* Dancing fiz T m"h' 'i y . "What popularity the waltz has lost in this counitry is due to out vigorous young people who~ demand ~peppy dances that will enable them to give vent: to the strength and good healith they fee'. That was why the©CBhar-- Je' m, that dance of doubtful crigin, had -- such a yvogue. -- It= rsquires Mhaswnnatohm anch as the and -- Black ple are dancing in this country thap mmmah&-&;.* town, Ohie, president of the Masters of America, told Internation-- al.\:::-s'nlcohuoxchdv' e in-- tery o as ing--and not far offt--when dancing will be part of the sehool curtricalum in almost every city of ijmportancée in the country. t By JAMES L. KILGALLEN _ .: New York.----America ~has becaome a dancing nation, settirfg the péce for other countries. (Millions more net tlion. to the dancing master who want to. keep e dance husiness on a hbigch plane, and. if fousd to be~dubieu, he s exposed. _ _ -- 'a o f Ing to Mr. Bott, and are knitting a relktionship that <will rca.!t'h heal-- tLitr young people everywhere, > people had to sneak off to some witd place to dance has long since been disearded," said..Mr.. Bott, 'and the schools and churchkes of the country are taking an interest in the dance as a means of mental--and physical upbuilding." He predicted that be time is com-- where in the country. Aa --soon as any person starts a dance hall his record Assculations in many cities, accord-- "The youn;: people of America in-- aist upon dancing," be . said. +"Boys and gifle of today are more athletic than their. grandparents were. and they will have nope of the old--fash-- tendencey is swinging toward --faster steps. -- The waltz, of course, will live forever but where young people dance three or four snappy, vigorous num-- bers. Kvem to waltz music they con= trive .many-- intricate steps to give them more action." c ~ Bott declared that the two "unfair competitors" the dancing: masters have ar>s 1. m-h'::cmlfl who dance are going to doge zm-mmusuunz:" Wo Dance Hali Evil * Tha so--calleg "dance hall evil" is rapidly being eliminated. bhe explain-- ed~ By cooperation with the Betttr Business -- Bureaus throughout the country, the Parcing Masters of Am-- music, in rapidly g.. The danes halls do not get a foothoald any-- "Dancing is a recreation, not &.dis sipation," : said Bott,-- who, in addition to being president of the dancing masters is president of the Youngs-- town Rotary club ind a deacon in AIR RACERS ARE . = will roar ont of the sky and onto §po-- kane's airport late this-- afternoon, ac-- cording to estimates of air ";: ficials today. mtrdtr A § in the four . races, from New--York. and two from San .Francisco,-- should. cross the hilly rim of the airport be-- tween 3:3&.'4&.."11 # Preceeding . arrival . < who have been battling head wind sleet.. fog and rain in the ir € tinental flight, Spokane wes itselt over to-- day to a wild $ of aviation, starting with a mammoth "umunrumamm'fi. rade in which a & W participate. . _ MaJ John T. managin gdirector o6f the National Air Derby Association of Spokane, was to lead the bombing parade. pang t IS ~ HEALTHY Pfigflfif idar the 'track itself.© --Sehank is ont of.Ihe city, emeie oi d es ienss LIMIT CHAIN RADIO . -- REPORTS OF FIGHT »éar the track itself.. Sehank is out the CHURCH JOINS IN by re put seklom with. : suceess beyod ED : . , phyr without Feal spprication or goins: . O | > deterred by.'the previous * others, 'however," a. much »+perturbed | _ Tl" clergyman bas sofught ; @. vehicle for the easing of the woek beset his sok!, 'and by the -- w1 > ~use_ ot solemn language difuted with | n liberal allowan+s of e--mloute | : ~ uau.bohuupa'fl:_i mething | -- that may, perhaps, be regarded an|, . . worth while."~ Thos, «ompiaining of1 . shose who resent his air. of solemnity,] 'he writes <as--follows: C t A», ~~ "Be he grave or--serious in his de-- |-- meanor: seeking to uphold the dignity |. ot 'his cloth, * s > _2 85 .. Ne c _ "He is said to Ue standofiish, 'pi,"]. .nd t Slmilarly, be Stdy that, it he tries} to be "gay, greeting aill anit : with a. mwry: jest, there care. many |: whom he 'displenses, so that, in re speet of his 'Semmecnor, he is very like the old man in' the fuble ot "The Old ~ Man and-- His CAsm* wiio, trying to|. definite pursuit. : Many persons in public life have suffered from it. Only wife of the British premier, suftered an attack of it after shaking hands with 000 women at a political meeting. . The.prince of Wales sufered from it badliy on each of his tours to distant parts of the empire. -- Lioyd George afihfidmm' have Both been laid up with it And OA $5,000° in jewelry. from them 'they milelike bim mach: . "Se that when to him they should tura as 'to a friend in need, with them he cutteth no ice." j ' It is, however, when be seeks to In-- terfere with ihe widespread habit 'of tippling that he gets into really het "Again, it beholiding --overmuch in-- temperance in Ris fock: he exhorteth all men to abstain from strong--drink. "He is said to be a kilbjoy and in-- "So when he bic#eth froth, he cont mitteth iniquity: and when be bloweth it not, he is like & sinner," % The conclusion to which the parson comes, surrounded by perplezritiesso dire, i# doubtless the best thing in his Twentleth--certury psaim: 'latfin-r:tm'dlh the steps of Master: ~and care nought for the opinion of men."* > and has the added merit of possessing a far--reaching 'appli¢ation. f "Hand Shague" Common "Hand shague," which caused Preaf-- dent --Coolldge to carry his band in @ please everybody," ended up by pleas bargain.-- This geod 'clergymsa has his --problems also with yourg men By-- she use of cleveriy rays of colored lights and a refrac tion screen, a Wuashington artist is able . to -- make --things ~Agvisible, ~say4 Popular -- Mechanics Magazine ---- At a demonstration a--personsitting in a was to employed this system in causing an entire aundience to disap pear. -- The"magic" oft the=stuot is based . on certain"' laws of 'light and vision and emphasised the fact of its proud> young pogsessor, who walked manfully into the barber shop and demanded a shave. -- The bot tow-- Uis were soothing and he bhait as the consclentious barber scraped nrckes. : The protess: compidted. the the > mirror at}luis clean--shaven Hp. his Cmot) "But if be-- entereth a tavern and putteth bis foot upon the rail of breas: there be those who say, *Behoid 'a Bernard Shaw has been heard to de clare that be will never risk it again. English Clergyman T cells ot IinJaw, Mrs. H. L Jones;s}| * of F4 r Among the Burmese an idea exists that people born on the same day of "mm"mm.nfl- . fortune wili--be their lot. -- In order to prevent these unfortunate marriages every girl bears a record of her birth-- _ day in the: initial Jott»z of her name, ~each day of the week having a letter bélonging to it, and &1l children are kmhinmvflq'mm upon which they were borm. ~= /. = ~ x hope it will be a "rather useful kind of book.' It goes rather in a Rery strain hbout the present condi-- Mlon of men in ~general, and the strange pass they are coming to ; and L eaiculate 4t mayawaken ' here and :«to_m,mofl. eyesn and consider what he is about h"la!dh-'fich&fi- 'virable ~at present.--Carlyle, in a let: ter to hils mother, Of "Past and Present" UNDAUNTED by unfaverable wenther, twenty--five planes left Mitchel Ficld, L. L. at down Monday on .-..P ru-n-:&?hhh--u.--'.qu"bm dower left) J. 8. Chartes of Richmand, who was Tirst to take off in Englerock plane, and (right) Konets EK. Vnger, former L. ¥. C. ase, fiying the Black Lrow. . © m y \ IPTEKN PLANES in the Class A division took off from Roosevelt Ficld in the National Air Derby on Pucsday, -- Above are N. &. Namer and Brace McDonald, Spokane entrants. por ons LAFFS IN TODAY'S NEWS DISPATCHES-- nto" in French hilg. | ©C Serchant of. a --young man who s«mmu.,uwmh-um to. the :uobility smor | with his . . «very. good," --re-- u--sm«-.fldhmu "I think father brought About wl »0o0on be garning evough so I cas wl T n i e t ND a v)wvwvww--w # o Mi',v,_.',_ ExaF¥a>._° ) Brl n ty % , wMMt.". 4 yX P+ xoi ~: * P * Wh k Meds . 9 is 4 + Planes Off on Hop P 2 we o % ought to be a law requiring five pay days in every month except February, which is too Short. All they would do to February is make St. Yalentine's m-lfiztukalwun «--Woman's Companion. forgeries, and for a--time deceived the most learned men in the country, when be was only savaenteen.> says that in 1917 It. was estimated that 1.07 pet cent of the number of bables born in the United States were twins. born in the United States were twins. Twenty per cent--of thess are said to have been twins of the tdentical type A man who weighs 180 pounds here would weigh only 30 pounds on the A tramp in a--very ragged: coat was atked what--material it was made of, "LI~ dunno," be --said, "but I thinkit's mostly freah air." > _: s and means to snarl and quarrel. -- It was applied by the burghers of Ne# a day, according--to an answered ques-- "The speed of glaciers. vtaries from au.Jnch a day to seversl fect a day, some few moving as fast a%s 100 feet moon is one--sizth that on the earth. Th -- A Amsterdam to the invaders from Con-- of corn to supply the lime in 100 pounds of milk. * Aycree ¥ Fet People's Heaven? T'erm of Opprobrium Seven to One w lee foaee & ,»,".f :,_. '?f'.x ,fi n¥ hss it RaA + Mie on P ho . ces o Mc 4s . Iesa c o o NCP c s 3 . To P44 e . i )« Paopaite, .L l Fr0 tm in WB't iz + is\ * t .n + Age 4 t P mm * P h . * e 4 C h+ . Nesn ces Te "4V o nds 14 Aouens fuies ait on 6 c -- mc C250 * TLight provided by a Jamp in.wtiich burned--'wo Incandescent bulbs, snake head was worked in gold and adorned with precious stones. In the early days of the World war ¥rench aviators carried as part of their equipment a bag of bricks. 'They were carried in the hope that m pliot might 'be able to hur! a brick into the pro-- polier of the enemy's alrplane.. Two German machines were thus brought --Egyptian Ruler's Crown . The' rulers of shclent Egypt wore around their heads a snake--head band in henor .of the cobra,-- which repre-- rented godliness and immortality. The where they hide nuts; are they guid-- ed by the sense of smell or do they Just chance to find food that they or groupd we might strike all the coal and oll that would be néeeded in mil-- lions of years. <In all likelihood we should find radium, gold, silver, dia-- monds, and other gems of untold wealth, as well as wonderful new met-- als and fresh sources of energy.--Ez-- pregecesror their colpage. Th ration of Charles I, who expressed a strong desire/not to look the same way as Oliver Cromwell, It was in the reign of Charles II that Britannia Arst appeared on the colnage, the orig-- inal model being taken from a portrait of beautiful Frances Stewart, Duchess MHvered to. my home tlie news from the four ~eorners ot 1e world: This mews as printed in<the daily paper is Anterpreted for me in the weeklies and monthilies, all of which are delivered to--my-- very --door n'aputmn. 'Lhe Soors 0" my: ie are cleaned with A' suction sweepéer, while the Clothes are put tEkrough an electric washer and jroned in am electrically driven mangle. *A other squirrels have higden? Natu-- ralists are puzzled over the question, but tests performed with a squirrel by Dr. A.~--Brooker-- Kiugh of Cornell university <indicate ~that memory plays no small part in the animal's remarkable skill at locating food it has secreted, says Popular Mechanics snow had --complicated the problem. RDoctor Kiugh conciuded that the per-- formance showed the squirrel's strong memory for location. | It is strange that an expedition into Beriousily attempted: If we could sink A red squirrel buried nine nots in the--snow on a house balcony.. The mext day it came and dug them up '\ In. an adjoining ~rooni atelephone, M M I ¢an talk ".' ady city on Tthis . North American continent. On the wall is a thermostat which ? the ow ~of gas. in my fur-- nace, and keeps the. room at an even '_A amusic cabinet containjng records My children attend a school where they are given a better education than the sons of kings--could command a I go to work in an automobile, and I travel a distance m three--quarters of an hour m-me been an all--day trip for my er a genera-- erdinary Income, living in an ordinary way. -- Tens of thousands have just as ~~~__ The King's Head Each succeeding. Britith sovereign Shaft Would Have Vaiue Bricks Used by Aviators rel's Good -- Memory of Our Artist on the Day's News! f*{ *@23 \~ 'm Wfl.kf Asserts Mount El Bruz, in the Caucasus, hay-- ing an elevation of 18,465 feet. Some authorities do not include this moun-- tain within Europe and give Mount We wish to thank our many friends and neighbors for their kind assistance in--the recent destruction of our home by Sre----¥'rom a Wyoming Paper. * MeP of courage, men |of sense and men of lettérs are frequent ; but a true gentleman is what one seldom sees.-- --School Life. >' They Are Scarce . 3 state, and many schools are acquiring tracts of land to be wooded by pupits. Of all men entering a woman's io the three that cause her the most trow-- bie are: The one she missed, the one she is endeavoring to lose and the one sbe plans to grab.--Exchange. f Reforestation Two thousand trees are added each year to the forest established several years ago by Cold Brook public school county, N.X. School forests are ex-- does the heart beat, The.clephant's Mbuw;::sumh minute ; Fhat of a ) times. © The nor-- mal rate is 70 for men, 80 for women, 00 for youth, 140 for a new--born babe, 150 for a rabbit, and 175 for a mouse, Activity speeds up the beating of the heart. If you rewain quietly in bed for a day or two you will have saved 20000 beats. 7 g "That expressior, 'dash off a stort,' gives me the pip! I never dashed off a story in my lifc~. It's my opinion that any story d«sbhed off is boun? to be worthlegss." *"* sometimes seems to me that every map, woman and chilid in the United States wants to write and is certain he, she or jt can write." he says. "'You knbow,' -- young fellow will remark, 'I think Iil become a writer. Why, 1 wrote an essay the other day and ev.rybody told me it was wonderfol. 1 think Til jusa sat story and send it to one of the big And for the good housew'lfe,. drug clerk and insurance salesman who thisk that story writing is merely the busines: of buying ink and paper on which one's way to literary fame can be written overnight, Mr. Cob) emits a disillusioning outburst. R it's "Kometimes 1 keep an idea in the barck of my mind for a couple of years before it actually reauches the form oi & story. It's like an egg inside a hen, It goes on growing; then the time com.,_ whemit craves to be laid,. and office hours for writing, and get are not inspirations but for yarns. wise in MceClure's Magazine : . _ "The two biggest fools in the writ-- ing game are the rebel, the ieconociast, the fiery eqpirit, the free und untram-- meled woul who won't learn the rules that have been proved sound by grn-- erations of writers in the past: ind the wman who, having learsed them, won't break them occasionaliv. *But you can't break the rules in télligentiy without mastering them first, and knowing exactliy when and why and bow they shoulid be J <' n to get a particnlar effect." As to walting for inspiratien to guide the fingers over the typewriter keyboard, Mr. Cobb is very emplatic. "I perer had an inspiration in my life," he declares. "I keep reguiar office hours for writing, and what I get are not inspirations but notions Europe's Highest Point * Woman's Troubles hemnvit Heart Beats himse!f? this T.we€ uds