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Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa • 8
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Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa • 8

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Des Moines, Iowa
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WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1931. PACE EIGHT EES MOINES BY RIPLEY BELIEVE IT OR NOT- How Much Does Luck Play in Success? Sinclair Points to Life of An Iowan TODAY -by Arthur Brisbane The Tribune Says- R. T. Swaine Started to Teach Law But Became Big Corporation Attorney, Instead.

Nye Catches a Tartar. HE big discussion of the moment 'concerns relief of Americans in need and fX Secretary Wilbur has sent a "sharply worded" letter to Chairman Nye of the Yy-Ai. how to go about it, if at all. There seems to be1 more hesitation about relieving Americans, by the way, than there was about relieving Armenians and other for jjffiftffl senate public lands committee demanding either an Immediate Investigation of the Kelley charges against his department, as to the administration of shale oil lands, or eigners in a war that we did not start. We acceptance of the attorney general's re did start this depression war.

Senator Borah In a savagely magnlfi- BY JOH.V V. SINCLAIR. How much does luck play in life and business? Consider tbe case of Robert T. Swaine, 44, a native of Tlngley, an A. B.

of the University of Iowa, and an honor-graduate of Harvard law school, now a member of the law firm of Cravath, De Gersdorff, Swaine Wood of New York. And yet when ha was graduated from Harvard in 1910, his bent was all in the direction of teaching law. He went to Minneapolis In the hope of getting a Job as teacher in the University of Minnesota law school. Only a part time job was ODen and the pay was no more than he icent speech that might make him president a PER FOREST DOES NOT COUTAiM Any TREES OR -SHRUBa NOR DOES NECESSAKILV CONTAIN DEER, port exonerating the department. The letter was Wilbur's reaction to the nolemn altting of Nye's committee to determine whether It shall ask the senate tor authority to conduct a "comprehen-lve Inquiry." "I want to tell you," wrote Wilbur, no such preliminary survey and no uch authorisation are needed to bring tus and our records before you.

I and the some day if he Is not careful, tells of a mother and her children eating "grejse and sour meal that you would not give to a dog." Not only would Borah have an extra session if necessary, but, says he: "Let us stay here until every starving child and woman has been taken care of by the government, whose duty it is to take care of its suffering citizens." The fight is on between Borah and Presi was offered as a clerk In the firm of which he Is now a member. He chose the humble clerkship in New York to part time teaching in Minnesota. Had he chosen to teach, or had a lull of the department will recognize your committee's authority without any senate resolution." All this, of course, grows out of the charges of favoritism In disposal of public lands, made by Ralph Kelley, former employe of the department. dent Hoover and their respective adherents. Tuesday the president issued a statement time Job been open, he probably would siill be teaching law, instead of acting as attorney for such reorganization commit- tees as the Chicago, Milwaukee St.

Paul, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber reor- gai.ization, the Hrooklyn Transit, the In- 1 terborough, the Shell Union Oil corpora- tlon, the Paramount-Publix corporation 1 and the Radio Corporation of America. Did luck play a part in his career? Did lie get the breaks? Is piling up huge; saying that the government should not do! anything until charity, meaning the Red Disregarding collateral phases of the 'I nomas S. A Man of Many Fields. Cross, lias failed. The people should rely on mutual self help, says President Hoover, quoting the tacle of stadium football 1n every Amer words of drover Cleveland under similar circumstances, "It is for the people to sup fees In New York City equal to the compensation, other than financial, received from the quiet reflections of the unlver-city class room? It all depends upon one'B point of view.

ican college? It undoubtedly is a step in that direction. port the government, the government should not support the people. Thomas S. Gates was born near Phila Senator Borah might and probably will ARE WARMER THAfJ toS-- one Thick shirt 1 SJWr JT 3 -Because 01 the -A delphia 58 years ago. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in reply, "That was not said to the hungry Armenians, or Russians, or the European both arts and law, he entered the law of A SPARK FROM nations that needed 10,000 millions of our money to continue murdering each other." fice of John G.

Johnson, the famous Philadelphia lawyer. After 11 years of resulting quarrel, such as Hoover's not very restrained rebuke to those who circulated the charges, and concentrating on the main point, does It not appear that -Wilbur's letter baa "put it up" to Nye? Some people are unenthuslastlc about rWilbur as a cabinet man, for various chief among which Is his relation "to public utilities as head of Leland Stan- lord university. But certainly the effort to ttlx scandal on him through these Kelley charges has been singularly fruitless. And certainly his out and out assurance that "the Interior department will not have to dragged to an investigation, but Is ready to come leaping, is as gratifying as Jt Is refreshing. The public, having had experience in last 10 years with too mnay cabinet 'members of a different stamp, should ap Thomas R.

Gates who resigned a partnership in J. r. Morgan to become president of the University of Pennsylvania, strikes a hard blow at the over-commercialism and overemphasis of Intercollegiate sport in university life. In recent years, football coaches have been paid two, three and four tiroes as much as full college professors. I know one university which pays its full profes 17 A BlACKSMlTHlS AMVIL IGNITED A CIGARE.TTE IN THE MOUW OF A BsTANPER work at the bar, he switched to banking Senator Borah says the Red Cross is not In 1912, he became president of the 10 FEET AWAY Philadelphia Trust company.

Six years Jim GiltnoTe BkikSmtlh later, he entered Drexel as a part ner. In 1921 he became a partner of J. strong enough to carry through the job. The government could certainly do it more cheaply, and efficiently, by employing men of the army and navy, as might be shown by printing the pay roll of the Red Cross for the last year or so, showing how much tUJU. rt sors $5.1100 a year and the head football roarh $15,000 and two assistant coaches $8,000 each.

This is a typical case. Mr. Gates thinks, as thousands of university alumni are beginning to feel, that the spectacle of 22 athletes pounding each of the money spent reaches salaried individuals, -and not starving stomachs. THIS GRMESToME IMSHftKKlU.Ehg. WAS SHOD VATM HORSESHOES (ByCtdesYot France) and wore them years i Tells the truTij 2-1 other all afternoon while thousands pack the college stadium to cheer and shiver is If congress means to do anything for preciate this.

And Chairman Nye, for those in want and should hand the money Once at least In his investigating career, "has caught, it appears, a Tartar. directly to them, regardless of that terrible word "dole," the money would be spent in stores, would help pay clerks wages' and start business going. P. Morgan Co. and resigned only recently to assume the presidency of the University of Pennsylvania.

His business experience has been very wide. He was director of many of America's largest corporations, including the Baldwin Locomotive works, chairman of tho board of the Midvale company and the Standard Steel Works company; a director in such companies as the United corporation, John JB. Stetson company, Public Service Corporation of New Jersey and United Gas Improvement company. Many of Mr. Gates' associates and business friends have often marveled how he "covers so much territory." A member of clubs, yet he has found time to give approximately half his time to various art Institutes, hospitals and other philanthropic enterprises.

(Copyright, 1931.) WaBiteir Wnncheil WORLD FAMOUS COLUMNIST However, that is for the tfise men at not productive of the best In college life; that the university should not be a place where the big emphasis is on football and inter-collegiate sports. So Mr. Gates proposes to make the football coaches members of the faculty, with compensation accordingly. He further Intends to do away with proselyting and scouting and establish an exhaustive system of intermural athletics. In which a large percentage of the student body will compete.

Will this plan work? Does it mean the beginning of tbe end of the gigantic spec Washington to decide. Aerial Giantism. t- The flight of the DO-X, giant airplane In Germany and powered with 12 lAmerlcan engines, across the Atlantic is The ship itself i9 experimental. Not it that giant flying boats are not proven On Broadway CYRUS H. K.

CURTIS conserva- paper prints this in big type: 'Birth of twins expected by Mrs. William II. Vanderbilt." A few years ago. such a positive announcement would have Building the City of the Future BY ABTHl'K DEWING OF DARTMOUTH INIVERS1TY IN THE NORTn AMERICAN REVIEW. successes.

They are. But nothing ap-proachlng the scale of the DO-X has been '-'produced and tested out before. It Is su-per-glant. Nobody can be quite Bure what the fu- ture of such enormous craft is. Perhaps thc DO-X will look small to the people of 1950.

Perhaps it will look big. All progress does not run to size. The "''Great Eastern" at one time marked the of ocean ships toward hugeness. jjThen tor decades and decades all the was In ships not so huge. In a wholly new science like flying, we Fadeout You claim that you're a trifle bored with me, My mannerisms get into your hair; 1 It's quite a simple matter to foresee The curtain ringing down on our affair.

I lasted for a fleeting month or two A novelty that quickly lost its lure, But now you criticize each thing I do And find me very trying to endure. Well, time is up, and I'll be on my way; I'll take some poignant memories along And doubtless find another girl to play Love's little game among the teeming throng; I hope your newest love won't prove a curse And as for me can't do any worse! Don Wahn. struction of the public's antiquated streets. It could certainly gain wider recognition for good work, yet it would constantly reiterate what the public needed next. And In this way, as well as by pitilessly denouncing building for profit at the expense of beauty and convenience, a free architectural criticism could take the lead We have found the very essence of the skyscraper to be concentration, specialization and up-to-date services and conveniences possessed mutually by its occupants.

We have seen the skyscraper as a necessary part of modern American industry and city life, but one whose function is so revolutionary that this new kind of building requires new means of regulation, new plans for streets and for itself. We have suggested that as the skyscraper economically owes its existence to FX FLA NATION OF LAST RIPLEY CARTOON A Donkey Refused to Eat Grass Sixteen donkeys that were taken underground into the workings of the Pikeview, coal mines have not seen daylight for the last twelve years. Recently one of the donkeys was brought to the surface, and it was found he had forgotten that grass was good food. A cow was pastured with the donkey in order to teach him that growing grass was good to eat. Francis Seldon Wa9 Imprisoned in the llastile for 60 Years In 1674, Francis Seldon of Ireland, 9, and heir to one of the largest fortunes in Europe, was a student at the Jesuit college of Clermont in Paris.

When, after the king's visit, the Jesuit Fathers decided to change the name of the school to that of King Louis the Great, the boy commented on the change by a play of words, alluding to the king's baldness. Thereupon he was promptly denounced to the king and a royal "lettre de cachet" was issued for the child's commitment to the bastile. Riquelet, the Jesuit confessor of the bastile, finally contrived to free the unfortunate prisoner, not, however, without stipulating that the tremendous fortune of the Sheldon's be placed under the tutelage of the Jesuit order. (ienderally The vagaries of the gender of German nouns are demonstrated in the long German statement in my drawing. The German words for "letter," "sheet," "envelope," and "head" are masculine; "love," "pen," "ink," "address" and "hand" are of feminine gender; while "girl," "paper" and "heart" are neuter been Impossible, not to say in chocking taste.

But now, the X-ray looks through intervening tissue, and reveals the two little cunning crooked legs, tiny little hands that will never know hard work, and there Is no doubt about its being twins. These little children will be the direct descendants, in the sixth generation, of Commodore Vanderbilt, founder of the family, who was able to recognize a good new idea, and changed from rowing a boat to getting hold of a railroad, and some millions. How quickly generations pass, especially in the case of the very rich and very poor. Both classes marry young, the poor to make life bearable, the rich, because so many offer to marry them. in the urgent tasks of diminishing the proportion of bad architecture, and of giving substance to that now long-heralded to look openmindedly at all possible directions of progress toward bigger city of the future which today, in spite of planes, toward smaller planes, toward its power to serve the public, the public has a new and vital right to thoughtful consideration from architects and builders.

To date In general more attention has beeen paid to helgfit, speed of construction and output than to developing skyscrapers admirably suited to the needs of common citizens, of the city-and dis Piaster planes, toward more cheaply-operated planes, toward more nearly fool-proof planes, and teo on and on. tor Rosenblatt choir is being ignored. They will not retract it." For all I know, perhaps Eddie Cantor's real last name Is 'j If the DO-X is a grand success In the WELL dressed young man got off in Old Man Ribber Mr. Ben Robeitixn, of a local rag. Interviewed Dr.

Rossi-ter Johnson, described as a person "reporters are afraid to see." He is 91, and, for 60 years, according to the reporter, has been A ew York Tuesday at the Grand Cen progressively harder tasks it essays, that a-will be significant. It will point the way or one of the ways. If it should not be tral station, took tho elevator in the Biltmore hotel close by, to the fourteenth floor and jumped. His wrist watch was grand success, there will not be in that lact anything to be dismayed about. The a foremost guardian or tne torm of written English.

Since Dr. marked "Jerry M. Noonan of Santa Fe, trict in which the skyscrapers stand, and of the city of the future. For one thing, the future city, it American architecture turns modern invention to its ends, will have new materials for the walls of America's 'new type of building. A hundred years ago np one thought of building indefinitely upward.

The only method of doing so would have been by the construction of impossibly cumbrous and expensive masonry walls. The steel skeleton gave architecture literally a new -DO-X is "pioneering," as truly as the first the publics need and Its evident beginnings, is too often regarded as aii unachievable Utopia. Now Is Time to Finn. The city of the future cannot, rise tomorrow, but it can evolve rationally as each new building is erected if architect and builder recognize thpir responsibility to the public the public's architectural rights. In spite of die-hards, the responsibility of husiness to its and its customers is increasingly admitted.

It remains for the architect and builder to accept the same responsibility and build for the best interests of the new populations of our cities. The world, especially America, is on the move, is speeded up by modern industry and science almost beyond most men's power to comprehend. Unless leaders find time to give the common man's incessant activity social direction, chaos results, as our cities already show. Today America Is building. This Is the time, if ever, for her so to build that the condition of her citizens is improved in proportion to the recent increase in the nation's wealth.

and he had written a telegram say iron-hulled ship, or as the early locomo- Romance? Another reason why the local night places are stale and empty is that they haven't tried to arouse the interest of the bored-wit h-the-usnal-rou tine customers. The average night club offers a group of undraped girls, a master of ceremonies who feels as old as his latest gag and a high fee for nothing. It remained for the Paramount ing: "I have arrived at my final desti or as Lindbergh's flight. nation. Johnson is an authority on style and form, he was asked what he thought of Ernest Hemingway's influence on young writers.

There was no answer. "Whnt," queried the. veicspaprr man, "of the influence of Walter Winehelt?" "Who," asked Johnson, "is Win-' chenr; A Plan for Des Moines. That telegram raises the interesting direction and individual buildings new The city plan announced by the Des question: Do we reach a final destination, "Moines Federation of Women's Clubs and forms. As a facing for the skeleton man naturally turned to masonry with which he had so long been familiar.

That he when we jump, from here? It says in the bible: "In my father's city planning commission shows fore- ICS Grill to start something out of the ordinary and competitors probably slght into the city's needs. Only by such Oh, these bandage makers! house are many mansions." Do we go to will follow its pattern. should continue to employ masonry for this purpose 1b neither to be expected nor hoped. 'foresight can Des Moines be made beau- While the orchestra plays a How Au ful! rJulldinR of Metal unci Glass. Frank Lloyd Wright, some time hack, Another of our favorite Crisp Cracks from Caustic Critics is the and stately.

City planning has made Washington the impressive city It Ms, and even in Washington unsightliness Uhas followed when city plans were neg some one of them, and stay there forever, or do we travel from one to another, perhaps from one planet, or big star, to another, on through the series of millions and millions of universes as far as relativity will permit, with constant change and new experiences, and, perhaps, improvement all the way? That would be an attractive one written about Butler Daven designed a building to be constructed with walls entirely of metal and of glass. That the future should bring, in place of ma Influence of Mind port. The cruel comment said in part "Davenport threw his pashy melody and the patrons are dancing under the dim lighting effects, the lights suddenly are doused. The music continues, the patrons apparently enjoy stepping in the pitch black for a few bars, and then the drapes on the stage part revealing a beautiful young thing, very undraped. It makes you go all to pieces.

sonry, a substance which could be a functional part of the skeleton, a substance knee out of joint overacting! which would admit light but not excessive heat, and which would permit those on the BY JAMES AV. BAItTOV, M. I). WHEN we think of the aids the medical students have at the piesrnt time as compared with those of just a few inside to see out but not those on the outside to see in, is no wilder a conjecture. KEMAL PASHA, forceful Turk, disagrees violently with orthodox Mohammedans.

They said he was disobeying the prophet's orders, erecting statues to himself and others, taking the fez from if men put their minds to it, than proposals for automobiles, airplanes or radios years back, we are apt to think that there should not. only be mora cures than in would have seemed a century or so ago. 10 YEARS AGO, 1921. THE United States will never be literally dry, Prohibition Commissioner Kramer declared today, though he expressed his opinion prohibition is to stay. Sentiment throughout the country, he said, is growing stronger every day and practical prohibition will come after the present generation is gone.

20 YEARS AGO, 1911. CONTAMINATION of the public water supply was the cause of the recent typhoid epidemic in Des Moines, according to a sanitary expert hired by the city, who today completed an investigation of the probable causes of the outbreak. 30 YEARS AGO, 1901. THR Tarents and Teachers Union of Des Moines was organized today at the Historical It has 2,400 members in tho city. Mrs.

C. E. Risser of West Des Moines was elected president and Mrs. John C. Loper of East Des Moines vice With pedestrian and motor traffic sep previous times, but also fewer actual cases.

As a matter of fact, these mechanical aids of the laboratory, X-rav, microscone. arated, with skyscrapers specialized as to function, with ever improving conven and so forth help physicians to be more ac iences for the occupants, with larger base nreas and bigger towers but wider spaces between them to admit greater shafts of a bit of overacting." air and light and broader vistas, and with men's heads, veils from women's faces. They were right. But in the fight with Mohammed, Kemal has won. A string of 2S corpses now swinging on gibbets, in the cold wind, pidve that.

Kemal is the boss, and that there is no longer a caliph, direct representative of the prophet, and of Allah. Two or three hundred more may be Oop! The other day a woman met a chap who had several letters from Shaw, so she went to him to bargain with him for them. The lad wasn't in the mood to sell. "I do not need the money," he sild, "and besides the letters are very rare." "I know," was the answer, "that's why I want thorn. What good 'are they to you? They are more valuable to me for I have over a hundred of them!" "Perhaps," was the indit'tren! reply, "hut those I have fron.

Shaw were written to me!" nonpartisan planning board constantly lected. The present plan Is tentative, and probably will be altered as new circumstances arise. It would be highly advantageous, for instance, if a way could found to locate the proposed new railway station nearer the business district and the center of population. But in Its general aspects, the plan is one in which few people will find for disagreement. To some extent, the plan makes use jpf Des Moines river.

This as it should Jbe, and eventually both the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers should receive greater consideration In the beautificatlon of Des Moines. Other cities have made great "Jise of their water fronts for boulevards Jnd scenic drives, and Des Moines can do the same. Eventually Pes Moines should have roads along the Des Moines and Jlaccoon streams which, will mean as much to the city as Riverside drive means to New York and as Wacker drive and ihe --new lake front drive mean to Chicago. These rivers can be made great pivlc assets when the people come to appreciate their possibilities. examining prevailing conditions and striving to improve them from the public's point of view, the city of the future may be a better place to live in than any that the world has known.

How, then, can it Squelch "Fitzie Katz, the lingerie salesman, whose wit sold more underwear than any other quick-talker. Is remembered by Hugh C. Mc-Clellan of the San Francisco Call Bulletin. "I met him once," writes McCiellan, "when I was working on a garment trade paper in New York. He came near starting a riot In a kosher restau curate in their diagnosis, but.

there is one very serious fault to be found about it. That is that in his effort to be accurate, the medical student and physician is likely to think more about his methods and their results than about the patient himself. And yet the patient's feelings, his anxieties, his fears, worries, or other emotional disturbances are a big factor in actually causing his trouble, and a big factor in the success or failure of the treatment. Dr. Cenrge Stevenson found in a large medical clinic treating stomach and intestinal diseases that about 20 per cent of the ratients had severe emotional problems, and that another 55 per cent had less severe problems.

This means that only 5 per cent, just one out of every four of these be brought about even in part? hanged, to swing in the same faion, as a warning that Kemal Fasha is here, Allah Free SMerli Ilrst Need. The best start would be free speech. tnd Mohammed far away. While professional critics judge music. A THE wind "bloweth where it listeth," paintings, hooks every other kind of art Eavesdropped Overheard at 47th Street rant one day by sticking his fin new buildings are opened amidst res of blatant enthusiasm or noncom "What sort of a role does Joe so the earthquakes, and disasters fol lowing, strike where they please.

The city of Napier, in New Zealand ger in a diner's coffee to see if it had gone cold while ho was listening in on ntzie's Des MoinesTribune-Capital Published every evenlne Mcept Sunditr by The Reeister and Trlbun compinr, 713-15 Locust Ft. Entered at the postofflre ot Des MolnM, as second class matter. play in that show?" "Oh, a terribly emotional one patients, was free from any emotional prob mittal silence. The general press confines its comments principally to news of real estate. The architectural magazines, edited for the profession, observe the architect's unwritten law never publicly to condemn another's work.

Architecture is In the last act he has to refuse lems. down on the other side of the earth, is leveled to the ground, with more than 100 lead, thousands injured, and perhaps many a drink!" Now it has been proven first in and later in man that. mental conflicts nore, fires destroying buildings, the earth cjuake having cut off the water supply. and emotional disturbances upset the normal functions of what is railed the sympathetic system. It is this system that SrBSCRIPTIOV RATES.

BY MAIL IN IOWA. Trlbiine-Capltal One year. 5: period If than one sear. 60 cents month. One year, J5; periods less than one year.

50 cents a month. BY MAIL OUTSIDE OP IOWA. He Knows Me! It was at the Ritz in the May-fair Room. Saturday night, and Maurice Chevalier was dancing with Mary Fickford. Bert Lahr, the.

"Flyinn High" star, danced up to a Broadirny col This disaster, amounting in money to millions of dollars, is the worst that ever regulates the circulation of the blood, the juices in the digestion, the action of the has befallen the island of New Zealand Trlhune-Capltal One year. 6: perlorls ot than one year. 60 cents a month Sunday Register One year. period! umnist. "What do you think of Roads are broken, bridges destroyed, the entire business district of the important less tnan one year, 60 cents ft month.

BY CARRIER IN DE3 MOINES. town of Napier wiped out. Tribune-Capital and Sunday Register II rents a week. Trinune-Capi'ai Moraine Reeister and HEN the hig bridge over the Hud Chevalier?" he whispered. "I think," replied the para-grapher, "that he's a grand person." "It would be past you, I presume," chilled Lahr, "to say so in your column!" -an emotional role." son is completed, New York City will pnnoav KFtttter thirteen papers ween 25 cents a ween.

BY CARRIER OITBIDE DES MOINES. The World'. Worst Golf Hole. Among the recommendations of the planning commission to the city council is that the hole of the Grand View park golf course which lies across Avenue Frederick Hubbell, and which therefore involves play across a paved high-way bearing constant traffic, be eliminated. No doubt there are many weightier jsnd more important rscommendatlons.

but there could be none more sensible. If anybody wants an illustration of Jhe height of preposterousness that hole it. let' have done with it. Thanx, Gentlemen "Night Clubs," an incessantly Tribune-Capital 15 cents a wees. Oaiiy ReaifWr Id cents a wee.

Sunday ReKister 10 cents a week unique among the arts for its complete lack of thorough criticism. Why? A skyscraper is regarded as a form of business enterprise, and derogatory criticism of any speciNc building can result in suit, as the New Yorker learned. Rut a skyscraper, we have remarked, houses thousands of people and directly affects millions more. Architects like to he known as artists, and builders employ publicity agents to insure the appearance of praise for their new skyscrapers in the public press. Not without reason, architects and builders may sometimes be glad criticism is suppressed: but such fear can in no way justify the general silence about buildings widely disliked.

For architects and builders to guard their work from free and vigorous criticism would be amusing were not such protection, in its reaction against the public, grossly unjust. Free Architectural criticism. In architecture, specifically, a free and vigorous criticism could estimate each new skyscraper in terms of its effect on the public, the city, the district, the square and. In so far as possible, the future. It might prod builders into a realization of the public's architectural rights, and even city governments into beginning recon uo not pay earner la advance.

have its first above ground connection with the rest of the American continent, and New York newspapers cannot agree on a name for the bridge. Edison brought light across the Hud delightful new book, by Jinimy In Fewer Words liurante and Jack Kofoed (A. WXEMBEB CIRCULATION NET PAID. Never forget that the bigcer nidi me uipttr luncs In breathing, and so forth. If this sympathetic system is disturbed then the various processes do not do their work so well.

They do not stop entirely but they become irregular and do their work poorly, with the result that actual harm often results in the stomach, intestine, kidneys, heart or other organs. Dr. C. C. Wholoy, Pittsburgh, reports a case of a girl of 14 years who had ail the symptoms of gall stones simply because she had been with her mother so much, and the latter had suffered with several attacks.

He reports another case of severe vomiting In a woman, because her little boy recovering from an anesthetic, had a vomiting spell, and she thought he was going to die. Now you can see how the. mental factor would have to be treated In these cases be fore any real help could be given to the patient. I mention this for the reason that if your stomach, intestine, liver, or even heart or kidneys bother you, you. would be wise to tell all your troubles to the doctor.

(Couyritht 1931). man gets the 245,376 bigger a target he Kn(pf'- vn f00n bp Peddled in DailV Cut off your rat-, our favorite tome shop. A para- Mo, IZ showing jn that caught our orb. 'c' becomes, also! son, from New jersey to Manhattan and spread it all over the world. ties but keep is on 1'ae 13 and follows: "Act fangs! This writer back in the night of time The Yid-erali "I thought it would Interest saw him putting lights in "Harry Hills." where John L.

Sullivan fought. It would please a good many Americans to honor Edison, the greatest man this count rv has you. affectionately writes J. II ors steal others' jokes; so do the columnists. Let a fellow conn-out with a new orange drink or an advertising gag or a flea circus and there are a dozen others to imitate him so rloselv- that the originator can tell his own ideas from the ropy." As if we didn't know.

In Des Mofttes Sunday 44,785 I arrr.t MORNING rlrrolalien In lews, larrr.t IVKMNfi eircnl.lion In Inwa. tartest SI NOAV circulation In Iowa. Member of The Associated Press. "ecisted Press is eicluslvely entitled to the use lor republication ot ill nes dispatches credited to it or not rttherwi-e credited in this paper And 9Ko the local neics publlfhed herein. AU rishts ot republication on special dlt-patcae fierem also reserved.

of Canada, "to know that 1 The bill to dry vp Washington didn't fict wry far. Con it he that some congressmen ihy at prohibition laws uhivh they themselves might have to observer ieveloped since Lincoln, and to do it while your complaint to the publication up here which reported that he is alive to know about it. (Copyright, 1931.) you begun jour career in a Can-.

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