Virginians Rally to Call cf Hunting Horn Members of old and prominent Virginia families, whose names have been famous in social life in ihe Old Domin ion for several centuries, rally to the rail of the hunting horn on one of the One old estates in the Blue Ridge foot hills for the tirst spring meet. i **************** II TO THE EDITOR | * i By Fred Barton. + * * <^? **?*?*? **-?***?**?*?*?** IT MUST be difficult to be bright. A very literary lady In another towu has just written me a letter all full of splutter. "I'm cross about these suburban women who form study groups and then can't be self-supporting mental ly." she writes. "I've been coaxed into prepsirin^ another paper, which means 1 11 stand up and do their thinking for them. Why don't they all stay at home and read a book to themselves if they're such culture bounds ?'* I suppose every town has folks who spend t^pusands for limousines but never buy a hook. And yet books are the world's surest and cheapest amuse ment. (Copyright.) Perpetual Fear A baby, it is ;ahi, has only two fears ? loud noise and loss of support. He recovers usually from the former but rarely ever fro 11 the latter. ? Hav erhill Evening Gazette. WHY PEOPLE SNEEZE By M. K. THOMSON. Ph. D. SNi;i:Z!N<; is one of the coinm??n reflexes. Other rellexes are wink ing. hiccoughing, yawning. gaping, sobbing, smiling. squirming. trem bling. shivering, shuddering. wincing. gnispiiiK. etc. The reflex is the simplest type of action capable for a creature ?nd<?wed with a nervous system, it Is an in born reaction. The act is definite, quick and automatic. The chief function ?>f a relies Is to protect the organism from immediate harm. Winking protects the eye. couching protects the lungs in yetting rid of foreign substances and mucus that accumulates in colds and con gest ions. C rasping protects from a fall due to sudden losing of hulance. The same is true of all definite re llexes. They are ready-made acts for ready-made situations. Among the most useful true relieves is sneezing which protects the nasal passage from foreign objects and from anything that i? likely to poison or In jure the person. The stimulus for this reflex is not Problems of the Girl Students By JEAN NEWTON COMBS word from a college that has recently become coed, that i he fjirl students have been forbidden to talk to the men! On the face of it, the ruling Is al most unbelievable in its suggestion of the antediluvian. One reason for coeducation is the innocousness of the familiar. In other words, it is the very intimacy of the daily association of the two sexes which it Is hoped will wear off self-consciousness, cultivate the habit of working side by side without being discontented by each other, supply that familiarity which forearms for necessary associations when school days are over and when poise in the presence of the other sex may be a matter of success or failure of an im portant transaction. People who do not believe In that theory will not approve, of course, of coed institutions. Hut to estubllsh an institution as coed, and then make a I ruling that the women students must not speak to the men ? well, incon- | slstency, to my mind, is a mild term for it. The fact of the matter is that at the college in question there are two thousand male students and fifty co eds ! In the light of which there is special interest to this remark of the dean on the ban on girls talking to the men : "It would not have been so bud It they had only talked to one boy at a time, but when they stopped to talk to one, they were soon chatting with seveu or eight I" Small wonder, we are impelled to say. when the ratio is one to forty? And for remedy they threaten to expel any girl who hesitates, even for an instant, ou the campus walks or in the corridors of the college buildings to exchange words with a male student To cure a girl of talk ing to eight boys at once they forbid her to speak to even one To cure boys of flocking around the girls. I eight to one, they forbid a word with a girl. Short-sighted would he a mild word. The logical remedy, of course, for such a complaint as eight boys flock ing around a girl, is more girls In the college ? so many girls that the boys | will become used to them and hence I lie same for all people. A woman of my acquaintance says that she cannot take a lump of sugar without sneezing. Pepper ami snuff and other irritants almost universally induce sneezing. Another peculiarity of sneezing as compared with other reflexes is that the response is also varied from per son to person. Thus some people al ways sneeze three times if they sneeze at all. Others have a different num ber as high as twelve or more. This may he primarily a matter of habit and the factor of anticipation. Sneezing, like most of the reflexes, is a protective mechanism. Taken to gether the reflexes are the emergency kit of the physoph.vslcal organism. <!c) by McCMure Newspaper Syndicate.) Mlf the next war is fought in the air," says Practical Polly, "it Is go ing to be a sad blow to the battle field-guide profession." more or less indifferent. And for the girls the remedy is to let them talk to the boys untii the novelty wears off, when they will get down to business, oblivious to the hoy world. Isn't that the way it usually works out? <{?) by the Hell Syndicate. Inc.) GlftUGAGvP Good Things Worth Trying jj By NELLIE MAXWELL S GRAPEFRUIT Is coining more and more to be appreciated ; as a breakfast fruit it has long held ttrst place, bur a grapefruit cake or pie or pudding is rather new. Golden West Cake. Cream one-half cupf il of butter with one cupful of sugar, add the well beaten yolks of two eggs. Sift one uud three-fourths cupfuls cf flour with two and one-half teaspoo tfuls of baking powder, one- fourth t*-aspoonful each of salt and soda, add to the creamed mixture, alternating with oue-half cupful of grapefruit juice and pulp, freed from membrane. Fold In the stiffly beaten egg whites and bake In two layers. Put together with a lemon filling and cover the top with an Icing of powdered sugar, butter and grated rind of grapefruit with Juice to moist en. ? Corn Bread With Coconut. Take one cupful of corn meal, one cupful of flour, one-fourth cupful of sugar, five teaspoonfuls of baking pow der. one-half teaspoonful of salt, one cupful of milk, one well beaten egg, two tablespoonfuls of fat* Mix as usual and add one-half cupful of shredded coconut at the last. Hake in a shallow pan for thirty minutes. <(?). 19S0. Western Newipapur Union.) hOOOOOOOOOOOOOC oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocxk Wind Indicator for Use at Airports < A novel wind Indicator board desiRned by the weather bureau for tuse at airports. When one or more of the four tiny bulbs light np they Indicate tbe direction of the wind and an electric buzzer tell* how fust the wind la blow lac. Paul A. Miller, Junior meteorologist, la shown In the picture The Children's Corner A ?Mi.JSr?V?.5?s A COLOR CUT-OUT When yon have colored the b?rd* ac ? ordlnp to your knowledge, cut them out and Insert them as you choose. In the slits on the base of the bird douho. These are tbe birds shown: No. 1 Hone BrMctcd <;ro?brak| No. 2 BlueJ*jrj No. 5 Baltimore Orlolei No. 4 Dloeblrdt No. 6 ilrowa Tkraaheri No. 6 Cardinal Bird i No. 7 Scarlet Tana*er j No. 8 MockJac Bird. ? Margaret Wheeler Rosa. THE BIRD I used to think it a very strange thing That a bird in a cage didn't care to sin* ; That It fluttered about from perch to tray And chirped with a note that was sad all day. But a bird in a tree that I chanced to climb Told me the reason without any rhyme. lie hopped on the branches and sang to me Of the great, glad, joy of being free. He sang of the sea and the whole wide earth; Of the trees and the space and a wee bird's blrtli. He flew straight up where the clouds float by And freshed his wings In the soft, blue sky. And I knew when I saw him a speck In the blue. And heard all the joy that he sang of, too. That he'd told me the secret without any word ; A cage, oh, a cage ? hasn't room for a bird! A PATRIOTIC CROSS WORD PUZZLE AN AUTOMOBILE TO MAKE A box from the florists is best but any box as big and the same shape will do. Look at figure one, which Is the top of the box, and cut about where the dotted line is shown. This will divide your box Into two parts, one a bit longer than the other. The short piece which we will call A, is to be the radiator. Now take the other part of your box, the Inside, and cut off about two inches from one end as shown In figure 2. Now slip A down over the end of this part of the box which we will call C. Now pick up the longer piece of the first half of the box again, (this we will call B) and at the open end, cat a strip two inches wide up to the top, but not across the top as we want to leave a piece to shade the driver's eyes. In B, cut out windows on each side and then slip B down over C about one Inch and paste se curely. Cardboard wheels, made from round cereal boxes, milk bottle tops, or laun dry Inserts may now be attached by brads or paper fasteners. Be sure to put a "spare" one on behind. A strip of cardboard pasted across the front makes a good bumper, a small spool glued on top of the radiator, makes a good radiator cap, and two milk bottle tops stuck oi< In front will serve as headlights. Paste inside, straight strips of cardbourd, bent at the edges for seats. A large carton such as groceries come in from the store, will make a splendid garage for all the cars you care to make. Horizontal: 1. Weapons used by Indians. 2. Opposite of yes. 4. A watering place. f. A place where drinking water to found. t. First half of the word entangle. 7. A kind of automobile. t. A boy's nickname. 9. What Lindbergh is. 11. To send money. 12. Certain kind of birds. 15. Something you do In the water. 17. A message. 19. The first part of a giggle. 21. The first nsme of a famous movln# picture actor. 22. The abrevlatlon of senior. 24. The first note of the scale. Vertical: 2. Replied. 10. Abbreviation for railroad. 12. Opposite of closed. 12. To act. 14. A color in our flag. 15. A low voice. 17. What sleepy heads do IS. I^cave out. 20. Fifth note in singing scale. 21. What you feel for Mother. 22. Those who make homes for hus bands. 24. Feels great devotion for. 26. A young bull Si. What Abe Lincoln was.

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