1- The) CCZGCI7 CTATTCISAII. Cdam Orecjexu We2aeadaT LlnrnTrr?. Kaveser lie i.i rAGS roxxa tfnf y T V4r 4t4 trtl fit U A i u 11 II ILr BIB IB V f I If! r 1 ! THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Armistice Day Thoughts Twenty five years ago today a war, the costliest and bloodiest in which mankind had yet engaged, came to a close. t cmttiM an interminable war. Nineteen months earlier Americans, war-weary, along .necessity being with the rest of the world through its Impact of the gasoline, on them had been oniy lnairevi, jwt the fray with the avowed purpose of ending it. True, they were careful to jump in on the side of world freedom and justice; but ridding the world of this war and of war in(general, was a primary motive. Today we celebrate the victorious ending of that war. A host of other thought as to the manner of its ending, and the sequel, crowd in on this first Armistice day of our Participation in another war or the same war f'J one thought at a time. Armistice day does serve as a reminder that wars do come to an end. Within the week,events have served to accen tuate that cheering thought. "Armistice according to Webster's Una bridged, means "a temporary cessation of hos tilities.'' It was prophetic, whether we could read the prophecy or not, that the cessation of hostilities November 11, 1918, was called an "armistice" and continued for some reason not wholly explicable until 1939, so to be desig nated. ' . . y. ' ' : The contention that this present and greater x war is merely a termination of the -armistice may be supported by any number of specific arguments, only one of which is really perti nent. It may be argued that the completeness of the victory, the cessation of hostilities before Germany had felt the ravage of war on her own soil, was a factor in persuading the Germans to try again. Probably but we won't go into that just now. J Otherwise, neither in the mere fact that the shooting did cease on that date nor in the tem ' porary armistice terms are to be found the seeds of renewed conflict. We did lose the peacenot then but latert at Paris and Versailles. When the sounds of lethal gunfire died away there was present every opportunity for the drafting of a just and lasting peace. In that sense, world War I did end at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month in 1918. i '. "Never again!" That was the vow of most human beings regardless of age, sex, nationali ty or race, on that first Armistice day. "Never Again'" was the theme song of most Armistice anniversary addresses and editorials for two decades thereafter. Many believed that merely by saying and repeating "Never Again! war could be outlawed. Now we all know that saying "Never Again!" will not prevent wars. What will stop wars, we are not agreed. But recent history in a series of lessons that started in Manchuria more than a decade ago and progressed through Ethiopia, Austria, Albania and Czechoslovakia seems to have been trying ; to teach us this: , jr The world has become so small ftlitieat units so I fhat what occurs in any one of them is the It is possible some thought until the last minute uwv TKat when an arirres- we were going into Dakar, as the nazis first did, r concern of every other. That when ggres tbaaZd! knew of the elaborate military, ; . or gets control of one such and P Mval economic, propaganda and international poli- :; to pounce on another no matterhow tony and preparations which enabled us to drop leaflets a remote, it is the cbncern of all. On, that s only Qver Francej planes over North Africa airfields, J par of the lesson; one can t really do it Justice troop, onto beaches, diplomats into the various i f without writing a book. But we'll mention one European chancellories at the same moment '. other item of it: "National interest" in the-Iong The move was organized even down to arrang- iew is 'likely to be the:, opposite of what it ing for the Brazilian ambassador in Portugal to .nnMni in the short view.- And though in one arrive at the Lisbon foreign office there on time JT iriA1im is futile, realism any less futile has to be exceedingly broad. Dreamy idealism and selfish, narrow realism are about equally guilty of getting the world Into this-mess. War is evU. But the-men who fight and survive with whole skins and sound minds are the better tor the experience. Some who have fought in this war and returned home briefly, we have been privileged to observe recently. Boys have become men, men have become bigger men. One who was just a Salem school boy until he went away, returned and- was given a standing ovation by Salem's leading citizens the other day, and deservedly. Armistice day is a time for honoring the veterans of that other war. They'll be appre ciated today, but on some such occasions in the Interim they were honored with a sleepy yawn. And honors are fine but 'tZ,"Tt Vn addition we had "listened to them v off today'fj1 nai, who have more attentively when they talked on subjects. uch as preparedness, on which they were quali fied to talk. - -. ! Peace is good. But they say it makes people soft. Well, in a way. When our, young men et to the fighting fronts, that doesn't seem to e the case. The softness of peace must be . superficial. If that's the case, maybe there are ways of avoiding it, less strenuous than war. That's another problem we f may face squarely tome day. Not today. Today we honor the. warriors, end celebrate' a victory, and remem ber that peace is won- by fighting through to victory. 9 - Whether the axis was ignorant of the United. Ilations' gigantic preparations f or capturing the north. African coastline, or knew about them but was unable to do anything about it, is "the debate of the week Paul Mallon, says they didn't know. -If he is right, this was many times greater than the job of secret-keeping done by the Nips in advance of the Pearl Harbor attack. ' . r .' - I ' - , - I Send your Christmas greetings early if you want to send them by wire, for such messages are banned after December 15. But if you man to send them that early, Uncle Sam's mail thould get them there in time and unnecessary vire communication is already being frowned vrcn. ' - '".. ' MHMMB 444 v - "Wo Favor Sways Us; No rear Shall Awe" From , First Statesman, March 28, 1851 Tire Serial Numbers A lot of us the same sort of people who are only vaguely aware of what is under an auto mobile hood have heretofore gone through life without making the acquaintance of serial numbers on our Faal etanoa and its geo- Interdependent, number of people in order to be with diplomatic It may have we'd be better Sicily is well however, believe ( rk. As we get the airfields on the African shore, we may well be able to soften those defenses for seiz ure, and ride up on the Italian boot, in control of the sea on both sides and the air overhead, .in deed, we might be welcomed by revolution j in Italy, as soon as we are ready or before. That is only one possibility. We will also have to . re-take Crete, when our planes and ships are ready for the job. This is necessary to nullify nazi bomb- '. ing efforts around the Suez, and make the eastern Mediterranean safe for our . traffic But direct invasion of the continent across the channel is not precluded. Hitler's ' weakness in ' men, planes and tanks,: which showed up con- -clusively in the African campaign, makes a channel attack look more feasible. It affords the shortest : possible line of supplies. v , Vice President Wallace, In his soviet day speech, ', justified the north African campaign, on the ground that it would open a shorter route of supplies to russia. All it does in . that respect Is to cut the ' long haul around Africa to the Persian gulf, thus lessening the sea route some.. . . - ' . The Bosphorus is still closed and German oc-: eupation of Greece makes that narrow passage un usable. v, . "it The rail route up from French Syria goes through ; Turkey, whose neutrality may now be drawn our way, but hardly enough to permit passage of war : materials to Russia. The justification for this campaign is the ac- ; quisition of bases for our planes and ships to get at the axis and defeat it. Diplomats may figure put -others, but this is the sound military one. tires. That neglect is from : remedied just now, in advance or rather mileage, rationing. Getting acquainted with those serial numbers. is not, furthermore, as simple in all cases as it, sounds. On some tires there are at least two long series of numbers and letters; on others there is none visible. Passing on the informa tion we had to go forth and acquire; if there are . two numbers, the one in a raised block of rub ber is the serial number. If there is no number visible other than the tire size, the next step is to "get out and get under. It may. be on the inner side of the tire; that is, visible only from under the car. v ' : But on some tires .there just isn't any num ber, usually because in some repair job it has been obliterated. All you can do in that cise is to list the size and make of the tire. That successful candidate who was stumped by the request for a statement, having prepared only one conceding defeat, has to our mind made a good beginning. There's nothing so valuable, and nothing so rare, as humility at such a time. News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON - f : WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 The North African venture was won by meticulous planning, which caught the nazis and Vichy French completely off guard. ; For a few days before the blow fell, the axis radio had been noting the pres ence of British warships inside Gibraltar. Braggingly, it give the names and numbers. Only twenty four hours in advance did it begin to mention inci dentally the presence of jan American ship or two. The nazis thought the British were going to reinforce Malta, where supplies were known to be running low. Only as j an afterthought did they consider the possibility of what was to happen. ' i The British warships had sailed up in front of the nazi spies in Spain with flags flying to practice activities, which held nazi attention while our Armada slipped through Gib ralter mostly at night and mostly undetected. I When Vichy, Rome and Berlin learned the plan,' It was too late for them to do much. Reinforce ments would have to be organized first, then cross the Mediterranean and, by that time, we were: in possession of that sea. A good part of the British fleet was steaming around off the shores of Tunisia and Tripoli to make that even more difficult. 1 This grand deception was amazing when you consider the vast amount of planning and ; or ganization which wfht into preparations. A large had to be in on the plan, n assurances of our intentions. seemed to some that we bowed too low in- explanations and assurances to Petain and Vichy, in a nattempt to ustify our actions. The facts of the war justified the campaign. An enemy Is an enemy wherever found, and a formerly friendly nation in captivity is not due many ex planations. Authorities here, however, thought they were: addressing their messages, not to Petain, whose name was at the top of them, but to the French people. " This success simply means we have, or soon win have, Africa and the Mediterranean ell of both, the whole north African shoreline and everything that lies beneath it -and control of -the waves, of Rome's mare nostrum. :h What we do next has not been decided by this step. Common assumption is that we will take: sicily and Invade Italy, a move advocated repeated-, ly for more than a year in this column as the ideal second front if J 'u J.: perfected bases there. The British defended, not by Italians but by Sicily can be taken. Qattara Depression 3its feci Bireaiast By R. J HENDRICKS When all Salem rejoiced 11-11-42 over Phil Sheridan's great j victory at the battle of the Opequon fronting Winchester: S .i The biographical sketch of Thomas Buchanan Read, prom ised in this column of yesterday, appears below, taken from vol ume 6 of the gigantic series, "The National Cyclopedia) of American Biography."; ,j Summarizing: Thomas. Buch anan Read, artist and poet, was born in Chester county, !Pa, March 12, 1822. His father ,was a farmer in reduced clrctim stances, and the boy's youth was spent in poverty and; hardship. He had but little schooling but ; devoted all his spare moments to reading, of which he was passionately fond. j On his father's death in 1839 his mother apprenticed him to a tailor and he ran away .and . took service with a cigar maker in Philadelphia, Pa. But he soon tired of that humdrum life, Hand after following many employ ments drifted to Cleveland, Ohio, where he was befriended by a sculptor, S. V. Clemenger, and gained some rudiments of artistic and general work in that field; roamed about; painted signs and occasional; portraits and had engagements with a traveling troupe of ( theatrical performers, from Dayton, Ohio. He became interested with paint ing in oils, and took up that work at Cincinnati, Ohio. j He gained some distinction from a portrait of j Benjamin Harrison which he painted:'; the member of that distinguished family who became president of the United States. j When business was dull,! he wandered widely, painting signs and doing other- odd' jobs. ( JHe moved to New! York in 1841, and next year went to Bos ton. He published in the Boston Courier several lyric poems, and had contributions to periodicals. Wandering further, he painted aigns, over a wide territory, and when business was dull returned to cigar making, moving again to New York in 1841.1 Finally, In 1846, he settled in Philadelphia. There he! published TVlH - llV f-ivr1fn I 002 S laarGOIl By- LTLLXJ5 L. MADSEN Three questions reached j me this week, each asking if it Is unusual for Easter lilies to bloom again in autumn. 1 Not at all. It is done every ' year. Just plant out your bulb in a shady place where water can be given during the dry sea son. Planting- should be done right after the plant i begins to ; die down following its Easter bloom. The bulb will rest for a, short period and : soon start growth.. again. I have one in; my garden right now that came into bloom October 11 and is still blooming nicely. It is about three feet tall and has two very large blooms on it '. In fact, it has produced much better in this; its second youth, t h a n i It did at' Easter. I , recall the plant was little and blooms not large because good Easter lilies were hard to obtain last spring. The plant is growing on the north side of a building where it had shade all summer long with; the exception of a couple of hours of morning sun: I do not expect the plant to produce much next year.' Two-blooms in one. year are rather difficult for any lily -"bulb... ; ' . - i - -1 1 -. his -first volume of poems; the following year, lays and poems, and desultory noems to the pe- riodicals. Then a volume, "Female Poets of America," followed by "Ro mance and Pilgrimage of the Great Saint Bernard," serially in ( a magazine afterward in ; book form. Restless, he went to Europe in 1850. He went again in ( 1853, with his wife and daughter. He studied the fine arts in Rome and Florence. He painted pictures, one of "The Star of Bethlehem," another of the "Spirit of the Waterfall," one of Henry W. Longfellow. The one, also, of "Sheridan's Ride," and some of pioneer life. u y During the Civilwar he went to the camps of the soldiers and entertained them by reciting .to them his own writings, and others. Also he showed them bis pic tures of pioneer life. V He completed some of the best of his poetical work in Boston in 1860. His last long- poem was iThe Good Samaritan," completed in Boston. He died of pneumonia, in New York City, May 11, 1873. j Every . man and woman of 1 public spirit in the United States,; who lived through the Civil war period, or nearly every such per son, heard the poem, Sheridan's Ride, recited. Nearly every such person In this country heard . It many -times. It -was good and it was appreciated because it was true, or essentially true. ' But General Sheridan did not make a 20 -mile ride, because . the distance was - only about 12 miles. But It HAD to be 20, to , fit the- lines the four fives. Sheridan in his own book, . vol- -ume 2, page 28, told of meeting. ' three young.' girls. In the town , of Winchester, a Miss Griffith and . Misses Jennie and Susie Meredith. They were making noisy dem- . onstrations , of rejoicing over ' Sheridan's great victory. f ' General George ' . Crook, who was with Sheridan warned the three girls against being too en- girls against being thusiastic over the great victory, scenes of which they had them selves just witnessed, or - the Confederates might punish them for their .patriotism: (General Crook knew the three girls welL) But; Sheridan wrote: - "They assured him j that they had no further fears of that kind, now, adding that Early's army was so demoralized by the defeat it had Just . sustained that it would never be in .condition to enter Winchester again. ; -V.-v-r .V.:- ; "As soon as we had succeeded -in calming the excited girls a. little T expressed ' a desire to find some place where I could : write ' a telegram to General' Grant informing him of the re sult of, the battle, and General Crook conducted me to the home of Miss Wright, where I met for the .first ' time the woman who had contributed so much to our success, and on a desk in her school room wrote the despatch announcing that we .had sent Early's army whirling up the valley. (That Miss Rebecca .Wright, Quaker, teacher of a private school, had before given Sheri dan valuable information.) General Crook was very well acquainted at Winchester, hence .. his Interest in warning the three girls against being too demon strative in their enthusiasm over the Union victory. Most readers of this column know General Sheridan was once a very familiar figure on the streets of Salem, and acquainted with the leading people here. By Clarence budington Chapter One " Darnley Carfax discovered during her seventeenth year that beauty was. a peculiar commodi ty. It caused quite different re actions in a man than in a wom an. In the presence of any beau- tiful girl a man would go all sil ly, like a cat with a catnip mouse. On the other hand, a woman would, narrow her lips and her eyes and hold her head as if; she had been sitting in a draft and ot a pain in the neck. She discovered that homely girls or dowdy girls could get' more favors from women. She found out that it was a personal affront to any woman to be more beautiful or modish i than she. But that a i lumpy girl with a muddy skin land onion eyes had as much chance of getting any thing out of a man as a radish has of getting Into a strawberry ahortcsJte.. .' Darnley pondered this matter. This pondering took place after she became possessed of the idea that she might be beautiful her self; She was not quite aure-of the fact; but her observations caused her to. wonder whether it was an asset or a liability. From ' practical standpoint, was it , : better to delight men and to throw women into a fury; or. to be ignored by the male sex.and have the women on your side? This caused her to examine life: as she had never examined ' it before. --""ff . ' ' . -. Up to the middle of her six teenth year .Darnley had'' never troubled to be astute. She had taken things as they came; and been moderately, contented. But at this time she saw that astute ness undeniably had its uses and thai she had! better V cultivate seme If she-were equipped to do so. It occurred to her at this time that people who ot what they wanted did not sit and wait for fruit to drop in their laps. They shook the tree -or, better yet, they induced somebody 1 else : to climb the tree for them. In other words, the men and women and boys and girls who got anywhere in this world made use of other . men and women and' boys and girls.- V - The question then - became: Was It more efficient to use men or to use-women? , She noticed that It was the men who owned the stores along Main street ' and ' the men who held paying jobs in the Dour mill and with the railroad. It required little study to discover that it was the ' male sex" who ; earned money and the female sex who spent it And it was quite evi dent to her thai money made the mare go. Therefore, a- girl with any brains at, all would prefer the admiration of men to the friendship of women. But : there j was one drawback of which she became aware, and that was that women maintained a sort of labor union. And a girl would be wise to watch her step and not -get this union down on her, or it might upset her apple cast Life, she 'perceived, was a complicated . affair through XSLMWCONESOAT 13M Kc, :4S Rise N Shine. J 70 New. 7:05 Rise a Shin : . t30 New if t:4S Your Gospel Program. , - 8 0 County Agent's TUc I S.1S Stan Kenton's Orhcestlfa. ;; SO News Brevities. " I , ; 8:3 Howard Barlow's Concert Orch. S AOPastor's Ctt. - . 9:15 AJ perry sun tuaera. S -9(1 PonuUr Mufitc. 9:45 Rouo Hudson's Orchestra. 10.O0 World in Review. i 10M Charlie Hamp. Slncer. ! y 10 ao Women In tn News, i 10:33 The Oaklea. 11 0 Musical College. '11.45 WU ChapeL 12-00 OrganaUUe. . 18:15 News. - .i- 11 30--HiUblliy Serenade. ' IX Willamette Valley Opinions. 1.-00 Nick Cockran. ' ' j - 1:15 Mai Hallett'a Orchestra, i 1-30 Milady Melodies. 1:45 Four Notes. 2:00 Isle of Paradise. 1:15 US Marines. - 1:90 Sine. Sons Time. 4- 33 Tune TtOMia. -- 3.00 old Opera House. z 4:00 The Aristocrats. 4:15 News 4:30 Teatlme Tuaes. 5:00 Modern Melody Trie. - 5:15 Let's Reminisce.- 5:30 Langwortb Choriaters. H Torugnt a tieeounea. . i . S:15 War Commentary. 60 Singing Strings. , ! ' 4:45 Popular Music ' ,l ' . tOO News 1b Brief. f Aft Tommy Reynolds . ' T30 Willamette Valley Opinions. TdO Ear! Hatch Vibraharp. . SO0 War Fronts tn Review. ; 8:10 Two Kings and a Queen. ' - S JO Treasury star Parade. -" S:45 Eaton Boys. ' I - SDO Mews ' ' -w ' " 9:15 Evelyn Turner Orch. i; 9:30 Hollywood Rhumba. j 9:45 Dickson's Melody Mustangs. 10 AO Lets Dance. 10 30 News. 10:45 MeFarland Twins. S 11.-00 Alfredo Antoninl s Concert. Orchestra. -lias News. . KALB MBS WEJJMESD AT 1134 - 4 30 Memory -iimeKeeper. T 300 News, .15 Happy Johnny, tao Memory Timekeeper. S.-00 Breakfast --Club. : S JO News. i H5 What's New. 9:60 Boake Carter. - m ' 9:15 woman's Sid of she Mews, 9 JO This At That. 10 300 News , . 10:15 TBA. . I 10 JO News. ! 10.45 Strictly Personal. 10:45 Buyers Parade. II AO Cedrie Foster. -!.:' ', 11 :15 Mias Meade's ChiMren, 11:30 Concert Gems. I ' 115 Luncheon Concert. 12 JO News. I . 11:45 Shady Valley rolka. j v 1A0 Walter Compton ' " ' 1:15 Who's Who at the Zoo 1JO New York Racing Season u - 1H5 A Man With a Band, i 2A0 Sheela Carter. - I 1:15 Don Lee Newsreel , S.-00 PhllUp Kerne-Gordon! Orch. 3:15 Hello Again. 1:45 Bill Hay. Bible. 4 AO Fulton Lewis. Jr. 4:15 Johnson Family, UM news 4:45 Nat "l Education Week. :' SAO Deneetime . - j 5:15 Willard Trio 1 5:30 All Star Parade SAO Gabriel Heatter.' 99 kelland x which one must walk.cannfly. ' If one could act so diplomatic ally that she would win the ad miration of men without arous ing the animosity of the women, ' 1 her chances would - be pretty good. - ' - It dawned upon Darnley that she might be something ! out of the ordinary the night of high school commencement when, she heard Mrs. Morehouse refer to her in an unmistakable tone as, -that Carfax girL" It had been working' toward this dawn for some time. She noted that when she passed the hotel the travel ing men on the stoop stared at : her and then whispered.! There . had been other signs and tokens which now added up Into a body - of evidence. ' - If she were beautiful she wanted to know it She studied herself in the mirror, and was ; 'reasonably; pleased-' with what she saw, , but this was by no means conclusive, I What was beauty? What did one have to possess to bej extra ordinarily lovely? - j - Darnley studied the pictures-of beautiful women in various ma -garinesy They were all j differ ent lio two of them looked alike. ". Today we honor ihe heroes living and dead, of two World Wars. To the one an Armistice brought peace Ini 1918. For the other peace must sU be won la the future, by long and hard' fighting. Iq name of that first Annlsilce we look forward to the termination of World War II with the United ITaSons victorious, and Justice meted out for all the people of the world wb.o have fought so cealously for the end of fadxm and the rebirth of world freedom 1 Tins STons clozzd all day x;ov. iitil l ATJ.H3TICS DAY BROWN'S Xrs Bonds . fki z m "'?aone4lZ3 WlJy KALE7.J, r i ng - I Calem's Leading: Credit These schedules are supplied ay the respecuve stattoaa Any varia tion noted - by listeners are dne te changes saada by the stations with tit notice te this newspaper. All radio stations may he est front the air at any time tm the UAerests of national ', defease. - 4:15 Matinee VarleUes 6 JO Jimmy Allen. 4:45 Movie Parade. - 7 AO John B. Hughes. I 7:15 Music ior Moderns. .- 7 JO Lone Ranger. SAO Symphony HaQ. r . 8:45 Alvino Key Orch. . - " 1 ' 9 AO News. i 9:15 Today's Top ' runes. r . 9 JO John B. Hughes. 9:45 Fulton Lewis. - . 10 AO Freddie Slack Orch. 10:15 Wilson Ames. - 10 Jo News ' - 10:45 Russ Morgan Orchestra 11 AO Her bie Holmes Orchestra 11 JO Anson Weeks Orchestra KCX WEONESD4V lift Ke. ' ; 4A0-Momenta of Melody. 4:15 NaUonal Farm St Home. . 445 Western Agriculture. . 7 AO SmUin' Ed McConnelL 7 A5 Texas Tunes . 7:15 Breakfast Oub. , 1 S :15 Remember? . S -30 Texas Jim Robertson S 45 Keep Fit Clue with Patty Jean 9 AO Meet Your Neighbors. ! 9:15 Woman's World. i 9 JO Breakfast at Sardl's t 10 AO Baukhage Talking.) 10:15 Souvenirs. -! ,' . 1020 Little Jack Little. 10:30 Benny Walker's Varieties. 11 AO Wartime Periscope .11:15 Nature Trails. 11 JO Stars of Today. 1145 Keep Fit Club with Patty Jean 13 AO News Headlines and Highlights - 12:15 Livestock Reporter. 12 JO Golden Gate Quartette ! 12.-30 Market Reports. 12 JS Novelettes. - 12:45 New Headlines & Highlights - 1 AO Club Matin. - - 1 AS News. ' 2A0 The Quiet Hour. , . 1J0 BN. 1:45 Sing Me a Song 1:55 Labor Newt 3 AO Stars of Today. 3:15 News. ' 3 JO Gospel Singer ' 3:45 Stringtim i t 4A0 Korn Kobblers (; i 4:15 Fitzgerald and Four Keys - 4 JO Hanx Lawson s jutignis. r 4:45 News. SAO Don Winslow ": S:15 Sea Hound. -8 JO Jack Armstrong. 5:45 Captain Midnight. ' 4 AO Hop Harrlgan. -.-! , 4:15 Homicide O'Kane r . ,J ..425 Gracie Fields -7 AO Raymond Gram Swing. 7:15 Songs by Sonia - 7 JO Air Base Hi Jinks. SAO Earl Godwin. News. 8:15 Lum & Abner. 8 JO Manhattan at Midnight. 9:0O Penn Hotel Orchestra : 9 JO News Headlines and Highlights 9:45 Down Memory Lena 5 10:15 Melody Time 10 JO Broadway Bandwagon. 1045 Ambassador Hotel Orchestra 11 AO This Moving World. 11:15 Organ. i ' 11 JO War News Roundup; ' f KOTO CBS WEDNESDAY 919 K4. 4 AO Northwest Farm Reporter.- ' 4:10 N.W. Farm Reporter I , 4:15 Breakfast Bullettn. . 4 JO Texas Rangers.- S45 Victory Front (Continued on Page 11) So it became apparent that there . was no set . rule one could go by. About the only jcommon factor she found in the lot was slender- ness. She had ' that Beauty did -not seem to be a matter of the. face alone; some girls were fam ous for beautiful hands; others frtr Vuniiti'fnl harlrs n nnmhr for legs.-Legs seemed to be ex ceedingly important if one were to judge by the eagerness of motion-picture stars to exhibit them. 1 She studied her face in her mirror,1 comparing it with4he faces of girls from Hollywoooor ""Broadway, or the photographed models in advertisements. Once a famous artist wrote a story about his favorite model and appended a set of measure ments which he claimed were those of the perfect figure. Darn ley abstracted her 'grandfather's favorite old. tape measure ; and went in for an evening of engi neering. On the whole it was satisfactory. In one place or an other she varied from this para gon by a quarter of an inch or . an eighth of an inch, but in gen eral she was so close that it was i almost- a tie. If, then, she came (Continued on Page 11) 4 W DAY Jewelers and Opticians I ! i i