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i "i 4 The Bismarck Tribune Ap independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) +..dPablished by the Bismarck Tribune Compary. Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘as sécond class mai) matter. George D. Mann .. . President and Publisher bscription Kates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state. outside Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota $7.20 7.20 5.00 Weekly by mail, in state, per year sees Weekly by mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail, outs’*- of North Dako.a, Member Audit Bureau cf Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | not otherwise credited in this newspaper and lsc the| local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All | jiving in a dizzy sort of world a few decades hence. rights of republication of all other matter heretr are also reserved. (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON TR hr ah acne ne REED Bismarck’s Great Baseball Chance ‘The local baseball problem seems to have been solved in principle by the Association of Commerce end, if the service clubs will join in the prop: organization in cooperation with public of the twin cities will accord its suppoi tical success of the sport here next summer . the prac- plan, if not this particular one. Under the plan worked out by the association's base-, ver stepping outside of the super-skyscraper in which hej pall representatives, W. S. Ayers, John Fleck, John A.| Larson and Frank Murphy, baseball will be something more than baseball here this summer.. The sport is to be conducted on the plane of welfare work among the} young, to be made the means of training for healthy | manly boys and future good citizens. This is a new form of the national sport. Heretofore the element of rivalry has predominated in the seasonal} contests between the towns and cities of the state, just as) it has in the big major leagues. The aim has been to supply entertainment to the commiinities, to inspire local pride, if possible to excel the other fellow. If these ob- Jectives succeeded, they received a sort of boisterous exaltation and the net result was the memory of triumphs, but nothing above the mere plane of sport. | ‘The season ended in a process of evaporation. Especial- ly when the avaricious dream of a championship failed to materialize and the inevitable mid son slump had buried interest and made attendance a tragedy. By this year’s plan to make baseball the cornerstone | of -welfare work among the boys and the awakening, akin | buildings you want in your city. to the scout movement. of those attributes of personality | which are the elements of good citizenship, baseball here should be divested of its old failures and a quickening interest similar to that which prevails in the areas of the big leagues. | :| In some respects the breed is improving: Not so The committee has let it be known tha for the success of this coming season on its plan to sign ‘a good manager and to bring eastern college boys here to form the local teams of Bismarc and Mandan. These will not, only play as the teams of the two cities, between themselves and with rival cities of the state, but thi members cach will exercise the role of coach to th’ junior teams of the cities—those sponsored by the Amer- ican Legion as a boys league in the two cities. Of these there are to be possibly four teams here and three in Mandan. This 1s a plan which should appeal to the se it is dey tails-still are to be worked out. each appoint a committee to enter into the developm: of ihe idea with the Association of C reo comm! For the fans the task will be to assure ihe financial; success of theandertaking. The tental | association committee has been to sell ti good for the season of 25 games. With tl other funds in the association budset, it is belic sible..to put on a successful season in the twin cities | hére. The committee is looking forward to c is with the leading cities of the state as part of the stimulus needed to make the plan a go. The whole projtct is bound iee“clubs and the public will ta! rd it, The wel: fare element ought to appeal to the clubs. All of thi are sponsoring in one way or the other a form of bo work, largely of a specializing character. Here is the opportunity for a broader spons« . Not all boys ar: interested or can possibly find the opportunity to be, in 4-H club work, but all boys are interested in spo especially baseball. This is a fac as the means of cultivating per: the team work baseball provides. In sociation plan means that good, clean sport will be pro-| vided Bismarck this summer if it gocs through. Now! is the time for action if it is to be adopted and made a} success. The word of the service clubs is awaited as the next step. at $10 each, and | i rse the st . The Elusive Riddle of Life A German scientist not long ago succeeded in mat:- ing, in his laboratory, the substance that doctors cail the! “respiration ferment”—the red part of the human blood corpuscle that carries oxygen from the lungs to the body cells. Thus one more thing that men had always thought only nature could produce has been manufactured by man. And the achievement leads Dr. Paul R. Heyl, physicist of the United Statics Bureau of Standards. to say: ~The body is after all simply a physical and chemical} laboratory. There is no reason why we cannot under- stand it all some day. We are getting nearer all the time . . . . I am quite satisfied that eventually we shati come to a solution of the mystery of life. Then we shall understand all the life processes as well as we now know the burning of a lump.of coal.” r ‘This is-rather a large order. Science, However, has 2} wey of making good on its wildest predictions. It per- forms miracles as casually as a conjurer takes white rab-| bits out of a plug hat. It has taken it for granted that! novhihg on carth is impossible, and at times it makes it lock @ if this were no idle boast. “Nevertheless, in this case we are fustificd in being ex- tremely skeptical. The mystery of life is not going to hb zolved quite 9s easily as our scientists imagine. In fact, | one , Gan never’ be solved. an discover what makes the wheels go around, perhaps. It can tellus what the chemical reactions are | in “that distinguish living tissue from dead tissue. But al- ‘of, test tubes and microscopes. life is more than a matter of eating and sleeping ind chemical laboratory, as Dr. Hey! says; but’ the body net everything. The body is very often a poor sort of p, ut it-can house s spirit, an active intelligence, that lose to divinity, t.00 | found and magnificent mysteries to the end of time. |new buildings that tower over anything yet scen, like (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Jack's beanstalk; and the architects are telling us that al evolved by the| Will come stores for a dozen floors or more; and below | ndan and if the| these, all the way to the ground, offices. y .be as- | to pass his entire life in one building. He could be born. | sured. It at least is a starting point to work out some | £0 through childhood, get his schooling, indulge in all } man would want to live in it? And what man, living inj he invested with | ‘rated still further, but to be spread out. We need better | tional proposals ever sponsored by a group of any in- thought of the | mended for their vision in sponsoring this forward move- ! aid of agricultural Smith-Hughes high schools. Two of ; them are now in existence in North Dakota, one at Park | of the larger group who will leave school forever after to the end of time, there is likely be an unknown @ THE cliemical laboratory,” riddled with disease as it was, might be casy for science to figure out; but what tech. nican will pin down the clement that produced the Fifth Symphony? Steinmetz’s body, likewise, crippled and distorted, ough | not to be a hard nut for the physicist to crack; but how about the spirit within, that was able to snatch thunder- bolts out of the sky and chain them in a little workshop? We are more complex than science supposes. Suppose we do gain an understanding of “all the life processes”: what then? The only important things in this world | j are the things that go beyond life. And they will be pro- The Horrors of the Skyscraper There is something very frightening about the pictures | of the city of the future which our architects are paint- | ing for us these days. ‘The skyscraper seems to have gone to the architect's heads. Magnificent to look upon, they seem to be mak- ing it into a be-all and end-all of existence—and if their nt guesses are right our children are going to b> New York realtors, in blind enthusiasm, are pushing up! |the buildings of the future will make even these seem Foreign Representatives | | | small and insignificant, i SMALH, SPENCER & LEVINGS i We shall have buildings of 150 stories, they tell us, cach | of which will house some 20,000 people. The upper 40 or 50 floors will contain, apartments—“homes,” the | boosters dare to call them. Under these, for a dozen or | more floors, will be schools, colleges, recreation halls, movie theaters, indoor golf links, restaurants, churches, {swimming pools and other modern conveniences. Then: | Thus it will be possible for an American 50 years hence | kinds of recreation and perform all of his work without | came into existence. And if you have ever heard of | anything more horrible than this, now is the time to| speak up. a breath-taking spectacle, to be sure. But what sane) | it, could stay sane very long? The skyscraper represents a triumph of science. The mere fact that we are able to crect such buildings speaks volumes for our technical skill. Putting up the Hanging Gardens of Babylon was an infant’s job compared to putting up the Woolworth building. But there is one thing more important than knowing how to build skyscrapers—and that is knowing when to build them. It is very doubtful that all of our grea: towers have increased human happiness in the least. Consider the unspeakable crowding of New York's sub- ways, Chicago's clevateds or any large city’s surface cars during the rush hour, reflect that this crowding is born of the skyscraper, and ask yourself how many 150-story Our one hope is the probability that these architects’ aze | ‘mistaken. The modern city needs, not to be concen- | rapid transit facilities, not taller buildings, | ; many of the younger clement this winter are pasting their hair into position. | Editorial Comment Schools for Farm Children (Griggs County Sentinel Courier) One of the most far-sighted and far-reaching educa- dividuals in the state comes from two groups of Farm Union members, one embodied in resolutions adopted by the county convention in Williams county and the other ‘he state convention recently held at Bismarck, when ‘ged the establishment of county agricultural and ing schools. The action of these two Farm Union groups is in line with the trend in educational circles | for more practical training, and they are to be com- ment as a body. It marks them as men of broad vision. The ultimate aim of education is, or should be, the better fitting of the student to carry on his life work. To better fulfill that aim, schools have been passing nhrough a period of evolution in which we have witnessed | & a departure from the old stereotyped, impractical courses to teaching which enables the young men and women to leave the school room with better understanding of the practical and theoretical problems of their trade or pro- fession which they are to follow in their future life. To some extent, this evolution has ehanged the course { study in local high schools, but as yet, it is only be- ning. hh vear sees an increased enrollment in North Da- kota high schools of rural children, who come to the city to attend high school as the finishing of their education, or else to prepare them for higher education. With the at mejority, high school is the completion of their schooling. Following it, they return to the farm, but little better equipped to carry on their work than when they entered. Practical education fitted to the needs of the scores of cighth grade graduates who yearly leave the rural schools of this and other North Dakota counties is the impending step in educational circles, and the state and federal government are a step ahead of counties in pre- paring for it by having available appropriations for the River and the other at Maddock, where both are writing educational history. The Sentinel-Courier has no intention to criticize the local high schools or the courses of study which they offer to students today. As college preparatory courses, they leave little to be desired and Griggs county has every reason to be proud of the accomplishments of the local institution. The demand of the day is becoming more and more for a better and more practical training for the students vhose schooling ceases with graduation from high school, however. In this class is included a preponderant num- ber of farm children, in whose education the farm peo- ple themselves should take the initiative. In our ideal educational institution 101 of the 170 students enrolled in the high school are tuition-paying students, and with few exceptions all come from the farms of the vicinity. Only a small percentage will pursue education after grad- uation from the local school. The present high school course is particularly designed to prepare these young people for their advanced educa- tion. while little consideration is given to the actual needs their graduation here. In the face of the preponderance of farm childrcA at- tending the local school, and these figures can no doubt be taken as general over the state, it is not unreasonable The county agricultural and training school is un- doubtedly the. solution of the problem and the Farm Union groups who have called attention to the need have |’ undoubtedly loosed a line of thinking which. will even- tually mean improvement in educational methods where ight assume that it is a mystery which, by its very -#27™ children are involved. And that affects students in » Manual training, work, @ complete agricultural course, Ly at algebraic X, that-miay remain forever out | academic course, for those who Education and the cM et PCAN OAT HAH BISMARCK A city filled with skyscrapers of that kind would he o Awe Now C'MON You To a GRAB PUMP- HANDLES AN* MAKE UP luo iF rT WASN'T FoR FISHER'S GARAGE CATCHING aN, FIRE TH’ BOTH OF You WOULD STILL BE TRYING To GET A HEADLOCK an, EACH OTHER'S WRIST, WW YOUR RASSLIN” MATCH # ae So, WE'LL CALL ) “TH? ConTesT A DRAW! C'MON, SHAKE ! RY. WELL. =THEN,- DRAW (1 IS tae a NEVER-THE- LESS SAKE + \F IT WASNT} FOR “THE INTERRUPTION, BY “HAT FIRE, IT WouLp HAve SURELY SQuARED NOUR SHOULDERS To THE MAT IN DEFEAT! TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1980 “BREAKS BY THAT FIRE, BECAUSE [ WAS sust cetnne “TH” LEVERAGE To SACK You UKE LAUNDRY AN? “THROW Nou IN A BARBS | @ Doctors are trying to isolate the germ of parrot fever. We can give them the names of several women who have had a * = ‘The Congressional Record has no regular columnist, but we recommend such @ department be conducted by Senator Tydings who said: “Let him Ra © 1930 BEGIN HERE TODAY JUNITH CAMERON, ¢ Or New York publishing bbed e laugh: NY, 18, JUNIOR, 16, aspen time away from hom Juditt appoinimen' yOunE man known only Nw” KATHRYN TUPPER, fice executive, han nequired 2 the xirl "bees beside him a quick glance. electric signal. “What is it, Judith?” You've been so wonderful. know how to say it.” dear, mind?” stillness! frankly. misery. “Oh, it’s NOT that, Arthur! asked—” pression changed. He wai bright and smiling again. “So that’s it! child, you. it this instant. cal 1" stand!” dircetly. than you think. post of trust has ever failed, one of them! tions. tions—I want character. have known you were the girl about yourself, anything that hurts you. isn't any past, dear. ture. Our future!” eee starry with teardrops. kerebiet to her cheek. wonderful.” une of | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER V i \dpande? KNIGHT gave the girl Their car had halted in the teem- ing Fifth avenue traffic. Limou- sines, roadsters, a great green bus and several smart-looking delivery cars crowded about, cach ready to spring at the flash of the green “What do you mean?” he asked in a still, faraway sounding voice. “I mean—-oh, you're so good! T don’t The blue eyes turned away from him, Her cheeks looked very pale. “Are you trying to tell me, my that you’ve—changed your How quiet he seemed, but what repressed fervor spoke through that Now the girl's eyes met Knight's In their sapphire depths he read appeal, embarrassment and It's not that. But you don’t know any- thing about me. You've never even With a sigh, as though the bur- den of years had been lifted from his shoulders, Arthur Knight's ex- gay. You poor, foolish Stop it, Judith. Stop No more theatri- “But, Arthur, you don’t under- Immediately the man sobered. He placed a large masculine hand over the girl’s small one (the one wear- ing the diamond) and met her gaze “I understand,” he said, “better Judith, there is one thing of which I have prided myself all these years I have been with Hunter Brothers. Not one man or woman whom I selected for a Not Do you know why?| moon. “Because when men come to me seeking employment I look into their faces and make my decisions. They come bringing recommenda. I don't want recommenda- Do you know, Judith, that from the very first day I saw your lovely eyes I had .been-seoking? -Seeking with- out even knowing it. Why, beloved —there’s nothing you can tell me Don't talk about There It’s all fu- 3 T= blue eyes were starry. now, “Oh, Arthur, I think you're— nd you're going to be happy who is without gin among you cast the first stone.” xe * A tourist who recently returned from Europe protests at the tyranny of the customs officers. It’s the quaint old American customs. zs Don't raise your boy to be a presi- dent or a ball player. Bring him up to drive a taxicab and write his per- sonal story for the magazines. With a little choking laugh the sirl nodded. “I want—oh, I want so much to make you happy!” she said. It was all over. Not once again did Judith Cameron attempt to con- fide to her fiance affairs which trou- bled her. Not onve again did Knight refer to this conversation, but for him, as for many another husbe.nd, the day was to come when he should curse memory and curse himself for a fool. Perhaps it was the reaction which made the girl and her com- panion very gay that evening. Knight ordered a magnificent re- Past and over it they made non- sensical jokes and then serious plans. ° Arthur said he could arrange for six weeks’ absence from New York. It was too bad their trip couldn't be longer. It might be arranged, of course, by waiting until after Christmas, Neither of them wanted to do that. “Six “weeks,” said Judith, really a long time.” He said eloquently that six weeks with her would pass like a dream. “You say things so beautifully,” Judith told him. “You DO them that way.” They talked about their honey- Arthur Knight enumerated possibilities—Cuba, South America, Bermuda, a quick trip to Europe, California perhaps, or Canada. Judith’s imagination flew as he talked. Her eyes narrowed until the long lashes almost met. Her glance was far, far away of: dis- tant shores. 1] “I've never been on a ship,” she told him. “Nothing like it!” “We could run down and see Tony iu Italy,” Knight added as an afterthought. “is go to Europe?” “Why, of course not, dear. It's for you to chose.” 2 ee Judith touched a wisp of hand- s° they settled upon Bermuda, He told her that Bermuda skies were bluer even than those of the Mediterranean. He described the coral beach, the little pink and white cottages perched on rocky h®BRom AY NEA Service Inc. ‘We ate 189,500 tons of spinach dur- ing the last year, according to sta- tistics. We hope that ends that. ze ® The last thing you want—and get —in this life is an obituary. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) Among gypsies, children born on | Christmas day are said to have the power of divination and ability to avert the “evil eye.” Si eivecy wo Gn ad TAPEWORMS When a patient realizes that he Possesses.a tapeworm, he becomes greatly worried, even though the tape- worm is usually easily removed. Sometimes people are unaware that they have these parasites, as there may be no symptoms. Or there may be abdominal pains, diarrhea with neusea, and in some rare Cases, anemia. The patient is often quite hungry and after eating a good meal all of the symptoms vanish. The tapeworm is known to be pres- ent at any age, from children to old people. The beef tapeworm is most usually found in North America, It may measure from fifteen to eighteen feet, or longer. The tapeworms live, in the intestines of their hosts. They are flat and without any digestive organs, taking their nourishment by S Dr Frank Mc eumES the ova the shells are digested in hi. stomach and he becomes infested with the worms or larvae and is said to be measled. ‘The tapeworm posit method of diagnosing tively is to find these segments in the feces. There are sev- eral vegetables remedies for tape- worm, such as the extract of male fern, Ld pumpkin seed, and egranat root, Particles on similar subjects which I have prepared for free distribution. adsorption through their skin, They! Please send 2c stamp for each ar- are formed of a head which may or | ticle you desire. This is to partially may not have hooks and sucking disks to enable them to fasten them- selves. with the pork tapeworm, then it is called “armed.” If it is without hooks, as with the beef tapeworm, then it is called “unarmed.” The y for preparation and post L eeatestinal Worms——; Amotbic If the head is hooked. as} Dysentery—. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (Dead T teeth) Question: Mrs. K, G. asks: “Can head of the beef tapeworm is larger | a dead tooth cause neuritis or rheu- than the pork tapeworm. To the| matism if the tooth shows no pus-bag head is attached a small neck, and | in the X-ray picture?” to it is affixed a chain of segments. Answer: It is possible to develop Each segment contains both the male | neuritis or rheumatism from abscess- and female organs. ‘The head is} ed teeth. X-rays cannot be depend- capable of forming new segments so|ed upon as ® positive diagnosis of that the length of the chain of seg- | pus-pockets at the roots of the teeth. ments is constantly increasing. However they are a very valuable aid, ‘The pork tapeworm is more often | and I would advise patients to have found in Europe and Asia than in| their tecth X-rayed about every six America. twelve feet, or longer. round and no larger than a big pin- head. The head is attached to a throat, and from the throat the long! diet that you recommend, line of segiments begin. This worm takes from three to three and a half months to develop. When it has reached the adult stage, the segments break off. In each segment are found thousands of ova, and each ovum has an outer shell and inside of the shell an embryo worm. If a hog consumes AICS Y LAURA LOU BROOKMAN He said, clogitently, that six weekswith her would pass like a dream. islands. He told her they would sail in silver-winged boats in the moonlight and play in the surf in the sun, And they would visit the harbor where pirates’ treasure lics buried and Judith could pin habiscus blossoms in her hair. The wedding, they decided, should take place in 10 days. The marriage would be at nine o'clock and two hours later they would sail, Judith agreed, with excite- ment in her. eyes, that everything GATURDAY morning on the tenth she needed to do could be accom- plished in time, The subject of her trousseau arose, “You'll need fol-de-rols,” Knight said, “Bermuda’s an out-of-door Place, Lots of linen and cotton sport stuff and fancy dresses for evenings. Let's be quite sensible, I'm going to open accounts for you’ in the morning but youll want cash too, Of course the accounts will take care of the major purchases.” He handed her a check for $500. “You're much too good to m Judith. whispered. eee JURING the days that followed she shopped assiduously. Ju- dith Cameron knew good things and how to buy them. It was a de- light to her to pass by millinery salons where “our own reproduc: tions” were being sold to buy a black hat and another in beige with the names of their famous Parisian creators demurely stitched in the lining. Those hats, which looked like nothing in particular as the saleswoman held them up for in- spection, transformed Judith into & ‘sophisticated, worldly young “Would you—mind—if we didn’t} jin woman, And Judith was style-wise. She did not need lessons to slant an Agnes turban at precisely the right 1c. She bought a sleck and glowing black broadtail coat which seemed this purchase only after consulting Arthur, and hearifig his reassur- ‘ances that the tremendous price was not an extravagance. She bought ‘a soft tweed wrap with voluminous collar for ship wear and a clinging velvety sort of man- and Arthur Knight were married in the chapel of St. Thomas’. the quietest, most religious. of ser- vices, There were no attendants, no guests. Knight kissed his wife's Mps devotedly, then gave ber his, arm, “At last, dear!” he whispered. Judith barely echoed his words: “At last!” ‘They were served breakfast in a hotel patronized by royalty both of Europe and Hollywood, but all Ju- dith could do was nibble at her grapefruit. Arthur Knight sat feasting his eyes upon his bride. - ‘Was it maidenly timidity which caused Judith to hold back a bit as she clung to her hushand’ Their luggage was on the boat. They took a cab and rode across town to the docks. It was like a swift dream. Presently Arthur and Judith were walking up a gang: plank, beautiful big white liner, stopped by the rail, laughing, and waving as everyone else did. Strains of “The Star Spangled Banner” burst upon the air. Cheers rose. Hats and handkerchiefs be gan to wave, “We're moving,” Knight told the irl beside him. “Can Oe mation’ yqu notice Judith nodded. She tried to cover her confusion and laugh gaily, Her head dipped and she looked up. again, straight: into the utmost-in elegance. She made|slim youth with a mustache, a slouched cap pulled down on his. forehead. He was standing on the docks staring at her defiantly. Judith Knight reached for ber handkerchief. It was a bad omen weeping on her wedding day. tle edged with ermine for formal evenings. The cloak was black, de- signed to wear over her most splendid frock. The gown was of satin, cut and molded to her very figure. The extreme lowness of the back was an amazing contrast to the naive, youthfully simple bodice in front. The long swaying skirt gave Judith dignity, and @ single, spangled ornament added grace. of December Judith Cameron It was rm 2 finding themselves on a They ie eyes of a (To Be Continued) It mayebe from six to| months. Send for my special articles The head is} on rheumatism. (Coffee Substitute) Question: R. J. asks: “With the could I drink water from roasted barley that T use as a substitute for coffee?” Answer: The only drink that I recommend with meals is plain wa- ter, but the water from roasted bar- ley would be quite harmless if you do not use sugar and cream with it. (Normal Weight) Question: Mrs. B. writes: “I have been following your instructions for nearly @ month and have been suc- cessful in reducing my weight 15 Pounds. I do not know any normal weight and wish you would tell me through the columns. I am 25 years old, 5 feet, 8% inches tall.” Answer: A proper estimate of nor- mal weight must depehd not alone on the age and it, but upon temperament and type. Send me a Snapshot of yourself in a bathing . suit, and perhaps I can make a bet- ter guess of what your normal weight should be. (Copyright, 1930, by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) ne | Today Is the | a Anniversary of | $e y VERSAILLES CONFERENCE On Jan. 18, 1919, the Versailles peace conference formally openéd. Out of this meeting came the treaty of peace signed by representatives of the allied powers and Germany, marking the close of the World war. Versailles is a town in northern France, capital of the department of Seine-et-Oise, 12 miles southwest of Paris, It has been the scene of many other historic events, including the signing of the armistice between Great Britain and the United States in 1783, and was, for a/time, the cap- ital of France. Today also is the anniversary of the institution of the United States de- partments of commerce and labor, on Jan. 18, 1903. On Jan. 18, 1775, Georgia elected delegates to the Continental congress. On Jan. 18, 1782, Daniel Webster ‘was born. i ‘ f Quotations | o @ “The employer usually gets the em- ployes he deserves.”—Sir Walter Gil- bey. ee 8 “One should always learn to love Oneself, for that is the one life-long asia Me D’Annunsio. * “A critical attitude may be as fatuous as the self-adulation it rege! from.”—Waldo Frank. ss * “Jazz will endue just as leng as People hear it through their feet in- stead of their brains.”—John Philip s * & “Words are the only things that last forever."—Will Haslitt. VERY BUSY LADY London—Lady Studd, lady may- oress of London, is said to be the Empire's busiest woman. From 8:30 to 10 she is busy with correspon- dence. Then she begins a daily round of engagements whieh keep her busy until midnight, She sometimes ar- ranges ten different engagements in all parts of London for the same Ye