South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 188, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 July 1921 — Page 6

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 7. 192!

JHE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

Morning Evening Sunday rLJ 1L fcTCrHlINSON. Putdi.ter. J. ... - j)hn iiK.Mir zuvrn. Editor.

Member United Pres and the , . International New Servico .-v.jt,

M'.rnlc Edition. ' "

Member Associated Press A1t! 1'rrn 1 eiclutlrely entitled to tb v fJ tlintloa f all new. dlpatcfcee credited to It or not V'n ml rr.:t:e'l in tte morning- edition of tnl. paper, and aUo t e 1 new published herein. Tfcls dee not PP'J tt. afi-rr.oon ealtiou. All rig-tt. of republication. "J eis st. Lis Uria rerrea tj tt pufclliaer. si to toU di::en. Thon. Mln tine). Privat brmnrh erertang. OlT P? clirP of person department wanted. After 8 p. tn. f.' 01 cun;Nrr-M.i!n :noa ciaMlEed 3e partisent : Main 21. city editor; Mala 210u. avcletj dltor; Mala 2101, circulation dFnirniPTTO? T! ATFTS t Mernln d Errata fttlea. F!n Opy, 3"; Knnday. 10-. Dellrered by ttrTlfr fn 1p 1 an 1 Minh-iwaka. I10.no per Tear In adruere. r w "7 we l-:irerr 1 fcr currier In all other towni. I7f Lr,7JrJ In sdrsn.. or IV ty the we. Moraine or Erenln EdltJ'"' oliy Iru hiding Sunday. Kctertd at tl9 Boata UQa po S.'ce aa aevud (im mal. XUTBd DT MAIL ON TtrRAr, TtTTTTTS TS FIRST AND fcECOND ZONES: Per Year Mi Mo. 1 Mo. t M. ' I'.CW 13.73 91JSO .00 ALL OTIimS DT MMLS

Fortln Kate, fl.W Ir Mmth.

JULY 7, 1921

Holiday h:.au-ts mako coast-to-ccast non-etop lights or oratory. o One way to leave footprint on tho randa of time ia to get cut and dig. o Beat thing about a player piano 13 you can't toll v.'hcn It is out of tunc.

No matter how .mall a Jazz orchestra, it always sounds liko tin pieces. -o A reformer gets moro pay for running things Into tho ground than a farmer. o Nowadays, when a novelist wants a happy ending, he lets tnem get divorced. o Farmers feem to think a good emergency act would bo Uj adjourn congress. 0 S?tatLnic9 show hog are decreawingr in the country. Moved to tho city and became landlords. o VIEWPOINT. Judge Nathan Smith, eenator from Connecticut, was said to be "of tho old school In his drees? a remnant of that raco of men, the veay form and fashion of whom arc a passport to deference and respect; hin white hair -well powdered, a handsom? bluo coat with shining gilt buttons; drab kersey mere breccia, and top boots, tho clean white tops of which were well contracted by the elaborate black po'.ih. of the legs." That was when he died In 1835. Mn doubts If this fashion, worn on the street tuday, would win either deference or respect.

MEXICO. l'res't Obregon, in explaining "why he hasn't . acrtM to the strict letter of the terms submitted by Cy of State Hughes, says: There are certain things which a country may not .lo without the surrender of sovereignty and vli'-rtpect. There are certain constitutional limits to the power of the president of Mexico." Sounds as thcucrh Alvaro had been reading the, senate debates on the Ieaguft of Nations. o OVER-STUDY. Princeton university reportfl that only one of Its .tud. nts has died from over-study in 4 0 years. And lie didn't die because- he exercised his brain .too much, but because, while applying himself to fctudy. he exercised the rest of hü body not at all. AW juntf Hen Franklin: "I fear not too mucn labor of the min.1, but I fear for the body that doth nut exert itself in due proportion to tho mind." Thi is pood counsel for all who work in otllcefl. If ynu haven't time for any other kind of exercise, try walking.

ONE WAY OUT. An explorer reports that whole African tribes are bent on race suicide. One tribal chlei haa forbidden marriage; la others women refuse to become mothers. The determination to die came with introduction of civilization's vices, the explorer says. The child-mind of the African tak.es the eaIet -way out of a hard struggle; the developed mind belr.r able to pee further, i willing: to undergo suffering to attain a happier future.

SMOKERETS. Congressman Paul Johncon of Mississippi clot.-:;"t believe in equal rights for women. JK ha.- Introduced a bill in congress which would subject to a :in of 25 any woman guilty of smoking In the Patriot of Columbia. Men would b rermltted to puff as usual. Ftlll. with the mx and tariff bills burled in committee, cor.cr-s must have something to talk about during the cummer.

CHICAGO. OrTkTals of the Hurllngton railway at Chicago have decre-d thtt no longer are peck-a-boo waists, short skirts, rollfd h' so or rouge to be worn by ir: employed in their onäces. Your.? men of Kvar.ston. near Chicago, have organlztd to boycott g'.r'-? who wear such things. A Chicago ir.ar. is demanding hat when out walking gir'..J dr modestly becaue, he believes, that, by Intriguing the eyes of automowilists, they are responsible for accidents. These Chi.'ag ite-rr.s are compiled here so that when normalcy comes- Lack it may be known just where it started.

THE BUDGET MAKER. Charl-s G. Iaw. appointed by Tre.Vt Harding ns director of the l.uiret. has taken hold of hi Job In a way that indicates he Is going to "get c?J:ne-wh-r. Tl.ere is no m-re intpcrtar.t pot in tho government, lepirly ad::;inistered, it can save the tax payers hun Ir .!. cf millions of dollars. Th rr.ass mating of cabinet members and bureau chiefs call d by luwcs with the president's al -jrovaL to imprs upon them the- urgent neconsity lor the ::.o.t i;i l to r.omy in every branch of gov-irr.mt-r.t ac:iv;:y. w .1- an inspiring ex.imple of direct cticn f..r rul!.-. luwi ' i 1. a e:ns to be that the way to economy is to ec ..:;( m;.'.e i:;r:ad of merely talking about it. Iasd upon b.iwt.-" temperament and pant performance, it i pretty safe to venture the prediction that If the vva.-ttful methods which are th rule rather than tho exception in Washington are N

not changed, there Is coing to be a noise like a riot In the capital city. FIDDLING AT PEACE. . Consrrrsrt is ptill fiddling at pace. Inability to get the Knox resolutions through the house has resulted in a compromise that does not repeal the declaration of war but only declare a rtate of peace as existing, otherwise presuming to protect all American rUrhts under tho IMrla treaty without assuming any responsibilities.. As in the case of the Knox resolution it effects the settlement with Germany. It Is a raro subterfuge. In another sense we have surrendered. It ia a separate peace without any feace. Germany long ago resumed peace relations with our former allies notwithstanding that they are still quibbling over the details. The resolution is an attempt to ratify the Versailles agreement under false pretenses, Germany may have something to say about that. It tcttU-s nothing. We quote tho Indianapolis News: Though a state of peace is declared, this government to maintain a war status with regard to indemnities, reparations, enemy property held, until such timo as peace is really made. We are to hold on to all that has come to u under the armistice, the treaty of Versailles and the treit'. with Austria-Hungary, or which came to us .as one of the participants In the war r.s one of the principal allied and associated power.-. Tho.: rights, tho resolution reserves "the right to enforce." And that is a very interesting nervation. Hut there in not one of the riuhi.s reserved as guaranteed to us by the treaty that can be enforced thereunder by our provernrnent until it becomes a party to that treaty. When engross "reserves the right to enforce the same" it must, one would think, have In mind some way in which that enforcement could be made effective. Whatever of the property of the German government or German national la hei l In this' country by our government can, of course, lie retained till there is a settlement. IUit there are other rights written into the Versailles treaty which can not be enjoyed except with the consent of our late enemies, and we shall have to get that as the result of a treaty agreement. It may not be as easy as it looks to "enforce" the so rights. And there It stands-. The peace problem is still with us. The president and secretary of state will have to decide, whether they will negotiate a new je.ice wjth Germany or resubmit the Versailles treaty with reservations and amendments to save their party'ü face. As it is on that treaty that the resolution passed by congress relies, the natural thing would teem to be to accept It, and thus mak sure that our rights will be enforced. Some sort of treaty will have to be made, and eoon.

MORE PEOPLE GOING TO CHURCH. A copyright articl from the Herald Bureau in Washington, oaned upon statistics gathered by the federal census, presents striking facts regarding the religious situation in America. We have been accustomed in recent years to hear much talk, and often from church leaders, that religious interest has been on the decline and that the nation is facing serious danger of demoralization on this account. The figures quit? refute this view. In less than two degrades the church memberships of America have grown from lesff than 35,000,000 to more than 4 5,000.000. .This is not half the total population and reilects still a deplorable nonaffiliation, but it indicates not retrogression but progress?. The body of churchgoing people is growing faster than the population, and over a million new members are joining churches every year. The value of the church buildings in the nation is J2, 000,000. 000. The roligious endowment in in excess of $000.000,000. Annually J50.000.000 and more ia spent for church extension work. We have in the country 20.000,000 Sabbath school children, with more than 2,000,000 teachers. Over 200,000 men and women are giving their entlro timo to church work. All this dors not take into account the many millions additional, both in money and numbers, organized for moral and religious purposes in the Y. M. C. A., the Y. W. C. A., the K. of C, the Y. M. K. A. and similar societies. The army of religiouM advocacy in our country is indeed great and its resources incomparably vaster than in any other land. It Is working moro aggressively and with more effective methods than ever before. We are not becoming, demoralized through any failure of the religions we have to press their claims and spread their teachings. 0 UNDER THIRTY!

W 9

... . . . 1

.t "; . . ; ... ' -1V.V J . - r . S- -

V

Wit C

S. l'arker Gilbert has been made

under-secrctary of the treasury.

ranking next to Secretary Mellon.

And he is not yet 3 0. It's a newly

created job. Gilbert was graduated

from Kutcers in 1912 and Harvard

Law School in 1315. He served on

the War Loan Board during the war.

y' .jrfy ftill Armstrong

DY BILL AILMSTItO.VG WELIi, WTAAj, WATSON, W1IAT DO YOU 31AKE OF TIUS? Dear Bill: I hung around the lakes all day the Fourth, trying to find out if the girl of today is really Immodest, like the papers eay ehe is, but. Bill, she hain't. She puts on a suit that's easy to swim in, even if It don't protect much of her anatomy from sun burn, and she goes in for a good time. The only immodests girl I saw had a lon? cape over her suit, but. Bill, she had such little spindling bow legs that she war trying to hide 'em. Wiltha Mareon.

BUILT XEVS or the an' Mitch, the clip and razor speclallst, is back from the fight and reports quite a crowd was out to see Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentler.

Evelyn is recovering from the effects today of another haircut. Charley Hagerty must keep a list of South Bend's Sunday school teachers on his person when he goes to court.

A street car caught fire at the corner of Main street and Colfax avenue yesterday p. m., causing quite a little excitement for the time being.

Jake Heclaman sez that his idea of a terrible accident would be to see "Cuple" Collins roll out of a barber chair.

We understand that over the holiday a young son arrived to brighten up the home and keep Donald Eldrcdgo up nights.

It rained like hale for awhile yesterday afternoon. We thought maybe some of the customers might have overlooked this fact.

George Piatt was going to the fight bjit changed his mind when he happened to think he would be away from his, young son for a few days.

ANXIOUS "It is an established fact." said the lecturer, "that the sun is gradually but surely losing its heat, and in the course of 70.000.O00 years it will be exhausted; consequently this world of ours will be dead and, like the moon, unable to support any l'orm of life." The head and shoulders of an excited member of the audience rose above those of his fellows. "Pardon

me, Prfessor!" he cried, "how many

years did you say It would be before this calamity overtakes us?" "Seventy millions, sir," said the professor. "Thank heaven!" gasped the interrogator, sinking back exhausted into his sat. "I thought you said 7,000,000!"

Success can also be spelled with four letters W-O-R-K.

u 53 vi

23

the BLAMi: dodgkks The other fellow's In the way When victory has crowned the day. With him we do not wish to share The splendor of the spotlight's glare; We'd like to have it widely known To us belongs the praise alone But when defeat Is ours to take. Tew have th e courage not to make The old excuse and place the blarne Upon the other fellow's name. Since first the fall of man took place. This trait has marred the human race. The other fellow drops from sight When everything is going right. The plaudits and the round of cheers

Are not intended for his ears But let us falter, as we may, And lose by careless work or play. Few have the courage not to make The fault belongs to them alone. The test of man is not the way He smiles on his victorious day. It's how he standt to pay the cost When he has made his tight and lost. In failure's hour he merits fame Who does not seek to dodge the blame. Oh, boy of mine, whate'er you do, Whate'er of failure comes to you. Blame not the other man, but take Tho censure just for manhood's sake. (Copyright. 1021.)

Berlon Braleys Daily Poem

MAGIC. Oh, never tell me that life is dull When up in the arching sky. Swifter than ever the hawk or gull. Men mount to the clouds and fly. And who shall wall for a lost romance When, high from its towers hurled, A spark leaps over the blue expanse And flashes o'er half a worldl Our voices travel on singing wires. With speech that is heard afar; And we skim the roadways on magic

tires. As we drive in a wonder-car. With the harnes.'ed strength of a raring stream We turn the great wheels of trade. nAd what was only a dreamer's dream Is builded, and shaped and made! Life's dull, you tell me? And yet you dwell In a world of marvelous power. Where each moment brings you a wizard's spell, And a miracle every hour! (Copyright. 1921.)

WYMÄM a

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Oomo and ßw C Store Hours. fts30 ta 3j30 Saturdays during July and August close 6:00

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Ii'.' : X i

4

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Dainty Silken Under-

V

clothing

of delicate shades to match the sum nie r frock.

r

There Arc Vests, $3.00 Italian Silk in the softest shades of cameo, N pink, Drchid, nile, French prey, jky, corn and white. They are exquisite. Then, Too There are Italian Silk Vests that are plain and embroidered in flesh at $3.00 to $5.00. And bloomers in flesh at $4.50.

Plain Silk Hose Plain Silk Hose in all shades of grey, brown, flesh, pink, beige, castor and aluminum at $1.25 to $5.00. Try our wonderful wearing Silk Hose at $1.25 in black, white, brown, navy, sand beige. If you have had one pair you will want more.

And Knickers, $4.50 ilso of Italian Silk in :amco, pink, orchid, nile, French grey, sky, corn a,nd ivhite to go with the vests. Silk jersey Petticoats Light, and yet strongly woven, these jersey petticoats come in a wide assortment of colors and color combinations. They are most attractive and the price is extremely low $3.95.

And an Envelope Chemise at $7.50 of Italian Silk in flesh, daintily embroidered. So luxuriously appealing, yet vith a durability that makes it inexpensive.

Silk Hose for Men Black, white, navy, panama, cordovan 75c. Black and white silk hose at $1.25. Cordovan, smoke, navy, black and white silk hose at $3.75.

The Last Word in Hosiery Brown Silk Hose, with hand drawn and embroidered clocking in brown $5.75. Net Hose in black, silver, grey and brown $3.73. Fancy Lace Hose in a wide range of patterns $4.50, $5.00 and $7.50.

Wy man's is a Group of Tzvelve Specialty Shops

AMATEUR EYES MAKING BERLIK A NEW EDEN GARDEN

Frolic and Play in Cabarets of Teuton Capital Until Press is Stirred.

BERLIN". July 5. Sunday performances of "Paradise Lost," are being etaged by the Berlin poUce. who are making mammoth raids on Tegel forest, Berlin's Garden of Eden, where amateur Adams and Eves disrobe and loll around cn Sunday afternoons in regulation pre-apple Eden costume. Berlin police surrounded the woods and carefully combed through it, rounding up dozens of followers of the Paradise sect who had removed their annoying clothing because of the heat. Summary orders were given to dress, and the collection of primitive humanity assembled where a pc'.lce inspector arretted the worse cases and freed the others. Amateur Eves cannot be disturbed, however, as soon as they can secure an engagement In a "Beauty Ballet," which is the main attraction of the majority of Beilin's night-life cabarets and c-afee. Since the revolution censorship has been abolished and the police can interfere to stop nude dancing only when a civilian has complained that the naked dancing haa offended his fensibllitles. Saon Scenery. The Berliner Tageblatt In an editorial attacking the "Nude Dancers" Mj-s: "In our favor it must be said that the host patrons of tne natural ballets are foreigner, especially the French olTicers taking a lively Interest in the beauty ballets. But it is disgraceful that 12 to 14-year-old boys and girls are permitted tc see the.e performances. The parents of children should at least refrain from taking them with them." The most pretentious of the Ev dances i the Natural Ballet In Berlin's largest vaudeville theater, the Appollo. where 26 charming ma'dens -uiigg'e aesthetically to muiic intended to represent the four eea-

sorta The scenery changes for each season, but summer or winter the chorus is protected only by llowers painted on the body at appropriate place with grease paint. This is shown between acrobatic and magician acts at Berlin's "Family Theater."

SPEAKS STARTS ACTION ON LONG JAIL SENTENCES

PublicPalse wn i :S a n i : k miii" i i: i 1 1 Kdilor Xew.s-Tirms: I am one of the many - i llr.l pedestrians who live in the suburban districts of South IhihI. It is the aim of the average pedestrian to do his best to hold his job. One of the main factors in this is punctuality. Hive any of you (speakinp: to my fellow suburban friends) ever run two blocks for the six-thirty street car, and make a final dash the l-t 20 yards to catch the already mercrowded car, then have it pull away just before you readied it? You curse the street rar service, etc., but all at once your anaer apainst the traction company vanish1.? aa you see a gasoline bupy pass by with a lone person in it friving you the merry razz, lienever thinks of stopping, but just what can you do to get even? Why. nothing. That nothing notion has come up to no many a time, but tinally I thine I have -nlved it. This may sound foolish, but it can not be any worse than what some reformers have in view. Why do not some of we .suburban boys start agitation toward a law compelling every automobile to be fully occupied, especially in the early hours of the morning and evening, so we do not have to take their sneers going and coming from our daily tasks. I guess we wouldn't get even then, eh? A Suburbanite.

I can where ther is a irrave r il

A girl ran not hive much

in this.

It's a fright, the way some of th so qirls th y are no more than

that tarry on. It starts with a : ,, . ., , , , ... ... I S--lf-r spect if she condU' Ts hfrsell harmless flirtation. She is waiting ; "ti the corner for a car and he driv-s iin this manner. I

I'W Shf .smiVs Atul hf i:rks her u: v- j.,Kf ti

here are o ; i i - r

h

and gives her a lift to her destin.t- have noted this condition, ari :h:

1 ' v

is growing wor.-v every ye4r.

Surely, you will tay, the-e is no jail mans. girls, have a care what

evil in this, but this is only the be

ginning. I am not a prude. I have .been around a bit not much yet

you are doing or som day yr-u m ay recret it. even a.- others now arregretting. A Victim.

I YOUR HEALTH f

Just What Can Be Done

to Relieve a Brain Tumoij By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. S ,,:r-.; VJtHVi K!i' Wit-V- f"ifv f

VUlUlUlOJlUliLl Ul ik.öin, wirk, ivj I

THERE is a popular fear of "tumors." This ihould not be the case, because a swelling from any . . a . m

cause is known in medicine as a "tumor

By MAVIS LUDLOW. WASHINGTON, July 5 John C. Speaks of the Columbus diserict, who as a brigadier-general in the late war, has taken steps which he thinks will develop some interesting fact? in regard to excessive and, in some instances, outrageous sentences imposed by military authorities for trivial offenses. Gen. Speaks believes that in the pripor.s today are many men who would not be there if justice instead of arbitrary military pique had ruled in disposing of their cases. The Columbus member has written a letter to Sec'y of War Weeks which is expected to develop the facts. He asks the secretary of war to furnish him the following information: 1 How many men who were sentenced to imprisonment between April 6. 1?17. and November 11, 1 9 1 S. are still In prison? 2 How many of these men were in the American Expeditionary forces? 3 Please state the offense upon which the charge was based and the sentence Imposed in each cafe. Sovcre Sentences. "I am convinced." said Gen. Speaks, "that in a great many instances the most severe sentences were imposed by military authorities for trifling offense. "My idea is that when the secretary of war furnishes the information which I have asked for and which "i expect to b-? in detail it shall be turned over to the American Legion, whose members will have an opportunity to investigate each cae on its merits and to recommend clemency, if clemency is found to be deerved. I believe there many men today in prison serving military sentences who ought, in all justice, to be released, and I am going to do all I can to see that belated justice is done them."

FADS ONI) FANCIES Editor News-Times: Tho "silk shirt period." as we have flfnnminntol the neriod in industrial

'history from the signing of the ar

mistice to May, 1020. produced peculiar effects which we have not yet been able to dispel. In such extrav aganza of speculation and inordinate

spending, the human mind w..uld I naturally lose its balance, and hank'er fer fads and fancies. This lack I of balance, judging from shoe winJdow displays and the makeup of the people in the streets, causes one I to reflect that all this glare and t lit -' ter eioes not accord with the sej-i-jousness of our present situation, i Commodity prices have b-en hquij dated: merchants have tak-n their flosses; we are calling for liquidation vf labor, of housing and fuel costs, land now we demand a liquidation of i fads and fancies. It is time th it the i people of this country were thinking i.il.-.rr substantial lines. It is hiii

If

some one rives you a hard crack over the head and a

big, eure lump appearr, that is a "tumor." "Internal tumors" are 'unpleasant things, and worst of all is a tumor of the brain. The pymptoms of brain tumor depend on its location. Consequently, the part of the brain involved u j.,.rtnini in manv instances by the nattim

tail VU uvn.iii." - - - I yj r

t K-o?n tnmor in an adult first V.otro I a U

in Kvm.-i - -..v,.. j i j l:z. il

itself by heaaacne. ne u-"-t .w.- nuU even -iTiVc- nain is characteristic. Vomiting is a

Dizziness is another sign cf tumor. Th" tV b J"cklnir ot rn triors cf the limb, and omtiine eev.ro con- ' Th !nd seerr.s '.o In " P'" Th p.vl'it loss cor.nder.ee. In Mmse.r end avoids mental exertion .KI,

Th ' elv mor" or if the I The .Uht fail. "a,r ' I INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. Julv

..eta or vMi"n in "

lh. oi'i;i.A.:)

a common BYmrAom

9 m

EICHORN TO HEAR ICE TRUST CASE

After a

nn may i , . while the patient may r,corr - The ire trut butin

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tllr.d and paralyz- H ".ay nn- s-r.co ai:ains" 1 n uia n.a po:: nnj.

nfer tt proch. . 1 ers an 1 procurers charging

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rntiirn OI xr.9 roml.ine. will e- hurl ,v

Vom !.....

r.iennorn. ox t5iui:tn. m:

! time mat. mey eie ..u.. u , iwi blare and trumpets of high Mown entertainments, of gaudy dress, of j flighty living, and the many things jwhich reflect thoughtlessness and lack of appreciation of things desir

able and righteous. We cannot expect the resumption of onr nro?neritv until the people of

I the land have cast aside the ur.lesir-

able things, are living m moderation and earnestly striving to build up the :r.oral and commercial powers of th ? nation. A Thinker.

"VAMPS" AND SO LOUTH

Editor News-Times: ! For a long time I hate been plan'ning to write you on a subject which ! impress, s itself on me m-re and j more every" summer. It has to do iwith young women of the city who ! think it a very pmart thing to go out ! automobile riding with married men. j What must be the feeling of these (men' wives when they !ern how j their husbands are carrying on? 'And, again, how do these young ' would-be vamps feel about wrecking same, good woman's home.?

W.- k, f T 1 T T- 111 V i J

i , a ras.

mornso find cad. or a -r 1 r,n t,ron )-lly er ven -iby. One !r. ft bUe the eens of srne.l or tate rr.ny be affected. "TVr?ar. .om.tlm delusion- of curd The victtn. Ixn.r.r.e. h. hear. rremay of m5ci er parti of the ftc. ' ?av cre;sS. or the tor.cue fall to work, ff icf waVKlnj? i. Hturbed often Si iSr VatUnt .tumble, or drsg. hi. f Turrcr cf the brain 1, very rye . after r, Tn ch'.lihM more thn h-Mf t.." ar. du, to tuberculosis. M.llimt J-Tra UK parcorr.a rei.pcn.ib. for mary ca-.. and .yphlll. U a far too rcr.rron cause. Treat many relents reccv from trili Tturror. rHlly cf the tuberP,hr ,r.d vphl'.itic type. C T" tuUrcutar cases are tr.atel JMte tuterculwl. cf the Freiih air vt lote of ret. rood food ani vaJ-iv VjrrourtJ'.nn will do wonder.. "TV; headache aJI forrns rnay U rf "vd ty crli ccmprfsei, erpc.-lA.ly from the apt-ücaf.on of lee. At tl tr.e syn-.:torr. d to prepare et t- tum r cn the brain content, can t rel'evel ty 3rawlr. eft om of the t A. A r.eeile run between twV c' -n cf the spiral column, ar.-i. in tr'.is way. dra'.r.a? of the tpinal r-r-' is accorr.pll'!Mm operativ rrr.dur Is lnated The '.'.u'.l oper.e-1 ar.d the turror rn-oved. Prll'iant rjlts follow' tn -one cwi. Of course, operation 1 the- 'A't report, and will b ubmltted to r.n'y f-n th P-dlTta hv carefullv V.ui'ed th caj ani counted tho chances. Fortur.atr. brain tumor 1 not a cornmen aliment, and er.ly an occa, onal irember cf the human family 1. thm af-r.icted.

ju l"-. at a fiVJor k Thür? ! ir.g. Ilhhnrn accepted th-

sperni juf'cf late ycyrr-r th defense ak'd a char.T-

H. rn -

! V.

' n

I WORDS of WISE MEN L!f I. mea.ured rot by I. r-r b-: ty It. rsthualavma. If you wonld conrlnc a man dat t does wronr. do riebt. It 1. work of however hurr.tte or J.'wly ort which brlr.e. reace. T'e ar gi-re-n tlm tn wMcJi to things, and terxlty la which to ar-awer fcr them. Our character ar.d babtt an tb r anifeatatlon of tb .;lr1t that dv.; :Q u,.

... , II who mtm In litt'. thing- caa b '

literal In great or.&, ...

and rraoe-s ar fruit, and not t. ostput

feet al a bound. If !ntea ef a tt or ee-n a cwsr we crra'1 cart thrirtft of a larely tho-jg yx tr.to the heart cf a friend, tbat wwilj b glvii-s a. tri tcjU cuit ! When we look Into tbe lone rsucl th future and se the f-Do-2 thre is for rach cf to do. w real!., after alb hat a beautiful thing It l. to work x l!a. ar.d be happy.

rv 1.

A your.c rcrilli In the New Tork

J zoo would eat nothing but the Inner

coating of banana skins.