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e) LY: tl W G 0: 0 a z y Ord ret a ara een er PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Rete ee Efftered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, »-)N. D.,.as Second Class Matter. Gtoncr D. MANN - - Editor Se 1 Foreign Representatives =@. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. = PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. — MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a a Whe*Associated Press I~ exclusive- ly, entitled to the use or republi- catio#’ of all news dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit-| i i eiinSthis paper and also the local héws published herein. ‘All rights of republcation of special ‘dispatches herein are also reserved. — MEMBER AUDIT BURBAU OF CIRCULATION ol SACU ak ecm SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE ¢ 1N ADVANCE Dally by carrier, per year....$7.20 Dail,” by mail ar (in B ar (in r Bismarck) .... pity by mail, outside of North Dakota . 5.00 “THE STATE : (Rstablished 1873) MS ens Se a KEEPING COOL To avoid sunstroke, keep in aj breeze. This advice is from the; medical editor of the London Times. | D: vs that heat stroke is rare in} wélt-ventilated or windy places, no matter how hot. The. old idea was that “gettin’ overcome by the heat” was due to temperature of the air, furdpean physicians are swing- tf to the belief that heat prostra- 'S OLDEST NEWS- PAPER tidiis and most hot weathér di cohifort are due more to stuffy, airy thay to actual heat. ; Péople instinctively know this.| Unepnsciously, on a’ hot day, you seek a position in a breeze or draft. Mechanically, this is the same as . the-fan which cools an auto engine. Circulating air is the antidote for heht, though too powerful a breeze —fch as created artificially by an | electric fan—is apt to»cause stiff necks or colds. : 1% op The. principle, that ventilation counteracts heat, applies also to; ‘rubberneck guide points out a place | ideas from,each other and blend their philosophies. GOLD There must be a lot of cursing; around the Green’ Tree saloon in Dawson. Mere gold is:beiig mined this year in British Columbia than | the Yukon yielded in the banner, yéar of its gold rush. | No fuss is, made about it, how-! + ever, probably because B. C. is not; , A man who can’t be shown any- ifar enough away. . If it were as hard | thing can be shown up. to get to a3 the Yukon was in 1898, | ‘ when the Soapy. Smith gang was; What’s in a name? The Irish had levying tribute north of Skagway, /a-battle at Mt. Misery. amateur prospectors. would be/ stampeding into British Columbia}. Chewing gum beats chewing the from all corners of the globe. | rag. Most of us think that fortune ex- ists only at great distances, far off] We would hate to be a robber. on the other side of the hills. | There is so much competition, ——+ 1 ABILITY Leopold Auer, trainer of master violinists, tells in Success maga- zine how he instantly recognized a} violin genius when he heard Jascha | Heifetz play at the age of 9, also| Mischa Elman at the age of .10. | Auer helped grubstake the two lads to a musical education. ‘Ability usually rises or. falls to! its own level. Plenty of helping} hands in the world. If yours hasn't | come yet, it will show up later. The Sometimes we think a pessimist 1s a man who is a consumer, Price of rubber is up, It cost one man $25 to rubber, One can’t help but remember the mine strike began April Fool's day. ‘Smokeless powder is strong and so is a smokeless cigar. Early to bed and ‘early to’ rise helping hand is one of the finest} makes you healthy but not very things in life, Make it contagious, | wise, Pan all along the line, for a_ better) world. We wish to’ retract our kicks ELMAN against the cold last winter. When Mischa Elman was 9 years | old, he was so poor that he had to 1 some of his clothes to buy a/ ailroad ticket to Petrograd, where | Leopold Auer had given him a mu-| sical scholarship. Chinatown, New York, the| You can see a little ripple of pros- perity at the banks, From the way shoe laces break it is a regular string game. Painting a housé’ ‘never’ costs ‘as where a lad named Irving Berlin; much ae: palngge ce. dauehter. used to sing for nickels and dimes:| Remember when “I \Pronounce you Most fascinating thing about the oc 9h ea gh history of ‘great personalities i9|™*" and wife” Was a: life sentence? how most of them rose from pov- erty. Poverty is the richest soil—; possibly, however, because there is | so much of it. BAFFLING The people of Rio de Janeiro will | catapult 7,000,000 cubic yards of earth into the sea, to provide a site for a new suburb. Maybe this thrills your admira— in political hertl Ss. % There is a tendency ea fo-sleep “Longer skiftg” aay the. bow- legged. “Shorter,” say. the -bold- legeed. ; ea) Money seems: to go further when you are after it. clothing. That's why women suffer ition of the tremendous power of | legs;than men, in hot weather. Air | man. ! circulates under their» dresses,; ‘To us, however, the most as-| copling the skin by evaporating |tounding thing is the almost piani-| warm perspiration, lacal swarming instinct that’ makes | In the Malay jungles, natives get | pcoplé move mountains so they can} thi;}same effect by wearing,an un-/intensify the sickening congestion | der-vest made of bamboo, the thick-|of great cities. Easier and cheaper | ness of a pencil lead. The bamboo! to extend car tracks or build auto io,cut into half-inch lengths andj highways out into the country. The| sifung on cord in the formation of city, to a humorist, resembles. a a fish net. The meshes or holes make cooling air pockets under the) outer clothes, Why do you wear heavy gar-; ments in winter?’ Your ° answer} prphkably is, “To keep out the cold.” But the real effect of woolen un- d ear or a sealskin, coat is to! prévent the heat generated in our bodies from escaping into the cold air. Put a hot substance with a;cold substance ‘and the heat flows into the ‘cold until the temperature of thé two is nearly.equalized. This happens in your refrigerator, heat) flows out of warm food and melts the ice. That’s how food cools— by losing a lot of its stored-up heat. The same principle works in summer when porous-clothing per- mits’ the escape of the body’s heat into-the air. The body’s heat flows out into the air or into a cold. bath, like ‘water through’'a pipe or elec— tricity over a wire. When the atmosphere is satur-/ ated: with, water, the evaporation of.perspiration is‘ checked, there ‘being no dry air to absorb it like water into a wet sponge. Hence thesaying, “I wouldn't. mind the heat if it wasn’t for the humidity.” Misery also comes. when escape; of the body’s heat is prevented by thezatmosphere. being still hotter. A CH SCHEME The largest secret’ society in, the world is said to be disbanding. It ig.a: Chinese organjzatio! stood to have,/at, members. f This | gigantle. car ‘al forced the Chiftse ‘boycott Japanese goo$s, against It was China’s Japan leave her Whenever a @hinese ° merchant ) placed dollars al patriotism.and persisted in se}lipE Jay se,Wares, contfary to ghé- boyelte: a Ssmall mob=of| the séerét socletg'gatheréd at-the shop door, fell on its knees and began wailing and moaning. ¥on ‘can imagine how .long a shopkeeper was able to- withstand) that-kind of asnault. etting out” of China, slowly but inevitably. The boycott | was successful. It made hard timés in Japan, for China is one of Japan’s big customers. Tho peaceful boycott probably was: more effective than would have been an army of several million troops. The ‘day may come when the trade boycott will take the place of armies, navies and. flying squad— rouse A-nation would think twice be- fore going on the warpath with a certainty that it would be punished by €conomic isolation, China is “in a bad’ way” right now, committing the worst form of self-destruction—civil war. But ,before many years have passed. education and science and exploiting foreigners will make China ai mighty world power. The Chinese are interesting now. ‘They will become increasingly in- teresting as they flower again into a ile civilization. (twill be interesting to watch the effect as the white man’s ways come in contact with the peculiar and. mysterious psychology of the They write backwards and=to us—seem to do everything Chinese. else’ the same way. penitentiary. - EDITORIAL REVIEW 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, YEARS ARE NOT ENOUGH | It ig the interesting theory of Gegrge Bernard-:Shaw that the longer a man lives the more intelli-) gent he will become. In “Back to Methuselah” the makes it appear that the fullness of years means the’fulmess of wis- dom—that until man can attain at least two centuries of life he is still a child. ; " The nearest the’ world has re- cently approached to an oppor- tunity to check up Mr. Shaw is in the study of the life. of .“Uncle just passed away at the estimated age of 134. Owing toj cloudy ,rec— crds there may be uncertainty: as’ to hiz exact number. of years,’ but the fact that he left more than 200. descendants may be taken ‘to -indi- cate that he far.survived the ordt- nary span of life. Ae “Uncle Johnny. at the age of more than, a hundred knew:how to shoot coons and how to cook his meals ovér a cabin fire, ‘and that )| was about all. ° While he was on the earth slav-, ery flourished and passed away, the| Jsteam engine and the automobile and the airplane relieved 'the horse of many of his burdens, people learned to talk: to’ one another around the world,; first with wires andvafterward wigbout. them, and a machine was built that ‘could re- produce the human ‘voice. i All these matters left “Uncle Johnny” cold. The “prep” school boy of 17 knows ‘more than he did, and could make a better living had he been sent intéd the Kentucky mountains. Perhaps in time the years will! really bring wisdom, but they cer-| tainly brought very little of it to) the ofdest man of modern times.— New York Tribune. The expected has~happened. A Washington woman ‘has sued for divorce charging her husband is a radio fanatic, and that instead .of spending his evenings at home playing pinochle with her, retires to his attic the moment he gets up jfrom the table and loses all interest in doing the dishes by adjusting his apparatus to take wave-lengths from WJZ or KDKA, It is hard to blame the lady. The husband who gets home, late ‘to meals and ‘bores the ear off every- the 18 holes is bad effough but at any rate he talks. He doesn’t get a lot of bocks about enunciators, or denunciators, and coherers, and detectors, dive into them and then what he’s read. The husband of the golf widow at least knows who was on the clubhouse veranda and what they wore. widow doesn't have that satisfac- tion, —Worcester Telegram. .~ Ht Johnny” Shell, ‘a .Keptuckian, ‘who |:* TROUBLES OF A, RADIO WIDOW] body by recounting every stroke in} rush up to the attic and test out| But the radio’ And goodness knows any poor); fish of a husband who can’t give up{ part of the evening to telling his wife what he’s seen and done down cp arate - ie town ourut to be divorced, anyway, jul ey have many ideas worth | and shut up in an attic and made to 'Kpowh q copying. Ultimately the white race | listen to his own radio all the time. | allover the Northwest for Quality and the yellow race will a 4 Turning down’ high prices will make them feel, cheap. Optimists: should not have gold front teeth. Our days are numbered. Don’t lose any. The man with a straw lid wears hay while the sun shines., The woman who uses.a dish rag often feels like one. Some women even go to church for their husbands. You can’t keep a good man or-a goad man’s business down. A used car is a pleasure car to the man who sells it,” |} (Some of our millionaires seem to need a check. cy) yyy, 4a ’ A fast friend is often slow. Laundries clean up during the sum- mer months. 5 Health. is wealth, pay to swal ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS | By Olive Barton Roberts “Ffello,” said’ a voice. when Nancy ‘and’ Nick and the Magical, Mushroom had landed in'the middlo of the Tin- ky-Winkle Star, “Whi:dre you and what’ do you want?™ “"., 5 « “We're after Flup-Doodle, the pur- ple fairy who flies':with his ears,” said Nandy. “He. stole the Fairy Queen’s wand.” ' : “Oh, ho!” “answered. the » voice. “Well, he never told me a word-about it!” “And a Chocolate Rooster came out of:a, coopimade of sugar:.cooktes with asaucy strfit, ~ { “Oh, do’ you’ know Nick eagerly. ‘ i “Well,I should'say!” answered ¢ Rooster. “I’m-his lord “high counci or. “He’s the boss.ofthis star, you know. . In fact, I'm .often mistaken for him, ‘being. so handsome and all, only I’anf. orange instead of purple, and my ears afe not quite so large and fine as his.” “Orange!” cried Nancy. “Ears!” eried’Nick. |, “Certainly!” the Chocolate Rooster assured them with dignity. “A: Tinky-Winklers ate ofange-colored and have big ears to fly with. Are you blind, my dears?” ~~", “No, but we think you are,” Naney couldn't help saying. “You're not orange, you’re brown, and you've no years at all)” i At this the Rooster looked down | at himself in astonishment, and no | sooner had his eyes spied his choco- late feathers than he let out al screech like a fire-whistle and a fog- horn rolled into one. | “Oh!” he screamed, :“This is an | outrage This isn’t I! Someone has {turned me into this. creature. | not I at all.” | “I know,” said Nick. ‘ “Flap-Doodle \has the Fairy-Queen’s wand and he \has used it on you.” but it: doesn’t him?” asked I'm} | “Sure as you're born,” declared jthe Rooster. “What shall I do?” (To Be ‘Continued.) | (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) | The first recorded life, insurance | policy was issued in London in 1583. There are 245 counties in Texas. W a ont @ 4722 & PDutton Company let the body go again. BEGIN, HERE TODAY Seeger as » “Who is it?” said. Antony. The prospective visit of a ne’er= (Si bs Nal door at the end of the short passage. was shut. Antony, kneeling by the body, followed Cayley with his eyes,! SATURDAY, AUGUST 5,'1922 | Antony nodded toward the open] ' Home Defense - door, ‘ “Oh, do. Yes.” He gat down and drew the, telephone toward him. “You must make allowances for me, Mr. ‘Gillingham, Of course, you're jquite right, and I'm merely being} | stupid.” He took off the receiver. Let ug suppos? that, for the pur-, pose of making a first acquaintance | with this ‘office,” we are coming; into it from the hall, through the| \door which is now locked. As we |stand just.ingide the door, the! length of the room runs right and left: Across the breadth of the room (some fifteen feet) is that other door, by which Cayley went: olit. and returned: a few minutes! ago, - In the right-hand wall, thirty; feet away from us, are the French} windows., Crossing, the/room and} going out by the opposite door, we, come into a passage, from which} two rooms lead... Tho one on the right, into which Cayley went; is less than half the length of the office, a small, square room, which: has evidently been; used:come time or other as a bed-| room, The window faces the same way as the French windows in the next room. ‘The room on the other side of the bedroom is.a bathroom. The three rooms together, in fact, form a sort ot private suite. Antony wandered into the bed- room, The window was open, and he looked out at the peaceful ryretch of park. \ | “Cayley thinks he did it,” said Antony to himself. “That's obvious, 'Tt explains why he wasted so much! time banging on the door. Why should he try to break a lock when it’s so much easier to break a win- dow? Of course, he might just have lost hig head; on the other hand, he might have wanted to give; ° his. cousin a chance of getting), away. Why did he run all the way|', round the house in order to get to the windows?” S There was a step in the passage outside, and hé turned round, to see Cayley in the doorway. He re- mained looking at him for a mo-| ment, asking himself a question. Tt was rather a curious question.| resents the intrusion, of the camera He was asking himself why the| man. Note Reece eggs in the door was open. hest in the, lower foreground... ° Well, not exactly why the door) ~ " | was open; that could be explained mT easily enough. But why had he : ; Eagle hunting with a camera is a favorite sport in the Rockies. It has its thrills when the parent bird and, after he had disappeared, kept expected the door. to be shut. He his eyes on the blank wall of the passage, but he was not conscious of that at which he was looking, for hip mind wag with the other man, sympathizing with him. Cayley came into the room again, murmured’. something; and knelt down to bathe the dead man’s face. Then he placed the handkerchief over it. : do-well brother, who had been, ab- sent for fifteen years in Australia, was a far from pleasing prospect t MARK ABLETT, bachelor proprie: “Robert Ablett.” “ont” “sald Antony. “I thought bh “Yes, Robert is his’ brother.” other. name was Mark.” Mark’ Ablett lives here. He shud- “Tf-1 can be of any help’ said Antony, “please let me.” “That’s very kind of you.» There They stéod up and looked at each to. you,” did not remember shutting it, but {somehow he was surprised to seé jit open now, to see Cayley through the doorway, just coming into the room. Something working sub- consciously in his brain had told him that it was surprising. Why? “I've telephoned,” he said. i“They’re sending an inspector or some one from Middleston, and the ton.” to Cayley joined him at the window. local police and doctor from Stan- Antony felt quite sure, from what) |Cayley had said and had hesitated y, that Mark had been the last MANDAN NEWS | FUNERAL SERVICE HELD TOMORROW | Funeral services for Mrs. Martin j Dahl of. Huff will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the Lutheran ;ment will take place in the Parkin cemetery, | Mrs: Dahl’s death was caused by ‘a stroke of apoplexy which she suf- ,fered at her home Thursday noon. | Parkin chureh., Inter- 'the panes, and asking for it. tor of The Red House. roe his constant companion, * MATT CAYLEY, remained in The ‘Red House awaiting the arrival of the brother, iS dered}. and: said, “I was afraid it was Mark.” “Was Mark in the room too™® /”” said Cayley absently...An- tony ‘liad gone to the locked door, ‘ROBERT, while the house-party Vand ‘was turning the- handle. .- “I}) ~ guests were away playing golf: ‘When Robert appeared, the par- Tor-maid, startled’ by Nis rough ap- eearante: ushered him into Mark's office and went to inform her mas-} Aitbny: shri thi : ter, Mark was not in the garden Fa ue shoulders and when the maid returned to the|‘pofnting. to the man on the floor. House she heard the report of a re-{ “The dead?” ‘Suppdse he put the key in his pock- fet,” he' said, as he came back to the dy ‘again, aE ane ‘Who?’ ‘volver and then the sound of Cay-|* “#élp me,” said Cayley simply. ley pounding on the locked office!) ‘They turned tho body orito its door and demanding admittance-/pack, nerving themselves to look at This was the stve of affairs when|4¢, ‘(Robert Ablett had been shot be- ANTONY GILLINGHAM, a youth-| tween the eyes. ful gentleman adventurer, arrived./' «pig you know him well?” said 7 Antony ‘quietly. GO ON WITH THE STORY you fond’of him?” CHAPTER III. “*“Hardly at all. Mark is the Cayley. looked round suddenly at} brother. I know best. He hesitated, the voice. _ and@.then..caid, “Perhaps I’d better “Can I help?” said Antony p0-|.get*:some;'water.” f litely. ‘Phere was another door opposite “Something’s happened,” ° said] to the locked one, which led, as An- Cayley. He was breathing quickly.| tony was to discover for himself “I heard a shot. I was in the li-| dirgatly,:into a passage from which brary. loud bang. And the] opened two more reoms.° Cayley door’s:locked.” He rattled it. “Open| stepped into the passage, and the door!” he cried, “I say, Mark,| opened the door on the right. The what is it? Open the door!” dgor/from'the office; through which, “But he must have locked the|he had gone, remained open, The door on purpose,” said Antony. “So why ‘should he open it just because you ask himh to?” . Cayley. turned ‘to the door again. window,’ said Antony: with a smile. He looked very cool and collected, as he stood just inside the hall, leaning on his. stick. “Window—of course! idiot I am!” He pushed past Antony, and be- gan running out into the drive. Antony followed him. . They. ran along the front of the house, down a path to the: left, and then to the left! again over the grass, Cayley in front, the other close behind kim. Suddenly, Cayley looked over his shoulder and pulled up short. “Here,” he said. They had come to the windows of ‘the locked room. French windows which opened on to the lawns at the back of the house. But now they were closed, Antony couldn’t help feeling a thrill’ of excitement as he followed Cayley’s example, and put his face close up to ‘the glass. But if there had been one shot, why should there not be two more?—at the careless fools who were pressing heir noses againsty LCEARCR. What an | JACK 4 “My God, can you see it?” said Cayley in a shaking voice. The next moment Antony saw it. A man was lying on the floor at the far end of the room, his back to- ward them. “Who is it?” said Antony. “I don’t know,” the other .whis- ered. “Well, we'd better go and see.” He ‘considered the windows for a DAILY PHOTO BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS ® Ss i moment. “I should think, if you !put your weight into it, just where they join, they'H give all right.” Cayley put his weight into it. The window gave, and they went into the room. Cayley walked; quickly to the body, and dropped on his Knees by it, With an effort he put a hand onto its shoulder and pulled it over. “Thank God!” he murmured, and! He meant, “Were|doubtfully at ‘the other. SON, WE'RE OUT HERES For IRest, BYT IF YOU WANT MANGENT sust Seine ve AT HSURISCT ONCG MO will be. things to de. But you mustn’t let me trespass on your kindness.” “~ ease “I came to see Beverley. He is an old friend of mine.” “He's out playing golf, be back directly.” “I will stay. if I’can be help.”.- 97 Maxey eee “Please do.‘ You, see, there -are women.” He hesitated, and gave He will of any he said,| Antony a timid little smile, pathetic in so big and self-reliant, a "man. “Just your *<moral” support, you know.” “Of course.” Antony smiled back: at him, and said cheerfully, “Well, then, I'll begin, by ‘suggesting that you should ring up the police.” / “The police? Y—yes.” He looked “I sup- pose—” Antony spoke frankly, “Now, look here, Mr.—er—” “Cayley. I’m Mark Ablett’s cou- sin. I live with him.” “My name’s Gillingham. I’m sorry. I ought to-have told you before. \ Well now, Mr. Cayley, we shan't.do any good by pretending. Here’s a man been shot — well, somebody shot him.?» Sayley shruggéd his’ shoulders and went to the telephone, “May I—er--look round a bit?” [EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO “We must break it in,” he said, putting his shoulder to it. a re ee aero “Isn’t there a window?” iyo: my = ; ‘ a BY 4, ww 2S AEs Ces “Window? Window? tea es Pep Ss oli A ; thas “So. much. easier to break ina] 1 (6G TES bs VO ev, Tees 8 | fat SEEMED SO COMPLEX Av DIT HCE T oF COMPREHENSION, BECOME SO MUCH OR INSTANCES WINEING OF THE (INCOME TAX o--=- gs was | 1 po sate megemmerernge: A. TEMPORAR To MAKE XouRS SS A \to see his brother alive, It didn’t | ‘She was 62 years of a a |follow that Mark Ablett was a mur- pesrvel seme end) came |to North Dakota with her first hus- of assault. \ jderer. Revolvers go off accidental- {ly; and when they have gone off, people lose their heads and run away, fearing that their story will not be believed. Nevertheless, when people run away, whether in- {nocently or guiltily, one can’t’help wondering which way they went. “I suppose this way,” said An- tony aloud, looking out of the win- dow. “I wonder.” v “Well, he didn’t go by the win- dows in the next room, because they were. shut.” ~ “Isn’t that rather odd?”".. “Well, I thought so at first, but-—” He pointed td the wall jut- |ting out on the right. /“You see, jyou're protected from the rest of the house if you get out here. If you go out at the French windows, I imagine you’re much more visi- ble.” Cayley ‘looked at him thought- fully. “It seems to me, Mr. Gillingham, that you’ know the house pretty well, considering that this is the first time you've been to it.” (Continued in our next issue.) ¢ . ° | ATHOUGHT © | ° x ¢ Wrath is crucl, and anger is out- rageous; but who is able to stand be-' fore envy?—Proverbs 27:4:. Envy is the most acid fruit that! grows on the stock of sin.—Hosea Ballou. . o———_——_—___—_ 0 | TODAY’S WORD | -———@ oo Today’s word is—BADINAGE. i It’s pronounced, approximately, for the original French pronuncia- tion has no exact English .equiva-| lent—bah-de-nazh or -naj, with ac-| cent on the first syllable. It: means—banter, playful raillery, pleasantry. ib It comes from—French “badiner,” to joke. It’s used like this—‘Recent sena- torial tariff discussion has degenera- ated from mere badinage into down- right abuse.” band, James Curen about 22 years |ago. Eighteen years.\ago she was , united in marriage to Martin Dahl. {She is survived by a husband: and | six daughters: © Mrs. Robert Mackin of Mandan, Mrs. Albert Jaroski of ‘Amery, Wis...Mrs. Wallace | Freder- licks, Clontarf, Minn., Mrs, Frank Pitzer, of Huff, Margaret and Agnes Dahl of Huff and thzce cons,‘ Arthur \Ouren of Hazen, John and Olaf Dahl of Huff and three brothers, August and Henry Daffinrud of Huff and Bert Daffinrud of New Richland, Minn. The following program was given at the band concert last even- ing: 1. March, American Legion..Parker '2, Overture, Norma *.+.Bellini 3, Popular Waltz, Three O'clock: in. the Morning:.......Robledo 4. Trombone Duett, Imogene. .Smith Messrs. Breuinger and Collis. | 5.‘Medley Selection, The, Best- I Loved Southern: Melodies. Hayes 6. Fox Trot; Just a little Love Song vi cesses cuenes-s- Cooper 7. Valse Oriental, Moonlight on the Nile, ....c.ceceseeeee King 8. Trombone Comedy, Noisy Bill Messrs. Breuinger, Collis, Law and Welcher. i 9. March, Noble Men . Fillmore S. J. Hunt “who-has. been’ visiting with friends'herdfor the past week returned’ to his héme: yesterday. ‘Mr. and Mrs. C. C. McLain who have been spending a few days visit- ing with Mr, and, Mrs.-John Foran, parents of Mrs, McLean, left yester- day,for, an-auto trip to Minneapolis. q MRS, HATFIELD SABINA, OHIO In Pitiable Condition when she Began Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound —_—___-—_ | NEWSBRIEFS | (By the Assoclated Press) Durham, N, .—The Durham = Ma- chine Gun Company of the national guard left for Raleigh to guard the penitentiary where it was reported a mob had gathered with the intent to lynch three negroes held on charge Spokane, ‘Wash.—Mrs. Gay Stroup ‘was Burned to death in her home at Cheny, Washington, in a fruitless! effort to save the life of her 17 months old baby. Washington—Reports. to the post- master ‘general said the. transconti-| | nental air service had a perfect rec-| cord for the past three weeks, every, flight being on time. Lansing, Mich—The ‘state auditor reported that during the fiscal year $29,809,560 was paid by bonuses to veterans of the world war. | Ames, Iowa—Major James-R. Lin- coln, 77, for 38 years commandant iss Towa State College died. } y Sabina, Ohio.—‘‘I took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compouny) for weak- ness_and irre; - _Stand on my feet long enough to cook a meal. Withis way for about a year and had tried several medicines but to no avail. My sister was taking = = in: in me to try it. I now feel fine 3nd can do m) housework without any trouble at all. You can use this letter for the sake of others if you wish.’’—Mrs, WELDON G. HATFIELD, R..R. 3, Sabina, Ohio. Housewives make a great mistake in allowing themselves to becomeso weak and nervous that it is well-nigh impos- sible for them to attend to their neces- sary household duties, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound should: be taken when you first notice such symptoms as nervousness, backache, weakness and irregularity. It will help you and prevent aS eects trouble. Give it a fair trial. It surel: helped Mrs, Hatfield, justasithas many, Waby other women, FOR MRS. DAHL - - eee