The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 2, 1922, Page 4

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f PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK’ TRIBUNE , THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE <td Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN Editor TH Foreign Representatives Ak LOGAN PAYNE, COMPANY CHEGAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. | Kresge Bldg. i ¥NE, BURNS AND SMITH) ‘ NRW: YORK |-) .- Fifth Ave. Bldg. BER OF THE ASSOCIATED rch PRESS Eas Pio Wasoclated Pross Is exclusive- lytentitied to the use or republi- cation: of all news -dispatches cre- dited:to-it or not otherwise credit-| ed.ia this paper and:also the local news Published herein, Wrights of republication specials dispatches herein are also of which an experienced toper swal-| lowed unharmed, while yet blaz-| ing.” However, some 1922 bootleggers probably can beat that. INSECTS Some insects have accomplished | comparatively more than man, con- | sidering their physical limitations, | isays N. FE. McIndoo, Smithsonian} jscientist. | “Some of the social insects prob-| ably adopted the laws of division of | labor before primitive man,’ And they not only had equal suffrage, | but also woman suffrage long be-| fore the dawn of our civilization.” Most. insects would perish with- out the sense of smell. To man, the world is chiefly one of visions and sights, other senses second- | i | Sims Says True words are spoken as jest. and jest words are spoken as true. | Lenin has bought a farm. ' Serves him right. | Ears are worn’ with fall-hats. If we treat Europe ‘so badly she may not invite us to her next war. Tom- | GULLIVER ‘UP TO DATE Coe T feit. It was scorched at one end, jand knowing that Rip must have jfound it somewhere I concluded that it had been on the dust-heap where Miss Drake must have thrown it among the ashes which she Cleaned out of the drawing- room. after I had secn her burning something there at midnight “{ recalled her ‘words: ‘Ashes, everyone, If only the first had {never been concgived this horror | would not have descended upon us.’ She had known from the start what! {her brothers were: doing. ‘her brothers knew until just before ‘None of the explosion came that she had been’ wise. :all,,the time; they thought she belfeyed that mythical tale of an heritance and I could kick myself f/¥ accepting it. with- out verificatiog,” but Wells» had NAY AUGUSL: GOSS a RS 8 tl NSC ea ae eA '@ ae ed ‘S || NEWSBRIEFS | Lansing, Mich, — Michigan school superintendent reported that appro- priation of primary; school fund this. year will be $11.70 for each child, the highest since 1904. Detroit—The Democretic central committee decided the party conven- tion would be held at Bay City, Sept. 28, Cincinnati—Three youths robbed a | messenger of a chain drug company of a $5,000 payroll. Two of the ‘bandits were captured. Washington-—The texts of resolu- tiong adypted by various labor or- ganizations urging a national strike reserved: ary. Take no chances with your) Talk about choosing the lesser of taken it for. ‘i ” 1 eyesight! i two evils, a Georgia man. has to Ln Pg eee tenes ete a of all organized workmen was made choose between the W public by Samuel Gompers. LBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION by carrier, per year... .$2.20 Dafly Dall by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily’ by mail, “per ‘year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 6 Daffy by mail, outside of N Dakota THE! STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- , PAPER (Rstablished 1873) “CE Wei. Hays, official dry cleaner ORED” 0 }rules that an old treaty permits In- OASIS ‘ Discovered—the only legitimate! oasis in the Volstead desert! Wil- liam Brennan, prohibition officer. dians on the St. Regis reservation in New York state to bring liquor across the line from Canada. The St. Regis tribe is technically, recognized ag an independent. na-! tion. The thirsty need not waste time getting out an atlas, for Bren- nan says that Indians who sell their | liquor to white men will be arrest- | | trie chair. gallows and elec- It’s cheaper to move in high soci ety than it is to pay rent. | If the world’s a, stage, railroad crossings are ‘exits, In lining up candidates for 1924 they think any mother’s son has a chance to become president. Wonder what a’golfer:dees for rec- reation? remarked consolingly. “Why didn’t I see that tattoo mark, on Andrew's arm when ‘hé:took off his coat there in the garden just before Miss Hawks appedyed? To be sure, my | back wa: tochim but I was there to keep my cyes on him and every- body.—How did you first guess that the Hawks woman knew Andrew for an.imposter?” “I happened to be in the hall when she ran out. of the house like a mad ‘woman after’ a'..tete-a-tete with Andrew and the next minute he upset the table and scalded his Washington—Glenn E. Plumb, au- thor of the celebrated “Plumb plan” of railroad operation and ownership, died of heart trouble. Cedar Rapids, Ia.—What old _resi- dents termed the worst hail storm in an area two miles wide and ex- tending from Delaware cqunty across Linn into. Jones county. St. Paul, Minn—A man _ believed to be Toby Stack, a miner of Melch- ever known here laid waste to crop , for*the® motion picture industry, | d+ j The worst villain in the movies arm. It wasn’t a bad burn and it 5 says the producers are going to at! Shien atas sticks gum under the seats. occurred to me’ that it was just an| er, Iowa, was found dead in a local tack censorship by eliminating the! = excuse for a bandage.” hotel. The coroner said death re- , necessity for it. } | EDITORIAL REVIEW Chicago crook who beat’ a’ cop may | Miles’ face sobered, “Gray was sulted from an overdose of sleeping ‘ This: ound sensible. Seeing will * “ | have been a senior in the burglars’ the real brains of the scheme. It] poison. z 4 vi 2 for new emergency commissions or | are single. iy, we : A j ‘ Wu oe the; people. industrial courtee plus vabateser | ied 7 7 r “Roger did, then?” asked the| Editor Tribune: “ ” Be. noel renls eventually had to Peiiead toward peace may come| Slump in nat bobbing Hg reported’ oar Naas Att other. For the information of the sports- | permitted again in England, be-i) ough separate agreements, there | @t bobber shéps.’ It may’ be getting sot bifnan in delirium wouldn't be taken| | “Oh, yes, it was the shock of that| men of the state I would like to sta te y ‘ which caused his stroke. through your columns that the Game be ‘believing. Qbserve tnat he admits the ,“ne- The_.theatrical profession has bebii fighting censorship so long! that the earliest records are lost.’ ‘Modern boards of censors date from 1642 when the Long. Parlia- Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express the opinion of ‘The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues. which are being discussed in the press: of the, day, “5 Si school passing his exams. All boys are born barefooted and naturally hate to wear Shoes. Burning the candle ab:both ends never makes the outlet bright. Scatttaged mse « 5) peatereemeerge? Houdini got zoviNof.@ locked safe joshi was he who wrote that devilishly satirical lecture and forced poor Roger by anonymous threats to de- liver it; he who wrote the other anonymous letters, one of which he slipped into the-house by means of a French window. which Andrew had left open for him and left on the hall table the night of my ar- Chicago—A tentative merger of the American Federation of Railroad Workers and the United Association of Railway Employes was agreed up- on by representatives of the two organizations, St.-Joseph, Mo.—Fire destroyed the ment. in England suppressed the! NQ SEN LH : theater cutiveny, chief reason for Rasen as SURRENDER. ts water! Ma 8 could escape rival to be mixed with-‘the mail| lard refinery of Morris and Company this, according to the elder Dis- he confused maneuvers now } from, no-button -underwears in an next morning, when I concluded {t| With loss estimated at $100,000. raéli, was that the members of Par- liament' had smarted so muck. under the--satirical whips of dramatists. | This censorship was political, a9; all form: of censorship tend to be-| come unless they are curbed by the} cause the politicians could not stand up under the ‘brilliant sar- casm of songs and petitions circu-| lated by stage writers. Most fam-/ ous of these was the “Rump Song.” Here’; part of it: Now while you reign, our low peti- i$ tion. craves That we, the king’s- true subjects and your slaves, i May in cur comic mirth and tragic | rage under way toward rail strike sét- |: tlement, on.the part of congres=|' ‘sional as well as administration functionaries, and through various | ‘propositions, including argumenta- tive mediation and various: devices is one point of contention that can too readily be glossed over as of no special importance. Yet it in-j volves a matter of principle that) does not so easily’admit of surren-| der or compromise. It is the ques- tion of “seniority.” The shopcrafts workers are re-| ported a9 being ‘now inclined to] quit their strike — after all the sweeping rhetoric about its impera- tive need and its sure succoss—if| ‘upper berth AN : Long-skirts are Abwng back, ac- cording ‘to skinny girls.” Some men work steady and others old-fashioned. Mr. Dempsey seems to remember his, mother’s warning not,.to fight. He is our heavy wait champ.” Strange thing about the- man who broke his leg dancing is it seems like he would have twisted his back in- stead. Give a politician enough cigars and Babel | strandeW ‘Om NEA Service. ts seriously, but you and Gray knew, too, that if. you forced the men of the familyzsby. anonymous threats! ‘of notoriety to commit ridiculous} public acts you could soon put the! screws on them for money and in- crease your demands until you had bled them white.” CHAPTER XIX. * “What was the first thing put you; on the right track, ‘Owen lad?”) Scottie puffed contentedly on his wag some member of the household. ‘He disguised his voice for the tele- phone threats which so agitated the liamily, but he cannot figure out show Roger Drake penetrated his habitual disguise.” “Gray had a sort of half-labora- tory back of his cottage and he was puttering about in it when Roger called. Just as he approached, Gray removed his wig—and Roger saw that the elderly\naturalist was really a young man in disguise. The logical reason for it came over him with a rush and his only thought was to get home and warn his brothers, but he was, stricken with the word unuttered upon his Se ise mmr | PEOPLE’S FORUM | o—_——_—____——_+ AIM OF BOARD. and Fish Board at a recent mecting held in Steele, N. appointed a full corps of. chief, state-wide and district deputy game wardens, but as it is not at this time positively known wheth- er or not all will accept and qualify, no names are given out. It was the aim of the commission to appoint men who are well qualified for ‘these positions, men who arc deeply interested in the preservation of our game birds and animals, men Set up the theater and show the only at vivileses ana advantases he ropes the voters in. } jj _ stage— of Senlorlty ‘ot eee “ate pa ne ade (Continued from our last issue.)) the private papers and letters of| pipe. lips.” who will not hesitate to see that all Thisjshop of truth and faney, where , i *| “Flowers have flapperism,” says) “Marks, take Gray into the draw- | the real Andrew Drake came into] “I think it was Andrew himself,”| Miles rose. “That papyrus was] persons observe the law. With the Miles responded. “It struck me as; exception of some minor items the i HORNED DINOSAURS f thelr arse ovis ae rita Nick wag weeding’ the flower bed, 80 | vious effort to control her emotion|#ike Andy, and Gray and I—well,| nf the summer-house and destroyed! somewhere; for the real Andrew E. T. JUDD, cane See ee ee arcunion seanks, from Labor Board Dr. Snore ithe. pala trsia an-/and the detective went on: ‘we saw there was a good thing inj the morning. after: we wound up ae must have talked a bit more in his Game and Fish Commissioner. | als: ‘02 et vom. | SWered the phone himself. was! “In reality the, initials are his| it.” | case, Scottie, did not contain the nal } America, in old age sometimes had | down, ae tes Et ay ee Mrs. Muskrat. own, as: fa ris the police records| “So Gray came on here ahead and| remains of a printing press a3 you oan Peat americans ° LZ" +. a skull eight feet long. The brain, menda ‘ pe : “8 raiae pe “Say, doctor,” she said in a queer nf Australia show. His’ name is for a year paved the way by get-| surmised, but the relic of a machine | whole paraphernalia so. that they A THOUGHT | inside was never larger than a tion of 1 e el Hs up’ “ny . o er”| Voice, “please don’t let anyone know | Hugh Osborne and he, too, is badly|ting in with Mr. Reger Drake and|for making a replica of the silk-| ould make some more of the queer | , man’s fist. x jielons ft pt ia: P of pap’ I called you up, but Mark, my hus-!wanted but not for the same crime| then you appeared as Andrew and| threaded paper the government} ind shove it themselves.” |! g@—_—__________-_* Scientist C. W. Gilmore, ofjact were perpetrator. band, is on his way to your house|ap his present accomplice. Will] @ few weeks ago you began to wprk| uses for genuine greenbacks and THE END. 7 We then that are strong ought to had been an original invention of i bear the infirmities of the weak, “vd vow Nofsto act anything you disaltow. We fwill. not dare at your strange votes to jeer Or ‘personate King Pym with his; state-fleer. Your tragedies more real are eXx- “} t ‘This is the status they wilfully re- nounced on given dates when, after ample notice, it was vested in their successors on the job, Two bodies cannot well occupy the same space, If the strikers can nonchalantly walk, back and claim their old places on the, list, it means the Burbank who may have noticed a flower shedding. : We can’t recall a single instance of an American who stayed at home be- ing killed in Mexico. Hays could help the movies by ine room,” Miles pondered aera the possession of Hugh Osborne’ is iar aL pam REL eRRCpRTENTTCTK question which tbe next official Drake .2nd take off the bandage.” A gasping cry came from Jeruy sha but Miss Hawks moaned: “That was what deceived me. st “Ohy you needn’t wait for that!” Osborne remarked. sullenly. “Andy and I were friends. He was taken odd in my first talk with Wells and} little Miss Patricia: that Hobart) and Roger should both have made public exhibitions of themselves, but Andrew’s fit of supposed in-j sanity took place safe at home, for] curious, wasn’t it?” “It was an example of: remark- ‘ably poor judgment on ‘Roger’s part, picture writing or no, \if it was as you said, a complete record of the way they made their counter- feit money,” remarked Scottie. game laws of North Dakota are lib- eral, easily understood, and shout. be observed. From observation about the state and from reports re- ceived, it would appear that there will be an abundan.e of strong, ma- press'd; $ 4 >Y | thoroughly when he was’ puttijig on}'down with ‘the fever-and I. nurse@} the benefjt of one of the servants} « : - o a akit ith with git- ehly je was’ pI iB on! r It.was more than that; an ex: You taurder: a i earnest we Eee OE ie Job unde ex- Halt Ee People from ‘sit- | nis coat out in the garden tng" rst him till, the end, but before he died’ alone. ¢ ample of the Drake conscience] tured birds of both the pinnated and ee at that time had the legal, Plicit conditions and complete as- Saale, day I called!” et eS hi me overything. It was all When I had made up my mind/ working overtime,” replied Miles.|sharp-tailed grouse. Encouraging re- eer ae ends But the bat-/surances. It makes virtual Mars| This may be an awful country, but The pscudo-Androw set, hig teeth {Rxed, up ‘legal and proper by his|that Insanity played no part in the| “Roger had designed it in the na-| ports are, also received from tern” status of vagabonds. But the but he made no show of resistance Ow aWish and.’1 can prove it,| strange events the only alternative|tuyre of a confession and meant to|tory where the ruffed-grouse are tle between the’ stage’ and ‘politi- cians kept up until the stage won. Censorship in 1922, Censorship} in 1642. The critics are stewing, about it now; as they were nearly| three centuries ago, People seem|' to-havethe same basic troubles and| problems, in varying degrees, in} one generation as in the next. and double-dealers of the railroads. ‘No wonder that the raibroad ex-}, ecutives who were subjected to sen- atorial appeal, last week, held steadfastly to their attitude that no such yielding and trucking would be possible. It is not merely a pride of position that is here in- volved. There is at issue even “Holier than thou” attitade injmore than the integrity of agree- hunian ‘nature is asbestos in the fires! of ‘time. « q Smithsonian Institution, says that; the pre toric dinosaurs perished because they were unable to adapt) themselves to changes in their en-! vironment. A gocd many people now living | are going the dinosaur route. They are able, but unwilling, to adapt themselves to a changed world. Elasticity of viewpoint and convic- tions is one secret of prolonging ment, the sanctity of word and or newly promoted workers who in ‘We have heard.a great deal about, e inviolability of industrial con- tracts and the virtue of collective or other bargaining. Such a cheap and timid trick would vitiate the; whole atmosphere of industrial re- lations, especially where service essential to the public is rendered: In this case such action would amount to forgiving and favoring those who had, in effect, struck th promise, toward those new workers |- lots ‘of people read these articles on how. to live long. o——_ ——+ | ADVENTURE OF |. THE TWINS oo By Olive Barton Roberts “Ting-a-ling-a-ling!” went Dr. Snuffles’ telephone. 3 Nancy was washing the dishes and and, honest to goodness, there isn't a thing the matter with him!” “That’s very strange,” answered Dr. Snuffles. “Why should he come to see me then? “Because,” answered, Mrs, Musk- rat, “he thinks, he’s; pigk,, He's /got a handred things the matter, With: him, jhe thinks, but he eats ‘en for 10, people,.slet ips Tike) a Jogi Ekwore that he had had them tat-| when the bandage" was’ femovedtthollvn there ‘was ‘little enough to and on, the still inflamed sutface'f‘leaVe, for ‘the sheep ranch was a’ of his arm appeared the bititred, hwretched failure, "and he'd heen too intertwined letters “H” and “0.” Itproud to write the truth home, Be- “You thought they were yourdwn| forp'he died, too, when the delirium) initia’:, did you uot, Miss Hawks?’ |'Wa8 on him, he told me how he and Miles asked gently. “Forgive mej his thers» had flooded the coun- for reopening an. old wound, but] tty here with counterfeit bills long that touch of sentiment for a time| 280,, but “it’s God’; ‘truth I never blinded you to certain inconstat-| Meaht'to make uso of that then. oncics which the Drake family] When’ fell in with Gray in Mel- themselves had failed to note?* | bourne.about a year and a half ago, She nodded dumbly in an ob- I remembered; how much I. looked secretly with your accomplice to terrorize the family while yourself of his identity entered your mind?” | pretending to be a victim as well!” “T called here yesterday, but as Miles declared. “You knew: you I grew reminiscent and he betrayed couldn’t get away with that accusa- an utter ignorance of the incidents| tion of counterfeiting if it came to mentioned a wild suspicion came| 4 Show-down, for the ravings of a nto'my mind. I spoke of my ini-}. by jals on his arm ‘and though he jyou tell Mr. Wells and your old friends here when the first doubt ooed there in remembrance of me! toeonside® wig blackmail, and ‘it! must Have ‘been for some indiscre-| tion or even cfime committed inthe far past. Right then the solution was in my‘ grasp for you had learned that in their youth Roger had been’ interested in chemistry, dyeing and in photography, that Hobart was a pen‘and ink artist and Andrew had worked for a time in a pulp manufacturing plant. The old chest of metal junk which we} carted away from under the floor the real’ Andrew. “It, didn’t come to me even then that the truth was staring me in the face until you brought me that twenty dollarsbilt:Rip got knifed over and! T found it»was counter- _ BY! | cal condition. eave it on his’ death’ to“ his intt- mate friend, Professor Matterson, though when Osborne ransacked the storeroom he hoped to find something more tangible.” “There is one thing: that still is dark to me.” Scottie pulled at his pipe, and finding i€ dead laid it on the mantel,. “How did Osborne and his confederate know that the paper-making machine was buried under the summer-house?” “They only knew it was hidden fa PRE Son area -—— <6 | Mind Affects Health | - + BY DR. R. H. BISHOP. One's health is considered al physi- True, but did you ever think how much the mind had to do with physical conditions The abso- found. The ducks are eound in every slough and lake on the prairies, gen- erally speaking large broods predom- inate, occasionally, only one or two of the young are seen with the old bird, but they are the exception. The real sportsman will not trans- gress the law, he should see that the others dovnot. District deputies will be within reach of ait parts of the state, any information furnished them will be investigated at tie earliest possible time. and not to please ourselves.—Rom- ans 15:1. Our deeds are like children that are born to us; they live and act apart from us. Nay, children may be strangled, but deeds never; they have an indestructible life both in and out of our - consciousness.— George Eliot. - sana blic a ern-| fat as a pig.and ¢ ¢ u pa youth and reaching success. against he! Se a eletence Seo ace a ee etait Mu ching! 1 Was still unconvinced, I felt that : lute control of one’s mind can often B q HOMES these material perquisites or ad-|:awful!” I must be going mad and yet I had ———— MORNING'S . — over come bodily ailments. , TODAY'S WO! WORD | r ret ees ig in keeping with the] Just as Dr. Snuffles hung up thet? make sure. I laid a deliberate : ream Fear, for instance, can bring about| | | vantages is in keeping a utter chaos in a person’s health. It |4@—HH4-+t—#£—_-—_® A building trades round-up shows ; this: family dwellings started last year The number of new one- spirit of class greed that actuated their strike action, receiver thei doorbell raiig/and, sure enough, it was Mark Muskrat him- trap for him and he fell into itt” Miss Hawks rose. “Now may I go? I came as } promised, but I— may serve to paralyze, as has been observed in the case of birds, many Today’s words is FUTILE. It’s pronounced fu-til, accent on in traveling - ‘ } in 140 leading cities was’71 per| Such a precedent would mean) self.’ rl ted 4 zh oe Ss it { #2 rf + i ” A ba a sha, for- which, though | d H cone more than the year before. |that ie fun controversie the ‘dunn A ae bl Bs end re aurely it iene eat by the stall ‘shot, fall to the, ee he first ee theta tlones end « ’ i ermits for erection of two-family jassured tendency would be to sc retchedly., . “Just, miserable. E iadrh ths 3 eal ‘ a i 7 * Maks [ ‘ y 2 F ; ‘on ‘know “the truth! as if struck by lightning. So it is} It means—useless, trifling, inef- houses increased 211 per cent over| warnings and to laugh at notices} Dr. Snuffles looked at his tongue) wai truth is always best, Ora.” in human life. fectual. 1920. The one-family home seems to be ‘a vanishing institution as cities! grow larger. This is progress — backwards. ¥f you puilt, you will want to! compare prices. The average one-| family house cost $3,925 to. build in 1921, against $4,314 in 1920. Two-' family dwellings similarly dropped frém $7,949 to $7,874. 3 SQUIRMING Roger Dolan writes. He thinks tlds country is in an awful mes3.j “Incustrial conditions are hope- of forfeiture. As the western rail heads declared, “Tho incentive of} men to stay at home in case of fu-| ture strikes will be destroyed, and) the, difficulty of maintaining trans-| portation service increased.” Which} means still less margin of depend- ability for the whole nation so vi- tally concerned in the continuity) of ‘transportation. It is thus not merely a denial of; justice, but a peril to public wel-} fare that a surrender to the senior-| ity clamor would involve. Appar-| ently the union spokesmen feel) there is a certain levity about the whole thing, ag well as a special and pounded him all over and slapped his chest and counted his pulse.and then said: “I know just what is wrong, sir! You’re:a very sick man. You've got a disease called by a very long name. It’s called ‘notathingwrongatall’!” “Goodness!” gasped Mark, turning pale, “Am I as bad as that?” “Yes,” nodded Dr. Snuffles, “but I can cure you.” And he sent Nick for a special kind of medicine. “Why it was only water!” said Nick when Mark Muskrat had gone. “Never mind!” smiled Dr. Snuf- fles. “His own imagination will do the rest.” Miss Drake rose and a-stern, Spar- itan gravity had robbed her set fea- tureg of all other emotion. “To- night shall see the end of more than one living lie!” - | John Wells escorted the tremb- ‘ling woman to her waiting car and scarcely had) the attorney reap- peared when’ the imposter broke out with an oath. | “You're right it, will, Miss Jeru- sha Drake! Lord, what a_ six months ‘I’ve put in, in this pions, |- \hypoeritical household! — Why, you're all worse crooks than me, every one of you, and I’ve got the We could have How's TAS SLAVES 2? WE'RE HAVING A MAGNIFICENT Then again, sad news will alter the expression of a man’s face and eyes, lower his physical tone and climinate the feeling of hunger. So, too, will good news tend to increase a man's sense of well-being and urge him on! to greater activity. Take the case of one successful business man for instance. He awoke one morning in the hands of credi- tors and his pride crushed. He for- merly enjoyed robust health and was vigorous and alert, but soon after his failure he lost flesh rapidly, became sleepless, depressed, constipated and hateful to those about him. During It comes from the Latin futilis, meaning “that easily pours out, or lets loose,” derived from the root word fundere, to pour out. It’s used like this : “He made a. futile effort to prevent the calamity.” ‘Bread,” made of clay, grass and moss, as eaten by the victims of the Russian famine, was recented exhib- ited at Riga. Be Copra cake, the residue after the oil is taken from dried cocoanut meat, is as nourishing as beefsteak. ‘sly confused, like a tangled skein ‘goods on you! | | of yarn. Situation i ly | dispensation for themselves in the 'To Bo Continued) i8 ODay ON i a | the next two years he was examined : oe testea" cy * extremely | cored namo’of unionism, It 1s 2| ‘ Set ee aa ee OS L TIME — FISHING, | ity one physician after another but In 3 Weeks i No OLD WOMEN Nowapays |®!! ‘round if you'd been sere HUNTING , BOATING, | | it was not until retatives came to Falling Hair Stops ‘Mr... Dolan is wrong. The indus- trial situation is simple: Business is squirming to escape taxation. Individuals are squirming to escape | cuts in their incomes. Everyone wants to receive a war-boom in- come and be able to spend it at pre- war prices. 2 In the last analysis, all this squirming is a frantic attempt to escape paying for the war. There igs no escape, FIREWATER !A dull day when you don’t read about a home-brewer’s still explod- ing. Firewater starts many fires. Hot stuff is being drunk. But the “‘head-I-win, _ tails-everybody-else- lose” demeanor. It is on all-fours with the attitude which would hold Modern dress, hairdressers, facial experts and cosmetics all combine to a jealous reserve right over the| keep women of all ages young and but as it is I’ve my own story to tell. and by G—d, I'll tell it!” Miles did not, look at Scottie, but seated himself with a laugh. Swimming, Coot BREGZES* AND GvGeY WING _|ther immunity nor impunity.-—Bos- | very job that is vacated or deserted. | Economic law is teaching them} they cannot claim absolute excmp-| tion from deflation, The law of; | social equity should also teach that | such strike behavior is not wholly without its penalty. There is nei- ton News Bureau. If the output of iron increases five | per cent per annum, as it did before the war, it is estimated that the sup- \ ply would be exhausted in about 130 attractive in appearance. Not until, “Going to try to stick to that far- the telltale wrinkles become so deep, totched blackmailing scheme you! the figure stoops, or some ailment 14 that precious partner of yours or weakness develops to drag @ WO- hatched when. you found that An- man down does she really look her qrew Drake had left relatives here eee. ‘ with money and a social position Every ‘woman owes it to herself ¢4 jose2" he asked easily. “Farrell, and her family to keep herself young yoy can join:Marks and his man till in appearafice, and happy. When J cat you. ‘Mr. Wells, listen to this headaches, backache or “the blues”: fo the wildest cock-and-bull yarn develop or when a woman reaches that two chéap crooks ever con- the trying age from forty-five to ceived! Mr. Hugh Osborne, here, Jim. t HOP] THe Tay cs NoT FAR. DISTANT “Si@ce TS TRANSMIT AND | fifty, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ig wanted in Victoria for blackmail | Compound may be depended upon to and forgery: now. He won't be ex- his assistance financially that he be- gan to show any sign of improvement. | This man has since gained his for- } mer physical condition. ‘A person should be careful about eating when in an unhappy frame of mind.~ If you are Eta in a con- versational controversy or otherwise taxing your mental condition un- pleasantly, indigestion is very apt to set in. 5 One should not lose sight of the ideal state at which to aim, namely a perfect capacity for self-control in all directions and at all times. It is | surprising what a great deal of sick- |ness this conditioa 1s able to way- lay. The only sure, safe way we know to over- come falling hair and baldness is to remove the infected Sebum. We can now supply you a signed guaran: tee, with a package of Van Ess, and that will positively stop talling hair and surely make new har grow. For the roots ‘are still alive and 91 ont of 100 tests actuaHy proved that Van Ess vt grow new hair and auickly hair. Be sure to get Van Ess, the only product ve know that will not fail. Van Ess Liquid. Scalp Massaga, with a special ap- plicator which insures perfect success in operation, Js sold on a positive guaran- stop falling hottest is mild compared with 200/ years. keep her in health as it has so many tradited until he has been tried and years ago. CEE other women whose letters we are geryed his terms here for fraud CRITE ae tee, which we will sign for you. Be sure + . Dr. Johnson recorded that in his} A recently invented attachment for| continually publishing in this paper. attempted blackmail, attempted he Sore throats, diphtheria and many {8 Bet started at once—Van Ess will not day hard drinkers used “flap-| passenger or freigh: elevators switeh | STE duction of Miss Patricia and sev- similar complaints are .practicaly un- |“S\pPoin’ * is t : | {nown among those employed in the| Finney’s Drug Store dragons, which were small com- ‘bustible bodies fired at one end, aiid floated in a glass of liquor, es on a red light or rings a Well as a danger signal when they are over- i loaded. The presence of peacock feathers!era) other little items growing out {in a room is regarded as unlucky by/og this case if Mr, Hobart Drake the superstitious, wishes to prefer the charges. How. oil fields, refineries and other branch- es of the petroleum industry. Bismarck, N. D.

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