, Baby Large Income Tax Payer Lights of New York By WALTER TRUMBULL Current Wit -U ' . Humolrt j This may be old, but It was told to me at an unpublished story. There Is man lu New York who liked to have people around blm, so ho used to Xeep open house on Sunday after noons. It got so that n good many peryont came regularly to eat, drink, KANSAS GIRL CHAMP Al V$ y -, 1 ' ' i Miss Florence Melchert, twenty r ear-old freshman In Kansas Agricul tural college, has been declared the MUtanding 411 club girl in the United Hates. She went from her home In H-anklln county, Kansas, to the Inter tatJonal Live Stock show at Chicago lo receive the trophy given by Sena tor George H. Moses of New Hamp shire. I WHAT WE MOST! Br THOMAS ARKLE CLARK TV.. - Kf I t f i IHinoii. xk--X":-.':'-x-:-:xx-..h-x:" David, all thlnga considered, was a pretty human and a pretty successful man. It is not an easy Job being king, I Imagine, but Da vid stands out with all of his. human weaknesses as the Ideal ruler and the Ideal man. Ter , . . fujT' J son why. He says JTxSri 1 in one nt hl psalms: ne thing have T desired ... that will I seek after." He had a high purpose and a determination to accomplish It. Most of us want too many things and so often miss getting or doing much of anything worth while. Story, whom I have known for some years, has a good mind, I think, and husky, healthy body. He has. In addi tion, a college degree which should have given him some balance and tome training. He has drifted from one thing to another, however, for the last ten years and always with en thusiasm. When he joined church I 1. V" v , mi The Truant A BOY MAY MENTALLY STAY OUT Of SCHOOL AHD VET RtCEIVE 100 f fOR RZOUltkRj ATTENDANCE. f SUCH ISLIFE--BZZZZ ifcrv: " a jtv r- www iworwf t. nasS'iffi' yA'-yy or mil smoke and lalk. The man, while not rit.'h, was pretty well off and, at vari ous times, helped some of his visitors financially over tough spots In the mad. He felt that they were his friends. .Many of them didn't need any help. Sunday afternoons were gay affairs. Then came the crash nnd the man was wiped out. The next Sunday ho made a little speoeh. He said he was embarrassed, but the truth was that he had been caught out on a limb tn the falling stock market and was flat broke. He hoped to get back on his feet, but he was broke now. "But I still have' this apartment,'' he said, "and I hate to see these pleasant Sunday afternoons discontin ued. We still could meet here, but nnd It Isn't easy to say I haven't money enough Just now even to pro vide things to eat, drink and smoke. I thought, if you each would put In two or three dollars, we could buy some stuff and still continue these pleasant times." The guests assented with enthusi asm: but the next Sunday none of them arrived. They haven't been back since. A writer got what he thought was a fine chance to show a new play with an amateur dramatic club, In a town near New York. . lie Induced several well-known producers to at tend the try out. One big scene showed a mother discovering a man, who had been her lover, making vio lent love to her daughter. The moth er was supposed to enter In sports clothes, but the woman who played the part had heard that there would thought he would be a power for good among our young people, but be has scarcely seen Inside of the church since. He Is too busy. He was going to be a teacher when he entered col lege economics or accountancy or something like that Then It was business, law, the consular service, a half dozen other things, and up to date It has really been nothing per manent, for he no sooner is possessed of one desire than he Is seized with another. He has the desires, but he does not seek after them very long and so realizes nothing. I have watched my young nephews Just getting ready for high school with a great deal of Interest They are strong, healthy, active young savages full of desires of all sorts. Eatuig and play and adventure and new ex periences all take their attention and fill np their time. Rut since they were ten they have been hero wor shipers. They have had one Idol and one great desire. Their Idol Is an athlete, and their one great desire Is one day to gain athletic glory, to be In the game, to carry the ball, to clear the bar, to make the long plunge In the water, and then to see their pic tures in the metropolitan paper the following, morning and to read all about It They train constantly, they practice winter and summer in doors and out. They run and Jump and hurdle wherever and whenever they may be. They have scales In their sleeping room to weigh themselves at regular Intervals to see how their physical development Is coming on. They go to bed early In order that be notables In tlio audience and, at the last moment, decided that she would be more effective n n negligee. When the time for her entrance ar rived, she was making the change, The pair on the stage sprain apart at the proper cue; but no mother ap peared. Thcv made love some more; still no mother. The situation grew strained. Finally, the girl impro vised. 1 "I thought I beard mother," she said. "I'd better go see where she is," and she walked off stage. The man, left alone, opened books, lit cigarettes and stalled for some moments, but there was no slgu of mother or daughter, so he said: "I must see what has become of them," aud he walked off, leaving the stage empty. By this time the visiting producers were tn hysterics nnd tho curtain fell on another play gone wrong. A man never really Is fat until he commences to catch his safety rasor In the folds of his double chin. There Is a handsome doorman In front of a Fifth avenue apartment who looks like a German drill ser geant He spends all day marching np and down, calling taxis and open ing automobile doors. The other night an Inhabitant of the apartment house discovered what the doorman did with his evenings. He saw him standing stiffly In front of an armory: probably waiting for some one to come out and put a uniform on him, so he would feel free to call a taxi. & 1I0. Ball SyndtcaU.) To Restore Queen's Toy Village Paris. riant 'made to be sent to Austria by Marie Antoinette to prove that she was falsely accused of ex travagance In building her hamlet of doll houses at Versailles hare been found and are to be used In restoring the hamlet to Its original condition. A favorite resort of tourists ard students of history b been this ra glle, Imltatliyi vll'sgt of peaOiif houses In which the qneen, bored by the formality of counts, used to plsy at life on the farm. But In recent years Its houses, built only to serwi as playthings, have bsen falling too ruin. And had It not been for t Itockefeller repair fund the vu'n would probably have become si plete. Most of the Interiors are bleak ex panses of bared lath, corners b ack with cobwebs and floors rotting. Te thatched roof of Marie Antoinettes own little cottage In the village tn fallen In, and the hole Is now fOTixl with tarpaulin. Six months ago H1 poplar fell on the little Imitation mil, crushing an antfe of the roof nfl causing a whole wall to lean. they may get a proper amount '1 sleep. They drink no coffee: they n no tobnrco; they eschew whatever 1 said to be -Wrl mental to the grow"n athlete. They read books on bow t play the various games in which tie" are Interested and like Iail tr can say "Cne thing have I desired, that will I seek after." One of these days you are going tn read In the newspapers that I!'b Is captain of his college football team nnd that John has broken the recmd In the pole vault, for what we nnt desire and constantly geek aftr vm are likely to win. (5). 1330 Vitern Nwpnr Unl-.n ) Repaint Kilting Catet naylelgh, Knginnd. Three of the six kissing gates In Loveland are to be repainted. , Disasters Paris. Mine. Ij'.'lmas l'raja, fatuous soothsayer and confidante of sev eral great political figures, predicts 'hat 19M will see the end of Fu.sdsm fit Italy and a violent revolution In (iermuny, accompanied by economic vid material catastrophes in every part of the globe. "I see," fche says, "the violent death if Italy's greatest statesman followed fy a complete transformation of the political regime. Oerinany will be tDrmented by revolutions cuuslng eco nomic and financial ruin. tfP5 UOMSEMSE W L, vqU SEE mo, But. HEAPP HIS PROPELLER. KJ? ,1 1" ( J 0 r - W- ' 'V: il' ii . 1 Eululla Tasso Conrnlei, an Argentine Inrant, who possesses a fort tins which brings her $1,2D0,(HH per annum. It was revealed by a recent government report that she la the biggest Income tax payer In the Itepuhllc. The entire hamlet Just now looks as foul a wreck as anything in the war xone In 1918. Money available for Its restoration raised a new problem. How did the hamlet look when It was fust built In the Klghteenth century? Nowhere In any of the archives could p'ans show ing the color nnd texture of the orig inal walls be found. It wrs known, moreover, that the restoratwn made some 40 years ago was mere guess work and probably Inaccurate. In the library of the Puke of Fer rari In Momtune, Italy, lay a price less "album" of original drawings of the hamlet made by MJeket, the archi tect who built it They were colored drawings. The queen bad had the little book made to send back to her home In Austria to prove to her fam ily that the hamlet was after all a simple little affair and not the king dom hankruptlng folly which rumor had made It The book never got to Vienna. Marie Antoinette had to answer to the French revolution on the rharge of reckless extravagance, and the click of the guillotine ended the argument about It. Patrice Bonnet, rhlef architect of the Chateau of Versailles, has been to Italy to copy Mlckel's colored draw ings. It Is from these that the ham let Is to be reconstructed. One of the discoveries made In the album Is that the hamlet when new was a faked antique. It was built nut to look like a new hamlet, but like one weathered and softened by time. Built In the reign of Louis XVI, It looked as antlipio ns If It had been there since the time of his great great grandfather. The renewed hamlet will be exact ly ns Marie Antoinette saw It first, with a toy wooden mill wheel In the toy mill stream, and with soma of the accretions of later years removed. Only It will be stronger, for hidden In the toy houses will be frames of for '31 Are "Argentina and Brazil have not yet completed their political revolutions and there will b several violent changes, without great bloodshed, during 1031. Spain also will be tossed upon the stormy sea of political con vulsions.'' Madame Fraya prophesies that war Is fast approaching In Kurope but that 1!).'!1 will be passed under the constant panic of war without actual lighting. During this time .Frame will conilnuo to consolidate Its position through the efforts of a "young tnnn" whose iTfy S tsi -it. M ."J S J?' X iw I No. I J -' reinforced concrete that will prevent any such general collapse as mukei the hamlet a dilapidated ruin today. FOR THE AFTERNOON This creation of mldas gold crepo, trimmed with black crepe and mu chine embroidery, makes a smart mod el for afternoon wear. The bloiiwi features bell shaped sleeves, and the flare In the skirt stiirts above the knee In inset panels. A black felt turban, rose beige chiffon hose and black leather pumps are worn. It It a gown formal enough for afternoon tea and not too fussy for business engagement a. Predicted political star has not as yet nrlsoiu "I am afiald," she laments, "that the coming year has many unhappy events In store for tho world. The United Slates will be even harder hit by the economic depression, but will emerge victorious from the struggle. Tho women of America will play a large part in the re 'establishment of financial and economic order. "Kurope will be tested by violent tempests ami earthquakes while Hind lar caatastrophes throughout th world will take thousands of lives." By Charles Sughroc ("I V IK I' ( : '. i 1 rro i u j l -- i wi HAND HIM A FAN ,f-' t Bum, who had Just fulfilled a 1JV tlniu ambition nnd bought a fur coat, went strutting dowu tho street, ,llu met a poor friend, shivering with qyld, who tald: . "Say, Kam, It's pretty cold today, ain't II r . , "I It I" tald Mum, peering ; out froui (lit depths his fur collar, "Now, you know, 1 really haven't looU.i) at tho paper today." Wall Street jour. naL W.ath.r .. "Rain fulls more frcuneutlv l twiH'n the hours of three and night tn the morning than at any other time," I-ot Angeles Weather Man llvrthef told a group of reporter! thn other uay. "For once yoo'it rluht" agrH'l una of the reporters. "There's alw ay t a storm at toy house when I come homa between those hours." SHE'D BE HAPPY She I could be happy with you U I only had a crust of bread, r He Vouil like my crust Permanent Qufition . A mn ccmund for f't r pow'r 'hy nvr lfv at a Inns, A la th quoollona of the hoiir, Wbkb Is, "Wlioi Ruing to be bouf Tttoughtfulneit ' "There, darling." s.ild the bride of a few months. "I made a hn?Fd em broidered penwiper for your annlvei aary." "But, sweetheart," sighed the young husband, "you don't need penwtpert for the modern fountain pnj. "Oh," snld the bride, "but I Mught you a leaky pen to go wjt tr ILVOil cago Dally News. Broad Vocabulary Mrt. Streatham Sinythe (staging ber first rweptlon) And, Mary, from 7 to 8 o'clock I want yoti to tam In the drawing room and tall the guests' names as they arrhe. Maid I'll do my best, mum. I sup pose Just the first thing that comet Into my head about 'em will do! Humorist NEW KIND OF PLUM Khe Have you noticed Jano'i tipiomh? lie What klml of a plumb? A Claitie Confettion Dln(f-ne rciiiiukiil, "Ah, n,,., i Da earth thrre l no liotoi'it elf, Vor. to m-ak trulhrully mi free, I'm soiiollilnn nf a hlulT myself!" Search Him Seeing a foreigner emerge from the bathroom In his barber shop, minus his collar ami with his coat on hit nrm, tho proprietor demanded sternly, "I "Id you take a bath?" "I no take da bath," snld the new nntvul meekly,- "I leave It In da tub." A Painful Thought Vlsllor (at 111 in studio)-oW do you make your alar weep m realistically? Mroctor I Just remind her of her Incomo tax. One Never Knows Splvvent was attending hit first opera and was pu..led. "Is she singing In Ungllshr he whis pered to his neighbor. "How do you expect me to tell?" re plied the old timer. "She's a soprano." American Legion Monthly. Cause for Complaint Prison fiovemor-You say you havo o complulnt to make? Well what Is It? ' ' Convict-There ain't enough cxltt, tlr, j