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i preconeernes 4 THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N.'D,, as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN Editor Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK * - Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ————— The Associated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use or republi- cation of all news dispatches cre- struggling,” small. ‘Don't look for an invariable gule for success, There is none, BONANZA Leslie P. Wheaton, 55 years old, has worked like a horse all his life. He'is known as “the best ditch dig- ger in northern Maine.” His home at Presque Isle is a shack made out of tar-paper and old packing boxes. Fate shoots her dice. Wheaton inherits $50,000. His hard days are over, This is the sort of windfall we all {hope for. It is good to read that oceasionally the dream comes true. That is what keeps most of us going BA Tom Strikes are always helpful. If it |‘wasn’t for §iem what would we blame high prices on? | Flapper clothen don’t always show | the wenrer’s age, REGULAR AIR SERVICE IN U.S. NOW! . Te _ MYSTERY. b AAMILNE @ 7 SP Dutton Company, Ca Dak (Continued From Our Last Issue) “Cayley asked us to bring a. let- ter along.” Bill explained to Bet- ty Calladine, ‘Here you\are.” “You will tell him, won’t you, | “Naturally, he hag not been here since. No doubt they would have been bound to meet up at the Red House sooner or later.” “Oh, this was only quite lately?” dited to it or not otherwise credit-; “1 i eaotly ed in oe pager, and Also the local | A man’s bills usually haunt hit. how dreadfully sorry 1am about—| “Last week, Mr, Gillingham. I meee Pi ened Reels i , RUBBER iwhen the ghost waiks. about what has happened? It) spoke just in time.” eectitt unit hoa herein are’ also| Marshall M. Vance, ‘Amertean | seems so hopeless to say anything;) «ani said Antony, under h's so hopeless even to believe it. If! breath. He had been waiting for it. reserved, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF consul in Ceylon, writes that the city of Colombo is experimenting with rubber roads, | It takes a lot of brass to start an | amateur brass band. tt is true what we’ve heard.” Bill repeated |the outline of the events of yesterday. He would have liked now to have gone away, so that he might have thought over the new situation by CIRCULATION i __| The rubber is used as a surface | Some people read movie subtitles SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE| dressing, applied like a coat of | With their cut-ou.s wide open. “Yes. _. And Mr. Ablett hasn’t| himself, . But Mrs, Norbury, was f NCB asphalt. Then gravel is steam-| A 1 ” still talking. ily by carrier, per year... «$7.20 | The average man’s idea of interior een found ye “Girls are so foolish, Mr. Gilling-. ’ “It is for- by mail, per year (in Bis- pani k) 7.20| ‘Tests so far indicate that rubber | decoration is a square meal. aily by mail, per year (in makes the best road and in the long 5 ° | Gt still seemg to have hi tunate that they ‘hi others to state i 4 i | 7 fi * s ave happened to|tunate that ey ‘have moth pe eee eee a 5.00| yun is not the costliest pavement.! Despite Russian relief plans, there Will Establish somebody else; somebotly we didn’t] guide them. It was so obvious to Dakoia ® §e0| It might be different over here, but | is no relief from Russia. More Wh know at all.” Then, with a sudden| me from the beginning that dear \; | = en zrave smile which included both of| Mr. Ablett was just the husband for THE, STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- PAPER (Mstablished 1873) rolled into it. it is an experiment that will interest all autoists. Art of road paving is in its infancy. | HORSESHOE PITCHING ORDERLY MARKETING | work at least 180 days a year. This may be an awful country; but Madagascar, law compels everyone to Fear Dies By Dudley Siddall Cleveland, 0., Aug. 21.—For years She shook her head, in distress. them, “But you must come and nave some tea.” “It’s awfully decent of you,” said Bill awkardly, “but we—er—” “You will, won’t you?” she said ham,” she was saying. my little girl, You never knew him?” Antony said again that he had not seen Mr. Ablett. “Such a gentleman. So nice-look- With thé greatest crop of grain in! Horseshoe pitching now has; Doctors say more blondes than! they've been telli “ iy Seuri in test crop of grain in | 1,900,000 players, says B. G. Leigh-| brunettes have hay fever. May bey future of aviation.” Nees ei ea é to Antony. ing, in hig artistic way. A regular “ ‘ will be-an unusual supply to be ab-| toR, head of this sport's national as-/ why they are dizzy’ blondes. “You can fly 110 miles by hydro- “Thank you very much.” Velasquez—I should say Van Dyck. sorbed by the market as soon as the | S°ciation. - . | ECE aeroplane between Detroit and Cleve- Mrs, Norbury was delighted to} Angela would have it that she could This and the increasing ronnlarity | No wonder Germany is broke. She| land. Two planes each daily, ex. |. (THQ. WOLVERINE,” ONE-OF THE SHIPS OF THE D. & C. LINES, | see them, ag she always was to see) Hever ATTY man-with a beard: E : As if that mattered, when—” She threshing machines begin to roll out | the grain in great quantities and cars transport it to marketing centers, A of golf indieste a gradual drift away from baseball, And back of that is a national | s trying to sell .otton stockings in his country. cept Sunday, at 9 a, m. and & p. m. A five-hour train ride, or an all- night boat ride, cut to 90 minutes! \N HER RUN FROM-CLEVELAND TO DETROIT (ABOVE), ‘BELOW )THE INTERIOR OF THE CABIN OF THE “WOLVERINE”; AND C. F. REDDEN, PRESIDENT OF THE A EROMARINE:, AIRWAYS, . INC. ‘any man in her house who came up to. the necessary “standard of eligi- bility. When her life work was broke off, and Antony finished her sentence for her. , is certainly decrease in price is expected, an in- f alaihy evitable result of a glutting of any Psychological wave, a general de-| These Wall Street men going back} This is the first airway of its kind ‘| completed, and summed up in those} “The Red House market; With this situation facing site to get actual exercise out of/ to the farm had better hide wher.|in the world. Never before, any- ce 7 ‘a . beautiful words. “A marriage has] charming,” he said. 2 sport instead of sitting comfortably | hog-killing time somes. where, has an unsubsidized, non-| C88 Milwaukee and northern ro-| 1S thought the vandalism was done by! pecn arranged, and will shortly|| “Charming. Quite charming,” She ‘gave a deep sigh. Antony ate many of the apparent trou- in a grandstand and watching others stock jobbing,, amply financed con- sorts; New York and Albany; Buffa- local. persons. seeking revenge for take place, between Angela, daugh- was about to snatch the opportunity ttendant to the harvesting of a e u ‘ : imagi big efop may prove helpful in the exercise. It is an important and! ‘These are 27,000,000. horses. and| €ern operated, planes on a regular lo, Rochester and Toronto; Santa] some imagined wrong. ter of the late John Norbury...” ae end. | valuable change | mules left in. this country, not unt-| twice-daily, schedule between impor- Bachata lie Angeles and. San. Die: ° ; <r j|then she would’ utter a grateful] of leaving, “when Mrs. Norbury be- : The;:patlroad: strike probably will | ae chronic, reformers. | | tant cities. The planes go by the, 80; Seattle and Vancouversa New | 7 py gin ; Nunc dimittis and depart in peace} gan again. PRACTICAL peeatiss) clock, loaded or ‘empty., No govern- | Orleans, Galveston, Vero Cruz and | STAMMERING © ||—t0 a better wortd, it Heaven in-| “And then there's this scapegrace = brother of his. He was perfectly cause difficulty in transporting wheat ‘to the market, as the rail- roads’ would be taxed to handle the enormous crop in normal times. The available threshing rigs in many, parts of the state cannot complete, A four-year course in training stu- dents to be hotel managers will be | started by Cornell University. \ We need similar schools for every | industry. Few men who go into| »This American trying to swim the English channel may be some tourist coming home brune, + 4+ Staunton, Va, has more women ment departments, no quasi-public organizations, no public spirited citi- zens are asked to help pay the bills, It’s a private enterprise, for private gain—or rather, private loss, so far Tampico; St. Louis, Cineinnati and New Orleans, will come in for early consideration as Acromarine Airway terminals. o—. BY. DR. R..H. BISHOP. sThere are few ominors ailments so embarrassing as; «tammering. It 13 not a physical defect but largely a mental: hazard,‘ang_so canbe cures sisted, but’ preferably to her new ‘| son-in-law’s more dignified estab- lishment. But it was not as “eligible” that the visitors from the Red House were received with such eagerness frank with me, Mr. Gillingham. He told me of this brother, and I told ‘him that I was quite certain it would make no difference to my daughter’s feelings... . After all, sai ‘i tomplete, susiness for themselves make a suc- | Me mee he. Worle of threshing this fall.’ cass of it because it takes them a| Voters than men Maybe the men ep eeate ut ts ontimated that LM. ental ter re are sections which report’ ji¢ctime to learn what a school could | cant get away. fivm home to vute. Py 7 . et EOS NOWNGH, by will-power. 5 today, and:even if her special smile | the brother was im Australia.” shortage of labor. Harvesting of the teach in a few years: meh pi ; of ‘Aeromarine Airways, Inc., has lost A N S To have a speech free from defects | for “‘possibles” wag there, it was in-| “When was this? Yesterday?” 5 crop may be spread over a long “ “wo earn merchandising and man-| A cat may have jiine lives; but $500,000 'in "his éfforty:to develop air ‘ there must be ‘perfect ihatmony be-| tinctive rather than reasoned. All| Antony felt that, Mark had only . : y | passetiger’ travel in the (United r tween ‘specch and, voice. apparatus, | that she wanted at this moment was |'mentioned it after his brother's an— period, and although the difficulties | are emphasized in many quarters they may prove blessings. H Experts declare there is a prospect of a shortage of wheat in the world market. An orderly marketing will! stabilize prices and the prevention of the dumping of a huge temporary | over-supply cannot help to eventu- ob has boor ‘actsrié betta ally raise the level of prices that . dea p Fich \ lrine Airways has to beat before it! he held this afternoon’ at 2 o'clock | 8¢tion, such part of the. world as mattered: * will obtain for grain in the world |“ Commanta reproduced in this || Wonder if you can cuss around a/ Ca" make air travel a commercial] from the residence... Members. of the we Tules' are: “A marrage has very nearly been| down here in the morning. market, column may, or may not express |! pint in knickbockers? “| success. family were unable to give any de-| , Training the muscles of speeci | arranged (by Mrs. Norbury), and} “Oh, no! There is such. a thing, \ : ‘ will certainly take place, between | Mr. Gillingham, as being too de- Delay in marketing will be enfore- ed insmany cases. An effort to pre-! vent an immediate _ over-supply | should be encouraged by those who are in position to thresh and market their=wheat immediately. Hl The farmer who stacks his grain, selling only enough to meet his im- mediate needs, wha ‘spreads out the! period of shipment of grain, may not: | eye ful lot of money. And it’s goi i : i ° it is certain’ that his summers ise ye And its, going.<to ; s carri versation only help himself but help his “24 ; In Boston, they cure lisping by| cost more, before. we succeed, Ne-|*® Her aid. Sho was carried, to her eae ; i , w admitting i ‘air compensation for his labors themselves to death. i i ness. She died at: hour later, Phy-| breathing plays a major role. Exer- . i = : labors from old. to new style) ‘and, there. | ‘emserves t0 CCN" of ur seven lines show a profit.on | Sianal Ware were” called reported] eves sould be taken tn this manner: | Cayley, that hopeless, inellglble. | Tesh a tor ineeaatch af all THE RADIO SLUMP ‘ing: 4 mm * t she Suffered & fractured skull. Stand erect ‘in the ordinary post- ut alas! Cayley had misunder- rl . Mars is leaving. the earth at th | that the time: ihad come to enlarges.” Yo. i be tion of “attentivi,”’ chest. high aed stood ‘her. She could not imagine] “The day potas, yesterday. AN Crepe-hangers ‘are: predicting that! the radio craze is booked to fizzle, out. They are wrong. i I i Unquestionably, interest in radio! is going through a decided slump. It! is a natural reaction. The novelty’ letry. It looks easy until you try it— agement is harder than mastering | astronomy or analytical trigonom- | ag every apprentice finds when he is | learning his trade. } EDITORIAL REVIEW \ the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which ore being discussed in the press of the day, SHAKESPEARE’S ‘SUMMERS Tho richness’ and -radiance of} Shakespeare. suggest -his summer, fore sums received him info, iat arms. He must, often have’ recalled’ a. simmer’ of ‘fils fahool das meh i of 1573, in which ‘Queen Bfizabeth’| visited the Earl of ‘Leicester ‘at! Kenilworth Castle. From Strat- ford, only 20 miles away, the boy may have been taken by his father wildcat still seem to have ninety. National horseshoe pitching tourna. ment will be held in Des Moines and merchants are stocking up on chew- ing tobacco. { Most of the rich act poor and most If. you. didn’t already know, it golfers address the ball; and when they get the wrong address it goes astray. ! Forgetting the past is all right but don’t forget the future. rate of -40,000. miles. an, hour... One’ good look was exough, eprstrsitt , ADVENTURE OF | | . ‘THE TWINS o—_——_—_—+ States. Yet, by opening the Detroit & Cleveland line, he demonstrates his firm belief that he can, ‘educate the American public to use hydro- acroplanes as fearlessly as it uses trains and boats, Hold Funeral For Mrs. Swanson Today Mrs. N. H) Swanson, 73 years old, Sobol ininved Friday night Must Beat Fear That’s the thing Fear! Aeroma: “We can beat it,” said C. F. Red- den, New York, president of Aeroma- rine: Airways, Ine. “We have beaten it in our lesser unscheduled opera- tions between New York and» At= lantie City; between Key West and Havana; between Miami and Bim- ini; between Miami and Palm Beach; and elsewhere, But .it costs an aw This, D. & C, line is the result,.Here |; you see aerial travel lifted out of |; pleasure thrill. for wealthy vaca- tionists and made into a service do-} signed primarily for business men to whom time is ritoney.” upon all previoug air travel services)4) ys” when she fell down the stairs at her st avd Sixth Avg. NW. will tails of the accident. Mr. and Mrs. Swanson had both retired at 9 o'clock and about 11 o’clock Mrs. Swenson arose. and went out into the upper hall of. the home. Whether she fainted of tripped and fell down the, stairs is unknown. The noise of her: fail brought her hus- befd and ‘her son, William Swanson, sband and five children sur- vi “Mrs.: Louis r) 4 hae Pe a Swingdq" and William Swanson, all of "Maiidan, and ‘Andred “Swanson -of Forsyth,’ ‘Mont. ~ perfect mind:control ‘anti-deep breath- ing from: diaphragm; ..- ‘The suffercrs from specch defectwhy would ‘overcome the affiliction must start as @ child learning to talh. must, after training, articulate with- ‘ont conscious effort, just as a person swallows food: with an involuntary throngh the sense of touch at the points at which they meet when og" e1uminating — monotone; breath control from the diaphragm; exercises: in shc.¢ ‘phrases to elimi- nate rapid, continuous :speech and to prevent’ talking’ when «the breath 1s | exhausted; retaining new perfection in specch ‘by’ reading aloud and con- active, while taking. breath, expand at the’ waist and diaphragmic mus- cles. Hold the breath while counting twenty: ‘Then increase by gradual de- gxecs to forty. The sensation of tightness: and fullness'in the throat \ nows—news of Mark. For.she was bringing it off at last; and, if the engagement columns of the “Morn— ing Post” were preceded, as in the case of its obituary columns, by @ premonitory bulletin, the announce- ment of yesterday would have cried triumphantly to the world, or to Angela, only daughter of the late John Norbury, and Mark Ablett of the Red House.” The girl was often amused by her mother’s ways; sometimes ashamed of them; sometimes disressed by them.. The Mark Ablett affair had seemed to her particularly distress- ng, for.Mark was so obviously in Cayley. in Jove — until she. saw: it, and tried too late, to.stop it. That was four. days ago. She had not seen him since, and now here was thig letter. She dreaded opening it. It was a relief to-feel that at least she had an excuse for not doing so nouncement of a personal call at the Red House, this perfect call at the Red House, this perfect frank- ness had a good deal of wisdom be- hind it. : “Tt couldn’t have been yesterday, Mr. Gillingham, Yesterday—” she shuddered, and shook her head. “I thought perhaps he had been voted a lover. Not in.the morning, no. We both agreed that dear An- 'gela— Oh, no. No; the day, before yesterday, when he happened to drop in about tea-time.” It occurred to Antony that Mrs. ' Norbury had come a long way from her opening statement that Mark and Miss Norbury were practically happened, Not that it, mattered.’ He was driv— ing to, Middleston. He hardly ‘had time for a cup of tea, so that even ‘if she had been in—” Antony nodded silently. This ‘was something new. Why did Mark is wearing off. Radio is becoming to see some of the moonlight pa- here’ : ss Poms pe Peis ill commonplace. Only a few months 5 fy There's only one way to beat fear} A.C. Willman, agronomist in| Will pass away. »» a iddleston the day before A . ago it was as great a marvel as the Sent: and some critics sec in the safety. No expense has been spared charge’of the flax investigation for| ‘The'length of ame it takes to cure | While her ucaleinrgih ihe. nuts jeg, eae Seat atlor sa ely An A hundred reasons arrival of a man from Mars. Interest in the airplane has had} much the same reaction. In com- munitjes where planes are not un- | common, people still look overhead | when they ‘hear the hum of the steel locusts. But they do not look with the speed that formerly threatened to dislocate the neck. | Nevertheless, the airplane is forg- ing ahead rapidly. It will be the same with radio. Manufacturers of radio equipment think that the slump in wireless en-; thusiasm: is due to summer. Their theory is that people want to be out- doors now in the evenings as much as possible. In autumn, the manufacturers prediet, radio will come back strong- er than ever. If the trade is wise, it will triple its efforts to provide novelty and “class” in the broadcasted music. Invéntive genius, too, must be itensified on improving radio ap- paratus, especially for eliminating static. | An old hand-bill comes to light in the east, advertising one of the early telephone-demonstrations at the city hall in Lawrence, Mass., May 28,) 1877. The hand-bill read: “The ‘miracle telephone! Wonder- ful discovery of the age! Professor A. Graham Bell, assisted by Mr. Fre-| deric A, Gower, will give an exhi- bition of his wonderful and miracu- lous discovery, The Telephone, be- fore the_people of Lawrence, when Boston ‘and Lawrence will be con-) nected vig the Western Union Tele- graph, apd vocal and instrumental music and conversation will be trans- mitted a’ distance of’ 27 miles and received by the audience in the city hall. Prof, Bell will give an explan- atory le&tire with this marevlous ex- hibition.” There's: a curious coincidence be- tween “vocal and instrumental mu- sic and conversation” over the tele- phone wire in 1877, and similar ser- vice by radio in 1922. The telephone, considered a mar- vel, swept popular fancy overnight. Then it:had a slump. People began to call it “a scientific toy.” Many of themppredicted that the telephone craze would die out quickly, just as similar predictions are being made naw: about radio. k But the teleyhone hasn’t died out. Neither will radio. It is as much in its infaney as Bell’s phone was in 1877. And. its future is as promising. |sue-on the morality “of cigarette vision of Oberon, in “A Midsummer Night’s Pream,” a reference to the Queen as the “fair vestal throned by the west.” It is clear that Shakespeare’s wonderful flower and bird lore, so rustically accurate, came to him in his young Stratford summers. Shakespeare was but two-and- twenty when he came to London, then a Gothic city whose summer dayg and nights were pure and glorious, its river pellucid, its] winds free and fragrant. He who wishes to see»London as Shakes- peare saw it on a summer morning | should look at Visscher’s panora- mic view taken in the 'very year of| Shakespeare’s death. We are standing, probably on a roof top in Bankside, a spot now sacred to Shakespeare’s memory. In the foreground are two curious octago~ nal buildings labeled “The Globe” and the “Bear Garden.” Beyond fringing the Surrey side, and over river which mirrored the London of; Elizabeth and James.—John O’Lon- don’g Weekly. y “MORAL ISSUES” When is a moral issue not a moral isue? Mrs. Margot Asquith, who has | put her feet on the desks of more| prime ministers than any living wo- | man, and Gene Stratton Porter, who ! has done more for sugar-and-spice- and-everything-nice than anybody | except President Harding, ‘are at is- | these are the backs of houses! ~ these we see the btoad bosom of thé sarie: By Olive Barton Roberts Along the Milky Way’ came: flap-} Doodle, the fairy, singing, ‘and pretty: soon h espied the little’ Chinese house Nancy and Nick had built. “Hm!” said Flap-Doodle, folding back his ears that he’d been flying! with, and squinting his eyes. “Tl have to take a look at such an inter- esting place. If i like it, I'll stay here. “I have the Fairy Queen’s wand 1} stole, and I'll turn the people inside! of the house into lead or something | heavy. Then they'll fall. down. out ; of te hsky and I can have the house.” | to. make ‘Acromarine’s big fliers | safc. In three years they haye car. ried thousands of passengers hu! dreds of thousands of miles with, out one single injury to a passen- ger. The fare is $40 each way by plane, as against $7.5Q first-class by train.! Ten passengers can, be carried on each flier. \ But when the public is educated to forget fear, and begins patroniz- ing the service voluntarily, fares will come down to around $25 the round trip. i What's it like to fly? Well, you’re scared when you enter the commodi- ous “limousine” cabin and seat! Tap, ‘tap, tap! “he -went- with his : in her Rew, gostum. thit, Flap-Doodle didn’t know her from Adam's’ tu’ ‘Wouldn’t he have” been “surprised; though, if he had known she was the 8 jittle girl he had:tarned. into ‘a baby-doll a short time before? “Howdy!” said he. “May L come in? I've lost my, way and I tiought maybe you had alroad nidp.” : “Certainly! satd Nancy, with aps other bow. “Come “Come right in, sir, aiid I'll tell my brother, Nick Oo Ting. My Name is Nan Soy. Won't you have some tea?” “Don't care if I do,” answered Flap- Doodle, standing his wand, or rather) the Fairy Queen’s wand, in a corner. Just then Nick -ime in and they all sat down and crossed their legs smoking for women. Mrs. Porter, in McCall’s magazine, urges a govern-| ment on “independent literature,” | smoke cigarettes and go about haltf- clothed” by describing “people? who lead such lives.” Mrs, Asquith, ask- ed from coast to coast what she thinks of knee-length skirts and | ladies'-size cigarettes, replies irrit- ably, “What on earth difference docs it make?” sees moral character issues all about her. She can name a_ half-dozen | magazines that shock her “almost to | paralysis.” They should be sup- pressed, she believes, to protect the innocent girls from contamination. another man’s subject of complete indifference, Cigarette smoking |; among women probably heightens. the blood pressure and irritates the nervous system, but, after all, it is not much more a moral issue than which, she implies, is making girls; Shout to get the Fairy Queen’s wand Mrs. Porter, on the other hand,|g || 07 TODAY’S WORD |i | Of course one man’s: moral issue ts| in Chinese fashion. Nancy and Nick looked at each! other and nodded. At last they were | they had come so far to find! Flap-Doodle never’ suspected a | thing, mind you, and picking up his | chop-sticks started ¢o eat rice pud- | ding with all his might. (To Be Continued.) | (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) ——* | | | ¢—__________ | Today’s word is—MUNDANE. | It’s pronounced—mun-dane, with | accent on the first syllable. It means—of or pertaining to the world; worldly. It comes from—Latin, “mundus,” the world. | It’s used like this—“The star An- |‘ tares, 400,000,000 miles in diameter, is the largest of heavenly bodies yet yourself in one of the roomy uphol- | stered chairs for the first time. t ‘the fear vanishes a minute plane takes off. After that ¢’s no more “sensation” than rid- in a Pullman, Not as much, for re are no jolts, no dust, no sense of specd. Mostly the planes keep be- tween 25 and 200 feet above the wa- tr, but at a thousand-foot elevation nobody’ suffers from height’: dizzi- ness, When I returned from my _ first flight, I boasted about. it,.as if: I'd’ doné somethingsbig. All first trip- ‘pers, they tell ihe, are like that. But| later— My second flight was a good deal of a bore. The thrills were gone. I read newspapers all the way across on my third trip, much as do ferry boat commuters. “Out of the thousands of: passen- gers we have carried,” +says Presi- dent Redden. “I've never heard of one to suffer any physical discom- fort after getting into the air.” Cotton in Ears The only drawback is the roar of the motors, for the passengers al- ways prefer to keep the window: open except during rainstorms. Cot: ton in the ears is the only special equipment needed. Straw hats don’t blow off, nor do the passenger's colthes require the application of a porter’s brush at the end of the jour- ney. You're not strapped in, wrapped { up, or even required to stay. in your chair if you first get the “conduc- tor's” permission (to change your seat or get a glass of water, Hand bagagge is carried free. The crew consists of a pilot and two mechanics. The ship is driven by two 400-horsepower Liberty mo- tors. After every 100 hours’ work they are overhauled, and thay’re practically junked after. five or six overhauls. Experiments are now being made the, United States department of agri- culture, on of the staff of experts at the -Northern Great Plains field station. here, state that flax acreage in the’ states of Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Eastern Montara, and Eastern’ Wyomnig would be slightly inoréaséd(in yield and grade’ this year: over last. Several hundred dollars worth of damage was down L. A. Paxton’s ‘big Nash six touring var Friday nt when vandals. broke into C, Thomp- sen’s garage and with a heavy file and some other sharp instrument punctured, three of the’ tires and slashed and niutilated the leather up- holstering. Mr. Paxton was former- stammering depends: on the respon- siveness of. the ‘abnormal speech- conditions, and the suffer’s patience, and ‘determination. FOR BATHING. Fashionable bathing suits, some of them, have overdresses of jersey which may be worn to the beach and discarded later when’ swimming. They are short and comfortable. oALPACA, Silk alpaca-is a new fabric utilized to advantage in the new coat dresses) for fall. Fur bands and trimmings find it an excellent background. There are at least 1,250,000, square miles. of, coal fields in the world. ly night roadhouse foreman here. It eee | EVERETT TRUE * coc gue IBY: CONDO | that Antony was likely to be the more sympathetic listener; and when tea was over, and Bill and Angela had been. dispatched to the garden, dear Mr. Gillingham found himself on the. sofa, beside her, lis- tening to many things which were of even greater interest to him than she could possibly have hoped. “It ig terrible, terrible,” she said. “And to suggest that dear Mr. Ab- lett—” ‘ Antony made suitable noises. “You've seen Mr. Ablett for your- self. A kindler, more warmhearted man—” ‘Antony explained that he had not seen Mr.. Ablett. : “Of course, yes, I was forgetting. But, believe me, Mr. Gillingham, you’ can trust a woman’s intuition in these, matters.” Antony, said that he was sure of this. *“phink of my feelings as a mother.” “Antony was thinking of Miss Nor- bury’s feelings as a daughter, and wondering if she guessed that her affairs were now being discussed with a stranger. Mark engaged, or about to bé ‘engaged! Had that any bearing on the events of yesterday? What, for instance, would Mrs. Nor- bury ‘have. thought of brother ‘Robert, that family skeleton? Was this another reason for wanting brother Robert out of the way? “T never liked him, never!” “Never liked—?” said Antony, be- wildered. ~ “That cousin of his—Mr. Cayley.” “How did Miss Norbury ‘get on swith him?” Antony asked cautious- vunere was. nothing in that at all,” said Miss Norbury’s mcther em- phaticatly. ‘Nothing. I would say so to enybody.” “Oh, 1 beg your-pardon. I never meant—” “Nothing. I can say that for dear Angela, with perfect confidence. ‘Whether he made advances—” She broke off with a shrug of her plump shoulders. Antony waited eagerly. “Naturally they met. Posslbly he might have—I don’t know. But my duty as a mother was clear, Mr. Gillingham.” Mr. Gillingham made an encour- aging noise. : “I told him quite frankly that— how shall I put it?—that he was trespassing. Tactifully, of course. ; But frankly. “You mean,” said Antony, trying ‘shouldn’t he? unconnected with the death of Rob- i ert might have taken him there. | He got up to go. He wanted to be alone—alone, at - least, with Bill. Mys. Norbury had given him many "things to think over, but the great outstanding fact which had emerg- ‘ed was this: that Cayley had reason to hate Mark. Mrs. Norbury had given him that reason. To hate? Well, to be jealous, anyhow. But that was enough. “You see,” he said to Bill, as they walked back, “we know that Cayley is perjuring himself and risking himself over this business, and that must be for one of two reasons. Either to save Mark or to endanger him. That is to, say, he ig either whole-heartedly for him or whole- heartedly against him. Well, now swe knew that he is against him, definitely against him.” They had come to the gate into the last field which divided them from the road. aoa “Jolly little place, isn’t it?” said Bill. “Very. But rather mysterious. Isn’t there a drive, or a road or anything.” “Oh, there’s a cart-track, but mo- tor-cars can’t come any nearer than the road’—he turned round and pointed—“up there. So the week- end millionaire people don’t take it] At least, they’d have to build a road and a garage and all the rest of it, if they did.” “T see,” said Antony carelessly, and they turned round and con- tinued their walk up to the road. But later on he’ remembered this casual conversation at the gate, and saw the; importance of it. CHAPTER XVI What was it which Cayley “was going to hide in that pond that night% Antony thought that he knew now. It was Mark’s body. (Continued in Our Next Issue) —.) o—-. By NEA Service. ‘ Vancouver, B. C., Aug. 18—Dis- tinguishing seeds and plants through a highly cultivated sense of touch, Arthur Gray, 66 years old, and total- ly blind, is a, successful garaener here. Gray lost is sight in a foundry accident a few years ago. Undaunted, he turned to gardening, ‘He taugn. his hands to do the work of eyes, telling him plants and their progress —_———— : 2 Enaeuel Ea GAINING over-eating, which also heightens the! measured by mundane astronomers.” it News. radi adeust- n success?’ Henry Ford is at the top| which also irritates the nervous sys- | So ito ‘the. passengers as they fly across that—er—Mr. ‘Ablett and your| by feel. To guide himself about the of the ladder and building additional | tem. A’ reading. of Mrs. Asquith’s | A THOUGHT \| Lake Erie. daughter—?” garden, he set ‘up a system of guide rungs. Nineteen years ago he had| memoirs. would doubtless heighten "If the D. & C. venture works out to | Mrs. Norbury nodded — several) wires. Ca a oO ‘ | tinies. Not only is Gray a gardener, but e only 96 employes and was making} Mrs. Porter's blood pressure, and only 195 cars a year. Now he has certainly Mrs. Asquith’s nervous sys- | But I say unto you, Swear not at | show a gain, President Redden says ! that similar regularly scheduled ser- “Bxactly, Mr. Gillingham. I had my duty as a mother.” also a carpenter. Unaided, he has ust built a glass-enclosed green- 75,000 employes and makes 1,300,000| tem would not stand more than &/ all—Matthew 5:34. vice will be inaugurated between th cars a year. very small dose of “Laddie.” hese| Profanencss is a brutal vice; he| other water-connected cities by “There must have been a certain | house for his garden. Plenty of others who were barely! “moral issues,” how they succeed one | who indulges in it is no gentleman.— Aeromarine Airways. Probabilities awkwardness about the next meet- i aT i ing,” suggested Antony. | Africa has only four paper mills. struggling along in 1903 are still, another—Hartford Times. | Chapin, jae that Boston and New York; Ch: