Monday, Nov. 17, 1924
POINT with PRIDE
After a cursory view of TIME'S summary of events, the Generous Citizen points with pride to:
The Spirit of Pittsburgh, crying out with a strong voice. (Page 20, column 1.)
Another year of Opera, in Chicago, in Manhattan. (P. 15, col. 1.)
A governor with ten children. (P. 6, col. 2.)
The screen version of He Who Gets Slapped. (P. 14, col. 3.)
The mother of the Passions, the Arts, the Talents. (P. 14, col. 2.)
A U. S. custom that is altogether good. (P. 1, col. 1.)
A stream of messages from the Carlton Club, London. (P. 7, col. 1.)
The marriage of Jack Spratt's great-great-great-great-granddaughter. (P. 30, col. 3.)
VIEW with ALARM
Having perused well the chronicle of the week, the Vigilant Patriot views with alarm:
A new kind of grandmother. (P. 30, col. 1.)
"Black pneumonia." (P. 18, col. 1.)
Ingredients for a grave crisis in Austria. (P. 10, col. 1)
The club, the spear, the bow and arrow, the gun, the bomb, the gas, the germ. (P. 17, col. 1.)
Moscow, draped in cloth of red. (P. 9, col. 1.)
"The Decline and Fall .of the Democratic Party." (P. 2, col. 3.)
Happenings at Peking, of which not one Chinaman could tell another. (P. 10, col. 3.)