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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 4

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Akron, Ohio
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4
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SATURDAY, JUNE 4. 1927 AKRON BEACON JOURNAL The Thrill That Comes Once In A Lifetime H.T. Webster I Fascist Taboos That the Mussolini government censors the press is a thing well known. It has been to learn the exact nature and extent of this i vi rocK AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Published by THE BEACON JOURNAL CO. East Market Street Corner Broadway C.

L. KNIGHT JOHN S. KNIGHT Editor J. H. BARRY Business Manager CHECKS DR.

STEPFIELD permanent Jobs established we heard no more about it. Editor Beacon Journal: censorship, because orders are issued to editors over the telephone, with strict injunctions against reducing them to writing. The New York Nation, Every little while the university Is Dr. Stepfield trying to put some turns out a bunch of job seekers and thing over on the readers of the Bea however, reprints these following from the Milwau these loyal upllfters seem to feel it their duty to yell a calamity and create con Journal? kee Leader: I checked up on his last letter and more Jobs to protect their own. The university seems to have lobby enough Entered at Postofflca, Akron.

Ohio, aa Mcond-el mattar here is what I found! In his letter printed on Tuesday, May 31, he cites to work any bill through the legislature which it desires. In March there Glenn W. Herrick's "Manual of Injuri MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PItESS Tha Associated Pr.sa axrluslvely entitle to tha all news, dispatches credited to It or not otherwtst aiadlted la thU pper, end also the local news published herein. was a bill passed appropriating out of a busted state treasury for corn borer Jobs. The government has stimulated prosperity for the implement companies by buying their sur ous Insects" and gives a list of corn pests taken from that book (pp.

295-317) but he absolutely fails to mention TELEPHONE DIRECTORY flil-hl ana Holla- ajonnacHons that Herrick devotes several pages Main tlto Main fllfts plus implements. Three million dollars worth delivered in 10 days! It hbUataeri'i office (print line) Mala tit (pp. 299-301) to a discussion of the Kaiioruu room Composing room Business office) Circulation Display Ad. Classified Adv. European corn borer, its description, ought to create quite a campaign fund for next year.

The fact of the matter eiS4 Main 1169 lilt 8164 life history, and control. Private exchange saetlni all depart-' toenta Main fllSO The information Herrick gives coin is that it has damaged the farmer a great deal, not only in doing of unnecessary work but also It has hindered him in getting in his spring cides with that given In this paper by Dr. Kraatz and refutes Dr. Step- FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVE Story, Brooki Finley fields assertions. Is that why Dr.

crops. New yore oiiy Pershing 8quara bids. Stepfield did not mention it? Across the road from my home is a Such inconsistency as his Is cer Chicago ItAeloa Ouarantea Bank Philadelphia Equitable Bldg. tainly amazing, to say the very least! 0an Francisco Beoart Mag. H.

CASSIDY. "SMELLING THE COFFEE" to Angelea Hlgglna bldg. widow's farm. She cannot rent It for the taxes and upkeep. A corn borer pulverizer came into a 12-acre field on this farm on a Friday; it did not get over this field until Wednesday.

There were at least seven different job holders In this field before the operator finished the work. Is it any wonder that taxes are high? Editor Beacon Journal: SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1927. In this evening's edition of your pa per the statement Is made that a wom Devil Take The Hindmost an black-mailer "gained prominence" through filing a breach of promise suit. Aug. 5, 1926., It is forbidden to refer in any way to the interview which the Indian poet Tagore gave to a reporter of the Vienna Neue Freie Presse, in which he denies the Fascist report that he is an admirer of Mussolini.

Aug. 23, 1926. It is ordered not to say anything about a manifesto of London intellectuals which demands the abolition of forced enlistments. Aug. 30, 1926.

Suppress all mention of the purchase of war materials in Italy by foreign governments. Sept. 23, 1926. Don't publish the final plea, of the attorney general in the process dealing with the murder of the Fascist Luporini and the Anti-Fascist Nenniolini in Florence. Cut every word referring to the economic, financial and political penetration of Albania by Italy.

(It was emphasized that these orders came direct from Mussolini.) Oct. 13, 1926. Nothing must be said about the thefts committed by Italian soldiers in the hotels of Meran, South Tyrol. Feb. 25, 1927.

The prefect forbids any mention of the departure of Under Secretary of State Grandi to San Kemo for the purpose of meeting the German Foreign Minister Strese-mann. If these notations are authentic, and it seems reasonable in the light of Mussolini's recent pro-nunciamentos to suppose that they are, this is an excellent comment on the status of liberty in the Fascist regime. These are almost as stringent as the deletions of our state board of motion picture censors indeed, they fall but little short of the Wood-rovian censorship which was established during the World war. I have 149 acres here, also 160 acres in the corn belt of the west; however Also that she had twice attempted The one thing which characterizes this century more than any of its other attributes is Speed. It is not difficult, for a man to love speed' for its own I have nowhere nearly as much anxi to commit suicide and had finally succeeded.

ety about the corn borer- as I have Allow me to request that you look sake. The child, with its natural impulses still un- ibout the tax borer. The agricultural department has a representative, the county agent, in each county to see to the appointing into the use of the word "prominence" in connection with such a person and such a life. by civilization and the savage in the deep wilderness love the feeling of swift motion, Rather think you will find that "no of a few local inspectors to help them torious" and "notoriety' are the correct words to use. Prominence refers to high-principled with the wind beating upon the face and the world whizzing past.

We have come' to regard speed as mora than a pleasant We-have made it something of a commercial god. It is no longer a luxury; worth-while deeds and accomplish ments. Lindbergh, for instance. gained prominence and fame. ims unfortunate woman moron we have made it a necessity.

gamed notoriety. The man who earns his. own living works at a Your paper gains "notice" as an ex ample of the use of English as it should not be written nor spoken. wake up and smell the coffee. "PURIST." VARIETY OF SUICIDES UlMGM A PfTALl Editor Beacon Journal: OF MUSIC Rt ACHED Speaking of suicide, there are sev eral different kinds.

For instance, there is physical or bodily suicide. Trig mental suicide and moral suicide. fair There is much theorizing among col get established. A year ago some of these same local inspectors were opposed to the uniformed borer guards sitting around in the shade reading; but it seems to have a different effect when they have a government auto to ride around in and a salary to drive it on. In some instances they warn the farmer not to fight the clean-up too hard for they may not get the two dollars an acre for picking up the stalks.

However I want to give some of these inspectors credit for being honest enough to admit that the so-called clean-up is not warranted, but if the state has easy money to throw away they might as well have It as anybody. I am not contending that there is no corn borer; but I am contending that there Is nothing to warrant such an expenditure of public money. From the farmers' standpoint there has been time enough lapsed now since we have known of the corn borer, to prove that this great damage is swivel chair theory. I have discussed this matter with more than 50 farmers and with one exception it has been pronounced, political graft. Some used much stronger language.

The one exception thinks perhaps there is a corn borer but he does not approve of the drive, The farmer has been hard hit for the last few years; he needs relief, and the thing that would bring him the biggest relief would be to get out from under the burden of supporting these tax absorbing upllfters. They are not only a burden to support but the; are a burden from the Interference standpoint, too. Our city cousins realize we faave been hard hit and would be glad to help us if they knew what to do: lege professors and doctor-authors as to the reasons why so many of our collegians are killing themselves. Some hold that it is caused by too much freedom, or by a disbelief of all theories of good ethics that our grandads held. Some dismiss it with the rash statement that it is merely a product Washington Observations By FREDERICK WILLIAM WILE Copyright, 1937, by tbe Beacon Journal rate; He has to.

Everything around him is going fast. He has the sensation that if he pauses, he will be run over: And that is more than a mere hallucination. There is little place in the world of action for the man who dallies and takes it easy. At the least, he is passed by younger men. At the worst, he is crushed under the juggernaut.

At lunch, he eats his food quickly. "When he is through with his labor, he frets at a five-minute delay in the arrival of his bus. If he drives a machine, he blows his frantic klaxon at the 6treet corners because the red light is turned against him. Having done this all week, he cannot abide a calm and restful Sunday. The tempo is in his nerves.

He feels uneasy unless he is going and going fast. He takes out the family machine and goes for a ride. He is not going any particular place. He has all day to do his traveling. There is no urgency whatever.

But he goes into a tantrum at every delay along the road. The same thing holds true when he gets his vacation. He does not settle down quietly somewhere to take things easy for a couple of weeks. He bundles into his machine, takes an automobile tour over a distance whioh would have been fabulous to his grandfather," and when he gets where he is going, he. tears from one.

sight to another as if his life depended on his losing no second between them. of the 20th century. They are all dis New York Day By Day By O. O. McINTYBE Copyright, 1027, by Beacon Journal NEW YORK, June 4.

No professional calling is so provocative of sneers as that of the female impersonator. exception of Julian Eltlnge who is rich and has a Rlalto theater named for him, few have attained theatrical heights. Yet the female impersonator is invariably a drawlne WASHINGTON, June 4. Not a single one of the big pifioB nf i-Vitt TTniror? Crafoe time ronroconfo in Via cussing physical suicides. while almost before our very eyes.

in fact, in our very homes in this very city, there is a form of suicide that es national oratorical contest just held at Washington. Birmingham, with a population of 225,000, was the only sizable community with a spokesman in the linals. The Chaplin Retort Some time ago, Lata Grey Chaplin filed suit for divorce against her husband, Charles Chaplin, the well and sentimentally known buffoon of the silver sheet. The petition was plenty smacky. In the meantime, there has been a great deal of jockeying for the Chaplin fortune which leads one to believe that Mrs.

Chaplin, however just her claims for divorce may be, js not entirely unaware of the value of the American dollar. Comes now. Mr. Chaplin with a long petition in which he alleges that his wife had her sweeties too. The idea seems to be that mud has to be fought with mud.

The whole thing looks pretty sordid. There is no question in anyone's mind that the Chaplins don't want to live together. The point of their litigation, will be purely financial. For the sake of a few dollars more or a few dollars less, the two of capes our notice. Whenever any per son allows his or her mind to become The two next largest places represented were Salt Lake the catch-all for any one man's the card.

Bert Savoy with his Jovial hard boiled commonness packed theaters from coast to coast. He spawned slang ories or any group of men's theories, then that person is allowing his crea man went arouna tne world. One of the first female City (population 135,000) and Binghamton, N. Y. (population It was smaller towns like Oak Park, McAlester, Okla, and Leonardtown, from which the four remaining young orators came.

tive ability to rust; he is not using his impersonators was Bill Artz, who now runs a dog shop on mind to its capacity. In other words, D1XU1 V. he is committing mental suicide. It almost looks as if Main st. has a monopoly of eloquence He is like the man who lived in a The modern crop of female impersonators are college men who found their metier at college theatricals.

They launched careers in what they considered at the time and intellectual power, for these seven school children valley all his life. Mountains all were the pick of roundly 2,000,000 boys and girls from re around him, mountains of stone and mountains of mental narrowness. He mere clowning. Many fathers who expected sons to sit at important desks lived to see them traipsing around in gions which included New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, had never traveled over to the other women ciotnes. j.

Detroit, Los Angeles, Cleveland, and a host of other big- side. He had never seen anything ex league burgs. cept what was cooped up in his val them are apparently willing to pose before the pub As a rule the female impersonator is a pronounced masculine type. One peculiarly enough graduated to his ley. He said, as we talked of the Incidentally, the victory of Dorothy Carlson of Utah, lic in the title roles of a divorce scandal.

A little calling from the driver's seat of a truck. Most of them world, "Waal, stranger, if God's world sole representative of the bobbed-hair sex in the cham-pionship finals, seems to indicate that this is Swedish' big to tother side, as 'tis to top of are married but they live pretty much alone. They are self-respect on both sides would keep this thing out of the Daddy Browning class. yonder mountain, then, by gol, it sure conscious or a certain stigma. In his early days Julian Eltlnge had to prove his mascu America's season.

Like Lindbergh, Miss Carlson is of Is some world I He was dead from Beside the couple who will let its private and Swedish ancestry. the neck up. He was a mental linity by mighty wallops. He frequently waded through a semi-circle 01 leerers at back stage doors leaving sev Then there is another form, moral eral with moused eyes and dangling teeth. He was handy James W.

Wadsworth, former United States senator intimate matters be dragged into the public prints over a financial row, Joyce Hawley, who got a hundred dollars for taking a bath in public, is a mere witn nis mitts. from New York, is being quietly mentioned as an ideal American delegate-in-chief at the Geneva naval confer suicide. Man has always had what he has been pleased to call a "moral code." Many times in the slow and painful evolution of man his moral laws have A press agent devised a rousing publilcty stunt for one piker. ence. He is a republican, a soldier, a strong believer in impersonator.

It was during the days of Jack Johnson's championship. The scheme was for the actor to go to been years behind his better knowledge ine resort unicago over wnicti Johnson presided and national defense, a student of International problems, and well-known abroad. of human nature. We are ever ready start a row. however there is one thing they can do that will help us and that is not to vote for any candidate for political office who does not pledge himself to bend every effort to repeal these laws that promote these tax absorbing jobs.

There seems to be an effort made to lay this borer outrage to the big guns of the west. I know of nothing to indicate any such thing. The agricultural department and the state university are closely affiliated. For the past four years we have had university students guarding 'corn borers; the present so-called stubble beater was invented at the Ohio State university. Last winter Secretary Truax went to Washington to discuss the corn borer question.

The result here is a chance to try to make the farmer think we are doing something for him. We will appropriate a bunch of money, but the manufacturers' surplus product, turn the rest of it over to the politicians and see if we can't pull the wool over the farmers' eyes. I think if you will trace this carefully you can locate the big gun in this deal down at Columbus. There is no use in trying to pass the buck to anybody out west, unless it might be the help of the implement lobby. There could be pages written on this subject but I am not in the same position as the promoters of the corn borer chase.

I have to do my writing on my own time. We opponents are classed as being ignorant; we know it. However, so fat-as I know we are supporting ourselves The impersonator was to hit Johnson and depend on Not the least of Wadsworth's qualities, as a co-framer Ballooning For Pleasure The German doctor who says a balloon flight is tne burly escorts accompanying him for protection from to condemn our fellows for every mistake they make. Yet our own lives are full of mistakes. No one can live a perfect life and have a loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and enjoyment of them, without having broken some of the of any agreements that might be sealed at Geneva, would be the prestige he has in the United States senate.

As a serious damage. It was well staged and would have as good as a three-week -vacation and who recom doubtless won first page prominence all over the land. member of that body for 12 years, and for many years But at the opportune moment the Impersonator paled and mends it as a substitute for the week-end motor chairman of its military affairs committee, Wadsworth tenets of our modern moral code. slumped into a dead taint, it was Johnson who considerately revived him with a dash of cold water. trip is right, in the light of Howard Wolf's exper would undoubtedly command unique Influence on the hill There is no doubt, in the minds of The thing that he loses by this mock urgency is leisure.

If the purpose of his speed were to give him more time for loafing, there would be some point in it. But that isn't the idea. Indeed, he can't stand pure leisure. This is reflected in his amusements themselves. It has affected even the great American game of poker.

Draw poker is as rare in this country as healthy women. The players can't stand a calm and scientific game. They want Action. They want to lose fast or win fast and they resort to Spit-in-the-Ocean and other barbarons perversions of poker to do it. Speed is not confined to our daily actions.

It has got into our lives as well. The young people are no longer willing to let boyhood and girlhood run its natural course. They want to be young men and women of the world before they are old enough to read the doctor book. When they get a little older and start traveling around in crowds, they can't be content to let an acquaintance ripen into informality and ease in the normal manner the ice has to be broken with gin so the strangers in the party can be acting like cousins before the clock strikes ten. Who goes on walking trips Some of the best literature that has ever been written was descriptive of a leisurely jaunt to some place or other or to no place whatever.

If you walk now, you must ience as an aide in the national race. all free men, that much of our pres when the time came to seek senate ratification of a new A film impresario recently sounded me as to the possi ent laws are obsolete. They belong to naval limitation treaty. Wolf avows that he will never let an opportu bility of titling one of his products. I replied I didn't feel I possessed the necessary qualifications.

He misun nity for a balloon flight pass. Mrs. Edith Nourse Rogers, republican, representative derstood my evasion and inquired: "How much intelli It may be, then, that the Detroit amateurs who gence do you assume it requires to title films?" I'd hate of the. fifth Massachusetts district in the house, will deliver the principal commencement address at Tufts col to tell him, being the polite boy I am. another period in the history of our country, and as such should be repealed.

If you want to popularize anything, pass a law against it. It will be the most wanted thing in the country. Any person allowing himself to become a slave to decrees of laws passed by others is on the road to moral suicide. Not since "Diamond Jim" Brady was the porcine play have their balloon clubs and who take little jaunts just about every Sunday have the right idea. It is true that in a balloon you don't know where you are going but how many Sunday motorists care a lege, Medford, in June, and receive a degree there.

As the widow and congressional successor of John Jacob boy of Broadway has there been a conspicuous "first nighter." Several have tried it among them a tire sales Rogers of Lowell, Representative Rogers has chosen as her subject one with which her late husband will always So we see that either form of sui man, a care keeper, a well known theatrical angel- be prominently Identified "The Foreign Service of the cide is dangerous. Let us strive darn about that! And the balloon offers this advantage you don't have to keep it in a line of Dy our own eirorts and are not de- United States." toward a better, bigger and more but they simply couldn't make the grade. When Brady went down the aisle with perhaps a Dolly sister on each arm it was an event that caused a craning of necks. The Rogers law, under which the diplomatic and con harmonlous life Where it will be pos- i slow-moving cars on a state highway. sular services were reorganized and amalgamated three His imitators do not even receive a side glance.

slble for anyone to live a life that will be its own law and its own reward. A years ago, was primarily the late congressman's creation. As far as the danger is ooncerned, motor traffii much easier if we did not have to support so many idlers on the strength of what they tell us. Tufts is the alma mater of Attorney-General Sargent. Broadway fame requires consistent effort.

Once in kills more people in the United States every Sun life of service to our fellowman is the nearest to perfection. But don't let One of its nroud traditions is that "Gan" Sargent, then awhile some figure squirms up from the maggotry of sen day afternoon of the summer than ballooning has your service consist in forcing men to a 275-pound under-graduate, fell so hard on a football which he grabbed on a fumble by an opposing team, that the pigskin exploded with a roar. C. H. 8CANLON, R.

D. No. 3. Medina. ISAACS AGAIN REBUKED sational tabloidlsm to be a nine-day wonder but usually they must do the same thing year in and year out to keep the focus.

Fame must be worn like Oscar Hammers tein's killed in its whole history. Who knows? Maybe in a few years you'll be hat or Brady diamonds to hold the spot. Editor Beacon Journal: walk on the left hand side of the road, or an automobile will smack you from behind and tilt you so far into the rodiac that you peer over the walls of There are a number of superstitious Americans who May I answer A. J. iiaacs' letter entitled, "Too Much Lindbergh." in is turning in your old automobile on a light er-than air craft.

hope that Secretary Mellon's plan to cut down the size of paper money will eventually include the abolition of the hoodoo $2-blU. Millions of people consider it unlucky. Sign in a midtown haberdashery window: "There is nothing high hat about us. Come in and loaf If you sue of May 24. I perhaps would never wisn." in otner words "just loiksey." have noticed it if not for Lindbergh's name at the top, and anxious for the New Jerusalem.

The other day a piece of fire apparatus struck an automobile, injuring several people. The injured ones were placed in an automobile and started The same driver whose bus killed a woman re Automats have been troubled recently by coffee thieves. every item, of course eagerly read. Every day, somewhere, it's refused when offered as change. Just why it has a jinx about it, nobody seems to know.

Some folks try to stave off misfortune by tearing off one corner of every $2-bUl that comes into their possession. Counterfeiters often "split" $2-bills in order to make 120-bllls out of them. A couple of years ago the treasury cently was steering the bus that crashed into A patron draws his coffee from the spiggot, puts It on a table and returns for some article of food, When he and to a bitter disappointment. How can any red blooded American street ear, sending two to the hospital. That's reaches his table again his coffee has been consumed.

even feel that too much is being said toward a hospital. On the-way, tl automobile was struck by another piece of fire apparatus. Granted either hard luck or something that doesn't look Beacon Lights pretty in print. 5 that it is a fact and it is that that the men assigned to the duty of driving our fire apparatus arc Ho, hum! You work for years to get a reputation: then people get used to you and lose interest; then you die and Nothing in the world can surpass the incre careful and resourceful men, accidents similar to norxxiy notices. dulity of the personal tax assessor who called on an Let's be fair about it.

Canadians who cross the line to work aren't as numerous as American truck drivers who live as you dictate; that borders on tyranny. BILL KRISP. TAX ABSORBING L'PLIFTERS Akron Beacon Journal: There ha3 been a lot said about the corn borer. It is strange that the farmer is so much less Interested In this danger than the public job holder is. These salaried Job holders have made an "awful holler" about this pest.

It has been cheap filler for the press so it has shot a lot of propaganda about it. At Brecksvllle, cornfields were posted, "Don't move this corn, it is infested with European corn borers." That was 10 years ago. I live within 15 miles of these fields and never yet have seen a corn borer except under glass. If this Insect multiplies so rapidly and is so destructive as these upllfters would like to have us think, I would think we would see destruction. A local merchant advertised for a corn borer to put on exhibition.

He advertised the second time with a prize offered and waited more than 10 days before he received a specimen. I don't know whether it was Imported or not. I have read and heard a great deal about the destruction they have done. 1 have driven many miles to see where they have done such great damage, but It was always somewhere else. One place it was stated a corn field was ruined; when I got there the man was not at home.

The lady said that the Inspector claimed there were borers in the field but she did not know of any damage having been done. The anxiety seems to be all with the agricultural denartment. not with the farmer. Akron tome yesterday and was told that the fam ily did not have a radio. this is potential every time a fire alarm is sounded.

This is likewise true of ambulances. To save one person, a hundred are To save three or four minutes in getting to the scene of a fire (which cross the line to load. Suckers aren't without cleverness. They find fake stock promoters the government detectives never are able to It is suggested that a floating island be built in may or may not be consequential) literally millions locate. of dollars' worth of property is subjected to the pos the middle of the Atlantic to make air travel feasible.

Something of that sort might solve Akron's You can say one thing about the flood district sibility of damage. This is not an economically There's nothing yellow In that vicinity except the water. tried to popularize the $2-blll by Including one In each pay envelope of government employes. But few cared to run unnecessary risks by accepting and carrying them, and the practice was abandoned. Count that day lost, whose low descending sun, views no new idea for honoring Captain Lindbergh.

William Moore, a New York physician, suggests to the postoffice department that it would be "a graceful set to issue an air mail stamp In Lindbergh's honor." Dr. Moore thinks such a stamp appropriate because Lindbergh "has so glorified the air mail service, which trained him and enabled him to accomplish his wonderful feat." The New York medic, who is an old stamp collector, points out that philatelists "perpetuate historical events in a way unparalleled." Remember The Time In 1902? Mourners at a funeral of a prominent man in Alliance engaged In a free-for-all at the grave over the matter of a burial permit Oregon went democratic with the election of George E. Chamberlain for governor. Riot and bloodshed marked the progress of the teamsters' strike in Chicago. The worst flood in the history of the city inundated Jollet, ni.

Contractor 8. C. McOowan was awarded the Job for building a bridge over the Little Cuyahoga at Prune st, need for a circus ground. sound system. It is part of our love for speed.

in nonor 01 Lindbergh? Why, every foreign country has expressed their admiration. What would America act like, to do or say less? The papers have given the people only what they want and the more we got the more we read. Imagine a letter starting off as A. J. Isaacs did, giving praise and credit where due and ending up talking about "Baby" Lindbergh and soothing syrup and comparing the French honors shown Lindbergh as "rot" being fed to the public through the papers.

Now, here is hoping Mr, Isaacs gets his 125 bushels of potatoes off the acre that last year gave only 100 bushels. For I am glad to hear of any farmer's progress, being a farmer's wife myself and only hers In the city for the time being. However, don't compare 25 bushels of potatoes more to the acre this year than last to anything as wonderful and awe Inspiring as Lindbergh's flight. Mr. Issacs has expressed himself fully, but I feel 'twas a mere drop In the bucket.

Another thing nice about a newspaper. It can be discarded or laid aside es a radio can be turned off or tuned out when presenting that which fails to Interest. Now for more of our Lindbergh. Tell us when he's coming home. MRS, K.

O. RATE, IMS B. Market St. There's one bright spot. The kids must come home from college to get some money before going off on their What does it get us, as a nation, that we are the devotees of speed? Well, we live thick and we live There are some nice trees still standing on Haw thornc and Hamilton a venues.

Can't some reason See that every man has property to cherish and you Ubt it a r.n nt Hlnali be found for chopping them downf UCCU 1 1 i vaio pa upnsanuv va i.uivam 4a -a aA11 am niur. In IV IB juov no acu iiu, hi vayvtta vuiii.iici. a. 1 1 Wa ill wuuiun accui iittbuiai wiwiuuv siio livugiis, anyway Well, some day in September of this year we'll put on another celebration for Van Orman. Still, men have liberty to do as they please as well.

A lot of us get killed in traffic accidents, but the rest have a good time, and we travel a lot of miles between birth and death. As far as progress is concerned, it means literally nothing. There is one main avenue along which the way of advancement is certain at this time. That is air travel. This country, after doing the trick that made it feasible, lost most of its interest.

For all our speed, we are behind all of Europe in the matter of aerial devel- opment. Even dreamy and impractical Spain is suming, of course, that they please to be decent. Science ts a good thing when applied When the A college town Is a place where the locomotive that with common sense. Swivel chair tneo A city is a great deal like a balloon, ballast is all gone, the flight is over. hits a coupe kills all seven passengers, ry has cost the public a lot of money and If the nation had to live on It I am It helps In understanding Coolldge when you know afraid we would go hungry.

his middle name Is "Oalusha." Borne few years ago we had a bar The banquet season in nearly over. Yes, but the W. H. Evans Son offered the city $11,000 for the berry craze. It was going to ruin the ahead of us, convention season is just beginning, Join the marines and learn wheat, but when there were a few to use chopsticks.

site of the old city hall at Quarry tnd Main sts..

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