N TO BE FAIR AND SQUARE, TO ENCOURAGE AND SUPPORT THE BEST, IS O U R M O T T O CLEVELAND JOURNAL A Weekly for American Slovenes VOLUME III. — ISSUE NO. 1 OBSER VER Entered as second-class matter August 2, 1928, at the posUoffice at Cleveland, Ohio, under the Act of March 3, 1879 CLEVELAND, OHIO, THURSD AY. JANUARY 2nd, 1930. PRIČE FIVE CENT OF INE N American. superiority in intell- ectual affairs and in the manage ment intellectual facilities is being recognized by other nations, who see that American methods are doing a great deal of good fo. the natives of America. After concluding his visit to the United Jdj States, P. R. Roland Marcel, di- ector or the Bibliotheque Nation- ale, urge'd that the libraries ol France be put on the same basia they are in America. He advo Many Slovenes Affected by Merger \ Many Slovenec are affected by the grand consolidation of ali the men and women coileges in great- er Cleveland that has been effect- ed last week when Notre Dame Ccllege, Ursuline College, Our Lady of the Seminary, St. John’s .ursing- sch4oJ, Charity Nuriing ;chool were put into one large in- ilitution under the leadership ol John Carroll University. the consolidation affects ■nany Slovene men who attend j ohn Carroll University and the ates the adoption of the Free number of young women who at ^ ublic library on a large scale. tend the various women’s college. * ! that have been affected by the The large national chain Stores grand merger j Ring In the New | Mr. Ivan Zorman to appear before Slovene School Satellites Dance Vehicle \) tare not an American monopol/ anymore. In England the Home and Colonial Stores, Itd., have in norporated . 3,500 provision Stores into one large Corporation vhich involved more than $19,- J00,000. Be that as it may George L,. °ayne is the president of a large \itained glass studio in New Jer- ey. ' Ash covered i ompeii is stili re jealing her beautiful bits of art of re bygone Roman Glory. Re [ently one of the finest bits of polycrome sculpture vvas un- irthed from the base of the per ptyle of a house. It is a four cot statue of Apolio made of beautiful colored marble. More and better history of th. Jnited States will be written afte ali the documents are unearthcc Lspecially those that deal vvith the jontemporary times of Wa:hing on, Jefferson, Madison and othe; jarly heroes of American History trunk of such documents are Svv in' the possession of Henr" Voodhcuse of New York. The Vhcle trunk, at one time, bejong d to Betty \Va:hington Lewis ve only sister of Washington. The 3 runi: of documentary morces wa iscovered in Sealston, Virgina. Spanisli Under the new plan ali the coli eges that have entered the mer¬ ger will be under the head of the j Jesuit Institution, John Carroll: Jniversity, yet, none of the coli eges will lose their individuality.: This change does not affect the teaching curriculum or the facul- ie: that are involved though ali wi!l be under the guiding hand of, the Jesuit educators. The plan, provides that ali the graduates; will receive their sheepskins from the John Carroll University, with the name of the college the indi- /idual atter.ded. The unification of the various units makes posiible a large ex- pansion in the education plans that are nov/ available in the citv of Cleveland. The number of pupiis in the University is now ncfeašfed four or ffve times and (Continued on page 3) The winking moon the most šenerally known satellite to most people is the subject of many a romantic evening and now it comes to be the name of a dance of the Spartans that will be held on January 4 to the tune of the favorite melody boys — the Lar- ry Revell and His Radio Revell- erc. Beneath the canopy of the rep- resentations of the various stellar inhabitants the Spartans will make merry at the Slovene Auditorium St. Clair in the lower hali. Winking moons, the milky way, neptune, venus and ali the other stars that compose our universe will be there to light the way to plenty of mirth joy and good time. The Prison Dance of a fevv months ago has been the talk ol the neighborhood for quite a time and the idea of Prison dances has been copied by other lodges and Dr. France Prešern Subject To give ali the opportunity of knowing ali there is to know about men who have made Slo¬ vene literature, the Slovene school has arranged to have a prominent speaker appear before the Friday night classes and speak some phace of Slovene literature or about the men who have made literature possible. The board of the Slovene School has decided that the best way to learn the Slovene is to listen to men who are experienced speakers and students of Slovene literature and Slovene men who have made literature. The deci- sion of the administrative board came as a result of the impressive address made by Mr. Etbin Kris¬ tan several weeks ago. In contin- uation of the addresses Slovene speakers will appear on program of speakers that are listed. The first of the regular series of speakers will be M'r. Ivan Zorman who has chosen as his SENIOR SCHOOL CHRISTMAS FROLIC VVELL ATTENDED Pavty SchooTs Social High Light T t T In the same track the cvernment is lending a har.d in f'vk he gathering of sourcec of Amer¬ ican History. Restriction, forbid- ling the scholars from seeing the .rchives of the country have been ed and permission was given fhat photostats of the records ps taken. From this source much nformation has been gathered of re life of Christopher Columbus. he archives reveal that Colum- us did not die in poverty as he ! suppored. Rather he had means hough he was not wealthy. The rchives a!so show he was buried the manner in which he died, vhich Spanish historical savants ^^ironounce authentic. -''V Turkey is having trouble with jVVA /the drartic modernization and JfjE Progressive reforms that institu- ^Aed in the last few years. Nevvs- papers have suffered much from jthe change of written letters which now written in Latin charact- rather than the Arabic. Many the nevvspapers have been dis continued because of the lack of X^>knowledge of the new scriptj ou t; Avhile many others must be satis- tke _^fied with the circulation of a fevv 'hundrede vvhere there vvere ori- ;inally thousands. The Slovene School has an- other evening to store away into the archives of its social doings. That is the Christmas Party that they have held on Friday eveni-g December 27th, for themselves and ali their friends. They came and s,o did their friends and in s uch numbers that the ordinarily large quarters vvere by far too small to accomodate them ali. Ali, vvho came, came vvith the idea of having ali the fun that it v/as possible to have and for them a great deal of fun vvas provided. Garnes, dancing, dining and gift distribution are only terme that express vvhat vvas trans- pired to have an idea of hovv those things vvere played one must have been there. Many new members vvere ac- cepted into the hen club. There wi. 1 be no high priced eggs at the Corning Easter season if many more are accepted for ali did in itiating stunts to their ovvn chagrin and to the amusement of ali vvho (Continued on page 3) The multitudes recognize this period as an auspicious one for beginning ali over, starting a new lease on life, casting off the old and vvelcoming the new. That t!iey celebrate vvith feasting and merrymaking is natural enough, knovving vvhat we do of human instinets. ali like to sit up on New Year’s Eve and listen for the chimes that “ring out the old, ring in the nevv.” This custom of ringing beliš on Nevv Year’s Eve originated in Nevv Er.gland long ago. It vvas customary to ring muffled beliš just before tvvelve o’clock, and at tvvelve to remove the vvrappings and permit the beliš to ring out lcudly. This symbolized the thcught that the old year vvas vveak and feeble, that the nevv vvas strong and povverful. “Of ali sounds of ali beliš,” says Charles Lamb, “most solemn and touching is the peal vvhich rings out the old year.” We like to hear the beliš peal out the nevvs that jhe Nevv Year has start- ed. It seems a death knell to the old year—a vvelcome to the nevv. And vvhile the echo of the chimes stili lingers in our ears vve are making our resolutions! We sit up and vvait for the chimes because of an inherent cur- iosity that has been bred in us for many generations. We don t vvant to miss anything. And vve have a secret little superstition, feeling that something, anything might happen on Nevv Year’s Eve. the Spartans not to be outdone! subject “Dr. France Prešeren, His have inaugurated something as a Life and His Work.” novel and as entertaining as vvas The subject is of special inter- ever held under the roof of the est to the members of the Slovene Slovene Auditorium. The Satell- School vvho have just finished ite dance vvill be a joy to anyone reading a synopsis of the life of vvho vvill attend. Dr. Prešeren but have no oppor- tunity of reading his pcems. Mr. Ivan Zorman is vvell versed and particularly interested in the poetry of the Slovenes, since he himself is the author of a volume of poems that have created vvide interest here and among the Slo¬ venes in Jugoslavia. POPULAR SLOVENE YOUTH DIES SUDDENLY Frank Mrhar, 21, Mourned by Many Alvina A. Jančar Finishes Nursing Training Completes Training Last Week ENAKOPRAVNOST EDITOR ASSUMES i NEW DUTY Bridal Pair Spent Honeymoon With PareSits CLUB OF LODGES PLAN PARTY Dance and Pantomine on Program 7K >fjj Ohio is sixth in the number of Ap' louse that are vvired for electri- ity. In the United States there ‘re 19,012,664 homes so equip-. hd. Nevv >York, Pennslyvania, ji inois, California, and Ohio i / ^ and in the places as named. The ancient custom of ringing the old year and ringing in nevv year vvill be celebrated in the old country fashion by the Club of Lodges of the Slovenian Auditorium on St. Clair Avenue. Extensive preparations have been made to reereate the old country custom so faithfully that the folks that come there vvill have fond memories of the Silvestrov Večer of their ovvn home viilage in (Continued on page 3) Eventful days are in the ofter ing for those vvho prepare for them and strive hard to make realities of ideals that seem ever so far off. Evenefully the day ar- ■rives vvhen the far off goal i: reached and the prize for the struggle is gained. Last Saturday M’iss Alvina A. Jančar has completed the vvhole course of nursing training and the after ho: pital practice and has stepped out into the vvide vvorld prepared to spread her doctrine of sunshine and hopes to ali the people vvho may need the assis- tance of a Professional nurse. The 2 1 st of December vvill bc a memorable day for the Miss Al¬ vina A. Jančar for it is the end of a lang preparatory course and ali the hardships that are connect- ed vvith study and training in any line of study especially nursing. (Continued on page 3) WE BEG YOUR PARDON ! Dna to unforeseen and micontrollable cirčumstan cc .s the Journal of Dec. 26th icas not puhlisheA. This tveek’s edition is in- tended to take plače of last and this veeek. We hnmhhj beg your pardon. Quiet and reserved not giving any information about himself and yet having' definite thoughts, Mr. Vatro Grili embarked on the voyage in the old shiip matrimony. With not a hint of the thought that vvas uppermost in his mind Mr. Vatro Grili had the rites read that enlisted him in the throng' of married. The bride vvas Miss Anna Bergoch of Cannonsburg, Pa. After the vvedding rites the bridal oair departed for the city of the br'ides parents vvhere they vvill re- main until Nevv Year. When they return to the city they vvill reside at a nevv home that Mr. Vatro Grili built in Lyndburst, Ohio. Mr. Vatro Grili is the present ed- itor of the Enakopravnost the Slovene daily. Besides he is the supreme president of the \S. S. P. Z. the national organization. The staff of the Cleveland Journal is happy to know of the marriage and hopes that ali the happiness and ali the cor.nubial bliss vvill b'e the lot of the bridal couple. Debut Widely Praised Appearance Makes For Best Concert of Series Last Sunday’s Slovene Radie concert has been hailed as the best and the most successful thus far rendered due to the vvonderful program of Mr. Svetozar Bano¬ vec, the operatic tenor from Lju¬ bljana. The clear ringing voice of Mr. Banovec has received much praise from ali vvho listened and the; quality of the Slovene Radio con-1 cert has been raised considerably j vvith the assistance of the famoua j operatic star. I Nor yet vvas the operatic song- ster the only vvorth vvhile attrac- tion of last Sunday’s program for the vvork of Miss Jeannette Per¬ dan vvho has recently been at- traeting much attention vvith her recitals in and about Cleveland and the nearby tovvns. Miss Perdan’s performance has (Continued on page 3) The snovv is just as vvhite and the people are going about their business as they alvvays did but they are sad- der to knovv that at 900 East 63rd slreet Frank Mrhar, knovvn as ‘Lindy’ is dead. Already ali are feeling the loss that has visited the vvhole com- munity because old lady death did not call her shots correetly and laid Frank Mrhar lov/. She did it vvith celerity and sureness that nrade the shock ali the more severe. Only a fevv days ago he vvas merry and cheerful as vvas his nature and feeling the cheer and the merriness of the Christmas season vvishing and hoping for a happy, prosperous Nevv Year only to be laid dovvn on the bed of death vvithout a chance for a fight that fight that he is so fond of. But he vvas ot g-ranted that opportunity. With only a short illness he vvent to the road of ali mortals and ali that is left is the “rnortal coil’ but his meni'ory vvill linger on. Frank vvas a popular boy about these parts always making nevv friends and having a hap,py facul.ty of knovving hov/ to keep them. Ali the going ito schools in the eity and ali XMAS CELEBRATION WINS PLAUDITS Performance a Tribute to Instructresses Anyone who wac present at the Junior Slovene school celebration last Tuesday night, Dec. 24 vvill be vvilling to attest that the Slo¬ vene school is a decided advant- age to the community not only in the learning of the Slovene but also ‘that it Is providing much material for Phe preservation of the Slovene language in America among the American Slovenes of the third generation. The yduth- ful members of the school vvho have had parts in the presentation have acquitted themselves as real “Romans” by the quality of their presentation. Songs, acts, plays friends that he has made vvhile ^ and ali ^le other things that have | been made a part of the celebra- BOY SCOUT TRIBE WINS COVETED PRIZE HERE S A PLAČE TO GO Saturday, January 4th — Spartan Satellite Dance at Slov. Nat’l Home, 6417 St. Clair Avenue. Sunday, January 5th — Interlodge Bovvling at Del Young’s E. 123 and St. Clair at 2:00 P. M. the people vvith vvhomhevvorkedgasp-,.^ have bgen formed with a ed an uribelieveable question “Is he| . . , really dead?” But that is the fact, smoothness and a ghek that de- Continued on paj-e. three Vl ^ hts the most harderusted cynic, who despairs of the stuff the young generation is made of. From beginning to the end of the celebration vvas a delight to ali vvho came to be entertained for they vvere not disappointed in their offspring. The songs vvere sung vvith a certain sureness that almoLt breathed of the long ex- not a tremor of nervousness vvas notice- able; vvhile the actors vvho did their bits in the tvvo one-act plays performed vvith the gusto of hard- ened actors. The parts vvere clear- ly spoken and enuntiated in the correct Slovene prounciation of the stage. Due to the youth of the performers the character rep- resentations lacked that broadness of vision and intimates knovvl- edge of the characters that vvere portrayed but this shorteoming, if one vvishes to call that, is not due to the effort of the young actors but rather to the extreme youth and their inexperience in knovving human nature that vvas to be portrayed. (Continued on page 3) Elections, party and Other Activities The Silver Fox Tribe, No. 2, Lone Scout Division, Boy Scouts 1 , , ... • i o perience on the boards of America, vvhich meets in the St. Clair Avenue Bath House, took first plače in the Inter-Tribe Meet held on Friday 1 3th at the Ep- vvorth-Euclid Church on East 107 Street, competing against three other tribes and scoring 7 I points. The Silver Foxes vvon first plače in 6 out of 9 events. The events of the Meet vvere, first aid, fire-by-flint, fire-by-fric- tion, knot-tying, vvig-vvag signal- ing, flash - lite signaling and In- d^n Sign language. e tribe’s nearest competitoi came m vvith 50 points, 21 points behind the Bath House group. T u a Tribe is novv the proud an permanent possessor of a sil- (Continued on page 3) Page 2 CLEVELAND JOURNAL Janu .v,-j- 2 n -i K, troo i i (Cleuelanči 3 fnurnal t* Published every Thursday by The American - Jugoslav Prin ting and Publishing Company (»418 St' Olair Ave.— Cleveland Ohio Joseph, the thr .-.hephards, lambs, an ox Frank Suhadolnik, Editor Business Mgr., G. M. Kabay »nbscription Rates: One year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 -CLEVELAND, OHIO, THURSDAY. JANUARY 2nd, 1930. NEW YEAR’S GREETINGS Everybody is doing it from little brother who bas shed his swaddling clothes, to ref med and respectable ladies. The weakness of the cuss word is apparent now that it generally produces no good effect. Sweari'ng and cussing is an offence against good manners, it shows a weakness of the vocabulary and a total lack of know- ledge of the use of the language that one claims hejstone fenceci enciosure knows well. t The demonstration bf the use of honest the good- ness English words, or $lovene, for that matter can be seen with the perusal of good modem writers who know hoiv.to use terms that produce the best effect and arejkch other" the story or to be more the babe in the manger. On either betvcen books ends of: greon Bide of the Christ Child are. Mary and | mounted on »d, bo ^, e stories . There are also figures ofjdren on the bi nmnT1 o-i PERSONALS Frank Škerl, residi the three wise men, the kings, the I These books have Lucula and i t-hzabeth A ve., and an etn and a don-|a few discnmmatmg »eader^ pf Buckeyc p orgff Co -°>Pl ey. The chalk road in front the j parentsmhave^ bten tempta ^ aT1 d ave. was injured la: t ^ .»able is represented by salt. On thai them 'home to rcaa to j „, wor ] c j n ,l r , Wc ^ M; left (outside) are three sheep in daughters. c hil-' ' ' r °t , ^ Hi 3 / : Ingle file Just about to leave the! More thantwo»hondI.od httle c, f, ot was broken th e to enter the'dren attended the Chnstm • <• r , en ds are invited to . • • n/] two lambs | hour on Saturday monnng, Decen.bc ; __^ ^ to Vl4t , , ^ ^ E c°' his home. Frank Rus:, 1 9, of i' Another year is drawing to a close and in the i:eview we find that we have accomplished some things that we have started out to do. Ali the things that have been undertaken have had some measure of success and that is something that we are thahkful for at the end of the year. Things that have not met with the greatest success will be a spur to greater things in the next year. We will rely on our resources as much as possible with the help of the readers, we hope to accomplish things that are deemed impossible. The past year has been successful and full of pre¬ mise for the next. “Corning events čast their shadows before them” and with the assurance of the past, wo hope for a bright future. We rely on the cooperation of no effect upon any one but only expose t'he ignorance of the user stable. On the right are two lam-usi «uui u.. -— -- . 10 i cl ... .... , eating g-rass. This has proved a j 21st. ^ children iSted and pro- Frank Rus:-, 1 9, 0 f | 30a „ ^ ‘ source of continued intereat to tho, many cntertainment. When; Etre et is seriously J1J ' $.? & It ^^ children. They quite frequently getvided their own cntena /m at C Ily u b e 5 j, down on their hands and knees and | the program was ^ j V* • ^ere take,,' V J peer through the gdass, and then teli j Oarge ba R of clndy , Wc Wish hi ™ a 3 p Ce ^ 1 c0 ptt ° c 1 sion of the story. On top of the casc/ ^nitv weiiarc nuu. i ^ more effective than the wholesale use of words that have j cxact - j . ti . h , ey 7 11 . eac ^_° th „ er J t I?, 1 „ r ,.ITn"! wluS^c£ y j vvvvv 17 T" ®*1 0 Jtx Libris ^ » 4 % T \ c * . . \ V®« ^t* 1 ******** *** *** *** ** Fro n Nature BY .TAMS CBITUARV be' Thoma: Franjic 52 Vlvia Avc., diod su 2 3rd, L iona Mramor, 27, jg^ acl n> e a i > te e , d M < -deni,,, hj of 0 loSl ( ir Street. Conducted by the St. Claiv Branch Public Library. a/. He is the biggest pest to th.:: j .onters and lumbermen; he fnghi ; and a Cardinal amongst a grouo e: s game and irriiate., llic lui. rmen with His raucous chattcr.: She is survived b, t 'o^\ Contrasted against the glistening sncw were a v/hile, blueja^ Loyal biuo Le The past Ghristmjs season has boen died children from the school, ac a very happy and mcmorable one for companied by seven or eight teachers, ° ’ ng IS sparrows ^ St. Clair Library. The season started liled quietly in the auditorium. a ’ d r°yal scarlet. Ticon eroga at m ->P KC ■ ,. , n d Quebec! It almost like des- ; again: t them, and especialiy th msband, five year old ^ 1 tio n' s ‘ o brothers. ■ 1 Jernie Sodec., H) Mar v?"-* vp.niNflBai.R The solati- 3 ti yea r j vjghter pr M':s. Marg aret S , th e ^ 5 14 Mohawk Avcruc. /\ . id brother also : urvive. December llth with a program 'fh e fj rs t part of the program was presented by the Adult Education a geleetior. by the school orchestr Class. About 60 persons vvere preš- ^hejr :played well and shoived good ildiculour to mention the bluejay, cnf including friends of the \\omen. ^j. a j n j ngi xhey rendered four selec- unc ] l ova l hlue together• the blue- our readers for th efurthe rsuccess of the undertaking J*™?* tions before the end. The eight grade jay b certainly a ” saucy ’ fe iiow, if| Ion' e ding from the sublime to the hlue jay, they enliven the :id duli winter season when wc i ve so few bnds witn us. ref that js known as the Cleveland Journal. some of vvhich they had vvritten them- gelves. This was the first time girls put on the play “The Stranger Great as our success has been we hope that each mtmber of them had ever spoken ^ e _ Child.” These girls had just one re- there ever was one. You are no fore an audience and we marveled at bearial at the library which they Joubt reminded of the lines ‘there Miss Squawk cr ■ M- and every reader has achie.ved what they have started ^ ease !ln( j rt . a ji negs W ith whieh ! .managod themseivcs ar.d used worthyj out at the beginning of the last year and have gotter. they »poke. Musič Va* fitrnished byi initiative in adaptin-g fche stage prop what they have set their hearts to. If they hdve not, we 7 sm f son f. 111pmbL'" ve^e brtter than the boys, o> j • "diicn \vhosc Motlisrs vvere in the ■ i, r thcry be boys wei;c 1 ’ dtor than the j ci practiccd failhftrflv ‘ *and pave' " - --h. oniovmont to their parents and . ■" '.'ivis by Hvimr the plny so we'L ; joes the bluejay in that baseball' ■ lit of his, strutting around as j ■ough he owned the premises. ! ey : urely deseribe him; I| -ght. him in the same attitude .vas bossing, .nagging, cajolin ; i wiiat not. i.- J. F ..ti foriune. y'voi Mr. Rapper ca-, be happy without Oh, well, money Thomas W. Va. Dec. 2 3, 1929 Bcob -— Cuch! k I t oump e IVIanv are the abuses of language today. One of the lic first sečne vas a cottage liv -■ .oo;ii of a pea r ant f«mily. Moto-| "rinsa Meetzi, hov little baby sis- t (represented Hv a large doli) and, cl :nes from a “distpnt citv” a'l fig-' !< ' hristmas u -- d in getting Meetzi. the little goat • vcry ir.J; h Iv, ready to guard the goats in the p.sture. ’• Th ; ■"‘ avo “Listen” -for 0ur . , merica - bluej:iy bcl.on.' ' ' '' ’ to a famlly of jays who with th , h c 1 i lic second jr-radc crirls dress- f n r -i , magpies torm a smaller iamily ol m v n.te. r u t? won our hearts sing- . , , . . , * y c “V.Miile Oh.istmcs Starš Wcrc the crow species. There is an old ■ .and Journal i<>r anolh . y ‘Cleveland Journal laveland, Ohio . ar Editor is ish to sub-cribe to l ae ( J' toonc. •'•'it; — Oh, vvcll, rub hulter on your foreheacl : v.'o n t shovv. .s sfnce — It ra ust hc >w you la t. J ho pirh nf grade 7 a',.;-j sang German tale of ‘‘die Elster” or: f intcsoslmrr. 1 he pa. It magpie. The magpie and the :i ’ 1 like laesl is tho s.ory ace.io i bluejay at timer show a liking for, y the new> icclion. idpal part of the pro- _._.k;- i Vas v.vll done and inu:h on ■d. • lt p'eascd us to have th 1.A qew yoi,— 'ou have agi C arissa — Wcll, i wo have known you either, e:t ’!: dress. 1' i: i' “ Hrr-efnll — How is yoy e-s.ng .aiong drivin- the c vAudcr! — j h, vh n s rm -■g. Now : hc' t ut )f a dežen prede; glittering objects and this parti -' cular magpie stole a jevvel lor In the second scene, greatest is the use of slaiig and vulgar terms in the wish ..t mounted on fokiing screens.sug- crayon drawn Rnchers so interestod in the library which a jeweler‘s boy v/as blamed for forceful expression of one’s self. Anyone who can use his ears to listen can vouch for the fact that everyone is using ali the slang that they can in the furtive hope of expressing himself with ali the foreefulness that is possible. It is a curious fact tli a as a resource they call on ali the dieties, they kno\v of and consign ali to the nether regions with the hope of D e ing inipressive on their fello\vs. The contrary affect is always the fact. The more one uses abusive language ge ted ithe setting — ^the evoods border- irstures. A gnome. in a bright and the Oh;ildren‘s Room. and hid the jev/el “im Loche.” On december 18th the principal of /\ nc J so the storv gocs but the point to observe is that our super Čase School with t\vo ssistor.t- •v: en suit, a pink and rvhite fairy and, K UI ' e h about seventv little actr: s t . , , . , , a brownie each had his -tura in teasingi fh " I>brary to eive a musical play hcial ma ?P le and h,s brother ja/ th- little goat girl and comfc-rting her j These boys and girls had not had a have a pronounced propensitv »o* \v: en she lost her goats. At last the! rehearsal at the library and the sta/"’ glitter. The jay ; are a large [am, - t? vvere found and a’l ended ha;p- 1 was too small for their produclion Ry snc J are found almost any ril • , yet, vvith no hesitation, they vvent , i i .i i , , wnere in the worid; the.-/ a.most • fte»- the ent-vtainment the womon through their program and did ex- . , ". ..••-.v/ed themselves singing Ch-istron- cecdingly vvell. We fullv aippreciato a have the distmguis..mg 1 lU souts and plaj’!!! 0, gamos. Tea and the time and trouhle it took to vvalk markmgs and the long tails. Sonr cnl os vvere served. The cakes. rep- ali these children to the library. of them hav^e the jaunty cresis and We have the prettiest wcn'hc-. r Xmas. The snow fal s gently, f Is s of t and v/hite. Evervtbin/ j at is covered vvith it looks Benu ; j. Thc.re is ro vvind ;o spoii, o -/'eatlier. l’m sure n - / 1 pc' pic who live herc v/iil have m~ny goocl iimo : -leigh ri' ! ing and i (ioing other things. I vvi-h the"; o f xroil T»fjQT>.lc ' , Y f>r C. h C" ” ' 1 h c prct!:y s c g n c 3 ancl liuv 0 : ! irorš; CAR LTiano, J im.- 'ec our Tl VOV -1 open c f nt3 11J ■ blark: ? I I ■omc new sMfcscibcrs. ■rc-on ting: those ninde for fc&st days c Ocmgfo tlieii co.>tumc5 and s:ot tli o m tbe cross bar markmgs wbic.b on ih e more ridičulous he becomcs for the mere rccourse Y the different nationalities, were organized for the stage. Follovving our b ] ue j ay are vvhitc • . made bv the vvomen. A fcw davs be- tms cantata Miss.Pcnnington’s Read- o language of that sort he demonstrates that he is p*oo in expression and demonstrates the fact that the vocabu- iary is so deploted that he niust use sprinkling of bona fide tverds and an overabundancc of “cuss” words. It is a psycho1ogical fact that the over use of certai" stimulants dulls the reaction to the stimulant. So it is with This bird to b< latg e bo dy C leingd 01 they w denti es gte' at ^ lude' inc* 1 Sokol t nationa w eek* 1 as a S°‘ drastic ed unc jugosla The ' periodi thus en the wh< the Kii vvhole equal t. Checko Heac gtoups dorsed and se< greater suit of 1 fore Christmas the two elasses pre- ir" Club girls gave the play “On reldom feeds on the ground -1 sented Miss Sunderland vvith a beauti- Christmas F.ve”. T-his ’-!ay s-bovved ''vhen he can get fruit, nuts or 'n f ul cyclamen vvhich is stili making a earefrl t-aining and bard vvork. A scets he disdains the lowly en'/ h bright spot on the recoiving desk. eapacitv- ciovvci attended t.us peiform- But in the vvinter vvhen food i St. Clair Lit'rary particu’«rly an- anec and some children had to be scarcer he will hop up to a p ; r ,,. preciates tbe cordial and friendlv ci- turned away. f , ,. , ot bread that you mav toss on' op' ration and support vvhich th'/ J ■> A (-i 5 play in t.ic Children s room tblc kitchen door and quarre! vvilh ■■ ‘sh "en n h/T .■> .m n s. and s> H i’ Nrv h car. •b criber r addccJ to your nlreacb/ ari-. Murv > 'v ari'! ' ’ it h mnny n" see m i the nati kingdoi the Jug ering tl nationa the kins various e o vv-ish mv friends in Goli-1 '-od. ma-y good limes durin" s-ehools make so e vid ©n t. On D"ce-e fr the use of cusa v/orcls.’ Tho v may produce the satisfactor.v i>e- 17 , st. vitus school ga •. r* a • i f g t *T i nrn p n t. in mir fmrlit-mri ■•Ilich iias attraeted mueh attention ga ve a n en is a miniature of vvhat the Frencb effect for a short while but the eclge wears off espeeial te tainment in our auditorium vvhich : C al' T.a creche. The fbor of the . . , we mili remembsr verv rJeasantb-fer, i ’ 1( , !cbof | roo f stablo is covered vvith ly v/ith ali tile “cussing that IS ramp ailt n03ivclays.. a lmg, long ti-n»e. About five hun- ha v. A tip^clectric light shines over the smaller bi to lide 'e no;ida-"s The blueiay har another broth¬ er, the whisky jack, or Carada Y ours sinccrcly, Miss Mary Hervetinc e noise v c a-ties? T j Naybc- — Ob. n" | may wa: t to h-rea 1 tora i! ccon, y to! T t f Lyon —- Osli k c sh .is mode; t sort of fellov; Ves, the only te-, pfogres .j ., u - s a cold. * * .> Mr. Blov/cr — Can you : somethirg to nrrest th | velopment of a cold? Dru ggbt - — - Ccrtainly; rec.obbcd dis as a dudfailin: cdy. ers rm’ fhing blovvi O- vene li,j F. T. Sili ADOLF IK \YTien tlie leaders of tho Obri enslaved lliom too mučit the Slovenes revolted against their mas- lers and vvith tho help of the Cheeh King Samo lliov throvv off tho volk of slaverv. Samo vvith the oharacteristic onorgj' es tabli shed a rltitcd king- dom of Cliochs, Slovonos and Northern '.Sorhs, but this kingdom- disiutograted \vith-tlie deatli of Samo and tho Slovonos tiaus ultl-ioUgii traces of paganism and pagan pnicticos have continued for severni con Tu¬ ri e&. • •> Not Cul, ure of Fj arly 'Shn-cnea rdi, much del m rte is knovn of tbe cmiure in the preeiiristian era. Procopiua, in Jiis account of liic Holhic var (555 lo 555) mentions the most j u . tere-litig and the most illuminating of ali that has been vvritten in those ear4y limes. The Slovenes a! lhat time have entered the territorv of tho left bank of tile Danube “the Slovenes' and Anthians .lo not have individual leaders, but lived on ;i p ;l . triarchial form of governmeul from the beg!nnin<>' having (ribal comicils vliere heneficial as vvell 'as harmfitT affairs are disenssed likevise, thev a ,‘ ( ! guided in ali other affairs after ancient ciistoms! 'Thev heiieve in one (Jod, the malcer of lightnim«- and vho is the master of ali; thev offor oven and everv k in d of animals as sacrifices. Fale, thev'do not knov nor heiieve in; ncither do thev believe that the dead have anv povers over the living hut if thev f cel that thev are about to die, either in var or in sickness then thev promise tb make an offer- ing to The go d s and if thev eseapo deatli, thev ful- fill their promises faitlifullv and think that 'vvith 1-lie offoring thev have purcliased th.e right to lite Thev a!s 0 adore rivers, goblins and other dieties and off er sacrifices to them; dtiring the saeri niau.v prophecies are incanted. Thev liv, hut s living individuallv having pb vsi e; d confirniation thev are ali the samo. y ca Ied 1 hemselves Spors, I think, N i eason that thev lived individuallv and f«r * J< !’A go» oiinnent among t hemselves, tlie? ■ 11 . 101.1 llosso« mnnli 1.J rm j...,,. 1 - ()t tiče 'e m poor . i, ■ , ... , , vcl '. v r(i Pgious hynms that a c ?°. , . 11 -" u 1 dices and religious rites. W is ooll Pu’ued in the song* ll ! vn sl °mi li,0,l ‘ - 1,, e X , ol' thoVclies of prechristian P Aigovor zoper izvin” ancient (}, ” "'hich irsetjf monTimilm na ^' 0l ! al songs have helped tbe i»W have been t ! le l j!ace ,,f ’ pagan dieties tf| siljle f n ‘i •' l,,)i4 titptod tlie names of saints. 1 'o trače a" /• - ... ^urA ali of the stories to tlieir onb 1 / o be continued i •VOOftAjv industnal plants, newspaper orr- ices, telegraph commercial offices and other places vvhere a number of messages are handled daily. The messages are typed by the aircraft company employee in charge of the instrument, vvhich is connected with the nearest West- /\11 who come be they young or old will not be sorry if they choose to spend the closing of the old year and the inception of the new with the Club of Lodges Old and New Year Celebration on December 3 I st. Club rooms furnished for Card Parties or any other prfvate parties; on 3rd f loctr. Rent very reasonable. FRANK MER¬ VAR, 5921 Bonna Avenue. Slov. Auditorium Bldg. 6405 St. Clair Ave. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4th, 1930, Admission SOc , I SLOV. NAT’L HOME at 7:30 January 2nd, 1929. ' , __ -- CLEVELAND JOURNAL .Si' ! ! I V Wel| i dotlej U:ri ?i mk •ad | ?l - 1)! a t. j n ag Wo e;ice F E National Gymnastic Body is Aim ellon ly ti jugo.lavia has entered the field of organized sports when the min- isters of the government have de- cided that ali the athletics are to be subsidized by the government and administered by one central body that is directly under the control of the minister who is to be appointed by the king himself. The action retulted as a move to unite ali the athletic organizations that are organized in the kingdom Tv Tugoslavia todav each con Bife i-Tjh- T ' ’ n‘'-er f ” =up -e jnacy in beir.g recognized as the official group. The new organiza- tion is known as the Jugoslav Sok¬ ol and will have in it ali the or¬ ganizations that are active now in the Kingdom. The king has passed a drastic rerolution that ali the sokol bodies are to be incorporated into one large body which will be the only body of its kind in the entire kingdom. The action will do away with ali the other sokols and they will lose their separate in- denties and will be a part of the great whole. The announcement included the clause that ali the' Sokol bodies must either join the national organization within three weeks or they will cease to exist as a Sokol body. The action was drastic in the fact that it demand- ed unconditional joining of the Jugoslav Sokol or disband. The age old question of the su- periority of the various Sokols is thus ended with one stroke and the whole youth of the nation of the Kingdom is made a united JUNIOR SCHOOL AFFAIR (Continued from page one) Ali the credit is due to the ef- forts of the vivacious and earnest teachers who have patiently vvork- ed with the members of the Slo- vene school to make it possible to make the presentation a success. Many an anxious moment was spent by the teachers, Mrs. An- toinette Simčič and Mrs. Mary Ivanush, when the rehearsals did not come up to their expectations but they applied themselves to the task with even more ardor and have been able to instill some of the špirit that they so abundantly possess and last Tuesday’s per formance is a complaint to their patience and their zeal in the progress for everything that is connected with the Slovenc .: hool. The ever welcome Sokojg de- lighted the audience with their snappy performance of the tum- bles, rolls and the athletic stuntg when they appeared in the early part of the Christmas celebration program. After the performance Santa Claus appeared and distributed packages to the Sokols and to ali the members of the Slovene school and ali the children that came to the auditorium. SENIOR SCHOOL PARTY (Continued from page one) vvknessed. Laugh provoking as the games vvere the greatest surprise of the evening was the gift distribution that took plače after the midnight snack that wac served. Gifts that vvere brought by ali who came to the party vvere distributed indis- criminately to the great amuse- ment of ali receiving gifts. Several nursing bottles, accompanied by tvvins have been some of the con- tents of the surprise packages. Mice and squeelvng toy rats caused the young ladies several anxious moments vvhile they vvere rur.ning wildly on the floor. Yes, another successful evening vvill be inscribed archives cf social doings i lovene School. Aerial Communica- # tion MISS JANČAR FINISHES TRAINING Quietly and vvithout public an¬ nouncement the Western Union Telegraph Company has, during the past seven months, made its great vvire netvvork available to air transport service and airports in ali sections of the country, thus promoting the safety of aviation and aiding the progress of that industry. In placing its facilities solidly behind aviation, the company has united its forces vvith those of air transport lines in providing aero- nautical operations vvith an up- (Continued from page one) Miss Alvina Jančar has com- pleted her course of etudy at St. Alexis Nursing school last June and finished her post graduate in- YOUTH DIES Contiimed froin page one he is dead. Frank Mrhar vvas one of those hap- py individuals vvho vvas as serious as he vvas cheerful always read*’ to Help ali w,hom he .could Help nnd that help ternship last Saturday, December : vvas ahvays accompained vvith the 21' Miss Alvina Jančar attended cheerful sinile and špirit that made Ursuline High and then entered ^ orrking vvith him ali the more the training school at St. Alexis j Hospital vvhere she vvas gradu- ! ated last June. She finished ali her training last vveek and is stil! connected vvith the hospital doing the vvork of a professional nurse. i pleasing. Frank Mrhar has an enviable ree- ord to leave behind him at St. Vitus School, at Catherdral Latin and vvith the Cleveland Trust Conipany vvhere he vvas employed. The funeral vvill be hald at St.Vitus Church on Thursday, Jan. 2nd. tS 'pm Usi Could vve vvrite vvould say: his epitaph vve Gone not because he vvas not vvanted but bccause vve could not help it. His share of“cheer vve vvill always miss. RADIO PROGRAM (Continued from' page one) fl o m of the TRIBE DOINGS the to-date Communications system.' reAched the plane that she has set .. .. ... - - ^ j O CATHOLIC COLLEGES ORGANIZE (Continued from page ene) makes the Catholic institutions equal in rank and importance vvith the other education facilities avail¬ able in the city. The expansion has been made possible vvith the strenuous vvork of the Rt. Rev. Joseph Schrembs, tWe Bishop of Cleveland, vvho ic ln seven months Western Union has installed upvvards of 125 tele- graph stations for air transport companies at varjous points in the United States. Telegraph Service for air trans¬ port, novv being extenaed rc.pidly is expečted to cover the nation in siir.ilar fashion to that vvhich Western Union furnishes raiiroads for dispatching trains and con- ducting other railroad buiiness. This program of the telegraph chief, Max Katz; asst. tribe chief, company vvhich handles more Edvvard Anderson and seribe, than eight-five percent of the na- Houston Allen. Other members tion’s telegraph business is de- of the officer’s staff are: Lodge signed to have a stabilizing and leaders: Sidney Kleiman, Victor | beneficial effect on the air trans- (Continuecl from page one) ver loving cup. Election is Held Last Friday vvas the semi- annual election night and the fol- lovving Scouts vvere eleeted j Tribe very much interested in education vvhole and making the Jugoslav J of the CathoHcs in Cleveland. The realization of the unified equal to the Polish Sokol or the Checkoslav sokol. Heads of the several sokol gtoups have enthusiastically en- dorsed the plan for unification and see in an opportunity for a greater unification that is the re- sult of the action. The leaders see in it the end of the strife of the nationalities that compose the kingdom and the propagation of the Jugoslav špirit instead of fost ering the špirit of the individual nationality groups that compose the kingdom. The breaking of the various groups is for the further progress of the kingdom itself and •;v,- : r ..-v • the opinion of authorities. The Soke! in Juposlavia ic t ' cranization that strives thre; group has been the Bishop’s ambi- tion for a long time and has been made possible only at this time after much vvork and effort on his part. Other notables interested in the expansion of Catholic education in the city of Cleveland and of Northern Ohio have hailed the merger vvith enthusiasm and ex pressed their approval and have been unstinting in their praise at the advance that education has received vvith the combining of the colleges under one head. R, inging al! the colleges under .> . one 'nstitution i - aT "p ■ rpriate at the time en John Carroll is finishing , pians to make a public appeal for unite physical culture to build the j funds to make the mother insti . physical and the moral forces among the youth of the nation. The Sokol has been in active for many years already but it vvas de- vided into various groups support- ed by the various organizations vvhose n^mes thev carried. The 'AiriH of the ki”g puts an end u f -s and makes one m' 1 : th t wi T l function as an offi cial national organizations tution of the heights a possibility It gives an insight into the scope of education that is fostered by the citizens of Cleveland and quality that is possible and makes ali the institutions a recognized force that is possible only vvith a combination that has been made in the last vveek. Appreciate home and unicn baked goods. ^^nlc-rnationM^ ^ (REGISTERED) Fresh & Delickras Bakings QUALITY BAKER! J. BRADAČ, prop. Slov. Nat’1 Home 64: CLUB OF LODGES PARTY (Continued from page one) Europe. Joy and happiness coupled vvith fun vvill be rampant vvhile tvvo orchestras play for the dances in the upper and the lovver halls of the Auditorium. At midnight pantomine featuring amid the fes- tivities that vvill be going on. Ali vvho come I or old vvill not be choose to spend 1 Anderson and John Ayster, Jr; quartermacter John Dejak and Li- brarian, Fred F. Leustig. Ali these scouts vvill serve as assistants to the adult Tribe Guide Mr. Felix A. Danton. The tribe vvill be reinforced by a governing committee, named from the St. Clair Avenue Mer- chant’s Improvement Association vvho recently vvent on record en- dorsing the Bath House group. Laying aside the usual .routine of a tribe meeting the members of the scout tribe had a partv and a reunion on Friday December 27. The party and the reunion has been planned to get ali the form- er members to come and meet the younger members of the tribe. And they came. Ali old faces of course vvere not present but those vvho came vvere surprised by the progress that the tribe has made in the interval since they have be- longed to the outfit. As a feature of the evenings festivities, the chief guest Mr. R. H. Beck, assistant scout execu- tive of the Cleveland Council pre- n.cd the membership certificates ilPam Matusa, William Zab sr and William Gašper. There vvas not much difference in the celebration that vvould dis- tinguish the meeting from an or- dinary business meeting except, and there is the great difference, the scout stunts vvere performed in demonstration and the stunts did not have the duty flavor but they vvere performed as a com- petition. Other things that made the meeting interestng vvas the ex- change of Christmas gifts, singing and a musical program. Ali arrangements vvere under the supervision of Mr. Felix Dan¬ ton, the tribe Guide, vvho, hovv- ever, only supervised and ali the particular arrangements vvere con- dueted by Edvvard Anderson vvho vvas responsible for the refresh- ments and Fred Leustig the ar- ranger of the decoration of the exhibits and decorations. port industry. out for herself and made last Sunday’s Radio concert one of the outstanding radio programs in the series of concerts presented by the Slovene Merchants Radio Club. That the combination of ar- tists like Svetozar Banovec and Miss Jeannette Perdan vvas a sue- cuss may be seen from the corrt- plimentary praise that have been given sponstaniously by the listen ers of the program. The radio, hovvever, is not the medium that does Mr. Banovec the greatest amount of credit for the radio strips. him of that per- sonality vvith vvhich he is so char- ac.teristically vibrant and the only 1 Nev/ Year Resolution: I SHALL BEGIN TO SAVE TO - DAY We Pay 5 % on Savings THE INTERNATIONAL SAVINGS and LOAN CO. 6235 St. Clair Avenue 819 E. I85th St. Assets: CIose to two and a half millions . JOIN OUR KMAS CLUB Interesi at 5% thing that one hears is the voice It is novv a commonly accepted that ig the {inest indication of the singers mastery of the vocal at- tainments but those dramatic qualities that he is capable are en- tirely lost. Yet this fact does not detract from the quality of the Slovene Radio Hour that has been presented via station W J A Y last Sunday. Miss Perdan’s vocal numbers also shovved tbe capability of the ; dramatic in her songs and her style of playing the piano, and they have also suffered from the lack of vision and have been listened to only. Last Sunday’s program vvas the finest that has been presented so far and it vvill be vvorth vvhile fact that the problems of the air transport industry require reliable and instant communcation facil¬ ities. Without such a system, the officials vvould be attempting to drive their horses vvithout reins. A vital problem facing the air transport communication eystem is that of distributing vveather re- ports, so essential to flying safe- ty. Some of the air lines gather their ovvn vveather to the other points on their routes so that pi- lots are informed at each of con- ditions just ahead. Collection of vveather reports rests partly vvith the air lines, and partly vvith government agencies, and Western Union may co-oper- ate at points vvhere neither of the foregoing gather data. Word of the progress of a great storm in the direction of an air line must be sent quickly to the vital points in order that flyers may avoid danger. With the co-operation of ali agencies, this vvork is devel- oping. Another use of the system is the rending of orders by trafffe and administrative officers of air lines on company business. A plane starting on its trip may have 100 pounds of frieght aboard or 1,000 pounds, and it may have one passenger or ten. If, at its next stop, ten other passengers are vvaiting to climb aboard, the Best wishes for a happy and prosperous NEV/ YEAR to ali the subseribers of the ‘CLEVELAND JOURNAL” friends and to the Merchants John Renko Representative for the “Enakopravnost” CLEVELAND JOURNAL f ms I the turning of the dials to the W , *s* J A Y Slovene hour program if *š* more like it are presented. £ *:! i I ? ? t I I t i93o ern Union central office by a special line. Many of these air¬ ports vvere located at a distance from the city centers and tele¬ graph lines had to be built. Employees of transport lines thus act as agents of the Western Union at such points,* handling both commercial and company business. The Simplex machine operates similarly to a typewriter, except that the effect is of the typebars reaching to a distant points, so that vvhen a letter is štručk at one point it may be companjr headquarters must be P rinted a thousand miles away. informed from both points if it is to meet the situation. Air pastengers require the same telegraph facilities at air¬ ports as they find at railroad stations. Telegraph installations at aircraft company offices at landing fields are utilized to ac- commodate this business. At many points messenger service is available at landing fields also. The automatic telegraph ap- paratus used by Western Union in the air service is the Simplex printer similar to that provided by the companjr in thousands of I f f I I .f Necessity of maintaining umn- *s* terrupted service is also met by *s* this system. If a vvire is broken £ in a storm, service on vvhich the safety lines may depend io not necessarily interrupteH. Western Union has such a netvvork of vvires covrering ali parts of the nation that svvitches are turned and vvire traffic is re-routed around the point of the break, or beyond it and back, to the addrees desired. Embalmer As \ve take the old calender down from the \vall and put the bright new one in its plače, we ali naturallv panse to review the events of the old year and make pians for the new. For ali of trs, 1929 brought its mixture of joy and sorrow, of dis- appointment and success. And 1930 waits at the door \vith , new opportunities for achievement and happiness. The members of this organization wish one and ali the best that llfe has to offer in the new year. A F. SVETEK CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 478 E, 152nd St, 15222 Saranac Id. KEnmore 2016 GLenville 5751' ■1 h M f Page 4 CLEVELAND JOURNAL 1«8H ...BO IIIUIIII i u iuax*a.is .la.o.a.isiiaaB.a.sEiiBi lact^HMutEEiniin 11n.EaoiB.4coB bi.*.«»' a g«aaaaaa aaaaasaaeaBBaaaaaaaairaanBaaassBeatii JOURNAL Januarjr 2nd, 1 939 INTER LODGE BOWLING LEAGUE BOWLING FOR SUNDAY DECEMBER 22nd ... P V’ TEAM THIiEE HIGH Collinwood Boosters Spartans . Loyalites .. . 2679 . .2641 ...2589 TEAM HIGII SINGLE Collinwood Boosters . Spartans .960 . .945 .925 IND. THIIEE HIGH Bencina . 599 Baraga ../599 Wohlgemuth .583 Krall . 583 INI). HIGH SINGLE Bencina ..'.268 G. Kovitch .246 F. Fifolt .245 B0WLING GOSSIP SCHEDULE FOR SUNDAY JANUARY 5th Alleys 13 — 14 Comrades vs Clair ivood Alleys 15 — 16 Coli. Boosters vs Spartans Alleys 17—18 Geo. Washingtons vs Loyalites Alleys 19—20 I5ettsy Ross vs Progressives GIRLS, NOTICE! BOWLING FOR SUNDAY DECEMBER 29th Meeting for the girls’ basket- ball Inter Lodge League wiU be held at the St. Clair Bath House Thursday, January 2r.d, 1930 at 7:30 P. M. sharp. Ali the man- agers and coachcs are requested to attcnd, as this meeting v/ill be very important and if vou are not prcsent, yOur team will not bc entered in the League. For further and ali other informa- tion, get in touch with Miss Vera Kushlan, at the St. Clair Bath House. Sunday Dec. 22nd The Spartans havc vaske« a to boggan ride again. Last week the Corprades upret things by annex- ing two games from them, while the past Sunday brought about a stili greater upset, this time by the George V/ashingtons (Kozan Shoes). It was generally agreed by close observers that the Spartans would win as they pleased, since the Kozan’s' are next to last in standing. Hovvever, the Kozans with a nevvcomer, Arko, in their line-up, bowled like an inspired team. The Spartans edged the Kozans by one pin in the firrt feame. Instead of losing heart after dropping such a close game to one of the best teams in the League, they fought even harder in the seeond game and won by sixty-five pins. The Spartans reališing the seriousneBP of the shoe repairers, but Charley Wol- gemuth, their chief bowler, in their line-up for the third game. In spite of this move the Kozans proceeded to bombard the pins and surprised everybody 'oy vvinning the third game by forty-two pins. 1 he Clairwoods are stili perch- ed on the top rung having de feated the fast ttepping Boosters in two games. Baraga hit five hundrede ninety-nine for the Boosters, tieing the high mark sei by Stanley Bencina. The Comrades gave the Bettsy Ross aggregation a jolt in three games. Frank Fifolt was again the lumirary for the Comrades having rolled a tv/o hundred forty iive game. This places him third in individual high single game ly new Sunday. According to re- ports we can describe it only as being fancy-plus. SUNDAY DECEMBER 29th NQRW00D B0WLING LEAGUE Bowling for the week beginning with Dec. 15th Team BUKOVNIK STUDIO Mills RaRtlciiffe T. Kotnik Strojni C. Kotnik —Totals Menver Bill Keller Smoly Kromer workeci ] — I otals feam standing. incidentaily, he was the recipient of a five pound box ol candy giver. to the bowler scor- ing the highešt game. The candy was presented by Del Young. Loyahtes v/on three from the Progressives. The league leading Clairwoods proved conclusively that their leader- ship is due to consistent bovvlihg and not just lučk. The slipping Spartans who have not been going so vvell lately were the victims. Stan Bencina held his own hy Corn¬ ing throuigh vvith a remarkable score ! of two hundred forty-two, hovvever, his teammates faltered miserablv thus bringing tvvo defeats to one win. The Boosters vvon two from the Comrades, thus retaining seeond plače. T. Laurich vvas the chief ipins- man in this series having rolled two hundred twenty. The Bettsy Ross team dropped two to the Loyalites who have themselves into a tie for third plače with the Spartans and Comrades. The Loyalites also displaced the Spartan- in high team single by bovvling a nine hundred forty-five game. The Washingtons continued their I winning ways by vvalking off vvith three games from the Progressives. Arko continued his good vvork and is responsible for the reversal of the Kozan’s form. He hit two hundred seventeen, v/hile his teammate Jak- lich banged out a two hundred ten score. ■ It was expected that after Sunday’s games the standingš vvould be alter- ed somevvhat. Hovvever, the Lovalites were the only ones to gain, vvhile the Clairwo'ods strengthened their hold upon first plače. This week brings togther the lead- ing team once again and it is ex- pected that some will change places. Spartans, Comrades and Loyalites are tied for third plače. O nthis trio, the Comrades have the toughest assign- rnent, drawing the povverful Clair- vvoods. Spartans also will have a hard tussle vvith the Boosters; niore- so, since they seem to be slipping while the Boosters have come to life j c again. The Loya!ites will battle the | rejuvenated Kozan’s. Lasch’s (Bettsy Ross), altho in sixth plače may climb -— Totals again by defeating the Progressives for they are but one game behind third plače. 171 1 74 167 184 165 861 I eam KREMŽAR FURN1TURE seam SOEDER’S CANDY 136 1 72 117 148 174 747 Teajn SUPERIOR HOME SUPPLY Tekavec Steple Pike Mul! e n Biatnik — Totals Team \romer Prosek 3nyder Verbič —Totals 164 186 157 179 i6 7 J70 165 221 144 123 171 ; 834 820 i eam Fifolt Kostelec Kobe H ocevar Udovich —Totals Team GRDINA and SONS Team NORWOOD SPORTS Alich Stepic i Petek Skoda Pozelnik 802 869 857 Team DOUBLE EAGLE 16 -Totals 789 782 G RI t t T AbigaH — I see where a scien- ti: t claims each kiss shortens a girls life 1 0 seconds. Phiebe — Heavens above, l’ve been dead 300 years and didn’t knovv it. t $ t They met in mid-air. "Imag ine meeting ycu bere!” said Pap 'Tm falling from my airplane.” “Is that so?” replied Sap. ‘Tm rising from my gosaline stove. t J T “So Beezum has settled in De troit, Flow#come?” ‘‘Well, that’s the first town hio creditor:: could catch him in.” t t t Freddie — Dad, what is an ' This week’s games at -the Noi-iir,piace. But, other teams have vvood league ,held many thrills j their own ambitions and they to the spectators and the play- j are anxious to be in H)ie fin for Brn a IGNAC OKORN ! TAILOR S 980 East 70th Street Florida 0992 J. g SUITS TAILORED AND MADE TO ORDEIt Also clcaning — pressing and repairing. ERHM6CriBHinBSiBH(ni!i2EE@!!ai&i£iHragSg!!nEiiaBPEai!i@iQ9BS£K2'* organ .- Dad (He krovvs) —What mu- sicians get paid for playing on and doctors for cutting out. the » * x Ichabod — What makes legislature so glum today? Cranium — They’ve just dis- covered that they’ve passed a law that everybody can understand. Beginnirg with the new rourfd Sunday, we find a peculiar coin- cidence in that the first four team: who are staging a hot race for first plače will roli against each other. The team emerging vic torious under such conditions can be looked upon as a real leader. 1 he Clairvvoods and Spartans vvill stage their ‘‘do or die” act j Sunday. ■ This series has been looked forvvard to for some time, | and the bovvlers vvill try hard tc j smash ali previous records. The Comrades who have risenj from seventh to a tie for third plače vvill be out to avenge a pre¬ vious defeat in tackling the Boo:t- ers who are in seeond plače. ThF comprises the list cf the first four. Hov/ever, pressing closely behind are the Laseh’s and Loyalites who also are tied for fifth plače and vvill untie the knot in the game: rolled against each other Sunday. The Washingtons and Progress¬ ives complete the schedule. —o— Bovvling shirts are getting to be a fancy araong the teamr. The first to intrbduce them were the Spartans, follovved by Bettsy Ross and then the Collinwood Boost- A complaint should be made to the management about the new pins, or j crs cEefnrelves. Many eventful j plače position and the Grdina U perhaps it was the lack of heat in 1 , , . , " , > I . . . i, • . , ., . - happened in the last v.-sek | ue* tak ere were out to get on the re-gion of tne oms boys, for the . f , . , , . . , , J pins seemed to be f rožen to the spot, H ihe standings of the various j rung of the ladder higher tha and simply vvould not fall. At times j teams cf the league. it seemed that they just meited and J crumbled, hovvever, two vvould remain The Mally Dentists were mown —result ^splits galore. ! dov/n by tr.e Grdina Und.ertakers - (and the Gornik Haberdashers in Instead of the usual “That a Boy!” • , __ j i .1 -7 1 J a briiaant game dovvned the Zak¬ raj: ek Llntertakers to take first plače in tne NorvvoocI League. It was for a long time that the m'anjr a one was greeted vvith “Cheei up, better days are coming!” * The holiday seasons finds many a fretting about vvondering vvhat Dentists occupied the first o F to buy hpr beau that vvould please him most. They / study the list of suggestions, then buy something everybody else is buying. However, j our “supreme coffee man” Bokar re- ceived from his girl a gift that pleased him above anything else. She' f i j- s position to the chagrin of ali the other teams. The plače was oc- cupieA for so long that the Gor- they have but the opponent made no difference and they beti the first plače team giving C:orni!; Habs a chance to cal themselves the best team on tli Norwood League roster. A lot of špirit vvas displaye | in the Bukovnik - Kremžar gai in which the Bukovnik studi: be: /s:d CXI ou an syi to ituc Ho lov tivi tes sei Pt in: hung a three straight defeat the expense of the Kremžar teal 1 he Bukovnik’s displayed mu: ^ , bovvling strength vvith their 9 nu Habs got tired of the stand-! tbtal. : gs and came and conquered the j After a slump of several w e* 3 ptace team by defeating the I the Norvvoods Snorts came fro reasoned, since he is such.a bowlmg 7 ,L ra * .L e f a . . » i wuoas oporis edine fietid, a bowling bali would be just j -p, J t ° r ' * ce , behind and unexpectedly defe« the thing. And just to prove that' . ‘ at -‘ l0wever , Was not the de c d ;:he Double Eagles, vvhile tl it vvas he went out and bowled a ' ::£lve ^ ame the odds vvereiSoeder Candy and the Superi: great five hundred sixty-six series. : agamst the Gorniks and their vvin Home —H. M. A ivas not enough to put them I mpace. Su^ply battled for Not to be outdene. the Com¬ rades vvill šport something entire- FRANK BUTALA 6410 ST. CLAIR AVE. The Plače to Buy Fine Footwear for the Entire Family at a Saving Priče. SLAPNIK BROS. FLOEISTS —- Flowei's for ali occasious. 6113 St. Clair Averme Bauiinlpli 1128 Ono Store Onlv! E23 ! A. Grdina and Sons. Invalid car and auto Service. Funeral Directors Randolph 1881 A Modern Institution. Dependahle and Reasonable VVhen you want a classy j ob of Printing done in a hurry, brina it to this shop. " tci Hand Billa, Public Šale Cards, Wedding Cards, Notices of ali kinds, Business Cards; any and ali Job Printing ' vork ‘ A TRIAL WILL MAKE Y0U ; teady CUSTOMER A Q r American-Jugoslav Printiag & Publishing C®. ‘No Job Too Smoli or Too Larvo 6418 S,. Clair Ave. HetX,o n 5811 ■Januar? 2 ml, 1929.' 'LEVELANjp JOURNAL nr ti issued by the U. S. Rubite Her.'.'.. Service The Public Health Arpects o." Heart Disease Many persons with chronic heart disease, the U. S. Public Health Service recently pointed out, maintain a fair condition oi health for years under favorabl : conditions. A diseased heart however, performs its work Cmdo. a : pecial handicap requiring in creased exertion. The exercise ci n muscle 'within healthful limits i follovved by inereased size and power. However, tiiere is a limit to the ability of a muscle to a-> comrnodate itself to long tor tinued and inereasing etrcin, an if lubjected too much to over strain it becomes vveaker, and les i able to function. In the čase o heart muscle, the inerease in siz and strength in response to th greator demand on the encrgy ir, disca: ed conditions is called ‘com pensation’. The proceos ol thin ning with lessened abi ity to funt- !:oi is called ‘discompensation . vvhich is characterized by breath iessnois, pailor, and. rapid pulse on slight excrtion. The treatmen of heart disease largely 'd open d on the presence or absence o' ‘\ymptom3 of dec o mpensation. i be actual trcatment depend ing on the clasi ification, and cem prisest 1. Limithvg phy:ir.al ac.tivii.ies. 2. Avoiding emo Liana! • .... me r t. 3. Rest in bed fov a preše ib' nurnber of hor.vs crch J 7 . 4. A v oi d in g the Use of drobi ? ccp.t under the -sv.pc- v Lic n of Fhy; ide. 5. Im p ro vin'.; rrinitirn by icniion to the diet. i he c’asi to vvhich a c~se o heart disease belcngi mu st bo c.n sidered carefully vvhen preseribin; exercise. Childrcn who are vvith out symptoms of decojnpensaticr and have never presented such symptoms should be encouraged to lead normal lives with the hab- itual amount of pl^sical activity. However, they should not be al- lowed to participate in competi tive exercises and physical con tests. Cases of heart di; easc that prc sentecl symptoms at some tim prcvious y should indulgc in dim inished activity, cligHtly climinlsh ec! if the symptcm! ara mild an g;eatly dinglnishcd if ih e syr;i tem are marked. icgulated cxcrcise is of distinct I 'ne'i'. ia the trcatment of prop r/ solccted cnrcfiac cases. The : of exercisc to be given at n time i; determined by the mr: nce of the symptoms of sb.c.rnr ensation. Tliis is known : 1 ' tolerance”. When the toler "cn of an inclividual čase for ex. e is onca determined, regu- 1 '1 c : lcyc:scs are carried oul v t'malic.'?lly vvith .improvement, and to an i - creased extent as de levmined by the tolerance. Rest in bed is of special im- portrnco in the trcatment of car f”ac cases presenting symptoms of (' icompersation, such as short oHb-ceth pa lor, and rapid heirt action. It is much bettej t rat the period ; of rest should la¬ čne v.-ith prolongec! rest in bed thus givi-g the damaged hear' e'••••: !c- time to rccovcr its tone Ihan for the rest to be braken in to short interval 3 with more o Ic; s prolorged intermissionn. h severe cases, res': sn a h nepitni i n better procedure than re t in thi c.verage home, dopending on th; amount of intclligcnt tforoperatip tirat rnay be enpeeted of the par ents. Whcneyer- possible, the j/er- GRIN! fluence upon the heart itself. No and the necessity for rest in bed treatment of heart affections m vvhen. preseribed, the kind of diet children will be completely sne- needed, the amount '-»f exercise cessful vvithout careful supervision that should be permitted, and the |or their diet with the view to freedom from emotianal excite- promoting body nutrition as ment that is demanded. She greatly as possible. It has been should emphasize that every found in examinations of school child with a cardiac condition, children that a much higher per- hovvever mild, should be consider- centage classified as undernour- ed an active čase and a candidate ished have heart disease than for periodic reexaminations. children who are properly nour- ished. I The successful treatment of heart disease alt o includes the re moval cf foci of infection, such as decayed teeth and other septic 1 mouth conditions, and the re moval of adenoids and diseased ! tonsils. > J Possible and pptentia! cardiac cases must be considered as ac tive caseš and subjeeted to re peated examinations and reexam ination by the physician for prop- er clarsification and exercise and rest. The provision of adequate school health supervision in a •emmunity and the regular medi¬ ci examinatipns of the children > an important faetor in the con- GOLD IN A TURKEY’S CROP Teacher — Why are you to late for school, James? James — I stopped two boys from fightipg. 1 Teacher — That’s fine; how did you do it? James — I licked them both. t t f Teacher — What is your fathers occupation? Billie — He’ s a worm imitator. Teacher — Mercy sakes, what on earth is that? Billie — He bores holes in fur- niture for an antique dealer. # * ^ Sophonisba — No, Gorganzola trol cf heart disease among chil- 1 cannot be your wife. Please go dren. Mention has been made of away and forget me. the large percentage of cardiac Gorganzola (dejeeted) diseaies in children under the tenth year of age. The discovery of children who have had heari disease, or who have heart dis¬ ease, or who are potential cases chculd be followed by the appli- cation of proper relief measures and the nececsary systematic su¬ pervision, appropriate exercise, proper diet, and environment. Tram the community stand ooint, the school nurse and hei o lcw-up work in the home is ol great value in safeguarding the livea of the iittle ones. The duties of the nurse in the home are ( 1 ) to emphasize the import ance of school examinations and lieeiaminations for the proper cfassification of the condition, from time to time, so thiat the your father. suitable remedial neasures may be 1 heodosia — And as a matter applied; and (2) to inform par- of ceremony you’d better speak to ents of the abnormal conditions the preacher. ’Tsno use, Sophonisba; I’m a memory expert. * v ;l= Him — You know dear, I’ve been thinking over our argument and I ve decided to agree with you. Her — Well, it won’t do you any good. I’ve changed my mind. t $ T “Madam, your husband Iies un- conscious in the hali, with a piece of paper inahis hand and a large box alongside.” “Oh, then my new hat has ar- rived.” :J: * Theophilus (proposing) — As a matter of form Td better ask A Picture for Christmas -j** By Clara Agee Hays iod st in bed should be Tol • lowcd by rccuperative tercatmcn!: in a r.cnvale: cent home or similar cotablishment. Another import • an!: ccnsidcrn.tion in the čase oi chi dren v/ith cardiac diseases is attention to their nutrition. The heart of a growing child inereases in size proportionately -vith the body. Therefore, nutviticnal con ditiens v-hich interfeve with the prep'-" prn T * ,, th nrd clcveloptneht o. L. c jody, cxc:.ci;c a harmful in- N CHiiiSTMAS eve Marion surveyed her apartment— rvreatbs of holly in the win- (iows 'and a tiny tree with colored lights in the living room. For three Christmases —ali alone—she’d done this. Even baked a chicken to— \vell —make it seem Christmasy. Anywny, she vvasn't hnngry or liomeless. Marion’s sinile was'wistful and pertiaps a Iittle bitter. There was •m one in the whole city to share her 'lifistmas. She’d \vorked up to a Jood 'Job, but her business acquaint- niK-es ali had their own family festiv- ities. Ilovv.the girls who worked un- ilcr ln?r had pinnned and chattered for tlie last \veek ! They called Marion “Miss Morris” and were timid hefore lier. Of course, she couldn’t nrenU the ice uith, “I’m only a lonel.v :;fi - l! i>on't th i n k of_ me as a boss. I.et me share yonr fun.” .Marinu paused, nmv, as she passed Mack s 1 picture 011 her talile. I”I::y- nun- slie sereued up her face. Siio'd ret him u preselit, of course. A—a ‘•igarette, čase uitli It is initials—ex- peuslve tmt simple. Thafs t he wa.v Mie girls at 'lite oilice sminded. And tie'd get lier it —She drop;ied 1 he eri diigemem and himied to rešene tlie potaioes—scori-lied lot supiier. I.ast year “.iaik'' had heeti a pres¬ oli frmii horself. Mer hrotlier, Ben. ilmnsands of miles awa.v, l.iad sem a papslior ot himself takeii uith a '(imig man "Siv pni atid 1 — iie’8 a ■tad foltou',’ Ben liad seravied aeross ir<> 'liiicii .Marion had studied tlie line Mio pirful-e and .veaming liorn e: nnreaii/! d dreiiin of romance lier ii'n;il!.\ utlieti last ('hrist- ■ae sim iipd gnilI iI.v cul lier s na Ilire o IT uiid had : he ol h I i i u tod and framed twinkling eyes, becamo maiter-of-faet Miss Morris of the Office. “It’s rldic- ulotis!” she scolded. “Oompletely ih love with a picture! I must be losing my mind!” Vindicatively she thrust “Jack” into a dravver and sat dorvn to make herself read and forget Suddenly the door beli rang. Marion opened the door cautiously. Then she gasped. When David Bruce entered he Won- flered why the attraetive sister Ol his pal stared at him as if she could not believe her eyes and sank weakly into U chair. “. . . Here on business. . • * Told Ben I’d look you np,” he ex- plained a Iittle nervously. “Shouldn’t tiave broken in on your Christmas—a perfect stranger—I—ah—was a Iittle ionesome, I guess . . Marion manged to say softly, ‘Trn glad you came.” And David, looking at her felt that, somehorv, she was. There’d been lots to talk about. David leaving late, antieipated with actual eagerness the dinner with her tomorrow. And Marion’s heart sang as she got np early on Christmas to “get ttiings done.” David came early, too, and Marion, pinning a towel around him, let him help. It seemed lilco m ■ d 11- lo 'U i ]•:•(>ces : i vvs. Mr. AHx vvas one of >f til ne chililren. and so niso 77. w!io ;vus Angeline 'iTii ' Vliv is uni-ie to 41! cliil ift- is mm!,to AT. The , ( :re the (eireiit.- o: LAURA SPOILED THE MATCH (© by D. J. VValsh.) W HEN Laura opened the dpor she savv that something had happened to Aunt Lol. She had run in vvith a section of chocolate layer cake for her aunt’s supper. There vvas a sound of rust- ling paper as she entered, but there vvas no paper in sight. Therefore Laura knew that Aunt Lol vvas sitting upon it, vvhatever it vvas. The wom- an’s cheeks vvere red. Her eyes shone. She looked almost attraetive. And she vvas vvearing her nevv blue crepe. Laura stopped and sniffied. “Tobacco smoke!” she exclaimed laughingly. “Oh, you sly one! Mr. Havvl has been here again.” “Well, vvhat if he has!” snapped Miss Johnson. ‘Tm sure I have a right to see company if I choose. I certainly shan’t ask you or your moth¬ er to pick my friends for me.” “Certainly not We have no such Intentions.” Laura flushed. She set the plate of cake down upon the table and stood hesitating. Usually Aunt Lol asked her to sit dovvn. Novv it vvas evident she vvanted to get rid of the girl in order to go on eicamining those papers vrhich Laura had heard rustling as she entered. Laura burned vvith curiosity. She felt she just had to see vvhat Aunt Lol vvas concealing. She vvalked deliberately over to tlie vvindovv and pretended to be admiring a pot of begonia on the vvindovv sili. That begonia vvas Aunt Lol’s treas- ure. “Just look !” she «xc!aimed. “I do believe—why, ifs a mealy bug!” Aunt Lol sat stili. Laura lifted the pot in her hands. Out of the corner of her eye she savv her aunt vvriggling un- comfortably. The pot slipped from the girl’s hands and crashed upon the floor. AVith a shout of dismay Aunt Lol leaped from her chair. There on the cushion underneath her lay some highly colored circulars. Laura gavg them one quick, comprehensive look before she ran out of the house. Mrs. Johnson, a small, faded vvom- an, vvas at vvork in the steaming kitchen vvhen her daughter dashed in. The Johnsons had kept boarders ever since the death of the head of the house. “Mother!” Laura’s bright young face vvas pale. “That man, Havvl, is trying to get Aunt Lol interested in vvhat he’s selling. And she is interested! I tried so hard to find out vvhat she vvas up to that I broke her begonia jar. So I’m going to give her my blue bowl to stick the old plant in.” Laura grabbed the blue bovvl, vvhich vvas vvorth many such plants, jar and ali, and ran back to her aunfs. Wlien she entered the house for the second time the papers vvere out of sight. Aunt Lol accepted the bovvl vvith more appreciation than she usually accepted offerings from her brother’s vvidovv and her daughter, for this time she vvas pleased. It vvas vvorth risk- ing the begonia to get hold of the bovvl vvhich she had long vvanted. ‘Tm going to have some nevvs for you one of these days, Laura,” she said importantly. “Good nevvs, I hope!” Laura started to put her arm about the vvoman. But the arm fell to her side, as Miss John¬ son said impressively: “You needn’t be a mite surprised if I’m married before long to Mr. Fred- rick Havvl!” This time Laura returned to her mother in agony. “Mother! She thinks she is going to marry him. Novv vve have got to do something.” “What can vve do?” Mrs. Johnson prodded vvith a fork into the potato kettle. It vvas almost time for the six o’cIock vvhistle to blow vvhen six hungry factory vvorkers vvould come trooping in. Laura pushed back her short wavy locks from her knitted brovv. She was troubled and perplexed. “Laura! Run over to the store and get a piece of cheese to go vvith the apple pie. Miss Miller’s so fond of (fheese. There’s some money on the shelf there. Hurry!” Mrs. Johnson turned from the potato kettle to peep into the oven. Laura flevv on the errand. As she turned the corner she savv Mr. Havvl coming tovvard her. Mr. Havvl vvas a stranger in tovvn. He lived at the hotel and his business vvas unesplained. He had made a friend or tvvo and these friends had introduced him to certain persons, vvoinen mostly, vvidovvs and spinsters. Thus he had made the acquaintance of Aunt Lol. From the first he had seemed to pay Aunt Lol a great deal of attention. He had sent her flovvers and cand.v. Naturally she vvas im- pressed. Laura, in her second college vear, vvas mystified until she remem- bered that A^int Lol had received ali tlie money -from a relative’s estate vvhich should have been divided equall l.v betvveen Aunt Lol and Laura’s fa- ther. Some said she had used her in- liuence unfairly. Laura and her moth¬ er did not knovv. A very iittle of the monej’ Aunt Lol vvas hoarding vvould have made them comfortable and lieiped Laur i’ through enliege. As n vvas. Aunt l.ol kept hvhi-.v peniiy for herself. But Iter nature liad its snfi side, and that vvas vvhere Mr. Havvi rame in. Mr. Havvl vvas shovvv looking and much vnuoger tlian Aunt ( -«>!. tluragli h e |ire! 1 tiiieii tn initiee nn dilTitrrUce in tlieir ages. Nnvv, vvlien he itn-l ! :> 11; r 1. his "vos lit vvith intere-t. Fe:' hai-rv ai'-‘ vvnr«-v 1 11-i o:’ i t ■ s ■ Laura’s natural cha-rm. Bagides, sh e smiled charmingly. Mr. Havvl ’ vvas plainly fascinated. As a consequence Laufk and Mr. Havvl stood on the corner and talked for twenty minutes. When Laura re¬ turned vvith the cheese her mother vvas vexed. “Don’t scold!” Laura looked mis- chievous. “I’ve been making a date— vvith Mr. Havvl. He’s going to take Aunt Lol for a ride after supper. And Fm going, too!” When at the edge of evening Mr. Havvl drove up to Aunt LoTs door he had the radiant Laura sitting beside him. Laura looked lovely in her tan sports suit. “What does thismean? Laura! What are you doing here?” demanded Aunt Lol. She vvas angry. There vvas no room for her in front So she had to get into thp rumble seat. It vvas not vvhat she had espeeted nor vvhat she vvas prepared for. Laura’s hair stayed on. Aunt Lol nearly lost hers and her hat as vveli, for Mr. Havvl vvas a fast driver. They came to a gayly lighted pa- vilion. Laura made Mr. Havvl stop and dance. Aunt Lol sat in the car. Laura had to have ginger pop and and chevving candy and Ice eream. Aunt Lol couldn’t partake. By this time it vvas getting late and she vvas getting furious. She demanded to be taken home. j She came over nest morning, blaz- ing vvith rage. Laura, looking pale, vvas vvashing dishes. “I vvas sick ali night, loading my stomach vvith that stuff,” the girl said. “I vvish you’d died!” exploded Aunt Lol. “If I had lt vvould have been in a good cause,” Laura sighed. “You’ve vvrecked my life! You’ve stolen my lover! We vvere going to be so happy! I had money for both ! We vvere going to buy some vvonder- ful property and go away from here together. But novv—ITI never have any more to do vvith him! After the way he carried on vvith you! It vvas revolting! You egged him on. You made him lose his head. You—you are a—a—vamp!” She flung out of the house. Mrs. Johnson stared at her daugh¬ ter. “What’s ali this, Laura?” “Nothing, Mom; I flirted a bit vvith Mr. Havvl and shovved him up to Aunt Lol. She’s a bit jealous. I just couldn’t let him rob her, for after ali she’s Dad’s sister. I don’t expect she’11 ever forgive me. But ifs over novv. The man is gone. He vvill nev¬ er shovv his face in these parts again. He’s the fellovv my roommate at col¬ lege vvrote me about. , Remember? Last night he shovved me some snap- shots he’d taken and a letter fell out of his pocket addressed to Forrest Hitchcock. That vvas his real name. He tried to get the letter away from me, but 1 vvouldnT give it up till he’d promised to clear out. So thafs Uu>’ My head aches like to split. But, Mom! Don’t be too hard on Aunt Lol. She has alvvays vvanted to get married, and this looked like such a splendid chance!” Controversy Waits on Ver diet of Scientista You can’t teli by the shape of a man’s head vvhether he is built for a straight or combination last and it doesn’t seem possible to determine from his footprint much about tlie contour and convolutions of his cra- nium, but it ought' to be as easy to reconstruct the creature vvho left the enormous imprint of a human foot in the rocks of Rhodesia as the one vvhose skull top, molar and a bit of femur vvere exhumed in Java. An Italian expedition believes this is a trače of the oldest race of man and, allovving, of course, for the enthusiasm of a discoverer and assuming no acci- dentai similarity of appearance tlie fellovv must have passed that way a long vvhile ago. Nature’s process of making cement is slovv. Geologists vvill first have a look at the Stone. They vvill identify it as belongipg to a certain period of tlie eartlfs history and, knovving the gen- erally prevailing conditions and tlie circumstances under vvhich the rock vvas formed, vvill be able to say vvheth¬ er it vvas possible for human life to exist at the time. If their opinion fur- nishes no alibi, anthropologisfs vvill direct their suspicious scrutiny to the marks, searching for evidence to dis- prove the theory of a footprint. Cred- ulity has no plače in the scientific mind; it must test every step for error. Ali doubts resolved in favor of au- thenticity, they vvould take the most delicately exact measurements for purposes of comparison. The knovvn vvorid of primates vvould have to sub- mit to the footprint method of idenl ifi¬ cation, and even then, tlie set of tlie muscles due to posture, probahly in niotion, vvould have to be considered to account for the shape and deptli of tlie marks.—Louisville Courier- Jounmi. Malaria Wipcs Out Zulus Mal arin has taken a terrlhle t"H 11 Zuluiand vvhere it is reiidrted ip South Afričan department ' -i !«•>!••: «'‘i: • ”7, CLEVELAND JOURNAL Page, 6 January 2nd, KATE ' f! AND HER QUILT tiku «S by D. J. TValsh.) E VER since sli e could remember, Katie had wanted to make a Pi - etty quilt for herself. But she had never had time for any- Sng bat the plainest, most utilitariun seving. Keeping buttons sewed on, stockings damed, hand - me - dovn clothes niade over, for five younger brothers and 'sisters had kept Katie too busy to do anything so frivolous as to make a quilt for her hope cliest. And after ali, vhy should she be fillingi a hope chest? She had never time to go out with any beans—grant- e,d she had any beaus to invite her out. Ali the same, Katie cherished her dream of a pretty quilt. She had made quite a colleetion of quilt pat- terns, for several friends of her in¬ valid motlier .had given given, hor their ciioicest patterns. One 'vom- an ]|iad even offered to cut out the bloeks to piece if Katie would just buy the material. . But Katie-had nev¬ er had the money she felt she could špare. That is, not until the last of the five younger brothers and sisters \vere through liigh scliool. Then, her moth- er being dead, and the čare of tli o house not so pressing, Katie had got ; herself a job clerking in the dry goods store. The hours were long, and the pay vas smali. But even a fev dollars a few dollars a weelc seemed wealth to the worn little creature who for so many years had scarcely a' penny she could call her very own, to do witb what she liked. Unconsciously, day after day, as she stood at the counter, Katie was choos- ing the color of her quilt, maldng up her mind whether she \vould do a log- cabin quilt in green and buff, a dou- ble Irish chain in rose and vhite, or a pimvheel in delft blue and cream. Sometimes, vhen the remnants of vash; goods vere especially attractive Katie considered making an oldffash- ioned quilt of ali different kinds of lit¬ tle squares, the colors set in hit or miss. The quilt vas stili, to be started when the last of Katie’s sisters mar- ried, and the youngest of the boys vent into the navy; leaving the old house so nearly empty that Katie de- cided to seli it and dfvide the pro- ceeds among the six of them. Eleven hundred dollars vasn’t as mnch as it might have been, but it looked like a fortune to Katie vhen the check for her share of the house money vas handed to her. The thou- sand dollars she promptly put in the bank, but the hundred dollars She had paid to her in crisp, fresh bills. Care- full.v she folded them and laid them in the very inside pocket of her shab- by purse, then valked briskly out of the bank. Katie, at the age of tliirty-three, vas about to start filling her hope chest, and the first item vas to be d quilt. Some vay, vhen she vent to look at the green and buff and rose and delft blue materials, none of them seemed to be just vhat she really vanted. As a matter of fact, she wasn’t quite sure that she vanted to piece a quilt She thought per- haps she would like to make one of the applique quilts that slie had seen advertised in the catalogue from the vholesale house, quilts that had been too expensive to varrant their pur- chase for the Plainville Dry Goods em- porium. Hovever, vith $100 ’ in her purse, there vas nothing to prevent Katie from going to the city to buy a quilt. And that is precisely vhat Katie pro- ceeded to do. Never in her beanty-craving, heauty- starved life, had Katie seen such love- ly things as vere displayed in the vindows of the Stores. Like a person in a dream, she feasted her eyes upon the exquisite linens, satin-covered dovn comforts, the fluffy blankets— and the quilts. In the fancywork seetion of the largest store Katie found the quilt of quilts. Rose and lavender morning glories tumbling gracefully out of a great vood-brown basket, the handle of vhich vas caught vvith a huge nat- tier blue bov knot. Rose ancl iaven- der morning glories trailing about the border of the quilt. Kate caught her breath in ecstacy. Lovinglv she fingered the squares of vhite muslin, the petal-sliaped pieceš of violet and rose, the leaves of green, the slender “ribbons” of blue. “Want it sent or vili you take it vith you?” brlskly inquired the clerk, to vhom Katie’s qnilt vas simply de- sign number three-eleven. “Ul take it vith me,” ansvered Katie. Hugging the parcel el ose to her shabby coat, Katie left the store and started back to the room she had en- gaged in a modest boarding house not so' far from the loop. That night Katie slept vith the quilt blocks laid on a chair dravn close heside her bed. And the next morning she began vork on the first block. For days Katie seved. And then she decided to get a job »in the store vhere she had purchased the quilt. 'Hien every day she could gaze at the fmished sample quilt—feast her e.yes on a picture of vhat her own quilt vould some day be. City vages vent barcly as far as those in Plainville, for ali that the city vages vere nearl.v double tbose of the tovn. SUH Katie ..’ e l vvitllOUt {ti-nvvlng Spi mlini: '• ■: ing. Because she could get a discount from the store vhere she vorked, Katie bought herself a hope chest—a little box-Iike affair covdred vitli cheerful rose-sprigged cretonne. She also bought an enameied, flover pot in vhich she set a real oid-fashioned rose geranium. It was the rose geranium that first attraeted James Dudley. James, being on the 12 to 12 shift of the bus route, never sav Katie herself for veelcs aft¬ er he took a room at Mrs. Casper’s “select house.” But he sav Katie’s geranium. He even ventured into the open-doored room and sniffed hungril.v at tlie fragrance of the funny little deeply-cut leaves. James also noted the sprigged ere- tonne-covered chest. The roses in itš pattern looked like those in his moth- er’s garden in England. Mrs. Gašper introduced James and Katie one evening vhen James vvas laid off vith a vrenched vrist, hence vas at the select dinner table. After dinner, James, mentioning the rose geranium, vas invited by Katie. if he cared to, “To smoke a pipe vvhile slie seved avhile.” Admiringly James gazed at Katie’s head, bent over ttie precious quilt block. “I thought,” ventured James, “that American, girls vere too bnsy to sew such things.” ‘fSome are—Prti not,” crisply retort- ed Katie. The long seams of the quilt had been -carefully Stitched. The binding had been hemmed about the edge. The quilt itself had been completed. The fluilt was beautiful, thought Katie, as she folded it and laid it in the little chest. But nov that it vas done, vhat vas to be made next? She could make one of those taffeta pillovs. But some vay the idea did not appea! es- pecially to her. It vas James who made up Katic’s mind for her. “I haven’t much saved up,” he apologized, “vhat vitli my six years in the army and having to take čare of my rnother for tvo years after. But I have a little, and because I drove motor lorries for four years in France, I guess I can hoid my jo’>' here, and I knov you are the kini vho vili make a vife vho is a vife.” Katie smiled happil;’. She knov vhat she vould sev nest. She vould buy some of those remnants of diaii toveling and commence homming them. “Teir you vhat, Katie,” said James, “I never should have had the coupige to ask you if ,you had been the kind Vho had to be stepping ali -the time you weren’t at vork. What decided me vas seeing you sevving on the quilt.” Christmas and Heart s M e««« By Lily Rutherford Morris OUT OF THE RUT Visitors Attraeted to Nation’s Rural Scliools ! It is nothing uncommon nov for i tourists traveling through tlie eoun- , try to stop and pay a visit to a rural sc-hool on fbe roadside. Mostly such visits are made by persons acttvely interested in educational enterprise.., but sometimes tlie calls are made pnre- ly for the novelt.v of the experience. Often the- teacher puts on a little impromptu entertainment, and vhere the visitors express a desire to maka a donation it is accepted for tlie ii- brary fund. In that way some of the rural school libraries have been con- siderably augmentečt Substantial gifts have folloved from casual visits to the rural schools by pleasure trnv- elers, either interested in school prob- tems or visbing to relax for a time from a motor trip in the atmosphef# of a country schoolroom. In either čase tlie experience is enjoyed by the pupils as veli as the chance visitors. i In one instance a tourist and his vife stopped at a remote rural school for a brief sta.y. Nothing vas thought of the incident, but a few veeks later some needed equipment vvas defivered at the schoolhouse with the compli- ments of the visitors, vho liajled from another State. What are knovn in Keritucky as one-room school liousos alvays excite the interest of visitors vith a particular bent for observing educational methods and systems. The rural schoolroom and the sur- roundings present a better appearance nowadays. Visitors are likely to drop in at any time, and the average rural school nov endeavors to make a good impression vhen company comes, to look around and perhaps to note 'the progress of the pupils., Certainly vis¬ its are an incentive to keeping things neat and trim.—Will Kaltenbacker ir • tlie Louisville 'Courier-Journnl. (© by D. J. Valsh.) W HENEVER there vas a party or a new shov in tovn Edith Flaxman knev as a matter of course that Loring Black would ask her to go. Sometimes he even omitted the formality of asking, merely remarking that he’d be around for her at a certain time. She was thirty years old and since they had been in higl) school Lorin Black ahvays had been her escort. | Living so near he was in and out of the house constantly. When they were youuger, people had smiled in kindly fashion at their devotion and expect- ; ,ed a vedding in a short time, but the expectation had died as the years vent on. The rest of their little crovd married and set up their households. Envying the girls she knev vere busy vith fheir nevv furniture and curtains, Edith vould have died ratlier than to admit to any of them tbat in ali this tirne Loring never once had spoken of ! marriage. Slie felt humiliated and at j fault. ; Ile cared for her she was certain j and he took her affection for granted. I It vas a rut in vhich they traveled i ahvays on the same line, getting no- vhere. Deep in her heart for a long time nov had been groving fear that nothing ever vould change the situa- tion. Popular, handsome, adored by j his mother and two sisters, Loring vas far too comfortabie to feel the urge to change and establish his own home. Life vas too kind to him. In fact, she vas too kind to him. But determine as she might she never vas ouite able to carfy through any plan to break the sliaCkles of habit, to make otlier friends among the men, to establish her right to vvin her ovn plače in life. She had been a pretty girl and vvas nov too handsome a vvoman to remain unnoticed but, though slie fought the fact, no one in lier eyes ever measured up to Loring Black, selfish though he might be. The summer in vvhich she had gone j to Europe, bidding him good-by vvith a j heavy heart and smiling lips, resolved see, said Ann, laugbing, vith i to break away from tlie chains vhich at the picture. “A syrnj)atheliv ! iield her, Loring had gone dovn to Nev York to see her off, had filled her cabin vith fruit and books and tlovvers and had held both of her hands at the gangplank. “Hurry home, Edith,” he had begged her. “This is a terrible idea of yours, this trip! Don’t knovv hov I’m going to stand your being away!” They had looked at each other a trifle breathlessly amid the jostling crovd and then tlie gong had sounded and be had left her. And that hope died out. Ali summer she had |.\ T N laid tlie bevspaper aside witb a auizzical sinile. “VVon- der if he Is a bacheior or a vidover? Well, Pil nor be long fipding out,” hur- riedly jotting dov?n the ad- dress. Half an hour later she vas ringing the doorbell of a jire- tentious house on one of the city’s best streets. “I came in ansver to the ad about Christmas-making,” she said sveetlj to the somber-looking man who opened the door. “Are you the gentleinan who wants a lady assistant?” “Yes. Efiease come in.” The man possessed poise. Ann vas at once impressed by his manner and began to enlighten him about herself. "I am Miss Thomas. I live at the Britling on Broad\vay. Your ad ap- pealed to me because 1, too, am aloiie in the vvorld and tired of going out for my Christmas dinner vith no one about to do some- thing for. I’d just love to get ready for a real Christ¬ mas in a sure enough home. Do you think I vili doY Jim Hilton’sfaee iighted. “I see no reason why you vouldrft if you are willing to under- tnke the task of trying to c-heer up an old bacheior vho has grieved through Christmas years—since my mother vvas taken There’s a cook, of course, but,” slirug- ging šignificantly, “vvho vvants to eat turkey alone?” “I him feeling exists hetveen us, at any rate. I should like to begin prepara- t'on s at once if you think 1 look like the right person for the joyful vork.” “Good! The house is at your Serv¬ ice, Miss Thomas. Don’t mind ex- pense. Get vhat you vant and if i can help I shall he delighted.” “Tlien we’ll go shopping right ivav. There’s no time to lose vith Christmas only three days off.” ‘TU get the car,” he announced, reaching for 1 s coat. “Let’s make the old house look'gay and festive— j thought of the time vhen she should Real Enjoyment There are tvvo kinds of enjojniient. The sensuous from the depth of tlie senses, such physical enjoyment n s eating a good steak or a chop. Sen¬ suous enjoyments are onl.v momentary and many people are never satisfied, like a person vvho eats around the chop but never enjoys the chop. In- tellectual enjoyments are not so in- tense, but far more lasting, and one never has to regret them. Rather than ever getting tired of tliem either, one finds them more and more arresting. Intellectua! enjoyments give compound interest.—Excli an ge. Seal Farm in Alaska Dncle Sam's “fur farm” on the , Pribilof islands, vest of the Alaskan malnland, netted a $1,000,000 crop of ; seals last year and bfonght the value i of the present herd up to about $M2,- j 000,000. The 31,000 seals killed dur- ing the summer are valued at from ! $35 to $40 apiece for their tanned fijrs. i The herd nov numbers more tli: n j 872,000 as coupared to '250,000 in j 1011. the yp;ir vvlren the '.v h-n;--n n »Ini-rliter ww stopped. In tlie Uitter rvi'" - r i'--- :i!cc!:ih centnrv. it i- it has been gloomy long enough. Why, you knov, I feel pepped 'up already.” “So do I,” replied Ann. “I’m getting the špirit fast. Let me have a pen- ci! and paper, please. I’ll make a list vhile you fetch the car. We must have wreaths and candles in every vindov, of course; and a tree and the trimmings and— I hope th« cook hasn’t made the fruit cake. ] have a grand recipe and I’d just love to go to the kitchen and stir up the mixture. Do you think she vvould oh- ject?' 1 j “Not Carrie. But 1 hadn’t thought i to impose the cooking on you.”- “Impose! For five years I’ve vvant- ed to make a fruit cake. But how could I vithout a kitchen to vork in? ITI make it to- morrov, if you don’t mind, even if Carrie has one al- ready.” “Oh, certainly. I want you to feel privileged to ffian- age as you vish.” What a jolly morning for Ann and Jim, though it vas the mere be- ginning of a three- day period of in- creasing fun. Christmas eve shovved the house ablaze vith liglit and gloving vith Christmas ehefer. The tree glistened vith its varicolored lights, and gifts vere piled beneath it for neighhor- hooii children who had been asked to come next morning. Ann rushed in late, havirg silssed her car, for Jim vvas told to remain at home to re- ceive the kiddies. Not in years had the [Jilton home seen such revelry. Later the old couple aeross the vay vere brought in for dinner. The ta¬ ble vas beautiful vith poinsettia, red candles in silver holders, and sprigs of holly at each pl ate. “Why, Mr. Hilton!” ezelaimed the frail little voman, “how did you learn to make things so pretty?” “I haven’t learned, Mrs. Dean. Flease give Miss Thomas credit for everything,” and Jim bowed gracious- ly to Ann. There was a merr.v twin- kle in his eye as he smiled upon her, and in his heart tliere vvas a grim determination to try to persuade Ann to beeome the permanent man ager of his home. Her ansvverinj sinile, at least, seemed hopeful. ((Sl- 19 23 »-; KTootaru M an ,atvaravr tt»Un. V Is ižSlalssi a lSž^i ž^ili^ilgHg^HitgljHgtiilafeitgBžgfžii ADVERTISE IN THE “CLEVELAND JOURNAL” ;o home and vvheD slie did return his unaffected joy at seeing her had svvept avvay ali her stern resolutions. Loring vas Loring and slie would take vhat vvas given her thankfully, tiiough she liated herself fot vviiat she felt was lack of špirit. “Loring is never going to marry,” his motlier was in tlie liabit of say- ing. “He is too devoted to his sis¬ ters and mjself. \Vhy should lie mar- ry vhen lie has a home like this—run vith no trouble and čare to himself?” She said it before him, anxiously vhen lie vvas younger. proudly as he grevv older. She had feared at first that Edith Flaxman vould have vv 7 on him avvay. Even Loring himself could not have told hovv lie had placidly accepted thjngs as they vere vvith no great de¬ sire to change tliem. Wlien the right time came, he told himself, Edith and he vvould marry. There vas no need of speech, they understood each oth¬ er. Ali this time, he insisted to him- self vvhen his inner self reproached liim. she had been free, he had not tied her dovvn to vaiting. Yet if she had not vaited he knev he could not have endured it. Edith’s married sister vas at times outspoken. “You are a fool to let I.oring Black monopolize you ali this time,” she told Edith. “He has no right to cut yon off from tlie rest of the vorld and do nothing more. He loves you and doesn’t knovv it. It is up to you to bring tliings to a head. Either niarry liim or send liim avvay. Or do you expect a miracle to hap- pen ?’ Fluslied and miserable, Edith had flared out at her and sileneed her. Bitterly she told herself that no mira¬ cle vvould happen, nothing vvould ever change things as they had grovvn to be. She and Loring vvould grovv old and gray in this ' lifeless comjpanion- ship. At times she looked unhappy and there vvere lines on her face. And then Loring Black, hectored by an insistent pain in his side, vent to the Consulting room of a noted phy$ieian, was received by an asso- ciated dnetor vho after an examina- tion and questioning told liim to re¬ turn tlie next day for the great doc- tor’s advice after he had studied tlie chart the assistant vas even then making out. He vvas not to vorry. Blithel.v twenty-four hours later Loring Black ran up the same steps and vas ushered into the inner Office. He sat there, handsome, confident and at ease and Doctor Morehead, regard- ing him, felt the recurrent pang of sorrovv that dogged his life vvork. “Black,” he said after some fevr vv-irds, “I’m going to give it to you : ,\:"»igbt from the shoulder. It seems inpossibie, I know—but you’ve got thout six months. There’s nothing to be done. Brace up.’ liiU!ii!aliiii!iilaiiiUiiilaliila!iiU!iiUlii)alii!BliiU!iil« vas a gray and misty day and in the misf nnri fog Loring Black valked fur miles out of the tovn along the river road. It vas a favorite valk in summer of himself and Edith. At the thought of Edith he staggered against a tree and clutching it laid hjs bot cheek against the rough oak bark. As a lightning flash reveals the entire lanuscape dovn to its smallest details this svord which had slashed his inmost soul revealed blindingly ali the long years since Edith and he had been in school, the years during vhich she had vaited and he had let her vait. Ali that he had missed. Gray faced, hours later, he vent up the valk to his home. There vere bright lights in every vindovv, and as his hand touehed the doorknob ' the door flev open. “Loring!” cried his mother. “Where have you been? \Ve have been so vorried—hov tired you look! When you’ve had some dinner you had bet¬ ter call up a Doctor Morehead, vho has been telephoning here every half hour since the middle of the after- noon—vho is he, Loring?” Feverishly at the phone Loring Black hesitated and then gave the number. There vas nothing more that Morehead could teli him that mattered nov. Why couldn’t he let him alone in his misery? “Black,” came the doctor’s crisp toneš at the other end of the vire. “I don’t knovv vhat to say, hovv to square myself. You must have been going through tortures! That fool assistant of mine had mixed the charts—and I gave you the fate of another man, poor chap! Ali that ails you is crossed ribs and a slight ad- hesion—’’ For the only time in ali his strong life Loring Black fainted. “Let me alone,” he told his mother and hovering sisters vhen he came to. “I don’t vant any dinner. I haven’t got time. I don’t vant to rest! I’ve got to go and see Edith at once 1” He vas not conscious of valking the few rods to Edith’s front gate, but presently he found himself in the room vith her and they vere alone and his arms vere around her. He held her as though he vould never let her go. “If you can ever forgive me for be¬ ing a blind and selfish idiot,” he begged, “teli me you’ll marry me, Edith 1 Next veek—tomorrov! We’ve vasted so much time. Let’s drive to the county seat tomorrow and be off on our honeymoon! Bight away!” Looking into his ardent eyes, Edith Flaxman knev that the miracle had in some way happened and vas not inciined to question fate. He did love her and that vas ali that mattered. ‘Til do it, Loring,” she told him. Books “Balanced” After Forty Strenuous Years French authors vho had knovn the el d er Dumas, author of “The Three Musketeers” and “The Connt of Monte Cristo,” personally, told me this mov- ing story. When Dumas came to Pariš he vas very poor; his entire fortune con- sisted of a 20-frane gold piece. But soon he rose to vorld farne, made im- mense sums of money and lived like a king. He spent money profusely, he played the stock market and von and lost hundreds of thousands from one day to another. But after forty years of Iuxury, he became a poor man once more. When he vvas Iying on his deathbed a friend of his visited him. The dying man lay on a simple iron cot in a modest, poverty-stricken little room. The doc¬ tor had just left him, and Dumas shovved his guest the preseription the doctor had vritten for him. T shall have to take this medicine right avay,” the sick man said in a vveak voice. The friend took the preseription and started to take it down to the phar- macist. “Wait a second,” Dumas said. *You’ll need money, too; medicine costs money, like everything else in the vorld!” And he opened the draver of his night cabinet. “I think I stili have enough money for medicine.” After a long search, he did find one single 20-franc gold piece in the dravver. That constituted his entire fortune. He gave it to his friend vith a sad sinile playing on his lips: ‘Forty years ago I arrived in Pariš vith 20 franes. What a lucky man I am! Look hov much I have played the market! And, as you see, I liaven’t lost an.vtliing in forty years!”—Ferenc Molnar in Yanity Fair. Faliacy Mayor Maekey, of Philadelphia, a university man himself, believes that every boy who vishes it should re- ceive a college education. “I hope,” said the mayor in an in- tervievv, “to do something for ambi- tious youth in my administration. I am a great believer in the benefits of education and I disagree totally vvith the iiliterate millionaire vho once said to me: ‘ ‘These here fellers vvith a mint of knovvledge can never coin it into good hard cash.’ ” Most Important Thing Three passengers in a big sports car vere having a lively argument as to vhether they vvould beat a train at a level Crossing. “Don’t get excited,” cried the driver, ‘I can do it easily.” “And I sny you can’t!” yeiled the man at the side of the driver. “Tlie train’s going a lot faster than ve i.” ‘Well,” said the passenger in the rear seat, “I don’t čare vho vins this race, so long as it’s not a dead heat._ Weeldy Scotsman. MAEKJE HAD NO USE FOR PACIFISTS (© by D. J. Walsh.) O F COURSE, it had been un- vise for Tim Brady to buy a car vhile the house vas stili so far from being paid for. Just because for ten years Tim had held a good job vith a good firm vas no reason for counting on the job and the firm lasting for another ten years, or for five years or even one year more. As a matter of fact, it lasted just six months after Tim contracted to buy the car. But that is getting ahead of the story. Tim wanted the car for Madge, for vith three little children to čare for Madge vas pretty veli tied dovn. A car vould mean that she could pack the children in and drive to town to call on her old friends. And on Sun- day they could ali drive out into the real country and have picnics. That vas hov Tim had reasoned vhen he took his $500 share of Aunt Loutse’s legacy and plunged the whole amount for the dovn payment on a shiny nev sedan. As for Madge, she took her $500 share and had an oil painting of the three jolly blue-eyed Brady youngsters painted—Madge had alvays wanted a really good portrait of the children, And nov ali three of the children vere a year older than when Aunt Louise’s Iegacy had arrived. Tim vas vithout a job that paid enough to keep things going, for the old firm had failed, and try as best he could the orders for the new firm did not build up commission checks large enough to meet ali the necessary expenses of the household. The finance company had taken back the not-quite-so-sbiny, not-quite-so-new sedan. Madge stopped taking cream. She and Tim drank milk in their cof- fee. Madge gave up having a voman come in to help her with the cleaning, and she stopped sending the vashing out, but did everything save the spreads and sheets herself. The money talks betveen Tim and Madge tumed into arguments, the ar¬ gumenta into reeriminations, the re- criminations into quarrels. “If only you had kept your promise to let me manage the budget,” ex- claimed Madge reproachfully the night of the day the man came and cut off the electricity because of the long overdue bili. “You know I got the car for the sake of you and the children,” defend- ed Tim. “It vould have been more to the point to make sure of a house roof over our heads,” snapped Madge in return, for Madge had been lying avake nights vorrying about the pay- ments due on the little house, and her disposition vas shoving the results of sleeplessness. “I didn’t notice you spending any of your share of the legacy on a roof,” retorted Tim. “I alvays wanted a real portrait of the children, they’re such darlings,” murmured Madge, gazing fondly at the truly lovely picture, vhich occupied the plače of honor above the lov man- tei of the living room fireplace. “Well, yon’ve got it,” grovled Tim vho vanted to read his nevspaper, but vho couldn’t by the light of the one candle. “That’s more than you can say of vhat you spent your share on,” an¬ svered Madge, acidly, for Madge vas vvorn ont from overvork as well as sleeplessness. “Oh, the devil, Madge, don’t let’s go on ragging this vay about money— it’s just money, money, money—fight, fight, fight,” protested Tim. “Who vants to go on like this?” stormed Madge in return. ‘Trn sure I don’t. It’s getting to be too much of a strain trying to put up a bluff of being happy befo e the children. If people can’t keep peace for the sake of the children tliey ought not to try to go on living together for their sakes.” • “\Vant a divorce?” grovled Tim. “No, thanks,” replied Madge, icily, “though it’s kind in you to suggest one so promptly. A separation vili do quite nicely.” “Ali right, if you feel that way about it,” answered Tim, vho vanted just at that moment to take MaiHe in his arms and teli her hov sorry he .vas that she looked so tired and miserable and hov much he loved her but vho vas just too stubbornly proud to acknovledge he had been in tlie vrong about buying a car vith¬ out asking her advice, “I’J1 take up an offer I had made me today and go dovn to South America for three years. This job is in Peru and pav- a decent salary, so ril be out of ver vay and silili able to help support v and the kids.” “Don’t bother about me,” renli Madge, stiffly, ‘Tli g0 light back , my old job—and you know dress i- signers get a lot more money tod,- than they did seven years ago.” Silently Tim sat and thought of 1 , far from Berwyn, lil., Lima, Pen, Silently Madge sat and thought of 1 far from Lima, Peru, is Berwyn “You don’t think ve ought to to keep on together for a vhile i er—for the childrens’ sakei”’ tu red Tim, hopefully. “Fve seen so much fighting re ly Im getting to understami pacifists feel—‘peace at an v p,.;,, me from nov on,” replied &ad~, S ,n,ply ached to g 0 across to °7 ; put her arms around him and r,- hov sorry she vas that slie , been .satisfied to just h f!v - e K0 ®.„ iy H th* Chi»* en in«t*ut w»««!l»g all 0 f the fa« an oil psrtrait, aDd to teli hi®^ c ” jjg j best to earn a living for tlie she knev he vas trying *' 0 ': ... - » *0Vo] ; eil and that slie vas sorry he Iook' 1111 ^ tired, and that she loved him in t o in spite of everythisig, and tw blts was sorry they. had drifted i nto - S | ' ! a bitter quarrel. “Ali right, have It your own assented Tim, vith an air of resv^'" tion he vas far from feeling, ‘ Slla ‘ And just then a young vhi rIv ,. svept into the ilving room, p Cf| ’' afl violently on an outgrovn veloci« “Oh, Daddy,” exclaimed slx-y ea f , s ' i Louise, “these handlebars are so i they tie my back in hard knots. er said you’d lift them for r Will you?” 8ain ' “Sure thing,” answered Ti m , forced cheerfulness. “Just brin- !„ my wrench like a good girl.” ° 111 e Five minutes later, strugg]i ng st , hornly to adjust the handlebars vith out asking Madge to help him, j; vas stili meditating on the numb er !! miles separating Peru from Ber v - v ,, Nearby Madge, stubbornly refusin^t help vith the velocipide until askefl 0 vas refiecting on the same disturbi n J mileage. Shrewdly Louise gazed at her ,moth er and asked: “Why don’t you the handlebars stili for Daddy, way you nsually do?” “I—I was seving,” lamely ansvered Madge. A moment later, In the course of ad- justing the vorn little handlebars Tim’s strong brovn hand closed over Madge’s housevork roughened, house- vork reddened fingers. Instantly Madge looked up into Tim’s eyes and smiled, a tired, happ y little smile. And Tim, leaning close, whispered, “We’ll make out some xvay’ sveetheart.” “Not in Peru, Tim. Oh! Not in Peru,” whispered Madge. “I never could manage ali three of them alone. 11 “Forget it,” whispered Tim. “Secrets?” asked Louise, inqusitive- Iy. “It’s not a good time for secrets.” “There are no secrets,” announced Tim. “Here’s your bike, good as nev. Now skip along. Mother and Daddy vant to talk a lot of things over.” Side by side, on the sliabhy living room couch, Tim and Madge sat, and Tim vas saying: “I think perhaps I can get that job in tovn I spoke oj last veek; the man tliey expected to get changed his mind and vent to Detroit. The saiary isn’t big, but it vould be steady, and I guess ve could budget it out to cover the house pay- ments and food, too—that is, if you stili vant me around,” he added with a good-natured smile. “Oh, Tim, darling. ‘ You knov I’d rather have you around—even if ve fight nov and then.” And this time Madge smiled good naturedly as she added: “I never did think mudi of pacifists anyvay.” Are You Familiar With Original State Names If the United States vere to adopt the recent European practice of re- viving old-place names, such as Oslo for Christmas, Nidaros for Tromih- jem, Helsinki for Helsingfors, Wars- zava for \Varsav and Praha for Prague, the roster of the forty-eight States vould vary in many cases. Nineteen States have different orig¬ inal Indian names they could go back to: Alibamu, Arizonac, Quonoktacut, E-dah-hoe, Hlini, Ayuhba (lova), Kan- za, Kentake, Massavadschiiasch (Massachusetts), Mishigamav (Mich¬ igan), Missisipi, Missiuri, Ohionliiio, I Tanasee, Texia, Ute, Mishkonsing, j Mcheuvomink (Wyoming) and Arkan- sea. Restoration of old names vould re- quire Delavare to revert to De la Warr, the name seleeted in honor of i Lord de la Warr. Nev York vas! named for the duke of York, but if ; origins vere to be pushed back as far I as possible the Empire State must revive the old English form, becom- ing the Eurevic. Revival of a historic name, such as that of Lvov for Lemberg in Poland, vould restore Vert Mont in honor of the French, Roode Eylandt in re- spect to a Dutch expIorer, and Ore- jones as a compliment to Spanish con- quistadores. Illinois serves as an example of States vhose present names are pit- falls to the unvary. Persons not fa¬ miliar vith the French adaptation of the original Indian tribe name pro- nounce the last syllable “noise.” George Washington, it is said, called ; Illinois country Black Island because he thought the French spelled it H e Noir. States vhose names vvould be un ' changed by a drive to return to orig- nal forms are: California, Colorado, ! 'lorida, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, M° n ' •ma, Nebraska, Nevada, Nevv HamP' ■>ire, Nevv Jersey, Nev Mexico, Nortn 'nrolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, ennsylvania, South Carolina, South akota, Virginia, VVashington and ost Virginia,—From a Bulletin ot National Geograpliic Society. Stenography 'io early history of shorthand 'ly allied vith paleography an been traced into tlie mists 0 :nity. Antiquarians have tried Pet it vith hierogl.vphics anl * , • - i > that it vas used more than . s B. C. by the Persinns, Egypt‘ a ’ Hebrews. The first modern shor I vas printed in London in 'ledicated by its autiior, Dr. ® Bright, to Queen Elizabeth. C-” s is the oldest living systein ■ish shorthand. It vvas first iss Mason in 1672 and improved • ">mas Gurney in 1750. Gnr- _ ot issund