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ee ed ain eeeeione re RAJ 3 9, willbe ch ur thoughts given a [Sus of minds and how they work? BHheed test, your common sen: gene Where do you imagine YOU will ral information and power to reason |™Nk? Just as an indication of your estimated on 4 p eu basis j stat S. intellee Ny speaking, try on} s%/PWhen the United States wanted of- | urself some of the following t | | ; Youngest Air Pilot in the World daughter of the inventor of the Farman planes, fourteen years old, is the youngest aeroplane pilot in i the world. Mle. Farman is more than a pilot. She is well ~ ‘versed in the construction of plane and motor and she can "*"epair machines with the skill of an expert. She is shown » in the cockpit of a plane ready for flight. ‘What Is Your Mental Status? cUnele Sam May Soon Record | Your Brain Power in Census Test ‘Below Are Given Some Simple Tests to Awaken the Brain—Prepared by Prof. Edward L. Thorndyke of Columbia. 20, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) LA RE you ready to be counted in} than thirty-five Fé a mental census? fi and professional Are you willing to have Uncle Sam list you among the high- brows, the lowbrows or the mentad be universities, colleges schools are using tests of this nature, most of them pre- pared by Prof, ‘Thorndyke. Who knows how soon the time will " middie classes? come when, every ten years or every "Willing or not, the time is doubtless | five years, each man, woman and © @gujing when the intellectu: | child in the country will be tabulated taker will get you, when y According to his or her place in a cen~ ur brain figers and wanted them quick, during lowing test is defined one | which “concerns comprehension of | SHUT PATH DOES A CANON GALL inary physical relations." ‘There RIREDIOH A LEVER? ere tiles Fo lems, First, @ mw the " a cannc aleve n ball fired fr |cannon across # field. Second, if a| | Ducke of wa forty-five ----- pounds and a fish is p water will the whol a rifle which ear- | SWHAT DOES THE BUCKET WEIGH > 100 yards, any With THE FISH IN IT: Wut can g yards 8? ‘Two ot the three vhe problem of the 5 ces. Inside a cardboard (an inch on a side, are two] WITH A TRUE RIFLE- WHICH TARGET boxes h of the smailer #8 EASIER TO HiT? YON sut box inside, How | we there’ altogether? Next,| ire two smaller boxes inside | then three and then four. The| problems are given orally, and but al minute tion o: Let somel paper-cutting 1 y be spent on the solu- & BOx CONTAINS Two BOXES EACH CONTAINING ANOTHER BOX - HOW MANY BOXES ALL t Mlle. Andre Farman, 14 Years, | districts A BLowourT ! AND | HAVEN'T GO AND SEE IF You CAN Copyneht, | What to Do Poor Little Income! Until the Doctor Comes By Charlotte C. West, M. D. 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Brening World.) Pneumonia M NIA is an infectious di: THE JOKE IS ON YOU INCONE | KNow WHERE HE You Made LITTLE INCONE Dizz~ EXPENSE ! cae, LITTLE INCONES, ° ALWAYS, Go FAST ae IT WAS THe | PRice Nave )| | { HIN Woazy MA Copyright, 19: DON'T like . {should rest; leads him to forego u meal when the body requires fuel, 1s " say anything," | chair doing in the dining room? remarked Mr, Jarr, “but since | The Jarr Family | By Roy L. McCardell | by The Press Publishing Cc (Tue New York Rrening World I's the hou broken and looks shabby in no no w nder everything in d t t jar | {Ying in the face of pneumonia at th« you've got the Ouija board | tine on RO TEREY te A ave present time. those who overwor : it’s all off with this ‘Look up,! “Little Emma brought the cha fect et: tt is communicable, All’ ana underfeed themselves run a gré down!" thing.” Teeny ere apie tned joy Won Infectious diseases are and some to @| gin eur t do you mean?” asked Mra, | ™rmed.” aeaiernanee rt | far greater extent than others, * ) , BO PiAce for st, ANY Wey A certain amount of fuel is indis-| Jarr as she abstructediy pushed the | growled Mr. Jarr—for he wanted to It has stripped within the all other Pneumonia is now iggregations of fronted, prevalent The been germ causing isolated, last decade out- | winter pneumonia hi and the disease can- diseases. | regarded as the most deadly disease with which large! people it is naturally n large cities than in rural are pensable for the body's needs, tha all know, Starches and sugars not take the place of fat in supply Ing’ the body with a heat-producing, ! energizing fuel. This is particularly what is most required, for the resist- ance of the body to pneumonia and similar diseases is weakened when the proper amount of fat in the diet is de- creased, We need more fat to keep us| ceiling,” he we! pointer to “Yes as she will . dress, gloves, everything “You know,” replied Mr, con- more give a hand.” “Why give | Jarr Well, a ‘hand? replied, asked Ouija; 8°! if she'd get a new out#it for Kuster— Jarr ‘Look up, not down; out not in—and , asked Mrs, ok at that cobweb on the and, so saying, \in this house I know It isn't necesaury get at the Ouija board himself and ask a thing or two about Hoover, and whod win the pennant, and if he'd get a raise of salary. atever iy the matter with you, | rd Jarre!" asked his wife. “I | Ww you particular about 8 before! Now you've made me | forget what was the last letter Ouija | to!” c "said Mr, Jarr, everything going to wr: ‘when ‘I ane | k and ruin TOGETHER? QUICK! miaate side pret | 20% Of course, exist unless the pneu-| warm in cold weather, ‘The diét of the| he took the broom and brushed down| to consult a durn old Ouija board senting but one edge, He throws mocoocus—us the germ is oulled—be| requimaux is largely if not entir he cobweb and the broom made al Mook at those wm; yroom any reese fragment away and lays the gol present, |fat. When the body is warm it 4s less| dirty mark on the ceiling, | magasines—and especially the floor?” FOLD PAPER TWICE AND pacer awe , You must Cal ay 7| How? Over-fatigue from any cause | liable to tire, to fatigue—and, further-; “Naw you've done it,” cried Mra.| “Those are the old magazines ee CUT OUT NOTCHICENTER} | firolded. — Pet * Appearance | whatsoever must be avoided. It has |more, the nervous system requires fat! fare, “Don't you iknow you should e the children to eut pictures out RECONSTRUCT PAPER Br thie (a one Gb the Rata toe Alueem anes <nae tum eke anmcuss |e VONR Un ns i ce said Mrs. Jaurr FROM THE UNFOLDED || «suincrio: it reminds me of | To prevent pn but a 8 the broom when you 1, 1 didn't mean for them to} "CUT ovT” the old catch m about the fox | more auiey tO sold, thet. dt ebille, | alto keep up th brush down cobwebs? Now you've/do it in the dining room,” growed “i Nhe bag of corn which| When it is not properly fed. with an abundance of fresh air i spoiled the ceiling Rte. vane | . a river, The A person whose enthusiasm leads! proper food. : ry t when aie Well, it looks better, at that, than | You are very careless with things BRING 7 PINTS ae i ed and| Proper amount of sleep in a well-aired with that cobweb sticking up there!” | youracit pl treated hie wite OF WATER | boy to the riven | re ore eee he eos id) room is therefore highly impor AMG darn Sand woRte at fae eaves a en 6 ACCURATELY ack exactly seven pints of * instance, and you never hang up MEASURED WITH water. To measu: ne guve him 4 ° ’ Pp Ou BEV et 5 anp 3 Pr Measures | | thevespint ves sie ave tun «) THE EVENING WORLD Maxims of a By Marguerite}. you never” fuld “yo uss the amount, OUIJA EDITOR ASKS| OO re ee rent Anis, Chie five-pint vessel | | 3 Mooers By Sis inga all WHAT COURSE lem is given orally, | 9, | Oo | is ks uf WOULD YOU TAWe allowed pencil or | PSY rrrnnnnnnnnnnnm®? odern al Marshall them,” grumbled Mr. J TO COVER EVERY two similar prob- | $ If the $1 Haircut Materializes ‘ 25 | hard Xe FOOT OF TH ay Will the Wig Be in Vogue? | Coprright, 1929, by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), too, Mr OF THE 9 h you mi 9 | w one ENCLOSED CIRCLE ! | SW OMEN are divided between the type who yearns to be a man's first] rls are i love and the type who thanks heaven daily that she isn't! | str, asking iin atrial hic to bring g at th water, beginning by| SQ ,*TRY THISON | "The year's record high tid probably the protest of that good oul some ink t ildren Bimgewar, what did it do? Tt turned t vessel; and in the | \ YoOuR old sport Neptune against this country’s going dry 5 \mpilled, You knew about it. You tet Bae ine psychologist, otherwise the VE RInG BAa’®. Hine: SS, QUIVA | Why does the writer or speaker who siys “In A word” immediately pro- | (hem have the ink. ‘The stain ta ewmental census taker, on the drafted ng the four-piat one SS | ceed to use ALL the words in the bright lex eloquent? \ } three-quar- | to “Yes, and nobody made any attempt t t ednen and t As of interest. In one American town, according to the Department of Labor, uke it out. Why didn't 4 . here is | ters of th eg es one o hat ion BARNS|!emon or ammonia on dds tosis, founded on the Bine n ay ‘ | ters of the wiveg earn money, In every town t on BARNS} mor SiNRONS of #0 Nayesem a ed at Loland nford nal |} money. but it frequently isn't PAID la pine tu © Univers row the | le, ‘ Some of the answer's to yesterday's | Judging trom old photographs, the “modest costumes” of the stage stars! oh yway, and I'm goin stirs NX Training Corps w ra take e weet question: Are College Undergradu-| % the past vary as the square of their distance from the critic of the 1) ee) a new one this di elect a eteplepes as ates Better for Never Having| Present—who is so worried over Aphrodite without any nightic nicw thm GUt Bid: kek Maw On en! kor sap Now 1 census has sproad | Whatever part of the fic Kissed? Men have written most of our histories—but women have made them urked Mr. Jurr Wea And who to the colleges. Over a yea S. A. M., Morningside Heights: My | Awful thought for to-day: you are nearer the the Euster hat than! pays for them? eee lag ald “4 . You furnish the money, 1 suppose aa rd Thorndyke of ouija mid: "A fellow who's nevar| _ You ever were before wd Mrs, Jarr, mild Whe eae Ms Sou ogcoh putcinicn Kissed has still got something to live | The person who invented-—and named—shock absorbers must have put tn nla" to be nfo this year for.” | @ year or so studying the mental machinery he truly ¢ Come now." sald M glass 4 y 1 Osculator, N. Y. ©. a world war| The best “chaser” for an unhapr ffa ther love aff Vance examination based on that this test | veteran I've hisved in six languages, | AMbody can understand the doctrit Vicarious atonement who wa r enc na fic subjec tudied y | May be ari COIN SIEBE |sccruaing the callve Head: aya| # husband's fate dinner the day the coo ¢ ndiess @ hg the le € epecicic subjects ty of Penney, Years old, and that any normal child | ‘ocluaing the native Bronx. I say come, the grocer delivered soap instead of soup and Mrs, Jones culled waste and carelessness in 4 Blfool, | The University of Pennsy!- o¢ twelve should be ready with a so: | fellaw who has never kissed might a8! wearing a hundred-dollar sp-ing sult wing and since the wer, is erim-| wania followed suit and now more lution, ws | Well be dead, If love is @ tragedy, marriage can be miscins uwpom to supply comic reLef, inal! And a map can't make a faint | ’ 4 | 2aey te started a Drivel War, Robert E. Peary Jr., 16 Years Old, Who Now Owns An Island | LL medals, trophies and Eagle Island were bequeathed | to Robert E. Peary Jr., the sixteen-year-old son of the | late Rear Admiral Peary, discoverer of the North Pole. Eagle | Island is located near Harpswell, Me., and it was left to the boy with the request that he pass it to his children with a similar request that the property be kept ‘in the possession of their descendants. The Admiral purchased the island with money earned while a high school student. | Raising Another Anti | By Neal R. O’ Hara. ‘ Copyright, by The Press Publishiag Co. (The New York Bvening World) | The Saloon Has Closed Up and the Cigar Stores Are Next’ | Pretty Soon There'll Be Only Flower Stores and Tea Rooms,’ | 16 boys that abolished slavery) ash tray. And the nut factories are! | Li | | in '61 started something. They) filled with guys driven crazy by started the Civil War. But the | safety matches, guys that abolished saloons in 1920) Yep, the Antis want the Nation jhave started a whole lot more./dry and smokeless, the same es, The powder, They claim the Greeks and Programme that called for a saloon-| Romans got along without smoking, less Nation in 1920 now calls for @) and so can we! Which fs a fact. i cigaretteless Nation in 1925, Hell The Greeks and Romans got along will be abolished in 1930, without smoking and the Greeks amd ‘There's a great big difference be-| Romans also got along without tween abolishing slavery and abol- | clothing, which is something the | Antis seem to forget. If it comes to bane , 4 vote, there are (plenty of cigarette PoT & fiends who would give up tobacco! MoRE. | leaves for smoking if they could GOxES | have onk leaves for clothiny. That’ rj ie is, for clothing everybody, Cetiar! The Crepe Hangers’ Union ts . ) muking a special drive against fee i male whiffers, Smokes for women ain't their idea of equal rights, The Antis are willing the women should ishing cigarettes. And there'll be a| Coll their own in a baby carriage, but lot of difference between the Battle | not in a sheet of rice paper, The of Bull Run and the Battle of Bull, leading slogan of the cigg campaign Durham. ‘The cigarette army will| is going to be “Save the girls!” "Bo- fight like fiends! They'll fight at! bacco Trust already has a strong the drop of a butt and they'll strug-| Counter slogan in “Save the cou- gle till they've inhaled their last | pons!" The smoke of battle should breath, The licker cause may look| be very thick quite hopeless, but the cigarette case} A smokeless Nation is going to be has a silver lining. | tough on old Virginia. ‘There's nothe It sizes up like a warm battle. | ing in the whole State now but to When the Cigarette Rebellion is all{bacco plantations and cigarette over, Gettysburg should look like @| plants, If the new idea in Prohitte’ minor skirmish, You can't expect | tion goes through there'll be nothing Antis to have a beart, least of all a|to smoke but Virginia hams, which tobacco heart, The plans now 1] ain't what you'd call a thriving ine for Nick O'Tine and the Old Nick fa ae The cigarette hounds wit line up in the same stable, The sa loon has closed up and the cigar} NOW % He stores are next, Pretty soon there'll| WONT i be nothing to put on street corners} GEV ANy- but flower and tore tea rooms. The main idea of a Vice Commit- ee is to have plenty of Vice Pre dents at $10,000 4 year, As soon the ghost begins to walk imply , to pick out a Needed Reform, Right now the ¢ man worst enemy. A fag wil! a guy into’) all be whining “Carry me back tq the gutter, provided the urn | Old Virginia.” Ses A lot of W ‘ spend! Anticigarette bunch will elimte their hard earned gra to get) pale all Ifs and Butts from thetr enough coupons for fountain pens.| Campaign arguments, ‘The Antis The with wretches | Want to down to brass tacks tha of the | right away, ‘Tobacco folks are wily ling to make it brass knuckles. But dtost but w e's abused and the big question will be decided im : fone of his bust-) 1925 like this: If the Reform Elee nena waa ment can show a halo over thelr ya a ea aae af : hry tT) head when the campaign is finished ou veun excuse not to get_me| then the Prohibs win, If the hale my Kaster things in time,” And Mr. Jart sat down and Ou board said}’'Yes, all will be wel. turns out to be a ring of smoke the* “| cigurette crowd wins, Ney en