By Charles Sughroe WHY, | WAS READING OF A MAN WHO L\VED SHOULD State Laws Restrict Flow in Half of Them. Washington, — Repeal of national prohibition on December 8 Is now a foregone conclusion, but a review of the situation indicates that only about half the states will have liquor this year and In some the wet flood may be sharply restricted by local option, There are 19 states which either pever had prohibition by Constitution or statute or which have cleared their books of such prohibition. These will bave liquor as soon as federal prohibi- tion Is repealed and although only 10 of them have so far passed control laws it Is assumed the others will quickly do so in order to start the flow pf license fees Into the state coffers, Bix of these ten states specifically pro- wide for local prohibition where de- pired. Nineteen “Wet” States. If the 20 other states, 27 still have statutory prohibition and of these 27 there are 11 which also have constitu tional prohibition. Two of the 29 have eonstitutional prohibition only, In only & few of these 20 states have arrange. ments been made which might clear the way for liquor by the date of fed: eral repeal, The 19 states where repeal is ef- fective at once are Arizona, California, Beautiful Fall Gown Fan pleats lend interest to the pep lum and to the square train of Patou's slender gown in blackberry crepe roma. Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Ili. nols, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsyl vania, Rhode Island, Washington and Wisconsin, Wet organizations here include Indiana In the above list with the notation that although it repealed its prohibition enforcement act, some doubt exists as to whether a prohibl- tion statute Is still in effect. States which have statutory prohl- bition are Alabama, Arkansas, Georgla, Idaho, Towa, Kansas, Kentucky, Malne, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippl, Missourl, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Da. kota, Ohio, Olkahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia, Of these the followlag also have constitutional prohibition: Idaho, Kan- sas, Kentucky, Maine, Nebraska, Ohlo, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia. Florida and Wyoming have constitu. tional prohibition alone. Among the states which have statu- tory prohibition alone no plans for special sessions to act on the statutes have been reported from Alabama, Ar- kansas, Georgia, Mississippl, North Carolina, Tennessee or Vermont, Three More May Get In, The legislatures will meet this fall, however, In lowa, Michigan and Min- nesota, which leaves the way open to adding these states to the list which might have liquor coincident with fed- eral repeal. Also, a special legislative committee is considering a control law In Massa- chusetts, a commission is studying a control plan In Missouri, and a liquor control commission has been named in Virginia, which recently voted both for repeal of the Eighteenth amend ment and of the state prohibition law, The states most likely to trail the repeal parade onto actually wet grounds are the 11 which have both statutory and constitutional prohibl. tion and the two which have only constitutional prohibition. The latter, Florida and Wyoming, are definitely out of the liquor group for more than a year. Duck Turns Placer Miner Chicago.—~A duck at Cold Spring-on- Hudson turned placer miner recently, and as a result the Frederick J. V. Skiff Hall of the Field museum here is richer by one placer gold exhibit, The gold was found in the craw of the duck by Frederick Blaschke. Kitchen Door Is Winner in Lottery Istanbul. —Ahmed Besit won $10, 000 with his kitchen door In the recent State lottery, It was dis closed, Resit, fearing that he might lose his ticket, pasted it on the door. It was a prize winner, but was stuck to the door so firmly it could not be removed, Resit unhinged the door, took it to the lottery of. fice, and got his prize, Cz GirareE » PILE 4. DRIVER - The crass, WITHOUT CLAWS OR SHARP TEETH, USES HIS LONG POWERFUL NECK TO FALL UPON HIS FOE LIKE A SLEDGE HAMMER TEST- BoTTiEs CAST in LAKE MICHIGAN TO STUDY CURRENTS, RESULTED IN ONE TRAVELING TEN MILES A DAY MOTIVES By LEONARD A. BARRETT Only in criminal law does motive de- termine the punishment for crime. If a murder Is pre. meditated, the pen alty is death, Should it have been committed by ac- cident or without malice afore thought, the pen. alty may be life imprisonment When Justice de- mands a penalty for other violations of law the element of motive is not considered. It has been a long time since Jean Valjean, in Les Miserables, served 19 years as a galley slave in a French prison for stealing a loaf of brown bread. True, he stole the bread, but the motive which impelled the act was the hunger of the seven little children of his widowed sister, That the penalty was unjust goes with- out question, but how far have we ad- vanced In this respect from the days when Victor Hugo wrote? ———————— — In the reconstruction of our social order—and who doubts it is under- going a very significant change?—the element of motive is bound to receive more serious consideration. The most dangerous condition in our social or- der today Is the problem of unemploy- ment. This Is due to two factors, the impossibility of procuring work by men who honestly seek for it, and the mental attitude of those men who do not care to work even when they have the opportunity. The latter believe that the government's duty is to pro- vide shelter, food and heat for all per- sons deprived of these necessities Buckeye Quarter Carl Cramer, quarterback on the Ohio State university team, is consid. ered one of the most brilliant of the Buckeye players. He halls from Dayton, Ohlo, The element of motive always asks the question, Why? When welfare workers disregard the element of mo tive and give necessities Indiserim- Inately to whomever applies, it only encourages that dangerous attitude which not only accepts but demands these necessities as the rights of eit). zenship. If a man's motive In accept ing help is to escape work, there Is no moral law which demands that he be assisted, to our national recovery, Why do we want recovery? The universal afiswer seems to be, recovery Is essential to prosperity. But why prosperity? If our motive In seeking prosperity 1s that we may again become extrav- agant and indulgent and repeat the same mistake whick brought about the depression, then the return to pros. perity might be open to serious ques. tion. Whenever we have a recovery of our moral and spiritual resources along with the recovery of our mate rial values, our prosperity will remain stable and secure and its recovery fully Justified, ©. 1913, Western Newspaper Unloa., Frogs Alive in Clay of 34-Year-Old Wall Schenectady, N. Y.—Examination of a bullfrog to determine whether it may have lived In hard elay beneath the foundation of a Schenectady building for 34 years, was under way today. The frog is one of five unearthed by workmen while laying a pipe line dliong 146 foundation. The frogs were in the clay 10 feet below the surface. The workmen tossed the frogs on the ground, beileving them dead. Aft. er a few hours In the sun they started hopping about, Four The foundation was constructed 34 years ago. : — Le Baron Walker There are some chambers in which it seems almost impossible to arrange the furniture because of the interfer ence of windows, Since it Is through these openings that sun and lght and alr with their purifying elements can get into the inclosed walléd area, the homemaker who finds this difficulty should realize that It Is an error in the right direction. It is far better to have too many windows In a room than too few. Now that the summer is spent. and draughts of alr are undesirable across beds, seek to find some position for the bed which will give the sleeper protection when windows are open. To sleep In a room without windows open is to hamper good health, the air should fill the room without blow. ing on the sleeper. An excellent position for the dress ing table, whether it is necessary or whether It is by preference, is before a window. The dresser should be low so that the standard does not come too high above the sill. The mirror should be silhouelted against the light. The person using the dresser will find the light Is good. It comes evenly from both sides and also from the top and it is thrown on the per son who Is reflected In the looking glass, A Homemade Dresser. An unsightly table can be convert. od into a beautiful window dresser. Cover the top with wadding first, then with glazed chintz and net. Gather the portion tacked to top edge for side and front ruffles The dresser will be inexpensive and in the vogue. Of course silk can be used for the textile and it can be left without net over it. Or it can have mercerized sateen or percale under the net as best suits the purse. A triple mirror, stood on the top is sufficient, but one with side supports from an old bu. reau can be screwed to the top, or at the back of the table. are good looking, they require no decorative tredtment, be covered to match the dresser, tioned before windows, and prove successful features in the room dee oration. In one instance the bureau was drawn out from the window enough for easy access to it to be per. mitted so that the sash could be raised or lowered readily to alr the room, which was small and had but the one large window. ©. 1923, Bell Syndicate ~— WNT Service Busy Navy Builder struction corps, U, 8. MN thief of the buresn of construction and repair of the Navy department, is a busy man these days as the new huliding pro gram of the navy gets under way, He has been chief of the bureau for about one year, § ’ e— NEED NEW CODE FOR THIS AGE Injustice Under Old System Pointed Out. The age of chivalry was responsi- ble for inany of the conventions of modern life When we consider that it ended more than B00 years ago, we may well come to the conclusion that some of Its heritage must be out of date, In the last thirty years we have finally changed, for or for worse, to a very different form of ely- lization, and a new code of man- ners must accompany the change, Especially is this true in regard to women, They have always been brought up with the expectation of care and pro- tection, whether they actually got It or not, From the cradle up little boys were taught to be strong and resourceful and to guard and protect all little girls. And the girls were permitted, if not encouraged, to take advantage of their weakness and dependence, Even under the old rules the ByS- tem worked countless Injustices. A boy could not strike a girl, but a girl could fease and annoy a boy until she drove him to desperation, rely- ing on her sex for immunity, A boy could not ery, because it was unmanly ; a girl could shed buck- ‘Ss of tears to gain her end and it was considered natural. Today, with women demanding and receiving equal rights with men, many of them also expec: special privileges, and are taught from the cradle to use every means, fair or foul, to attain them. It seems essential for the preser- vation of our tradition, If we wish to preserve it that a new nursery code should be evolved, where boys and girls are taught fair play and mutual respect. In this way can be as- sured that the western world will not become a matriarchy In which the men are reduced to a hiologieal necessity by a race of gold-digging amazons~Brooks Peters Church, in Indianapolis News. better only we Why Liquid Laxatives Do You No Harm TT — The dose of a liquid laxative can be measured. The action can be con- trolled. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a day or two later. Nor will a mild liguid laxative irritate the kidneys. The right liquid laxative will bring a perfect movement, and with no discomfort at the time, or afterward, The wrong cathartic may keep you constipated as long as you keep on using itl An approved liquid laxative (one which is most widely used for both adults and children) is syrup pepsin. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a preseriplion, and is perfectly safe. Its laxative action is based on senng— & nafural laxative. The bowels will not become dependent on this form of help, as they do in the case of cathartics containing mineral drugs. Ask your druggist for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Member N. R. A.