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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1931 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Independent Newspa THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) __ EGRET anor cnteria ted at fl ON Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second clas mai! matter. George D. Mann seseese President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable tn Advance Daily by carrier, per year .........008 Daily by mail per year dp Bismarck) Datiy by mail per year (in state, outside Bismarck) .... Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year ‘Weekly by mai) in state, three years . ‘Weekly by mail outside of Nortb Dakota, Der yea: .. te teeeeeevee ‘Weekl7 by mail in Canada. per year Member Andit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not credited in this per and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein All tights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Former! CHICAGO No Longer Self-Conscious No less an authority than Efrem Zimbalist asserts that America no longer need take a back seat for other nations | with regard to music, and the news will come to most | of us as something refreshing. For many years Americans have regarded themselves) as inferior, in some of the arts and letters, particularly! the field of music, to our European cousins. The great- st compositions have been regarded as those of the so- called old masters and, whether or not he liked the| works of Brahms or Liszt, the average American has tried to give the impression of true appreciation while listen- ing to their compositions. All this despite the fact that the process frequently pained him severely, if the truth were told. We have taken it so much for granted that the Euro- peans are superior in both composition and rendition that Mr. Zimbalist’s pronunciamento, “America leads the world in every form of musical activity,” is something of a pleasant surprise. Although a naturalized citizen, Zimbalist is not a na- tive American, having been born in Russia and educated under the foreign masters. He has lived abroad much of the time and has kept in close touch with musical developments in the leading centers of Europe. ‘We can believe him, therefore, when he asserts thai “We have left Germany far behind. We not only have the best orchestras and the best concertists, but we have men who write excellent music, Powell, Taylor, Gershwin and Goldmark, for example. “American jazz never has been so popular in Europe. | Europeans adore it, even those who make a pretense at despising it. They sneak off secretly to listen to it.” There are many persons in this country who regard “Let Me Call You Sweetheart,” as more typical of the spirit of the nation than “Yes, We Have No Bananas” but partisans of both American balladry and jazz may take equal pride in Zimbalist's inference that our infer- jority complex, insofar as music is concerned, is un- justified. A New Art in Fishing | Keeping wild fish wild is one of the fine points which makes the artificial raising of fish in most states of the country for restocking purposes a real art, accord- ing to the American Game association. With the hatching season in full sway in state fish) culture stations, Wisconsin is now importing 2,000,000 brook trout*eggs from the Rocky Mountain wilds of Mon- tana, where the young fish dine on mustang meat. The diet for baby fish in Montana has been mustang liver and meal, but faced with a shortage of that vigor- ous fare} the state is experimenting with other ingredi- ents. The mustang supply is fast decreasing because of canning factories which export the delicacy of mustang flesh to European countries. New Mexico, confronted by a depletion of the beef; liver supply—due to the human consumption of liver} since America went “vitamin conscious”. solved this problem by weaning the young fish from fhe liver menu; after the first few weeks and giving them straight horse meat. “Though reduction plants engaged in manufacturing chicken feed and dog food are making serious inroads into our horse supply also, we anticipate no serious pinch in this direction for a long time,” said E. L. Perry, secretary of the New Mexico department of fish and game. “Mother” fish kept in the rearing ponds are caught and stripped of their eggs during spawning season. The eggs, millions of them, are placed in glass jars, about 8,000 to the quart, and water at an even temperature runs through these constantly for from 90 to 120 days. The infant fish are returned to the pools and carefully reared to planting size. The pools are watched night and day, often lighted by “bomb” or flare lights, to guard against poachers and to attract insects. The End of a Legend One trouble with the world these days is that there re so many people who like to go about destroying all of our harmless and pleasant little illusions. { There is, for instance, Miss Beatrice Grimshaw, who declares—in her tecent book, “Isles of Adventure”—that there are no more cannibals in New Guinea. She qualifies it a little, of course. There are a few, *way back in the hills; but they are rather ashamed of it, and they are dying out anyhow, and nobody in New Guinea is in the slightest danger of being plopped into some cannibal chieftain’s dinner pot. Here, we submit, is a fine sample of subversive litera~ ture. If there are no cannibals in New Guinea, there should be some. At the very worst, nobody ought to come right out and reveal the uninspiring truth. The world is getting prosaic enough as it is. We have a right to, keep a few of the old traditions. The trouble really began several hundred years ago. When Columbus headed across the Atlantic and, instead of reaching China, bumped into a wild and sparsely settled continent, he killed a whole set of exciting tradi- tions. To be sure, he led to the creation of many new/ ones; for years thereafter people could dream of the golden city of Manoa, and the seven cities of Cibola, and that weird land in the northwest where men’s faces grew out of their chests, and tribes of fair-skinned, won- drously-beautiful Amazons ruled the country. But those legends, in their turn, faded and were no more; and by the time the twentieth century arrived the really stirring tales of distant lands were few indeed. stations | presented to him. Remember how it was? which one can let one’s imagination run wild, unchecked by any prosaic facts? You can count them on the fingers of one hand. The polar regions, the Gobi desert, the African interior, the islands of the Pacific—their mysteries are vanishing like snow under an April sun. ‘We know altogether too much as it is. If we must have more books describing these places, let them be written by talented and imaginative lars. Fond of Their School It is a little hard to believe that there are any school children, anywhere, who would not rejoice when theis schoolhouse burned down. Yet so reputable a magazine as The Nation assures us that this was the case recently when the Hessian Hills School, at Croton-on-Hudson. New York, burned down. If The Nation says so, it must be true. But it is a bit of a shock. Indeed, these children not only failed to rejoice at the \burning of their schoolhouse; they flocked around and offered to help rebuild it. They offered their pennies and nickels to the building fund. Groups of them pledged their allowances. In every way they showed that they sible. This seems to us to be as good a recommendation as and while we know nothing whatever about the place, we would like to hear more. A school that can make chil- dren go to their classes with joyous zest would be worth studying. Yet, when you stop to think about it, the wonder 1s; that all schools are not lke that, Surely the school suthorities have everything in their favor as far as the raw material is concerned. The youngster who trudges/ off to school for the first time begins his journey with | high hopes. He 1s eager to go. School is going to be! fine stuff. He presents himself, wide-eyed and expect- ant, ready to drink in the marvels that are to be On top of that, every child has an overwhelming thirst | for information—any and all kinds of it. There are} many, many things in this world about which he knows nothing, and most of them are fascinating. It is the job of the school teacher to feed him this information; and, considering the appetite the average youngster takes bed school with him, the job ought to be easy. But scmehow it isn’t. Somewhere along the line there is a slip-up. The child is not long in discovering that school work is chiefly drudgery. If the school and the child are both normal—representative, that is, of the; great average—the child soon entertains a lively hatred| for the place, and wants nothing so much as to be ever-/ lastingly free from it. Part of this, probably, is due to the fact that learning anything has its dill moments. To play the violin, for instance, is very gratifying; but before one can produce anything that even approximates pleasing music one must spend long hours at the most uninspiring sort of study and practice. The preliminary steps are bound to be more or less discomfiting. But is that all of it? Shouldn't it be possible for the school to be fascinating and enjoyable? This little story from the banks of the Hudson makes it seem 80, at any rate. Editorial Comment below show the trend of thought blished without regai ‘Terse or disagree with The Trib= Fditorials printed by other editors. to whether they agree or disagree une’s policies. Shaking Off the Other Sheep (The Northwestern Miller) If you ever watched ten thousand sheep being driven through a village street in Idaho, you saw a lot of violent action, but little progress. They eddied up every side alley, jumped over each other's neck, tripped over their own feet, and nearly strangled in the dust. The trouble with a shecp is that it insists on some other sheep doing its thinking. It is not what you would call self-reiiant. When danger threatens, sheep huddle together with heads toward the center, and bleat—the way the average motorist solves a traffic jam by honking. It 1s a curious fact that comparatively few people make much, if any, money out of business. THAT IS BECAUSE SHEEP PSYCHOLOGY GUIDES MOST BUSINESS MEN. The average business man feels lonely and lost if he isn’t churning in the dust with ten thou- sand other sheep—tremendously active, but going no- where. One of our basic industries is an example. Recently, a foreign competitor dumped a few hundred tons in this country at a low price. We could have absorbed this dumped stuff without a ripple. But one of our producers got panicky and jumped into the ditch. All the rest followed, of course. As a result, prices are below cost of gling and getting nowhere is all wet. We manufacturers are producing three hundred million dollars’ worth of goods and making no money. We are a bunch of sheep. OUR STUFF IS ALL ALIKE AND NOT ESPECIALLY GOOD, BECAUSE QUALITY AND CUT PRICES DON’T GO TOGETHER. Dealers bully us into selling below. cost and then can’t make any money themselves, be- cause most dealers are sheep also, Naturally, consumers don’t care what they buy, so long as the price is low. They are indifferent to poor quality, because no one has ever told them about high quality. No more for me. I will make our goods better than any one has ever dared to make them and I will tell every man, woman and | child in the country about them. The rest of these sheep can graze over the same barren pastures—me for the upper ranges where there is something to eat.” The Right to Vote (Grand Forks Herald) In support: of the petitions asking for the submission of a constitutional amendment to move the state capital from Bismarck to Jamestown it has been urged on sev- eral occasions that the signing of such a petition did not necessarily imply approval of the capital removal project, but merely recognition of the right of the people to express themselves on such an important subject. It was argued that refusal to sign would indicate a desire ; to prevent free expression of the popular will. A similar argument was made in the house at Bismarck by some members who declared themselves opposed to capital removal, but thought it only fair that the people should have an opportunity to vote on the subject. Therefore those members opposed the inclusion of the emergency clause in the capitol building bill in order that the sup- porters of removal might not be put to the trouble of obtaining as many as 30,000 signatures to the referendum | De We Want Just the actually wanted the school reopened as speedily as pos-/ could possibly be obtained for the teachers at this Loree | | | i | i | | WHAT YOU NEED IS AN OPERATION THAT WILL. THE Guse: Usual Remedy—Or a Permanent Cure This Time? Expert researchers, who can get and others. Theodore Roosevelt was you any information on any subject, are at your command, without charge to you. A two-cent stamp will bring you a personal answer to any in- Q—When did clnation houorary president. against the practice of vac- | smallpox begin? guiry of fact you may make. great service. Try it today. Make your inquiry easily read and easily understood, and address Bis- marck Tribune Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, Wash- ington, D. C. Q.—Wiere is the largest stecl cur- tain in the country W. D. A.—Variety says that the one used at Convention Hall, Atlantic City, is. Ti is 108 feet in width, and is a steel frame covered with asbestos cloth. Next is the one at the Alamac Temple in Los Angeles, covering 104 feet. Solid steel curtains are not generally used or required except in Chicago, where there is one 73 feet in width at the Granada Theatre. Q—At golf, are “winter rules” played only in the winter? J. B. C. Thou- |¥. R. sands of newspaper readers use this “A—It began about 1796. Before this time, many people were inocu- lated with the disease. Q—When was the first life insur- ance policy issued? N. G A—The earliest policy of which anything definite is known was is- sued in 1583 in London, insuring the life of William Gybbons for a twelve- month. This policy was underwrit- ten by 13 persons acting individually and the premium, was $80.00 aj thousand, ; Q.—What {is meant by the term | “liming” as generally used in refer- M. L. A—The term liming as generally used means the application to the soil of the element known to chem- ists as calcium in one of two forms ence to the improvement of soil? |. ible from damage. Usually, however, dating from 1101. A.—tThe expression, winter rules, is in a sense a misnomer, for a greens committee may post the sign, “Play Winter Rules” at any time when in the judgment of the committee it is advisable to require the improving of lies through the fairways in ordér to protect the course as much as pos- —either lime, or calcium ox magnesium mi playing winter rules comes in the| term lime. winter or early spring when ground conditions are at their worst. Q.—What does q. following a 1 Q.—What it the name given to the upper left-hand corner of the edi- torial page of a newspaper or other similar publication, where the sub- scription rates appear? A. A—It Is known as the A—It means whereby. . S. masthead. | Q—Should a flag be used as a table or desk cover for a speaker? cc. A—It is not considered respectful to use the American flag as a table roduction and will stay there for some time—for no | cover. 4 ” Feason at all. 4 iraces its origin ‘An advertiser follows an individual line of thinking} @Q-—where in England is the about as follows: “This industry in which I am strug-jchurch known as the “Round Church”? E. P. A.—You probably refer to Saint Sepulchre, a church in Cambridge. England, commonly called the Round Church. It is a Norman building 50 years old? F. Q—When was the Playground and}. A.—According Recreation Society of America formed? M. L. A—It_was organized in 1906 by Jacob Riis, Luther Halsey Gulick, lived to be fifty. age of fifty. calcium. commonly known as carbonate of burned lime of commerce. Carbonate legal notice mean? signifies megns the lawyer attaches his sig- nature and the reason whereby it is official is the fact that he is a notary appointed at a certain time, giving the expiration of his term of office. Q.—When was the New York Stock Exchange formed? J. E. N. A.+The present stock exchange who held daily meetings under a but- tonwood tree which stood at what is now 68 Wall Street, New York City. it was in 1792 that a formal organi- zetion was effected. Q—How many white men women out of 1,000 born live to be out of 1,500 white males born, 674! white females born, 698 lived to the According to an esti- carbonate, more oxide, the ordinary ixed with carbonate cf lime, as in dolomitic or magne- | Roo: sian limestone, and the mixed oxides resulting from burning such lime- stones are included also under the the abbreviation p. lawyer's name in a H. D.N. “per quod” and In this case it to a group of men and ET. to the 1920 census, Out of each 1,000] mate made in 1928, the rate had risen to 736 for men and 774 for women. The 1930 census figures for these percentages are not yet com- pleted. Q—What is the farthest known star from the earth? J. D. S. A.—Dr. Shapley of Harvard Col- lege Observatory says that recent re- search indicates that the greatest distance as yet estimated is for “Cloud D” in the Coma-Virgo Super- galaxy—170,000,000 light years. This is, of course, a far greater distance than that of Arcturus. Q.—When was the City of Phila- delphia planned? M. Y. H. A—The town of Philadelphia was planned before William Penn left England in 1682. Before 1683 Phila- delphia had more than 500 in- habitants. ‘ Q. What is athlete's foot? G. T. N. A. This term originated with Dr. Charles F. Pabst to designate ring- worm of the foot. Q. Please publish names of the people who have been buried in the Washington Cathedral. FP. A. C. A. Many years ago congress passed a special act authorizing the author- ities of Washington Cathedral to have four burials a year in the Gothic ed- ifice now rising on Mount Saint Al- ban. Since the foundation stone of the Cathedral was‘laid’by President sevelt in 1907, there have been fourteen burials in the crypts: Right Reverend Thomas John Claggett, irst Bishop of Maryland and first Bishop to be consecrated on Ameéri- can soil, and Mary Gantt Claggett, his wife. (Their remains were trans- Pianted to the Cathedral from the church yard at Crome, Maryland, in accordance with action taken by the General Convention of the Protest- ant Episcopal church). George Dewey, Admiral of the Navy andj) trustee of the Cathedral Foundation. Right Reverend Alfred Harding, sec- end Bishop of Washington, and Jus- tine Prindie Harding, his wife. Her- man Henry Kohlsaat—journalist, edi- tor, and publisher, noted for his serv- ice to the public. Reverend Walden Myer, Canon of Washington Cathe- dral, and trustee of the Cathedral Feundation. Reverend J. Townsend Russell, Canon of Washington Cath- edral. Right Reverend Henry Yates | Satterlee, first Bishop of Washing- ton, and Jane Lawrence Satterlee, his wife. Henry Vaughan, first ae | itect of Washington Cathedral. Wood- ryw Wilson, twenty-eighth president of the United States. Henry White, former ambassador to France, dis- tinguished diplomat and trustee of the Cathedral Foundation. Melville E. Stone, journalist, a founder of the Associated Press, OUT OUR WAY petition which would be required to overcome the effect of the emergency clause. Such arguments have a certain plausibility, but they are unsound. The initiative and the referendum are in- tended as extraordinary and emergency measures. Ordi- narily it is expected that constitutional amendments shall be proposed by the legislature, and that laws en- acted by the legislature shall stand. It is intended that direct action shall be taken by the ‘people only in un- usual cases, where there is a strong and well defined sentiment which, fot any reason, has not been expressed by _the legislative body. In the case of capital removal, if there is sufficient removal sentiment in the state to make it reasonably probable that the project wil! be supported by a majority one. and It mey be noted in passing that when the capitol bulld- ng was before the house, all the representatives n the three’'Grand Forks county districts voted in favor of retention of the emergency clause. We are satis- fied that in doing so those members expressed the sen- it that ts preponderant in their several districts. the rempval petitions were signed by a large num- of Grand Forks residents, very many of those per- ed without having given the subject a thought, while the subject has teen discussed informally at iy i id boats of the British fleet. ‘How many places are there lett, on all thé globe, about business gat Ings. we have yet to Jearn of one of such gatherings where there was evidence of any con- siderable sentimént in favor of removal. MR. KNIGHT—I NOTICE’ You TAKE Your FRESH MEAT OUT OF THE SHANTY AND HANG VT UP IN THAT GG TREE EVERY NIGHT— WHATS THAT FOR 2? By Williams WHY THATS To WEEP IT. TH! NIGHT AIR, OOT HERE, PRESERVES] MEAT. (THEeme's NOTHIN LL KEEP MEAT BETTER'N THIS AIR'LL KEEP (IT. ENCLOSE STAMPED HODRESSE! © igas HPCOY HEALTH SERVIC DON'T OVER-EXERCISE WITH: YOUR FORK Some time ago Thomas A. Edison gave out some of his . opinions on health and diet to a group of report- ers. In view of his age, eighty-four, and the tremendous amount of men- tal and physical work which he per- forms, his views are intensely inter- esting. Mr. Edison said: “Sickness is pretty hard on the working man now. It's hard for them to get a good doc- tor, and proper care is expensive. There is too much sickness; some- thing will have to be done about it, and that is where biology and chem- istry come in.” When the reporter asked, “Will science tell us to eat less as it has told us to drink less?” Mr. Edison answered: “Eighty per cent of our deaths are due to over-eating. After the age of twenty-one a large variety and quantity of food is un- necessary. All those things crowd the stomach and cause poisons. It takes courage to learn restraint, but all that eating is unnecessary. I find that my weight keeps up on a glass of milk alone, every two hours.” - Successful men are almost united on the opinion that heavy eating is not conducive to heavy thinking. Usually they have arrived at this from their own experiments. They may differ a great deal as to which foods are best for them, but they are united in the view that the use of moderate amounts is the safest plan. Henry Ford as well as Mr. Edison has trained himself to eat in moderation. If you will notice carefully you will find that you are never at your best mentally after a heavy meal; drowsi- ness and a lack of ambition are com- monly noted. In fact, the chief rea- son that I have found for that uni- versal tired feeling in the afternoon is overeating at luncheon. Distinguished patients are always in a great danger when their doctors are afraid to let them go for many hours without food. In this connec- tion, I was glad to read the words of @ noted news columnist: “Many that might recover die because loving rela- tives or unwise doctors insist on their taking nourishment. A sick man is eliminating poisons. His system can’t do that and absorb nourishment at the same time. Those who forget it are apt to die.” Overeating is never the best policy even during health, and it is one of the worst things that can happen during sickness. If you feel you are emong the millions who eat too much, I would suggest you begin today to reduce the size of your meals. This is one of the best and safest remedies for sleepiness, lack of pep and gen- eral sluggishness. This is the wisest blan, especially for those who are be- coming advanced in years. If you are accustomed to large meals, your sto- mach may feel empty for awhile, but (0 ENVELOPE FOR REPLY -LOS ANGELES- CAL: if you decrease your meals until your stomach has become accustomed to Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of envelope for reply. soon notice that if you eat a heavy meal, such as you were previously ac- customed to, you will immediately feel distressed and over-full. I realize that this rule for increas- ing your pep and health will probably seem too easy and simple to produce a remarkable improvement, but I can promise you that if you wish to gain your best health, you will have to learn to guard against overeating un- tii it becomes a habit with you to take no more than is needed, and to make sure that the foods which you do eat are best suited to the needs of your body. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | Mongolian Type Question: Mrs. H. writes: “My doctor tells me that my little girl is @ Mongolian type. Is there any hope cf this child ever becoming normal?” Answer: Of course, I do not know enough about your child's case to give you a very good opiriion, but many of these children are able to learn enough so as to take care of them- selves and not be a burden to so- ciety. Cream of Tartar Question: Mrs. G. H. asks: “Is one-half teaspoonful of cream of tar- tar in water every morning any bene- fit to the nervous system? What can be done for extreme nervousness caused by great shock and fear?” Answer: The cream of tartar would be of no benefit and probably be harmful to you if you took it every morning. If your nervousness is caused ffom shock and fear you should read some good books on Psychlogy or consult a psychoanalyst who can teach you how to straighten out your mind and think construc- tively. Skin Discoloration Question: C. R. asks: “Can you tell me the effect the liver would have on a person's skin? My nose is mostly brown and looks as though J had been tanned, but someone said e liver trouble. I am 20 Liver trouble usually causes a yellowish tinge to the skin and whites of the eyes. In some cases brown spots occur on the skin. I would advise you to have a careful examination to determine what is causing the discoloration of your nose, as it may not be liver trouble. _ Today’ Is the Anniversary of LAENNEC’S BIRTH On Feb. 17, 1781, Rene Theophile Laennec, French physician famed for his invention of the stethoscope, was born at Quimper, Brittany. His invention, by means of which @ physician can listen to sounds pro- duced by the body, was at first a mere roll of paper. His idea, crude as it was, was rapidly diffused into every country. o But Laennec did far more than introduce a useful and convenient device into medicine. He explored with extraordinary skill the physical signs in the chest which correspond to @ large number of diseases. The major part of\ our chest-lore and much of the technique and nomencla- ture of chest examination came di- rect from him, Despite continual bad health and the shortness of his life, Laennec’s > Paris hospital enabled him to trans- mit his views and methods to many other physicians. He is said to be sons: the greatest physicians of all T BARBS i Tin Pan Alley is said to be ital- izing the latest H age with a new fines "eeoton on the Keys.” xe At least, the Tully-Gilbert, Keaton- Keys altercations have given certain ity to He 700d, view brighter constellations, * Unlike most fighters, however, Bus- ter isn’t asking for a return engage- ment. xe * Women are poor losers when it comes to dieting: ee Some New York magistrates, like a careieteing bei layer, seem to serve It is no indication a farmer is do- mestic merely because he belongs to the Gos | le. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) brilliance and devotion to duty at a} , its chance with the rest—Helen Wil- kinson, British M. P. 8 # * I am confident that the peace of the world will be preserved and that before long a new era of prosperity will dawn.—Premier Mussolini of Ttaly. 2 * *k * If I were not a writer I myself could be a very capable criminal, and it would be very easy for me to earn money by swindling.—Edgar Wallace. xe 8 Boys and girls should be kept apart all through the lower schools, high schools and universities. In short, I think, they should be kept apart through the whole of their educa- tional period—Dr. Clarence Cook Little. ——_—— KFYR r oo o Wednesday, February 18th 540 Kilocycies—545.1 Meter Farm flashes. )—Weather report. 5—Farm reporter in Washington. 0—Old-time music. ;—Meditation period. und the Town; Radio floor kman. 0—Opening grain markets; weath- er report. 10:10—Aunt Sammy; daily household chats, 0—Primer for town farmers, ;—German program, :30—Organ program: Morris. Grace Duryee . M. :00—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- une news and weather; lunch- eon program. 2:00—Grain markets: high, low and close: Bismarck Tribune news, weather and St. Paul livestock 2:80—Siesta hour: Good News Radi- magazine, 3:00—Music, \—Music. 5—Uncle Paul's kiddie time. —Stocks and bonds. 0—Music. 5—Bismarck Tribuné news. Moore Bauer. 6:45—Newscasting. Trinity Lutheran mixed quar- tet. 7:15—Legislative tidbits, (0—Jackie Sherman, 1:46—Royal’s poet of the organ. Quotations ] pO a oe ES In a period of depression we must run as fast as we can to stay where we are.—Cyrus H. K. Curtis, * * * Now that so many other careers are open to women, marriage has to take [ Stickler Solution j Hl F ras z 2 i tH Ee. i tF eke i FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: the smaller sized helpings, you will