Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 05, 1925, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    o
0
o
o
o
M EDFOPJ) MAIL TRTmTKE, MBTFflU. . 0rMVi0N' KAWftTuY. T)K(WIir:I) S.
vwn fotm
Medford Mail Tribune
AN INDKl'K.NDENT NtlVHI'Al'iiB
PUBUbUKD KVKItY APTKKNOON KXCIPT
dUNUAY, 11 Y TUB
MEDtOitl) I'BINTJNQ CO.
The Med ford Sunday Morning Hun ti furnUhed
ulwcribtri deiirij.g Ui acvcu-diif tUily owi-
uffiet! Wall Tribune Building, IIST-St
Nortii Kir itreet. I'hoiie 76.
A consolidation of ttie Dcmoi-rutlc Timet, th
M.-dford Wit), tiio MHfonl Tribunt, th BoutiV
fn Urt-goiimn, lii abijiuiiu inuuiia.
HOHKHT W. RtJHb, Editor.
8. HUMrTKK HUH 11, Ut.iu.grr,
Br If til In Advance:
Daily, with Suiiduy Run, year (7.00
iJaily, with Kuutluy Hun, month 70
bally, without Sunday Hun, year 0.60
Pally, without Suiiduy Hun, moutti . .1 .06
Wwkty Mail Tribune, one year 2.00
fluuduy Hun, one year 8.00
BY CAHItlKR In Uedford, Aidiland, Jackson
ville, Central 1'olnt, I'liiwnlx, Talent and on
Hisliwav:
Dally, vvlfh Rumlny Run, montt
Daily, without Nunduy Hun, month...
Dally, without Hunduy Nun, oiih ywur.
Daily, with Sunday Sun, on year. . .
All term by curriwr, cuhIi In advance,
.$ .76
7,60
8.60
Entered ai rond-rlimi matter at Bedford,
Oregon, under act ol March o, JH7V.
Officio! paper of the City of M I'd ford,
Officiul uuur of JaeliHon County.
Hwom dully average rlrcnnntlfin for alx
tnonthtf ending April 1st, 11124, (, mure Umii
d'ittlle the fircuiitlioti 01 any omer paper puu
Unhid or circulated In Juckaon (Joiinty.
The only paper Twiweerv Albany, Ore., and
CM co, (Jaliforniii, a diHtance of over 400
miles, having leuaed wire Aaaodated Prea
art-vice.
UKlfllKltH OF THR AHriCIATKD PKKHS.
The AHHOf-fated VreM n eirluaivHy entitled
to the une for republication of all newa dla-
pa tehee cremteu ro it or not oiwrwiee ereouea
In this paper, and also to the local newa pub-
llNhed herein.
All rights of repuhMcatlon of ipeoUl dij
patches" herein are Uo rt.Mn.TVpd.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
; The well known cltbscn who de
clared "the fog wiih invigorating,"
escaped under cover of the Mime.
rOR SAI-K Thirty-five dairy
cows, some milking. Ci. V. King.
Montague. Western S I s k I y o u h
Ni-wn.) You'ro right, absolutely! -
K.oi;ir
, id'endlclori Hast Orcffoiilun)
' The wedding march wiih played.
Mrs. J. Douglas Wallop and Mr.
James J I. (.! ret singer of Capo
Alay, sang "O Promise. Mo" and
JuhL before the appeuraneo of thu
bride, "I Love Three."
It has always been the layman's
Impression that hennery chefH could
not fry potatoes without producing
poker chips; but it they would only
keep the Jul'uge glue out of the out
meal. A nine year old Portland hoy shot
and killed his mother. Tho faot that
it gun was handy had nothing at ull
to do with the tragody.
After today, tho community will
return to normalcy, and gosh! how
they dread It.
Neither does self-admitted virtue
need a briiHH bund, or saint linens
r-kyroekets:
OcedH, not creeds, 11 ro what the
world needs
( DeedH that are done In tho open
day. In (he light of the sun.
There Is no worthy tank that
needs a mask
' Not one! (Shelley.)
Cynics seem to think that tho row
over Prohibit bin enforcement, in
which tho President is slightly in
volved, 1m more to get tho right man
appointed tit the right job than to
eh force Prohibition,
1 Xexl to not parking In front of a
fire hydrant, autobus obey best the
In w prohibiting going by a scliool
hniiHU faster than Id miles per hour.
coon OU 1AYH
' In IKflo, let us say, you were poor.
The underclothes you had on were
ittiide of flour sticks or, If you pos
sessed those buggy, fleece-fined
tblngH, they were huge enough to
tillow for several years of growth, and
they were patched on the knees and
elsewhere. The pants you had on
were made of dad's old ones, and
they were patched also. Your coat
was frayed ttt the rnd of the Hleeves
nnd needed clipping at Intervals.
When you needed n haircut dad
did tt on Sunday morning, using the
back of the comb at Intervals to pun
ish you for not sitting still.
You took a bath in the kitchen,
using the wash basin and u rag; you
iitept In your underclothes; you wore
woolen stocking contributed by
grnndma, ami these were knotty with
dHrns.
Kot dinner every day not lunch
you had a stew of beef and potatoes
ami onions, ami on linking days you
came In from piny to get (he heel of
the outside loaf and flit It with butter
that would melt and make a feast fit
for a king.
Had had great trouble keeping you
In show, and be always groaned when
you told him how many school hooks
you would need.
Mother made over last winter's hat,
nnd kept on remaking drosses until
the gVulH vnre out. She wore cotton
stockings and did her own washing,
and was thrilled hryoml words when
'dad hired a horse and bungy to take
her somewhere on Sunday,
Ah, well; the poor are with us nl
ways! They wear sttk stockings now,
ami perhaps have a decrepit flivver.
( 'ertalnly they have better furniture
and more comforts ami convenience.
than the well-to-do Mid In lttuo. Itul
t hey feel poor, and they i-escet the
fact that tjo-y can't go to Florida this
winter. Ton see. the girl m-e in
colleftn ninl need a little spending
money, and there are the payments
on th walnut set in the dining room
nud the radio set and mother's tor
Hiat. It takes sn lot to flvo these 1;
and one nust watch tho p-nnlcN.
(ft.ihhnore Huu
In the 1'mmlsAl lrfind
JI"nitAM:M Thrr nn tpli-lihnm-whPH
mrrnfW 1lu l''rt rnllti' tif
Olf children lsi'ticl tu the rnmlrtt-il
luiifl. Horvlco ItiiH lic.'n opcm-il he
Iwccn 1:IH unJ 1'ukaUiiO,
THE INCOMPETENT NOSE.
7 OUR nose knows less tlnm it
n scientific writer. TIib sense of smell in the average civilizPil
person is commirutively ineffective. Must vf us, it is said, could
not identify over a dozen different odors if our noses were not
aided by our eyes and ears.
An experimenter concealed in uniform containers such varied
rialej'iuls as lemon, coffee, violet and rancid butter. Then he hd
Mimerous friends try to identify the contents through their unuidvd
fiense of smell. Not one made a perfect score.
In other experiments he has found that a woman who is particu
larly fond of fresh violets and takes especial delight in their frag
rance does not recognize the same fragrance if coming from a little
bottle t lie contents of which she does not know.
Perhaps we have had to depend so little on our sense of smell
in the process of evolution tlmt we are losing it. Or perhaps the
nose has lost the delicate discrimination it once had because of the
strong odors and clouds of train and factory smoke which fill the
air in many of our cities. It would be interesting to find out
whether a country man has a keener olfactory organ than a city
man.
There may be times when an effective sense of smell would save
life. On the whole, however, most persons are not greatly handi
capped in their pursuit of success and happiness by nasal shortcomings.
A NOBLE
GKRAfAN aristocrats are scandalized by the fact that the young
Count John Lercheufeld auf Foegering and Shoenberg lias
taken n job as floor manager for dancing parties in a Rerlin hotel.
For 500 years it has been considered that no scion of that family
should accept any employment from the state or army.
Young John, who happens to be a handsome fellow and a good
dancer, with modern ideas, thinks he can earn more in such work
than he could get out of his wrecked family estates, and doesn't
see any reason why he shouldn't take the job.
Americans wifl look at the matter as he does. They will make
the additional comment that the count will probably do Germany
less harm by his dancing , than the German nobility has done it
latterly in public service.
QUILL
Oh, wi-11; lerlmps .Mitchell had
If hoodi-ili'Miking winter comes,
How it snddens one to see a
Homebody to -end it.
Dull times are those in which
real estate you buy.
Communism will work beautifully when love instead of greed
inspires it. ' . i j
Thanksgiving, IfiiT): Shooting a turkey with a gun; 192"), get
ting a birdie with a club, .
A snob is n pedestrian who doesn't mind being knocked down
if it's n limousine.
At last Franco has Germany
disarm suspicion.
Doubtless the world was made in seven days. There were no ef
ficiency experts then.
All lands have something to be ashamed of: Friction in V.u
ope, fiction in America.
A "great" president is one who
the people are making money.
Contempt for brawn is what
thirteen collar.
"Chase yourself, Cap." "'d the future private in the air ser
vice; "you'ro an idiot, an' I'm takin' no orders."
"Well, doubtless Jim enjoys being
as he enjoyed being Governor of it.
RipplfngRhuniQS
RETRIBUTION.
POOlt fintiAK l'OK, home down by woe, read books nnd'
wrote reviews; the caustic term that makes men squirm
he seldom failed to choose. For he was broke, his watch in
soak, his stand-off null and void ; and, being sore, books were a
bore, no author he enjoyed. His life was dark and cares that
cark uprose on every hand; he'd take it out. on some poor scout
whose book had come to hand. The high and low by Critic Toe,
were roasted, trounced and flailed; the crossroads bard was
jiummeled hard, Longfellow was assailed. This work .of Toe's
made countless foe.s of writers great and small; nnd when, with
vim, they wrote of him, their pens were dipped in gall. They
set him down as boor and clown, as iugrate, drunkard, knave;
this cvil'fiuuo still clouds his name, though long he's filled a
grave. It seems a sin that he should win renown so dark nnd
foul, b;cause some jays he would not praise rebelled and raised
a howl. Men often rise to roast the guys wlm slandcrjjd ono
so fine, with lie$ absuiW ad bitter wovl and gossip most ma
' lign. Hut when 1 read pale rMgar's screed denouncing men
and books, w ith "savage irc niul0vcnom iMl'o, t sigh and say,
"(iadzooks! The men thus sorted ere much groVked, nnd
played the vcngPntieo game; and I can't say, at this late day,
that they were luucPto blame!"
-I i i i i i i a
is driven erfilit for, itcconliii"; to
DANCER.
POINTS
rather be right thnii 11 colonel.
the courts will bo far behind.
poor, forlorn strike begging for
you arc expected to pay for the
disarmed; now if she could just
happens to be on the job while
you feel if you wenr a number
the husband of Texas as much
Eproonal Health Serrico
tf WILLIAM EKADY. tt.
Signed letters pertaining to peruana! health and hygiene, not to dlieise dlagnoslf or
treatment, will be amwered bf Or. Brady if a stamped, te It-ad dressed envelope Is enclosed.
Letters should be brief and written in ink. Owing to the large number of letters received, only
a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper.
Oyex! Oyez!
Plenty of simple honest folk would!
probably testify to my regular or!
J - ... I
uhuuI lriHunlty,
hut I wonuer now
much u colleague
would sank me fori
His expert opinion
that 1 was suf
feriug from some
hitherto unknown
kind of special in
sanity for a few
hours. If I should
go out and mur
der a few proof
readers, editors or
other beings without souls? 1 m
saving, up for the big day, but first
I wish a few alienists of standing
would submit bids for the job.
When a doctor hus his day In
court and comes off with any traces
of ilitrnilv Htlll Intact, that Is
sign that tho judge and lawylrs In
the case are very dull Indeed, on
ethical principles a lawyer will haze
a medical witness even though he
knows tho doctor is going to ope
rate on his (the lawyer's) mother-in-law
in the morning.
There Is enough scandal In the
present system of expert testimony
to cause some talk of modifying it.
But I don't believe the lawyers really
want to chance the present arrange
ment. T believe they're going to
eliminate the medical expert, by i
gradual process and take upon them
selves the function which these wit
nesses have served. Innumerable
cases now on record as precedents
indicate this trend; attorneys and
judges conjure up expert opinions
from their own consciousness and
weave them Into the testimony and
decisions us "common knowledge."
It is human nature to assume that
what one thinks one knows must
be common knowledge." This is
akin to Hillings complaint.
In a recent finding of the Massa
chusetts Industrial accident commis
sion, this- interesting passage occurs
in the report bearing upon a claim
for romtwnsation for pneumonia al
leged to have been caused by injury:
"Men do get pneumonia and
die who have not been injured,,
nnd since the" germ theory of
pfiiumonia has become fully
blown It is a favorite sport of
phystcinns to testify that pneu
monia attacks the strong nnd
healthy us well as the weak
and nnn -resist en t. Of course,
most of this testimony Is given
In personal Injury cases to show
that personal injuries had noth
ing to do with the onset of
pneumonia. Hut it Is n matter
of common knowledge that men
carry pneumonia germs around
In their mouths all the time
and that they never nttnek them
(that Is, as n Philadelphia Inw
yer could point out, the germs
never attack tho men) until the
germ carrier suffers a lower
ing of big resistance. It may be
n chill from the cold, or. from
n wetting, or it may he n per
sonal injury. The germs which
men carry around with them do
not suddenly become virulent
and life-destroying unless some
thing occurs within the man to
give these germs a fertifle field
In which to work."
Thn commissioner must have con
jured all that bolngna from his own
inner consciousness, for there 1h no
Hcientlfic evidence that chill from
the cold or from a wetting "lowers
resistance."
The finding of the commission that
the pneumonia which followed fi
personal injury and caused death
was attributable to tho Injury, Is a
sound one, for there Is ample scien
tific, evidence that injury to the lung
predisposes to pneumonia. Hut where
the pure nuperstttfon about chilling,
nnd wetting, is dragged into the case
as "common knowledge" that's the
humorous part. There Is a lot of
rich humor In the law If one Isn't
at the moment a witness or on trial
for nnythlng.
This erudite commissioner remarks
patronizingly that it is "a favorite
sport of physicians to testify that
'E BATE TR1
Dec. 5, 18S8 67 yr, mo.
i Peasants lifrfting in a field near
Toledo, Spain, unearth a rare
treasure. Stooping to remove an
, object obstructing hi spade, a
' peasant found, encrusted in the
i soil, eight ancient crowns richly
- studded' with rubies, pearls and
sapphires. One of the crowns boro
the legend, ""Kecccswinth Rex."
, Since a Gothic Kin ReccKswinth
is known to hae ruled in Spain
about the year 653, it m supposed
that these were the crowns of his
household probably (juried dur
ing some time of confusion, sinco
no remains of a caket were found.
Cvirns&i, lin' ffswHF. srnJmis. lae
Oyez!
pneumonia attacks the strong nnd
healthy, as well as the weak am.;
. nn,ilui .i nt Wall thnrnii n rillPH- i
- ((-'". i
nun Knowledge. very.uuy ,.u -
... i j
Aitnougn tne pneumo.oc-,u .
found in the mouth, nose or throatl
uf nine out of 10 persons. It is a
virulent type In only two out of 10,
and a liurmlefc type In tho other
eight persona.
QVKSTIOXH AND AXSWF.IIS.
l.lko Jluinlet Without ti Grave.
Is It scientifically poHMlble to, re
move the eaffleno from coffee, ns
Is claimed for certain brands. Mrs.
E. C.
Answer The larger part of the
raffiene is removed from uch cof
fee, and what Is left doesn't tuste
so very bad either.
Mlttht Try An Alcmllo Gun.
My husband is troubled badly with
running ears. Kindly exioln how
to use cod liver oil. Mrs. B. 1 M.
Answer Internally nnd moderately
if at all. When 1 suggested the use
of cod liver oil as n remedy which
will Increase natural resistance to
infections of the middle ear and
the nasal sinuses, I should have
specified that tho oil Is to be taken
internally over a period of a few
months In the year, for a child a
tenspoonful a day perhaps, for an
adult n tahlespoonful. The idea nnd
purpose is to provide the vitamin
which seems to help the body to re
sist Infections.
On llrlngilie C'nmiMiny Home From
.school.
Several months ago one of my
sons ame home from school In
fested with head Ike. I have tried
many things, and several times I
thought I had got rid of them, but
presently they reappear on one head
or another and with five to cure for
I am getting discouraged. Mrs.
M. K. a.
Answer Let each youngster satu
rate his or her head thoroughly with
kerosene for two hours, and see to
It thnt they keep nway from fire and
flame while the kerosene is on their
heads. Then a thorough shampoo.
That will destroy any lice. Then use
a dish of hot vinegar, and draw
strands of hnlr through a cloth or
towel with the vinegar each time.
This will dissolve and destroy the
eggs (nits) which remain attached to
the hair shafts near tho scalp. If
you make n day of it, carrying this
out thoroughly, nnd also soak their,
head coverings for an hour or two In
gasoline, kerosene or benzine, you
will get rid of the company. If lice
is the worst thing the children cntch
at school, yours Is a well-conducted
school.
A TiM'turor-s Hokum.
A recent lecturer In this city ad
vised taking a tublespoonful of salt
In a quart of warm water every
morning on arising as n health pro
moter, laxative, and to give one pep.
Is this a good thim to do? Is there
any danger In It? How about taking
half tho amount of snlt and water?
Uiella.
Answer Well, n lecturer has to
tell em something for their monev.
Since most people consume enough
or too much salt In nnd on food it
Is unwise to nd, to tho excess a
whale of n dose like that. The quart
or such portion as you can com
fortably drink, of water, warm, hot
cool or cold, as you prefer, is n
good hnhit. for most of us take
too little water nnywny.
Timely .Views
on World Topics
"I'lnt'pMrivliaiit Marino Vnder Con
trol of President," Advocates Ship,
ping KiK'rt.
Administration of the American
nierchnnt marine will bo removed
from the control of the United States
shipping board and plneed directly
under control of the president. If the
government adopts
yio policy of reco
menuea to Presi
dent Coolidgo bv
H. O. Dnlton of
Cleveland in a spe
cial report mado
public recently.
Dalton was chos
en to make a sur
vey by tho presi
dent. 'Ph. Hn. .
it. i "T iu l ren.
ommends:
&i Complete sepa-
uTTWi'Tiki " " "i me
hmergency Fleet
Corporation from the shipping bonrd
and transfer to the fleet corporation
of nil ships, terminal nnd other prop,
ertlcs and facilities, hooks nnd ac
counts, the Insurance funds and re
search bureau. '
Iteorganiaitlon of the controlling
body of tho Kniemencv k-l..ei -
nthm, now composed of seven trus
tees. IJnlton would establish n hoard
of directors or trustees, composed of
. . . mi . ,u ,vnr- nnvy anrt com
mence, and tho postmaster ..,-.,
or these four cabinet members with
the ndditlon of trustees-at-lnrge ren.
l-esentK ,,, A, ,,. p,lrjf(, am
Gulf regions If the nre.l.lem
all to serve subject to the pleasure of
I'l-csmeni.
The report recommends thnt sur
plus ships should be sol, I ns pnunptly
as possible. M numbers fit in
time to thlme, spread anmg the va
r oil, concerns whlcltcan scrnp'fhem
thus ilneflttiiic ,,,.. i,.,!,-.,.,..
Glortn Kino! $2ftn
NEW VOI1K c.lorli. s,vnn.
must pay a :io fine Tor contempt
Mie lost an anneal over n .
1"ine lo .H without testifying In
Janet Uccchtft Uivorc .utl.
Tho Kml ttt the Search.
CluiKli. KUTKle. KUKle!
Cirowly mme a queer noiso In his
throat nnd Blanced up nt I'cter.
"What does that Hound likfl to
Vou ?' asked the Hear. The Hoy knew
. - awuy hla Mvnd
meant.
iLk( wnt(?p runnlng mit of a bot.
tI(l! Aml n,s M waa ri(;ht.t Crowly
nn(1(lfl(1
Itight-o. Well, when a Hear hears
a noise he doesn't understand he stops
whatever he Is doing to find out what
It is. I had blundered upon' some
Two-Iegs in the woods and hud sear
ed them off, but now I left off chas
ing them and turned buck to inves-
tigate that strange sound. And I al
most stepped Intd a bright ( shiny tin
pail lying on its aide and right at my
fee. Something was flowing out of it
but it was not water; oh, no, it was
not water!"
(Irowly shook his head.
"It was something thick nnd brown
and sticky and It smelled, oh. so good.
" Ah, ha! Honey!' And I growled
in glee. 'Now for a feast for a sly
young hear!' And into that sticky
stream I stuck my paw. Oh me, oh
my! What a terrible surprise! That
sweet smelling liquid was. as hot as
fire. I burned my poor paw, burned
it just as badly as though I put it In
a flame!
" 't'gh, ugh! Wow! Grrrr!'
"I wept and I walled and I gnashed
VTh hardest tiling, next t glttln'
.lack )emsey t live in the Balkans,
Is rcMluciti' your bins without Jim
my, h' your fact,1' mivs Miss Tnwncy
Apple. A lilck town Is ono where
ovcii n hnlr cnli changes Hi whole
npiHannu'c the community,'
Who's Who
Sir W. Itcglnald Hall
The mnn who was responsible for
the downfall of most of tho German
spies lrt England during the late war
is Just beginning
to receive recogni
tion for his ser
vices. He is Sir
W. Reginald Hull,
head of the Intelli
gence service of
the British admir
alty, during the
war. It is now
revenled for the
first time that the
famous teleg ram
which announced
the open Ing of
Germany's "sink
without trace sub
marine campaign"
was captured by
Sir Heglnnld and given to Lord Hal
four for the American government.
From 1311 to 1!13 he was naval
assistant to the comptroller of the
navy. He also commanded his ma
jesty's ships Natal, Cornwall nnd
Queen Mary. While director of the
Intelligence service he was made a
rear admiral In 1117. In 1DH2 he
retired ns vice-admiral.
Sir lteginald Is 53 years old nnd
hiring the past two cars -wns prin
cipal agent for thcsunlonlsl party In
Kngland. 0
llulld Kxttorimcntnl Datll
RKSNO An experimental dam is
to d.e constructed and destroyed on
Stevenson creek, a trtbutnry of (tV-e
Son Jnanuln river. ThWlnm Is to be
erec'l at a cost of 1100,000 and Is
exulted to provide lnfnrmn on
lh.polnt nt which a dam will fall to
U'ln t;,e power uf iho river.
my teeth, but my paw nehed on. The
tears rolled down to the tip of my
nose and dropped with a splash on tho
shiny tin pail would never have spilled
at all. With my paw In my mouth
I just sit there all In a heap and wish
ed with all my might that I was safe
back home in the cave with mother.
If I hadn't wandered so far away I
would never have fallen' among tho
terrible Two-Legs nnd the terrible
Two-IgH would never have run off
and upset the shiny tin pail, and tho .
shin ytin pall would never have spilled 4
outs its fiery sweets, and the fiery
to burn my meddlesome paw! Uh!
huh! Kverything might have been all
right if only I had been a good Cub
and minded my mother.
"Didn't learn my lesson! It took
more than a burnt paw to teach me to
mind my own business. It took a
sore head, too. YAu can just bet I
didn't do any more meddling with
that hot stream at my feet, even tho I
was certnin it was as sweet as honey.
Hut by nnd by, when my paw stop
ped aching, I sat up and began to
take notice of things about me!"
"Trick, trick, trickle! What could
that queer noiso be? It sounded to
mo as though something was going on
over by the large maple tree. So1 I y
paddy-pawed over on all fours. And
what do you think I saw A thin
brown stream trickling out of a hole
in the tree's trunk."
"And I knmy what it was!" cried
Peter. "Maplo syrup. Those men
you frightened away had been tapping
thnt tree and it was In the boiling
syrup you burned your paw!" t
"To be sure, I know that now! Hut
I was a stupid young Hear In those
days. However I kept my paw out
of the stocky stream. IJurned once,
shy the second time. And then I for
got the sticky stream for I spied a
stone nearby. I couldn't see where I
over to sniff at It. Umm! How sweet!
Carefully I touched the jar with my
tongue. It was cold. I licked the
rim of the jar. Delicious! Then I
proved what a greedy Cub I really
was. Down into that stone jar went
my head and I ate and ate and ate.
At Inst I could swallow no more. Hut
when I was ready to pull my head
out of the jar I couldn't get it out.
And here I was with a jar on top of
my head. I came near smothering.
L.ucky for me that there was a big
ston enearby. I couldn't see where I
was going and I tumbled head over
heels over it and the stone jar was
broken to pieces. And when I was
free again, I was n wiser fellow!"
Next: "Disturbing the Peace."
Poems That Live
Poetical Justice.
Our busiest thinkers are idle drones
In tho eyes of the workaday woi Id,
And the songs that echo the angel's
tones
Are but leaves of the autumn
whirled. ,
Ey the breath of the frost from up In
tho sky.
To the dullard who dwells In the
vale.
And spurns them, as o'er his path
they lie
In the lull between gale and gale.
D. B. W. S.
Children's Pictorial
Cross Word Puzzle
Running Across. , ' '
Word 1. What animal swallowed
Tom Thumb in the picture?
Word 5. An insect sometimct
found in houses. f
Word 6. Above you. iffi
Running Down
Word 2. The name of a moun
tain range in Missouri.
Word 3. The name of Noah'l
boat.
.Word 4. Timid, retiring.
YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE 'A
ANSWERED 1
How About till" Owls?
LONDON The fog Is so thick th.it
pigeons are sleeping on St. fault
cathedral (1 daytime.. Ga -