Part 22 (2/2)

”He hates sandwiches, anyway, and has no suitable place to eat theood work on a cold box lunch But those clattery quick-lunch places which are all he has ti or surroundings, and all ood home meals may be counteracted by his miserable lunch I believe half the explanation of the 'tired business man' lies in the kind of lunches he eats”

Twenty-five cents a day is probably the outside lireat majority of men spend on their luncheons Soets for that su food, quickly served He wants to eat in a place which is quiet and not too bare and ugly He wants to buy real food and not table decorations He is willing to dispense with elaborate service and its accoet more food of better quality

The cafeteria lunch-room provides a solution for the mid-day lunch problem and, isely located and well run, the answer to : ”What shall I do to earn a living?”

(6)

(_Newspaper Enterprise association_)

AMERICANIZATION OF AMERICA IS PLANNED

BY EC RODGERS

Washi+ngton, DC--Aoal of the naturalization bureau of the United States department of labor, as expressed by Raye of the Aine Review_)

FIRE INSURANCE THAT DOESN'T INSURE

BY AB BROWN

”This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon, or added hereto, shall be void if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownershi+p”

If any farmer anywhere in the United States will look up the fire insurance policy on his far, and will read it carefully, in nine cases out of ten, he will find tucked away somewhere therein a clause exactly like the one quoted above, or practically in the same words

BEGINNING WITH A QUESTION Every question is like a riddle; we are never satisfied until we know the answer So a question put to us at the beginning of an article piques our curiosity, and we are not content until we find out how the writer answers it

Instead of a single question, several may be asked in succession These questions may deal with different phases of the subject or may repeat the first question in other words It is frequently desirable to break up a long question into a nurasp the idea ained for each question by giving it a separate paragraph

Rhetorical questions, although the equivalent of affirh of their interrogative effect to be used advantageously for the beginning of an article

That the appeal ht home to each reader personally, the pronoun ”you,” or ”yours,” is often embodied in the question, and sonation such as ”Mr Average Reader,” ”Mrs Voter,” ”you, high school boys and girls”

The indirect question naturally lacks the force of the direct one, but itis desired

The direct question, ”Do you knohy the sky is blue?” loses ed into the indirect form, ”Few people knohy the sky is blue”; still it possesses enough of the riddle eleht Several indirect questions may be included in the initial sentence of an article

QUESTION BEGINNINGS

(1)

(_Kansas City Star_)

TRACING THE DROUTH TO ITS LAIR