FJTGE FOUR
!MEDFORD MXIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SATURDAY, JTJXE 21, 1930.
n
Medford Mail Tribune
Plllir and Sunday
PublMxd by
-.- . MEDFOKD PHINTING CO.
25-27-20 N. Fir 81. ttu "
ROKRHT W. RUM., Editor
B. miMflKR B1IIT11. Muuftr
An 7:idepend.nt Newspaper
Rnrnttl as tHond class miltrr it Mtdford,
sirrfc. mi" AH ol Hardy , 188.
8UBH0RIPTI0N HATES
By Mill In Advantv:
Dally, wllh Bundty. jnt T.0
fltlly, vlth Sunday, nionUi )"
Ually, lihoin, Bunday, yar 6.JO
Dally, without Bunday, month -fl
' Sunday, one yaar 2-"P
By carrier. In Advance Medford, AinlAnd,
Jarltsowllle, Onlral Point, ritouill, Talent, Hold
Hill and on Hlnhviayi:
Dally, with Sunday, month 1
Dally, without Sunday, month 0-J
Dally, without Bunday, one year T.00
Dally, wllh Sunday, one year 8.00
All lermi, cash In advance.
llfllrlal paper of the City of Medlord.
Official paper of Jackson County.
MF.MBRR (IF THE ASSOCIATKI) I'RKBB
Rectlvli Full leased Wire Service
The Auorlaled Freai Is delusively entitled to
the me for publlrallon of all newa dupatcnea
credited to It or otherale credited In this paper,
and also to the local new! published herein.
All rltbta for publication of special dlpatehes
herein are also reverted.
MK.MBER OF THE UNITED PBEHS
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
A B. C. average circulation for lis month)
endlm March 81, 1930, waa 4322.
Daily average distribution for ill months to
March 81, 1030 '076.
Present net paid A. B. C. 4458.
Present press run, 4B0f.
Advertising Represenlatlvea
M. C. UOOKNSEN COMPANY
Offices; h New York. Chicago, Detroit, San
Franclcco, Ifll Angeles, Seattle, Polrland,
Ye Smudge Pot
(By Arthur P.rry)
: Chorlm Chaplin, whom you mny
remember os -a movie cometllnn,
now hail an ambition to have a
"full beard." Thus Is not much of
an ambition, but Indicates a will
ingness to make some sort of an
atonement for what Mr. Chaplin
Marled, In the dinky mustache
line. '
l Observation revealB that a man
V with five lead pencils In his coat
A pocket, also totes a heavily laden
hi key-ring, that he never uses.
!l; ' We' are Intrigued, as Tonaus
j Swem would suy, by the discovery
Id that a member or the BrltlBh
(i . nobility is Lord Travers-TravorB-
a Travers.- He sounds like the Duke
,rj of Barking.
. One of the oddities of life Is that
every centenarian has either uhuj!
whiskey most of his life or left It
alone. (Los Angeles T:mea.) And,
If they -have chewed tobacco since
they started plowing, at the age of
4, they can't stand cigarette smoke.
1 A newspaper census of Oregon
11 will be taken. The final figures
k on the round-up .'will show 032
Journalists al) able- Journalists. nl
.' "He died, as he'had lived, fight-
lit Ing and holding his wife's hand"
il It'hlco Enterprise.) One arm free
li in the clinches.
I
Roasting ears are on the market.
"' . They can not be oaten with any
II delicacy.. The proper way Is to
J chew off the end nearest the right
hund, and then bite in a northerly
a direction, until the left hand Is
I encountered. Don't eat a swath
I down the middle of the cob, but
. ! rotate the object as you chomp.
J This leaves a neat Job if you. give
J up, half way to success.
HINT FOR AITOISTS
KP. KiaiuiiUT) '
Accompanied by a woman
companion, she was motoring
and her car collided with one
driven by Border. She contin
ued on her way, but Border
overhauled the car, forced It
to the curb, turned Mrs. Fit
ting over his knee and Bpank
ed her.
A tombstone was stolen from a
Henry county cemetery the other
day and a typewriter stolon from
the Presbyterian church. (Clin
ton, Mo.. 15ye.) The crime ripple.
"The Good Will socloty will hold
a meeting Tuesday evening, as the
reoent dissension In the club hus
been adjusted" (Smith Illver
Notes.) A pleasant hate was had
by all. i
This Is the longest day of the
yeur end, what of It?
Troy Bogard, wheat farmer from
the Dry Fork district, was trans
itctlng business in town Tuesday.
He thinks Morrow county la get
ting too much wind. (Pendleton
Kusl Oregonlan.) Why can't some
body throw a tantrum and stop it.
The chronic auto-horn blowers
ore violent again, and tho general
opinion of the Older Olrls Is they
should be shot at sunrise, or at the
time of the offense.
The season for sticking the fore
finger In an electric fan Is nigh.
A coon is reported loose In tho
wilds east of the city, and despoil
ing the henhouses and the gardens
In the manner of a hungry tourist.
Ksther Tuttle, 6. was hit In the
right arm yesterduy, with a tomato
ran thrown by a bad boy. An ugly
rut resulted which In 14 years con
masquerade on a vaccination mark.
"WANTED 30 or 40 good lady.
Ing hens" (Drain News.) Cackle
that am '
"INDORHEMKNT BOUGHT
FOR COLUMBIA RIVER" (lid
line Portland Telegram.) The
Columbia river probably needs it.
FISHERMAN WOULD BE
BURIED IN SEA DEPTHS
MARAHFIMLD, Ore., June 21.
VP) Ted Thompson, 50, Puget
Round fisherman, who sailed the
schooner Hhipmate, alone, may be
hurled at sea. He Is known to
hova einressed a wish tn til. frlenl.
"Hig John," whose last name Is
tinxnown, mat he wisned to no
cut Into the Pacific. Thompson
tiled suddenly In his boat.
ON GOING TO
TPIIE typical American always goes to extremes. It is nt once
imr k rent est streiifrth, mid our Kreatest weakness.. As a
virtue it lias placed the country at tlie top of the liusiness world;
hut as a vice it is now keppiiifi this country in a state of depres
sion not warranted by the facts.
A year ii'o we had an uneoiiti'ollalile Mull market, which, in
spite of warnings front all directions, continued until the in
evitable catastrophe.. The same quality the absolute refusal to
exhibit restraint or moderation which produced that November
catastrophe, is now pi'odiie.iiif; another one.
'T'lIK Hears are now in the rip of the same sort of stamped1!
that frippetl tle Hulls a year asio. The dear people are
now selliiijj; stocks and takiiiK losses as foolishly as they were
buyiiiK stocks, with the hope of i rofit in June, 1!)!).
The wiser beads are advising people not to sell stocks, today;
just as they were advising people not to buy stocks a year imo.
And the rank and file are paying just as much attention to the
present wnrniiiK u-s they did to the previous one.
"
YKAH njjo the Federal Reserve was raisiiiK rates to dis
courage buying, now rates are being lowered to do the ex
act reverse. A year ajjo Secretary Mellon was advising the pur
chase of stocks instead of bonds; but if any considerable niim
chase of stock instead of bonds; but if any considerable num
ber of investors arc following his advice this year, anymore than
they did lust, the evidence is lackini;.
To the warning from high circles, that there is no sound
basis for the present stock collapse, the people are turning the
same deaf ear they turned to the warning -from tbe same source
a year ago, that there was no sound basis i'or the market, infla
tion. . '
TITR tiine-iionnred figure of the Wall Street lamb was, after
all, a perfectly correct one. In the mass we are all lambs,
or if not lambs we are shyep.;
Like sheep we follow the leader, faster and faster, until what
started as n movement, soon becomes it stampede. When stocks
are going up we all buy; when slocks are going down we all sell.
We can't do things by halves. The first thing we throw
overboard arc our heads. The last thing we resist are our emo
tions. And as a result the majority always lose, they bold the
sack at Hie end of the performance, whether the show has been
put on by the Hulls or the Hears.
IT TS a common practice to 'blame the inevitable deiiouncment
to inside manipulation, the higher ups unscrupulous- fleec
ing the lambs, and slaughtering the bulls! We doubt it. There
is manipulation, of course, but hi still manipulation is founded
upon common sense, restraint, anil, above all, an understanding
of actual material conditions and human nature. 1
The higher tip minority could not always win, unless they
could depend upon the unthinking majority succumbing to the
mob spirit and going to extremes.
WANTED AN "ISOLATED CALM"
THE startling thing about what Mr. George W. Wiekerslinm
had to tell the National Conference of Social Work in Bos
ton concerning prohibition was
chairman of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement
saitl it. While we have been attempting to promote abstinence
from alcoholic beverages by relying on the power of govern
ment to compel, and by the imposition of increasingly heavy
penult ics, Great Jit-it it in has been encouraging temperance by
regulation of tho liquor traffic, by education in the evil effects
of drunkenness, and by the substitution of more wholesome di
version. England's success in this
ing to Mr. Wickershani, and liy inference one may assume that
ho believes our attcmpta at enforcement have failed. Just what
is his conclusion from this contrast is left to theimaginntion.
Does ho favor the retention of the prohibition amendment,
but the cessation of efforts to compel obedience to its intent anil
the substitution of an educational cai)tpaign in favor of obedi
ence? Or does he favor tho abandonment of the prohibitive
policy altogether, and the substitution of a temperance one?
It would be well, at any
forego any nttempt to show how obedience to the prohibition
laws may be enforced, and concern-itself with the other great
problems of the administration of justice which lie before it.
For, as l'rofessor Felix' Prankrurter told tho conference, the
inclusion of tho prohibition quest ion in tho program of study has
removed from the atmosphere surrounding the commission "thai
isolated calm in which alone the patient work of scientific in
quiry can flourish." New Republic.
"Office Girls Fired for Drinking," says a headline. Tonight
you're a stewed chicken; tomorrow a canned peach.
This new vogue of night baseball will be a godsend to the
umpire. Lmlcr cover ol darkness lie II have a nctter chance to
escape. ''
MUTT AND JEFF A
HALF-HOLItAV, pots IT MAK6TO H HALF-H 0-ID I'M ' f&
. JFT.' J YOU? YOU AIN'T J "ft I J -ftmmS
t ! a WORKING! I ONI nl.r J (onSUNIWS I'M A HI
(sJ I 4 you'r a i4- (LOAFER! J ' S.iHl U .
EXTREMES
not what he saitl, but that the
endeavor, is striking, acecord-
rate, if the commission should
Half a Loaf Is Better
I " k
MAIL TRIBUNE
DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I. Veitmtni
t MnnrDlllia
nlcknuni
S. tlrutvi drowit
li. !elrurtlon
13. It"
II, HI li if In Itilnir
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iliufie
If. hyiittiol for
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to. hiiiMTliiLIre
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t:t. ..inert
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SU. Artihtun chief.
Inlmi vor.
8. lU'iinid ir rain
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intiiir
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40. Ilniilmr of
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41. KxlBt
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47. Kill
44. Hun IT 0(1
45. fi.nn.i1l
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle
LlElN AfSePl AflBE S T
O D ORilA L oTnqUa IQE
r A mPs p aBh eat ERS
sm i tie sBc e nTtOm !et
A f jDNB A S U RLNpQN
bl e a r yPl q N eDo P 3
silTa t eIIr a v ePf Rfle
tanIIeaseHo neirs
lis situ y air oftr e y s
LlElTlslfslATlsilAlOll IT
61.
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Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
alined letters pertaining to personal health ami hygiene, not to disease, dlannmli or treatment
will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self atMresifrd enrelope Is enclosed. Letters should be
brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large nunlwr of letters received only a few can be answered
here. No rtply can be made to Qiierlea not contermlng to instructions. Addresa Dr. WUUam Brady
Id cart of The Malt Tribune,
TIIK VVIXK F CAXC.KIt OP TIIK IIUKAST
In 939 cases of enncer of thdj
breast referred to on x-ray spoVr,
lallst for treatment, tho. histories
showed that in nine out , of ton.
cases tho first Hign to attract the
pat lent's atten
tion Is a lumpj
pain or nn in
jury.
In all the 'j
ca&es tho average
p r o c rufitlnaUo.i
was 19 month.
Is it any wonder
that the treat
mcnt of cancer U
so often dlsap
pointing I On what possiblo pre
text or excuso can nny woman let
such lump, pain or Injury drift
along for 19 months before she
makes up her mind to consult hci
physician? ,
Many of theso cases nr referred
to tho x-ray man only months after
an operation has been done, ampu
tation of the breast and dissection
of the nodes under tho armpit. The
average length of time after op
eration before the patients wer?
sent for x-ray treatment was 1 5
months. This is not very flatter
ing to the practice of surgery in
America.
In every case where an opera
tion Is done for cnneor of the
breast tho patient should receive
x-ray treatments beginning two
weeks after the operation, as t h?
best established means of prevent
ing recurrence. This rule, follow
ed by the most experienced phya
Mans, has proved the best course.
Tho patient who has rcjonably
early surgery plus post-operativ
x-ray treatment hn, twice as good
a chance of permanent cure os
has -the patient who has only the
operation.
Kvery little while somo womrfn
writes to describe sumo such lum pa
pain or Injury of the breast and
asks whether It Is serious. I dls
llko to alarm anybody unless it Is
necessary. 1'lease don't ask me If
anything ls serious. If I think It
Than None
NOW it - BUT OfJ A
Half-holiday I'M
oini HALF a
LOAFER!
Ilard'itirlleil
fruit
a. Korward
' lu, Chief ratal
II. Aiierta
17. I'runuan
IH. Cunrernlna:
tt. Trend a rider
foot
23. SoiuljT
ti. Cornered
id. Concise
to. Auricle
to. C'rufly
SU. At uny lira
31. Feniluln
iiu m e
81. YlKbthunse
Bi. mume with
tea
87. M out tenaoua
HH. duu towei
13. Hunt I end Ins
48. tin Ihe tmnimll
41. hlHln coliir
4. llmlaD eo!ae
46. Nbfirt for a
nuui'i mime
4'J. 1'art nf h (tin)
SU. 11 hi meiiiure
of lenirlh
63. At bfime
8. Whirlwind off
- Die Knro
f alii tritla
19. ntlr of
wuilxrn U alisV
DO H.N
t. CriiMln
S. HeKlntilnir.
3. 3.1416
4. Tfr.nli.al
i. I'uri of a
eburrh
8. Tbe Urtek B
7. tint of love
Is I hate to tell you; If I think It
Isn't, I'm flfruld to offer you false
security and .encourage dangerous
delay. To any one with lump, pain
or Injury of tho breast I 'can only
say that the sensible course Is t.
report to your doctor Immediately
for examination and advice. If It
proves" a minor complaint, well,
your peace of mind ought to bo
worth the- doctor's fee.
Ql'KSTIONS AND ANSWKKS
Smiiitls Almost Jtojiivciiatliig.
Kin eo my family doctor tells m
I have arthritis 'but does not be
lieve in dieting for It or anything
for that matter, will you kindly
send me your regenerative diet for
chronic degenerative arthritis and
oblige. Mrs. R. M.
Answer. -S ure, on receipt of re
quest accompanied with stamped
envelope bearing your address, fly
'regenerative' diet we mean- the
diet tends to stop and even re
verse degenerative processes that
manifest themselves In Insidious
mature age.
A Creek In the linrk.
I have n small creek running
through the hack of my land and
the villnge turned a sewer into it.
I wonder if the creek water Is now
fit for stock to drink, lias the
village the right to do that? (1. M.
Answer. The village health of
ficer will take a sample of tho
water for examination at the state
Inborntory. without cost to you. I
do not know nbont the legal as
pect. I should think that you. would
have a fair claim If the water
proves dangerously polluted. Great
cities still pollute rivers with their
raw sewage and by some shenani
gan or other escape responsibility
.for the damage to cltUens down-!
stream. So It may 1h that the
village enn do you dirt In the same;
way.. with Impunity. Whatever may j
have been the excuse in primitive 1
times, there Is no reason whatever!
why any stream of public water!
should he polluted with raw sewage
tfiduy except the rotten plea of
municipal economy, and such econ
omy is generally In the interest o
the grafters of the town.
Iarty IJoe Not Answer.
About 10 days asro I asked you
certain quest ion regarding Wait
Hermann tests and aaphenamlne and
splnnl fluid, which so far appear
not to have been answered . , . .
O. H.
Ansjver. I rotelve three or
four hundred tiuorls daily mil
have Hpace to unnwer only thi.e
or four here. Many queries are not
suitable for answering here. Xluny
queiMes that might be answered by 1
private letter remain unanswered !
becaiise they re anonymous or i
Correspondents do not Inclose :
stamped, addressed envelope for u
reply.
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
Screen Life in
Hollywood
. liy Hobbin Coons,
HOLLYWOOD. While many
silent picture successes are helm?
rejuvenated as talkies, stars un
dertaking the task are faced al
ways with the prospect of "com
peting with . a
memory.
Years ago the
fans saw and
liked a picture,
and that good
1 m pression re
mains for com
parisons with
the new effort.
Norma Tal
madge, whose
" S m 1 1 I n
Through" I'.i
1922 was tre
mendously pop
ular, did n o t
care to attempt
a repeat in the
talkies and Joan
Bennett will
take the role.
Norma rftilim.l4;c
Mary Plckford, who also con
sidered it, rejected the story fur
tho same reason, and now i seek
ing a suitable vehicle for the first
of two pictures she plans definite
ly for 1030.
Miss Plckford, having altered
her screen character radically in
"Coquette" and "The Taming of
tho Shrew," Is loath to return to
any characterization savoring of
the peppery sweet child of the old
days; yet she must letain, in what
ever vehicle she selects, her ap
peal for the public she built up In
those years.
"Peg o' My Heart," Lauretta
Taylor's old stage success, has been
suggested for her, although it was
made as a silent picture In 1923.
liltirb Ma.sU'riiliKi'H
The movies never have been tim
id In the use of superlatives in ad
vertising. Now. with tho fresh
ness of a rejuvenated industry, they
appear to have iione on a wil'l
spree of competition for extrava
gant self-praise.
- Kach new talkie noW is horalde'.
In print as stupendous, glamorous,
KorKeous, breath-taking, exquisite,
dazzling as were many silent pic
tures.' 1
J'OHTIjAND, Ore., Juno 21. (P)
Jack (Irani and Karl Hradley,
federal prohibition nsents, today
wore free from cluirKea of liquor
possession filed UKuinst them by
city police. On the request ol' V.
K. Newell, federal prohibition ad
ministrator for OreKon. the charges
were dismissed by the municipal
Judge.
Grant and Bradley were arrested
by city police during a raid on an
ulleged liquor vending place.
TO
, WASiriXGTON, D. C. June 21.
(Special.) Mrs. Anna Huch has
been appointed postmistress of
Much, in place of her husband, O.
M. Ituch, who died recently.
LOG TRAIN BRAKEMAN
HIT BY SPEEDER, DIES
Hood RIVKK, Ore.. June 1.
typ) L. K. Thome, logging tram
brakeman. Portland, was killed
hero yesterday when he was struck
by a speeder nt the Dee mills.
-- - . - kfaavavai asaan ip
Thrills Readers
4 , V-'--Tt.C
1 vri-!-'l '
"Marooned in Crater Lake" la
the title of a book of thrilling; short
stories for young people just pub
lished by Alfred Powers, dean ol
the extension division of the Uni
versity . of Oregon. Tho book,
which draws largely front local
pioneer material, is the first of a
series of books on the Oregoa
Trail, to be published by the Met
ropolitan Press.
F0R0HI0 CRIME
COLUMBUS. Ohio, June 21.
John '. (.literal, 42, formerly of
Uaker, Ore:, went to his death last
night at the Ohio state penitenti
ary for the murder of Harry
tireen.-coal miner in October, 1929.
I.itteral entered the death room nt
9:05 p. m. The current was turned
on at 9:08 and two minutes later
lie was pronounced dead. Lltteral
faced the end calmly and nsked
to tie baptized nn hour before he
went to tile chair.
In the electrocution room Lit-
teral asked Warden P. 1-3. Thomas
for permission to shake hands with
everyone in the room.
...rPORT.LANX),.,Ore., June 21. (P)
"The Sock', was in town last night
and ho was busy.
Within 45 minutes "The Sock,"
known as Portland's most elusivo
robber, had bagged two places, on
drug store and one filling station
He realized $35.
'Police were told his operations
must h;ive been successful becaus
they glimpsed white silk underwear
beneath his unliutoned shirt col
lar.
IS
HELD IN PORTLAND
PORTLAND. Ore., .Tune 21. JP)
Clarence V. llarless, 24, was under
bonds of $2.iiM today, following
his alleged confession to police last
night that ho drove the nutomoblle
which struck and killed llrogl Din
leola, 40, on June 11.
llarless was charged with invol
untary manslaughter and failure to
stop and give aid. Witnesses to
the accident aided police in ar
resting him later.
ITALIAN CHEESE CUT
BY NEW U. S. TARIFF
NAPLES, Juno 21. (fP) The
liner Suturnla sailed today with
only 100 tons of Italian cheese
against 250 tons which the boat
had been taking normally each
voyage. The reduction was due to
tbe increased tariff un cheese at
American ports.
linnks and watch manufacturers
of Switzerland have united in or
ganlxlnir a credit underwriting or
ganization for the timepiece Industry.
tsj v .-; : , 3
" I'
SrjMHUsVEaK aj)isrslMaTOarir?M
now THAT'S MY
Xf OP A
PROSPERITY
WWbb-W
lsaki
Do Yoa Remember?
TEN TEARS AGO TODAY
(From files of the Mall Tribune.)
June 21, 1920
18 Angeles hit by earthquake.
Trade exnansidn committee nf
C. of C. ponders program.
crni., iirn Is tn he onened J til v
1, if snow from road cleared away.
Medford to be base for forest
plane patrol.
ii'mui r.liv McAiloo to he draft
ed by Democrats for presidency.
Chicago Epidemic of railroad
strikes looms In East,
TWENTY YEAKS ACO TODAY
(From flies of the Mall Tribune.
June 2V1910
p Kninen Rnwn. world's great
est plant pathologist, visits I'rof.
O'Gara.
rinbinmi .iiiplr l.ondon. noted au
thor, loses first fight to Tim Mill
downey, cafe owner.
"Cure for Alcoholism" offered liy
Haskins.
VImq Wnll .Mrs Prp.l Colviz. ill
lead for Jacksonville "Goddess ot
Liberty."
Ai.ltiQtst who run over fire hose
will be filled, new police edict.
c.nn Dunilmnul tlifil Me.lfnr.l
O.............V ...... .
nnllna w.a, Stnirni-mU "ntl.l IfUlll
metropolitan," reported by Greater
Medlord club.
Sundown
Stories
'II(C)IjAT1'j 1CK t'KKVM
By Mary ;niham Bonner
The Little Black Clock had turn
ed thu time ahead so that he was
able to bring John and Peggy mo
very quickly to
their next adven
ture, but now he
said he was not
going to bother
about having the
time turned
nhead.
The children
werer not paying
tn u c h attention
to w hat the
Clock was saying.
They were no
ticing something
very unusual, bui
something very
delightful. Well, the Clock had
told them this was to be a very
jolly adventure.
They were In a large room nnd
nil around the room was a biK
counter upon which were rows ol ,.,
dishes filled with ice cream. In
front of tho counter were many
high stools.
"Look at all the ice cream!"
shouted John. "We're going .to
have some, aren't we?" he asked
the Little Black Clock.
"Oh, I'm so warm. I'd just love
some Ice cream," said Peggy.
"Listen for a sechnd or so, nnd ;
hear what they have to say," said '
the Little Black Clock.
"Dishes of Ice cream can't talk,"
said Peggy.
"Of course not. silly," said John.
"You're forgetting about my
magic," tho Little Black Clock
saiit.
The ice cream In each dish was
made In the shape of a little face
and body nnd now one with the
flavoring of chocolate was saying:
"I can't help It, ice cream
friends. If I am the favorite. It's
my luck."
"They like me pretty well," said
the vanilla ice cream, "particularly
if some snuce and some nuts nre
poured over me."
"They like me, too," said the
strawberry Ice cream, "but still.
Chocolate, you're the favorite."
"I like chocolate best," said
Peggy.
"So do I," said John.
So they took two of the dishes
filled with chocolate and they ate
up the ice cream right away.
Hut the other dishes of
ice
cream were all too sweet
and
pleasant to be jealous!
.Monday "Beautiful Dust.'
.ftiid to he the largest In t!i-
world, a floating elevator 1 1 1 "i
feet long and 8 5 feet wide, was re
cently taken from Berlin to Rouen
and delivered on reparations ac
count to France.
Albany. -opened
for
building.
- Modem restaurant
business In Barrett
By BUD FISHER
Ml