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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • 2

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i i mow," i LAi 'i GATUEi)' A 1 9317- Pulitzer Prizes Awarded Winner of Pulitzer Prize i Pulitzer Prize Winning Cartoon 1 1 Southerners in 10 Years The Gentleman From Nebraska Editorial appearing in the Fremont (Nebraska) Tribune which won for Charles S. Ryckman the 51,000 Pulitzer award. Tells of Trapping Murderer "Verona, how many times has Pavne war he was a director of the American Red Cross news service at Paris. had you out to lunch?" Senator George. W.

Norris. "never man' in the senate. But every time Many times," she answered at lacKing a mandate irom the people I he succeeds in pestering his prey until once. "But there was always another in me course ne nas pur i ic-turns around and snarls DacK ar girl with us." sued as a member of the United him, the chuckles can be heard all 1 took another shot in the dark. It Mates senate, now returns to Wash-1 the way from Council Bluffs ti ington doubly assured of the unques-1 Scottsbluf f.

The summary of it all is that Ne tioned approval of his state and its people. braska derives a great deal of pleas. Will Cather Is Virginian. -Miss Willa Catber, author of many books, including "One of Onrs," which won the Pulitzer prize in 1923 for the American novel published during the year, is a native of Virginia, although she received her A. B.

degree from the University of Nebraska. Mi.s Catber was society editor of Mc-Clure's magazine in 1912, and is the author of "April Twilights." "The Troll Garden." "Alexander's Bridge," "The Bohemian Girl." Pioneers," BY" B. MacDONALD. (Reporter. Kansas City Star.) KANSAS CITY.

May 4.W) A. D. Payne, the. Amarillo, Texas, lawyer who murdered his wife and maimed a son. had defended criminals and learned their ways.

He planned for 10 months the murder of his wife and children. His plan to set off a timed explosive in the family motor car was so well thought out that five weeks afterward police, sheriff, insurance investigators and reporters had uncovered no clue whatsoever; Gene Howe, editor of the Amarillo News and Globe, asked the Kansas City Star to to send a man to work on the mystery. The star sent me. Howe met me. ure out of shoving George Norris down the great American throat.

He The senatorial record of Mr. Xor-ris, with all its ramifications, has been endorsed in as convincing a manner as anyone could wish. Many BY W. G. WELLS.

Eleven southerners have won Pulitzer prizes in the last ten years. The various awards hate been given to two representatives from North Carolina, two from South Carolina, two from Virginia, one from Kentucky, one from Tennessee, one from Alabama, and two from Georgia, the most recent award being to The Atlanta Constitution, which has just received the Putlitzer gold medal for the most disinterested and meritorious public service rendered bj an American newspaper In 1SK50. Seven of these have been won by Southern newspapers, guided by southern editors for editorials, reportorial work and for public service rendered. Two winners have been novelists, and two have been playwrights. has been an effective emetic in re1- publican and democratic administra- reasons have been advanced as to why tions alike, has worried every presi- outu.

rnuuraemrni suouiu not oe i aent lrom xatt to Hoover. His re- extended to him. Ihe opposition to tirement from the senate, whether Mr. Norris'hss been conducted as i vnlnntnrv nr fnr.wi tpi. "The Song of the Lark," "My An-tonia." "Youth and the Bright Me ably and as thoroughly as any group corned in more quarters than that dusa," "One of Ours" "A Lost poinicians couiu oo tne of any of his colleagues.

The first thins," I said, "is to find Lady." "The Profess--' House. "My Mortal Enemy" and "Death Comes to The people of Nebraska know this. the motive. Who wanted her out of 'JtrL and enjoy it. Every time Xorris baits the Archbishop.

the way and why?" trust or lambasts the social lobby, Nebraska gets the same amuse Insurance or loveT She was heavily insured, and so was "Scarlet Sister Mary," the 1928 prize winning novel, is a work of each of the three children, with Payne t. ment out of his antics that a small Acceptance of the situations there- boy gets out of sicking a dog on au Mrs. Julia Mood Peterkins, a South i MV Vf Mi" Mr 1 In 1923, the i'emphis Commercial-Appeal was awarded the Putlizer medal, and in 1920, it went to The Columbus (Georgia) Enquirer-Sun, iore a matter wunoot cnoice. xo alley cat When he shies a brickbat Carolinian. She was educated at Converse College.

Spartanburg. S. as tne neneiieiary. ut 1 did not believe that this insurance alone was motive enough. tuuuuuc jtas argument is to waste a president, Nebraska has as much it-wwMu fra kid pushing over an out and th author of "Green "Black April" and the prize Howe said there seemed to bs no -luiiw nua utrcu wj truujyiif iviy BUlr I DOUSe.

woman in the case. Evervone the winner, "Scarlet sister alary. Airs iuea ana so tnorougniy discredited neighborhood said the affection of the Peterkins is also a contributor to America it Mercury. Smart Set, Cen Paynes was often commented on. mat rurtner jousting with the wind- You have to know the isolation of mill is more quixotic than Quixote the hinterland to understand why this himself.

is so. Nebraska has sent manv men mornimr we drove out to see tury and the Saturday Evening Post Payne. Hatcher Hughes, author of "nell He welcomed us cordially, but he Bent for Heaven," Pulitzer prize win There is not even good reason for to the senate who were more capable being disgruntled over the result. For than Norris, as his predecessors and the purpose of the Nebraska political as his contemporaries. It has had was nervous.

His long fingers kept A. B. MacDOXALD. pulling at his cheeks and chin. Be ner in 1924 for the "original American play performed in New York, situation.

70,000 people can't be other senators who have done more hind his thin-lipped mouth and leath which shall best represent the educa ery lace I lelt there was a cruel, heart. wrong, -ihe win ot the state is sel- for the state and for the nation than occurred to me that if Payne had been in hotels with her he would take tionnl value and power of the stage." less nature. aom expressed in so tremendous a I he has. her to some other town. No matter what the Question, he al was born at I'olkviIIe.

N. C. He grad majority, ana it must De taKen not But it has never had another Ben-only as an endorsement of Mr. Norris And you have been out in the Pan uated from the University of North ways dwelt on how he loved his wife, He overdid that. handle with him?" aJLleaf- a temporary thpre was a Gentleman from Nebras- Carolina, but continued his studies at Columbia University, where he is She thought I meant the town of His eldest daughter, now 14.

was 2-V. uyvu ii.0 cuun uu ka" in the he has Panhandle, and she replied: edited by Julian Harris and Julia Collier Harris, native Georgians. Interesting," in view of the award just made to the Atlanta newspaper, is the fart that Julian Harris began his journalistic career under Clark Howell. From cub reporter, Mr. Harris rose to managing editor.

After experiences in New York snd Europe, be edited the Columbus Enquirer-Sun, and is now news director of The Constitution. William Burke Miller, a reporter on the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal, won the Iutlitzer prize for outstanding reportorial work for his paper in his exceptional reportorial work in connection with the trapping of Floyd Collin in the sand cave in 1026. Lathan Editorial Wins. Robert Lathan wrote an editorial in the Charlton News and Courier in l'J'-'ti which wns picked as the winner ni the prize for the best editorial appearing during the year, the test being "the clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning and the power to influence public opinion in the right direction." P.efore Mr. Lathan entered the newspaper world as a member of the getting dinner.

I imagined there was HI 11 LB. now a professor of English. in doing." Nebraska could send a suc les, 1 ve been to Panhandle with Among the other plays written by a irignteneu look, in her eyes. Too Much Exnlalnina-. him." cession of great men and good men to the senate, and the east and west The state of Nebraska has elected Professor Hughes are "A Marriage Made in Heaven anil Burnt, and Some months before the murder Mrs.

Payne onened a closet door and 1 rT UA-, "And to Borger?" "Yes, to Borger." Then she admitted going to other Norris to the United States senate this year, as it has many times in he wns co-author of "Wake Up Jona shotgun exploded. Pavne snenr full and. south would never kuow there was a state of Nebraska or that such a state was represented in the senate. But Norris lets them know there is the past, mainly because he is not places. I said: wanted there.

If his return to Wash ington causes discomfiture in official Uive me the names ot all the where you and Payne stayed as uour explaining to us nis theory that the gun had fallen from a sewing machine as she opened the door. I did not believe it. a Nebraska, "and Nebraska does not The cartoon drawn by Edmund Duffy, of the Baltimore (Md.V Sun, circles, the people of Nebraska will eare how he does it. than. Another playwright from North Carolina.

Taul Green, won the prize for the American play in 1927 with his "In Abraham's Bosom." He has also written "The Lord's Will and Other Plays," "Lonesome a man and wife." which won the Pulitzer prize of $500. It is entitled "An Old Struggle There is an instinctive resentment regard their votes as not having been cast in vain. They do not want farm Payne's little girl. Bobbie Jean, came "We never did that, she said. "That is all now.

Verona. The po Still Going On, and was printed in the Baltimore Sun, February 27, 1930 in the hearts of these neonle of the reiiet or any other legislative bene lice will send tcv you. Don't try to states between the Mississippi and the mountains against the failure of the iu wun a joiDie unaer ner arm. "This is our little girl, Bobbie Jean, coming from Sunday school," said Pavne. fits a senator might bring them; all they want is a chance to sit back and Author of Prize Novel Dates far east to understand and annreci- collection of sit plays for the negro theater).

"In the Valley and Other Carolina Plavs," "Tread the Green Grass" (a folk fantasy) and "Wide gloat. I asked Bobbie Jean some questions. ate the middle west. It crops out in politics, in religion, even in sports. eDraska nurses an ingrowing Career From Motor Car Mishap vnre ner latner corrected her grouch against America in general ii.

nnnev tr irnsn't that Fields' (short stories). Mr. Green, Nebraska is one of the richest of all Don't you remember, it was this way wns born at Lillington. N. C.

grad and eastern America in particular. The state expects nothing from the conceal anything. "Do you think he killed her?" she asked. "Yes, I think so." She shook her head and said "My It was an awful thing, wasn't it?" Why Did She Tell? I don't know yet why she told me. She has said since that she could not explain that herself.

She had met Payne secretly, and he had cautioned her that his life and hers depended the agricultural states, and yet the wealth of its industries exceeds that of its farms. It has given such names ot pain until a lorn surgeon uated from the University of North Carolina, and is now a professor of auu iic urgim io Bet ner ngnt. Into the face of the child came look of fright. She burst into tears, Girl's Eves Show Truth. rebroke her back and fused some at Gutzon Borghim.

Cat her. national government, which it regards as largely under eastern control, and asks nothing. It has lost interest in constructive participation philosophy there. He edited the Reviewer in 3925. vertebrae.

P.T RICHARD MASSOCK. CHICAGO, May 4.JF) Margaret Ayer Barnes, new Pulitzer prize novelist, believes in a good fortune. "I've just been lucky," she says of I felt then, and knnnr nnn John J. rershicg, William G. Dawes, While bound in a cast during the in federal affairs, and its people are both girls knew their father had killed their mother.

unam Jennings iiryan and a others of prominence to the na in a vindictive frame of mind. her success. "I've had all the breaks." Something convinced me that there This grouch is cultural as much Traffic Arrests, Fines, Sentences Xext we had a joint conference I tion. It has unsurpassed schools, progressive cities and towns, people was a strange woman somewhere in as political. and its peo- Pie have been the butt of eastern joke- of intelligence and culture.

tne Background. If so, his stenogra pher mieht know about it- Sunday's arrest for alleged violations He gave me a list of different sters so long they are embittered. Ev- And yet the rest of the nation per-ery major federal project of the last sists in regarding Nebraska as pro-half, century has been disadvanta- vincial, its people as backward. If geous to them. The building of the the east thinks of Nebraska at all.

it of city traffic orilinancfs. according to with the police, sheriff and district attorney. We told them what we had learned. Miss Thompson was brought in that evening and told all she had told ns, adding how she and Payne had gone on a picnic together the Sunday before the death of Mrs. Payne and had planned how he was to divorce his wife and marry her.

Still the officials would not send for stenographers. Of one. Miss Verona Thompson, he said she was "just an ordinary-looking woman. No man would get sweet on her." Of nnnther. summer of 192G, Mrs.

Barnes began writing a story for her own amusement. A friend suggested that she try to sell it. She did, and it was accepted. Also another. Then ten more in a year and a half.

These have been published in a volume, "Prevailing Winds." Turns to Drama. Nest she dramatized Edith Wharton's "The Age of Innocence," just to prove to herself that she could do it. That was followed by a couple of plays, "Dishonored Lady," in which Panama canal imposed a discrimina- is as a state still in a frontier period, tory rate burden upon them. Vari- The national conception of a Nebras- ous reclamation projects have In- kan is that of a big hayshaker, wit creased agricultural competition. Fed- pitchfork in his hands, a straw in editorial staff of the Columbia (S.

State, he taught in the public schools fr a year. He stayed with the State as official court reporter, and then news editor. When he joined the staff of the News and Courier. Charleston, S. lie made the position of news editor, and soon became city editor.

He has been editor of the pnper since 1910. Another prize winning editorial was written by Grover C. Hall, editor of the Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser in 192S. He wrote editorials against gangism. flogging and.

racial and religious intolerances. Mr. Hall began his journalistic career as a printer's devil on the IMthan Ala. Daily Sittings in 1905. He became editor of the Enterprise (Ala.) Ledger, but soon returned to Dothan as editor of the Daily Siftings.

He received the-editorship of Selina (Ala.) Times and then went to the l'ensacola Journal as editorial writer. He started on the Montgomery Advertiser as associate editor, but has been editor since llCti. The following year Louis Issnc Jaffe won the prize for the best editorial in his Norfolk (Va.) Virginian-Pilot. Although Mr. Jaffe was born in the north, he was educated in Durham, X.

C. and received his degree from Duke University, then Miss Mabel Bush, he emphasized her attractiveness. We left end hurried to see Miss Bush. She was all tisat Pavne said eral tariff policies increase the cost hi. mnnth And that statement is not entirely slang.

For one of the breaks was in her back. Out of an accident she emerged an author. Mrs. Barnes was born in Hyde Park, a Chicago suburb, and grew up in the "Years of Grace," which were later to supply the title of the novel for which she has just received the Pulitzer award. Her father was Benjamin F.

Ayer, a lawyer; her mother. Jailet Hopkins Ayer, daughter of a federal judg- at Madison. Wis. Entering Bryn Mawr College at the ago of 17, she was graduated in 1907. Three years afterward she was married to Barnes, Chicago lawyer.

They have three sons. Accident Leads to Career. of living Nebraska, without mate- on hig chi a tch on th rial benefit to Nebraska producers. hi3 overalis and the muck th Nebraska voters have long since on his ceased to look to Washington for re- i r- i i nse IIiad. she was red-headed, pretty.

She liked Mr. Payne. No. she never saw a woman around the office. Had she heard anvthinr about Miss iiei, ana tney no longer seieci xueir a iCU mt.r iuui- congressional representatives with re- mtl.es; Dut has Jtiven tip hope of lief in view.

Neither George Norris avoiding them. Its only hope is to nor any of his Nebraska colleagues in payback in kind. In the days of the Payne, thinking the evidence insufficient. Woman Confronts Him. "Confront Payne, with the girl and he'll confess," I argued.

"No mind can carry such weight of guilt." We appealed to Mayor Ernest Thompson, and at his order Miss Thompson was brought in and her written statement taken. Then Payf was brought in. peering at the girl, hardly believing his sight. She watched him with a curious sort of sneer as his face became con record" at police station, were: H. C.

Msdilox, S54 Stewart avenue, rerk-lpp drivinc H. H. spar. Jonesborn road, drank and reckl driving. J.

P. Allen. IGre avenue, reek-lea drivinc. Italpli Conn. Fox Manufacturing Company, reck leva drivlna.

Karl Holli. 44H Gray afreet, drunk and rckle drivinc. Clifford Spencer, 547 Bobbins, drunk and reckles drivinc. Jesae Murphy. 3 SO Cain, reckless drivinc and hit-and-run.

Thomas Early, 75 Jackson, drank and reckless driving. John Allen, rear 3S8 Whitehall, drunk and reckless driving. C. H. Dunn, 201 Asliby street.

Improper lijhta. James Monitor. 42 Ashliy. improper liclita. Tlarrv Svift.

345 Tate, improper lights. Frank Blanchard, 478 Tatnall. improper lights. L. S.

Taylor, 1118 Murphy, disregarding stop sign. E. E. Estes. HO Braircliff road, disregarding stop sign.

Mrs. Tom Little. Seminole avenue, dls-regardlns stop sign. otto Stanley. 5'J Douglass street, speeding.

D. Brown. 233 Fourteenth, speeding. C. H.

Bell, 217 Randolph, disregnrdinj atop sign. congress have been able to combat tnis reai ironuer, it ventea its wratft on honeless situation. If Norris were I the occasional luckless tenderfoot forced to rely upon what he has done I from the east. Now it sends George in congress for Nebraska, he would TNorris to the senate. Thompson? Yes, some talk Payne was sweet on her.

We want to see Miss Thompson. Howe introduced me just as "Mr. MacDonald." She said afterward that she thought I was a detective from New York or Chicago. There was something about her that might be thought very attractive by many men. She had a shapely form, teeth white as pearls and brilliant eyes.

A Shot in the Dark. My first question was: approach an election day with fear in 1 his heart. Xnrris dnee tinf mnrpcanf "Vohrnct-i The motor accident that brought Katharine Cornell appeared, and "Jenny," written in collaboration with Edward Shelton. "Jenny" was a vehicle for Jane Cowl. SuccessJ-1 in two types of writing, Mrs.

Barnes turned novelist. "Years of Grace," the story of a Chicago girl, her education, marriage and experiences against a background of America through the World War, was published early in 1930. Mrs. Barne- lives in Chicago in the winter. In the summer she goes to Mattapoisetf, for wimming.

I Ti v. vulsed with the emotion. about her writing occurred in I ranee I n-niilfl a ra fnnfaaenH thart hut t'vi hi, lie la iiic VL But senator morris nas iounu.an- vhrRir t. four years ago. She on a tour mobs were forming.

The police spir- I other way to serve Nebraska. By lectual aloofness of the east. A vote Trinity. He worked on the staff of the Durham Sun from 1911 until ited him away to another town. I making himself objectionable to fed for Norris is cast into the ballot box eral administrations without regard That night he confessed, 1917.

but transferred thst year to the of the cathedral towns with her husband when thei. automobile collided with another. All the passengers were seriously with all the venom of a snowball to political complexion and to east Uirhmond (a.l Times-Dispatch. He thrown at a silk hat. The spirit that has edited the Norfolk (Va.) Vir ern interests of every wind, he has 1 1 i hurt.

Mrs. Barnes endured mohfbs afforded Nebraskans a chance to vent puts Jer vinaictive, retana- ginian-Pilot since 1919. During the their wrath. He is. nerhans unwill- oraaior uugui gei jcti- OLD-STYLED JOB 1 VINS BIG PRIZE Continued from First Page.

eral projects, administrative favor, inply. an instrument of revenge. wauid tint I post offices and pork -barrel plunder clared, has been determined by the ideas and power of the minorities. He cited the power of a small group ot Christians during the Itoman empire, the struggle for American independence, the cpntrol of New York city by "Tammany's organised minority" and Gandhi pitting himself against the British empire. listen to Geore Norris lone enough 1 for Nebraska, but the state is con- to let, him tell them how to elect altemptnous of these.

For nearly two dog catcher in the smallest village in 1 decades Norris has kept Nebraska be- the state, out tney nave neen- senaing jouu me paie oi ieaerai xavor, out nis courteous to the newspapermen who questioned willing to help in v-ery way, anxious to solve the mystery of the bomb that had slain his family for he was certain it was a bomb. him to the senate so long it is a habit. I people consider him worth the price. If he lives lone enough and does not I George Norris is the burr Nebraska BOARD REVEALS get tired of the job, he will spend delights in putting under the eastern PULITZER AWARDS more years in the upper nouse ot con- saddle. He is the reprisal for all the eress than any man before him.

Death, jokes of vaudevillists. the caricatures i If If Continued from First Page. ill health or personal disinclination of cartoonists and the jibes of humor-one of these may some day drive him ists that have come out of the east Sink, of Zanesville, Ohio, and David out of the senate, but tne people ot the last quarter of a century V.h.ncb. -Brill I A. Robinson and Winston Phelps, of The state asks little of him in re- New York citv.

Elliott of It gives him perfect freedom nf movement and of It holds New York, won the scholarship for MacDonald questioned Payne closely. From this questioning he developed certain clues that led him to a former secretary of the attorney, Veron Thompson, a pretty girl who admitted, after MacDonald had exposed what he already knew, that she had been overfriendly with Payne that the lawyer had promised to marry her. That night, Payne was arrested. He confessed, and committed suicide in his cell, nsing a bomb he manufactured himself from materials obtainable in jail. OIL CONSERVATION PACT COMPLETED AUSTIN.

Texas. May 4. OP) The music students, and feamuel iviem, ot him to no party or platform. It. requires no promises of him, no pledges.

New York, the scholarship for art He need have no concern tor. nis con oil states advisory committee tonight students. All scholarships have a value of $1,800. stituency, is tinder no obligation tolcomDipted a oronosed interstate con- Miss Glaspell. the author of the people or to politicians.

He can ide-j servation pact designed to stabilize prize-winning play, has written as vote as mucn ot nis time as ne uiuithe petroleum industry, others. The most important of them was "Inheritors." produced by Miss to tne uusra vXA. The pact would be submitted to the e.TonaUsW effective Le Gallienne in 1927. Miss Glaspell was born in 1882 at Davenport, Iowa, PULITZER PRIZE TO CONSTITUTION lahoma, low tariff demanded by cane sugar zh? producers of Cuba, while the beet when ranfied by Texas and Ok sugar growers of Nebraska are starv- two of the biggest producers. It would become and educated at Drake University, the University of Iowa and Univer Details of the proposed pact were sity of Chicago.

For a time she was ing to death. He can interest him-eoie in TinliHml Reandnls in Pennsyl Continued from First Page. "not immediately available. a newspaper political writer, then be vania, and be wholly unconcerned.) gan turning out-fiction and moved 1923 The Commercial-Appeal of Memphis, won the medal and in 1926 The to the literary colony at frovmce- where she still lives. Enquirer-Sun, Columbus, pub over the economic plight of the Ne-j braska farmer.

He can do. all" these things, and be as nssnred of election as the seashore Auto Accidents In City Monday With her husband, the late George lished by Julian Harris, a son of Cram Cook, she established the Prov- Joel Chandler Harris, was awarded is of the tide. He could spend a cam incetown Players in 1915. the prize. paign year in Europe, and beat a Washington in reDublican Mr.

Harris recently was appointed director of news for The Constitution. Margaret Ayer Barnes, author of "Years of Grace," is the wife of Cecil primary and an Abraham Lincoln in Barnes, a Chicago lawyer. She is a Mr. Howell, the rresent editor and a general election. graduate of Bryn Mawr and is the A-nd vet.

George Norris is not a mother of thrpe children. She began writing in. 1926 while recovering from publisher, was graduated from the University of Georgia in 1SS3 and following a cosmopolitan apprenticeship on the New York Times and the Philadelphia Press began his service injuries received in an automobile accident. Her novel tells of the experiences of a Chicago girl against the political power in Nebraska. The people of other states believe is revered as an idol in his own'state.

As a matter of fact, he is probably held with his father's paper on the tele graph desk in He was closely associated with Joel Chandler Harris background of the United States in war days. She dramatized Edith 1:45 A. M. Butler street and Auburn avenue. Automobile driven by Paul Creddelle.

77 Hil-liard street, hit a parked auto- mobile causing slight damage. No cas made. 10:45 A. M. Butler street underpass.

Automobile driven by Oeorge Ware, neero, of 263 Kingsley street, 'hit a mule-drawn wagon driven by Norman Harrington, negro, of 19 Lowe's alley, carrying Wiley Reynolds, negro, as a passenger. Harrington and Reynolds slightly injured. Ware arrested, charged with reckless driving. CHEAP CUTS OF and Henry W. Grady, the noted south Wharton's "The Age of Innocence ern publicist and orator.

same years ago, wrote another play, He- succeeded the latter as manag Dishonored Lady, for Katherine Cornell, and collaborated with Edward ing editor upon Mr. Grady death in in lower esteem in Nebraska than in any other state in the union. Ilis indorsement of another candidate is of no real value. He, could not throw a hatful of votes over any political fence in the state. He gave his tacit support to LaFollette as a third party presidential candidate in 1924, and the Wisconsin senator could have carried all his Nebraska votes in his hip pocket without a bulge.

He came ehelton in Jenny. Grandmother's Bread is made from a blend of the choicest flours of rarest quality. This is mixed with milk and pure shortening, yeast, salt and sugar in the same proportions at every taking, which produces the same even texture and the same brown crust. 1SS9 and in 1S97 he succeeded his father as editor and publisher. He has been a director of the Associated Robert Frost, born in San Francis co in 1875.

lives in South Shaftes Press since 1900. Major Clark How ell, a veteran of the World War and son of the publisher, is business bury, on a farm. He attended Dartmouth and Harvard, and at various times has been vagabond, teacher, shoemaker and editor. His earlier into Nebraska in J5 witn a ianiare of democratic trumpets and of radio books of poems include A Jioy manager of The Constitution. MINORITY RULES, hook-ups, stumped the state for Gover Will," "North of Boston," "Mountain Interval" and "West-Running Brook." MEAT IMPROVED BY USING SUGAR Dull In) (y ri FOSDICK ASSERTS Charles W.

Eliot, the subject of nor Smith ana eorasita gave Herbert Hoover the largest majority on the winning biography by Henry James, was president of Harvard for a basis of percentage, of all the states NEW YORK, May 4. UP) The Rev. Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick says in the union. 40 years and its president emeritus at his death in 1926.

-Mr. James is As far as the people of Nebraska Sugar Blends Deliciously with son of William James, American' that despite the United States democratic form of government. 2 per cent of its people decide its questions of public policy. An alert, organized minority has are concerned, George Norris is as deep as the Atlantic ocean in Wash OH Meat Juices and Seasonings ington, and as shallow as tne tiatte philosopher, and a nephew of Henry James, the novelist. He is a trustee for the Carnegie Foundation, the river in his own state.

dominant influence in almost every di The exDlanatiou of this fascinating Rockefeller Institute for Medical Re rection religious, political and economic the postor of the Riverside nolitieal naradox is to be found not fw of the most inexpensive meat search and an overseer of Harvard. In 1920 he edited a volume of his in an analysis of Norris, but of Ne- Rtws to make is the famous Mexican church said in a sermon yesterday. The history of the world, he de- braska. As a senator, Norris has given cbili Con Carne. The recipe, father's letters and in 1923 published a biography of Richard Olney.

Nebraska something the state never vy, simple, follows E. tchmitt, winner oi had before. He has put the "Gentle- gjice fine two onions and cook man from Nebraska" on every front our tablespoons of fat in the history award, is professor of page in America, and has kept nim -overed kettle until Boftr not modern history at the University of Chicago and editor of the Journal of Modern History. In 1926 and 1927 he interviewed many of the men who there. A resident of Nebraska can pick up the latest edition of a New.

York daily or of an Amona weekly, and find "Norris oi Nebraska" in at least Free Foods At Our New Delicatessen three type faces. were in power during the war. The work of Hubert R. Knickerbocker, honored for his series on the Soviet's five-year plan, came into in full 16 ounces of the finest bread you've ever tasted baked by the same recipe that has made Grandmother's Bread "famous the nation over and your assurance of freshness is that each store gets two deliveries of oven-fresh bread each day! Grandmother's Bread obtainable only at ternational prominence in 1VSJ. At But the publicity Norris gets for Nebraska is not the whole story.

His real strength in Nebraska is meas that time he uncovered a story which led to the conviction of two men for forging documents purporting to show that Senator Borah and Senator Nor ured by the antagonisms he stirs up beyond the borders of the state. His people take delight in setting him on tha kooia nf th mline Dowers, whether ris had received 5100.00U Irom the brown. Then add one ana one-half pounds round steak or cheaper beef cut in small cubes and cook until the meat 6tarts to fry. Stir in one to three tablespoons Chili powder, mixed in a little water, one teaspoon salt and two teaspoons sugar. Next "add one quart hot water and one-half cup tomato puree or juice.

Simmer until meat is very tender and the- stew is of a thick consistency. Serve with potatoes, rice, corn- or hominy and a salad. This meal topped with a sweet dessert is most satisfying and properly balanced. Sugar can be similarly used when you stew, braise or pot-roast cheap cuts of beef or lamb and a dash of sugar to a pinch of salt noticeably improves the flavor of vegetables. Most foods are more delicious with augax.

The Sugar Institute, (-au j- Russian government. of government, ot or ot industry. The more he makes himself to a nolitieal party, to a Edmund Duffy, cartoonist lor tne Baltimore Sun. studied art in New York and Taris and has contributed to many magazines. His work is known for its strength and simplicity.

national administration or to Ktraar rr.1. hotter thev like him. Barbecue Corned Beef Spiced Beef Imported Cheese PIC 'N WHISTLE Ponce de Leon Ave. Nebraska is not interested the smallest degree in what progress he m.L-n. m.

shut he accomplishes. It has been said of Norris that he has rnf more necative votes against win ARGON PILLS Praised by Millions of Grateful Users NEW TRIAL ning causes and more affirmative vote for lost causes than any other 0 -A.

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Years Available:
1868-2024