South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 36, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 February 1922 — Page 6
SUNDAY. I-T.PRLWRY A P22
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Kvrninf Sunday .1. m i .rm:N'v r ! r '!.:.! .-r : Associated Press Unitrcl Press International News Srrvice
tiMo.l t- t:n fr . -1 iM t it -r ret f all r d;fc;-rttrl . . i i .!- t !- a 1 cvn I t;d;b. -1 l,.r. I! .- ! - i.t ri'ly ! o n rrr.v n dit:oL. l'hnn: Mln CIO-" ?1M tie:. Hrnrli I". l'n . ) j Tr.j:.: rp n t- t.iition. 1 rrr Stt M'Tr.iv? r.i Su'idST. i t -e. Fr.:-.c ar.d us17, rr vn. k K or.rr ith .v.i-J'j;-, ei, cir ov Mill N-rnir.? isd S ir.dir, a rural n c:.2 Jr - - !'r. -. Hwt!". - - Mill $7..V) Krd r-i at Son!) rud I'ot t Office n Pecon-i Clas Mali. FEBRUARY 5. 1922 .S V0&7J WORLD FLAT? Vn;jva, the c'-5' r of Do announce erl ou'y tl.it the ror!d in fiat, a great floor cf which Do h'avpr.r are a dome ar.d the un ar.d Mara hung : i T -r-er.dar.t light? in a great cathedral. .'rr.e. hundred or thousands of h'- tristful follow; s, Tr.ho trust his omnls:!?nce believe in h'.rn and the r st of the wo: lau P-fcre you lau;h. too heartily at thi.n autocrat, vi turnt? ha-;!-; the cWk 'if hi-lry. It inipiit bo wr:: to remember that th world ha b-' n round for than SCO )fr.t. I.'r.til the day of Copernle-i:, who ua.) no: born untitl 117.", all j.-c; believed tha th world was a l".''l thn.'. hur-? In ; ao hy some miraculous rower, and 1 1 ; : l if t-T n j-fsrni d far n'ih they would corno to 4s rdr." It v.iji h "rt ti. a 1 t b,!!'-r r hrrw i-s: a:id tho Titirs of this ß'-JeriM.!. v'r'i evolved tho theorj' t?;at th? fun Lt ih. crntfr -f a cr-at -tciii n.xu tht the world 'an'"! revolve about, it, v.r-re ftmong XYif f "rhid! n m 't!: for yar.i aftr In-' lath. T; to tli -lr,' oT this rru.an f'icntif?t, roldlr rd Jurist to all purror."a the world wn.s Mat l--.au o iiifn believed It to U fit. Yr'Ua now lives and thinks and plans for a wctM tliat It Ron. nfor9 yen condemn him rntirly nnd "'"rnplctely, it rr.iirht be r tr v. hrtlir he i.s alone In ri-v-reinjf tna al?nanc. ITov.' many exTlodfd thfo:iM of history are you fl'rizinz to or turnlns: to? IThv many denia's of truth are ;ou ir.aklr.s: ra !i and ovry day In your "'n life? How many rrnM :u-r you .'idvam iru ;ia tmfh, a f t r' th" y have lr,n rol .j .J ,y pf rirnro? 'Die oM law of "an ty fop an ryr and a tooth f'r ' tooth" v. an drnroyed nincl n hundrd.T of years npo ty the truth that all no n aro br"th rs and that lov. not hate, the rule of lif-"1. Vet in pm.ite affairs nnd in r nhli- i . 1 : i a ref rg one of tho mt romninn of passions and the atijrn-il l'urt turns for .va.tifaot ion to puni.-h-ln? tho.?'" who offend. T ho papers ar- fillvd i t li tales f,f murder, of betrayal, of jealous strife that are prompted by th!a ancient error, which n,n once tnio to mankind but ts no longer tru. The old doctrine of "to the victor belongs the epü.s" was onee the truth until civilization reached the Ptaze where It Tconircd plunder hs not only immoral but unprofitable. Today rcM revives the old. discarded error of force and hate and applies it to the fttlriii-nt of pri-tn ronnu, and uf- national rlypute.. The di-".no rttrht of Lines -was orte true to the world until America proved its falsity by denmnrratincr that men are pos-srss'-'d of the inalienable rirht to rul' thernr-.elves. Yet th world Htill yields I? hon.no of fatten', of fawning interest, of fuhervient obeisance to those who claim royal blood even those who call theniselves American?. The world once belleve-i that the aim in life waa co5efv!on until there came- the truth that "it i more blessed to iv than to receive" and yet tho r.neirnt error of "ed still nibs In the human heart rd there are too few who really vr according- to th Il$ht of truth. !Tany tilings hive happened btuen the day of Copernicus and Vollvn. IVtw. cn these two lie3 the whele fton of human hi.opy that was (hanged wltr. the pbdftintr of the little onomated .-ddp, in whleh Cclumbw.s teste. I the truth of thh iirst bollvr in a round world to th frreat ptenmship', airplane, P'.eam engine. ntwfn thn t.vT lies the differrne between the ra$Krllnj idllaea and the preat ritien made pesmMo by modern transportation; between the primitive e-rlculttire. of th rivr alleys and tho wide planting of far places: berween a humanity in which education ws the privilerre of the few and one in which It lis th ris;ht of the many. Has the tay vet dawned for voti when nil the rloded errors cf centuries are really rnn and rcn forever, cr rtn your mind wir!; with Voliva's? TV yon live in a round world or is vo-jh that? THE BIGGER JOB. "WTjen ILanford Mac;ider promptly announced that he would nn accept tho .T.atorial toca laid aside by Ken yon. of Imn-a, he added one moro to the l'5t of r.-dabTe -Tires he his rendered th!-' cour.tr'. Ab tho r.atlrr.al ccr.:mandr cf th. American clon. chartered 1 v roncrw to r reserve the rpirit of the American defender. . r..ime was t-ruErsrcated at otvj as the f.: ruco or to the Iowa statesman. Th Iec;!cn, which he heads, la net a political orraniratlon and if it over enters th political rleld it vi'.T lo ir.s power and its v.sfulness. rcNid?r i-i a your? man ar.i a snatorship ;s a pr'.'e whi:h misht have tempted one le? uneijh. Iiis leadership of the men who wore the uniform during ths wer brings with it a power to h!p the ration cr to harm it. II: U th vo'ce whic speaks authoritatively f r the.e men. Hu Is the duty to bta'.n Jv. .i.-e for th-m end to kep Alive that nt'.mr.t of America v ."ru wh. i "h flwerrd in these men 'iurir-g- the war. Had ho yi'vV to a trr.rtation to oh: a in personal honors throuch thit pr.t' n iver h'.m bv hi.s cmi-rade-, thi Amer;--n I-.on wo-id hive i,.-en promptly hrande.l e a jliti.M'. organization and :hs men who r. oev t'.vp ! t:-.e;r .j-jpp(rt o;:M h.ave deserted it in flocks. Fiatterinsr ai th offer rirh.t atp"ar upon the urfae. it v. e.s irt reality a deTnct ion rather than a prcmo:: .r. f-r .Mv-N'!! has th t ipper job. Ticky Tt-n t i .a" a nder iy).o rcrcn!;c1 thi fact. U ORT If STl.'DYIXG. "U win fn1 -n vs pai tl.e remark ahl etorj" cr two yo-:r;' .ds. wh - r:.-.cht 1 c.-.Ped edu cational x rt d ;at'. I- w-re it nt fr the fa,-t that tht ir mother vys th;- .a r rv rrr-.a children rated in e natural, irate. vi of an ni'iive.l method. It 1 e irnowhst remark abb- fart th it educational r f-thr!.- hive prrn p.---.'. hut m TO centrtej and that th fourviations today are much the same as ti y -ere in th.e early tlay.s c! Greece, .vhen the f hlVrhers and t.-her gathered their pu1la fibe'it thm sr. taught them by drawdr.ar characters V po ;i m, Mr. i .-ho..; ):ms l -en ani fflll !s too much cf a tonror t' th or-ÜnnT v-h!'d to obtain th best rralts.
a a sour., e of knwldge r.d movlnsr picture; uetd l ? 1 1 iIb-tra,T and to ta. n thirds t!: t. ha f beer. herrtof'.re :mpari'd thriuih th-- prir.t-d v. cud. j Thi.- mother tatiKht h.-r daiiht-r. in a 11. ir.ti'r '. tiiat ru'idw iearniric a pha.ir- insfaAl of a tah and Indelibly left up-t the mind the truth, iri5trad ; of a. Jumble of wo'd which ',.rj intended to d'- ' f-cribe the truth. i What would it mean t tli- world if eery child fhoMld be taught i.a a manner that would ir.ake them 1 at 15 the r qu'iN in knowledge t th-s average ktudent '
of :av There ar twenty millior.- of t-eh.ool children in Amcri't a! on". Multiply ti nt number by five yai.f savd and ou hae the population of th-.- world and i:.s iif-.timc up i' the Christian era. The.'.' iive extra jear?, either for further study cr tor the active use f,f the knowledge already pained would ehovM livil.zation alontc r.t an evn hipher öpeed than it is prrßresslnr nov. Education and the search for knowledfi: should be a leaaure re the oun mind whlh N learning to know the world. If this mother has found ths ecrt, why should net her methods be put into general u.J? o THE PEOPLE RATIFY. Simultaneously with the endirgr of tlie International dinrmamen: confere nce con:cs word that conpre5smen. .veekin? to protect their powers, will ih.j a resolution denyinsr the riht of any other othcials to limit their risht to decide on the number of battleship this country will have. Theoretically, the consrrenien are fully within their r:clit.-. A. a -old, pr.liticl fa''t. no conirresman would dare to vote, money for battleships in fxcew ff those agreed upon hy t Ii natioi,., unle.n one of these nations brf-al; tlie aKreement. Any dt.sati5faction with this part of the work of the conference will not be caused by the promiss to .top buildinsr sliipa for war and to Junk i few of thoso already bui'.t. The people if they lodgr any criticism will ask why the fame xsument for limitation would not liave been powerful enough to force a complete disarmament and the ending of all war burdens. Th" people, wha fay tlie hill?, will be hapl'3' to (scafte even the rmall portion f the burden which U lift 1 by the ticaty whicli will b-- sirre d tomorrow. Inder the constitution, the only othoials who have the hural rieht t F.y what this country shall do in the way of maintaining a war m o hirie i - tlr:-COT)i;re.'--S. It Is doubtful, under a stn-t intTin et alion of tint f'.iK'iment, whether this n'lit can be limited by treaties and whether any future eoniss mUht not, if it wished, prucoc d to appropriate funds for battleships and enforce their building. Tut there is a guarantee, to the other nations which is more binding than the v ritte n constitution. That guarantee lies in the fixed and determined purpose of this people to pet rid of war and In tho traditional policy of the povcrr.ment to maintain only an adequate dcf(hse. Thia cour.tr' will never invite wars by causing fear In the hearts of other peoples. It will never reek to terrorize a world by a show of force. It wdlll neer caue any imperialistic neiriii.or to embark on armament by force of example. Whatever the senate may or may tud do in th; way of ratifying nil the treaties and bargain, some of them of questionable meaning and some of doubtful value, the one biff outcome of the conference) lias already been ratified by a power that is supreme even to the senate the people of the United Statee. Objectionable in theory as are some of the other agreement, and lacking a they are In power to do all that the people wish, the bargviin to shut off the battleship rrogram will meet universal approval. That, by the way, would have been dono without any conference by a conjrres that luus any regard for the real situation. The 'battleship, n.s a m-ans of modern warfare, has lo.-ct its terror and Its power. Promising to quit buildincr more of the?e obsolete machines is very much like prom!.inj? to buy no more flintlocks or muzzle Voiding- cannon. There will be need of more conferences and oM wider participation na time rocs on. Thia conference saves money for a bankrupt world. The next one may reach to the heart of things and remove war dancers by thinking in terms of peace instead of reaching decisions from the war viewpoint. o The movies have Insured Will Ifny.s for f 2.000,000. Must intend to push him over a clifi. o Ninety percent of the men looking for argument"! are sincle. 1-hnancial writer says unsettled incidents expected next month. Py "incident.s" he must mean bills .MU. SCHAYAUS IWITII. (Waslilnston Post.) e'harles M. Schwab in an address to the Hotel Men's association ef Now York enunciated a confession of faith which may wall be adopted by every American citizn. He announced that although the P.ethlelo m S'.eei Ce i poration. of which he is the di- " rectin ba ad, is n nv runninp it.s ilant at only about cne-third ea; auty, the board of directors has authorized the expenditure .f 5 lb''. On c.eoju for the i onstrtiction of additional plants. This has been done, he said, berause he has faith in the people :-.nd the sroverr.ment of thks country. Mr. Schwab could scarcely be accused of beins; a dreamer of dreams or an impractical icUali.-t. Hi recu-d i-s juite to the conttary. lb- : a successful buines:- man, afd more; he is an economist of international repute. Cor.scriueiitly if he and hia ass.oliates have deliberately decided to expend J-.O'JU,-000 to increas tb.e capacity cf their Kteel works and shipyard, they roust have a deep and abidmp faith in th-ir country and itsi future. It i.s refrcthir.-,' to meet a captain of industry hke Mr. Schwab who not onlv bolls optimistic convktion but : n ulv to ba. k them up with hard asi, The Ke.'.eno wh.ch P. th'ehem directors have ete,l tail more convincinplv than all the .lettmiahs who aro iroirp up and down the land d plonn-r xistiiv enditions and predicting a lark j future. If tb.eie w.e more caritai:--:. whose vision coul l pierce the clouds and who had the eourape o! the;r conviction a central revival of business f in thi country would b hastened. J o QUAKES. (CTeolaiHl lrciss.) Kar.h ;uakh soon will be predicted, san.e as v eath.er is forecast in advance, according to Prof. i. . Jl" ?ril e. i ti" e iii:t.l ci Ldiuiiiiia. Pr. d, :;np w ill : , done by watchmp the "creep of the carta s-iput and gradual , banc 3 in latitude. These prva- de epu-akos. Warned ol' onb'.i: uu ikes. inhahitauis c-.u'.d speed j away, rfturninc to if'i;'..l after the d; ister. Th:aiea , lent. if: c w-rk s ivin o: h.uman ju mi:s. (Oklahoma ees) A Jury, luar.np irchib;t;on ctic ;n Prooklyn. N. was- permitted by the judpo to sarr.rl the evidence. This precedent Is a.id to have cut in half the number of; mm a.skir.r to be excused from Jury duty. Th procedure l. not without benefit to a bootlepger. One of them had his c-Lse polled rerently in a western town because the police had drunk up th
OtlierEdnorsTlia
Girls Startle School World by Marvel Of New Education al "System "
s. 1 ... 6- ' - : ' ':::: ," Vv .i .- ' '.'xi . - I " hy i:. y. rnii:iiuv. ( itci:il to The Nfwu-Timo.) IH)STON. 1't li. 1. A liUUAcl of j child edueation has been aeeom-! plished by Mis. llha Taylor Kansom. Ih r dau?ht rs. lint 1 1 and Lhanor, went through the ordinary 8-year .grammar selioe! u.mi?" iu two years! j lll".'innr, a 1', ut. red Vasar last fall. Kutli. at 17. i in Tufts .Medbal He ho ol. Mrs. ltaii.-om, internationally famous as n physician, and formerly a public school teacher, condemns the exitin.? .school system. She t-ays schools ruin children's br.ain. "She .Not a Prodigy." "They're callim; Illeanor a proli'y,' she said. "I say ;-hc isn't. Look at my other daughter she did the same thincr. They can't both be prodigies. Anybody can do the same thin?." This is the way Dr. Kansom did it: She didn't snnl Iicr rhildn'ii 1 si"lieKl till tlioy autc niii' jears edd. Moaimliilo -lio !wuiu:lit tJiom to re ad and to add and slu tatutht them alwuit tin out-of-eheir flowct.. pras, soil, mcks, star;, aidinah. she taught tlwni to loam by idninir. 1 hoy had in study hour. l'tTjthin;r was a atno.
'- .- - -.-V'-'-'i
!U:r-- ' 4
daughter UleaneM- (at bult) who cna red Yass ir at K, and lo r vlauir.ttor Ituth who enter, d Tufts Medical Sehend at 17.
child with - education. ,
'Ilutli and Uleanor l'Oth went through the grades in two years and then went through hih hchool In the customary four years. That's 12 y a rs' weirk in six. "Use a blackboard. T' aeh by object?. Make it play no regular hours of co;. Ii nein nt . ra schedule. Make it fascinating. Iamim l.v Jinitatioii.
ciiuu viu learn to read, and t "A child's brain isn't prop.udy eleveloped at six to becin crnnmiiu." information into it." said Dr. Kansom. Starts Sdi(Mlinjr at .Nino. "I wish it were poi-siblo to keep every child out of sehool until nine. Unfortunately there cannot l such a revolutionary reform of the educational t-yttem.. Many parents aren't equal to the tas!., financially er mentally. "Schools tcaeh S' li-- esst thim:' And tlU'V ke. p chibhen confined in rooms and in s'ats and bind them by rules and regulations and system. The child 'would be healthier outdoors. "Graduates of the present school system arc empty-headed. They grow inte mediocre adults. They can't concentrate; they never learn "Our ,-irls w uit ed. They b am d fundamentals of natural history,
tronomy. Now they know what the out-ef-doors means. l-'cw cb.ildrn do. 'They idajed number. they didn't study r rithme ti'". Tbey b arnd how the things they cat prow and why thc .;t them. Tbey Lamed that, they .at to live, not live to eat that they tat certain things to mend th' ir bodies, not because they taste rob e. They b arned about calories, and why eatinp certain things mended certain holes in the liumun structure. They b arned to apply to their bodbs? the principle that no
how. They have their education . sane person would mend a holo in a pounded into them. They don't' 'due s"tv skirt with a piece of red
learn faster and better because sib;. Fchoedinp hasn't been made attrac-
Dop.sn't Cotnlonui Sediools. Mis. Hansom, whoso greatest, fanto lias he.-n in obstet m s she was n pioneer in "twilight sbep" locsn't
I tlve te, tlicm." t'ritioios S liod System. Mrn. Hansom, who looks more
' medherly" than she does like a ) enly condemns public schnob. She politician, hits sttaip'.U frtun the j thinks f a s Mon a b 1 "flnishinc rdioulder apalust the pre-ent day ; schools" aro worse. school system in spite of the fart j "My child education recipe is cornthat her husband is headmaster of! mon sn," she says, "you wouldn't Po-don's larpest public school. try to make a slx-months-obl baby "Give me r child of 12 who can walk. The brain of a six-year-old Ls read and write and add," she says, nlmost. as weak as the lepn of a s:x"and In a oir I can show you a months-old."
Hi ish-a- Bye - Ba By James J. Montague The action is entirely in the home never worry. of Henry und Grace, the ftm scene bein-; in the entra nce-hall-!i inproom irdo whicli Henry has just come- on his letuin from his day's work. Grace has risen at the sound ef ids footstep on the walk, and is
not men cold blooded mechanical, machines. j Grace- Do you think he could II AYL ar-Mhinp'.' ID nry ANYTHING? He could I have LYLItYTIIING. Croup, flu,' scarlet fever, Tm as'.es, eerebro spi-! nal meningitis, dith say! i Grace- Oh! What is it? I Henry Didn't I tell you not to Jet1
' at the door. The time r, o'clock in the afternoon. Grace Oh! I'm isO clad you're home. I'm horribly worried. IT...-.- M-rr.'..l" -Wliat iV.niit0 I : him play with
. . T . . 1 . . f Henry Paby. Great prief. (H ,arl tht.ni,e;,Cs starts upstairs. Grace seize- him by i .y h the overcoat, of whi' h he lias not yet h( it vll,.n l-iti-jne ' t n.l rrtr'iinii b t Ol V . U1 , i. . ... . T j; Grace Not nov.-. Ik; is sleepint:. -.a HrnryVhat i It? What bas Henry dear. The happ. tied to him
lira. i.ao. around tb.e neighborhood and simnlv
! Grace Henry, we mu-t be brave., II nry The parbape man? Do- '; . ' -. ' ''f .; - : W. prom:- . I each other we would you mean to say you let the parbape .. . ,v h;.,;;.-, , ff . f& " : I be If ar.ythinp happened ami man come into the housr. with his f-.-';b'.M .:b-.v ,7rh - W Är? V-.":- ! Henry What D it? I inMt tha clothe sirhply reekinp with infec- .'V'-i ufSX j frA A t j you tell me what it is. KUht away! , Pons? . ?V-C v''-ff ' 1 i Grac- Paby is (;ri.-e !b didn't come Into the r, 'V-u'.'tr' - " ; Jv,v : : ' ' '. . ' : r. '
Grac Paby is (!rvf-ll didn't come Into the I V-'u.'ir "- 'v '"'. - - Henry Has he pot a TLMPLHA-; .oi:;. . He caupht the cat in the .'; -c ' 1 ' bl; TUPL? i yard. - t -V -'.' V V -'' Crno-Not YET. j HnrvtVell, that's someThinp. f '. - , -V : k ' Z Ilenry-What is it them T 1 i uk . I be,n catint?: ' , Ai"; r' ' I cant stand this suspense. I MLT , ;rac..Hov.- should I know? v" :i;ff? ' ' r-o nnstairs and see him. ,T ,j -r-v I " - 'ik'tj v '-.3r WJ
jgo upstairs una fee mm. Henry How , Grace Don't not yet. I li tei: , , ,, you about it dear. Take off your s GracT (lon overcoat and s;; oown. Unnrv st . f down' Tlow r.n T if mm I .n- Vn unrrirH Ulf M f n rV 1 ou ' o u baby. The B - a ! ' .,-.: be. n rntmc" I . , ... , Gra.-e Just vioDni.y . i ll,-,,, !, diVVr Y'l'M C;h'k' or.e tb.e dr. -tor
him. Henry me ,,h,.r .n his! IP nry And yet bis flesh is simp --.,,,.0 Vonu: roue Voo- ,,,.t ! W b'dinp off him like that. There
n.tist be somethir.p the matter.
i vji f r.r n r.l ti r-r i h ri i r I ' ! flrac Oh I ) Henry Hans the roar Now tell wcrriP j jrr.e what it is. nf nry-Wi:y 1 Grace Well. bar. whn I tv.k t'-.ir.u' about it
him to Dootor Purle-y's th aftrr- Grace I tnusrn't wak? h'.m up. noon he was half an ourvc under y0u know that. weicht! Henry Why don't you call the
Henrv Half an c.ur.c: M s-dl do tor. ' Grace pe brave dear. It may 'into 1 uae r.t a thfr-" Tf nvcv not r. al- but h.e isn't .'.t lv The do tor sIi not to wnrrv. H-nry Tire
Henry The doctorl Doctor's I riding, r suppose, while his po,r '
-y ".JW , .-"V
SV ' - . ' . A v. 7j . . r .f o. , h -. r - ill ? .v- - . - r 1 , v ' - - -.1! . . ... v- . . . i iV',h- - ; :::- . ' little patients may hA ' -' m " J puts Ik r hand over h: little patients may b" dy (Grace puts Ik r hand over h:. mouth). Grace Homy, PLUASH! Don't say nnythimr o terrible. v Henry Did you P. ave woid tliat he must come riitht oer here the instant ho ttot b-ok to his office? " Gra -Ye. I did. 1 did after I rrot to worrying about it. I hit you -ee be wei'1 ei to,., baby himself,! and he Knew In- was unde rv. i jcht. 1 I iieiii i JWiow, iMii ii" ol in i !T. r e .... l... i i rJi11- 1 : a.iMuuHI i'ooui. n. o;u ne .
1
Dr. Kliza Taylor Kansom. her IV . ' . v"
Hchry 2sot to worry. It does ( beat the diel. ens what brutes men pet to be in those medical eolkjres. Did baby pro to bed at tlie usual time '.'
Grace No dear, and that was1 . . ,, , r , ., . ; ,,,,,, , --"TMlieüt ts m la..-- Ml!i 1 U'U't 1 uik'.s t ac- o . L. , w liat trouble I me. He was fussv, -, , .. i -b- i'.e - , and he kept throwing his bottle out1"-0 V"'" 1 ' 'r"'!: "T. ' i"'. .
conipb te ( b meptar; i of the crib. It was terrible! 1 1 .... r. - .. i, ; ii : ... . .. l... as that, heyl That's what he when he had the col Graee-DoVt remind mc of Pet. I know it. jjemj 'ie; 1 1 1 u i n i'i is . .s ij.ni Henry Wei!, there's iust on thinp to do. ami that is t,,' take his temperature. (He starts upstairs,. Gra-e Dir. we oughtn't to wak him up. i'aiu wtKus aii'i ; Henrv Why not'.' U iniclit then ( w rite, i ust i u..lkc un ln convulsions like Eron
by imitation. Don't bind down th-! 5on3 kid did. and then we could brain with i ubs. Spelling can bo j never fo-cive ourselves.
iearne.i oy vistiaiP.insr worn-.. Grac Du-, the .Joctor said
outdoors atid play-j ifmry Oh t the deuce with the while playing the doctor. Whit d doctor's know otany, peolorty, I ;i bout babies. Not flic in a hundred biology, and even aü-',of 'un over liave anv anvwav Grace Do .tor Purb y has four, dear. Henry Yes, and didn't one of them liave the chicken pox just winter? Fine doctor lie Is. I'm go inq to take the kid's temperature. by! i ' They are machines,! v o.-vv-T ' ' V. ' - v. -n'-V e l v- -. i ' . - - !. that cat. Cat's roam down with cerms. r .j j. ' 3 ' .- -a .a ,. t ... garbage man took a should TOU know? - t fe?d tr e gart.af.c hn- i mf.in n.e - b - y. What has HE the usual diet. The put lilm on. know it dear. I'm ;ts you are. ibui't you DO somethen. Al . a ... nie.! mm iwi-.-. jhome. doctor h 1. Jry i, .
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r;: ace (In the I -hy' ri . II- :e th.e - He nry Lhd you s'er.l. e " Ira e Of ure. Henry IVrhal s at: !p ur. Ur his r-rm. Sh. b ..by. I'. by Wow! V.. 1 (Jrace I w a s afrei 1 you'd waken him. HT.ry Well. It had to be done. I'm not one to hrlr.i: f: "m my du'y.
- the n ' u: 1 1 . r .r:. -- A C-i- ' threat Goodne?. or.4 hui.-li e-l 'o;e chill r.UNt l v dIr?. Giace Did j ou s-hako I m.' ii.eter down? i IKnrs No, I fiippM th---r at uro u ha: ; hak" n it dow n. dar'.'.r. tt. Ii ::rv '.V. I". '!."! pe-tttim v.e;i in j 1 I f il jiffy - r . 1 ' - i t. Ita!. Wow wow wowl T;. " 1 Henry In urn's little m.cuth r r w 'that's rieht. Hold h.". j iw s toqth.er I w C'P.'t ycu Gra ce. Gr a., e Hush treasure. It will b ! all risht. Henry Looks r.ornnl. ( i:ter.dimr thermometer). He fee! coo! enough. ' Eabv Wow vow wow wow. r r; u v, .Ter.' - We;. Henry lhr.e terfv.: kid. tha. shore m 2 rt . 1 - ',
Grace perhaps he's all riuht. but iug him up rlpht. jl do wish wo could pet hold of the t.m ycu k:.jw. J . r 'doctor. (Tb.e telephone ring. Tie!- never piven C,r -o-e ' 1". is tb. it you Doctor? We're so ' r : vr ur.e - .r ' worried about b by. He 1... 0 . l.v ' .s l-r';. tr.uch w eight, you know and ?Co. 4 K' ; - r!-''
SHORT FURROWS By Kin Hubbard
I Th" bad-n" a"raM!oM ;n Wah-! PI -li 1 av-- r ! m'ton t !-.-... day-.' im t t' th .-!-at . ; tt ! ilisarur5. m nt. o;i"- y nee. ?s th' t in .- m i : i-fv'.(:i ll-.- in on . TV lb b 1- -1 : Kreat pro ni that's v.orr;V th' ? ) - s 'best i.iinds is how f fraive up a A.;' i revenue bill that'll app-aY t' relieve Ihr.,, j th consumer a:;' at th sa nie time hart ; lift a. heavy !.:mb n frotu th" shnul- All h rs capital a?i also pro ide All 'V,oi:ch ro entic. t' e nforeo th' "ol- you. fead law an' prob - ? th' mails an '.'cm ta'-.e care ft' rdln r minor rnv r'mep.t t a r. - ! expenses. Y don't know who buy. '!:: Ith' l;is fee th' Mayflower, but we . .- , f , r. visioni-'s '11 Jeok i " ! o b . . ;i it üo all reahe tha? th' w..r wo. : il c:v r , xpet-sive an tliat all of us n,r pay V. . ;i-d:-. 1 t th' bill, but f th' averare lu.ill-ci.d . Girls v.;,- - j consumer it would ee;,i ihat we ('on'! In j boub.t too manv trucks. bit v- : Mu,-a '. ,- ' re-.ie.-.-.i ..,- .,,Ue, t,.,, 'so ' r.-, n-d- , tic r v.u. an o t :-rp odi;.'t Inn , r a . v ;tt(. C( r,, r.,u .,.. nMVbov t!: r'-- ' do 1 1 ! : . 1 1 1 " e i pop" hi r and wi ! 1 v P.. id s;-. caltii-. d b. hef 1bat t V r:ov i'':;!:' To uo;u 1aX!!l. , ) r,,, t!:i.-. tha" if r,.. o,o,' ,c,ir; . t b . ( '..i. v r: -': r vn 1 buildiu' o' apartnpnts an' th' buym' o" intao.'-; ild1 or d . t '..Mi d :s- i cuuragin' th' rs .' iroisk an teth- i 1 paste an' :.eou ra i a' libl.. s. P.y w j". .i.-' ' ; vl-oreiu.-iv toxin' th' imhriu' a t 'el tliin- O i , 1 ' ' !-.., 1 i ' e : ' i v - ' '-" 1 " O' 1 " ' ' '" i.o-ilt:; l ma ;e a nry if u1 " -i , .i ' ev i booth u'-' r aid pi--.v:d. d ani"-" ''' '"'-ft I:
di(1 ; marine for ever' I--U- tier a ; u . . . 1 1ni ',n this hs.t of 1 . - . -; ( it. thms miht be taxed V th' limit ; of l a. op,.,, t - t e ... .'Abhout workin' lb' bast hardship;-; '- j ; - ;;;. ; , ,
p;d'' a 1 1 i ei n ' i.-lf.n-e..-. tin' i r . 1 Ti n- ! I . 1 1 I : ' ! ' U 'UO . . i ... v. ........ , honie-lovi: hrodu-v r. an' at th'j bre-..- i : . l''"'1 stimulab th' alr ady I -an ,c-t.
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JhjVC-coior.d SV-K ,lo;;OWin, CCU. '.a xa-a. wv:. . Publicity experts. : Amber Jacke. kV::k Joe The ( Smooth." fluent aft - r- ünn-r prop- cf Quahty. AH ere. th.-- cleaner ;
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j Women politi- lar.s i Uafe bitsirU.
Viufoiled c:-urs-. tr.-c-. T'ilms showiu tii-tiv s" -'u i , Divorce co-re vpon-iet ; Apx c:gr.r c.r.d Rr'arex W Jazz conrs. I prs Central Pie Ctrl 3 Company. 1 Ikxpert tennis players an' o'her I 5k Main tt.
last j experts. - j Ih-appcarin beds. pea'ouarin' livin room table -" ' ' :-'V vv'v- ; r w i vi - ";':', ' ' ' " - -V;.b" VW ' - ' . ' rlZ arf.TTt : ( : r-. ,, 0
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