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Show This Week by Arthur liilsbiuir iM. Artichokes The Bull Is Honest Riding on a Bullet Rewards for Killing-Providence Killing-Providence helps those that nlo themselves. California artichoke tfiowors knuw U. Hvik-ad of fighting each o'her w.ui price cuLs, or complaininr without action, these men coin-. b.ne in a fund to advertise their product. 'Hint's the modem way oi im. l rov.r.e: conditons. First produce Vhat people want then let the peo-1'.; peo-1'.; know that you have it, by ad- .'fing. Artichokes are rich in most important im-portant vitamines; the leaves, cat-en cat-en one at a time with an excellent sauce Hollandaise or HoUandatse vmgrette teach children to eat slowly. The substantial artichoke foundation foun-dation provides, in nourishing form the "roughage" that men need. Mr. Sidney Franklin, born in Brooklyn, and perhaps possessing ancestors that lived three thousand years ago on the Island of Crete, went to Spain, became a bullfight- sn'rov mW he goos int0 vaudville vL Vs lnS 18 aolutely a "fafr lav hPlU'e" SP01t' bcca' In that respect, bull finnt-'S finnt-'S w unlike prize fighting! Mrs Elizabeth Converse, only Chuiai, Virgmia returnig from a coon hunt, at 6 oclock in'he morn- hor K1"1 autmbile driven bv ' l'a(l on a curve, knocked knock-ed over two trees, cut off a telephone tele-phone pole at the base The im- nstantly, her head crushed, both legs and arms brosten. Her companion com-panion died later. The impact tore the shoes from apart They l0Und 100 feet When you drive a car at fifty or sixty miles an hour you are rid-Ingoa rid-Ingoa buUet weiehing from 5,000 to 8,000 pounds, going about 100 teet a second. Motorists should remember thac. In Sparta, Michigan, a farmer may take a bushel of wheat to the barber shop and get a good, artistic artis-tic haircut and twenty-seven cents in cash for the bushel. That is uniy a partial solution of the farm problem. A farmer with a thousand thous-and bushels of wheat can't hava his hair cut a thousand times. If anybody asks, "How long will the depression last?" reply, "How long does a cold in the head last?" It depends on who has the cold how much of a cold it is, and what you do after you get it. This country is rich and powerful power-ful enough to throw off this chill of depression and, anyhow, it is comforting to know that even a heavy cold does disappear. The Nebraska Bankers' Association Associa-tion offers $3,000 reward for every bank bandit killed during a bank hold-up, or in pursuit following a hold-up. Similar rewards have been offered elsewhere, but there is some question as to th&fr legality. Offering rewards for killing men that cannot, after death, prove they were not bank bandits, is delicate del-icate business. However, sixteen Nebraska banks have been robbed in sixteen months, and something must be done. Dinosaur eggs, found originally in Thibet, have been discovered in America. The "hen" dinosaur that laid them was about eighty feet long. Standing up she could look over tall trees. These strange animals of all sizes once covered and apparently dominated dom-inated the earth. Some, carnivorous, carnivor-ous, lived on the others, peaceful vegetarians. Suddenly they vanished, at about the same time, and science wonders wond-ers why. Swarms of savage rats gnawed their feet, thus destroying them, according to one theory; and, according ac-cording to another, animals of higher high-er intelligence killed them off, as British and American bipeds are killing off elephants, giraffes and rhinoceroses in Africa. Mr. Pabst, one of the able brewers brew-ers that formerly "made Milwaukee famous," has just spent a million doiiars equiping one of his plants to inake real beer, in anticipation Oi' a change in the prohibition law. Tiiis m;.y be premature. Any prohibition compromise will probably ignore the law, letting the public drink as much as it pleases of vile whiskey and badly made beer. Beer, properly made, would be better and would add hundreds of millions a year to government revenues, rev-enues, whereas "botleg" gives thousands thous-ands of millions a year to bootleggers. bootleg-gers. Adults hardened by years, by contact with the world and the ossification that goes on inside the skull, should remember that children, chil-dren, more sensitive than their elders,' el-ders,' feel sorrow and disgrace more kesnly. In Detroit, a 14-year-old girl, accused ac-cused of smoking cigarettes, was expelled from school, denied the charge, brooded over it, drowned herself. Those responsible will say, "We had no idea she would kill herself." There is always danger when a child is treated with cruel severity. The result may not be suicide, but there is always intense suflenng " and often a career injured. |