(1 IU J. Hendricks Ar- -President- Carls Abrams . - . Secretary - - j J. L. Brady Vice-President i Issued Daily Except Monday by J I I THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY i 215 Si Commercial St., Salem, Oregon Portland Office, 723 Board of Trade Building. Phone Beacon 1193) " 'r MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is ezclnsirely entitled to the use for publi cation, oi an news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. . It.J. Hendricks John L. Brady Frank Jaskoski - " Manager - I Editor . Manager Job Dept. - ; '.'.:: BUSINESS OFFICES: j- Thomaa F. Clark Co., New York. 141-145 West 36th street; Chicago, , ". : Marquette building. W. S. GrothwabL Mgr. . TEf.FPHOKESr t 23 I Circulation Office - - .683 News Department - 23-106 1 Society Editor N - - - lOo i ; Job Department V - - . - - i - L 583 Business Of f tee. -" - 1i - Entered at the Postoffice In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. GOOD FOR SALEM AND STATE FAIR , There is a movement looking to the opening of North Seven teenth street through to the state fair grounds - " ' And it should succeed, if it will result in the making of an other paved street leading to the state fair, i In accomplishing this desirable result, there would-be an expansion of the residence district of the city, a consummation that is worth considering, for the way Salem is growing there will before long be felt a dearth of lots in sections adapted to the construction of modern homes. j 4 : A paved street to the state fair grounds, providing for an entrance gate near the new pavilion, would very materially re lieve the congestion at the other gates, and prevent serious jams of traffic on the streets leading to them.! The movement mentioned ought to succeed. , im . ' .1 : T Y' CO ; Another thing: lion., T. B. Kay has recently become the owner of the Bonham tract of land on Market street, and some land in addition that was needed "in its development. In buying the Bonham tract he acquired the" beautiful 7 grove near the Englewood school. There is about three acres of land in this grxve, and Mr. Kay is willing to give it to the city for use as a park, if the city will attend to some necessary paving work of me streets mere, and to be opened in the tract ; f This offer deserves attention,1 and action. -Salem will never have enough parks. She must acquire, those that are. offered ' J UGLIES A property owner protests in The Statesman this morning about unsightly garages being built on the lot line and thus disfiguring the entire block.: There is a good deal of this in Salem and it ought not to be permitted. These garages are uglies. f Uglies are .not good for any city. least of all a beautiful one like Salem. This is an unusually at tractive city and to have it dis figured by uglies is intolerable. it may be argued that it is no body's business what a property owner puts on his lot, or where he puts it but ihis is a mistaken idea. The city council has a right to regulate any, building or to say whether or not the man can build at all. I5ut "aside, from any law no man ought, to want to disfig ure his own yard and interfere with the beauty of a neighbor's yard. The uglies are wrong. ', GOVERNORS , AND LAW THE DRY Certainly it was fine for the governors to go on record for the enforcement of the prohibitory law. There would have been no question about ft had there been an epidemic . of automobile steal ings and the governors had de manded the strict enforcement of the larceny law. But prohibition is set apart because the profitable ness or the liquor - business has made many friends for the traf fic.:; - - i : .' ) The prohibitory law is on the statute books and whether or not a governor likes the law is one thing and his oath to do his duty faithfully and impartially is an other thing. , The governors are right in the -position they have taken. CONCERNING DIVINE HEALING on such, advantageous terms. I i II 1 SERVICE AND ADVERTISING At a meeting of the American Electric Railway association irt Atlantic City week before last, one of the speakers, Charles i isimquist of St. Paul, pointed out as a favorable sign that whereas only 30 of the companies represented in the convention were using advertising as a means of increasing business three years ago, today 300 companies are doing it j v ; ' Recognizing that street cat and interurban service is -a com modity, and as such a suitable subject for newspaper exploita tion inrougn advertising. . - i-, f Public service corporations in general are advertisers, and those among the number whose destinies are directed by men of vision are making advertising a -vital part, of their business ' Realizing that Jheij rrjfits, as in (other (business, are in wat they sell ' 'j . . : V y f : j - J' . And advertising Is ILe worfdV treatest salesman. ; , Every consistent advertiser in Salem, having sVmethingof nun iiuuo ii ulici it mcpuunu, buu uaxmus up - me pruueu wora witn xugn ciass service, maKes iiot onijr a possible immediate profit ; l : ' 1 . He also makes a .tfood will increase in the valne of rhis busi ness, and a good will increase in prestige for his.eity. He makes Miem stand out as a live city, desiring to extend and improve its connections. The same is true of the advertisers of any .city. mi a i.J' ... .... - 1 r ine aavemsers are toe city builders. J They Help every man in the city, from capitalist to laborer.. They put value in all prop erty,' from the most prominent corner lot in the business sec tion to the smallest parcel in the remotest suburb. GET READY TO GO . The capital to capital highway will be dedicated - In Salem on Friday of .this week. This marks tb completion of a wonderful work. Good roads have 'meant so mach to Oregon that' we are apt to-take them as a matter of course. but back of every project there was wearysome agitation. The roads did not come easy. ? Every fot was "opposed, every effort put f of ward was met with determined fighting. The Pacifie ,. highway won. but it was Jiot aa. easy con f test. . ; . ; -.., ' v- In celebrating the completion of the road we realize that the obstacles pave; been overcome and th victory won. It is an achieve ment ranking behind only a few, anjl ahead of most that have been doing in Oregon. It 'has marked a fiew era. Mad does get awful muddy in Oregon.1 and the paving is about the ." nicest thing ws could have. ' . ' . ..... :. .. 1 - ' HOMER DAVEXIORT DAY 1 . . fDavenport Day'J,wiII be a feat ure of the opening work of the Wsman's club this year. I 'An lex tensive program 4sbein prepared and will be 'glvtfn In the public library room of the-Eugene Field building on Saturday.! October 2T. beginning at t:3 p.. m. At that tlce the beginning of a collection of 'articles of -Homer Davenport's wil be presented' to . the library. It is expected that this list will be j added to from time to' time. the part of the club women is to be commended J , from another standpoint. It shows that the women of Silverton are abreast of the best thought of the age They would , not decry commer cialism, but at the same time they are showing that they are alive to the finer things of life. V Homer Davenport was a nation al figure.' ' 'He possessed genius. ana nis ngni snone in many places. ' The work he did made the world better. It was clean, and It was real art. : Davenoort was never a 'sensationalist- never sacrificed art for display. These men have to be born somewhere, but it so often seems a pity, that they are , born . in other ' parts of the world. It Is fine to know tha; one man of genius whose reputa tion Is national was born In Sil verton, Oregon. It is enough to make the city proud, t rr :1 A FOOLISH IDE.; A number of original cartoons and otter things of interest are being loaned for the occasion. . The pub lic, at large is cordially Invited to attend. Silverton Appeal. ? " , llotner Davenport .was born ; In Silverton and he remains -today i t s roost disUngnlshed l egacy. The big mills have came since his day and have done s lot" towards makj in Silverton the city that It "Is, but back of all this there is the famous character . who originated there. . - -,: 4 i - ' , ' Furthermore, the movement on College ' professors are some times so funnjr.x. So many of them are parlor socialists and, kid gloved bolshevik. Possibly' they do not deserve the reputatldn. Mo3t of them do not. but some of them do. Berkeley. Cal.,-has a great school, and In a school of that size there 'must be all kinds i 1 IT or men and a few freaks. One professor has proclaimed a brand new reform. He declares that the students should hire and fire all the professors) j This is the limit! In . the first f place the student body is composed of young men who are not there for executive or administrative purposes. They are there to learn: They do- riot have either -the time or the money to make the necessary investiga tions ; preliminary to( ".hiring a teacher. Again , the" stadent,.body Is only temporary.-.; It 'changes every yearf. Just think, what pickle we wotilit beMn If the stud ents at Willamette voted upon the( profemors each year. It Is so foollsu: that Jt ought , not . to be dignified with; a rebuke. ' ? . i , i i - ill1:.: . .. THE NOVEMBER ISSIT2 The Lariat for November, the new western literary: monthly, has some features' of interest to Ore gon people. ' There Is a delight ful appreciation of Samuel Simp son, the Oregon poet, by Manche Irene Langley of Forest Grove. Delbert Fohl, a newspaper man at Med ford, has an article on "liter atore the life-blood of civiliza tion." ' Mabel Arundel Harris of Portland has a review of child ren's books for the' holidays j A brilliant new" Oregon -poet, under the title ."Horizons and Sky Lines," has eleven new poems hitherto unpublished Eleanor T. MacMillan, Portland, secretary of the child' welfare commission. ; - :VA-JTROPHECY J A couple of . days after his dis missal as warden, Johnson; Smith came to the writer and stated that he wanted to ; make ia pre diction. He asked that it be re- membered. His prediction was that within two weeks after his dismissal the same guns that had been trained on him would be trained on Cleaver. "These fel lows will go after Cleaver's scalp the same way they went after f mine," he said. The prediction is being verified already. The: Portland papers have turned their guns on Cleav- er. . . '..-v . . .. .. I .. i ' It Is given out from Russia that the American vice president of the Farmers' union has been elect ed vice president of the peasants union.. The only excuse we. can find for the man is that he must have thought it an organization of pheasants. 5. JUNEAU. Alaska, Oct. 20. A special election to pass on the question of dividing the territory of Alaska, of which the ' late President Harding suggested ' the southern portion might well be admitted soon as a state, has been called by the Juneau city council for November 6. r Axe you Learn to think construct ively about your life's I A nrohlems and about ; the I 'v business you want to rise in. We build you mental ly and show you how to use your knowledge prof itably. If you cannot ko to day school, plan to fl5J taice our . nignt bcboui mi r so hpeinnine October Ft- 29.- X... , ; START HERE!! OSCIN NOW! it in 1 Lvi (Copyrighted by the San Jose Mercury) THERE is a healing power in the divine life past human com prehension. That there have been large numbers of thor ujrhly authenticated cases of divine healing in the past does not admit of doubt. Not all the people who are said to "be healed by divine power are so healed. There should be a clear differ entiation between recoveries from fancied ailments and the heal ing of serious imaladies by divine power. Many people fancy themselves sick who are not! so. Frequently a disability of an arm or a leg or of both these members occurs that makes the victim not able to walk or use them. In time the member re covers by natural processes' but is weak from non-use. The patient honestly believes he has. permanently lost the use of these members. Cases are known where some sudden shock makes the patient forget his: disability and he attempts to walk and finds he can do so. Some people form a habit of non-use either in whole or in part of an arm, a leg or even an eye, and believe the member is permanently disabled, when it isi not. Many times these people become excited or emotionally affected at a religious revival and under this stimulus make an effort to use the disabled member and :find. they can use it. . These cases are not instances of divine'liealing, but only discoveries that a member supposed to be disabled is not in that condition. These instances do not j prove that there are not cases of real divine healing. Because we do not understand the process bv which blindness or deafness .a crfneernns or tumorous e-rowth in the body or other disease' is cured by divine power, it is not wise in this age of miraculous accomplishments' for any one to say that such things are not possible. Like the rays of the sun, the divine life possesses a life giving quality that we do not now understand. . It is easy to believe that if a large meas ure of the divine spirit could, be brought to bear upon a body weakened and inactive from any cause it might be reinvigor ated and made active, and that disease resulting from such in action could readily be eliminated. Dulled bodily functions might-in the same way be given new action. , It is more difficult to understand how a cancerous growth could be removed, but therej are authenticated cases where ths has been done. j ; The chemist of the present day has accomplished wonders with the elements with which he deals and those not versed in the mysteries of their operations are -astounded at what they do. We are accustomed tor'think of gold as one; of the most substantial and indestructible of metals, and yet the chemist dissolves cyanide in water,; pours this solution over pieces of gold, and the solid gold is dissolved, is taken tip by this liquid solution and disappears from sight. If nothing is done to pre cipitate this gold again, ther solution containing-it could be diluted to such an extent as to make the presence of the gold in the solution practically imperceptible -even to the chemist s tests, and the gold would lose all its solid characteristics.5 Of course the chemist knows how-to extract this gold from this cyanide solution and reduce it to a solid state again, but if he chose not to do this the gold would be permanently lost for practical uses. The chemist works equal wonders with other substances. These demonstrations are now so common as to produce no comment. We know- many of the laws employed by the chemist in his work, but have not yet come to understand the laws under which the divine life and spirit live and oper ate. We have not even learned the laws governing the ether, that surrounds the earth and fills space. Those engaged in radiographing have learned; some things about the currents ex isting in the ether that open; vastTRelds for further investigation, but we have only the most . rudimentary knowledge of these aws. We have learned that wood' and stone and even steel do not furnish the slightest obstruction to the passage of the currents that carry the radio messages. We do -not .know why this is so. It is natural for one to ask, if water carrying cyanide in solution is poured over rock containing gold will dissolve the gold and carry it away in solution, is it not fair to assume th's't fthere is some substance in" some form in the divine life or in the ether, that, under theidirSblion of Itome wise intelligence could be made to penetrate the "human body and dissolve a can cerous substance existing therefither in tbe tissue or in the blood, and remove it as complefelj as the cyanide solution re moves the gold from . the; -rock;!' and leave only the normal, healthy tissue fn then bodyl; Bcrhiia substanee need not affect or injure the healthy tissue any: more than the! cyanide solution affects the rock in whiph'the. gold is held. In such cases if all the cancerous or other life! de&fuag1 substances were removed and the healthy tissue leftrttrriHbndy might resume its normal condition and human life be prolonged. I ' .!..--'.: . i After all God is the srreat..the all knowinff chemist. ' It is reasonable to believe that He has prepared and thatlthere exists under His divine law a remedy and corrective for every abnor mal and disturbing condition that enters into life in any form j anywhere. What man needs is to develop capacity to know and make use of these divinely? established corrective powers, Man has learned how to remove an infected tooth that if left in the mouth might prison! and destroy his physical life. The horse has not this knowledge. But man has not yet learned how to take advantage of the multitude of other provisions God has made for his protection and development. As he grows in wis dom and godliness these new possibilities and powers will reveal themselves to man, and whenhe understands them he will know that there is a divine law under which every imperfee tion and defect can be removed from human life as easily as gold can be extracted from its rock container. The work, that lies before man is to equip himself to- know God and work with him. ' ' i - where he was . born on , the first day after the first full moon in June, 1857.! His Influence Is not confined there, . however. The book is a biography of many persons; "and time Is every year writing supplements to their biographies -with foot-notes by you and me -with a pen of struc tural steel dipped in brick and stone and cement, with human beings 1 foi pigments, on a page of glacial drift." J" ' Every lover of Iowa, "The land . where ihe West 'begins and the tall corn grows," as broad casted to Radio Fans from W. O. C, at Davenport, Iowa, will read "The Hawkeye" ; once, perhaps twice, and lay it aside for the lib rary of his children. (liy C. T.) "IN GREENBROOK" by Mer- ritt P. Allen. Published" by I... C. Page & Co., Boston. Price $2.00 net. The story of two men one who is more a hero than he seems, the other who seems to be more a hero than he is and of a maid whom love both. : Dr. Mayforth is the virile, fear less type with whom honor is a principle. His actions are promp ted by devotion' to his fellowmen and opportunities for service. Larry Murdock, his closest friend. is at heart a traitor, giving first consideration always to his own desires. Dr, Mayforth's engage ment to Helen Hentley makes no difference to Larry when, he de termines to win her. Greenbrook is a delightful lit tle New England, town; ... green fields, shady lanes and bubbling brooks emanate -.contentment and romance, ' and .'"Little Breeches" brings to the book the charm of childish pranks and faith in all things. Dr. Mayforth ' becomes the czar of his' childish kingdom a missionary, in fact, to all. How true he found the words of Dr. Derby, the j dying physician, "I hhave cared for little children who never heard of Easter; there are dozens of homes that contain not one printed word.;-The only man of the world who, comes in, con tact with them is their family doctor. If the doctor has charac ter he can lead tbenr out- of jtheir harrow valleys into broader fields, for they are eager to follow j. a k w Iratf ." r ' man woom And they trusted Dr. " May forth. :':xC: X ' ': New Yorkers Forgetting How: to Get Around Afoot NEW YORK, Oct. 20. The me tropolis is forgetting how to walk. The transit commission which. to day made public figures to show that New York's subway, elevated and surface lines carried 90,893, 000 , more passengers last year than the year before, believes an "increase in -riding habit" is re sponsible. . Statisticians estimated that the new Yorker took ten times as many rides last year as he did in the simple days of 1860. Now each resident, according to the average, rides 456 times a year. In 1860. lie. rode 43-times. ' ':Wx: Treat Your Eyes Right and they will serve you well MORRIS OPTICAL CO. 801 - 5 .OREGON BLDGY : Oregon's Largest . . Optical Institution Phone 230 for Appoint ments. . Salem, - , Oregon T FUTURE DATE S October 14 to 88 Op for pheat huntiBf. ' mory. Otoer events. ' . October a. 84. .f".7"" nual now P"ittir7. October U, Wedne.drbrlee P.dV , dock, world champion .printer, to .peek, at high eehool. ; - ' October ! 4 end 35. Wedneeder end Thnredy--Coinpletlo of pevlnf of P cUio hihw.y fro- CelifornU J.ne f V.neouTjr. B. O.. to be cel.br.ted . Olympia, Portland and Saltm. October 2. Fridey Countr YMCA oVUb.rto2. 27. 2S-M.HO. ,o ar OirUtian 1 Endeavor eoevenUon at .tbe IliKhland Triend'a ehorch. October 26, Kriday Francea Wlllard October T, 8atiar Football. Willa mette . Chemewa, at Salem. October 27, Baturday MaacoTitea t meet in 8eleWv " .-; " , . ... October 27. Saturday SpanUa VVar Veterana meetinrj" - J, October Bl. Wedneaday---Preelde0 Suxalo of Unitreraity .of Waebinton to addreaa Kotary elob. 'jj 1 . Konmbr 2 and ft. Friday and Satur day Independence corn ahow. . Noember 8. Saturday rootball. Wlll mejt va. CUen f. Fnge Boand, at November 3 and 4. Saturday and Sun day Annual , home-comif nt OAO. or- , Tallin, and football game with LniTeraity f nIVK to 10- Pnclfle I.tT tienal Llveatock eapoeition, fortland. NoTcmber 3. Saturday Football. Sa-. lent hish aebool and Cottage Orore fcif h, NoTember'' 8. Tueaday Speeial election - a income tea referendum. t KoTember- 9 and 10, Kridy end Bat' urday Firat Annual WillametU UaiTar aity Home-Cominir. . - November 10. Satnrdar Football, Wil lamette unireraity va Whitman eollege, . at Salem. . ' , V NoTernber 12. Monday Armtatics day celebration in Salem. November 12. Monday football. Sa lem high and Eugene hich, at Salem. I November 13, Tueaday Special aehool , election on queation of buying te and building- junior high aebool November 17,- Saturday Football. Be- November 22, 23 and 24 Corn abow and induatrial exhibit at armory under, auapicea Chamber of . Commerce. November 23, Friday Football, Will- ' mette va. Pacific "probably- nt Port " land. . . November 28, Friday Football, Salem . kirn and' Albany high, at Albany. November 23 and 24. Friday and Sat nrday Annual home-eominc and Oregon . OAO football same at Univeraity of Ore- November 39, Thuraday Football. Sa lem hich sol Medford hifh at Mdford. lem hirh hnLCorvallia high, at Corvallia. November 39. Thuraday Football, Wil- Ume inllae: l Tdnh. a B4ao. ' January 12. Saturday Meacovia ce- emoniial at Alhanv.' February 23, Saturday "Dedieatlon of atatoe "The Circuit Kider." in atal btwine rronnd. 'Classified Ads In The Statesman Bring Results li l. -rn a mirx a a mm a. ami nvi rnv i - - at THINGS TO DO The Biggest little Paper In the World LOADS OP WN Copyright, 1923. Associated Kditors. BooK Review 'FORTUNES FOOL" by Rafael Sabatini. Published by Hough ton Mifflin company, Boston, Price $2.00 net. Subatinl, of Italian birth j and English ; rearing, writes with the breath of romantic adventure which is rarely equalled iii the modern writings. He has been called "The Modern Alexander Dumas" and reading his Scaram- ouche, his Captain Blood and Sea Hawk one can feel the pulse of Dumas thrills. Sabatini's i new est novel "Fortunes Fool" is uo to his best writing. Romance is abreast f with adventure, excite ment with the, plot action. J 'J Colonel Holies is Fortunes Fool. A rover of buccaneering days, a ne'er-do-well of romantic inclina tions, a warrior with sash Land buckler, a rake with memories' oi single love. . ' , j A persistent currier of favor from the royalty, relying on 10 early years. brings Holies to Pauls Head inn. An engaging landlady scorned, her wrath en kindled, a lost appointment; and fund less purse, brings Holies to the low depths of proposed abduc tion of a popular actress. ! Just how, just why and who is worth reading to find out. 1 Fre-i quent references to Samuel Pepya and hi famous diary which is be ing dally immortalized throftgh have said., helps the reader to the atmospheric setting of roman- tice location-. r An ideal book for a man, worn en of today will purchase its kind and then sit up all night, to finish it before it is presented to the man in question. eh-h 0,;0.,JUclBtyrres syndicated co'lTownshlp. but ' now , in WHIo v o MUiuw rcpys wouia TownshiD, Monterey County, low (By C. T.) "THE HAWKEYE" by Herbert Quick. Published by the Bobbs , Merrill Co., Indianapolis. Price . $2.00 net. One does not think "Vande- mark's Folly' without thinking also "The - Hawk-eye, the second novel of an author who has lived the life of the open prairie, who knows the delight of the plow in the cool, rch earth of a fertile land, the thrill of waving fieldi of, luxurious grain, and in whose veins flows the blood of sturdy, pioneer stock. Herbert Quick's people are molded by the isolation of home steads staked out in boundless prairie grass, primitive depend ence upon Nature and the labor of unskilled hands, and ambition chargeable to contact with a rest less outside world. Fremont McConkey is 'one of these. The -position of ' farmer and "neathered" is but a stepping stono to him: he sees -beyond the horizon or this a brighter vista education, politics, contact with leaders. He wishes to become a power, lie begins ax an out standing rignre in "The North west' Quarter of . Section Twentr- wo in what was then Rnrhanm I HOW TO CARTOON T 7SrfS7fv7rv! v rw-l fzi f.4, riuw a u i a v v Kdlted by John M. Miller.' AXD HER NA3IE IS JIAUDK: The very, latest thing , In golf caddies Is maude! She is a very placid stupid sweet-tempered lit tle donkey. What she under stands about the game of golf H nothing . all, but, she .does, know that when one becomes a caddie," one- rises in the donkey world. There is no comparison between' the old life of hauling sand and cement for the railroad for hours over hot dusty roads, and this new existence of social ease whereby v one takes an afternoon stroll 1 around, the green turf of ' thi '" course and' calls It a' day! From the standpoint' of the gofer, too, - Maude is a success. Two golf bag are for her a light ouraen, ana while she has not yt mastered the art of finding balli. think of the saving In the matter or tips: . : .4 HEADS This, the first of 12 lessons In cartooning, will deal with the head and various facial expressions. The head in its simplest form re sembles an egg as shown in Fig .1 Fig. 2 has a line from top to bot tom dividing the face into halves and three lines across which we will call the eye, nose, and mouth lines. Place the features on these lines as indicated in Fig. 3. An ear has been added to Fig. 4. Note that the ear begins at the eye-line and ends i at the nose-line. Bv rutting a little hair on Fig. 5, we have arrived at a regular cartoon face. , I The expressions shown In Figs. 6, 7 and 8 correspond to the pro file views !9, 10 and 11. If the head ' thrown backor I THE SHORT STORY, JR. w , . A PARTY WITH REFRESH. MEXTS forward as in Figs. 12 and 13, the eye, nose and mouth lies are curv ed! to- follow the. direction of the; head. The ear .continues to be between the eye ahVl nose-line. Practice scrap paper, do, not Ink these V faces. iirst on When you ink 'them the ' eye.; nose an mouth-lines; they merely serve as a guide. " . : Next week we will take up the study'of hands. Be sure that you have mastered this lesson before the next one appears. For drawing equipment pro feasional rartooiants me a good black, drawing ink an! Bristol board. - Yoa will find m soft drawing, pencil, about a RB grak, the best , to , work with. 'Art tJum makes an ex cellent eraser. nnunuaBBeBBaiaawB ' " The Proof In in the Eating 'I want a loaf of bread." "While or "grahamT" -"It doesn't matter.- ! r- bllndlady." out qnitc a The party turned treat They all ltd such queer things to cat; j i The guests ' all declared . As refreshments they shared. That a party like KJaat couldn't be beat., ' : t " ' When the teacher at the settle ment school in the foreign district had a birthday, she gave a nartv ana invucd all tne children. Ter esa Sansone knew little about part ies, nut berore the afternoon was over she learned that birthdav ceieorauons Were wonderful af fairs and; meant good things to eat ic cream bricks and. rakr with icing roses end peppermint drops. , ' ij ',- -... As the time of her own birth day drew near Teresa wished- more- ana more that she could have a party. "You Invite 20 chlldrehs this house!" exclaimed her moth cr. "What Jrou have them eat? Spaglietti:rTere'Ba: IknVw tfiaV spaghetti would never do for party refreshments, but how she would love to have a party! On the day before her birthday was to come; Teresa had an idea tnat made her black PVPI ftain She ran to. the house where lived the Bach thildren. i w.nt should come to my birthday party j teaming, "ut and she wagged hpr lttii. narrinmi -ni., . .uwiumjr,; "you must bring somethings to eat or you go 1IUUK1 T. When' she had Wn in house in the row. delivorin- invitation, she -went home to tell he mother the news. "Yon you invite childrens to party when I nay we have nothfhra in ..)h cried the mother angrily. Each has Teresa. promised me," smiled err. .The party was very exciting, for the; guests : sat InTchalrs in Ter IE! hr8e nd wUh h new r . " i we nostestr , would "What did yon bring?" , "What Is yours, Hans?" askct' Teresa when the Bach child re !t?e,V'Kuchen" WR thP 6ns wer. Teresa putzled a moment then opened Ike bir.ii. cake:" -be. laughed., "What Z rourt, Frlta: wieners? Then It I a game! You must trade. KacL must trade what h h t,rn.M n'."1 Whai some one has noi eaten!' H was a fine eamn 't-- , little Irishman,, strwek a barcala wim boon Ah n. th rhinii.. ... of exchanging a ham ..iv, , chop suey, Pepita cave hor h.n. anajto Marie, wbfise mother ran. a delicatessen, in exchange for drop cakes. Before, long everybody wasj begging. a sample !Ue of boiii-j one: j else. ' - x , "Tomorrow they will ,V, ..n ejek, predicted Teresa's mother when the peculiar ity was over. then each will have to take a dif ferent kind vt medicine" I) V uV -ury- imDff'-sotnethinr; f