28 "But nothing has any right to be so beautiful!" It was my involunâ€" tary exclamation on stepping out on my balcony here in Rabat, lookâ€" ing over the old Moorish town .with its lovely gates and walls, with, in front of us, beyond an ancient cemeâ€" tery in which a small Arab boy is per¢ching on a&. gravestone and, two â€"donkeys are taking their fill of yelâ€" low .flowers, the â€" blue .and â€"green cloudâ€"speckled sea.. The air 4s erysâ€" ftal clear, so bright that even the somber colors of the Arab robes seem ‘like_festal attire. The white flags on the prayer towers, signals for prayer, seem like flags of an eternal truce between this land and It was with regret that I left this morning the ugly modern city of Casablanca, for there, guests of some English friends, I had been entertained by the "English Colony" for five days. Touring is, after all, much like aquaâ€"planing, tearing along from wave to wave and from crest to crest being touched only by .the spray. But dropping off for a few days is being submerged in the waters w hich you have only skimmed before. # the And being submerged in those of Casablanca was to have an opporâ€" tunity of seeing the wistfulness of a colony of intensely patriotic ‘peoâ€" ple exiled from home. â€" Wherever, the English settle, there is a "bit of © England," turbaned â€" servants handing about English crumpets and tea over which English voices are discussing the recent .cold snap in London. has for the observer something pathetic, the extra turn of tke screw which makes ordinary things poignant. ' Even the golf course where played yesterdayâ€"tripping, over yalty, as there were two prin« two counts and a duke on ths co played yesberdayâ€"_-tripping‘ over . roâ€" yalty, as there were two princess, two counts and a duke on the course â€"â€"had so many reminders that this was. Morocco chiefly : the caddies, great turbaned and bearded creaâ€" tures stalking about with the silly looking bags‘of clubs of *which, like a person caught carrying a newsâ€" paper bundle, they tried to appear unaware. Except my caddy, who, trying hard to get the idea, kept rushing after my ball and bringing it up to T9 °6 " Laamins smile. ~He â€"had eyidenfly P To L 21 cï¬ d wanioans SR me with a beaming smile. He had evidentUy been trained as & retriever. Our only comâ€" fort was â€" that we could speak our. minds about them quite freely and leave them as happy as before. ' Pausing for.a moment in modern Morocco one has a chance to reflect on the marvelâ€" lous work the French have done here in the few> short years since 1912. Roads, railroads, the appearance of law and order, sanitation and even gecurity> for e‘he_‘en:.l sanitationâ€" antdâ€" even POCUUH °* 102 wack traveller are as new 88 that. And most of it is due to Marshall Lysutey, that genâ€" jus . of Moroeco whose influence overspreads the place as a great oak: towers over a garden. It was he who fixed on the happy French colonization plan, he who saw to it that the war did not stop the work, who built military railways so that he could rush his bandful of troops about and make the nations think he bad an army, it was his brilliant idea that German prisoners should build the roads. Then it was he, who unâ€" 1 e c 0 40 0oal CA aie : mm appreciated as are all genuiaes in MTO 27 " time, sailed out of this harbor, recalled to France, without & single salute except that fired by some English ships which hapâ€" pened to be there. Some day, probably after he is dead, he will have the recogniâ€" tion that he deserves. _ _ h on thAl NC WERC]CCIT It is evening now. We have seen enough of Rabat to make it plain that the promise from my balcony will be more than fulfilled. I have just been up on the hotel roof where Sali, the place of Robinson Crusoe‘s capâ€" tivity showed across the river like a ghostly village of wh*~ ard **> river itself, a fist silver band c=";~ t~~ moon became truly MOROCCO ESTHER GOULDS TKAVELL * _ CORNCLCRK, t was he, who unâ€" nuises in their own harbor, recalled to the marveiâ€" ne here in 12. _ Roads, r and order, â€" the casual the refuge of those terrible pITBI@s .@L D0 1 against whom Sir Francis Drake sailed. Close at bhand, from my height an..occaâ€" sional light offered a glimpse through an Arab doorway. into an Arab home. And from somewhere farther away, carrying with the startling distinctness of sound â€" in this air, came the queer tinkling sound of Arab stringed instruments accompanied by the steady rybhthm of Arab drums. "RAYMOND â€"WHITCOME 5.'&..8- RAMOND & _WHITCOMB COMPANY 176 No. Michigan Avenue NORTH CAPEâ€"BALTIC SUMMER CRUISES $.5. ""Carinthia"‘â€"â€" June 26 $.5. "Franconia‘"â€"â€"June 29 Raymondâ€"Whitcomb North Cape Cruises for almost ten years have been the most popular Summer Cruises to sail from America. This year there will be TWO Rayâ€" mon‘d â€" Whitcomb Sumâ€" mer Cruises to the Land of the Midnight Sun. The cruiseâ€"ships will be sgisterâ€"shipsâ€"the newest Cunardersâ€"specially deâ€" signed for cruising. Sailâ€" ing just after the close of schools and colleges, these cruises have conâ€" sistently attracted younger people and famâ€" ilies bound for a vacaâ€" tion together. They may _ be taken as a complete holiday in ~themselves : (generous shore excurâ€" sions characterize . the prograims) or as <a‘ deâ€" lightful new way toParis. . The routes include Iceâ€"â€" land, the North Cape and Hammerfest, Trondâ€" Khjem, the most beautiful of the Norwegian Fjords and the cities of Scanâ€" ‘dinavia and the Balticâ€" Bergen, Oslo, Stockholm, Visby, Tallinn (Esthoâ€" nian ‘capital), Helsingâ€" fors (capital of Finâ€" land) and Copenhagen. The ratesâ€"$800 upâ€" include assured homeâ€" ward accommodations by such noted Cunard liners as the "Aquiâ€" tania", ‘"Berengaria‘" and ‘"Maurctania‘‘ as â€" Tel. State 8615 T HEâ€" P R ES S "Carinâ€" White City Opened â€"» Séason Last Evening Another â€" brilliant â€" season wasl started May 15th, when White City begins its 25th joyous year. 50 zippy attractions have been readied and they are all primed for the crack of the whip which starts the millions of thrills in store for the myriads of merrymakers who will stream through eP io dnc romin enncanen Cï¬ reral 1114 B 3. Lo fabade in tichchini en tabsimes the gates during the four months i pending. ’ Last season over two million peoâ€" ple enjoyed the unique .pleasures housed along the mileâ€"long walk. at White City and the prospects for the coming year hold gay visions of many more.. The Flash, the world‘s chamâ€" pion of coaster rides, is well broken in and it takes its long dips and speedy curves like the thoroughbred that it is. The Racing Coaster, Pep, Chutes, Mysterious Sensation, Heyâ€" dey, and other playthings. are all I C 2 c uqy Py O d c en groomed for rim + . Be sure the floors they play on are free from draughts â€"their bedrooms wxï¬fy. American Radiator Heating . Equipment can be installed for less than $75 a room. TRADE IN YOUR OLD fHEATE‘R We‘ll be glad to make old heater and arra or the children‘s sake NAPHTHAâ€"KEROSENE GASOLINE _ _ _ ELM PLACE SERVICE STATION Eim Place and First St. Complete Oiling and :Greasing fhdy N* $1.1D5. : z.: 30 Minute Service tfxe start and they have 15 South St. Johns Avenue Telephone Highland Pprk 201 to malie_-pjibérfl‘ éflowgnce on your. id aâ€rrange.r' convenient paymcnts. We Guarantee All Work â€" es y /E E D O L all been given some new twist or some new angle flqueeze a few more hysterical howls from its paâ€" trons. There will also be many new Atâ€" tractions consisting of "Revelation," a new extravaganza recently importâ€" ed from Europe showing the ereation of a human in actual flesh. The Big Free Circus, the Musical Revue, the fireworks display, and~ the thrilling spectacles all are to be offered paâ€" trons at some time or other. And every person who attends will feel the delight of the unusual pleasures housed in the square xpile of thrills at White City. l rp ons â€" ¢ * .+ Whatâ€" Profit? .‘ _ Why be always talking about proâ€" fits in this world will geshrdleaocins fits? The man who hustles for proâ€" fits in this world will get his loss in the next.â€"Farm & Fireside. Phone Highland Park 35465 Thursday, May 16, 1929 Thursday, May® _ The very firs to each other other by using their voices by press the symb tures in The s in stone or in stop to think t ple did such thi .bolism is as ol woman. _ We n alphabet as bei bols for sound _ The first pl shows in Can "Camp Fire C think that th ‘club for cam more signific was chosen f. eral wanted Fire ‘Girls." of what the with the hon the. hearth. hearth girls, the warmth ¢ the home. â€" ! outdoors as * which was th cluded the people and 0 discuss ideal successes â€"and cheer, ~strang symbol of al ‘= and the org Camp Fire C All‘ through people, the. Ass Greeks, we fin or a curve in pleasing arran symbol for an Gothic area everything. J and spires of People sudds designs were « the adaptatior ed; and the s forgotten. Camp Fire members som ty of symbolis ing as well as by bringing of symbols. In the n again the sy would not 1 wood and t has an i4m] part in the | take the sar perience to j to make a fi ‘Gather for The Fite then hasâ€" n Fire, more: the fire is : not burn. If it does be no burn used as tor: So the sign third rank, A symbol plicity a st ation, or a symbol of individual, the persor stands for that persot criptive wo