Evening Star Newspaper, May 21, 1927, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, .D...C., SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1927. THE LIBRARY TABLE ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN. THE EVENING STAR |[didate of one of the major political | chest during a national political cam- . With Sunday Morning Edition, _ | Parties than men who have ne\er“ml;:n, Among the more recent n]l-l [ - |tackled such a task. It is a tre- | pointments of career men are those AND IHAI WASHINGTON, D C. mendous strain, even for a man ac- | of J. Butler Wright, Hungaty; Hugh | SATURDAY.......May 21, 1927 customed to public speaking. But the | R. Wilson, Switzerjand; Hugh Gibson, e W R | By the Booklover. < Presidency of the United States is | Brussels; Leland Harrison, Swaden: | BY CHARLES E. TRACEWELL. 1 i | i {one of the most arduous jobs in the !y A, Sterling, Irish Free State, and | THEODORE W. NOYES. ... Editor| g and it is after he enters the | win | It is a pretty safe bet that what| Lot the b Many of the hooks now being pub- 3 . o ‘. lished for present-day children mot| @ What do the initials F. O. T.|to 150,000,000 acres of forest land. only exemplify all that is best in|Stand for?—T. C. A . O e P segins. Most of the Presidents the adoptl ; Niat b iioh printing and illustration, but are' also| A. This is an -}h\jrmlitl(un for the m:'r‘\. \K: h;“f.[,;“(,:,'::,\“.‘:::fl\p' f‘i-) s-\"lv:: o G i e upon the adoption of a policy which | like training and temperament will| In other words, a person of average |in subject matter thoroughly modern, [ Phrase, free on truck. e B b e e de i AU of the United States have been. in | places competent, well informed and | think intehigance, who: hius.*mixed around™ |mple, “natural, without ‘cantior @l | o e oo mimp o oo o] A No charge i TR i iore Ons is almost tempted to lump|a bii and who tries honestly to see | dacticism. In most of these respects | & b g hulcniodhinagal B S g e s e o e e oy, e o | PUmanity off finto price cinsses. as | the world and see It whole, may be | they differ markedly from the chil el Lt e | Yy ety S What of other candidates for the| . . > = i it i PronnuAciureeR Gdy s with iy auto- | reasonably sure of his judgment. [HRERE DpaRanof 88 Sk 0058, tiAny: of A. There NPT T ) g i ot ity s policy of selecting men em it in | mobiles. A man a certain “price| A person realiy ought to put more | Which are almost grotesque when| A. There are ‘x|" 3 | v lel I ne Evening Star. with the Sunday morn | presidential nomination if a maximum | g o e was hoth successful and will think so and so, say & | faith in his:own judgment than most |Judged by the standards of today. An [mail cranes in the United Statey naed | = Q. What {s meant by & model e dition e deirvered ers” Wit i ; itiill Ko Rnd ok m5: A e, [ of s o Some of the egotistien |Account of “Early American Chil- | to deliver mail pouches to passing| engine fn a Ford ear?—I. B. D. y at 60 cents per iz SIS il st a i el unsuccessful, according to the adapt This can only become snobbishness | young gentlemen are 2. Bne oofect loa- | dren’s Books” forms a chapter of Dr. |trains. ‘ A. The model T Ford signifies tha or | 14 . a T HINOIS. ity of the appointees to their new | if ton much veliance is placed in it, | son (o those whe@oubt their own |A. 8. W. Rosenbach's story of his| q 1y, pirds have stomachs or giz- | this type of Ford engine is standard | m Phillips, Canada | : . et . ¥ | White House that the long four-year The cc ¢ is to be congratula fone person of normal sensibilities [ will come around, in time, to his way The Evening Star Newspaper Company | 3 \e country is to be congratulated Business Oflice | thinks, 9 dut of 10 ather persons of fof thinkin 11th St and Pennsvivania Ave. | New York Office. 110 East 42ud St their fifties when first inaugurated Chicazy Office. . Tower Buildina 4 ’ Europeau Office’ 14 Regent S1. London | the records disclose | experienced men in charge of adminis is to be applied? Frank O th_ Geders may 1 by mail | e e [just as the socalled “intelligence | ability. ag Judies: exploits s n collector of and dealer d |and bas been used since 1909, Prac - tieally all automobile manufacturers of ‘each monih work. The mnew policy. however, I ; use the alphabet in designating thelr birds that feed on flesh have stom- |y (B0 IR ol 0 gineers of the zar = should assure the most efficient serv- [ (S9F Lo b e do h Rate by Mafl—Payab'e in Advance | more than a year older than Mr. | "ony ot the same time act as an only i the educators are the slaves MATTIAD RN W ehES. K Indeed. he will have passed 5, o0 iive 1o young men of ability to| ~What would a modern school have | o ing Ao feel that one is right than|TAlly in the Saturday Evening Post. to Believe that one is an old grouch. | The Booklover hopes that when the hampion of the corn and wheat belts tests” in the schools can do harm | 1t fs h more satisfactory feel- |10, ook ravities, v aring se- 7 3 hampion of the corn and wheat beits, 1 do harm | L f el more satisfaciory feel- wities, now appearing se- [ “VEIE T 1 Survey says | « Yeb many persons are so iabosing |Series is completed it will be pub.|dchs, but birds that feed on seeds | yrd Motor Co. used numerous letter Dells asa'Wimiiaps o) Wl o, 25 |iths 46Hh anhiversary ofiblk blsth o | fine roreian Wervice. “Nolsyatem | IONC L R L THHR Duiwie | wan (uplo themesives, swhen all (fhs time lished in baok form, with the illustra. | and grain have gizzards. | of the alphahet down to T. At this iy Dy trosaon o Masch & 1085, Sl G e o0 foreign & 4 sethoven, think vou, who couldnt | of their acquaintanees fecl ex. | tions which have added so much to . G ST st | Point they felt that the engine was Sunda 1 vr.. 3300 3 o et ey i | RODTRR O It behooves the Stte | add fo save his musical soul, much |actly the same Wiy they do about | the Interest. ,...G..“ ‘:’,,’.‘.e:.xm.‘,‘-:.yi.'\nl-"fl“'.'_‘ M‘”"‘ first | erfected and sinee 1909 the model T D L e e sl e sl St v H\\\ I\v‘u:\ 1>r\< : ‘,‘f.‘"‘h : i hines in general d _about some R A, The Continental Congress in its | ‘¥ ¢onsidered standard. Dally and Bitudas.id ve- SIZ00: dow, $UO0 Lo s veratie Dreside | B vanced are worthy of ad- | WHAC we sant Lo discus, howover, | thifes in_ pusticular, o that the | Theauthor began collecting carly [ “Lang Ordnance of May, 1765, dedi- R Daily oniv 1yel =800 5 i} nomination, Was:DOLN CLODED o I vincsment, Merely. to advance & Ian iy eo w6 Shich @a Lyl sts.” the | (ormer person bad better trust to his | children’s books when a child. His|cated from the public lands which| Q. What are parentteacher asso Sunday only 1010 1NEL $400 1 ind he would be in his 66th vear [\ s b co f | Ube of which seems to be placing a | cwh opinion and believe in the sanc- funcle, who inspired him to become a|lay west of the 13 Colonies, lot No. | clations for?—8, C. caue e has been in the service i | tremendous faith in a comparatively | UG of his own soul mor | coliector and a dealer in rare books, | 16 of every township to “the mainte- | A. The purpose of parent-teache: he worst kind of folly. Indeed, un.|new science, but the homely proposi e unanimity 9 persons out |gave him on birthdays and other an-|nance of public schools within the | asseciations is to interest parents in 1 Press 18 exelusivels e ¢ the cold but certain theory of | UG DO HOTE Ran T JOf i) VRO LENen e tor i alsut niversarlen not icontesivotaneauily | Sai towrianipe - Eite polioy Bot uu,|fln- work of the school and in matters s B s el il B e S Suspicion that y s Sing thing, proved by chance re- | published books, but old children’s |ing public lands for education has |Dertaining to the proper eare of chi reat Circle Flying. il ca ot e ks now and then. As stated, fow | books, and urged him 10 add by pur- | peen continued, and linds and serip | dren. Itis the practice in most places e o= should he nipped in the bud s nothing more mor less | persens are airing these opinions. | ehase’ to his collection. Dr. Rosen-|have heen:granted to a total of 117,- | L0 Kive exhibitions or receptions to wrlos Lindbergh W : e you really ought to fecl If there is some sort of nuisance {bach relates that when he was about 231519 cres, an area nearly equivi- | Vhich parenis are tnvited, nndln: a % i v the b rosa knowlec wbored in your peighborhood, be |7 a4 companion who was visiting him | jont to | e the Cierman republic. | Part of the program educational top i iy { A Man's Mascot. | out of 10 of your meighhor £ the fict that most of your [spied his hooks and hegan to ,l,',"‘"‘- lent to that of the German republic. | U B e Bt reports e Magnificent Daring e ) D oh Charles Lindbergh, one of the pluck els e v}‘wl' r chbors feel exactly the same ‘way | them over and flnally to write crude | Q the Mississippi River a tidal | ceived it is evident that the meetin When the Light Brigac sk e briis history, Hom e ie] ol 1 St of B 5 L vou do about it You are not e aIHRbEe e e Loy | have been suecessgul *in informin: * 8 Lag b ; thes world n cor en in . 5 4 S will be brave funique. ns, his was too much, he relates.| A. Tt is a tidal river only from its [ Parents recarding pew developmenis a mascot. it may be worth | eHOUs it it, even confidentiall Approgch one of them, however, |“T flew at him like a wildcat. Only [ mouth as far up as New Orleans. | in school work and in securing sup e e \\uy.r',u.]“ up a realy | w th o divect question, he or she will | the i iate intervention of the com- - ~ !"““' from the comfmunity in regard e Las it most human beings. | declare, with a greaf show of imilies saved him from anni*{ Q. Is it easier and cheaper to grow | to the extension of educational ad dog is generally & ais feel in fact, the foundation | prise, “Oh, no, it doesn’t bother lation.” One of the fascinating fea-|rve or wheat?—FP. J vantages, such a# the establishment SRiREe e y With a thoughtfulness which some ','.”"“”'“ hope of i | Without jat, all!” tures of these tiny volumes is th 1t is cheaper to grow rye than|of gymnasiums, the improvement of wrting p might not have expected of so young | [t In It various forms and rami day, however, at a chance |fact that they give such maive sam.| it is to grow wheat, but not o profit. the hygiene of public schools. the se = i ot ; tions, the, uld be no social 1i coting. Kis real.opinion will pop out, | ples of the ‘mental food on which [ablé. Rye can be grown on poor soil [ curing of playgrounds for childrer S e |t vt s then vou Wl isec .that all the jour ancestors lived when they were [and with little soil preparation and the like e TR < | take his furry companion i 4 ! * % he his -heen féeling exactly the | young. For example, a small volume | e When | gar with him upon the hazardous ¢ After all. are not ing ne way about the thing that you |published i 1738 by Samuel Phillips,| Q- Does the law for the length of | Q. What does the following mo 1 When he came to this decision, the | Prelty much aliks e lled “History of Our Lord and|!ime liquor can be sold differ in|mean: “Heras non numero nisi se ety ' Iail down e e Patey. e cak There cannot be any very w k¥ ok avior sus Christ, Epitomized; for | London and the vest of England’— | nas?" -8 XN i _ y it looks to be the|Prd v prive J vergence upon fundamentals Il S O g . the Use of Children in the South Par-|T. G | A This Latin quotation is seen frc zeous, but b s ' the | Of an opportunity to take a piac 1l breedi il bree the | oois Wholesome restraint 18 What lish of Andover.” sets before the lamba| A. The licensing act of 1931 fixed | quently on sundiale. It fs translated = ! Puss-in- | World around, among civiliz S badk il "i- tlet and his parents | under his care 60 pages of indigestible | the hours of sale of liquor at nine | “I count none but the happy hours' people. it s reported, | dIStortion of the map when it T e e R enetoncs famows | DIes: “Thicro miy b some diferensbe../| TTom Many ¥ fieserved “hawling out."| food, consisting of questions on and | hours in London' and eight hours| : . S ected upon a plane S 2 staring at women is not held in { When the brattock, without any fanswers to the most abstruse meta- |elsewhere, the closing time being 11| Q. How many men are employed in are « irred by the gallant TEE oot ciceicf Ta itk of mavisns | Sk repute in some places, but, by | provegation Whatever, calmly rak \?"h' sical, philosophical and other con- |p.m. in London and 10 p.m. elsewhere: | the Santa Fe shops in Los Angeles? dertarking of Charles Lindbergh, setting | SR g hread| Yet undoubtedly is enough to be{large, mon are judged on what they |13 finger-nails ~through the right|troversial subjects—subjects still un- g 1= B B eions in Srmatl nsibotione motor | o 17 theuline seoyered v thread | o ond and pal of such’'a man as |do and say. cclc'of your own small son, causing | solved today. Another item in his| Q< How did it happen that a single| A The Santa e Railroad shops at opsdn geenl e g What one person thinks, in connec. | 50078 thit may Jast forever, but|collection is a pamphlet printed in|command was established for all the | Los Angeles are valued at $10.000,000 g d Chie enrth. trcu okt fo-port. Tt iy the | PM0SKEN. Bdoh &n honor ouBBE 10 |tion with & given case, i8 what o vou hope.will not, he needs a entitled “A Leghey for Children, |drmies fighting against Germany’—|and are the largest west of Topeka Yaris. They are ing with Canrol STaLil, 1 & % lie enough for any man, let alone one |other persons will think. panking, and his parents a se- Some of the Last Expressions |l D- D- | These shops of the Santa Fe Railroad literally of a great circle that it} o\ 'yiiien and small Patsy today | < The same thing | true in t ve lect {and Dying Sayings of Hannah Hill, [ A. It was the result of the terrific | employ 2,500 men Department to see that career men A <hould become President March Member of the Associated ess khis of Wi iy across the AU ts gallant but fulile there is much confusion in ng out in a day and age when mind regarding his rout dogEoal dndta Fren , looking t He is flying, it dgic spects said Clest 1 fique with feline heroes, including stretched across a globe representin to the interior of the 5 wide subject of literature, in 1h.| Dut do you administer either |Junrof “the City of Philadelphia. [Plow struck at the British. Army,| will have the world hoping and Pray-{ poalm of music ot (e Rty No, to civilization's credit (perhaps) . Apsdl Tlaven Yeancain 'm,“r' March 21, 1918, known as the Second | Find out wha e you want to that he is. indeed, a real mascot, | There is no judgzing in ma ' you tlo not. Yeu put on a severa | Three Months.” Little Hannah took | battle of Picardy, when the German |know. There is no foom for ignorance s who “It is magnificant, but it is not wa Jt is not according to the rules game. Grieved and distressed over the fate of Nungesser and Coli, who | metric center of the sphere. In prac 1o best sense of the word. | taste, the old “saying has it | me and gather your cloak about |several days to die. during which she | Army broke through the line of the | in this busy world. The person tice, however, ships rarely sail actual-| s . ) e | taste of most persons is amazi e ind sally fort nd set forth |claimed the undivided attention of |Somme, parating the French and | loses out is the one who guesses. The face with generosity the possibility |1V on great circles, but on a sevies of | v par | ws, and the brat stands snick- | every member of her family, giving | British armies. The subsequent de-| person who gets on is aliways the one s S ¢ ® S lrgR Of sunk) clcslen; Hinttedsin s |, Tromation fof learnea ioaan’ to A new book apne ind the curtain, Sand you | them moral advice and telling them | moralization and almost complete de- | 1ho acts upon reliable iniormation. that the lone American may do what | Ch! S = i fv in a colleze cannot at present If one will divest himsslf of the i that nothi \bsolutely | what they should and should not do |feat of the allies compelled them to | This paper employs Frederie J. Has two Frenchmen failed to do, vance to effect a minimum of difficulty | pirit of applanding the renowned i BeLabhe Zbout. it Dhat ey SOUId AN Ol o 00 e o o thay horttotare they had | ki 1o canduct ow informatiow Burets One-man flying is not unusual. The |in setting the steering course. Cer- | withor, and read the hook solely. on | dre, in the last analysis, just |eil which she gave, to her Dear and |been unwilling to take. in Washington for the free us> of the riected it earth would pass throuch the geo- have now been given up as lost, they .ommand the publicity attached to the | condemnation of some hapless person |its merits, he will be able t i o 1 1o 1 o yoital 7 ublic. There is no charge except 2 erican air mail pilot alone, | tain considerations of land formation X S e able to arrive a er “thnid soul,” the product of | 0nlv Sister and Cousin, Lord Zachary, ¢ Lk il oot American air mail pilots fly alone, | tain consid ,.‘ ns of lan: o Byl G iaiivie. onals a_correct judgment of the work. ‘The | neration that put much hope and | Whom she dearly loved, was very| @ How man: es of forest land | cents in stamps for return postage. making long hops over hazardous|of ocean currents and. of course, o Sk R I | biurb on the jacket will sway him mot | faith In manners and etiquette and | grave and pithy ¥ are owned by farmers’—M. H. | Write to him today jor any facts youw conditions. Lindbergh, himself a mail | weather ecause departures from the! e e lall that sort of.thing: . e | A" The “rorest service, United | desire. Address The Evening Star In pilot. has made many flights without | rizid great circle sailing Cutting down trees is 4 i \ew singer comes cn the concert| A good barrel stave applied to the bl E Stafes Department of Agriculture. | formation Bureau. Frederic J. Haskin, s _ ter. Restoring them in case they |Stas 4t 0t the hrat’s pants wottd de e | Dr. Rosenbach's collection of 800 | estimates that farm wood lots amount ' director, Washington, D. ( companionship and aid. A few days| The season of the vear is a factor in | f- % e in A difcult proposi-| S IS heralded as a wonder. ek than all, the etlonette paumm | early American — children’s books, before he left on this present flight {ship courses, in the Atlantic service, [ 10U h‘ i Gk Ix~ SR Thaisar 1‘ in authority says she s gr ever written tuette books | which are dated from 1682 to 1840, is 2 tior orestation is 0 impol ediately nine: i . | oW ¢ chibitic ew Y Po had erossed the continent alone in | The great circle route carvies steam. [ 0n: Deforestation i nef 2 IHITE | lnmediately ninetynine out of a'hun-| In private, you <o express yourselr. | Bupy on e B Shn AL i New Yotk # | T L tant a consideration in a eity s dred listeners applaud hor madly and| Nine of your goc . % 7 e hese books revea two hops. lers farther north than the route fol.| A"t & S vow that b of your good meighbors, wit-|he ; i g -oodlands, where it affects the run-off | VOW that she is very great nessing the accic g6l exno . the change, not only in juvenile read- It is pointed out that Lindbergh's|lowed during the, Winter and the | WOOU4T g e occur. Yet, even | OU€ sane person. honestly compar- | same e iy “i‘\.‘i‘,',,, Uy he ing matter, but also the change from greatest risk perhaps is in the d period of iceberg possibilities. At this | WNCT NCAVY TS 00Cul - ing | o her voice, fluds it amazingly thin | them speak up bravely in Gl LR P e T BY PAUL V. COLLIN that he may fall asleep at the con-|time of the year the “steamer lane” is | ':“" It”“" G wittious CeatRguL ) Tty ‘;-wm::;:”'.'y:v' 4nd not particu-] No, not one of them does, ittucus William. e opad e e trols. That, however, is mot likely | somewhat south of Lindbergh's course el He say 0. 'The old -9 out o] m:"u.“'y\u. -Mg’ courze, _they express | tice and Patty Primrose to Tom Saw-| “Canst thou minister to a mind | malingerers or scared soldier in a temperament such as his. His|during the westerly portio Sy 10 secretly agree with } Y e nal sentiments about | yer, Huek Finn, Penrod and Rebecea | diseased? evade ice, have sometimes ‘eigned . g westerly portion of the SRR O S him, but are | the latest caprice of “the brat.” s . St 5 “shell is sheer nerve. He has demonstrated|flizht. Nearing the Irish coast his afraid to contradict the great “ex.{when they. : ie brat,” but |of Sunnybrook Farm. The earliest| What a long span it is in medical | “shell shock” on the verge of going often in the past that he is at all| R ast His| 5o nese solentlst, who performas | Dert,” hence refure to agree pus.|eame vourg hiatnl JAreNts of the|book in the collection is “The Rulefpractice from the “bleeding’ of| 'over the top,’ they are comparative: ] past that he is at all|line of flight more mearly colncides | Nl o iaotating | el | e young hopeful, how beautifully | of the New.Creature. 'To be Prac-|patients for all kinds of ailments, as | ly few. The American Bxpeditionary times in control of himself. He has|with the course of ocean travel, as the | th¢ & i e L R YR S | £loss over the whole matter ticed every day in all the Particulars | done by the doctors of haif a century | Forces were not made up of scared gone many hours without sleep in|iiner lanes converge for the English|> 5™ tells his story in half an hour. —— - of which are Ten,” which starts off |ago or more, to the present-day .an-| men. After the drafting had gotten St e el o) 5 inglish | oo method of expression, in addition r . as follows: “Be sensible of thy Orig- | nouncement, made at this week's con- | organized, the medical men made & fenoim o - . That b Channel. skl etenaiic) videie, Wioel Berve 55 nird-i artv Plan inal Corruption daily, how it inclines | ference of the American Medical | systematic examination of all soldiers certain of his own powers in this re-| Landmen are confused in conception | ' ° S T L TG T dertake to thee to evil, and indisposeth thee to | Association, that the doctors should | taken in the draft. and weeded out e o) No more we heed the roaring spect is shown by the fact that on|of ocean navigation, especially to i ; ey o good; groan under it, and bewail it|now use mental therapy in _hf-ag‘nu the psychopathic weaklings. An ex- %he mighit before he ool Off £05 Paris e o pavieation, especially as 19} giscuss public affairs of any kind. | A ] I t o as Paul did. . . . Also take special | “broken hearts” and readjusting dis- | pert Canadian officer estimated that St e | great circle sailing—or flying, as in e - L l'Ollbe 1 (’ llt lllblasm notice of your actual sins, or daily | located mentalities! Only a few years | by that process our Army voided . ey s of sleeD. | the present case—because of their fa-| . el - bR, infirmities, in Thought, Word, Deed,|ago one smiled incredulously at the | 40,000 cases of potential shell-shock Almost anybody else would have|mijiarity with the flat or projectec ilipinos plne - he N e SR Endeavor to make your peace with | Parisian “unmedical” specialist who | vietims.” projected v, is that z rested for longer than the usual period | maps Furthermore, it is Sk The only question, apparently, is tha Dr. NicholassMiitay Butler God for them before you go to bed.” | professed actual cures through having | * % % % of repose. 1t is reported, too, that he | 1¢ rememd e, b 18 0L unarsl | op greantsing miseltgOSEdAmBnt WHich | geatini in ‘o Tdltimore: specch. tha] bhoots oo on el o OV ot do” it | Another BoK e lEially b beh el e ey way, 4 Ny | i stne et ana v ate no breakfast vesterday morning | - crpered that Paris is consider-| yy 1o, complete and reliable. Such | both major parties have avoided the hrough one or the other of the pres. | Englind, an’ American “edition of | ter in every way, day by day.’ COU | grave problem now confronting the il 'y i 5 & | ably farther north’ than New York ‘taking necessarily takes time. | Prohibition issue and that.th 1- ic 1t jor parties, the people will form | Which’ was printed by _Benjamin | the scientific doctors of the American | Veterans' Bureau, nine vears after before going into the cockpit which he fapout cight and a halt degrees in | o LRnE RocessarTly TR Dhimibition tsstie and that th 1 deal| thomselves o 2 pgily of entorces] ETanklin fo 1740, was the Rev. Jumes | Medical Association are “geliing better | the end of the-wat, s the increase of with grim humor likened to the death | 1o\ oi0ud6 1n fact. This pl E . [ Party, v S th object ot tanting fird {ment ‘and “&nother. for- repeal. -Dr Janeway A Token for Children,|day by day,” for they recognize :lhr‘n‘l neuropsychiatry; ie. mentally un- cell in a penitentiary, with pardon et “This places It, on| o0t Egyptians knew how to| lic sentiment, is received by the «oun: | or s Aking - the-lssuo-cleqr. ami | belng an_Exact Account of the Con | mind has alipel e ang that | oanced pationis, OnMax_ 1, each e o the “Mercator projection” map about e ize the ovesflow of the | try with littls enthusiasm. T n-|at least is poimting out the line of de. | Version, Holy and Examplary- Lives | over -the bodily functions, and hat | year, for the last four years R A, e L SRkt B o e dlina. x| oy el TR e Oy €| nite iden provan Tipaasm. Two defi | markation. But it is difficult to be [and Joyous Deaths of several Young | “there’s nothing either good or bad| patients in all bureau hospitals were Some men are born to such accom- [ o “'"dm‘rgh o ‘“'ink Nile. We still have something tol ., S0 PGV T @ L.‘."_‘\,J;"':‘ _f‘x;\ ;h.u a wet party can win.” The *‘hgdv;n " Since many editions were | but think'm: l:nrtnkm!l it fl:}-flfl?&};"};% as follow plishments as Lindbergh is now on|, . g e % | learn from the old-timers. | to the extent of wet se estion as | Manchester Union (independent Re- | Published, the author expresses the|speare found that out co s B0 ey T e thite B his course, calculated his great circle | i = A ;”“” HI_‘ 1;«1‘111»,-’1“\:“‘ ¥t '\I\K:mu‘m| ‘nn_nvl publican) holds that “of course, no|OPinion that it was the certain means |the Amenmn_Modu-u}_. n.u«um‘mi '{’J.;}’(‘,T.";('f"‘ culiar combination o 2iflight from the last land contact | b oneints er. himeelf would b an | third party next year could hope to|Of saving mang children from hell | Even the Christian Scientists—but 0o | lnurtilidaics) o.014 12,930 13,008 13874 peculiar combination of qualities that Al At Do s skl hibh SHOOTING STARS. e bodearndt ¢ r suchlwin,” and (he Huntington Adyertiser | 2nd damnation. Cotton Mather wrote | matter! S | Percentage of 3 make the ideal fiyer. They have the |"re ! starting point, 3 T Y e situntion. the Corany. | (2PHOCTatie) “cannot believe that the | @ continuation of Janeway. entitled i Inited States| SivIiolal 41% 435 48% 49 courage, the nervelessness and the 0 WERIdTen, ta edrey hjoyevan | i ’ NSON | bus Ohi 615 Touril. (Ranobl ey | ot A ey Jesiie pofont enotih to)| £ | EKeT, forc I SCHImSRRGEINER | it all Sevent BT ik few 3 i magination to cause them to- disre.| 2Fther morth from the steamer lane. | G S s agrees that “it is cowardly the way the | |+ PtV line e E e o ot oot | veeeans, o tganaral practit pree, andlot the M A h MAa = 2 s ANy | |pantles tiva e o R Bk in' whom the Fear of God was | beaten the general practitioner, and |of the bureau, addressing the Medical gard hazards, and yet not heedlessly| , == | Unres Pt o Raony s dasus, IOl IV LS o Adig g rkably hudding before they died: | also the specialist, to the idea that|Council. composed of the most eminent 10 invite them’ They & ‘the one | - WOman condemned.to the electrle | u N1 oe iy Lol ot e e Gotnt TR D 140 a threat.” remarks the | i several parts of New England. | the influence of mind is the one factor | specialists of Amer: aid that from who do. the magnificent things In_the | CH4IF 18 deprived of hair bleach. In o i e tal ;3 of the majority of the voters.” | Peiglt Daily News (independent). “Dr. | Preserved.and Published for the -En|.of supreme importance in. the bu- | analyses which have been made by T B el voh ' desperate situation. it snakes Dy ionbeinvolce B0 e, - [ CTRITE, 8406, HOWeR But | i Eles & hapny hope before | couragement of Piety in other Chil- | reau’s increasing problem of relieving | the bureau of the trend of hospitaliza- world's history, even though they | . “ to 5 Which seemed to tell us, “This'll| What can the po-r parties do? Senti- | ats and Republicans. It a{dren.” In another book for children, [or curing the afflicted veteran: of the | tion “the peak load of neuropsychi- do not always conform to the rigid | o difference whether gentlemen A joyous journey he!” POl S o aepsiay diviieg as| (hind purey could be formed with [publined in 1714, Dr. Rosenbach | World War. At the last ses atric cases will not be reached until ilen ob et prefer blondes. 2 : Lol jie istom ot ydlitendlars | A B8 SR e ighteenth amendment | found embedded in a waste of theo- |Congress the bureau was given full | about 1947 f | fe o, 1 '::C\:\y;{;,‘.r‘h‘\l[,‘.:v‘jM” e it e .lx'xlm line up |logical discussion for infants the fol- | authority to take over v;uurlolfl;fipr;\‘l”:"‘;‘ It matters nothing whether it is his Summer vacation s one of those | '¢8ard alcohol as a medicine and not| The skies we are exploring .'ji"”:;'!*l‘]"{)m‘{fi P e [ proportions of this Cissatisfied minor- | indeed: But will it not be a dreadful | pitals. That work hitherto ha 5] 14 HAE taftuy (HAIS (h6' caece: matters that have compelied the exer-| Merely as a popular poison. To glimpse an aeroplane. circumstances, the idea of orgwing | (L7 A, similar view is expressed by | thing to go to Hell from New Eng-|been carried on by the Red Cross So'| ureau hospitals are mental, and th AT e | » : 3 [ e lnf‘ru, either bone-dry or drin- pm‘».{\'_ : ield Republican (independ- | 1and?” Besides books on religion, | clety, the Knights of Columbus and | proportion is growing. In. addition, 1 etoes. | G g No matter what we're gaining ping | wet, s theoretically logical | (U "Which nominates Dr. Butler as | which seem. to predominate. the col: |ather philanthropic organizations, DUt | niore than half the general cases are i s o - A Merited Appointment. In our endeavors new, o L ELEL R that thej 219 008 | o indidate for Presi- {lection contains “The School of Good |today the surgeons recognize that the | 3150 mentally affected. Hence the So far as the.Missieaippi River 18| Anpoinenent 6f dosepir C. Grow 4| There's something. still remaining | hory; WYOUId not get enough v.es to JEAL,, 4G, acmits that '4f Dr. Butler | Manners Composed for'the Help ‘tjhenenty muse come ChEonEd, U |emphasis put upon treatment grom concerned, a large amount of rivers sep irew as he u u M A big enough vote, he|Parents in teaching their Children |merely unmethodical social “enter-| thoungle of mental readjustment, and . riVers | American Ambassador to Turkey is in To 1id us Hope and Do. The moderation issue would not be | Would really do something toward sav- | how to carry it in their place during |tainment,” or recreation, but that|ihe encouraging thing is that. by arbors discussion has apparently | line with the present policy of the -lt l‘uy\(r]ul‘ 8rong V"xjxu::‘h to_hold ’:L‘\hl\: country, as he sees it, as well | their_ Minority,” published in Boston |such aids are more necessary In treat-| cojangific, systematic study, great been wasted. White i G it ot e ot Good Listener. fogether” asserts tho So-th Bend |13 cnding p ohibition in 1772, Among the gems of etiquette, | ment of all kinds of ailments than iS| . oevess’ is noted in results. There ST e % D n r men of | o vou golng to say about|Tribume ' (independert Republican). | The eville Times (independent | under the heading of Behaviour at |the prescribing of drugs. The work.|,.o™n, more straitjickets, man: H“ he: No'a Cand]d ¢ wide diplomatic experience in key hia'1 : t' A gt hl: Democrats would be longing to "‘m“("v“‘ll feels that “the doctor’s|the Table, it admonishes: “Spit not, therefore, under the new lav will l"‘j R0t Haditied Gellw, ba fi\r{'é ]N‘]"’(..“‘ g! ate. positions in the forelgn service. My | [PI® Important question : return to their true environment. the |falk of 4 third party cinnot fail to be | cough not, nor blow thy - nose af | taken over July 1 directly by the Vet.| St FITCIC : prppba g Chatles Evans Hughes, former Sec- | Grew's selection for the American| ~NOU ® Sreat deal” answered Sena.| Republicans to theirs. Recog | 9F e anding interest (o’ the Demo | table, It it may_ba avolded.” He-|erans’ Bureau doctors. The Red|® e patient retary of State and former associate | embassy in Turkey s part an |y Gorghum. T will listen to the | dispo: "3 tow.rd a liberal in | crats,” and it sug “If Dr. Butler | haviour when in Company is not quite | Cross Society will continue to serve, . assy in Turkey Is particularly for- soth parties, represented by move- | Should find 1 political event: as they [ so strict: “Spit not in the room,|but will serve according to definite| ...y hocked patient” manite ius\u‘e of the Supreme Court of the | tunate. He has intimate knowledge I"""NN('U*]'\I*‘ '.*D"“‘"’»“- f‘\“ -*‘&":‘» I“”” | ments to put liberals fo:ward as presi- | O to pass the opportunity {o place | but in the corner.” For Behaviour |and individual prescriptions from the | " o ijtable and irritable tempera Tnited States, has iss St taont | ) respons speaker, al condid- te Still canng a thivd ticket i B ifte b % s AAR bt ctors, just as i 2 o aln o] Duited States, Nias iasten o statement used to be the responsible spea dential crndid-tes, we still cannot see | @ third ticket in the field, the results School one must “Bawl not aloud | doctors, just as the dispensary func-|ong " je is given to paroxysms of of conditions in the Near Fast. He 4 a third par i i ay be as s - MR St e OF the e ive S | . | Now héw the andlence a third party composed of dissatisfied | MY he as epochal as the campaign of | in making complaints” and “Jog not | tions in filling medical preseriptions. | /0" : p L Bebientnomiiloloii ninnils o sl L k, ¢ Gt L i o N = e Knights , 7 cith. | 'age and violence. He cannot control il balain, ez, . he | mocral nd Republicans on a mod the table or desk on which another |The Knights of Columbus will with his nerves. The task of the dc United States the Lausanne treaty | Overlooked Opportunity. | the lost control. He must be inte gy e m:‘qun platform.” n\\ o that Dr. Butler maintains | writes.” draw entirely’ 4 2 n 1928, Mr. Hughes gives two rea- | peiwoen this o ' Sk P 5 iiving serio s consideration Dr. | that “the Amierican people were inex * ok K % Contrary to misunderstanding in Sonk Bot Blx Bockon: IRt that Bl o TR cothty WRR TAkker (0 | gue plinx s atient. W evels tutler's charge that the eightoenth |Cusably careless in. permitting the 3 some quarters, this does not mean | (he ¥ vai e ohe | 1023, True, this treaty was not rati-| The record long and still amendment 1s “the primary source of | clhteenth amendinent to get inte the | , hodes scholarships, -the = ever- | thae there will be less. recreation, nor | SSed. 11 segne occupation-—no matte sident Coolidge “first, ‘fast | neq by’ the Senate of the United| o Suhinx 1 + to hear | Iwlossncas and contempt for law, of | Constitution. tho Wichita Beacon | ETOWINE flood of student:tourists and | jesy social service, but it does mean | phAt=which will take his mind off + ) Sphinx, what would we pay to hear v e W arie Way huv his troubles, h ies \ Tl e e, B0 aoond, Bt g o ces piitia 1n At AR BT S oals 1 aALGINET Nynoerisy and cowardioe.” the Hart: | (ndependent Renublionn) states tnat | he World War have all brought in-| that both will be scientifically admin | 8 1roubles, his worries and his sick- he himself is too old & In the| Your voice in vaudeville ford Courant (Republican) says: “Hefe | “t5 @ matter of fact, no amendment | (Le25iN& knowledge to the public of | istered toward the relief, not the mere | fC0%; af he produces may or may iy W p | bounds of probability that a new —_— obviously is a situation of vital e has heen adopt the United States about the educa- | rtai " or financial profit of | Mot have a commercial value—at first The third-term issue, which Presi- { s e | 8 2 o T VL CORe [ R adopted with more dellbera-| {iona) institutions of England. It is| oo anments or fnanciat s preferably not. But if it soothes his ot e o eaL | treaty betsveen the two countries may | Jud Tunkins ays a dentist i3 one | soquence, not only to the Nation s | lion or with fuller realization of what | o longor possibie 1o sar B Chatles | the, patient. nerves—that is “medicine.” So he is olid s already are |y, g v b e s, i e ] ‘ ;| such, but to the pe ha compe it means TR b b for | Do 10 possible to say, as Char a0 ratively new science S-—f < T e ki e o 2oy ar® | be drawn by Mr. Grew in tho light of | Of thoss friends who fdel in duty| Sch but & b L e e i et Sristed said in 1333, when he | _ L o neethe ‘World | Prescribed o many hours a day (i BAtloR i Feeleetion, Bius s taprors | 20 Station Tound tsseist Airing ths | hobal th 8l yop the SAOMEN?. have not the courage to face it. lest from liberalism than the idea | haiyn Srooks, ~hive, Years in an | war. “While it applies most congpic- Rl bRl e MR and Do siEnifoance for 3t Eurrrs | consideration by the Senato of the| bilities by 50 doing they alienato the votes of | {hat the »conlo of the United States | NSlish University”: “Very little is|yously to mental adjustment, it ulso | 3F goRe SIheC BImple work, Hestits s g or Mr. Hughes. | ;. oo treat 4 those who believe that principles “f [#re restricted or limited in the kind of | ‘CCurately known .in th affects diseases of the heart, abdo-| (il TSt ave very foush: often he fies Mir. Fluches 19 reepanized as one of | et s “Will you be my wife’ | sovernment are of mno importance as|law they may write into thelr Constis| iPout the English Universit men, and, in fact, all diseases. into a rage and breaks the muclifie. Bhb erbatest arthavitibe oo \m“;m“} Mr. Grew is a “career man” in the | .. » answered Miss Cayenne. “I|compared with legislation designed to | tution.” " ¥ natl ‘T it, u{{er all, still possible to say » 3 * K * er“nmtnar. hn“;.wu :lmn_u;lerl and a & i3 { American foreign service. Almos . | enforce pta ce )0 he “There is no reas Have that iatever the case, his book . P! smile or a gentle word of help. In a Government. His opinion doubtless | o - 2 il | Injjienigies, Stotal Inence upon the| T oty o feason to Belleve that | iy very 'interesting even now, and Tn the British hospitals,, “shell|vear, or two vears, he becomes quiet will carry welght with the American | 70T the time he left college in 1902 | no gtyle 1o which you have heen ac-| Moo (203¥ PO, = & & T6 18 B0t | Sroblem. aver ipar Sould solve the | much ‘that he tells of English uni- shock” s recogmized us a Eenulng|and his work shows the improvement, people. ~ Indecd, it will outweigh by | N has been in that service. Ilis|cygtomed.” B o e I e Doty o s a e b Mg <P M e s 15 the fashion 1o deny that there sver | oty Tig, S0ie value is not the point— far in all probability the dictum of | 1TSt @ppointment in 1904 was as clerk | — tinue forever a policy of evasion | York s (independent Democtatic) | camiamee Gn e ooty °f,Oxford and | wag such a disease as “shell shock” PICEyCE: s il 4 Dr. Nicholas Murras, Butler. ancihor |10 the Ameritan consulate in Calro Artificialities. which leaves them as much alike as | offers the comment: “Anything that | Fristed sas flve ves at ity oo |and to deglare that the thousands of b Bl 7 e { Bgypt, and from there he went as|Into an ancient tomb they two peas in a pod can he done to make party manage- | joge, Cambridge, from. 1840 to- 1845, | Soldiers who claimed to have heen 0| In the exhibit room .at Veterans' Rty Wonkes, wresiienc o ur COUOBbIL o0 hateutity \to e | Atbartoan hes | | ABA Rtickesiltaiin iwelive i8pah 58 e, 845, | aMicted war® either malingerers or, | Burcau headquarters is a beautifully n* |and nurse is to aid him in regaining don’t believe 1 could support you * n nore alert o changes of senti- 3 ¥ Ak ment move alert to changes of senti-|and’ was graduated a foundation 4 ok ¢ il et It is not beyond the possibilitie: nent. more svmpathetic with demands | gohola THe: Boaks, tacesy, NOUUEE |0, 16 War. sceliers Of MO O carved picture frame. The maker, University, who persists in his declara % bassy in Mexico City in 1906, Since |A golden scup bowl made for show ording > 5 | for ellig e st lin s h The explanation | for fiv ars, was T 5 el e s ) . sin ! according to the Portland Oregon Jour- i intelligent program of action, | poie, , hoat races. supper|pyaudiin sympathy. The expl n | for five years, was rated a hopele it the anetecn MO Of| en he has occupied many important | A diamondstudded frying pant | nal (ndependent Democratie), “that s | QUEh to e welcomed and encournged. | jive ion of i vaxrtons Colese clupe, |18 that they were not shocked by the | case with hallicinations and desporf hat 4 : i e el ———- I new party will come forward in the| But until everything of this kind has | Sheve astenth i > CIUbS, | oxplogion of shells or the terrors of | sncy—an incurable “dementia precos.” Coolidge must be considered 'h‘l\!n'»'\\\‘flh:r “; iy \v’i'i ""““"'_‘“_‘ b We must trust our fellow men,” | United Siates unless there is a reor-| NCCn tricd, till every stimulus within N';"pm_-‘"‘l“"“ ""“,mx;‘”‘ D;{g’glm’:tms:‘l. battle, but—well, they were just|He was illiterate and violent and “fitst term.” and that conse. | AMPASsd g ¥ is the first as | 1iq Uncle Kben, “but jes' de same 1'd | ganization of the old parties. Perhaps | the pari has heen o iad, the resort | cfety, Examinations, the Mathematical shocked”—that's all. ''The iufernoe| ‘ugly.” Thres years ago, he began to quently a second elective term would | e head of an American “”"“"’“‘"‘irzmu-r have ‘two blts in bright sliver | the probibition issup, will have s pat o third narty seems both premature | Tripgs, the University Scholarship |1 thal It oSt (Useh TOCh, W take notice of the school iessons given i { i the oy . Y in the clenvage, But there nre othior|2nd improbable, (Pinp Sthe s Uit cholarshib | praviously emotionally or men -[to other patients. His own schooling B S neeA Hun Wit a5 Breal: | BEADNY, CATiRrThY World ‘War! M| uin daiie tp in & 1nGEA Eace. in th : | and Commemoration. A .chapter is et e O : . Dr. anxious .o ¢ ; ne ind serious difficulty in expressing INIT in it one may find definitions of | ey ;. : i S PR 1 Study and I lias bring about the nomination of a wet | in Paris and was appointed secretar Sucid Childhood Pavind themselves under the present leader | [ ) ATES T T e aa iy, | Ward insanity. Much of this dis | recelved 511 hours of school training, for Tresident than he is excited over | Eeneral of tho American Commission | 2 © |ship of the old organizations. * * * IN WORLD WAR | |fos Wrangler, senior optime. Other| oy oF e o s O e | L, hours_of a _tull commercial . 2 01 e etroit N . o8 e voters i emselves 4 s iliar e ignol e 5 o vee! 'S (T A w5 callea Ulinitarin dgkiie, ‘s 1t | 0 Mewntiate Peace: Shies adarch, 1838, | "0 B8 RS SRR i e L S TS VEREE. Sapee them e fetms . defined’ are as' tamile a0, o it O e S Ho b vk re ot craftiga pplics to President Coolidge. His | 10 has becn Undersecretary of State, | industries there are suffering from “in- | nothing? Can e exhiess. | e e i o TR e the office he now relinquishes to go | dustrial maturity.” Gee whis! the|selves when Democrats are lined up Eaonr B e st e sindlniindy | Fordney schedules have been treat- | with Republicans on party measures | oL - bm. th Shirt sleeves” diplomaty, the term | . them like Peter Pan, who never | and vice versa? Can the old parties | his attack upon the re-clection ¥ By, the term | spéw up. 2o on when there is no oppusition, one retary Daniels favors prohibi= President Coblidge, applied partly in derision to the Amer- | BRI to the other” \what did the 4.000,000 | tion for the Navy. * * * War De- ‘ : I 000, he Navy. o b /idences of insanity, either person:| treating his case, every : - Siashes dtlaratis e o L SRS e s i s : votes cast for La Ifollette in 1924 | bartment announces its r in- | Sround for Rafael Sabatini's latest |V S AeRe, ettuy study pro. “400 0ld to run for President” raises | Aparently s passing completely out [ SUL e AHOUS LIE PN el e Chosie Stwenkih of | the National | yrout” of Sabatini's heroes are for- | The soldiers who showed personai| hold out to a disturbed, confused mind an interesting question. On April 11 | of the piciure under the new policy of | From the Columbus sk “By no means beyond the possibili | eral Trade Commissit i *| tunate, as lLeroes of orthodox ro- | Positive findings” were 38.43 per cent.| something by which it could be open.d a President Coolidge does mnot look 3 n he possibili | erd rade ommission asks the However, only 2.2 per cent were so|up and lifted v Mr. Hughes hecame 65 years old, In | PICKing men who have rown up in | especiaile hapns when he throws out | 1es.” is the verdict of the Springneld | Government to fix coal prices to pre- | mance should be Bellarlon, to be | jenciont as to be discharged from the | pressions, and it s e e ot |iths' forsipms mavite o ‘e conitiy vho | Hhs Miise. EOT 0t dabanine or e : nion (Republ »hxw’:nah finds the vent ll:rlh(‘rk p:-.nnoe.-nu.v_i S sure, ’\:‘roz}g Efl{ilywfilfiefiu{lzgkl?‘;;z; deliclontiay X0 e Yacharay frois Uie | piepalons; axdl o confidence in him- ! " 5 i b o s e b 8 ose he | Feason in the fact that “membership sia to seek treaty ‘revision from 2 “posi-| vige” dent next year, at the time of his | fil tho more important diplomatic | base ball season, but we subpose he | [HCR U U G Gic ind other qugs. | her allles; wants to. know exactly | In the greatest squalor, but this only | 0a "ladicationse elther parscnar or | in unresimere oy saronSer, consists B tas is glad he isn’t expected to make the | : 1 fnauguration March 4, 1929, Mr.|Dosts abroad. This policy has been |~ & . tions,” and that “there are in euch|what “peace with cations” | made his later achievements the . " 3 | first tackle at the opening of the foot | Foce Peace ithout annexations - family. a o > Hughes would be nearly 67 years old. | more and more marked since the pas- | bl geason. | : 0| party elements which have moce in|means. ¢+ * Brass from _liner iniore rg‘mmknhle. He became knlght, | “'0n"" tne contrary, Mott, in the :}“;flf‘?filxfiel{z ;?:.:m:z:m:;;!h. :;:;. Me gives the impression today of | 5age a few years ago of the Rogers et common with elements in the opuosins | Mongolia's shell kills two nurses and | lord, prince, and fel in love with a | gritish Medical Journal (1919), said: |definite view of therapeutic eff : e : ’ e party than with other elemeats tn| wouwnds another, und ship returns to | princess. The adventures by which |~ “Shock—and by that I mean not | Trained. socisl servicer woriore oo both mental and physical vigor far be- | act reorganizing the diplomatic serv- Auto Dangerous Weapon, | !heir own.” The Union warns that *4f | pori. © "« floover suggests a|le rose make a plot full of action. | oniy commotional but emotional shock | operate in osigl servica” workers co - yond that of many men years younger | ice. During the administration of the | T T 0 T | by 1932 they do not azquire more cour- | $10,000.000 appropriation for the pur- [ Bavored with much medieval history. | —due to terrifying or horrifying con-|patients, whether th ough . sidiital Hhias Hio fu, Yot-Mx: Huslies maya that | State' Departnent by Seovetacy Kcel:| i f PUINBIIIE o Lo o] Tt oY, may IMIDE Bt srifdic. |johase of foods by Qovemmentit eon- — o ditions "of this war, may induce | questioning of the men or investigat- e 1o ton old" He i make. the | Io5E elghtses mew apsolntments 10| Genle mmer A e oo e bion| L Lok ore, ocursiely folffed \tiency artsen ¥ o itp| - Particular Alms Phitn:. | MSSaNp vistat mg iy & e UES QS X g s b Cale vace for President in 1916, more than | important posts have gone to the| than usual this Spring, one gets the| Declaring that prohibition “cither again thye amendment, * % | From the Clevelany 3 ;;;:0: solglegmvlv“hn il'-‘:h(mu.rl;:d‘?mé m:!‘wm-.m!mn S S e (0o Seo W ecadn amo Mo has, iherafore, a | career men, ratser than (o the suc.| 10ed that it must e about time for|must be enforced or be repealed,” the | aris pays a dbilir & pound for hecf | Canada may W wet, but she has her | shown that he ls neither of a timid | ma: o At st gt sl g 2 Gres . 5 : ““| the public to realize that the auto-| Aberdeen World (independent) argues: |as “Meatless day” is inaugurated. | scruples. - Swir§mers entering To- | dispositios i L2 gusstion answered, better idea of what demands a presi- | cessful business men who have con-| mopile in the hands of a reckless| “The politicians cannot keep on talk- * * % German casualties in April | ronto's $50,000 #ater marathon must ten‘.’fifie 1 thor has RgY Coppehie HCauR et B Tuliier to ajmind qential campaign makes upon 4 can- tributed largely to the party’s warldriver is a dangerous weapon. ing enforcement with their tongues in put at 42,538, “’"@"” Kkilled, wear bathing ghits. Huwz‘hlk it may be that, w?m“’ 1997, by Paul V. Colling.) * = g tion to insanity s more common than | of Two Citles,” “Silas Warner” an. Ten Years Ago Today * ok kK most of us like to admit. the volumes of l&‘r)\-:-':":“.\l:e,;'lilr:]r: The hostilities and changing for-| A medical authority, Dr. C. M. Bow- | Commonwealth.” He was rediagnosed MAY 21, 1013 tunés of Guelphs and Ghibellines in |man, examined a certain regiment|as “manic depressive.” He was dis- . the first part of the fifteenth cen- |and found that 45.59 per cent of the|charged from hospital in 1926, clear- tury make a spirited historical back- | men gave ‘positive findings"'—showing | headed and able to support himself. in

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