The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 25, 1919, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE 2. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE as Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second == Wéditer lass Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - = Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Maruette Bld _ Marquette *DAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEWYORK, - = MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited to it or not ted in this paper and also the local news published in. : ! we All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year . $7.20 Daily by mail per year (In Bi: : Daily by mail per year (In state outside Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ..... THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER, (Established 1878) ize — WHEN BROTHER GOES COURTING Hear that splashing in the bathroom? Catch that melodious chord—just a little flat—floating down the stairs? Get that humming and whist- ling and bustling around? Want to know what it means? Brother’s getting ready to call on his girl! Yes, brother’s got a girl and everyone in the family knows it, although he won’t admit it and gets red when anything is said about it. She’s a dandy, too. Just the right sort and a friend of the family. Everybody’s delighted, because broth- er deserves the best there is. Think of all he’s gone through the past two years he’s been a doughboy. Think of the grime and the work and the danger. Think of the long separation from friends and relatives, No wonder everyone’s de- lighted and hopeful. There brother comes now! Look at that, an- other new tie! That makes four new ties this week. He seems to think that ties will win the lady. But he’s evidently not depending entirely on ties. Look at that box of candy he carries so carelessly—too evidently carelessly, in fact. Lis- ten to what he has to say: “I guess I’ll go out for a while. I may land up over at the Smith’s and mebbe I won’t be home till late.” He MAY and up over at the Smith’s! That’s his girl’s house! OF COURSE, he’ll land up there! RED HELL AND A YARD LONG We knew an English sparrow once that made its home in a hornet’s nest without apparent dis- comfort, but that is the sole instance in our ex- perience of any living thing fraternizing with a yellow ticket and being comfortable. A bumblebee has a neat sort of a prod, tucked away under its belt. The honey bee can add quite a bit of jazz to a picnic, if improperly approached. A wasp has a stingaree, that bites going and coming. But old daddy hornet is the he devil of them all, when it comes to hunting a fight and always getting the best of it. And Brother Hornet is no retiring savage, sulk- ing in the wilderness. Not he, by choice he prefers the warmest cor- ner of the attic, but anywhere about the house, barn or sheds will do, just so he can perch his castle well up above the throng, and occasionally descend on a marauding expedition. Along about this time of the year Yellow Jacket comes forth with his little private hate all burnished, and his half yard or so of red hell fairly aching to take a spring swim in a bucket of blood. And woe betide the hapless urchin who, glory- ing in his first barefoot rays, run athwart Sir Hornet's path. We have had seven inquiring surgeons probe our interior, and have had “painless” dentists ex- tract nerves from sturdy old molars, and, once, we had sciatica; but the worst inventions of man are kind and even soothing beside the frenzy of pain that convulses the poor sinner who gets an injection of prime hornet anywhere between his pet bunion and his occipital lobe. UTOPIAS Why is Utopia always so far away? Why is its location so hard to visit? Why, alas, does it so often, like a mirage, disappear upon closer ap- proach? Why, worst of all, does its contemplation so frequently interfere with needed application to domestic tasks? Today Utopia is located in Yucatan, Russia and Hungary. Pretentious publications prove that the Maya Indians of Yucatan have shorter working hours, more pleasures, better schools and a higher civilization than is to be found in the United States. Men and women return from Russia to tell of the glories of Bolshevik civilization. But they always return. They do not stay to enjoy the glories. Others describe marvelous transforma- tions wrought by Bela Kun at Budapest. Any doubt cast upon these travelers’ tales re- ceives the old reply of travelers: “But we were there to see.” Fortunately these are days in which personal visits do not furnish the most reliable information iconcerning a country. A visitor sees much less than tabulated investigations make available to lany reader. It is not necessary to visit Russia to learn that its area of more than 6,000,000 square miles con- ins a population of 180,000,000 people, one-half pf which is totally illiterate, while few of the bthers have even a common school education. We ow, without-going to see, that less than three er cent of the population are factory workers— Fifth Ave. Bldg. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE tion. a free press in which to evolve a common mind, {nor freedom of assemblage to form intelligent]. group opinions, nor liberty of organization to cre- ate bodies to carry out a democratic will. We know that none of these countries have an indus- trial organization of either men or machines capa- ble of directing government, nor a governmental organization capable of managing industry demo- cratically or effectively. Geniuses, “born out of due time,” caused Rus- sia to lead the world in certain phases of painting, music, literature and dramatic art, but POLIT- ICAL AND INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY ARE BUILT OUT OF DEFINITE INSTITUTIONS THAT HAVE NEVER EXISTED IN RUSSIA, Hungary or Yucatan. Therefore we have no more need to visit these nations to know that they are not the seat of Utopia than we have to visit the poles to disprove the practicability of conducting banana plantations there. If a society comes in which pleasurable, co- operative work produces plenty for all it will be bui't upon those democratic and industrial insti- tutions that evolved through long centuries of struggle. The Utopia reached by short cuts past such institutions is like the pot of gold at the foot of the rainbow—found ‘only in childish imagina- tions. GENTLE BUT FIRM A noted golf player says that four out of five golfers lay the foundation of their foozling, by gripping the club like grim death instead of hold- ing it ina manner which may be described as “gentle but firm.” The same reason might be given for the failure of many men to accomplish their “drive” for what- ever they desire. The business man grasps his books and his ac- counts so firmly that he drives into the bushes of greed. fo yenety The professional man often clings to the ethics of his profession with a grip that approaches fan- aticism. The athlete pursues his ideals with a persis- tence that leads to “going stale.” They have no flexibility, no ease, no smooth- ness. Folks don’t like to deal with a person or an in- stitution that is apparently on a strain. They like to feel that there is a certain freedom of action about the transaction. From a purely commercial standpoint it is good business to develop gracefulness instead of rigid- ness. Don’t take your work or yourself so seriously as to cause too tight a hold on the stick. THIS IS A MATTER OF PUBLIC CONCERN When the influenza epidemic was at its worst in this country considerable effort was put forth most learned of our physicians, got intimately acquainted with the flu germ. More or less guess- ing was done along preventative lines and in the treatment of patients. The result: 500,000 deaths! Influenza rages in autumn, winter and early spring. Lalas Another epidemic may come with cooler weather. Another WILL come some time—if we have not learned how to prevent its coming. To prevent its coming we must study the subject more thoroughly than we were able to do while stricken with the dread disease. And the best time to do this studying is NOW. A year’s delay may harvest another 500,000 deaths, or MORE. The American Medical Association has asked congress to contribute $1,500,000 to an investiga- tion of the influenza epidemic in an attempt to de- termine its cause and to isolate the influenza germ. This is but a cent and a half from each person in the country. Is there ANY person not willing to give that much toward ending the influenza danger for all time? Congress immediately should appropriate the million and a half, and direct the U. S. Public Health Service to begin its investigation in con- junction with the American Medical Association and to continue this highly important work until the germ has been found and its methods of attack analyzed. Preventative and curative campaigns then may be more intelligently planned, and will be more successful than were our efforts during the course of the last epidemic. To do this, and to do it quickly, is a matter of public concern, and therefore, it is a matter for public financing. Clemenceau realizes more clearly than the other premiers that to modify the peace terms is to modify the security of France. In his efforts to get off lighter, Heinie will doubtless discover that Clemenceau’s head is as hard as the terms. Opponents of the treaty had it put into the Congressional Record, where it would be securely hidden from the public. The nation-wide strike of wire operators is a rather important fact in considering a Utopia based upon the dictatorship of a factory popula- Without a personal visit we can know that nei- ther Russia, Yucatan nor Hungary have ever had in “fighting the flue.” But no one, not even the], Alice John, with An opportunity to see Guy Bates Post in “The Masquerader” is the treat in store for.local theatregoers when Richard Walton Tully presents his star at the Auditorium for an en- gagement of one night only Saturday, July 5, In New York last season this Tully production scored a great hit, and Mr. Post spent the summer in Australia where the papers were un- animous in acclaiming his perform- ance the finest. ever given there by an American player. He scored a rec- ord run in Chicago this season. “The Masquerader” is a dramatic version, by. John Hunter Booth, of the novel written by Katherine Cecil Thurston. Mr. Tully has done not- able work with the scenic effects in “The Bird of .Paradise,” “Omar, the Tentmaker,” and ‘The Flame” and the scene with which “The Masquer- ader” opens, a London street in a fog gives his genius for the unusual full play. The ‘other ‘settings are sa: ic be in keeping with the excellen e of the play. “The Masquerader” tells tha story of John Chilcote and. John Loder. Chilcote is wealthy, a leader in poli- tics and of a greattfamily. Early in life he had become a drug adict and shortly after his, marriage..he separ- ates from his wifdfin order to enjoy his. drug. As the spell of mcrphia grips him tighter and tighter he re- sents the time hefmust give to his Fargo, June 25.—Mrs. Turner of Fargo and Miss Ida Serum- gard of Devils Lake were the only persons in the observation car at- tached to No. 1 of ‘the Great North- ern, which was hit by a tornado eight miles west of Fergus Falls yes- terday afternoon, who were on their feet when the car stopped rocking, according, to word brought to Far go this afternoon by passengers on the train. Mr, ‘Turner, who is with the Crary- Turner agency of Fargo, was in one of the Pullmans, and after the for- ward cars had been derailed assist- ed in the work of rescuing the in- jured. Mr. and Mrs. Turner were on their way, to Fargo from Osakis, Minn. Miss &erumgard, who is em- ployed in the office of U. S. Treas- urer John Burke at Washington was on her way home to enjoy a vacation. ‘Mr. Turner, when interviewed this afternoon, declared that he never wants to pass through a similar ex- perience. “It was-.pitch dark when the storm hit us,” ‘Mr. Turner said. “The rain was falling in torrents, and the first of us outf the cars could not see a thing. In about a minute \ PEOPLE’S FORUM | —— THE HOOK. Is it a prophecy or a promise? Is Governor Frazier scheduled for the hook or the axe; or was it merely another cage when. Job’ Brinton, snip- er, struck when a man’s back was turned? In discussing the printing bill from the balcony of the league headquar- ters Saturday night, the much inflat- ed, much advertised rear rank pugi- list asserted that the selection of the official Newspaper of each county, under the printing bill, is up to the people, to the voters of the county. Brinton said, “There: is no chance for ——————— POSLAM FOE OF SKIN DISORDERS HEALS RAPIDLY If you suffer with any eruptional trouble, do not let another day pass without trying Poslam. Let your own skin tell you how effi- cient it is, what splendid help it can render you in driving away Pimples. healing Eczema, disposing of Rashes, soothing and allaying inflammation. The test is to apply Poslam to a small affected surface at night and in the morning look, to sée improvement. Healing power which supplies a soothing, comforting influence is here abundantly in (concentrated. form. Sold everywhere. ‘For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 serious, but enough men will be left on the job to care for government business ‘and the- baseball scores. : West 47th St., New York City. Poslam Soap, medicated with Pos- lam, brightens, beautifies complex- fons. Guy Bates Post. work and the public. Whi-e in one of these moods he meets Loder and dis- covers they look exactly alike. Chil- cote conceives the idea of changing places with his double and thus gain- ing freedom. Loder is an ambitious, strong man, but always lacked the opportunity tc test his powers for leadership, When Chilcote comes with his propasiticn. Loder is ripe for temptation. He fin- ally accepts the offer and in his new role creates a sensation. But an un- foreseen element is brought about through Mrs. Chilcote thinking her husband has reformed and making advances for a reconciliation, Loder cannot avoid her and as he learns to know her, he learns to love her, too, and she falls in love with him though at first she does not realize he is not her husband. It is on this theme and the political activities of Loder that the drama develops. I is said to hold the. audience in a tense grip from the beginning until the last word is spoken, Mr. Post in the dual‘role of Chil- cote and Loder has an opportunity. to display at its best that rare art of! his which has gained him so wide a public. The company which Mr. Tully has engaged to support his star in- cludes Alice John, Lionel Belmore, Clarence Handyside, Ruby Gordon, Reginald _ Carrington, Katherine Raynor, Milano Tildon, and others. TWO NORTH DAKOTA WOMEN ONLY ONES LEFT ON FEET AFTER WRECK OF GREAT NORTHERN LIMITED NO. 1 Thomas|and a half, however, the air cleared, and as we mounted the banks of a cut through which the train was pas® ing we could see the cars off the track. Engine is Missing. “We were very much surprised. to find the engine missing, but learned later that in the darkness the engi- neer did not miss his train until he was come distance down the track. The engine, we were told by the engi- neer, lurched several times, and both engineer and fireman thought it would go into the ditch. “A number of people were injured, but none seriously. The conductor of the train suffered minor bruises by being thrown about in the swaying of the cars.” Son Not Awakened Mr. and Mrs. Turner’s small son, Thomas Arthur Turner, aged 4 years, was asleep on the seat beside Mr. Turner when the storm struck the train, but was not awakened. Mr. Turner picked him up, and carried him out of the car. “Dad, what is the matter?” was his first question after he had been car- ried out of the car. @ politician like Governor Frazier to select these newspapers. It would not do. He has made too many mis- takes already. He is not a: politician.” Is this a pre-election, covert warn- ing and preparation to Governor Fra- zier that whatever calamity follows in the wake of the league program will fall like the knife of a guillotine upon his neck? The Frazier head lying in the bas- ket will be his master’s evidence that the Frazier mistakes will be correct- ed by the Frazier successor, Is Governor Frazier to he the vic- tim of this socialistic regime of Quix- otic extravagance and atutouratic conceit? Hastings got his for. doing what he was told to do. The same fate fell to Box and LeSeuer and Ingle and Mitchell and Mees and Kosttzky and Harris and Langer and Youmans and Hall, etc. Governor Frazier, you are next! Then, if you resent.the axe, you go into the Ananias club of Town!eyism. A BY-STANDIR j SUPREME COURT [ o From Ward County. Buchbinder Brothers, a corporation, Plaintiff and Appellant, vs. George E. Valker, doing business as Valker's Minot Greenhouse, Defendant and Re- spondent. Syllabus: In an action brought to recover the purchase price of certain fixtures de- livered to the defendant, where the defendant. counterclaimed for damages attributable to the failure of the re- {rigerator to fulfill the purpose for which it was bought, the evidence is examined and held to support the judgment for the defendant on the counterclaim, Appeal from district court of Ward county, K. E, Leighton, J. Affirmed. Opinion of the Court by Birdzell. Grace, J., concurs in result. Robinson and Bronson., J. J., dissent. Possard & Twiford, Minot, attorneys for Plaintiff and Appellant, Palda & Aaker, Minot, (E. T. Burke, Bismarck, on oral argument), attorneys ifor Defendant and Respondent, From Grand Forks County. O. J, Barnes Company, a corporation, Plaintiff and Respondent., vs. North- ern Pacific Railway Company, a cor- poration, and Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, a corpora- tion, Defendants and Appellants. Syllabus: Where a carrier received perishable goods, namely, potatoes, for shipment at a season of the year when it is reas- erable to anticipate freezing tempera- ture; and where, following a delay in hipment, the goods are damaged by be- ing subjected to a freezing tempera- ture, it is held: (1) The perishable nature of the goods is a fact to be taken into consid- eration by the jury in determining whether or not there Was an unreason- able delay in the shipment. (2) Where goods are shipped under an option, whereby the shipper assumes the risk of damage from heat and cold, the carrier is not relieved from liabili- ty where its delay in the shipment is the proximate cause of loss or damage by freezing. (3) A carrier is not exempted un- der the rule which excuses it from lia- bility for damage occasioned by an act of God, where perishable goods are damaged by freezing following an un- reasonable delay in their shipment at a season of the year when it Was reas- onable to anticipate freezing tempera- ture. Appeal from the District Court of rand Forks county, Cooley, J. Af- firmed. Opinion of the Court by Birdzell, J. McIntyre & Burtness, rand Forks, attorneys for Plaintiff and Respondent, Watson, Young & Conmy, Fargo, at- rues for Defendants and Appel- ants, THIRD NATIONAL CONVENTION TO BE AT ST. LOUIS Delegates from practically every state in the Union have already pledg- ed their attendance to the third na- tional convention of business and pro- fesional women, which will convene in St. Louis from July 4 to 18, at the Statler hotel. The convention is being called by the Woman’s Association of Commerce of the United States of America, headquarters, 1635 Monad- nock building, Chicago, This convention is called for the pur- pose of taking counsel together for the next great forward step in the ad- vancement of women in business and the professions. More and more do wo men realize that men have always glor- ified their achievements, thus stimulat- ing other men to greater efforts, In the future women must do this if they are to keep apace with the pfogress of the times, The woman’s association of com- merce includes on its board of gover- nors a North Dakota woman, Mrs. 0. J, Lendrecie, Fargo. The officers and members are as follows: President—Florence King, LL. B. S., Chicago, Il. Vice-President—Dr, Elnora C. Folk- mar, Washington, D. ©. Dr. Irene Behnke, Chicago, Ill. Secretary—Dr. Anna R. Ranes, Chi- cago, Il. eee nea G, Fixen, Chicago, Members of the Board of Governors ~-Elizabeth Rainey, Indianapolis, Ind. ; Mary C. ©. Bradford, Denver, Colo.; Helen Varick Boswell, New York City; Jessie Hall, Saginaw, Mich.; Dr. Mabel Palmer, Davenport, Iowa; Mrs. O. J. De Lendrecie, Fargo, N. D.; Alma Loh- meyer, Springfield, Mo.; H. Anna Quinby. Columbus, 0.; Emma May, Terre Haute, Ind.; Anita Bauman, Ak- ron, O.: Helen F. Reedy, Bloomington, Ill.; Helen Alpaugh, Chicago, Il.; Bina M. West, Detroit, Mich.; Abbie E. Wil- kins, San Francisco, Cal. DUBUQUE PAYS HOMAGE Press of that City Pays Great Tribute to Madame Zarad’s Singing. This evening and Thursday night, in the Auditorium, Mm. Fran- cesca Zarad, the distinguished French prima donna soptano of the Chicago Grand Opera company, will be heard in concert, under the direction of the Bis- warck Conservatory of Music. The Dubuyue (Iowa) ‘Times-Journal of June 18, had the following to say: “Noted artists have appeared in Du- buqne again and again and have fav- orably impressed local audiences, but there is one artiste who will never. be forgotten by those who had the oppor- tunity to hear her sing. The part in cuestion is none other than Francesca Zarad, the superb French prima donna soprano. To say that she was wonder- ful would hardly describe her. She possesses a rich, high soprano voice which, combined with a compelling personality, fairly facinates her listen. ers. ‘Madame Zarad does ‘not merely sipg—she throws herself into her song and lives the part, and, more than that, makes her audience live it also. To hear her sing is to be uplifted; while she is singing the sordid things of life vanish and you wonder how there could be such things as hate and envy and deceit in the world. When she stops you wake from your dream with a start and as you join in the enthusi- astic applause you marvel at the power of this young singer, who brings out the good in your nature and makes you feel that living is more than worth the while. Too much cannot be said about Madame Zarad; it-would take a genius to adequately describe her art. But this much we can say, and Dubuquers who heard her sing will agree with us that the musical world is indeed for- tunate to have among its members a singer of Madame Zarad’s calibre, The great singer was accompanied by Mary Harter, a brilliant young American ar- tiste, who won the approval of music lovers with her artistic playing.” Attended Dancing Party. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Paulson, 921 Ninth street south, returned Sunday evening from Valley City, where they spent Sunday as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Burl Carr. They also attended the dancing party given Saturday ev- ening by Mr. and Mrs. Carr at their home. Other house guests for the event were Mrs. Al G..Brink of Bis- marck, and George Akeson of Min- neapolis.—Fargo ‘Forum. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1919. HER NEIGHBORS WERE SURPRISED End Was Near For They Thought Mrs. Colton——Tanlac Brought Health. “you can say for me that I don’t believe I could have lived much long- er if it had not been for Tanlac,” said Mrs. George Colton, when the special Tanlac representative who had ard of her remarkable recovery, tailed at her residence, 1114 East 21st Street, Kansas City, recently, to as- certain the facts. “Since 1 have gotten well,” contin- ued Mrs. Colton, “my neighbors tell me they used to expect every morn- ing to hear that I had passed away. My health had been failing me for seven years. I had no appetite and what little I did eat would sour on my stomach, causing nausea and intenss suffering. I also suffered, like I be- lieve thousands of other women aré, from going through that period in life that taxes a woman’s strength al- most beyond endurance. I was un- able to do any work and would get so discouraged at times that I would almost give up in despair. I was very dizzy and so nervous the least noise would nearly drive me distract: ed, and while I spent hundreds of dol. lars trying to get relief nothing helped me. My back and head ached all the time and no one knows how terrible my suffering was, because 1 just can’t fully describe it. No one thought I would. get well and I had about lost all hope myself. “But here I am, after taking eight bottles of Tanlac, able to do all my housework and everybody who knew how bad off I was is surprised at my wonderful recovery. My son, who had taken Tanlac, wrote me from Omaha, Nebraska, begging me to try it. ‘Well, it commenced helping me almost at once and by the time I had finished my second bottle I noticed a great improvement. |My appetite got bet- ter, I was less nervous and the pains in my back and head did not trouble me so much. I can eat just anything I want now, everything agrees with me perfectly, and I have gained ten pounds in weight. I can sleep eight or nine hours every night and can say that my health is just splendid, and my neighbors come to see me and: go away praising Tanlac. | will always praise it for what it has done for me and never expect to be without it.”. Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos. Breslow, in Driscoll by N. D. & J. H. Barrette and in Wing by F. P. Ho- man. Advt. THREE YEARS THE LIFE OF CIRCUS PIG Pigs may make pork at a stated market price of so much a pound; but pigs as mirth producers are valued ac- cording to their brand of stunts and the amount of laughs they can get out of an audience. A porker may go to market at six months or six years and very little dif- ference will be noticeable except the tonnage, but performing pigs cannot be marketed under a year, which is the time required to make them into circus performers. They are worth many good silver dollars to anyone in the show business, for two years, and then anyone can buy them at porker market price. The one year of constant care, daily tubs, sterilized milk bottle and unlimit- ed patience spent upon them to perfect their training and make them personal- ly attractive, the two years of cutting capers and helping to make a circus day full of fun and pleasant memorts all go by the boards “when pigs become bogs and too heavy. and clumsy to shoot the shoots, seesaw, race,” etc, Coming to Bismarck on June 27, with the Al, G. Barnes circus there will be three troupes of performing pigs among the 1200 animal perform- ers. They are of the varying degree of development, the suckling, just learn- ing his trick by following the nursing bottle; the second season school in the height of their career, and the racers on the last lap of their show-world journey, making their final tour. The show will come .to Bismarck from the west and is scheduled to ar- rive early, giving a parade leaving the show grounds at 10:30. There will be an hour of concert preceding the per- formance, doors opening at 1 and Tp. m. WONT TAKE “CAST OFF.” Yarmouth, N. S.—Nova Scotia rest- dents and newspapers are indignant over reports from Boston that. Massa- chusetts is getting rid of its old fash- ioned horse drawn hearses, by sending tuem to the maritime provinces and re- placing them with automobile death cars. Newspapers in the “Bluenose dis- trict” have pointed out to the under- tekers and liverymen that the only way to repudiate this report is to re- fuse to purchase the cast-off equipment and to buy six-cylinder hearses. JOBS FOR SOLDIERS Mr. Milton L. Standish of Far- go, had occasion to thank his Da- kota Business College training when he returned from France and decided to stay in New York. It enabled him to get a place in the accounting dept. of Morris & Co., Packers. Another ex-soldier and D. B. C. graduate, Mr. F. Eggert, has recently been employed by the Pierce Printing Co.," Fargo. There are always places for graduates of. the Dakota Busi- ness College, Fargo, N. D., be- cause the courses are exception- ally thorough. Write for details about enroll- ment to F. L. Watkins, 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. Summer course now in session.—Publicity. " _ a

Other pages from this issue: