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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 39

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY QaklanO Cr.bun; OCTOBER 9 1927 4-B SMS WflOML MEN the canse of eafntj here must be 'made a start upon- a definite program gradually remove the evil and- more attention to signal. devices, cd protective mechanism at the crossings. VAMELESS VISION. aklanfiibutip Siipiimt "i timimtnmtSUtv' otSair1-trcneieStty t'AKI 0LV loCAIXrOWNED, LOCALLY CONTKOLI.EL) DAILY. E-stnbtirhrd February 21, 1874 Fl'fM KIl BY VM DAHiilB One thurels ivithW the Chamber of my soul -Who, like a- creamy dove against the "purple of the night, Urges me on to.

that celestial goal Where Christ ami Buddha raim tranquility Member American Newspaper Publishers Association Cimrter Miml'vr Audit Bureau of circulation TS Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tht fur rHPutMicatiori ot all news despatches cred Wed 'n 't. or not otherwise credited in his rr ar.ti also the local news published herein Ail rights ct, reputllcruion ot special despatches neroin rio are reserved. T.llliL.NK PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUELlSHKHf Jur H. t.A.Mh iresioent ana ruuimuci A FOitff -General Manage! ltd every evening and Sunday Single copies lT TAKES SOMETHING BESIDES JUST A SET OF TOOLS 1 Jk I 1 FIX IT YOURSELF iPj! Jj THOUSANDS OT SATISFIED ff" The formula for success recently announced by Henry Ford, i. think On a large scale and then try to get a machine to carry your thought into reality for you, is already stirring up considerable discussion.

And, as it is to be expected, old bromides have been resurrected, re-dressed, and released for the benefit of a palpitating world. Says one big executive in the business field "A young man should hunt experience. He should take the advice of others. He shoiitd think faster than the next fellow. He must Bv wii.mam nAtm Special Correspondent The Oakland.

TRIBUNE of Ktca-raugua Is in town. He Is the gentleman whom we refused to recognize as President of Nicaragua In 1825. He wants to rur President in the Nicaragua! elections of next year. He is a stocky, burly man with a vigorous outdoor complexion. He is sa'id to be the best military commander in Latin and looks it.

Our Marine Corps is to supervise next year's in. Nicaragua. Rumor has had it that our State Department is against allowing General Chaniorro to present his name to the Nicaraguan people inlhose elections. The general is here presumably to investigate that rumor, llather pdd that a foreigner should be among us to try to find out if he can run for office in his own country. Ana wneiH Obliterates the chaos of pas sioned sod Where man alone exerts his feeble mi CARLTON KENDALL, (In the soul of every man li i Nameless Vision which, like a divine- mistress, urea him on to helhts of spiritual realization.

Until he perceives this vision, he is conscious of only the most crystal-ized of his three bodies and, in spite of his blind laith, lives in world of materially struggling with much wasted effort to supply him self with fdur essentials ol earth Food, pidthlng, Shelter and Happiness The last Happiness-he never finds for it dwells in the world of the Nameless Vision and is imperceptible to those who can- Iailv FMiiion. Sunday Edition, luc nacs numbers Haily Edition, be and up; Sunday Edition and up" priiUCATloN OFFICE Trthune Building, corner ot Thi'r-eentii. and Franklin Sts. Flione Lakeside 6000 Emend as cond-class matter, February 21, at -The Pr-nffice of under act of. Con-gic-ss.

March 1 79 nna h- Cni-rler! One month Six months (in adv.) .76 Three ta una year un have honesty, truth, integrity. He must stick Snrmerlplliin Hnle bf Mall, Profane Pnidi United States. Mexico arid Canada (Ail Mall Subscriptions Are Payable in Advance) One mont 'S5 Six months tin dv .4.76 three months 55 One year (In advance) SIM)A1 EDITION RY MAII.I One -50 Six months '-u Threa months $1.50.. Twelve TO SI IIS( HUMORS Subscribers fulling to receive their paper by m. daiiv cr a.

m. Sunday will please repyrt the same to Trie riMBUNE Otfice by telephone l-a Uie 6ii(i) and a special messenger will despatched at once with a copy of The THIBUNE to his worfe and give his attention to small-details." That has a familiar ring, has it not? Then a banker comments: "Hard work plus time are the roads to success. They're about, all there is to it. One must work hard ami do it over a reasonably long period. The trouble with so many people is that they either won't work hard or they won't work hard long enough.

They. quit before they get there. But with hard work and time even the mediocre fellow can make a success of himself." Comes now a professor of philosophy "on the not perceive tne vision. SOME FIFTY YEARS AGO. (In friendliness Inscribed to the old folk.) When we were looking forward Some fifty years ago The world Was full of promise The heights were all aglow Our -heritage the future Te reap what we might sow The world was in our keeping Some fifty years ago.

Then we were but proposing T. 1L t. .111 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1927 The League of Nations is going So appoint an American to Bit permanently on its international economic committee. This writer subscribes for the publication of the League of Nations. On the subject of the recent League of Nations ecohomio conference at now- has received fifty-nine pamphlets and leaflets, totalling two thousand, three hundred and seven pages and weighing fifteen and one-half pounds.

This writer calculates that no American ought to be appointed to the League's international economic committee till" he has mastered the whole of that fifteen and one-half pounds, and then he wont want to be. ine aies wouiu lo-ve uieu scene: "To be successful is to see life steadily and see it whole, to have an' opportunity to do useful work that one likes, to have the love of A Power Supreme disposing But we're proposing still As we proposed consistent With what was right we know Our hopes came true we prayed for Some fifty years ago. friends, the respect and honor of the best men and women and to have a feeling of accom And have we been quite faithf To our ambitions high plishing something for the good of the world." Catechized If happiness is synonymous with This question we must answer success, the professor replied: "We philoso phers don't think so, for the word happiness generally means pleasures, and we do not be FIRE PREVENTION. Fire Prevention 'Veek. is one which has proved its value.

An annual period of intensive education in the wavs to prevent fire is to be welcomed by ahy commtinity for a reduction of the fire loss means a saving to each individual. With each year there is new audience to le reached bat bo well are the schools cooperating, and so firmly are the repeated lessons implanted, that progress is being made. The country over, the fire tolls remain disgracefully large. We burn more property in a year than any other nation. Indeed, our total of homes and buildings leveled by flames is larger than the total of construction work for many countries.

In addition a human carelessness is 'responsible for a greaannual fire loss to crops and trees. Here in Oakland the fire logs per capita in 1923-24 was The next year it was 2.43, and the next, S1.10. This would indicate that what h-s been done here in pointing out" the hazards, in cleaning up the brush heap and cellars, enforcing rigid inspection rules for building, and in efficiency by the fire department, has been worth while. There is" proof of the value of educational methods and demand that they continue. It is not time to stop when lieve that to have pleasure necessarily is to.

have success." The time is drawing nigh But we are sure of pardon "From whom all blessings flow We still can kneel as sure as Some fifty years ago. Our blessings we would mention But time and space forbad Their name is countless legion And may our sins be hid A greeting we would send you To those who yet may know Our hopes and aspirations Some fifty years ago. 15. T. Mrs.

MedJll McCormlck will presently leave Washington to try to cover four counties a day In Illinois, in the course speaking for herself as candidate for the Republican nomination for congress-man-at-large. She favored the direct primary and so it is only fair that she should taker, her turn at going without sleep operating it. She refrained from running for anything last year because she did not wish to seem to be trying to use her late husband's shoes. She is running now on 'her own and with her own "organization." Women politicians exist now by the thousand, but there are only a very few of them indeed in the whole country who have their own "organizations," the way "men have Mrs. McCorniick is the most prominent of that Jew.

Her jace for Congress will be worth watching nationally. Can a woman, wrjp additionally is-very scrupulous and high minded, be a "regular professional politician" and succeed on her awn merits and "machines?" "Is wealth necessarv for success?" "According to our philosophic estimate of Industry Vies With Art YOUR HEALTH success, few wealthy men in the world have been successful." What is-suVess? NEW ORATORICAL THEORY. San Francisco is having a municipal election when three candidates mount the platform and speak in concert Heretofore, there have. been no demonstrations for the conserva American industries have been 1 Invited to participate in the ex: hibltion at Turin, Italy, in Novem tion of the energies of orators ot; listeners and armory adjoining the Royal Palace contains more than BO suits of armor and various historic imple-" hients of war. "In the Cathedral of Turin there is a piece of linen, which tradition holds is a part of the shroud in which the body of Jesus was wrapped'.

A copy of Leonardo da Vinci's 'Last Supper' is displayed in the doorway of the edifice. "Valentino Park, along The Po river, Is Turin's Riverside Drive. It has a public garden, a lake, two castles and is beautifully laid out with winding roadways and i i i it ber, in commemoratipn.of the tenth anniversary of the Italian armistice and the four hundredth anniversary of Emanuele Filiberto, Duke of Savoy, "Turin br Tormo, as the city is known to the Italians, is one of the most important industrial centers In Italy," says a bulletin from the Washington, D. heaquarters of the National Geographic society. "American exhibitors Who visit Turin will marvel at the industrial there remains some debate as to the success of the exertment.

The crowd in the hall heard three speakers in the time generally devoted to one, hear.tr all three at once, and now may BABY WISHES. If baby wishes always came true And all they had to do was ask, rWe'd be no stars blinking down on you And no bright silver moon alas. The skies above would hold no sun at all The clouds would be called front their places sd high, The rainbow in the heavens would fall And the breezes in baby armt would sigh. Baby hands would be reaching for the dripping sparkling rain And for the flowers at their feet. We would never see the shimmering moon cast lakes again And no singing birds could we greet.

If baby wishes always came true And ail they had to do was This oiid. would be crying and blue And happy days would b'e of the past. IOLA KIMBALL SMITH. "They" say that Mrs. Cpolidge took her revenge on Calvin Cool-idge for not letting her know about his "1 do not choose to run" statement.

Hs issued the statement without telling her and then wnt off to take a nap, still without her. When she learned about it from Capper she did hat every wife in -the country will fehe just went right av, ay waked right up! The Coii.mander in Cluef of the anil of the. United the of his nap residents can perhaps lntimlda.e but not wives. uie per capita iuss is cm uuu mure luan fifty per cent, but time to continue that the old days may not In Fire Prevention Week, which starts to norrow the firemen and others will outline -he old affd'lriew rules, srnitid some simple warnings, and upon the attention paid depends safety to person and property. seeK io separate iiieyniircssioiis.

Cartied out. to its) erfect ion the theory will. Cappuccinl, across the ictivity. "of a -city without -6piendid ransDortation facilities. No Indus be a boon to the tired listener.

I.etll the can didates for state and national! sniind their messages in concert and serve the composite to a pubHf which never did care much for political debate. Then let 'the man with (he loudest voice be declared winner! view of Turin. The height of Turin buildings is- unu.iuaily uniform as viewed from the mountain. Here and there a church dome rises above the house tops but the dome and spire of the Mole Antonelliana, said to be the loftiest walled building in "Europe, stands out boldly-above all of them. It hs hut.

8. feet shorter tharl the Washington Monument." Where They Are Heard The revolt of the small nations Is the outstanding feature of the eighth assembly of the League of Nations. Enemies of the league look on and smile, are apt to repeat, "Didn't 1 tell ypu But they did not. The thing taking place is that which they denied ever could happen in the League of Nations, that of the smaller nations forcing the great powers to lit-un to their protests. wIIAT A USES APPENDICITIS? By Frank Martin.

M. Chicago, 111. Member Gorpas Memorial. Next to the removal of teeth and tonsils, the removal of the appendix is the commonest 'Surgical, operation performed today. It is the most frequently performed emergency operation.

What causes such a wide-spread and dangerous disease? Dr. Frank K. Boland of Atlanta, has answered that question most Interestingly as follows: "The Vxperience of Robert Mc-Carrison, an English surgeon, seems to suggest one answer." he says. "Recently he- practiced for nine years amofig the natives of norther India, although he perfbrmeokSGOO surgical operations during thatVtime, he did not' see a single case of appendicitis. Not only did not see a case of gall stones, or ulcer or cancer of the stomach.

In fatj, indigestion of all kinds were unknown. "When he searched for a reason for -this' remarkable state of affairs, he discovered that these people ate foods as near to nature as possible! that is, they subsisted on milk, eggs, grains, fruits 'and-leafy vegetables. They ate no meat, and the Amount of sugar in a year in a town of OUtTinhabitants was less than that used in a large New York hotel in one day! "We do not have to leave our own country to find examples similar to this. One 'hundred artd fifty years ago there was practically no appendicitis in the United States. If there had been any considerable number of cases, such keen medical observers as Benjamin 'Rush and Ephraim McDowell would have found it out and left-some record In.

their writings, whicrtf-fh'ey did not. The natural inference may be ra wn, there fore, that the diet of our forefathers of those days must have resembled somewhat the diet of the, people of India, except that our forefathers didteat meat. "Another illustration supporting the ideathat over-preparation of MEN AND MICK. The mice which are marching up Bollinger This and That can von are ttrotestinsr. in wnv -i mi hist -i LANDMARKS.

A street car line is removed from Montgomery street in San Francisco and there is a celebration. Fire destroyed a. large part of the Piedmont baths in Oakland and the older residents hark back to the days when the building" was a show place. Because 'the car line and the rambling building were 'landmarks their passing will' be regretted. When the rails were laid in.

Montgomery street tliat was the avenue of hotels' and the, new cars were regarded with pride. One. by 1 1 i i trial city of a half million population In the United States is without a navigable water cour.se at its or back door. Turin occupies a fertile plain at the foot of he Alps, 65 miles as the crow flies from Genoa, the nearest seaport, and the Po River bordering the city on the east-can only accommodate only small row boats and gondola-iike pleasure craft. "Good railroads, that form a network about Turin as a "center, keep commerce moving to and from the The location of the city near the Italian end of the Mont Cenis tunnel that pierces the Alps, between France and Italy causes much commerce to flow through it Ihe-UflwlT--w-hicrr is' about eight miles long, is 4 a direct route between northwestern Italy and Paris.

The French cap Hal' Is less- than 500 miles, fron-Turin. Beiore the St. Hot hard tunnel was completed. Turin was Italy's chief railroad center but tlirbnhce in the balance of nature. Mad not the enemies of mice, hern killed -off.

by man, those enemies would have hoi lat ion dowjj to a comparatively harmless level THE BERRY PATCH. Devotees doff their shoes, with humble mien Obeisance make, and purge their souls of spleen; The fragrance of thetr thoughts, unclouded, tense, I Floats like a benediction In lnoense. With like devotion I would enter herein fragrant arbor, rlne frame and parterre, Where clustered Mammoth-pnrpled pyramid Where Burbank's Logan-neetarlMd hybrid. Jog the monk-like Black Oep, round, tonsured; The late-maturing Himalaya's head, Black as a raven's wing gleams la When a man calls a woman, honey It doesn't mean anything. Most men don't really care for honey and they are likely to associate It with getting stung: The Los Angeles Thisir -derby rpparently is.

an Indication that it takes 'a water haKafd to. stir up the American publi Interest In aviation. The Lincoln Star. The re-volt of the small nations against domination of the greater o.uht to be regarded as sign of ije.ter iiingsin the world. f-'or" Holland, Poland a.d Sweden are as one in the that the assembly shaNadupt understandlns to outlaw war, ne gieal ptwers eventually uiu y.

id. or stand before the iiuvi.c.i.es ot Were theie no 01 Nations, these small siuita would have no chance wriaieier to be heard. 'They would and there. would be no hungry para'de, through the. vineyards.

Mice iiivaslors iy be expected. 'nv then, says (Irirw'l. hci'i of thn mn set in of vert' brale zoology the I'ni now it bows to Milan. "Although trn lmernatlonally known automobile has been man- versity of California. The year has been favor If prize fighters are deliberately to remain down until, the referee tsv svurrout influence lntntermuJ nas erranTed nine: wrv- Tiot rrro- the sun iional aliiiis.

Now they help direct the fturid'un its course. Tnat hi a thought for those who deny the need and the service of the league. The Los Angeles Evening Express. uue mr uim-iM n.ie iihim'u ii. muij (ail uuuti ings of steel and stone-have taken the place of the frame ones with tin it; false frouts and huge wooden awnings.

"firOafrlaiHl-the- Piedmont-baths, 'for a t.nfe. marked the limits. It stood near the outskirts and then on. the frontier of that hilly, region which wooed manv residents awav from the flats. In the days when houses were first built on the heights it was regarded as a re markable indication of growth that tEe city was moving beyond the baths.

Hikers went by the place on the way to the canyons, wagons pulled through the mud jn the winter. Beyond was a park with eucalyptus and palms. nble for the field rrfce been rise or cxteniii nat-oirof their enemies and the abundance of food. In several parts of the state men who have killed off the hawks and other foes of mice will have to do the work of hawks and kill mice, Nature-has a way of. letting ns-khow when its delicate balance is disturbed.

The sober, somber garment of tho nun. Essenced aroma-harem, rush, It, "lure For nectars, honeyed juices, rich and pure; Toeaeh Bweets-fllchlng bird an av'ary, And ev'ry flaming bee an ap'ary. ALEX R. SCHMIDT. EVEN lb FUR 10DAY.

lood lna.v have, something to do with causing appendicitis is found in the report from a large city hospital in the southern Dart of vtne coughes and make them comfortable The Eoston-Transeript. It has been suggested that the cheapest way to handle the next wa- Is to buy off the warring countries before they get their guns loaded. T.ulsa -World. Mr. McAdoo evidently believes that he who fights andNruns away has a wider choice 'of methods in resuming an attack.

Brooklyn Eagle. i the-t; lilted giates, where It Is shown The latest alleged "lazTetnnm" ins been discovered in Chicago. "He sat down while rid ing an escalator." In one way or another Chicago keeps in the public eye. GRADE CROSSINGS. It is all right to get behind "almost any movement except that' of a mule.

Louisville Times. LONGINGS. Have you ever felt the longing' For a letter from your child Who" is too Interested. Or by Cries beguiled -With the' passing pleasures That "are present, on the spot, To the old and absent parent For the moment is forgot. Have you ever felt the longing To hear the child's own voice Speaking with affection It is easy to say that the way to stop grade crossing accidents is to remove the grade crossings, but it is not easy" to contemplate the A recent Chicago event poignantly revealed the fact that some, gazabos are better bettors than others.

Archblshop-B--Hanna attends Eastbay Holy Name Society rally, St. Anthony's church, morning. Knights of Columbus communion breakfast, Elks' club. Wolf wood carvings exhibit, Hav-iland. hall, U.

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Berkeley Hiking club to4Scout Peak, morning. Contra Costa Hills club to Pine Mountain, Marin county, morning. Sierra club to Northside trait, Mt.

Taraalpajs, morning. Lonesohie club, instrumental music, silo'and community)': singing, 7:30. to 9 p.m., 125 Twelfth street. Dixie Social club whist, South Berkeley hall, evening. Fulton "The Last, of Sirs.

Cheney." Orpheum Vaudeville. American "Beau Geste," T. D. "The Cat and the Grand-Lake "A' Gentleman of I'aris." State Pictures and musical comedy. Hippodrome 1 "and vaudeville.

Broadway Feature film. costs. At a time when twenty million rtntomo biles are moving about a land which is pat The next proposed airplane hop, we (suppose, will be from Greenland's icy mountains to India's coral strands. Shreveport Journal. 'Italy wants to expand.

Well, let Mussolini throw out his chest. It's the same thing. Los Angeles To cause you to rejoice? But that-voice Is busy telling fact 1 1 rM nt Turin for two decades and machinery, leather-working and tanning factories, iron foundries, silk and cotton weaving mills and other industrial- plants, are turning out a large volume of products daily, Turin, unlike many so-called factory towns, Is unusually clean, and unlike many cities 'of Italy, particularly in the south, unusually modern. Broad, straight streets. intersect each other at right angles, frequently opening Jnto piazzas or spacious squares that are surrounded by attarctive.

arcaded buildings, forming unbroken walls four to five stories in height. Some of the piazzas have beautiful gardens, while others are. hare save for streetcar tracks and electric light poles. "The Piazza" Cistello, the hub of Turin, was once within the wall that, surrounded ancient Augusta Taurinornm, oh whose foundation the Turin of today is built. The walled city was less than 10 city blocks square.

Now it covers many. square miles. Excavations show that the new streets parallel the old. "The wall has been destroyed but the North Gate, one of the four-that pierced it, has been preserved. It is a massive brtck-faced structure with two large vehicular and two srjialler pedestrian arches.

A huge sixteen-sided tower flanks each end. "The Royal palace, overlooking the R.oyal Gardens, near Piazza Castello, is a mute reminder of the dayswhen Turin was capital of the Kingdom of Sardinia, and for five years, 1S60-1805, capital of Italy. The palace contains many statues, historical paintings, and tapestries. The throne room -with its elaborate chandeliers, candelabra and velvet hangings, Is one of Turin's show places. 'Works of art are also on display at Gallery of Modern Art, the Museum of Anclnt and Applied Arts, the Picture Gallery.

Ah Interesting display of Egyptian antiquities Is preserved In the Museum of Antiquities, including documents, vases, Jewelry, food and musical Instruments dating back to the Seventeenth century, B. C. The PROOF OF WOMAN'S BR A'INr Women will be interested fro-see the full report' on the brain of Helen H. Gardener. Even the shwrt account of the examination must give them mingled feelings of loy and pain, which -at any rate are stimulating.

Mrs. Gardener's purpose was to prove that the brain of an intelligent woman would reveal the Of "the fun we had last night," Yet with no thought of causing, The man who wrote, "It is better to have loved and must' have had a good break on the alimony. The Humboldt-Times. terned with rail lines the subject comes up each day with stories of fatal accidents. In California there are 80,000 miles of roads.

provide separate crossings over or. under trie- rail which cross these roads-would icst one billion two hundred'and fifty million dollars. Who can pay Buch a sum? There "is an argument advanced that the State should undertake to build irrade crossings thati appetrilicitis is. four times more common among white than Negro patients. While Negro coftks are noted for their preparation of luscious rich dishes for the white folks, when it comes their tirnejp eat'they sit down to corn' bread arid turnip greens.

"During the latter part of the 19th when appendicitis first becmne so fashionable (Dr. Fitz of Boston said if.was 1SSB), the super-preparation of articles of dii became, prevalent. Now our foods are often so over-seasoned and over-prepared that our great-grandmothers would not recognize them as something to eat. If there is any way-w. can return to some of the natural foods of iiur ancestors, surgeons will not have appendicitis, operations." AWAKENING.

Full starry eyed and conscious let me slip, (As fingers slip from out a well worn glove) Into the larger freedom; let me slip With ecstacy illimitable love. Just like an eagle. who has known restraint, -Into the ether let me soar and soar Above all murmurlngs of low com- I'laint, In utter joy love's largess to ex-. plorr. let me rise and dip and sway and whirl In sheer abandonment of' spirit' freed From all anathemas that cut and hurl The earth bound once Into the pit of greed.

With, one desire retalned--the will to praise Lord, make me songster of lmmor- tal lays. EVE BRAZIER. same essential characteristics, ard development 'ns that of a man'of the same grade. So, when she died two years ago she left her own to Cornell University for comparison. A college education is a fine thing for the man who can use it without revealing it.

The Vonkers Herald. Noticing activities in Para, Brazil, British Interests seem to fear that Mr. Ford may win the game and rubber. Lowell Leader. io the parent, any slight Have you ever felt the longing For the absent ones, most dearT Have you wished to have them near you -And by their presence cheerT But the many fascinations Of the pleasures nearer by Still prove' a greater interest And the visit they deny.

The -children are but thoughtless And never, would offend, But yet this longing for a letter The children never send. We cannot hear their voices, Their faces are unseen, But In memory's- recollection My pleasure I can "DAD." -(M Tle New England Way. Oh, Tommie, hov; did you ever get such a black eye?" "Because I did not choose to ruOj mother," Life. "The" navy has been frequently reminded that in time of peace It must prepare for magazine articles. The Washington Evening Staf.

talents attainments were well-known." It is hot surprising that her brain shows no inferiority to those of -the -learned men represented in the Cornell collection. Women who, Uke. Gardener, believe firmly in the equality of brains in rHeif will be torn between triumph and irritation at the scientific confirmation of their contention. They rejoice, with the purely reasonable Fide of their that science backs them up; but they also murmur, with truly feminine contrariness, that this is nothing to shout about. Surely the section of humanity confident thVt there is.

a fundamental difference in the workings of maie and female minds must be dwindling. When Juliet's nurse said, "I do bear a brain." wli'o believed her? Now we kndw it was true, and any woman these days who wants to claim the same organ will be believed or, at least, permitted to bequeath it to the laboratories for inspection. New TorJt Timea, at the places of-greatest danger, should ini prove one-fifth of the existing crossings. To do so would cost123 million dollars and call foE a huge bond issue, or would result in prohibitive rail rates if it did. not, put the lines out of business.

These are facts which must be omSidered, and not arguments against the modern overhead or tunneled crossing. There will be more automobiles and more roads and unless some remedy Is applied, more accidents. "Unless EVENTS FOR.TOMORROW THI-BL'NE radio broadcast. Park Boulevard Vfomen's club, card party, clubhouse, Athol avenue, afternoon. AVoIf wood carvings exhibit, Hav-iland hall.

U. Cw 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oakland Forum, organization meeting, Hotel' Oakland, 2 p.m. Foresters' Pacific building, 2:15 Mrs.

Rose Berry before North-brae Women's club, Community Center, 2:30 p.m. Lakeview club civic and current events section program, 124 Monte-clto avenue, 8 p.m. A shine may not be worth a dime, but it. adds about eight cents to the price of an apple. The Montana Record-Herald.

One trouble is that-there are'not enough parents who are on spanking terms with their children.r-The Charlotte Observer. someone willing to spend many Bullions in.

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