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| “¢ " « THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Ree 4 " ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1922 SUCCEEDS WHERE PAGE FOUR “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class lin a sleigh from Ghost Lake. Both were breakfasting -heavily. | EDITORIAL REVIEW A PERFECT FIT os les Laomi Smatter had arriyed_ ee ae | The pretty, sulky-faced girl fetch-| : \ ‘ the e Tribune. The ; as (GEORGED.MANN- -- ~~ -— = Editor | are-Srosented mere Ir order that a aid Proper Stornigpt earris ei : our readers may have beth siden iN oshanwag Sake chen vhe iedterad: ig eather ios . *. issues \c! re . + H , Ns Foreign Representatives Being ‘discussed In the press of | He set the tray on the stabje. She, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com. f v. | G. LOGAN PAYNEXCOMPANY the day. Put both arms around his neck. | pound Often Does That.—Read | CHICAGO - - Se DETROIT |tremuscus with tears,” | Mirs, Miner’s Testimony | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. aissoURL CONFEDERATES ‘ON |" “Everything has been done,”: he! busco, N.Y.“ ry ND SMITH LINCOLN ‘i Teeeye : | . Churubusco, N. Y.—‘‘I was under the PAYNE, BURNS A [ | said: “Will you. be ready by eleven? doctor’s care for over five years for | NEW YORK S A - - Fifth Ave. Bldg.| The United Confederate Veterans Til come for you,” i backache and had no 4 who met in convention in Rich- She clung to him in silence for 4 relief from hi: i~ { MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mond, Va., last June and unanim- | vila relict oars ‘ously adopted a resolution holding | At eleven’he*knocked on:her door. } siineighbor told me } | She opened it. She wore her. black ' wool gown and a black fur turban, Some of her pallor remained—-traces | jof ‘tears and bluish “smears under! labout your Vegeta- ble Com; . took it. It helped ma * g0 much that I wish |Abraham Lincoln personally re- ‘sponsible foy the Civil war would ido well to imbibe some of the spirit jof the Untied Confederate Veterans | | i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or + republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Ae % r 2 of Missouri. i both eyes. But her voice. was! to advise all women * All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are} ‘rhe Richmond libelers declared stendy, ; i to try Lydia E. Pink- also reserved. Fe that the war was “deliberately and ; “vould I see Dad a moment! Barn 's Vegetable a ees | personally conceived and its maug- alone? : empoundtor fe- MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION juration made by Abraham Lincoln, | ‘Of course.” / male trou a and }and that he was personally respon-! She took his arm; they descended = backache. » It isa | |the stairs. There scemed to be| great help in carrying a chi noticed a difference when I didn’t take it. I thank you for this medicine and if * J ever come to this point again I do not want to be without the Vegetable Com- pound. I give you permission to publish SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE istble for forcing the war on the! Daily by carrier, per year........-sseeeeeeeee «$7.20 | South.” 5 i Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . 7.20 | The Missouri Confederate Veter- | i A Fy * x : | ans expressed last week their judg- Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . 5.00 | ment that Lincoln was “one J the| many people about but she did not |lift her eyes until her lover led her/ linto the dance hall where Clinch |lay smiling his mysterious smile. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota..........+.... 6.00 | greatest (find noblest Americans | father’ e Stormont Clete er mone this letter 99 that all women can take d. ‘i { ee ,| my advice. —Mrs, F'RED ER, THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER "Very few shoughtful men and, In a tettitic, snowstorm they 108 Churubusco, Ne Yen | women of the North believed for a/ moment that the Richmond ‘cofven- | a -s ivention reflected the sentiment of 8 \ NESTOS ADMINISTRATION ENDORSED ‘any great part of the present citi-| . With the vote in the state two-thirds in, it is evident that |zenship of the South. On the con-| (Established 1873) ‘buried Mike Clinch on the spot he |had selected, inorder that he might {keep a watchful eye upon the tres- | passing ghost of old man Harrod. | It blew and stormed and stormed, and the thin, nasal voice of “Rev. | i It’s the same story over again. ‘Women suffer from ailments for years. They try doctors and different medi- cines but feel no better. Finally they take Lydia E. Pinkham’s. Vegetable Compound and you can see its value in, Governor Nestos has been returned to office by a comfortable | tery they is to think that the | iSmatter” was utterly lost in the) the case of Mrs.’ Miner. F ¢ _ majority, the size of which is as yet a matter of conjecture. enn Vijorans spoke snot alone | wind, The slanting lances of snoW/ " ‘That's the truth of thematter. Ifyou The vote can be taken in no other way than an endorsement poay of Southern citizenship whose | | drove down on the casket, building | are suffering/from any of the troubles of the efforts of Governor Nestos while in office. The cam-' sincere wish is that there shall be, Bea eee beubie pia Women have, you ougl t to try this med~ paign-in behalf of ‘Governor Nestos was based on two grounds.¢in all this country a common) sight. or old, as it contains no harmful eld Deficiencies were charged to the previous league administra- | thought as to the flag, as to patriot. | \ "There was no time to be lost now; | ‘ tion-of which Mr. Lemke was a part, and the record of the| ian’ of ae. Sais and |the ground was freezing under | 3 inistration.i i i po he Mit < | i d bitter wind out of the; Nestos administration. in less than a year in office was placed; ‘The Missouri Veterans have made | veering and bi ; ote ; - . Veterans) iH . Mr, Lyken’s talented _ as- before the voters. They made their choice. {the country their debtor because of| [rere eae aitticulty tn shay: <= The election marks a turning point in North Dakota poli- | the effort pur forth “Dye trem st0 | ing the mound which snow began to ra i ight has been based ct, the recentyantiLineon| make into. a white and flawless tics. For several years the anti-league fight has been based) propaganda that has had its head moneente 0 |The last slap of the spate rang ’ Chiefly upon the shortcomings of the league administration. In the future any campaign for the present state administra- tion must be based upon the record of. the administration itself. : f Governor Nestos received many farmer votes—league|as a man not to be compared with | ‘hack into it one by one; “Rev! oy. wong . = * 7 A | Annie OO ‘ : gets better. An in- , 7 sa he | Jefferson Davis in character, pur- ep pee Oey each Rare, ai i ‘ ” got into his sleigh, plainly . farmers. They by their vote showed that they believe t I Seas eadstiternnchine D | teave of Clinch and rejoined the Srigtten est fate is sleigh Plate. ventor has a tiektess clock. preserit administration will better carry out the mill and elevator program, make more farm loans, sell the industrial bonds at better advantage and better money conditions by attracting financial interests to the state. The vote was a reflection of the strength of the Governor before the people, and the decisive majority may dissipate much of the bitter- ness in the state. The future is, of course, what the admin- istration makes it. = BANKRUPT? In eight months worth of goods. This is nearly $141,000,000 more than we buy from her. She has very little gold in her vaults, to bal- ance the books, so the $141,000,000 is largely a credit ex- | tened to her. i é The talk about Germany going bankrupt doesn’t seem to worry some of the American bankers and exporters. Ap- parently Germany has an unlimited charge account with them. ! International finance is a queer animal, rabbit one day, ' sociologists on the subject of mar-|bed. And beside him sat Trooper] news penetrated the wilderness; and “ y hi rms are made out wolf the next. é | riage! 1] Stormont, waiting. out of the desolation of forest and| they came from Harrgd's.” f Si auatiek, and his back-} Qh, what is’ so rare as a ton in Frahkly salacious literature has| It was snowing heavily when Mr.| swamp and mountain drifted the| Darragh nodded: “How is she,|*° ® Cut ora red one and his gun | October? fo AUTOS not been lacking in all ages, sinee;Lyken,. the little undertaker from] people who somehow existed there—[Jack?” i out of a yellow broomstick with g peste ost Lake, arrived with several] few shy, half wild young girls, af “Al in’ green sripes!” repeated the old The Cleveland Trust Co. investigates and gives this de- we ship Germany about $213,000,000/ and source in Georgia. Pamphlets! |prepared and circulated by self-| jappointed historians of that state include bitter attacks on Lincoln, | |as an arch enemy of the South and] Not con-/| {tent with criticism of the public} career of Lincoln, the writers of! {these pamphlets make contempti-! |ble personal assaults*6n the great War President. iad | No good can come to the country} or to the Souht itself through’ dis- semination of this sort cf “litera- ture.” The American people and | the world have their minds irrevoc- |ably made up as to the majesty of mind and spirit of Lincoln: His! good name and fame are safe for all| time, and those who assail him; can do no more than. betray their} own littleness.—Minneapolis Trib-| june. : | DEPRAVING THE CHILDREN. | Six Lafayette; Ind., school children, who attempted to carry out six- month “trial marriages,” show what comes from the loose talk and loose writing of socialists and self-styled | writing and printing were invented, | (Continued From Our Last Issue) ROBERT: W. CHAMBERS . *@1022 GEORGE H DORAN COMDAMY watch by Mike, but Stormont's blunt authority prevailed and she lay down for an“hour’s rest. The hour lengthened into many EPISODE TWELVE Her Highness Intervenes CHAPTER I Toward noon the wind changed,, hours; the girl slept heavily on her and about one o'clock it’ began | Snow. “Eve, exhausted, lay on the sofa in jhier bedroom. Her step-fathe ton a table in the dance hall below. covered by a sheet from his own vcore under blankets laid over her “*'l by Stormont. All that dark, snowy day she slept, lay | mercifully ‘unconscious of the pro- ceedings below. In ‘its own mysterious way the | with a metallic jar across the lake, | where snow already blotted the new- ly forming film of ice; the human | denizens of the wilderness filtered groups -in the kitchen, where were the funeral baked meats. if nive still slept. Descending again | from his: reconnaissance, | Trooper Stormont encountered Trooper Lan- nis below. Hl “Has anybody picked up Quin- | Lyken betrayed unprofessional: haste ee loading his wagon with his tal- ented assistants and starting for Ghost Lake. (Continued in \Our Next Issue) tana’s tracks?” inquired the former. “Not so far. An Inspector and two State. Game Protectors are out beyond Owl Marsh. The Troopers | from Five Lakes are on the job, and we have enforcement men along! vrecioned Valley from The Scour to! 1. turned outthat Searerow did “Does Darragh know?” * not have Mother Goose's broom “Yes. He’s in the there with Mike. | after all. toni iNew He brought a lo® of flowers from; For when Nancy an Nick aes Harrod Place.” % off in their Green Shoes te Hg The two Troopers went into the| chocolate drop shaped house pein dance hall where Darragh was af-! Mother Goose lived on a igh ni, ranging the flowers from his green- | and told her that Scarecrow ha ‘ houses. meee new supply of arms and eee Stormont said quietly: “All right,|@ new backbone, all eee ae Jim, but Eve must not know that! broomsticks, she shook Re x | THE TWINS — By Olive Barton Roberts “Do you know the story?” : Lag | ADVENTURE OF | I The annual shortage of plumbers has been announced. A’ politician with strings tied to him has his drawbacks. Fur coats are one argument and three gocd crys higher this year. When the New Jersey singer- minister murder quiets down. it 1s Californias’ turn for a snappy kill- ing. Some towns ard so lucky. An auto theif was shot in Cleyeland. ‘ When a man goes aboard ship now he is on the water: wagon. The only brafch of the air service that hasn’t been breaking any speed records is Congres : We often thing the old gray. mat- | j but it is ndt a tithe as injurious asj assistants, a- casket, and what be{dozen silent, lank men, two or three| . “ kc t tease =e Hi eal scription of the average purchased of an auto: the later sort that attempts to justify | © lied prell trimmings BU eal of Clinch’s own people, who stood Vallon et es akin atten quis “Yes,” answered Nancy. “That's ter ‘ain't what“ she-used..¢o' be. animal-like immoralities under some ago Mike Clinch had selected} silently about in the falling «snow |e ey eae an eee an Before | Tight. And he feels awfully. P| tone Bordoni says our women He is a married man, 33 years old. He has a bank ac- count and carries life insurance. He buys a $1400 car and pays $700 down. He pays the balance at the rate of $100 | | false philosophy and set up a barn- vard code cf ethics. There is a close; association’ between those who under- his driven a section of iron pipe into the [ground on a ferny knoll overlooking |Star Pond. In explanation .he grin] own mortuary site and hadjand lent a hand whenever requested. ' One long-shanked youth cut hem- leck to line the grave; others eréct- ed a little fence of silver birch e ‘ i 1 you that you -could have dawn this morning Eve _ located | Sud {0 fel! Yon eT Sie life.” Quintana, set a bear-trap for him,| “Mother Goose smiled kindly. She and caught him with the goods—” | patted her black cat and lifted her don’t kiss properly, but Irene doesn’t mention our men. monthly. His monthly income is $350. He owns real estate| mine the social order ‘of civilization , a a i F ‘ 5 = coat apbk Ys “pahlieheg {JY remarked to Eve that after death dit, maki f the-enclosure What goods?” demanded Dar- |}; into her knee be-| When a gang of grouches meet, a, in-which his equity is $5000. He has personal property worth |:nd those who attacks he establish he préterredite be: plantedswhere hel'gemplot” Pree agh sharply. sdgide ei ba Rieter miserable time is enjoyed by all. op & about $2000. This is not his first car. | economic system. Most of the Plo-| could see that Old Harrod’s ghost} A gaunt old woman from God|_ “Well, she got his pack and found!” “No, none of the broomsticks that — : fs ueers in socialism were of loose pri-| 4:4, & ike’. - Fembremr es oat ‘ - According to this picture, average prosperty AMONZ| vate morals or advocates of more ot lente HePeDN ER ac rows where aed Me Lyken_ at in- preter eomelry, init Scarecrow pay Greet aa or te gee nemly; weds ore! nob as fgullee . pares A * * Beal Boe ‘ ere two of Mr, Lyken’s able as-| tervals: a pretty sulky-eyed gi : ” said. “For being magical, m- | as early-weds who are not as Americans is higher than most of us imagine, since an auto tess free love. “Nearly all the &X-| sistants dug a grave while he diz-| with her slovenly, red-headed sister 4 “The jewels Quintana wes after. | stick turns every color of the rain- |foolish as the never-weds. is-owned by, roughly, 1 in each 10 Americans, or almost every) perimental socializsie colonies were’ ying was still good; for if Mike] cooked for anybody who desired | But that was after she'd arrived at |bow. It takes on the color of the gaan other family. pained an the same way. | Clinch was to. lie underground that} nourishment. the Dump, here, Jeaving Quintana! sky wherever I Nappen to be, 80/ Deer hunters report an excellent |} socialism were not impracticable | season there might be need of haste'l’ When Mike was ready to hold the} to get free of the trap and beat it. | that I cunnot be ‘ seen from the |erop of rabbits, é and impossible, it would still be fata! ng weather prophet) ever having! inevitable reception everybody filel| “Thaf’s how I met her—haif,earth and mistaken for a bird by ge SANITY niece i ybody file; n — F , : . ‘ | to civilization becwuse of the moral} successfully forecast Adirondack] into the. dance hall. Mr.‘Lyken was | crazed, gding to find Quintana | some venturesome hunter. If the} ugniy a few children know who =. Art is a reflection of the emotions and state of mind of @/ dry rot in it. Those who preach the | weather. master of ceremoniesy Trooper Stor-| 28ain. We'd found Mike in Drowned | sky is gray, so is my broom. If it| 34. vice president is,” says a sena- | people. Crazy art.reflects a crazy population, just as aj doctrine of common. ownership of| Eve, exhausted by shock and aj'mont stood very tall and straigh: by | Valley and were bringing him out | is blue, my roomstiek instantly be-| 10. ‘On, well, Coolidge only knows | national government is a mirror of the people governed. | things inevitably tend toward com-| sleepless night, was spared the more} the head of the casket. when [ ran into Eve. . . I.brought | comes the same. si 5 t,|Who a few children are. ‘ . Ba i ‘ i munity of women. They attack the harrowing details of the coroner's| Clinch wore a vague, indefinable| her back here and called ‘ Ghost | “If I'am out in a glowing sunset, ~ Homer Saint-Gaudens, art authority, says the cubists, | 70" hen thas | cist e : Pau ha 4 ne me ee ak Tl paar jthe broom becomes crimson, and if oe 4 * HEPES * u : | family, because they must, when they visit and the subsequent jaunty smile and his best clothes-;tnat | Lake. . . They -haven’t picked up|‘ 3 black The: weather’ Smaneicoulds .vacatt faturists and impressionists still are holding forth in Euro-| attack’ private property, which is in- tivities of Mr. Lyken and his effi-| same smile which had so troubled} Quintana’s tracks so far.” fe tern ny Etec eect Pcl Gao and leave a three sronthes sup: pean art exhibitions, but have about had their day. Europe! dispensable to maintenance of the cient assistants. ‘Jose Quintana. | After a silence: “Too bad this | 88 night. Go and fell Scarscrow vot | of colder predictions. a g i | family.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. She had managed to dress herself] Light was fading fast in the rcom | Snow came so late,” remarked Troop- |‘ Worry ® Pi p . gradually returns to sanit y z! eae i 2 y. ' nalts in a black wool gown,’intending to] when the last visitors took silent | er Lannis. But we ought to get Quin- | (72¥, nee gall. for, [nome of Sitisl weden whee che Shabpy in = NTING IS GOOD tana anyway.” | oft he "Pwins:to telly Scare: | heaven i ‘ji ite 2 KNOCKS AU Darragh t d looked | went the Twins to tell Seare- | heaven if all the wings are alike. | a : A * A coroner’s jury in Oklahoma . gh’ ‘went over and looked | 3 ei ... Few of our artists will agree with Momer Saint-Gaudens’ | city jas exonerated a woman of silently at Mike. Clinch, i lage phe eee ee | A wise man never kicks back at.a | belief that America now leads the world in creative art. Their the charge of murder laid against EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO Dit eek 7 jmule or at a boss. : disagreement is natural, to, be expected, it being the custom Lane ae eater sccldent:| it wasn't mine, Mike... PN try| | AT THE MOVIES I o \ of: cern to pan themselves collectively. 5 | 1y while shooting at her husband, {N THE MIDDLE OF THe BLOCK Sila ane to square things. Don't worry.” | ¢— —______—__ There is no safety pen. 3 ‘ =. Grumbling and dissatisfaction are national traits. i justified HE MIDDLE OF Tit STREE He came back slowly to. where} era r good thing, for dissatisfaction is the sure generator of eis cunt eapaee, arentt Ne Os et ia mv Sences Gee To KNOW 2 Stormont was standing\ nedr the} Louis a nies Bates co ee weren't born’ evry, tinue | progress. : |did prove a poor marksman and] OR YOu'D N HURT “Jack” he-said, “you can’t marry | Cleat Call,” the John M. Stahl offer-/ ae i Every pa and ma, after building a house, tell their friends |S8¥™ out the life’ of’ some foolish Do YOu KNOW WHAT THE Eve on a Trooper’s pay. Why not | 28 Which the Eltinge theater will| ye ossified head found near De- ' that if they had to doit in they’d make such and such |@“¥idual who chanced-to get into) terre J STANDS FOR $ quit and take ever the Harred eo, | 2resent Friday and Saturday is not] soit was not on a reformer. The at if they had to do it over again they’d make such and such the path of her bullet. Had she s eee We ner, fhe, Harrod ce” onlya firm believer in the Walue of| surnrmer type begins with “a” not j rovements. This. dissatisfaction makes American homes not just returned from a stay at a] ” business! CoRGNER Meee eA like | great casts on the sereen but is-also|sc YE ei a” not ) each yeay more artistic, more comfortable. {Rospital:tundes restate for a ait After a peyses “That's rather |2~ conscientious follower of the!” x : =e broken, it was alleged, by her hus- . im,” sai | theory. His list of celebrities in this | ji FOSE: eR Re } ART iband. "And what right had this wenger Rue yee dene, Kang what | Blcture reads like acroll-eall of the yuchend fac so pons boo aiden, 8 Be America now leads all oth tries i ti Lee eee er anat well sort “of business man Td. make—"| Most popular players in flmdom. | oney away from him? Es leads all other countries in creative art./plan by intercepting. that well- “I know wh ry Milton Sills, Claire Wind I ae y i s | at sort of officer you) Milton Sills, Claire Windsor, Irene | Saieat So.says Homer Saint-Gaudens, director of fine arts at Car-| meant bullet? made. T'm_ taking: no ‘chance, | Rich and Henry B. Walthall head the | Aviniion is [belliw spent’ Aiming ' negie Institute, as he sails for a tour of Europe. It is always the open season for, "And Til make my, peace with|°ggregation, and in the balance of | 41. j:f¢ of Abe Lincoln, but they will ig 4 . Seng {husbands in Oklahoma and some Sa tae ars th t Joseph: Dowling:remem:,| In, but they wil =- Saint-Gaudens says our art leadership is largely due to’! 4. We Eve—or somebody will do it for me. | the cast are Josep! 8, Temem- et some back when they cell the Ee oe id cary h hat a other parts of the country. ‘o- . Is it settled then?’ | bered\as “The Miracle Man,” Doris | ood a 1 S ¥ Bou. snore Yapid recovery rom, the war, that we are returning men, ft seems, continue to shoot.| Thanks,” said ‘Trooper Stormont, Pawn, Shannon Day, Donald Mac-| pues | toa condition of national sanity, whereas “all the new art in poison, stangle or butcher theirs reddening. They clasped hands.; Donald, Edith Yorke, Nick Cogley,! ~“, yis. man nev Vacteaeeacay | Europe is a manifestation of the spirit of unrest due to the | With impunity. But for the protec Then Stormont: went about and light- Fred Kelsey, William Marion, Albert |. on’ or at hic wife's cooking, ) war.” Bolshevism in politics is reflected in radicalism in art. arate aes ra rae ed the candles in the room. Clinch’s | MacQuarriec, Annette DeFoe and |~ : yy Then, too, many of Europe’s best rising artists were killed , Guire that the fair shooters be qual- geccsonaie patiatas scl fey See, eae a ee in| Once politicians tossed their hats ' Ly =the enemy’s bullets. f"itled in marksmanship. It there: dead have much to be amused at. | ctars or featured players of the of- sate the ring, but now some use ¥ Cy ie jare any mare of these. pected As Datragh was about | to go,| dinary release, and none of the or- em for megaphones, ; r) ; = GREAT : {slayings ho, Knows tat, Hat. some d Stormont said: “We're. burying | dinary ‘release, and none of the rest,! 4 Jeoressional, saxophone player » | Lloyd George, in a vote-getting speech, says the money |guilty of ‘something or other?| | L WANT OU TO KNOW THAT IIT [one Groot Lake: Pilot officiates.” With the excention of Master Gor" |’s not the worst thing on earth, i his country owes us is nothing to tbe the debt we owe Eng- | Lafayette Journal and Courier. STANDS FOR JAYS WALKING, “T'll_come if it won't upset Eve.” | oxperience Notete’ tha cathera’ | There are amateurs. i land pecellee or ie ~aplaae tet ua derived ge pra ne CUT THIS OUT. ae jparract ad edgccl i lighmen—John Wesley, akespeare, the Pilgrim Fath- Tr IS WORTH MONEY| ie: won tice any 0Ony Noe e 4 4 a fancy,” remarked Stormont. | ; 1 jer ete. | pe Ho” aac ahve tenia ‘ana|} A THOUGHT ' Quickly 3 sa belie Ag ths myery this way and there’s no end tol. cute out tals lp, Henelose. ith watched Darragh take the Long/ z { \ it.. How much does England owe us for the benefits she gets 5¢,and) mail it to Foley & Co. Trail through the snow. Finally the| 1¢ | must needs glory, I will ator & } from discoveries of great Americans such as Edison and the 293°, Sheffigld Ave., Chicas, Hy! glimmer of his swinging lantern was | of the things which concern mine | onqguers ‘inventors: of airplane, street car, auto, automatic machine, Wriling, (yOur jg aamigy aa andress lost in the woods and Stormsrt | infirmities—Corinthians 11:30. | e e eee tin ener shoe thera ot hae ne clearly. ; You will receive in re mounted the gtairs once more, stood | "The truth of God working throws) | Censti ation gs y ra lore than @ money in the world. | turn a tr’al package containing silently by Eve’s open door, realized | 4,4 personality of man has been the | ® Fog Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound i for coughs. colds and croup; Foley | Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, bachache, kid- ‘ney and bfadder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole-| some and thoroughlv , cleansing GOAT _ The farmer seems to be the goat of deflation not only in ‘our country but all over the world. if Taniion Daily Mail says : “Although farm sales this ichaelmas are seeing a slight downward tendency in the ; aaate Ai | prices of implements, utensils, wagons, harness and the like, Sense ra ee pious _ the fall is far outpaced by the slump in the market values of | bowels. | produce, and that is at the bottom of the agricultural crisis.” 1s AGERE bea | | er abe an ae retes league of farmers is needed more },.¢; ‘man’s companion for about | than.a league of politicians. 4 _ | 1000. years. ; she was still heavily asleep, and | dalvation of the world. Increase th: sented Hitnselt 68 a ena outside | jersonality’ and you increase : door to watch and wait. } —Phillips Brooks. All night long it snowed hard| P°¥°™ Ehillipy Br | over the Star ‘Pond country, and| Carpets which are made on a! white robed world. | riehimandfactured Toward ten oclock Stormont, on! Gevfang ne guard, noticed that Eve was grow-! ine restless. Downstairs the flotsam of the for-| highly organized» society -long - be- was there in black gloves; the Rev- | tled down into-communities.— 8: | Ants had developed their present | cease. Fo: Don’t let constipation poison yourblood the (&nd curtail your energy. ! Ifyour liver and bowels don’t work prop- F * 2 erly take the late gray light of morning re-| ja5er mesh foundation, but which | CARTER’S vealed a blinding storm pelting «| wil!’ stand neither beating nor much | Little Liver in | Pills today jand your itrouble qill r dizziness, lack of appetite, lache and blotchy skin nothing 1 Pill—Small est had gathered again: Mr. Lyken| fore our ape-like ancestor had sef- can equal them. Purely vegetable.