.t. --~ ~ d~ as _; _- _ i ' "M &2 I I (Ctlased from Page 1.) ad (Mrs Wm. Harvey and two will leave to-day for Galves d t0 wto spend a month, visit- t L t-ive. They will make the b a their motor car going and n -. lirs. Wm. Mahoney left fIL or a visit to the principal a - ad northern cities. f Ers. E. J. lorio have re ad m ,lvestion, where they gl o of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. I p Mrs. Cochell was formerly Stechlin of our town. juse Bride Specials 0. & G. Ice Cream Is Novelty Moulds wald & Gros Co. Two Stores 61, AND 120 CANAL SAVE MONEY ml have t ped to eat But YeU 0s sa4 st better by trading I. Oa prices wae low sad the ISCAL MARKET AVm . T VEERW WT. h n U..-a a..r AltS, VEGETKALES, au A-D FISH onessm a- taur &FABARES STAMP AND rrNCIL CO., Inc. Mauwfactursng SSsmps, S tals, Stencils, i tCCecks, Door and iek Sios of Every . Desuiption. Ipdl1 Prompt Service amd.H *e Nateebe St. NEW ORLEANS, LA. WEIDIG'S POTS wsit ralmrs st HARDWARE STORE $1.6 up; the meet proved pot ea the arket: rseem waded ever* where - vases. benches, pedestals. aseatals. bird baths, fountain hbees. Our aies.s is Men'. and Boys' Shoes, you know the by vsptation-you will be fitted satisfactorly by b sipt sriSmcd shoe in the city. SCHU~MACHER'S 108 ROYAL ST, Ner C alA Try Us sad us a(v~ sIod PA-POOSE ROOT BEER The Year Round Drink Delicious and Pure o' gIhtM by N A. Zataimln. 1t3, asmuafctued sad BoWled By .L ZATARAIN & SONS , NEW ORLEANS, L" --EISEMANN RADIO HEAD PHONES Supersensitive Type -SUHREN, INC. AUTOMOBILE ELECTRICIANS s.ae Mai er Mrs. B. Nelson and little nephew Junior, left Saturday for New Yerk. le Mrs. Fred Eckert and little daugh ter Verlin of 535 Bermuda street. have returned home after eight al I[months stay in Houston and Galves- R t( n. Miss Lucille Christy is home again Iafter spending the past year in Buf Sfalo, with her sister, Mrs. Bancroft Weaver. Mr. and Mrs. A. Schultz. who re- 5s cently returned from their honey r moon trip in the tropics, left for n Chicago, to visit the former's parents. ' Miss M. Vaughan is spending her V vacation in Superior, Wis. She spent r, a week at Chicago, en route there. C( Mrs. V. G. Landry of Beaumont, rn Tex., is visiting her nieces Misses n Clairia and Ella Richards. The Friday Night Euchre club met at the home of Mrs. F. Facius. The successful players were Mrs. D. Mur- s tagh. Mrs. Fallow, and Mrs. F. Goe- ft hel. The consolation was won by Miss Salome Kappler. The next meet ing will be at the home of Mrs. B. Gould. L Mrs. W. Oser and daughter Myrtle. I of San Francisco, will return home t to-day after spending some time here. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Barrett. Mrs. M. Geldert and children and Mrs. W. Mermillord and children are spend ing the week at West End. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nason. of Bogalusa, are spending awhile here with relatives. Miss Florence Lecourt left for Ashville. N. C., to spend a month. DEPENDABLE PHOTOGRAPHS COLEMAN STUDIO Pertrats of yoer meet leasinag Per soaltry Copying. Enlarging, Kodak Finishing as CANAL ST. PThee Maln Uss DRINK FRENCH TOWN COFFEE NONE BETTER 537 TOULOUSE ST. H 3806 LENSES GROUND IN OUR OWN SHOP - No 6aoin ddls of several dnts waitis for yew uImm N. petty-yet irritig mey msc -el be perieui ed,. aour r g ** wick **r HOLMES - OpcalDe SDAVID C. WILIAAMS, 0. D. Optometrist. Phone M-»00 819 Canal Street Rw Mr. and Mrs. A. Borne and baby c. left Saturday for Lucy, La., to spend awhile with relatives. t. Misses Mary and Florence Clifford t are spending awhile at Centerville,. Miss., the guests of their brother. Rev. Victor Clifford. Miss Martha McNeeley returned after spending her vacation at Abita Springs. Mr. and Mrs. A. Schlumbrecht are at Abita Springs for the rest of the summer. Y The Once-A-Month Euchre Club r met at the home of Mrs. Watkins. s. The successful players were Mrs. G. ,r W. Pollock, Mrs. S. Boylan, Mrs. S It Donnelley (for Mrs. Styles) and Miss e. Clairia Richards. Miss Lena Kroge' t, received the consolation. The next s meeting will be at the home of Mrs H. Acker. et Mrs. J. W. Morrison and daughter ie Mamie. and Mr. Raymond Richards ,r- spent the week-end at Long Beach e- Miss. t- Easter and the Rabbit. B. Nearly all the world over the hare is associated mythically with the e. moon, and it is on this account that to the rabbit has so much to do with le Easter. There has been much dis pute as to why the hare should have anything to do with the moon, but no body has arrived at any satisfactory conclusion on the subject. It is evi dently a folklore notion of extreme antiquity, which partly accounts for re its wide distribution. The rabbit is nocturnal in habit, coming out at night to feed, and that might have or started the idea. It is asserted by students of such matters that the left hind foot of a graveyard rabbit, killed in the dark of the moon, represents the last quarter of the moon, and fir that reason is lucky. Art of the Story Writer. Story-writing is always experiment s al, just as a water color is, and that something which does itself is the vitality of it. I think we must know what good work is before we can do good work of our own, and so I say, study work that the best judges have called good and see why it is good; I whether it is, in that particular story, a the reticence or the bravery of speech, c the power of suggestion that is in It, or the absolute clearness and finality of revelation; whether it sets yeou d - thinking, or whether it makes you a see a landscape with a live human fig ure living its life in the foreground. -Sarah Orne Jewett. t Healthy CoempleXIen Assured t Martha was a pale little wife whom t white cheeks Indicated her listless cea dtitoa. Her husband worried about Sher elack of bloom till Coosin Helen came from the East for a visit. Mar - tha improved wonderfully with bright 1 f companionshlP. Her husband was not slow to express his gratitude to his S wife's cousin. "Helen, you can't imag Ine how much good your visit has done Martha. She looks ten years 1 younger." "Well, I am so glad, Cousin George," Helen babbled. "And if she .keeps on using that romge rm leaving , her shell always have that healthy P complexion, like mine."-E schsng5 , Remove Gum Frem Flax. A proces has been perfected iM A gentina for removing gums and other waste matter from flax straw betore it Is dried and seat to Durope for manufacture into fiber articles. Phem Uptown 758 CHAS. J. SICARD U. s. TIBSr lardware riat and Oils Plam y Bng epairs Massume emeo Warine NeoW OLtANS. LA. "SUPERIOR" POTATO CHIPS FRESH-CRISP Roear A Torrence NEW ORLEANS 502 ELEANORE ST. Upt.79 TANET'S TRANSFER General Hauling and Forwarding Agents. Motor Trucke To Hire For All Oooasions. PHONE MAIN 2248 OFFICE SN Tohoupitoulas St. LSSISIAAA AgTS TiP SIUP AUTO TOPS AND CURTAIN8 MADE TO ORDER Seat Covers, Cushlons Upholetery And Repairing of all Kinds J. P. DESMOND, Proprietor 816 Julia St. Phone Malin 481 NEW ORLEANS, LA. FOR PLUMBING - BABST SER VIICE MAIN 1200 MSIP-ESELL IAI IIE WRIS Expert OrIndInE Cylinders, Pletes CrakS Ma Et. Geer Mahine Repairs New Os La. SEES IT Editor's Note- The recent tri- i,4 umph of progressive Republican co candidates in various states and upset of other Old Guard leaders an brought forth the following comrn- t ment from Theodore Roosevelt. fa Jr., Assistant Secretary of the b Navy, when approached by the Washington representative of cI y this newspaper: ve qu to di S. . he e -b 7 AM delighted with Gifford I + w Pinchot's victory in Penns sylvania. e toward progressive ideals iy this conndelighted with Gifford Pinchot's victory in Penn-d that is sylvania. tt It indicates a general trend t toward progressive ideals. In this connection, however, it is necessary to bear in mind that since 1912 lines are; blurred .d considerably on progressive t policies. K For example, a very large part of the 1912 progressive I platform has already become the law of the land. In this, t woman suffrage is a specific incident. re The person who Coughs all over the i I; landscape these days is about as good 7. a citizen as a bootlegger peddling a eargo of wood alcohol. ty Inasmuch as gas rates are coming M down, people who just dote on exces a sively rare meat can learn to like it somewhat better cooked. For getting cigar ashes on the rag there are husbands who can't be beaten, but their wives will show ea them that the rug can be. a at The flapper must think It rather an hard to be criticized for merely do L h' tag the things she is taught by the Iht daily example of her elders. let hOf It is reported that wives In ithe t- Sudan have risen In cost from four 55 spearheads to eight. Maybe somebody Is has been cornering the market. da he Another thing that makes It so dfi E cult to attend to one's own business y is the swelling Impulse to devote one's entire time to reform somebody else. There are sigs now and then that persons with money to invest should beware In particular of a certain clau oe promoter who has an oily tongue. for Lots of time It Is not necessary to see a man's wife to know that she dresses in the height of fashion. The looks oe her husband's clothes provu that. If the flapper can't quilte understand why she is being a. reoundly abused all -e a srdden she need not worry. No - body else really knows the rease either. The Ohio State Journal says the secrets of Maya elvilisation asre beaing wrung from the hieroglyphics ea stone tablets. Wringing a stone must be some job. The value of live stock, the gov ernment reports, shows a decree com. pared with two years ago Yes, the value of an animal decreases as it gets older. One of the world's leading modista has gone into bankruptcy, Indicatlnag Sither that the lady of fuashion has Sbe retrean ing or has not bees pay atng her bills. After looking oraor the criminal news IIla any recent newspaper the old fashioned gold-brick operator will real Ise as never before what it masa to be a piker. - Now that the styles in halrdressing reveal the fem!nine ears again, the dear things aren't worrying long about N what to do abshout It. Earrtngs ate gamlnIng back into vnLo~re ., NOW - STAR BAKERY aD CONFECTIONERY 141 amimE S. ru g. 511 Try our Rolls Cakes and Douglshnuts Oscar J. DeBat Sidny Enligi DBAT & ENSIGN s e, REAL ESTATE List Your Property With Us. You Will Get Result Phe Male MI 34 eoeIae S t. NsW ·L aUs L*A. - -- - - - - - MISS SILVER LINING By MOLLIE MATHER Copyright. 1931, Westers Newspaper Union Rain, rain, and sombre clouds, an unfamiliar village street. and a man trudging along, gloomily. At the farthest end of the street, a weather beaten house, its faded green blinds closed against possible sunshine, its verandas bleak, and wind-swept. To this uncomfortable goal, the stranger forced his way. He questioned a passer-by as to where en tertainment might be found, and was directed uncertainly, to the shabby house at the end of the street. "Mebbe Miss Perkins will take you in" offered the passer-by. When Philip Clogston agreed to run out to the country to look over the farm his elderly sister anticipated buying, he expected to drive the fifty odd miles in his car. Minerva was imperative that he should go no later than Wednesday. and on this Wednesday afternoon of stormy weather, roads leading to the ua frequented country were almost Im passable. So Philip, impatient with this new whim of his whimsical sister, boarded the train. Upon his arrival at Lynden village, he found that the next returning train would not leave until eight o'clock that evening, the farm which he was to pass - judgment upon, was four miles up an isolated road. He decided, still TI angrily, to go back at eight o'clock without fulfilling his errand. What did Minerva want with a farm any way? But then why did Minerva enter into any of the foolish business ventures which claimed her purse and attention. th The shabby old house was opened ba by a grim-faced woman who eyed him with hostility. is "I was directed here," said the con- in fident man of big enterprises. by "('ome in," said Miss Perkins, and N4 be followed into the dismal parlor. q, "I kin give you some ham an' home- a made bread an' coffee," the woman pr offered laconically, "If you want to it glt .warm, come out to the kitchen." , "Thanks," Philip returned drily, "I at will wait here." He settled down In his overcoat frowning. "Woman are m queer," he reflected. "wherever you happen to meet them." His memory bi of his own mother was that of an ex- ol acting invalid. Minerva, with whom m he made his home was a creature of III changing, unreasoning mood. Then al here, was this stolid, unconcerned, vii- a lags woman. He smiled satirically, be he as an engraved motto caught his eye. k god "Every cloud." said the motto, "has a a silver lining." "Great promise that, st in this tomb of a room," he meditated. fj Then across the rattle of wind and rI lng rain outside came a ripple of soft c' e laughter. I It "Well, that's my last splashing I hope." called a girlish voice. Philip looking through the window saw a young woman turn to wave to an old heman who had evidently brought her 1i ow to the shabby house In his buggy. He E heard her explaining to Miss Perkins. O "I came out from the city as a s- tl her prise to visit Aunt Ellen, and I find do- that Aunt Ellen has gone away shop- tl ping until tomorrow. Will you take w me in for the night, please Hannah." " "Well, mobbe," Hannah graciously a the complied, "They's a man In there, h our come to supper," she added. tl "Good afternoon," she greeted d Philip pleasantly, and turned quickly ti to light the forbidden fire. " "We are going to be cheererful" she I told Hannah firmly. s ls. "Hannah," cried the girl "I am u coming out to the kitchen to make a - afluffy omelette to go with that ham; u you used to let me play about in the I Skitchen when I was a little girl, and we will toast the bread, and have our meal here on the little table before the are. No you must not object, a sh you shall be company this evening is Syour own home." a SClogaton threw aside his outer ceat, ' the room, all at once was full of rosy light from fire and lamps. Tbe visit- a SIng girl hummed happily as she laid the white cloth on the small table, NoShe wore a dress of virvid scarle~t which matched the color of her lips. "It's my old gray cmap" she in red Hannah, laughiagly. "1I dyed Sit to wear on days like this, when I'm la I alone; it makes ms feel cheery." Later, as Hannah washed the d , be the girl answered a bit raetfully to hds questioning concernimng her identity. "Who am I? Oh, I am just a fllre, gow I went four years ago to the city to Sstudy art. I was to be a great the illustrator. Aunt Ellea still believes a In me so that she woald sell her farm in order to come on and help me. But I won't have that srlflce, so I hurried Ltes home to prevent ILt I grew ap, you tag see, in Aunt Ellen's caz." has "My name is Clogate," Philip ab ay ruptly annoaunced, "and yaours" Bat the girl milig, shook her head, "TomorrOw," she told him, "we shall em have gone our separate ways, and old- names will men nothlag to as. Good real- night" eas Philip arose. "When yu came here,a" he said, "I was lost tin a clad t gloom, ys gave to that cloud a silvr sa lilnng. Tomorrow ad through all Ma the temorrows to come. I shall anevrw s hout get you. And now, good alght MIs at Slver Lining." bShe glanced at him, moved by his earnestnem, aMd h - blu eyes widened la new smt wonder. And as the train bore him ditywmrd, Philip sat, lost in a great content. Fr he knew that he would find agaplan, ad win for his own. this girl whose bright presence had vanished so maraculousy all his past years, of gloom. "Prosperity Stirs Industry." says a headline; but that is a trifle com pared to the way industry stirs pros perity. Those may boy radio operators may g presently get the air so overcrowded that they will have to submit to trale regulations S Swor waweag ataI." This wll airise sre me resamSnt patro, awho ae been eampleg at en 8m d Washed in Soap and Water but does not get Wet fe i Ilic ate f,1 washed thor i re not alt Ir,(d a:nd o,ds are not o injured. S.,ap and ,ater ar"e ueuI. but I1 ,d s:r pr. 'w.e-, \ iIIl n,)t 1e: thi ,l -. S, nd. ty .trange ,lt' it nut? LS is .\ trial \ill cm inee u of the merits ,f thi m 'c « v.t l. By O. DORSEY CLEANING, DYING, PRESSING, ETC. e. Phone Algiers 9127 711 Teche Street In TESTS VIGOR OF BANK ROLLS Me Majority Wither Quickly, but Some Grow Robust When Exposed to New York's Climate. New York has long been known In the provinces as the nesting place of tun bank rolls. In this nest either they rig grow or they die young. A bank roll rel is a sensitive plant, as It were, being kin Intfuenced quickly and permanently in by climatic and diplomatic changes. rio Nothing can become discouraged more so quickly than a bank roll in New York, an and nothing can gain a satisfied and prosperous maturity more quickly if be it gets the right start, attends to Its own business and keeps away from pr strangers. M, Generally speaking. I would recom- as mend this town as the best health re- se sort for bank rolls in the world. Some bank rolls come here in the full view id of perfect health, with perfectly nor mal chest measurements and waist- th lines suited to their age, and immedl ately go into a decline which no th science is able to stem. They seem to be victims of the old-fashioned disease or known as galloping consumption. of t Others come here in a very frail bi state of health, puny in fact, and by to judicious exercise take on weight and I require larger and larger belts. Cir- hi cuamstances alter bank rolls.-Roy K o. Moulton, in the New York MaiL a, w Avoid Letters. nl The editors of a recent volume of II literary selections for the use of col- e r loge students calmly omit Lamb and Haslltt and proceed to justify the L omission by the remarkable assertion that to encourage a pupil "in pleasant a rambles with Ella or Hallitt through a " the by-ways of literature Is to put a ti s weapon Into the hands of those critics tl who condemn the English teacher as 5 a pedant of a dilettante and to y ' hasten the exodus of college men from s the liberal arts course." The thing to b d do say these exponents of liberal cul- c I ture, is to study authors who present a "a logically connected program of II e Ideas!" Study Huxley, study Mill, t; study Godwin, study Paine-all of ' a whoil are represented in this volume ( a -but don't study Lamb In other f worts, don't study literature.-Harry a e T. Baker, in the American Review. g r English Statesman's Nickname. ti n Lord John Russell's diminutive stat- 14 ure earned him other nicknames be- a a sides the Inevitable "Johnny." The ii neatest is the one recorded by Cree- 2 t, ey, which was bestowed by some wag y upon him when he married the widow - of the second Lord Ribblesdale--"the 4 Widow's Mite." John Russell was a c a frail and delicate child from the first, p t but his physique cannot have been t helped by the hardship of his school s Sdays. He had to be taken away from b d Westminster because he could not g * stand the fagging and unwholesome b food. And before that came a private t school at 8aunbury, where, as he re- a called in later life, he found the mut- b ton fat so intolerable that he dropped t It under the table. But the master, a b clergyman, made him sweep It up off d the dusty floor and eat it, dirt and all. a The Old Nantucketer. i The Nantucketer, he alone resides and riots on the sea. . . There is his home; there lies his business, a which a Noah's food would not inter- t rapt though it overwhelmed all the t millions of China. He lives on the a sea, as prairie cocks in the prairie; he hides among the waves, he climbs them as chamois hunters climb the Alps. For years he knows not the land; so that when he comes to it at last, it smells like another world, more I V strangely than the moon would to an I aglishman. With the landless gull. W that at sunset tolds her wings and is Srocked to sleep between billows; so at I nightfall, the Nantucketer. oat of sight of land, futarls his sails, and laysI Shim to his rest, while under his very pllow rush herds of walruses and I Et whales.-Herman Melville. i 4, When "Flappers' Usd Snuff. I SThe flapper of 200 years ago had nd one besetting weaknemss that is not ht shared by her modern sister. The i use of snuff was one of the petty vices of the young lady of fashion in the Eighteenth century. The practle a elicited a roar of protest from a gem m- tleman who wrote a letter on the sub SJect in 1711. He tells of the conduct of a young gentlewoman in church, and declares "she pulls out her box ay in the middle of the sermon and, to led show that she has the audacity of a Be well-bred woman, sho ofered It to the men as well as to tho women who sit net her. Lest Sunday, when they st1 came about fer the oedrlia, she gave a her charity with a very good air, but rl t the sae time sked the ecmrc wardam if be wmld takeo a palc." AS TYPE OF MONOTHEISM Melohizedek So Figures in Pages of Scripture and as Character in Legends. Melchlizedek is a v:igue character occasionally nletioned in the Scrip tures. whose name means "king of righteousness." The muost dietllite references ii, himi ilndicate thlt hlie as king of Salemt. and priest of Jehovah in the time of Abrullln, uniting the royal with the pit.estly dignity, and so becoming a welcome type for the ancient writers. Later on his name seetms to have become more or less legendary, and was used in a figurative sense as "a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek." and he is placed in the same category as the Messiah, HIlm self, apparently as a type of ancient monotheism. Still later he becomes Identified with Shern, the son of Noah. and the ancestor of Abraham, and is the subject of an elaborate story in the Egyptian book of Adam and Eve. In this story he is represented as having been chosen of God "from all gen erations of men." to stand by the body of Adam after it had been brought back to Jerusalem. lie is supposed to have remained with Adam's body under the protection of an angel until he encountered Abraham. He is one of the four mentioned in Holy Writ as "without father and without mother without descent, having neither begin. nling of days nor end of life, but made like unto the son of God abiding for ever." What Is WIreless? Wireless is man's control of electe magnetic waves in the ether. But what are electro-magnetic waves? Briefly. they are disturbances traveling through ether or space, writes French Strother in the World's Work. When you see sunlight, you see electro-mag netic waves, at such a number of vi brations per second that they are per ceptible to your senses through your sense of feeling or touch. But both light and heat are exactly the same thing, namely, electro-magnetlc waves. The only difference between them Is that the lngths of the waves are dif-" ferein. T'hewiave-length of light is al most Inconceivably short-about one fifty-thousandth of an inch. The wave length of heat iS longer-about one ten-thousandth of an Inch. Now, wire less is exactly the same thing as light and beat, except that its wave-length is Immensely longer-anywhere fros 200 feet to 20 miles. Famous Husband Unappreelated. º The famous signature of John Has. I cock was attached to at least one im portant document besides the Declare I tlon of Independence. In 1776 It was Saffixed to the license of the marriage I between himself and Dorothy Quincy, t thus joining two of the most cele Sbrated of American families. Dore 5 thy was the daughter of Judge Quincy, a stanch patriot, and the daughter in herited the political beliefs of her fa I ther. Young Hancock was one of the I heroes of the country, and this un ! doubtedly had its part In making Doe . othy look favorably upon his salt. Hancock was very much in love with his beautiful and aristocratic bride, I but she failed to return his ardor with s much enthusiasm. Whenever he was , obliged to be away from home he wrote her every day, and in every let 5 ter complained of her negligence li 5 aot writing him. I Explosion Something of a Puzzle. e A queer sort of an explosion of a " small glass tube having walls half a t millimeter in thickness and contain Slang 25 milligrams of the purest radium n bromide is reported by a French physi i, cist. The tube had been in use for 11 a months. At the time of the expolosl t It had just been removed from a bath I of liquid air. A load report accompa i nled the exploslon, which occurred la 7 a dark room and the glass was scat id tered all through the room In almost microscoplc particles, and the scat tered radium shone in the darkness like a starry sky. It was calculated i that the pressure In the tube must o have been equal to at least 20 stmos * phleres, and it Is supposed to have Sbeen due to the evolution of gaseous a decompositlon products from the ra Sdlunm.-FPlttsburgh (Chronicle-Telelgralph. rb et Flame has a new dictator. We h, sall see presently what kind of a a spring poem he is capable of. a Farm girls are said to be flappers. he too, recalling the modest violet, born lt t fap unseen beslde a mossy stone. e They are now talking about rega ut hltng the air. and we suppose It will h et e ga betme ther begain to tai IL.