The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1925, Page 4

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AAW wrrArem€ PAGE FOUR . Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N, D., aa Second Class Matter. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - DETROIT Kresge Bldg. republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. Daily by carrier, per year... sarees er Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... . ox Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) (Official City, State and County Newspaper) THE WORLD REAWAKENS In the endless universal cycle of life sueeeeding death, Hastertide arrives again to symbolize a reawakened world. Deriving its name from pagadom and, as at Christmas time, adopting several of the pagan customs of celebration of the spirit festival of the year as well, the Easter of Chris- And in our dress we respond to the spring call. Joy- killers who condemn the preoccupation with spring fashions as destroying the sacredness of the Easter season, forget celebration of the spring festival. And he seems to get as much of a thrill out of it as the of the spectator. And this banker’s imagination has always been young. This imagination has discovered stepping stones to success the furniture styles of the various Louis periods, but a world “which is becoming just a little independent about Parisian zelothing styles may also prove cool toward other dictated -THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Easter—The Season of Be Editorial Review _ Comments reproduced in tbis column may or may uot express "S RESCUE MINN PAPOLIS! (Minneapolis Journal) The bieonial City election draws Witiin a fortnight all tion will ibe held | Minnexpelis is thus setting about City. The Mayor is largely a tig- urehead, save for his control of the | Police Department. He serves as a member of various ‘boards and represents the City in various ways, chiefly welcoming or: tor. It is the Council that reaily has the say here, despite the fact that its tax-raising powers 2re su | pervised by the Board of Estimate and Taxation Thus the selection of thirteen Alcermen next June becomes a matter of paramount importance to the welfare of Minneapolis. For the thirteen elested, joined with the thirteen hold-overs, will give this City waatever sort of govern= ment it is to ha whether good bad or indifferent given. Minneapolis a bad name the Country over as a re! governed city where the tax trend is up: ing the bidders in various ways. High taxes are a serious damper dermen next June. The radical majority must ‘be turnec! out. But that alone will not be enough. The (Think it over. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE it there. ild hang out a service ome member of the fant ily has gone to town. all? not say what particular peces- Leslie Prescott Mth n such | of motherhood sobered you at Of course, | know that you h ney enough to delegate the datie Yes, dear, you have guessed it, I| auty - thei e into u You know that when [ marri omplication that hus co most happy about it, (Copyright, 1925, Since Coolidge has been named | “Bear Ribs” by the Sioux Indians we doubt if they thought of “Cat Got His Tongue.” | pa Lo, the poor Oklahoma Indian, he ys no income tax Since federal prohibition officers THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON r names upon the geroll of pos- my { ied ou were expecting a child and were! ¢, Most people seem to think that I NEA Service, Inc.) SATURDAY, ‘APRIL 11, 1925 What Are Essential Suppose we try thinking w: Still earlier, we remember had ceased to unlock any door The educated man of the fu' metic. are already in the doubt; aganist the law of that state either the freedom of religion or the} separation of church and state. Perhaps not. But it does contra- vene something else quite as essen- tial. That is freedom of teaching. Human progress is impossible if nate. Unless the outposts of knowl- edge are free, other learning soon ceases to be knowledge or truth. Freedom of learning and teaching Most of the knowledge and prog- Often these passions, desires and motions are not in harmony with each other, and often one has to be smothered for the sake of another. But there was nobody there but fat ‘The Muffin Man was counting out her change and the cash drawer wa3 open. “That comes to two shillings six By Chester H. Rowell “Reading, writing and arithmetic,” of course. | thinks with his memory knows that, without thinking, Are the “three r’s” much different? Reading? Once it CONFLICT OF EMOTIONS is Of An Education? GEORGE D. MANN ie x % = Publisher the opinion of The Tribune. hey : : a our fenders may ve tone sides || “Back to the essentials” is the newest school slogan, in Foreign Representatives ping lacus a reece reaction against the “fads.” But what are the essentials? the day. Anyone who ith something ‘else than mem- ory. We remember that reading was once the key to knowl- ‘edge, writing to expression and arithmetic to business, that Latin was once the key } E ( L ates for place will have to. enlightenment. So the tradition-minded still make it a | filed nth ry ima ii i i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or ee 2 Lae uot Ae Be sity the center of all. higher education, five generations after it not already open. A es ; A , {the task of selecting a Mayor, was the only means of receiving information beyond the ee republication of special dispatches herein Geico nee Gorn afer ane small circle of personal contact. Now the radio threatens to " {important than this, it is setting {make hearing words as important as seeing them. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Gist Wi al choosing ie ae sehr trted ke talk to a dictaphone, and your stenog- i SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE eae igaat jeountliveeverenea Arithmetic? A cheap machine does it better. Reading, writing and arithmetic were never of value in themselves. They were merely means to other ends. Now there are other ‘means to those ends, and there are more ends. ture will doubtless still need to -know, among other things, how to read. Writing and arith- ful class. Tennessee re-establishes the Inquisition It is now for any teacher, even in the universities, to*teach evolution. The governor explains that this law does not contravene tory. What was the matter with the rest? One generation is as in- telligent as another. Why does one learn much, and the others nothing? A papyrus has just been decj- : ' Se Saati ip ‘ - any other authority than knowledge| phered in Egypt which shows a tendom has become probably its most significant holiday.) Thanks partly to the great and itself can impose its dictation on the| knowledge of medicine such as. thy For the Christian Church Easter commemorates the resur-| growing disparity in the popula- alte SACU Vet Pree oral dp eebce sen btanaluntcrtturee 3 s os nae lleGHaR et (tier swaric favaee fait ruth: en Christianity imposed] thousand years. Priestly orthodoxy rection of its Savior, and signifies the renewal of the hope HErEY Cho the Ta erecee ca aul that for a thousand years, Christen-| stagnated the promulgation of that and promise of humanity after a season of despair and doubt. Rondeevative: <vetsih MinneSpOls dom stagnated. _.. | knowledge. And so the Easter holiday for us today has a chain of ren dal 3 RAGA ERA _ Because Mohammedanism still] Aristotle, a few centuries later, foviuliassociati With the sloughi ff of the/desthvand has tore several (years neuer ted! imposes it, Mohammedanism stag-| laid the foundations of both science joyful associations. With the sloughing off of the death and {cal Coune.. This hi ) tui Gu nates. and philosophy. His successers were decay of winter nature garnishes her world in a glorious oe in neh, Ba , aie politics: were fosmpore i a our patererted in they puoeanhy, and rai olor a . ane eave . ; has led to public extravagance er-patriots are trying to do in| carried it on usefully for over two( rainbow of color. Easter means the advent of tulips and] with’ iis. inevitable. coroll: y of history and our reactionaries in eco-| thousand years. They were not in. daffodils, Easter lilies and hyacinths. higher taxes; for anotaer it jas nomics, free government would stag-| terested in ‘the science, and i stopved where Aristotle had left it until almost yesterday. For a thousand years after Roman freedom ceased, AHatel : fl inde fs : wards aes is the foundation of all other free-| free, and the world dienecd: ceabinn, at in no way so much as in dress can man, or woman| ‘The present Auditorium situa- ra cma a _|dom. If scholars in Tennessee are| Then, in one or two generations, it mostly now, due to the eccentricities of sartorial conventions, | tion Is a eta i etony o’ lausthers youncouli mavenaoHenseate Tequired to conceal from students) woke up, and the miracle of thes express rejoicing and festivity. Easter without its efflor | (oistes. Giving no heed to the | thing to help him ( me T, T aceolcauwilliiecvat Tennessee © Pane tga rae eettihe alter: escence of bonnets and gowns, would be as sombrely unsea-|extra burden heaped up for the out He Gur Se hedge bulging oe he Qn le ee And if the young people of Ten-| ered that physical things were worth sonal as a flowerless, musicless, churchless day. __,__ {taxpayers to: carry,/ it loads the! man and: woman ride up in a ms:| oe ee HOIED TER I) Gd TG ie knowing, and the ‘physical conditions For music and church services are the formal recognition | Project with wage scales awo0Ve | shine, ‘They are well dressed, Why | L————— money con elieons\: e ife were revolutionized more in eet . 4. {What any private concern would] do they live in t qualid dist#ict? century investigation, they will not|two generations than they had been of the day of rejoicing, and one should not miss them. The |jaye to pay. At first it sought per |The Kast Side is full of anachron-| 1 #4! EGR SERN 3 XDNEX. (CAR. Jam going to have a-baby. Dick is be twentieth century people. in twenty thousand years, ial servi q ya f churches for eo aiBte Aventhainulidineieneet: Nba EVER GANT Gul “|10N TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCC quite crazy about the idea, Men al- en thought is free and knowl- special services announced by all of the churches for tomor (Sebcaly i Hc nes pn Pen i a Oe under. | eave ; ou know. They seem to] WHEN THOUGHT IS FREE edge is regarded as worth while, the row are an attractive invitation to everyone to join in the ed on the day labor an, despite | rane te Eira York youll tind] , Your letter quite mysterious, You ane desire to perpetuste| KNOWLEDGE LEAPS FORWARD. | world leaps forward. At other times, he cer y that thiy would a v ; i | 8 it stands stillf or worse. The Ten- from 25 to 50 per cent to the tatal JAMES W. DEAN, | “illo you have been up to now, I] terity. I-don't think ft ever enters| tess of the world have been due ito | nessee Legislature would, if it could, —. —— cost, Balked in this scheme ‘by the wish namesake was a their minds that they may perpetu-!@ very few generations of its his-|ireturn us to the stagnant. ages. CIRCUS stout resistance of Mayor Leach, ne zr about her aes ate their little idiosyncrasies and FABLE ae ‘ es yi ere «it now seeks to bring about the ve over the last of the week. | vices as well. ‘S ON HEALTH. There is a banker who visits the circus every time it|<ne result by cunningly restrict- io), Of myself, however, I am not so comes to town. letter From Beatrice Summers (o} sure that I am happy over this- new youngsters of 10. on elty growth. Certain manutac we have exchange ang eame out here I came into! — «qp i TO ; F 7 + : " tur who ha ecently investl a ADaabltenealiethes (a ae ety . mot, “Every human being js a_ pot Sometimes thi. moth Some folks might say this man’s bank would not be|yitea Minneapolls e auloantion for » eee wnethe Nuen el eligncae chy tenner have boiling with desires, passions, lusts, | raging dies fae tees best to do business with, that the banker is too “flighty.” |new plants, have gone elsewhere a sn't matter, how-| realized the point where I have claws ebay aenteanseeene easiest thing to do, and in the at- But it’s this man’s ability to get a thrill out of a circus that ren ae x:situation, was report | we .ometimes consider the world sresl “ake ne ae el reeling Gna ae ae rene ey mental hygiene authority. tempt. one often assumes an outward Sees) Be cea ty . 5 aR D ic not caring. is Die wille Anis 4 cop, S, a a Ss, and some] one’s innermos' elings. i For circuses really appeal to the imagination only. There its reputation and its desirability nouscaniig eae ilies will peabebly sounds the person does not recognize and Mhns-it is that some of the most is nothing remarkable about them except what’s in the mind | by setecting the right men for Al sing so fast in Chi- Leslie. Has” \eounded te me wher you told me} conigs: them.” apparently puritanical and pious men and women do things their acquaintances would not — imagine them doing. And often this conflict of emotions 4 ea a euler j]] | tive voters to begin serutinizin: * - - | berculosis and only those proved to tion now in preparation, that the whole civilized world will iho lela of nominees fon thaun |. sine: eoverneu ot Ned ork aees al Mrs, ‘Spratt with a market basket. | be free from it are purchased. They come to her, not for antiques, but for modern art in house-| 3, fiasenoneltackearlvato whité shirt with red flowers on it,| enough money to last a month at a aqbesmacsuisked: ont: dozen doughs are then kept under close observa- hold decoration. i ' about ‘rescuing our City Govern-|but governors are seldom arrested. | summer resort. ADVENTURE OF || 204 four cream puffs and her basket evan realt ie placed on the operat- Perhaps not too many tears will be shed at scrapping |ment from ractcal domination was just about full. ing table, in turn, and the abdomen adjacent to the front leg is shaved clean. No incisions whatever are made; the skin is scratched with the right kind of cons2rvatives must to someone ele. You see, I remem-|am one of those mother-woman whol * "pus an illici ‘ ? t : na 4 i it forbidd f " : meran alieniprainsywauldinothavejvisioned: bo elected. In the present Council] «things are upside down" says a[ber you co che of the avast and lare always unhapny unless they lave gg tidy CoNMUeREAE Cee hapaake oti Hol eoiee eek te et ioe re ee S aa aes here are radicals and 12 so-]| London scientist, en we won't sit| happiest of sirls could thinkya baby in their arms, On the con- to b igi j i There are too many people who declare the circuses |oiiica conservatives, If the latter|on any movie seats in our spring | of You as havibg children of your| trary, I look upon motherhood with | PUrPese, to be religious ‘or good, or | balanced, and society calls the per- aren’t as good as when they were young. Fact is, circuses} jad all been sound, able men, they | suit. own and I thought it very strange) the greutest of dread. In the first £ g aan mean te i nae en BOY ae is atu when. you adopted Little Jack. but} place I.am_ulmost sure that giving|~__... 0s are better. Their imagination only is not so good. ae ending ethan Hatsemeof| ‘Three men shot a general in Me--{ Mfter adopting him I’ thought it|birh to a child will kill me, You corner they came to the Muffin| with the truth that I feel it a duty 7 ir. radical colleague: : | peasants, e e aking it]> self to the pail er has: ¥ at 1 ea eile zens: of Nor akota _ ._ NEW PARIS FURNITURE eae with their radical colleagues. They | Peasants tried to vole, thinking st) was flesh of your flesh, The aching of a tooth has - been| said, “Hot Cross Buns For Sale.” | real facts. pie: ae Paris, it is reported, is about to start an anti-antiques | sold out the City’s velean for ensls sans ie now tara wondering what| known to drive me into convulsions. men nltsher Shaicl has a sweet] Herewith I send you photographs * : e. + : ee . own petty projects. Thats the 7, Trae 2 Mex. | Children like and what they do|T know it is silly but it is a physical] tooth—-he may be-here,” said Mister] of the stable in which thi 1 pnovement: JG plan Lo ae the fashion Se aDPAS: iL | kind of “conservatives” to keep out | ,..V ender te a Pee ene tes ‘lin the lives of husbands and wives| failing which FE cannot overcome,| Whizz. “Lets go in.” | . kept. Nothing coal Demape nen XV furniture and banish forever Victorian effects in Great | of the Council, vs permission to shvot the cap.| When they make their appearance| Even to think of great pain makes| ~So they all went into the Muffin| tary. Only healthy animals are Britain and America. France hopes, afer the Paris Exhibi-| it is none too early for conserva- : i on the scene me faint. Man’s Shop and looked around. used. They are first tested for tu- / | In New York | Fin Fakir ae ar MAInE Glog AEG GO edge of the knife but only suffi- *fashions from that center. Nobody, however, will object | In’ Germany, an opera will be) would like to ha h f the| IN THE MUFFIN MAN’S SHOP ‘Di ‘i ciently to remove the epidermis or -to taki look at the modern F ns Gamaihane.s ee >—_ | broadcast from radio station Koen-| cant : ee eeeree ON The next. place that Snitcher| gp nid eee ane hen iter Sfusch| acarf skin, but not so deep as to | ;to taking a look at the modern French furniture soon to be)” go ay qiseq ot | ipsusterhausen, Please remember siatan, "tke Gani, ‘eohe ‘WaiiGhes | around here anywhere, Mister Muffin] draw blood. The glycerined vaccine revealed to a waiting world. It may turn out to be tasteful, | pyoadway und the lichts and the| the name. Two dozen bottles of liquor were| Daddy Gander Town, at re a Wid surfers Mier sicue ge aces The virus so used is never passed through any monkey or any human being. It is derived from the cowpox from another calf. The Twins and Mister Whizz knew this because the white crow had told them, h had stolen their strong and comfortable. found in a famous singer's car, so news is|no wonder she has been singing. y can show movies in daylight, | but you can always hold hands in an lusual sights of the town I strolled \for several hours last might through jdark streets of districts I have not | visited in many months. “What's that? The bad little goblin who stole the Sand Man’s sleepy sand one time?” cried Mrs, Spratt. Further bad Germany they April is the month in which a ALL RIGHT Snitcher Snat “What has he been doing now?” Thi it i i ‘ 4 r ‘: hel cies i ‘i i itatement that it is “pus” (i.e. a 5 6 es A et Over into Hell’s Kitchen, supposed | 2uto. wise bride sets about improving her] aeroplane so they had to use magic.! “He's stolen the gold snuff’ box| «1°. °% pus” (i.e, , Miners, said Prime Minister Baldwin of Great Britain, | 3)‘ be the toughest section, in —— | beauty by selecting iply brides-| With magie shoes it is wonderful the| that belonged td the Fairy Queen’s| matter’) from abscesses on “hu- should get a colliery and run it themselves. New York. It was as quiet as Hills-| Rus nts to trade with us, but | maids. places one can get to by just wishing. uncle,” said Nancy. Bt) recently dead (of “emall: the whiskers raised in America pos” is absolutely untrue. Equally And now they have taken Baldwin at his word. Workers | ber. ©., at 10 o'clock at night, The} the | Whiskers | false jth a For about two minutes and a half.) “And he’s run off with my aero-| Untrue is it that the virus is takes ; 4 a a ETS. | tew, people on the streets were going Most things are « matter of cus-|they were there, right in Mrs. John’s| plane,” said Mister Whizz, Pde 1 of the Vauxhall colliery, in North Wales, have arranged with hee ras bed oer out Vi aieey i ——— tom. So, we ‘don’t know but it| apple orchard, not far from the|” “Tre Lord Mayor should be told iia ‘a, virulent case of human ! time. : The Prince of Wales has sturted| must be proper to snore in a Pull-| House-That-Jack-Bui at once!” cried the Muffin Man. smallpox: the management to conduct the business on their own. But there was no sign of Snitcher The ‘calf is then placed in a clean * i out on a 26.000-mile trip, this being | man, ran x The colliery owners lost about a hundred thousands dol- | 207 ofiicush, the Twenties und) ov cure sign of spring. ey ae Gall Suaten Voraninnernpiavad angiahatet icin evateteaeiin akon Tlie stall and ghows no sign of discom- 4 lars in the last four years and had decided to close the works, |itat of. many Spaniards. No life!) hink ihe Prine of Wates | A,bay tells us he hates school in| “We'll have to go around and ask! Muffin Man's Shop. fee nor oes 5 doxpcite 9p etite. but the 650 men and boys employed ther: di (7 eye | Me os _g They think the Prince of Wales’ spring. He sayé the exelamation| everybody if they have ‘seen him,”| And nobody saw the. person with | imal is ‘h gr sixth day the an- i Aare Weed ploy e made a pact by | ‘inthe upper Twenties between| is engaged to a Swedish princess, | points look like baseball bats to‘him.|'said Mister Whizz, “It is really most] the long nose shake a few grains of | 41" humanely slaughtered and :which it is to be carried on by a guaranty fund subscribed by | Eighth and Ninth avenues, dismal| but we don't. remarkable the way that scalawag| something out on to his hand and|‘"© Pure lymph is removed from the “the employes and the people of the district. It is the first experiment of its kind in Great Britain, one which, if it is successful, may affect the relationship of scapital and labor throughout Great Britain’s mining in- dustry. . RUBBER Trade wars are seldom exciting. No one—except a little known worker, far from your fireside—ever gets killed. No attleships are sunk. l But you are about to sit on the sidelines of one that will Thterest your pocketbook. “Firestone, Ford and Edison are planning a fight to, break “the British rubber monopoly by growing rubber in America. If they lose, auto tires, hot water bags, golf balls and what not will cost more. av DRAM Fifteen million Chinese face death from starvation as a result of crop failures, one reads in 10 lines of type. One man—Chapman—faces death for murder, one reads in 10 columns of type. * * Phe Chinese are 10,000 miles away. in our backyard. Chapman is almost BASEBALL s You have seen this editorial before. But it’s worth re- every year just before the baseball season opehs. i teen men run about a field. A hundred—ten thou- ! sand sit and watch. How much better it would be if only 18 ghen sat in the bleachers and the thousands played! sight, a pitiable sight. You shudder Jana walk away, still in doubt as rooming houses. Factory. girls, wait- ers, bus boys live there in cheerless rooms which rent from $4 to }6.a week. You see them standing on the stoops of the houses taking one last breath of fresh air before going in There’s a sweet-faced wistful girl in shoddy clothing, looking out on the dark world, What’s in her mind? What will fortune bring to her in the next ten years? I'd like to write a story about her. Across Twenty-third’ street, once the shopping district, now a row of dark buildings and little shops. Only a few stragglers on the street. -One wow of dwellings with upper bal- conies, one with shutters, a rare sight here. Madison Square Garden and men sitting under electric lights reading want ads in the papers. Some of, them will sit there all night, waiting for morning when they will start to ‘hunt for a job, O. Henry used to sit there, acquiring color for his stories. Into a different world, once across Madison avenue. Strange furtive people. I watch two men, one with a face like a hawk, hurrying along, glancing back often, {[ see them walk around a block, Why? There goes a dope fiend. And there a sodden drunk. Prowlers in the gare shadows of the elevated struc- ure. In the end’of the Sabbath, as ward the first day.of the week, sepulchre, Here comes a man in_ tattered frock coat, a derby pushed down on his ears and his head pushed down in his coat. Not a button on his shirt and his undershirt’ black with dirt. And they say we're all brothers un- der the skin! A drunken blind man kicked out of a lodging house. You offer to help him and he curses ~ow. A frightful his raiment was white as snow. Doheny has sold some oil wells.| ne : Got $38,000,000 for them, ‘That's | (Copyright, 1925, NEA, Service, Inc.) Magdalene and the other Mary to see the And, behold, there was a great earth- quake: for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon it. His countenance was like lightning and Bnyvtwo lawn mowers, one for the ighbors, it began to- came Mary Come, see the ean hide himself.” They walked down Pippin Hill and the then along Broom Street, and on And for fear of him the keepers did shake. and became as dead men. t And, the angel answered and said unto the women, Fear not ye; for-I know that we seek Jesus, which was crucified. He is not here: for he is risen, as. he said. place where the Lord lay.’ And go quickly and tell his disciples that he is risen from the dead: and, behold, he goeth forth before you into Gallilee; there shall ye see him: lo, I have told you. blow it through the doorway. Instantly the Muffin Man went, “Achoo!” go hard that all the money flew out of his cash. drawer and rolled out of his:door and down the street. And Mrs, Spratt went, “Achoo! Achoo!” so hard that everyone of her doughnuts and buns and cream puffs flew out of the window and onto Mrs. Tweedle's roof. And Nancy and Nick and Mister Whizz went “Achoo! Achoo! | Achoo!” so hard that the person with the long nose went flying out the back door and turned three somersaults. And some of the magic snuff spilled out of his snuff box (for, of course, you have guessed that. it was Snitch- er Snatch) and the wind blew it all over Daddy Gander Town, Then the (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc,) People’s Forum _ | ——_—____-—___——_+ To the Editor of Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. D. Dear Sir: f Mr.‘ Wallace Campbell, some, time ago, made an address before the forth Dakota Senate Committee on ‘Compulsory Vaccination, in strenu- ous opposition to such a proposal, It dress were merely ‘an ex- pression of his.own opinion, 1 should not, of course, rely to it at all. How- ever, as it was delivered before the Senate Committee, it deserves refu- tation, because on their decision, ‘| fun began. \d the health and li + Fens of North Dakotg. os “ne tt The statements as tothe method of obtaining pure .lym for vac-: #0 used vaccinated surface and mixed with a glycerine-water solution, resulting in & pure cowpox, vaccine virus, free from any noxious germs. Bacteriological tests and animal tests of this lymph, under the strict ‘s regulations, prescribed by the Unit- ed States Public Health Service, es- tablish the purity of the lymph. “Believers in medical freedom,” says Mr. Campbell, “do not desire to coerce any one.” This is not true. ghey desire Spe whole com- les to suffer from disgusting of di hey. wah to compe! of y times as many thous- ands. No one man should be allowed to kill and mutilate a tenth the Population of any city, as the Poll- man porter did in Montreal, as .I have pointed out in a Paper, which {enclose with this for you. The right to health and happiness of the whole community must pre- vail over the opinion, especially the unjustified opinion of the individual cltizen, just as Mr. Campbell is com- polled ta: obey the traffic regulations r cars to’ prevent hi r killing or maiming’ ed as W. W. KEEN’ + Jefferson Medical College, ‘ j Philadelphi x —___® ‘i ese stations if you don’t want. the oreniae dish of ‘pte Sos; liad g ‘(338 Met.) 8:80 E, ian program; 9: De Porslenthnes KGO (361 Met.) 8 P. T.—Mozert’s The. Marriage of. Figaro.” Tune in oj

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