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Show BEAVER PRESS t A A AVa AAAA Ice Tears Away Niagara Falls Bridge Is No man regrets going to college, even if it doesn't enable him to make money. It gives him the understanding to comprehend bo many things. Some of the "mistakes of your youth" that you grieve most over may be those when you had an opportunity to snatch pleasure and didn't. True dignity is pretty sure to tame the impertinent. .f' f .r. , ami. v.. Mr ' & lit- e. One great wellspring of crime is In the determination of certain young men that they won't work for a living let the boobs do that. One of the gifts to man which is just as good as it ever was is the multiplication table. It Has the Goods If there is any justification for vanity, the peacock is one vain animal that is entitled to be so. y of the 40 year-ol- d Thl. twisted mass of steel girders among mountainous blocks of ice is aU that remainsfalls after .sung gorge below Niagara Fall. View International bridge which collapsed into the American side ine from made was 24 bridge" an Ice Jam for hours. This view of the famed "honeymoon la,'s d structure blotted out for a moment the roar or noise of the crash of the who had been sent Into Workmen ' buckled. the as watched of Thousands girders spectators yards npstream. came. the forge to strengthen the bridge's supports narrowly escaped death when the crash Ice-fill- 4,500,000-poun- Looks 100 HOURS AWAKE w ygwwww-y- True love is a gift to the young; and sometimes they can make it ' last over ' to old age ignorance often does more damage than injustice. First two people who got into trouble blamed it on somebody else; which is still the usual procedure. One excitement of the small town is wholly gone the runaway of horses. Self-righteo- -- If i p in at Record Between Dips ro M 1 i l illlllllillliiM mm Miss Ruth Jimmerson, nineteen, of TJnadilla, Ga., one of six students at the University of Georgia who completed 100 hours of voluntary Insomnia in a psychology experiment "in the interest of pure science." mid-wint- Farr Gives Tardy Handshake er Golfer Picard for Pet Putter $3,000 golf open over the Brookside course at Pasadena, Calif. Picard AMAZING as tt seems that one XX mind could encompass so many l8 iff v. E J 111 t "V Tommy Farr, left, shakes hands with Jimmy Braddock, who won a decision from the Welshman at Madison Square Garden, New York, recently, as the two met in Promoter Mike Jacobs' office. Farr, greatly disappointed over the result, said he had not seen Braddock coming over to shake his hand. A day or two after their amicable meeting, Jim Braddock announced his retirement from the ring. surprising ten-rou- W' AJ , i ' )fW ! I was victorious with a total of 276. He made the final turn home in 35 which added to his outgoing 34 gave him a total of 63 for the final round and 276 for the tournament. American Locomotives Bound for China toot off-han- d Ex- Pattern 5895 cheted any number of Uic equities UJ COmhina these! I. - fashion, small refreshment pieces arl nanasome m itus choice des you use finer cotton. In pattern 5895 von win structions and charts for ml the squares shown; and for! ing them to make varinul tides; material requiremen lustration of the square and stitches used. To obtain this pattern sed cents in stamps or cnim n i preferred) to The Sewing C xiousenoia Arts Dept., 2591 Fourteenth St., New York, N Please write your nam dress and pattern number pli A Three Days' Con Is Your Danger Sign No matter how many medkj you have tried for your cough, ciI cold, or bronchial irritation, you get relief now with Creomula Serious trouble may be brewing f you cannot afford to take s eta with any remedy less poten; t Creomulslon, which goes right the seat of the trouble and aids furn tsi snnUiA and heal the lnfiiloc mucous membranes and to n phle and expel the Even If otherreniedieshavela; peditions sent by this department into the far domain of youth say it's that way all over the country, 4- Ka AicnijmyfiA. tW CreQ3 particularly among the collegians. The Dossier says he does it with Eion. Your druggist Is authortea u you Wj barrel-houst, reluna your money WiUl his the VinrnncrVilw satisfied screw-bal- l and grunt-iro- n music." W..W.WLu.j . nhtolnarl frnm- thB. verr 3J Be that as it may, it nets him bottle. Creomulslon Is one wonH $100,000 a year. two, and It nas no nypnen kj the At the age of ten, he was a semi-pr- o Ask for it plainly, see that ti is ureomiusiuu, vaudeville musician, earning on the bottle youH get toe genuine product around $2 a week in Chicago's want. (AdrJ the reliel you Ghetto. He was the eighth of eleven children of a tailor who earned $20 They. Too, Are Warmedtc a week. He bought a mail order who bring sunshine Those clarinet on the installment plan, cannot keep it f: of others lives the and, by time he was thirteen, ' Barrie. themselves. was a journeyman musician, but still in short pants. He first got out In front in HOW IS YOUR DIGEST! running his first band in 1931. ... i J. v He slumped down to $40 a week in 1934, moved in with Billy Rose, hit Frances Looy. j his stride again, and, via radio, is a so nncon.fortablt.tej recent arrival In the rf bum, ana brackets. snd tired. bJstna eon ! i He is twenty-sevetall, dark, athmioytri;!?"i1 letic, with rimless oc. Dr. Pitrce'i W tagonal glasses, and, the more saveal Discover, felt age his music, the more money he stomach upsets snd I dnirout W ererr war' Ask tout "J makes. "gut-bucke- e, a, - good-lookin- WJJA PRANKLIN MOTT GUNTHER. American minister to Rumania, decorously, and quite unofficially, he says, challenges the new anti- Semitlsm in Ru- Mr.Gunther mania. He Is a Created Big suave career dip-Nein 1914 lmat who once pulled headlines as big as a Rumania war would get today. That was in 1914, when there was less news. He was a guest on a yacht anchored in Christianla harbor. The harbor master told him that spot had been saved for Kaiser 's A I Victors in tbe End made 4 so The universe is olnne Can 1 " irutn anaj ju&m-- - c , Anthony Frooae dure.-Ja- mes , yacht There was an argument and the harbor master said Mr. Gunther had clipped the cap oft his head and wouldn't pick it up. It boiled up Into a big international story, but Mr. Gunther came through It nicely to continue representing his country In many foreign ports. President Coolidge made him minister to Egypt in 1928. He is a native of New York, fifty-tw- o years old, an alumnus of Harvard. C Consollrlnted News Features. WNU Service. Collective Barrel v ntntr . v. . w wot valuing is a laDor union term referring to a method of ....,.u,8 wages, nours ana wonting conditions by direct negotiation . . hptuonn .... 4Va ...s .. n oi a labor union and.cjjieseiuauves an employer. Instead of acting Individually, as In the case uutt. uurgaming, we em ployees act as a group in present SWEDENBORG LIFE AND TEACHING of the 250th of birth of (he EMANUEL. SWEDENBORG being celebrated throughout the world, A book of 348 pages, handsomely bound in semi-lim- Inc. TN THE new movie, "Hollywood A Hotel," Bennie Goodman, trumpeter and swingster, again demonstrates that he gets all the college trade. The boys Grunt-Iro- n whinny with Makes citement at Mr. most Goodman's Kids mmmmm top-mon- Commemoration Edition SWEDENBORG FOUNDATION, SI East 42nd Street New Tor. I - biest Call-forni- - imitation leather covers, gilt lettering and rounded corners. 25 cents postpaid: paper edition 10c. "Heaven nd Hell" by Emanuel Swedenboru, S cents postpaid (mailing cost). Address: J?) full-fledg- 3 now BCSIW - Swedenborg's Birth Anniversary st germ-lade- Henry Picard kissing the putter that helped him win the Pasadena 250th Anniversary In commemoration front-Bigge- Whinny Shows Affection Nation Celebrates Frepared ago, r. Far from the sidewalks of New fork and minus his brown derby, Alfred E. Smith, former governor of New York, is pictured reading his newspaper between dips in the briny at a popular resort club at Palm vacation Beach, Fla. The "Happy Warrior" enjoys an annual in the South. be long today ic Impression of Pleasure For all knowledge and wonder (which is the seed of knowledge) is an impression of pleasure in it self. Bacon. varied realms of knowledge, never theless It is true that Emanuel Swedenborg, the 250th anniversary of whose birth is being celebrated this year, made Important contribu tions in many fields of science, theo retical and practical, in statesman- chip, philosophy, and religion. he published the first In 1710-171eclentlflc periodical in Sweden, con talnlng records of his mechanical inventions ' and mathematical discoveries, which included the first airplane design to have fixed wings and moving propellor, the first airpump to employ mercury, and the description of a method for determln ing latitude and longitude at sea by observations of the moon among the stars. In the Trlnclpla," a work on physics and cosmology, he arrived at the nebular hypothesis theory be fore Kant and Laplace. lie was 150 yet.rs ahead of any other scientist in his works on the functions of the brain and spinal cord, and on the functions of the ductless glands. Swedenborg Beared as an active member of the parliament of his country for more than fifty years, introducing fiscal reforms and much general legislation. Emanuel At the ago of fifty-fiv- e Swedenborg discontinued his scien tific pursuits and began his work as a theologian, publishing the "Arcana Coelestla, Apocalypse Explained"; "Heaven and Hell"; Tour Doc trines"; "Divine Love and Wisdom"; "Divine Trovldence"; "Apocalypse Revealed": "Conjugal Love"; "True Christian Religion"; and other mis cellaneous theological works. Information regarding the life and achievements and the works referred to, will be sent without charge by application to the Swedenborg Foundation, 51 E. 42nd St, New York City, TL7' 3$ y great-grandso- NERVOUS? Do you feel so nervous you want to screamT Are you eroas and irritable! io you aeold those dearest to yotlT If your nerves are on edpe, try LYDTA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. It often help Nature calm quivering nerves. For three generations on woman has told another how to go "smiling through" with I.yilia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound. It beloe Nature tone un the avatem. thus Uwspiw ing the disoomforta from the functional dis orders which women must endure. Make a note NOW to get a bottle of world' famous Pinkham'a Compound today WITH- uur f AIL, irom your druggist more thanre-a million women have written in letters porting benefit. Why not trf LYDIA E. FIN SHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND! ( crXTH I cfsy ry tle of them. jelly-cak- Parlon newspapers wouldn't be Star paging the scription of the to star in the Leap universe, 3,000 times larger than the sun. They should have named the star Napoleon, instead of Epsilon Aurigae. of events ter- His was the touch-of- f restial which finally ranged out 3,000 light years and brought news of the giant star. Chronologically, as the astronomers would put it, it was like ". this: Wilhelm Struve Friederich Georg was a studious German youth who wanted to be an astronomer, but lacked opportunity for study. For no apparent reason, a ranging band of Napoleon's scouts seized him and locked him in a prison on the banks ' of the River Elbe. window-dive to He timed his high the passing of a queer-lookin- g ship, made a long, hazardous swim and was pulled aboard. The ship was The I meward bound to Russia. czar was a patron of astronomy. The young man was encouraged and became not only director of the observatory of the University of Dorpat, but one of the founders of modern astronomy, with Herschel and Bissel. His' sons and grandsons became famous astronomers and it is his Dr. Otto Struve, who, with his assistants at Yerkes observatory of the University of Chicago at Williams Bay, Wis., discovers the facts about Epsilon Aurigae. He is director of the observatory. He arrived here in 1921, after fighting with the white armies in Russia and fleeing to Turkey with their colHe became director of lapse. Yerkes observatory five years ago at the age of thirty-fou- years Those write most thrillingly of the Fa two-stor- Deprivation Inspires A smart housewife leaves the cooki? Jar unhidden so as to save Lemuel LavishAppearc to string, and quite th. evet 4 ?f? fTTYTTTTtYf f VvTfftff ful ever! The a prisoner panion squares Zl YORK. If NEW gether. vet nnn "r.'ttKi jumped out of a and used window and escaped, 123 For nature's charms who see very Budget Lace fW WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... 0" By What Education saisill thplr rinma-.- . !.! repre Biumung sentatives who hold conferences . n.U e representatives of- the em Cloven tn Orfinc Int7 L- Jlv -. rnnaacipma. . .vi ic laiinunn, . ... uuc v. paid for by the rhincse government. disclosed. SJlT' 'womoi'vr manufacturers from Hum me- miu-- Mates In recent Tians for getting the locomotive-- , past the Japanese WoTkadrJSe it.. ...c .bSi. ..ouc .u- ,.. . 1 i t ... m j, The individual employee subordinates himself to the common inter... est Of hit I. in .cm mi benefits which he could not vuluui aione. ine Dowe. unknown MuctH Nujol with INSIST OH GENUINE WATCfH the Specials YoU can s- Ppend on the our town n ,of tbiJ the column piP money savin to readers. tbe to patronue u rvbo chants or tneir j'-- - of yi f. ;d |