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Show Pope Will Open the Holy Door Christmas Eve. Beautiful Monument to Stand in GaxethU Beat With 0 Newt ' jij tar- IJ rjv) f j yi : r - - rv Q S ' W I m"mm'mmmmmmm"mmmm'm'' On Christinas eVe the fatuous holy door i'orta Santa In St. Peter's will he opened by big holiness Pope IUus with a golden hammer In celebration of the start of the year of Jubilee which come only once every 25 years, The door During this year thousands of .will remain open tihtll Peoember 25, 1925, when It will be closed again until 1950. Catholics from all parts of the world Journey to Rome seeking special spiritual rewards. The photograph shows a "view " of the holy door, at the right and iuBTkied with the cross. , Los Angeles , 1' ' fu C.) . r 9, DnbMtr, PAPERS PEAT CS rPPtSITKN I1NUTES TESTER-DAITHREE TEST . VOTE SPAEE NO EFFOBT SECURE EESCKT TOMOB-BOEIXEKBT," Gareth threw down the telegram after reading It and. sprang from his desk, In pushing back his balr he was careful not to Upset and break It, knowing he would nor 'be supplied with another. "Soar no effort. Indeed. If he had been told not to spare cash for expenses,- the message necessary would Kem more toi the point., Nine times out of ten lie beat the opposi tion, Just by alertness, and Initiative and physical speed ana weu ay luck r and elElrt times out of those nine he wouldn't even know of his success until much later, accidentally. But when he slipped up, as he must, In fomnetlnff with an organisation which employed. Ihreo wen to do What he did alone, and which ai lowed them to spend ten dollars to his one, he would find his nerves put critical Juncture like on "edgetat this. - Three . minutes ! The wonder Whs ne hadn't been beaten by three hour. Of course, --though, be ought not to have let them beat hlm. . The next day, the French' parlla-entwmeeting; both houses Jo elect a new Preslhent of the BepubH& A pass had come In the affairs of the nation when the question waa of world-wid- e Importance. The group of American evening papers whose Paris nttews service Gareth "managed" (he had been given the TStle of Manager to balance a acareely decorative salary) simply mu'st be first In the field with the news. He was perfectly aware that the telephone' wires would be leased by men who could afford to do It, and large sums would probably go for bribes. To offset this was the fact that the censors wiuld be watching Jealously with the high motive of delaying all messages impartially. Unless a first flash caught them napping there would be a .confusion abolishing privilege as it would order. So he must get that flash, if he would beat the others. And he had to beat them. ' Not as a purely personal matter.' He had set out to help build up this new service" out of nothing, with no facilities af hand and every odd" of money and of influence against hln and he was going to see it through. He knew at what cafe on the boulevard some of his newspaper friends would gather that night They were good fellows, and while swapping stories would drop hints. He migh- tNo, he wouldn't. "His pjogram had been prepared and he wasn't going to be rattled by a foolish telegram. when the crucial Nevertheless, moment came, at Versailles next day,' he caught his breath as if for a cold He had staked everything plunge. upon psychological observation at a famous rlal on" whose verdict he had beaten tne! world to his own surprise. If the same law failed to work now he was done. From a gallery (areth watched the crowded Congress hall, tense with passions and heavy "with" breathing? The speeches, heard In scattered portions, roused he fervors of partisanship on benches where senators and deputies sat with a common rank. Then came the vote and the rush for, the oom where ballots were counted. Gareth knew his ground well, havSo he proing paced It In advance. ceeded quietly to the vast hall serving' as antechamber to the secret room: The most brilliant and eminent figures in the life of Paris social, diplomatic, political, Intellectual-w- ere pressed and packed against the forbidden door like shoal upon shoal of herring. With a crash the news broke. The doors did not have a chance to open, they were driven in. Tells, punctuated by a roar of footfalls, rang and The result, cried out In stentorian tones, was caught up and repeated, again and again and again. Not at the first cry, nor at the second, but at the third and fourth, Gareth dashed out of the far door and down the desertftl stairs, four steps at a leap. He had been sure, enougfh of his advantage to wait for confirAs he leaped, his fingers mation. were busy, choosing from some written cable forms he held the one with the result which proved true. The others, he crushed into his pocket, and read and the one In which only the figures of the vote were lacking. .He added those, with a polite, "Send that at once, will you please?" "At once, please," Gareth repeated. The telegram wenf at the first flash. In the stairs he had heard the crowd catch in. an all but inextricable Jamb behind' him. He could not ston to look back. But he looked now, from his wntane ground within the telegraph office. He 'saw the advance fringe - of the battling rabble reach the door,, and Jamb anew, for the fight" of fights, Beyond them beside him were the empty telephone booths and the Idle employees waiting. Gareth learned later that his papers In America had had the news to themselves for twenty entire minutes He learned It very much later, and quite accidentally, at that. - 'But when a newspaper correspondent, no longer a cub and not yet old, has worked out psychological laws for himself, don't they bring him their own reward? Especially when ha waa right ' .r. fl and Shenandoah in Their Nest 1 - - rrrm n n c -- ' Nazaire Bay DAWSON By WARRINGTON a r- St '- nui iTii inin'ii R - ' " if rt- - The model, just completed by the sculptress, of the great St. Nazaire memoriaL bv Mrs. Harrv Pvn WhitnPv which la to be given by the St Nasalre Association f America to France.' It will stand 6n a rock luttlnr fin tie ant i the water In St Nasalre bay, Into which the first American troops to fight In the World war sailed June 26, 1611, The monument will be of bronce, heroic In size, with the soldier 13 feet high and the eagle'i wings 85 feet la spread, A will ' be unveiled June 26, 1926. t - Stage Children Putting on a "Juvenile JFo!lies, : v -- 8 - v.- y v ;- :S P Q kttim, 1 ro 0 i-- ' o 0 In) Here are Uncle Sum's two huge dirigibles, ZB-now the Los Angeles, and the Shenandoah, housed side by side in the great hangar at the navy air station at Lakehurst, N. J. The Shenandoah bad Just returned from ber transconti ' nental mghr when the picture was made. cjtovi TDioreurH ' I New Radio News Transmitter "'. IJW, . . NEW SILO DESIGN Stylish Wedding in Hollywood ... Th A Nntlnflfll Rtnva nhllrfratl khAtaHnn will "Pli T, n.tln Pnl 11, . tMifl i Tort The children In the revue will compete for $10,000 in scholarships. Winners will give special performance at the White House for President and Mrs. Coolldge. In the photograph la a group of these tageehlldren. m -- M New t Trying Novel Method of Eviction 4 MOST WONDERFUL GfItf.H 1 V 1 m t ' President Coolldgs has been made a member of the Smokl tribe .of Pres- C Franflft .TntthtH ... InvunNiv hKAliurffA HUU cott. Arls., and Is seen with the hat .vA Athm . . ... . nt v . th VIUH l l.u rvm.tn iuvuuu nlAtuM f,iuiv Knt him by the Prescott Chamber Important InvemTons, has perfected a radio photo news yiujciyt, transmitter which sends printed matter through the air at the rate of one hundred words per of Commerce signifying- Ms membership In the tribe. ""wu uuivgruiiu buuwb jennins wiin nis new invention. y&, hv.c A 1 v r'f . a Helen May Martin off Geneva, 111., is the only kntwn deaf and blind person who learned to play the piano welL She hal never heard a sound or seen a slngta object Miss Martin has extraordinary talent, and has been pronounced the most wonderful girl In tie world"' by Paderewskl, for whom she has played. 8he was edu-- 1 Because a tribe of Gypsies who bad rented a house In Chicago persisted in using the place for Illegal fortune telling, a real estate firm started to brick deaf at Olanthe, and In addition to her ; up the doors and windows. The Gypsies refused to move out but made such musical talent Is able to cook, weave clamor that the police came and stopped the bricklayers. and embroider. She was born blind t and deaf,."'".' ! .. -- Earl of Galloway Weds Yank Girl SHOOTING HER COAT d mm i.tf;y.ii irr 'i mi :1 This combination ilo and granary, scientifically ventilated and containing n a elevator that automatically fills it, has been designed by a While the Bloomlngton (111.) man. building' follows the design of the ordinary silo, it Is constructed of concrete staves and on two aides of the building the staves are provided with vent boles which permit air to circulate through the stored fodder and prevent It. from spoiling. Under the . ,ft structure Is a passageway, largo enough for a horse and wagon or mo !1 tor track. believe owns them. motor-drive- , hl5 "!f - t?teU1I" hinL.v When Priced dog to the movie world, promised r' "0.1 of HaI War whon NIchol, Newfoundland, hrTe etyUsh wedding took place. C100 officiated. FcUe , permit ;aQli) I nil V The dally limit bag of .five every day the opening of the season that's with his bride,, who was Miss Phillips Wendell, the squirrel hunting record, of pretty Gnwy Jacob Wendell of New York, and sister of Lady Oarnar-- Dorothy Hlxton of Neillsville, Wis. married In St Margaret's churehr Westminster. The wed- - Squirrel potple every day for the famPromlneat society persons. The couple or now ily and a nice, squirrel coat before b' I snow flies. . I1 "j"? bo? since "y1 ning" |