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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 20

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Los Angeles, California
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NOVEMBER 9, IIjJ mes SATURDAY "MORNING." And in This Corner! TieLEE SIDE GREAT PASSAGES FROM THE BIBLE BY LEE SHTPPET o'L. A. It sho' do pay to get religion, and pass it on to others. FINDING A WAY OUT The State Chamber of Commerce is entitled to public thanks for the energetic and workmanlike manner in which it has tackled the Increasingly ominous problem of the California taxpayer. It is none too soon for the stfong and substantial business men of California to take on this problem as their own.

The appalling mess in which generations of political office-holders and professional spenders have landed public finances is sliding us into community bankruptcy at a rate which no one with Some years ago a Negro bellhop turned his back on opportunities to make easy money as a hotel bootlegger or in its night club, and became a religionist Instead. Since then he has spent five Proverbs Chapter ixv If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink; For thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head and the Lord shall reward thee. The north wind driveth away rain; so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue. It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman and in a wide house. As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so Is good news from a far country.

A righteous man falling down before the wicked is as a troubled fountain, and a corrupt spring. a dollar's worth of taxable oroDertv can afford longer to Ignore. It is one of years in England, where he is said to have been the honored guest at teas and all that sort of thing, and now, he he is touring the world "sponsored Negro Who Once Was a Bellhop Now Is Lecturer," Playwright the inexplicable peculiarities of th.e American system that what is every body's business is nobody's business a cynical saw that will have speedily to be THE TIMES-MIRROR COMPANY OFFICERS JTARRY CHANDim, President end General Manage! NORMAN CHANDLER. Be-Prealdent MARIAN OTIS CHANDLER, Becretarf TRASH. X.

PFArFlNGER, Treasurer DIRECTORS Barry Chandler, Mirin Otn Chandler, Prink X. Pfefflnter. Mbl Booth. Harry Carr EVERY MORNING TH YEAR DAILY FOUNDED DEO. 1BB1 84TH TEAR RALPH W.

TRUEBLOOD. Edltor-ln-Chlef L. O. HOTCHKIsa, Hmmm Editor OFFICES Timet Bulldlnc. First and Bprinf.

Washington Office. 1217-1219 National Pratt Hub Bldf. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE Wllilamt. Lawrence ds Cresmer Cblearo Office, 360 North Michigan Avenue Mew York Office. 385 Madison Avenue Detroit Office, 10-169 General Motors Building an Francisco Office.

Chronicle Butldlni In addition to the above offices. The Timet It on file and mar be lound by European traveleri at the office of the American Express Company, at 1 Rut Bcrlbe, Paris. France, LOS ANGELES (Locc Ahng hail tis) MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE UTILITIES DECISION By declaring the Wheeler-Rayburn Utility Holding Company Act invalid in its. entirety, United States District Judge Coleman at Baltimore has dealt a blow to one of the New Deal's most cherished dreams-that'of ultimate government ownership and control of all public utilities in the electric While no such purpose was admitted In the act, the goal was none the less plain. The program of strangling the utilities on the one hand, and competing with them on the other, in the unfalrest manner possible, was visible to the blindest.

One half of this program has now been upset, at least so far as the decision of a lower court can upset it; and while Judge Coleman's finding- is neither final, nor binding on the Securities Exchange Commission, since it was not a party to the suit, the utilities and the public have won the Personal Health Service' BY WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. by the Very Reverend Richard (Dick). Sheppard, dean of St. Paul's, past dean of Canterbury and present royal chaplain to His Majesty the King of England." That is Oarland Anderson, who tomorrow will give the first of a series of lectures in Los Angeles. Anderson is the author of a play produced in New York and also in the Majestic and Figueroa Playhouse here in 1927.

I know precious little about music, but if. I were a realtor, a banker, an industrialist or anyone else vitally affect reversed we are to dodge disaster. Few people realize the actual and personal meaning to themselves and their hard-earned holdings of the statement of State Finance Director Stockburger that California will be $79,000,000 in the red at the end of the present blennium, la spite of the $60,000,000 in new taxes that have been Imposed. Still less are they apt to grasp the significance of the official admission that the tax-layers are at the end of their devices; that hereafter it will be up to the taxpayers themselves to say what is to be done. Officialdom is throwing up its hands; apparently it can find nothing more to tax nor any way to reduce its spendlngs.

It is at the end of a breaking limb with a bottomless chasm just beneath Under the circumstances, California is fortunate in the possession of a group of hard-headed business men willing to give their time, efforts and ability to find a way out. The State Chamber of Commerce has devoted long and skilled study to the problem of government financing and tax-reduction without loss ed by the welfare and progress of Southern California I would be worried about the Philharmonic Orchestra. If climate were what makes a city, Nice would be a Man Knowing Nothing of Music Knows Importance to Community 'Signed letters pertainlnt ta personal health and hygiene, not to dtsesse. dlag-nosis or treatment, will be answered br Dr. Brady if a stamped sel-addressd envelope is Inclosed.

Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Address Dr. William Brady, ear of this newspaper.) THOSE TINY DILATED VEINS The chemical obliteration of varicose veins has proved so successful universally that it is now the standard or orthodox method of treatment. An associated condition in many cases is called telangiectasia or popularly tiny broken veins or "capillaries." Sometimes this occurs without any enlargement or dilation of large veins. It is troublesome only cosmetically.

These "broken venules are not broken, but only dilated, overfilled, stretched. They are not capillaries, but only the smallest veins. Capillaries are not vessels at all, but only spaces between cells. Capillaries cannot be seen by the naked eye; these spaces between cells can be made out greater city than Paris and San Diego would be many times as large as London. The kind of people who make any city grow and prosper are those who wish to rear their families In centers of culture, in which any unusual talent they possess may be developed by unusual teachers and be exposed to exceptional Dr.

Frank Crane once wrote a remarkable article on the theory that if you told him what a man liked he could tell you what the man was, and all of us, consciously or unconsciously, Judge cities the same way. And there could be no Hollywood Bowl were it not for the Philharmonic Or- League Sanctions and the United States only with the microscope. No one has yet isolated or separated a capillary from surrounding tissues or structures. When doctors or others speak carelessly of the capillary vessels they are BY EMIL KOEDEL Just speaking carelessly. ud to a year or two aeo.

there chestra. Fine musicians who would be in demand in Philadelphia, New York has been no treatment which would obliterate telangiectases or dilated venules without leaving a scar. Other Towns Profit by the Bowl as Much as Does Our Angel City or elsewhere maxe States. In French industrial circles it is assumed that the imports of these products from the United States will continue at least at the present ratio. Industrial France will move the proverbial heaven and earth to prevent general trade sanctions, and M.

Laval's moves must, therefore, be considered not only from a political angle. She says, quite, soberly that if The Modern Method Today skilled physicians can their homes here because, between the orchestra, the Bowl of essential services; the program which it offers comes from men who know what they are talking about. They propose that the State and its subdivisions be run on the same sound principles that govern any well-conducted private businessprinciples in whose successful application they have spent their lives. They would make the State live within its income and abolish the stock alibi that "mandatory expenses" are responsible for our deficits by constitutional reduction of such expenses. They would cut down the staggering cost of social welfare, relief and education by a process of sane co-ordination and consolidation of their innumerable scattered agencies.

They would establish work able budget systems, a uniform method of accounting, centralized purchasing and a limiting of expenditures by enforceable law. The multitude of sep arate taxing agencies would be combined, for each county, in a single office. The program is admittedly not complete, but each item is a considered remedy for governmental faults which have helped to raise the tax bills of Callfornlans from $95,000,000 to in 1934 and which, unremedied, bid fair soon to sink us without trace. THE CASE OF KEY The' college football scandal created by the discovery that the youth heretofore known as Ted Key, smashing fullback at U.C.L.A., Is a ringer ineligible for college athletic competition, is a obliterate these minute dilated and pupils, they are busy all the time. veins as well as they can obliterate large varicose veins, by vir The other day I saw a folder put out tually the same treatment.

The successful obliteration of The decision of fifty nations collectively to apply sanctions against Italy brings up the questions of Italy's raw material needs, its trade balance with some of the important countries with which she exchanges commodities, and how far those nations are ready to go which have a substantial Interest in trade with Italy. The first step of the League was to prohibit, shipments of arms and ammunition to Italy and to lift the arms embargo on It is probable that President Roosevelt's list of what the State Department considers "war materials" will also be included. Financial sanctions are already in force. Besides "war material" Italy needs especially heating and motor fuel, metals and textile raw materials. For that reason Italy will probably never be entirely by the Burbank Chamber of Commerce In which there was a fine picture of Hollywood Bowl.

And that was fair enough. The Bowl does not belong to Los Angeles, but to all of Southern California. Out in Ourville, two weeks from tonight, they are going to give first round by a large margin. The word public is used advisedly. The investing public, the great thrifty middle-class which is the United States of America, Is the owner of the public utilities; they are not now, if they ever were to any appreciable extent, a "rich man's Investment." Combined, they have millions of stockholders, each of whom would have been penalized and deprived of money honestly earned If this act had gone into effect.

The consuming public was equally concerned. Its interest Is in first-class service at rates; and reasonable rates means rates which will return a profit sufficient to attract new capital as needed and keep the physical plant In bang-up condition. The history of the electric power industry is one of continually decreasing rates, because it is one in which a heavy volume of business is particularly profitable. The intelligent self-interest of power companies prompts them to make rate reductions as rapidly as possible, and for the most part they have done so. In the real public interest, therefore, the electric power Industry should have been the last one attacked, and anything which helps to keep the efficient privately managed companies going and prosperous is a public victory.

Strangulation, not regulation, would be the effect of the act Just declared invalid. Every detail of management, not only of holding but of operating companies, was placed by that act under a political Federal bureaucracy. In going so far, Congress plainly overreached Itself, as Judge Coleman points out in his opinion. He finds the act unconstitutional on three main grounds: that it goes far beyond the limited powers of the interstate commerce clause, that it Imposes restrictions beyond the meaning of the postal clause, and that it deprives citizens of property without due process of law. "If the Constitution be construed to permit what the Public Utility Act aims to accomplish," he said, "then Federal authority would embrace practically all activities of the people and the authority of the States over their domestic concerns would exist only by sufferance of the Federal government." The language is similar to that of the Court In its Nil.

A. decision, which is natural since the same principle is involved. This is still a Fed telangiectases requires that the central venule of each network, or little group of dilated venules be injected with a mild sclerosing solution similar to the solution used for varicose veins. It is necessary that the solution be brought into contact with the Intlma, the endothelium lining the venule. It Is useless to Inject the solution around the venule.

a benefit performance for the Philhar monic Orchestra, so that the whole community will have a chance to contribute. Is every successful criminal lawyer an actor? Julius Klein, who was a self- lawyers Are Actors, Only Most of 'Em Aren't Fran About It respecting police reporter before he became a foreign correspondent and finally slipped even to the depths of writing for the movies, has observed both commentary on college football in general, rather than on the athletic ethics of the Westwood institution. Key's imposture was plainly without the knowledge or consent of the university authorities, who acted with commendable diligence at the first suspicion of his masquerade. As for Key himself, he probably has been sufficiently punished by the disgrace which he has brought upon his team-mates and himself, and he should be permitted to drop out of sight as he seems anxious to do. There may be some truth in his assertion that what he really wanted was a college education, though his "explanation" needs more explaining.

"I realized," Key Is quoted as saying, "that I wouldn't get into a university without paying tuition money, which I lawyers and actors closely and believes a successful criminal lawyer has to out-act a lot of the actors. Back in Chicago he knew a young attorney named Michael Romano and broached that theory to him. Romano didn't exactly admit that it was acting rather than facts which won him court decisions, but he was interested to the point of taking a screen test In Chicago. It promised so well that now Romano is out here to take some more tests. (Tessin) live about 35,000 Italian citizens, not counting those in Wallis and Graubuenden.

The general sentiment in Switzerland is against sanctions, as the hard-headed Swiss asks himself wonderingly: "What Is going to happen to our business?" Italy is the fourth best customer of Switzerland, after Germany, France and Great Britain. Nine per cent of Switzerland's total exports go to Italy, 8.1 per cent of its Imports come from there. It is true that in Its trade with Italy Switzerland has an unfavorable balance, but the bulk of Its exports are finished products, its loss meaning increased unemployment. Exports to Italy have been increasing, while exports to Germany, France and Oreat Britain are shrinking. It also is true that there have been difficulties in collecting from Italy.

But it la said that.no other country possesses as heavy private investments in Italy as Switzerland. These are the well understandable reasons why Switzerland demands assurance of reimbursement of losses before participating in sanctions. Another and no less Important reason is the problem of transit traffic via the Swiss railroads, mostly government-owned or controlled. As the Swiss government guarantees the bond interest on most roads the balancing of 'its budget Is closely connected with this problem. These roads carry an amount of transit freight of almost 2.000.-000 metric tons annually.

From Germany alone come about 1,000,000 tons, from Italy to Germany about 175,000 tons. The transit freight from Germany and France to Italy and the return freight from there to these two countries alone represent 85 per cent of the entire Swisa transit freight traffic. This important item of Swiss income would disappear if. because of sanctions, Switzerland would have to let Austria get this business, moving it over the Brenner. Austria's categorical refusal to participate in sanctions is largely based on economic reasons.

The United States has had a favorable trade balance with Italy for years. Italy's chief purchases, besides copper and lubricating oil, are cotton, of which she has been buying increasing quantities, with over 800,000 bales in 1933. Our main Imports from Italy are olive oil. tomato products, cheese and silk. What are we going to do in this international confusion? As the clever French see it: "Sanctions will cost us a lot of money and won't do much good as long as the United States does not participate." Already Italy, which imports much more wine from France than it exports there, has canceled a special agreement regarding this exchange.

The reasons why the League members, especially Great Britain, are so anxious for our "moral support" are quite In order to accomplish this, the physician requires a strong light free from shadows, such as an operating-room lamp, or a good head lamp. He must resort to magnification, by means of a binocular loupe, for the venules are too tiny to be readily penetrated with the needle under the naked eye. Finally, only the finest, thinnest needle obtainable will suffice. Even with the very finest needle made, it is often necessary, and quite possible, to inject successfully a venule smaller than the diameter of the needle Itself. The technic of the method is difficult and requires skill and patience, but given these, any good doctor may now offer his patients relief for this annoying trouble and as I said, up to the present no other method of treatment has given such relief.

Here I again warn readers to beware of quacks or healers of any description who appeal to the public with the assurance that they use methods or treatment recommended in this column. I still hold that if a healer is good his satisfied patients will send their friends and keep him busy. If he is not so good-well, Barnum was right. QlEftTIONS AND ANSWERS Tap, Tap, Tap 1 And It necessary to have my hydrocele tapped on both tides every few months WO.O Answer A physician abreast of the progress of medicine can cure the hydrocele with ambulant treatment. This Is little or no more troublesome for the patient than a aintle tapping.

MaateM Operalle It formrd that mastoid operation was necessary because of an Inheritance of tome venereal disease. Is that true? tc.v.a.t Answer No. Mastoiditis it computation or sequel of middle ear Infection, which In turn la usually aecondary to noee or throat Infections, such at ejulnsy, corysa, tonsillitis. Copyritht. IMS, John Dill Co.

I guess the last Joshua Little says: thing Selassie wants to hear Is the Italian army singing "Haile. Halle, the Gang's All Here." A man who has lived In Southern California celebrated Would Not Sound folly to Selassie, That "Haile, Haile" Song the other day. And he had something to celebrate. Just think of living here sixty years without ever being run over by an automobile! Italy will continue to receive, as seems possible, sufficient supplies from elsewhere, especially from the United States, Italy will not seriously be handicapped. The "freedom of the seas" will play an important part in the final valuation of sanctions.

During the first six months of 1935 Italy imported from Great Britain goods worth 4,600,000, as against 4.400,000 irr the same period of ,1934. During the same time Italy sold to Great Britain in 1935 4.300,000 worth of commodities, as against 3,900,000 in 1934. It hardly is "protection of Tana Lake irrigation water" alone which is causing the present world tremors. The Lion always roars angrily when he hears another prowling on what he considers his private hunting ground. Czecho-Slovakia would suffer very little If sanctions are ap- lied only against "armaments," ut in case of a general embargo its export loss of glass, textile, paper and ceramic goods would be considerable and the loss of this market, with Italy in its present mood, would probably be permanent.

Hence, there is very little enthusiasm for sanctions in industrial Czecho-Slovakia, especially as Italy has but recently placed orders with the (Caecho-Slovakian) Bata shoe factories in Czecho-Slovakia and Rumania for 700,000 pairs of military boots. The economic relations with Spain would considerably be disturbed, if sanctions were decreed, especially the Spanish fishing industry wculd suffer. And as only on October 3, this year, a trade treaty between Italy and Spain has been signed, after long negotiations, which was supposed to remove certain trade difficulties, great pressure is being exerted by the leading League power to keep Spain in line. Gibraltar, after all, Is on Spanish soil, so to speak. The picture would not be complete If the economic relations between Italy and Ethiopia were not mentioned.

During the period of 1930 to 1933. Italy bought 4.25 times as much from Abyssinia as the Abyssinians bought from Italy. Italy's coffee purchases, while not running into anything like our own coffee bill, doubled In 1933 over 1932. and are now ten times as great as five years ago, encouraging Ethiopian coffee production. Its main export item to Abyssinia, textiles.

Is meeting with steadily increasing Japanese competition. Abyssinian export items are ivory, certain feathers and wild animals. Caravan trade is of considerable importance in these trade relations. The great divergence in values in various years show, however, that economic life with definite and consistent requirements does not yet exist in Abyssinia. About half of the entire caravan trade (Abyssinia's) is carried on between (Italian) Eritrea and the 'Abyssinian) Province of Tigre.

These two regions always had closer economic relations than, for instance Tigre had with Addis Ababa, the capital. This, undoubtedly, accounts for the numerous defections of leading TlgTe native chiefs. It Is well to bear this in mind when considering the Italian-Abyssinian problem. The countrv which is having the most severe headaches about sanctions is Switzerland. Its Geneva representative has already pointed this out most emphatically.

In one canton alone self-sufficient. In order to become as independent as possible of imports of raw materials Italy has encouraged growing or manufacturing substitutes by tariff rates which provide this Mediterranean kingdom with the highest tariff wall of any country in the world. But, nevertheless, its annual need of coal is about 9,000,000 metric tons in addition to coke and liquid fuel. Its own annual coal production is only 500,000 tons. Great Britain's part of coal shipments to Italy has been very great.

During the first eight months of 1933, 1034 and 1933 she shipped to Italy 3.270,000 tons. 2,990.000 tons and 2,870,000 tons, respectively. The lower figure for 1935 Is due largely to payment difficulties. Of Italy's coal supply 40 per cent comes from Germany, 39 per cent from England, 10 per cent from Poland. In case of a blockade, provided Germany does not participate In sanctions, at least 40 per cent.

If not more, of the coal requirements could be furnished by Germany. It must not be forgotten that there has been an Important development of hydraulic power in Italy. Of its Iron ore supply 21 per cent comes from Algiers, 30 per cent from soviet Russia. 24 per cent from Czecho-Slovakia. 8 per cent from Sweden and 17 per cent from France.

France alone furnished 47 per cent of the total Italian imports of iron and steel This is one of the reasons that industrial France looks Upon any sanctions with considerable misgivings and does not hesitate to point this out to M. Laval. During the first six months of 1934 Italy took 7 per. cent of the total French steel and iron products exports, in. 1935 (same period) about 14 per cent If one adds to this France's considerable ex-r ports of skins and minerals, chemicals, bicycles, motorcycles, automobile bodies, grain and grain products, eggs and meat preserves, which all have increased during recent years, it is understandable that French exporters protest against sanctions, complaining that they will cause tremendous losses for France and will be of advantage only to her competitors.

They claim a threefold loss and damage: first, because France will suffer direct trade loss: second, these losses may be increased because of sanctions which may have to be applied to other countries refusing to participate in sanctions decreed by the League; third, because France may have to reimburse such countries, which would be especially hard hit by economic sanctions' and economically unable to stand the loss. Italy receives 40 per cent of its oil supply from Rumania. 25 "per cent from Russia. 10 per cent from Persia and 15 per cent from the United States. Of copper 31 per cent comes from the United States.

30 per cent from Chile, 22 per cent from Portugal Sixty-one per cent of its cotton imports come from the United eral union, with autonomy in its component parts. It is not a bureaucratic oligarchy with all power centered in "Washington. That is the plain meaning of the court's decision. Of great if less direct significance is the fact that the reasoning applied in the Wheeler-Rayburn case is equally valid against most of the remaining administration schemes yet to pass before the courts. Broadly speaking, all of them rest on the same collectlvist principle; if one is unconstitutional all are unconstitutional.

One by one the supposed high cards of the New Deal are fluttering, soiled and tattered," into the discard. The tricks they took are being crossed off the score sheet because, on closer examination, they are found to be deuces Instead of aces and not even part of an American deck at that. BETTER LATE THAN NEVER With no very obvious reason, the Los Angeles Realty Board has for thirty-two years barred women from membership it. its organization. The news that this restriction has at last been removed will please more than the Immediate objects of the long-time ban.

Not only has there been no argument worth taking seriously for keeping women, who now fill important places in every line of business, from membership in this representative professional body, but there are many good reasons giving them the right to Join. The outmoded prejudice against women In euch capacities has been disproved in so many modern business establishments that it no longer holds water. Women generally have shown themselves so adept in appraising and selling real estate and have always maintained ethical standards so high that their voice on the Realty Board, added to that of their male associates, prom- i i i ul raciilta In stnhllirinp: did not have, unless I played football." The words "tuition money" hardly apply to the University of California, which charges no tuition and where fees are nominal. What Key presumably meant was that the financial worries of good footbrll players are materially less than those of other students, at universities in general, if they are not at times removed altogether. This is a situation indefensible from the standpoint of amateur athletics.

It is possible to argue that all students, including athletes, should be permitted to work their way through college by exercise of their best talents, but it is not possible to argue that athletic competition for pay is amateurism, nor that any form of fraud should be permitted at institutions supposed to Inculcate the highest ethical standards. The colleges should either clean this situation up or abandon the pretense that football is an amateur sport. SHE WILL STAY INSANE The decision of the Arizona State Board of Pardons and Paroles not to grant either pardon or parole to Mrs. Winnie Ruth Judd means that Mrs. Judd will stay insane Indefinitely.

If the State board had granted her request, she would, with little doubt, have bee-i miraculously restored to mental health in a very weeks. If she recovers sanity under present circumstances, the death chamber would confront her. Her murder of Agnes Ann Leroi remains unexplated, and she has never" been tried for killing Hedwig Sauudson. Mrs. Judd, it will be recalled, hacked up both, packed them in trunks, and brought them to Los Angeles, expecting to dispose of them in the Pacific Ocean.

She was about to be hanged when an accommodating Jury found her insane, and she is now in the Arizona State Hospital Arizona may as well reconcile itself to paying her board there from now on. ONE EXAMPLE BY FRANK A. GARBUTT Small taxpayers, and voters who Ignorantly think they don't pay taxes, look complacently upon Income taxes that are "soaking the rich," Just another name for destroying the rich whose spendlngs make a community prosperous. Consider one example of thousands that are undermining California's prosperity and that of the whole United States which cannot prosper while part ef iU people suffer. I know a clever screen and state actress who made three pictures last year.

Her salary was $300,000. Why shouldn't she pay plenty? With California's income taxes added to the impossible Federal taxes she retains only $100,000. She had, at much expense, and perhaps extravagantly, established a city residence and a beach home costing over $300,000, which reauire $5000 monthly to maintain, most of which goes to employees and tradespeople. This leaves her $10,000 yearly. Deduct her customary charities, automobiles and Incidentals and there remains $10,000 of her earnings to save foe her future.

The earning- years remaining to her, barring accidents, may be five. Who cares? She is forced to leave California which loses her Income tax plus three times as much in legitimate taxes on lost future Investments, her spendlngs and her influence. Scotch the Ignorant demagogues who brought this blight apon as and ur State. Pied. Piper Wanted The Argentine government offers large rewards for a remedy for the plague of rats that infest Rosario, probably the greatest wheat port In the world.

is.ti.t.n Vi trKar Via AUTUMN A mighty sorcerer strides o'er the land-Whence come or whither going, who can say? He hides himself from mortals well away. But see! He has passed by I On either hand The forests stand transmuted to our sight. In gleaming gold. In pale and ruddy. flame.

And strangely wondrous colors none can name; His hand has touched the maples, and they light The countryside with an unchanging glow, Mysteriously burning and the glow this still stream holds beauty none can know. So, when you came and touched my life, its dull And sombre fabric sprang to glow-tog light-Miraculously changed unto my sight Into a queen's robe, richly beautiful. With broidery of gold and Jewels sewn. That I wear proudly, with head lifted high. Clothed in your love, no evil can come nigh Nor any guess that poor dress was iny own! GRACK BUSH.

wheat crop is being moved rats move in onto tne wnarves in. such numbers that during the three months' loading season thev carrv off as much as 120 carloads of grain. J. F. Legal clinics to correspond with medical clinics for thosa who cannot afford to pay high-priced attorneys are being advo-ratpd bv William S.

Weiss, a New I5C3 MJ UdliR a still further this highly important industry. wesawsawjawsaaiawsawsweMBBaBjevaawawsiSwa A merchant often loses a customer's trade because of the bill that is still York attorney. Mr. Weiss thinks 1 1 1 A mr.A kn 1 Drunken drivers have the potentially ties of a front-line attack. some piaii cuuiu uc uciusu ujr means of which leeal advice owed.

cculd be given those who eaiL. not afford to pay lor it. persists Most folks find it anncuu Denave i An egotist is any leliow wno as well as they expect others to. la talking when you prefer a Hit An egotist is any fellow who.

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