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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 28

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Los Angeles, California
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28
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41 SUNDAY MORNING. WAY 22, 1927. PART 1L TUB WEAPONS Of PF.ACB 1 All wart of Calling in His LO.U. THE GOD OF THE MOUNTAINS fc BY FRED HOGUE Edgar Alwyn Payne, the poetnainter of the California Blerras, THE TIMES-MIRROR COMPANY officers JAKRT CII ANPf FR. rtti.

at Of. Mir. tmt lllli (IMMilkK, llre-l-roe. Hit Sory. HAMi X.

irilllNOiK, Troa.urar. DIRECTOR rr Chandler. OIK h.adlrr. Freak X. Ifemngrr.

Mahal Oil. Heolli. Marry larr. cat, brought to the Stendahl Calleriei at the Ambassador what Is perbapi the finest collection of mountain lakes that ever came from ji MUCH 0SUGE0 FOR THE LOAN imts tha brash and easel ot an artist. Payne Is a lover ot the mountains.

Ha was born In their purple shadows, and every summer for the FVr.RY MORS1X1 IN THK 1ER WftHT roi'MIFH DEC, IMI 4TII TEAK. last ten years he has spent In sllont, solitary communion with tha everlasting hills. 1 In his youth he was attracted by the legend ot the European 51 Alps, and he made jhe traditional pilgrimage to Interlocked He has ji painted the Swiss Alps, the Bavarian Alps, the French Alps, the 1 Maritime Alps, with side excursions into the Carpentarlau and Vosges 'f Mountain and the -Pyrenees, but be talis me that ho found them tame, domesticated, colorless, compared to the wild fastness ot the UNCLE Cftll YOtf GET RAIJ-H W. TKIrlllOlll), Managing Edllnr. Yrar for er il.t nf Anrll.

lt twinir.1 nl. irnur for April. II7 .111.11) 4rat. teri ealn rr AprU. I WJ officem Krw'Tlmn Uiillillni.

Hrat and Rrnailvar. Rr.tlt-fc iiltlrf No. etl outh Spring irrt. Aaahtngttnt llnrraii. IMI-M lllhtt ttullilliig.

fhn.m imlrr, SMI North Michigan Arnna, Nrw tark Offlrc. tS Madlann Aarnna. hmn Iranrl.ca OfMc. 14 M.rkrt Mrrrl. w.iltlf tHHcr.

Whlla Hnry Kluart Hldg. Pert. Offlr 1(0 It nr. h.lnt Honor. In nil'I'tlon the above offW.

Th. Ttmr. I. Ml ttlr and may he found by r.uroan tratrltra al llif qfllre of the Amrrlc.n t.liraa tampan). sprung from cupidity.

The actual cssus belli has not always been a signal act of avaricious diameter but greed bus Invariably bean th springhead from which the crimson stream has trickled forth to deepen and broaden until in Ita gory course through the green fields of Industry It has drowned the intended spoils of victory and burled them bcsldo Its dead. To the victor belong the spoils. But who wants them? Tim spoils of modern warfare are acres of graves, and bankruptcy for thn survivors who st niggle to rear new industries where war hits torn the miirhliiery of progress to pieces. If all nations wore so equipped that common Industry among their peoplo would guurantee a comfortable livelihood there would hurdly be room for the kind ot greed that gives birth to war. If the billions expended on the World War had been used to further the ends of Industry world-wide prosperity would have been proxlmated.

If the billions now being disbursed tj prepare for more wars could be diverted from tho plans of warfare to plans for welfare, an era of world progress would bo creuted almost Instantly and no more would brothers of the blood turn their cannon upon each other, nor urge their armored prows against the shores of prosperous neighbors. Free commercial Intercourse under the protection of a democratic banner lias made forty eight States of the greatest of republics one In everything except thn collection of taxes and other community functions his dress or the cut of his hair to a suggest the artist. But when he stands before his pAflvaa In tha mMat tt iValrh. Dt V. 4.

es, brushes and tubes of paint, he LOS ANGELES (Loce Ahnghaylais) Sierras ot California. 4 I felt abashed, humiliated at my little knowledge ot my own country when he told me that there are more mountain lakes within 200 miles ot Monmoth in Mono county, California, than In the whole ot Europe. "But," I protested, "the glow of the Alps is here lacking. It is becomes a lord, a creator. Mountains rise at his magic touch, with streams tumbling down their slopes and lakes nestling close to their sheltered base.

A blue or purple haze lies like a shimmering veil about the summits, and tamarack and spruce sway In the moun MEMBER OF THE ANXUIIATED I'KKHH Tha Aaaorlaled Prra. 1. enluaHrly rntlllrd In lh ue for rvpuhllrailnn of all urwa crvdllrd In It tint olhrrwl.r credited la I la napar and alao all I oral pabllahre) brra allhlo. Uke the aurora borealis. It is tain wings.

Pearl-tinted clouds The! Tirnr. aim. al all tlmra la arriiraU In atrrr publlabed of fax. Itaadrre a hi. riUiotrr any Important Inamirary of will confer a favar by railing alltnlloD of tba Editorial prnartment lo Ibe rrror.

float In a cerulean sky; and as the Bad laws, if they exist, should be repealed at soon as possible; still, tchile they continue in force, for the sake of example they should be religiously obstrved, Abraham Lincoln lacking in the Sierras, because under our warmer skies the snow leaves the slopes ot the mountains and is to be found only in tho canyons. To see that Alpine glow one mutt visit Switzerland." Under the amused gaze of the artist's eyes I felt uncomfortable. They told me plainer than words that he was marveling at the valor of my Ignorance. "The glow of too multitudinous for tho administration of a the Alps," he responded, "is a cloud SIOXS OF THE TIMES There's none no blind us the girl who imagines nobody else can see that she Is painted. single government.

Traimportntlon facilities equuled nowhere else on earth have bound together tho agricultural' and Industrial areas so solidly that remote sections which would bo barren wastes under a feudal system send to tho great markets the products won from tho earth and receive In return the necessities fashioned by skilled artisans in indiiHtrlal centers. It is a democratic example for tho thoughtful study of the LIGHTNESS and light You can't Judge too much by appearances. Lantern-jawed people deal least In llglit conversation. whole world and 'a ready Inspiration for Its own cltliens as the day for world progress is driven closer to the present moment by the force of human necessity and demand. The next world war should be a war Ytl.I.ERS We have a real yellcr peril in this country in every household In which the parents yell at their children.

effect, not a snow effect. It is visible in Switzerland very rarely and only in the late afternoon after a rain. I spent a summer in the Swiss Alps and saw the glow only twice; and the natives told me that sometimes an entire summer passes without its appearing at all. "Do you know where 1 have seen it oftenest? On the Pasadena mountains. I think the smoke that rises from the cities in the valleys here has something to do with It But the same glow, of even greater Intensity, Is to be seen In the California Sierras.

I do not think I have made a single trip to the Sierras here without seeing It. "Tourists wait for weeks, some for months, in the Alpine villages to witness that phenomenon. Mark Twain, I believe, writes of tarrying for weeks and then departing disappointed. against poverty. If tho sinews of military drives are used In the peaceful campaign that must come If life on earth Is to have Its due, there will actually bo spoils for the victors and there will be no vanquished.

sun sinks and the purple shadows lengthen, that evanescent phenomenon, the "glow" of the Sierras, appears. The artist is transformed Into the god of the mountains. He creates them, models them and adorns them, evn as the jreator ot the heavens and the earth. Then his chest expands, his hazel eyes glow with the pride ot accomplish-ment; tor he Is Imbued with the creative spirit ot which genius is born. As a landscape painter his reputation does not depend upon bis native State or country.

His canvases of European mountains have been exhibited in the art centers of Europe. No canvas that he sent to the annual exhibition of the French Salon has ever been rejected and not one is accepted there where ten are offered. But the adulation he received in Europe has not turned his head. He painted In the California Sierras last year, and he is here now, preparing to depart again for the Mono Lake country. His persistence In preferring tha California Sierras to the Swiss Alps intrigued me, and I insisted on further particulars.

"When one goes Into the Swiss Alps," he said to me, "he does not get the feeling of communion with nature that one experiences here in California. Even on the peaks, one finds there shelter huts. The slopes are cultivated to the snow line. The hotels follow you everywhere. "Here it Is different.

The California Sierras are not yet fully, explored. I have stood On the banks of fifty mountain lakes that are neither charted nor named, I have sketched in the shadow of mountains that would be famous in Europe, but that are known here only as units of the Sierra range. A POINT Who la Sylvia? What is she? Don't ask such questions, honey. Sh'-j's'the flarper that flapped me pay her alimony. The United States Nnvy's greatest boasts Protected by George Matthew; Adam.

are the Tennessee, California, Maryland, THEY ESCAPE A suburban man has noticed that when man Is really Lard pressed the clothes he wears are likely not to be pressed at alt. Colorado and West Virginia. The combined cost of these gigantic ocean-going forts was $117,233,015, more than twice the amount turned over to tha Emergency Fleet Corporation In 1917 to create a great cnrgo( fleet for the United States. The NTO THE LEAST OF THESE" PJCN OIXTS Insurance company experts have just "Sometimes, over there, after a rain about an hour before sun set the glow appears. It Is like a long line above the horizon.

First it is yellow; it deepens into a red, NOT MENDERS It isn't much harder to find a needle In a hayrtsck than it is to find one In the kltfhphctte apartments of some modern hoitHewlves. then fades into a rose, and dlsap' pears. completed a study of the automobile accidents occurring during 1926, and have discovered the tragic fact that almost double the number of small children were killed last year than during any previous one. The young children, especially the ones between 2 and 5 years ot age, make up a shockingly large percentage ot those who meet death beneath the wheels ot automobiles. Nowhere In the world today is childhood so fraught with constant danger as in the "You get the same effect, with story of that corporation is long and involved, but suffice It to say that at the close of August, it had under its control 12N0 ships with a total of 7.70C.4S0 deadweight tonnage.

Shipbuilding statistics cannot be handled like square blocks, but it is probably safe to say that tho millions expended on the five dreadnaughts could have been made to produce more than 2600 ships for use in commercial intercourse with other nations or between other nations. a background ot the Pasadena California eye experts did well mountains here, ten times for ev ery time it is visible in the Ber to choose Avalon for their 192. ON THE FENCE The was and drys appear to bo mighty far apart, but a wise cracker says convention. They not only know nese Alps. A legend has been how eyes should be used, but built up about It in Europe it is that the average politician has an awful where.

a great advertising stunt but the compass to his straddle. people do not appreciate it here, because they have not been told large cities of the United States, with their ever-increasing number of automobiles. In Los Angeles alone the number of tots who have met violent deaths in the last few that it is one ot the wonders of the world." Edvln Wide, latest marvel of the cinder path, strides seven feet six inches and kicks as gracefully as a chorus girl the while. How's that for high, Wide and fancy? As I looked over the canvases BREAKERS AHEAD One of the profenscrs at Princeton has succeeded In breaking up a molecule. Lefs tee: it was also Princeton that broke up the eavolr falre of Harvard.

months, Is larger than In former years. In this year's exhibition, I discov IN DARKEST AMERICA A sad illustration of the lack of erudition among many of our State legislators is shown by the difficulty in which the New Jersey Legislature finds itself. That worthy body, for some political reason too dark and devious to be comprehended by the average cttizen, decided that it would be an excellent thing If It should meet every two years. With this in view the legislators passed a law at the last session requiring that the legislative body should meet "biannually" and went home happy in the thought that they had done a good deed from a political standpoint. But their rejoicing was shortlived.

For some offensive person with more education than political acumen stepped forth with the dreadful information that biannual did not mean what they thought it did at all. He suggested that the worthy solons doubtless had in mind the word "biennial" and that they should have taken a peek at their dictionaries before they framed the law. There is deep gloom amidst the politicians, who certainly did not wish to have the Legislature meet two times in every year. It may prove quite buxdensome to drop their professions and businesses and hasten forth to the State capital two times per annum. As a comfortable majority of the legislators are lawyers, one wonders why these flowers of the legal profession did not know what the word biannual really meant.

Evidently Mr. Webster's illuminating book is not especially popular in New Jersey. Science has stamped out many of the most ered that the artist had painted All men are born equal, but one with this evanescent glow in deadly enemies of babyhood, or at least placed them under control, but a newer very few die that way. the sky. He Eaw it on the shores "To me, Shadow Creek is the most charming, the most romantic mountain stream in America or Europe; and yet how many people in California are aware of its existence.

"There is more color in tha ot Shadow Lake in the high Sier and worse menace has presented itself. Tfte Gentlemen prefer blondes; press records almost dally the frightful ras. In the foreground Is a mountain pool In which Is mirrored the blondes prefer jewelry. Hl'MMING MOTORS With our growing passion for motor cars and ail planes and our neglect of home we may have to change the old song to "Hum, hum, sweet, sweet hum." death of some happy, frolicking tot, crushed Tho naval appropriations of the United States and Great Britain are more than three hundred and twenty-live millions a year; tho 1925 navy appropriation of the United States was 1340,142,001 and Oreat Britain's was 44,765,000. In the same year, France set aside 1,251,975,405 francs for its navy; Italy appropriated lire for tho same purpose; and Japan appropriated 225,407,887 yen.

Other nations have appropriated and expended their public moneys for military purposes In proportion to their financial ability, despite the fact that most nations are bankrupt from the drain of the World War. Small wonder that the United States Is leading a sincere movement to replace greed with cooperation, and fruitless warfare with productive industry and market-making commercial Intercourse. To arms! Sierra pines on the banks. In the high Sierras than in the Alps, and in a driveway, or killed by a passing car Happy is the man who gets background, silhouetted against or truck. what be wants and forgets what an opal sky, are the abrupt slopes of Mount Rltter.

They are In the he doesn't. The driver of the death car Is rarely at fault legally, but morally the responsibility shadow, but ot a color I cannot describe, because the words' de It is difficult to patch up a do DONT HAVE TO is quite possible for humans to wear straw hats all the year 'round In Southern California. Perhaps this Is the reason why so many of them don't. mestic quarrel without having the seams show. picting color in the English language were all coined before is there.

The complaint Is frequently made that the mother should not have permitted the youngster to be out alone, but only those who have had the care of a that canvas was painted. I might The man with a good opinion ot liken it to a transparent shadow. restless, active youngster of pre-sehool age There is a golden light on the foot himself may be a poor Judge ot human nature. hills, and an onyx glow on the To arms against poverty, that stinking, dirty know what an almost superhuman task it is to keep it under constant watch. The busy mother may guard him ceaselessly lake, reflected from that opal sky.

The "glow" is depicted before the Neither anger nor love is re WORKS BOTH WAYS The Smith brothers have for their slogan; "Al can beat Cal." But slogans do not always win battles and this quip works, better backward than forward. Cal an Al. sponsible for what it does. twelve hours of the day, and if her atten lemon tones have deepened into red. tion is withdrawn from him one brief min The only way some men' get Sometime we may have a Cali ute, those sixty seconds will afford ample time to effect his death.

fornia bard who can tune his lyre ahead is by staying out late at night. child ot piKgish war. Let the capital of tho world be thrown into the battle to hurl the business of fighting and starving off the globe, to the end that Industry and agriculture may be woven into the rich fabric of peace which all peoples could, wear except for the waete In guns and tha blood they spill. The whole world could and should be as prosperous as America-except for greed that wins no spoils To arms with tho weapons of peace! Aa the city grows, gardens and fenced- THE MORAL WAVE Under a law just passed in New York It Is said to be possible to padlock a theater for a year If it is found to be producing obscene and immoral plays. If the law to the notes of Moore or Burns.

And what a poem he could compose from the Impressions awak Faint heart never won (air lady in yards become more difficult to obtain, unless the parents own their own homes. nor lost a breach of promise suit. A' GOOD LISTENER A radio fan at San Pedro claims to have, caught stations in thirteen different countries outside the United States. A man with ears like that should head a detective bureau. ened by that canvas! Flats and duplexes are built out to the Payne is a poet who sings in A young man must either be is rigidly applied a lot of white lights sidewalk line, and the rear yard cemented on Broadway would disappear and that colors.

He is a romanticist, dropped into the lap of a material fired with ambition or fired without it. in, and there is no place for the small ALENCIA ORANGE SHOW citizen to romp with toys, save on the side- OOK OF THE WORLD The pessimist's only object in highway might take on the aspect of a country lane. Perhaps in their zeal the reformers have gone too far and created legislation that will never be enforced. wjalk. Useless to preach that1 the mother The navel orange holds first honors In more atmosphere.

The rocks of the Alps, are granite, of a uniform gray. In the Sierras there is a mixture of granite and pumice stone. In the Sierras one finds mineral ledges everywhere. There is a diversity of color. There are reds and greens not to be found anywhere in Europe.

"One finds here the mountains of Switzerland under the skies ot There is greater warmth and color. A hundred years from now people possessing the means to travel will be coming to California from all over the world, just to visit the lake' country that those living in the great industrial districts of California have not yet discovered." a a a It is not for me to pass upon the merits of Payne as an artist The medals he was alike la America and Europe, attest to his genius. And it Is not on his mountain canvases alone that his fame reposes, although they Impress me most. As a marine painter he has won international recognition. While his summers wera spent in the Alps, he went to the coast of the warm seas during tha season that the mountain passes were inaccessible.

In the present exhibition are canvases of rare merit depicting the burled villages of Southern Europe, By this I mean the villages bordering on tha Mediterranean that are unknown to the traveler who follows tha paved tourist routes. He has brought with him from Europe a canvas of Montrachard, with its medieval castle, its red tile roofs and its ruins of walls and fortresses of the period ot tha Roman occupation. Montrachard is located in the Tourraine, a district noted for its medieval castles and and champagnes. killing time Is to put it out of its The American Bible Society put out ist age. Shadow Lake is but one ot many similar canvases in the present exhibition.

There is another of Iceberg Lake in the shadow of the Minarets, which Payne tells me have a greater ap should teach caution, for that word is not misery. contained in childhood's lexicon. The small It may be hard to teach -an old nearly 10,000,000 volumes of the Scriptures last' year. The Bible always leads the world in the extent of its annual placement. No 'other book can compare with it.

No wonder that Hollywood seeks to dramatize dog new tricks, but new dogs are always up to old tricks. the California citrus industry but every year the Valencia presses It closer for second place. Side by side the Anaheim Orange Show, the court fete ot Queen Valencia, paces In popularity the big San Bernardino exposition, where the monarch of the citrus grove holds sway. At the old and historic city of Anaheim the California Valencia Orange Show has Some troubles are due to the fact that most of us think we peal to the artist than the Jung frau or the Matterhorn. On its placid surface are mirrored sky, mountain and forest.

And the waters of this lake are of a deep cold blue, suggesting alike the fathomless depth of the pool and the sky above. On the banks are amount to more than. we do. youngster cannot understand what death or fatal injury means, and follows vagrant fancy 'wherever it may lead, Into the street or a neighbor's driveway. So the responsibility rests on the driver who turns down a residence street, to proceed slowly acd at all times have the car under control.

Better a leisurely rate of speed and a few minutes wasted than that another tiny form should be taken to the morgue. It takes some people so long to BELATED AMBITION By James J. Montague be sure they are right that they just opened its gates for the seventh time, suggesting not Inappropriately a reference have no time left to go ahead. the tamarack; for Iceberg Lake is Within the snow line, a height For long I thought the great good men GETTING THE DOIGH If the various tax commissions take the testimony of the average property owner "they will find that all the assessment officials and agencies have been working on. full time and under high speed.

Few avenues of revenue have been neglected by the politicians. to tho seventh heaven. For if it were pos Whose names emblazon history's pages that the spruce and fir cannot sible to fashion a near heaven in beauty, Many a man has an idea he is going to get into heaven by putting Began to shine in school at ten, ascend. color and suggestion from the golden fruit his religion in his wif name. And often earlier ages.

As I stood studying this canvas the artist came to my side. "I am of California orchards, the exhibitors have achieved that feat by the symbolism and A weight of deep but vain regret Be pleasant with your associates For many years I labored under, glad you like it," he said, "for, to me, that is the first mountain and your work will be easier. allegory, the picture and color and design For I believed a teacher's pet A CRITIC. OF JAPAN Solemnly stating in a Current History article that Japanese efficiency is a myth and that no other nation has anything to fear from the "sjam power at Tokio," Roderick O. Matheson tries to create the impression that Japan" is so far behind in the race for supremacy as not to count at all.

It is never too late to mend, pro displayed in grouping and arranging their displays under the big canvases on the pic Alone could wake a nation's wonder. lake, either in America or Europe." I looked at him In amazement: vided you don't put it oft until you turesque exhibition grounds forget how. STOCK SUBJECTS Custom in some of the early Indian tribgs forbade a mother from speaking to her daughter's husband. If that idea prevailed now America would lose about 33 percent of the paragraphs in the joke column. Incidentally it would escape some of the business of the courts.

I had small aptitude for school, but there was no mistaking his Not only the chosen few interested in the I was not what you might call booky Some girls would go hungry to sincerity. It was the verdict of growing and marketing of our citrus prod My thoughts went straying toward the pool have their fortunes told. a ucts, but all who enjoy the luxury of rich, the' artist who has visited the Scotch lochs, the Irish lakes and those of' the Italian and Bernese He says that the people of Nippon are withr out initiative, that the politicians, do all their thinking for them and that it Is a ripe oranges on the breakfast or dinner Poverty Is the flea that causes Where bolder lads than I played hookey; I never had my lessons pat. a man to scratch for a living. table, all who are interested in decorative as well as gawtronomlc treats, all who care Which sorely grieved my studious sire, land of red The fighting efficiency It is dangerous to drive in a fog, of Japan, he asserts, is yet to be proved, to see the story of the California Valencia orange told in colorful pictures and all who especially if it mental.

SAFETY FIRST The motor statisticians have compiled an honor roll of thirty American cities as China and Russia, the only countries love music, bright lights and cheery ea It is better to be loved and with which it has warred, were easy bossed than never to be loved at all. If, in the case of a real war with a well- there was not a single traffic tertainment will mark-down the Valencia fatality during the month of April. Here 0range Show in underscored letters on is a. glorious roster on which the name theIr list of places t0 be ot-wr own fair city may never hope to 0ur annual horticultural and agricultural appear. For that matter mighty few towns BhoW8 lncrease In number and Tarlety as equipped foe, a rival commander should Our dearest friends are not necessarily our most expensive introduce something new, as the Germans did with poison gas and the British with ones.

tanks, Japan, he says, would be sunk. Mr. alia liiuio itiau lUimuilaUlS UaVc much' hope of making the list. Some men are so helplessly de Matheson, in his specious reasoning, whol And all my teachers said: "That brat Will never set the world on fire." But there are lota of men, I And, Who seldom passed examinations, And in their classes lagged behind, Who occupy exalted stations, in school, with listless eyes and ears. They proved the futllest of scholars, Yet, when they grew to manhood's years They earned no end of fame and dollars, I am not wealthy nor acclaimed; The meager salary I'm earning Till recently I've always blamed Upon my early lack of learning.

But now I'm nopefnl of success, I'm all steamed up and eager-hearted To snatch at fame, though I confess I'm rather late In gettlpg started. Copyright US hr tha Bell Syndicate. Ine.1 linquent they won't even pay their ly overlooks the fact that Japan would copy and adopt the new tactics so quickly One sees In this canvas the ruins ot an old Roman tower. From ita ssclusion it dominates Monaco and the Mediterranean. Another of his hidden villages is Loche, also in the coart try, a village surrounded by legendary chateaus.

Then there is Rocque Bruhne, a village hidden away in the Riviera, whose inhabitants are subjects during one generation of laly, and of the next of France. The technique of this canvas awakes tha admiration or the connoisseurs. Space does not permit me to describe more than a tithe of the canvases of exceptional merit in the present Payne exhibition. One must visit the gallery to appreciate its comprehensiveness and its quality. But what Impressed me most is that after, covering half the circumference of the earth, he has returned to California convinced that our own Sierras possess a greater appeal to the artist tha nature lover, the lovr ot the romantic, the beautiful and tha sublime, than aught an alien clima can offer.

respects. Alps. My humiliation was complete. I have stood on the shores ot Loch Katrine, of the lakes of Kllarney, and of the most famous Swiss lakes; and California has been my habitat for more than thirty years, and I have never made a pilgrimage to that wonderful chain of mountain lakes In Mono county. No artist In my newspaper career has brought home to me how little we appreciate our own country like Edgar Alwyn Payne.

I wonder If even those who have been preaching to us "see America first" have appreciated what marvels there are in our own country to see. Like most great landscape painters, Payne is a recluse. He feels out ot place in the midst of the social contacts of a big city. Ha i.i retiring in demeanor, and in his hazel eyes is a look of timidity. And It is his fate to be always pursued by ttil fair adorers ot his art, end always evading; them.

that it would make that Tival's head swim People who live within a stone's throw of each other shouldn't live OINO EIGHT WELL In glass houses. D' The day of the worker voicing fierce Some seocle find it hard to keep the State grows older, and every way they contribute to the instruction and enjoyment of thousands, whether residents, near residents or temporary sojourners in the Land of Sunshine. Nowhere has this truth been better exemplified than in the educational and spectacular exhibition prepared for the welcome of all comers by the hospitable folk of Orange county. If It will persuade some interested spectator to make two Valencia oranges grow where only one grew before or to eat. two Valencia oranges where only one was eaten previously we know the men and women devoted their loving care to the adorning of this Anabeim exposition np with the neighbors and the grocery bill at the same time.

denunciation of the capitalist has passed mayhap forever. Thi toiler of the moment is often a stockholder in the corporation with which he is associated. By tomorrow "THE MAXLESS TRACTOR 1 A Nebraska man has invented a self-acting tractor. In a recent test the machine plowed a twenty-acre field all by its lonesome. The apparatus was started in ne corner and the mechanical guides justed for the turns.

After that the tractor kept a perfect course ard tnrned a lovely' furrow. Looks as if some genius could one of these things woiking and tire go to the movies while the whole State of Texas was being plowed up. If a rjien can do farm work without being on the farm tie Lack-to-theland movement ill father atrength. There may be two sides to the prohibition question, but you can't he may be something ot a plutocrat him make a wet or a dry believe lu self. All things are possible in a land that is rich in resources and opportunities The reason some men don't The soap-box orator who argues that the spend more time at home Is be cause they re afraid to but atone country la fcolng to the dogs cannot per- will feel mora than rewarded for their There Is nothing In the mode ot In a house at night.

anybody to listen to his lament. labors.

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