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PAGE FOUR Entered at the Postoffice, tf ¥ Matter. GEORGED.MANN. - - - -- Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - 3 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th DETROIT Associated Press is exclusively ‘entitled to ‘the use 0 republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- ;4 college education. wiso credited in this paper and also the local news published !for the difficulties of herein. > All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ~ MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION "SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per Year... see. cece cece eee eee ees $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) ...........++++. 7-20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00 "THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THOUGHT FOR AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK On April 8 ,1918, the American’s Creed compiled by William Taylor Page was selected by a com- mittee as typifying the things for which America - stands and which has made America great. It was adopted by the United States, April 13, 1918. It follows: . : “I believe in the United States of America as a government of the people, by the people, for the people; whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a repub- lic; a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States; a perfect. Union one and inseparable; established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice, and humanity, for which American patriots sacri- ficed their lives and fortunes. I therefore believe it is my duty to.my country to love it; to support © its Constitution; to cbey its laws; to respect its flag, and to defend it against all enemies.” - CONTESTING THE ELECTION : Upon assurances from some of its readers in precincts outside of Bismarck that they felt The Tribune did not get a correct count in the recent election, The Tribune com- pany today has taken steps to procure a recount on official paper for Burleigh colnty through its attorney Scott Cam- eron. In order to get a recount under the law, it becomes necessary to start a contest. + An examination of the election officials list throughout the county discloses the fact too, that several election | officials in precincts outside of Bismarck’ were officers. and stockholders in the paper which was declared elected. Under | the law, candidates cannot act as election officials. Whether this safeguard attaches\to the. newspaper when it becomes _ acandidate is a nice point of law and one which The Tribune : corporation whose newspaper is a candidate should not in} : for the newspaper candidates and no paper is. anxicus to have adjudicated. ; ‘There is also a question as to the absent voters ballots which will be raised and a decision asked. Of course fair minded people realize that stockholders ‘and officials of a fairness to the other candidates be allowed to serve as elec- tion officials. The law throws out safeguards to protect individual candidates and why not newspapers. Is the elec- tion law less potent in upholding corporate than individual rights? The state has no more vicious law than the newspaper act: It muzzles the weak newspaper who trudkles from year to year to the political machine that is in power in order to hold the patronage. When the legislature meets, the law should be so amended as to provide a separate ballot 1 \ which has not been in existence for at least a year and which has not at ‘ least 500 paid subscriptions in the county in which it is a candidate, should be permitted to go on the ballot. the‘law newspapers can be started one day before the thirty day: filing limit and apply for second class majling privileges merely to get on the ballot and take its chances in the poli- : tical lottery. Out of this contest, The.Tribune hopes to have estab- : lished some safeguards: about the*election of official news- papers. If officials and stockholders of newspapers can act at elections where their newspapers are candidates; then the. law is indeed a mockery and subversive of fair elections. : AN EXCELLENT START -Bismarck’s new Association of Commerce got away to flying start last! evening when the members divided up into various groups and held “classes” upon the needs of Bismarck. Running through every group discussion was an-insistent demand for parks and playgrounds. The city is lacking in recreation plots. How to proceed to a realiza- tion of this demand is a subject that calls for much con- sideration. But some beginning must be made consistent with the public purse. \ The North Ward and Richholt schools have fine grounds which could at a very small expense be parked next summer and playground equipment and benches installed. Two neighborhood parks could be made in these sections at once where people might go and enjoy the shade of the trees. j Before any general park plan is inaugurated, however, it-will be necessary to have a survey by one trained in such matters and a five or ten year program mapped out. = Suggestions mace last evening at the various group meetings cannot be realized at once. The Association of Cémmerce must take up the various planks in the city pro- ram and proceed gradually. Those members who met last ‘évening were concerned merely with sifting out the com- munity ideas in an attempt to formulate a program which has public endorsement and which will serve to keep up an interest in the Association\of Commerce for years to come. Of the many and divers things suggested for Bismarck, only a few of them can actually be realized within the next five or ten years, but this is no grounds for discouragement. Bismarck has been more or less indifferent to the welfare ‘ofits people as regards playgrounds and recreational mat- ters. _Public improvements have moved forward rapidly in‘various other directions, however, and any program that is-finally evolved must be commensurate with the financial , exigencies of the city and the public will to do and to work for-the best little city in the world. Civic endeavor cannot rise above the level of civic demand and ambition. «A long process of education and the inculeation of a real community spirit must precede the actual accomplishment. =It was an inspiring sight to see groups of citizens gath- ered in class rooms to study the city’s problem. People must be interested first before great ventures can be launched. | Members’ of the Association of Commerce showed their in- tegest last evening. Within the next few days, the new board of directors will be'sélected. All of the men nominated have the city’s in- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class "Editor Kresge Bldg. Fifth Ave. Bldg. benefit of students of the University of North Dakota. During American Education Week it ought to be made Under | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE terest at heart and Bismarck’s Association of Commerce is lassured of an efficient board in any event. Let’s Go! | EDUCATION IS CHEAP -: | Reports of the state board of administration disclose ‘that the number of students supporting themselves in whole jor in part while obtaining education in the higher institu- ‘tions of the state is gratifying news. It also makes plain ‘that any strong young man imbued with determination to gain for himself the best education that is afforded through ‘the maintenance of our great institutions need not be de- | ‘terred by lack of finances. Records of achievements fre- ;quently contain the names of men of affe Oftentimes they are fortunate, too, “working through school” tends to sause the student to extend every possible effort to get all: out of his education that he can. It more often is the boy x girl who has plenty of money who fails to take advan- ‘tage of the opportunities offered. | It also is gratifying to note that students with all the! ‘comforts and luxuries that can. be afforded generally recog- , inize the qualities of worth evidenced in those who are sup- | ‘porting themselves while in college. Often the self-sup- | ‘porting students are found in college fraternities, in leading ‘societies and in places of trust and honor in the college or juniversity. Numerous societies have been formed by busi- iness men and others with the view of aiding students who | iare forced to support themselves, through loans to them. | ‘Such a foundation is maintained in Grand Foyks for the ! ‘plain wherever possible that almost every boy or girl can get the best education possible if he or she desires to get it. | a EFFECT OF TARIFF ie | Makers of the new tariff law,:admittedly imperfect be- leause of the undisturbed period in which it was made, but ireaffirmig the Republican doctrine of -protection and en- \ecouragement to American industries and workmen and pro- | ividing for a flexibility to remove imperfections or which ‘may develop, probably had in mind such a condition as is | iyeflected in the experience of an American returned from | Germany. | | This man, a resident of Columbus, Ohio, was in Germany | ‘last summer and brought home two trunks full of clothing ; and underwear. He had no duty to pay, because his total: ‘expenditure for the contents of his trunks were less than | $100. : | | He has one neat business suit, wool, that cost him $1.30! | (American money) ; another much finer in quality for-which | ihe paid $3.90; with two good pairs of shoes at 30 cents and} |50 cents. An overcoat that would have cost him $100 here, | he got for $10. i One can imagine the living conditions of workers who must produce goods on this basis of exchange, during the | ipresent economic condition abroad. .And one who also imagines the effect of a flooding of the American market with goods produced and sold on such basis, which would be pos- sible without tariff protection. aN - | | AR ARR AR eee | fi 4 od! I—I also—am an Ameri- column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides ef important {issues which are being discussed in the press of. call their inspiring and uplifting | power. The streets of our cities on of marching men their way } the day, jeverseas to fignt—ard .if need be, —— : —!to ‘die—for the lright. | It was, a jay .) cE ANP jnew dawn, a new consecreation THE STATE, TELEPHONE AND and baptism. Ag for those who SERVICE It is possible to state the argu- ments against government opera-; tion of private industry persua- | sively and at great length. But gave their lives the American peo- tple can say with{Ingersoll: These heroes,are dead. They died for liberty—they died -for *“* * {few arguments are more convine~ Be ee are at rast Coke ting than results. We quote from a! cha ce ues ' ni el recent dispatch from Paris, in part | S2@Cows | of the clouds, | care: as follows: less alike of sunhine or | 5 storm, ,each in, the, window- Moved to action by numberleso complaints against what is withoyt ‘doubt the worst telephone service lin any civilized ‘country, the Cham- ber of Deputies last ‘spring named {a commission headed by - Deputy : Jean Lambert to make recommen- i dations for the improyement of the French system. | | The report just suvmitted to the |chamber recommends tnat the state ‘turn the telephones over to a pri-| jvate company. This is significant ' lin view of the recent decision of |the French government to go out ‘of the railroad business and indi- ‘cates a general trend away from state operation of utilities as in- efficient and ‘uneconomical. | The report is based on investiga- jtiong in the United States, Sweden {and Norway. The recommendation is that a system be adopted like; that in the United States, operated ' by private companies under gov-| ernment supervision. | This France arrives at a conclu- ; sion long advocated in this coun-} try as essentially sound: That government ownership of industry |” is y and bungling; but that government regulation of public utilities works for the public good. —Grand Forks Herald. AMERICANISM It was suggested some time ago that Americanism-—about which we are today hearing so much to si little purpose—consisted largely a knowledge and understanding of the principles that underlie our} outcome. governmental system and of the in-! And it was for American ideals | stitutions which embody and pro-'and principles, for American ideas tect them. Also it seemed that the | znd institutions that all thése fine history of all these was worth | sacrifices were made. Over every knowing, and that no true Amer-|! French cemetery in which lie the} can could afford to be ignorant on! hodies of, American soldiers floats | any of these points. This surely ‘the old flag,under which, and for is ‘the foundation on which one which they fought and died. f must build. every. one of them it can be said, But America is more even than|as truly as the apostle said of him- all this—it is a sentiment and idea.|self: “I have fought a good fight, Among these are liberty, equality, !T have finished my course, I have democr. local self-government. | kept the faith.” The American When really take hold of} people, too, will keep the faith, the soul they become, and rightly, nor will they ever lose the visién a sort of religion. Americanism | which led them in the days of the is at bottom a faith. It is also ai“greater glory,” days which will faith — and we should rejoice ;never be forgotten, and glory that that it is so—that Shows its mican never grow dim.—Indianapo- life and ‘action. It has Had some | lis News. startlingly beautiful _ munifest.-| tions, as in the great World W: \ COUGHS AND COLDS IN WINTER And this brings us to another e!e-! Indoor sedentary life in Winter }ment of Americanism, and one of a!|has a direct bearing on the preva- peculiarly sacred ch er, {lence of coughs and colds. Keep the namely the glow which the Ame*- | bowels active and overcome consti- lican feels in contemplating ‘the | pation with Foley Cathartic Tablets igreater victory” cf the irepubl folds, coughs, croup, throat, chest | Men who up to the time of our jand bronchial trouble quickly reliev- entrance into the war had becore | ed with Foley’s Honey and Tar. Con- ;somewhat indifferent toward their j tains no opiates—ingredients printed ship of course—or even per-|on the wrapper. Largest selling . it,}cough medicine in the World. jfelt a new thrill, and understood “Foley's Honey and Tar is wonder- they never did before to the ful for attacks of coughs and colds,” exte 1 Webster; writes W. H. Gray, Venice, Califor- “Thank nia, less palace of rest. Earth may run red with other wars—they are at peace, In the midst of hattl n the roar of conflict, they found serenity in death. “The greater glory of the re- !public’—who does not rejoice in it, and reverence the cause in de- tfense of which it was won for our ‘peloved: land? We knew that thé boys who were going “over there” would do their duty, and we were not disappointed. In speaking be- fore the national convention of the American Legion Gen. Persh- ing said that he felt “a particular sense of gratification to be the guest of the American Legion and ‘feel again the exalted spirit of our great war army,” and continued: Common service for a worthy. . cause in which men have en- dured privations and suffered. hardships and death, has ever been a basis for strong and lasting friendships. War in its sordid details is a shock to our finer instincts, and de- pressing to our moral stand- ards, yet there is Something of the ideal about community of service in a righteous war _ that touches the nature of the noble and elevates the spirit of the patriotic. No army of any | such size as ours was ever | raised, equipped, trained and sent to battle in so short a | time, and none ever fought {| more gallantly, nor with such | strikingly vital effect upon the hops eynicg! with regard s who fired fur- | rinaces, waited on tables or did other work in order to obtain. EDITORIAL REVIEW can!” How often did we hear| ati e men say | that the nation had | a “found its soul’? Those were Comments reproduced In. this | great days, and every one will Gan were filled with the long columns : | |, $30,000. | think, jinsconvineing my | ‘ i War Triumphs of 4 MJonquelle:%, _ by Metviiue Davisson Post’ . @_1992 _NEA Service, inc. THE FORTUNE TELLER BEGIN HERE TODAY ;, Seated in the quiet of his Paris serystal supported by the necks of the three bronze storks. He ap: peared unconscious cf the act, for he was in deep reflection. Then, as though the weight in his hand drew his attention, he glanced ut the thing. Something about it strucx him, for his manner changed. He spread the will-but on the table and began to move the crystal over it, his face close to the glass. Pres- ently his hand stopped, and he stood stooped over, staring into the Ori- ental crystal, like those practicers of black art who predict events from what they pretend to see in thes« pheres of glass. Mr. Gosford, sitting at his ease in victory. regarded my father with a supercilious, ironical smile. Atudy, M. JONQUELLE, greatest of French bi detectives, reads from his father’s @ diaty, the tale of a crime. that i, toak; place years ago in far-off Virginia. The diary tells how the: son of EYTON.. MARSHALL | stole his father’s will because he believed { his; father at his death-fhad been f strangely influenced by the Eng- ishman, : R.sGOSFORD, and that under this + influence had left Gosford all his 4 $50,000 estate instead of keeping ‘his promise and leaving his son The writer of the diary recounts how, his father and the lawyer, aes i “Sir” he said, “are you, bi MR. LEWIS, were s\ ous of Gos-jchance, a fortune-teller?” ford. The son admits he took the| “A misfortune-teller,” replied my _ Will and surrenders it to~the ex- ecutors who are gathered in the plantation: library with Gosford and the old doctor, GAEKI. , father, his face still held above the r ul. “I see here a misfortune to Mr. Anthony Gosford. 1 predict from what I see, that he will release this bequest of moneys to Peytor Marshall’s son.” “Sir,” said the Englishman, now CHAPTER IIL It. wag my father who broke’ the| provoked into a temper, “do you silence. ! “5 lenjoy this foolery?” "“Gosford,” he said, “what| “You are not interested in crys’ scheme were you and Marshall| gazing, Mr. Gosford,” replied my about ?” father in 2 tranquil voice. “Well, I “You may wonder, sir,” replied the Englishman, continuing to write his notes; “I shall not tell you.” “But I will tell yoa,” said the b “My father thought that the states in this republic could not hold to- gether very much longer. He believ- ed that the country vould divide, and) the South set up a separate govern- find it’most diverting. Pérmit me to piece out your fortune, or your misfortune, Mr. Gosford! By chance you fell in with this dream: Marsha, wormed into his confi | dence, pretended a relation to great {men in England;+ followed and per- uaded him. until, in his: ill-health you got this will. You saw it writ- ment. He hoped this might come] ten two years ago. When Marshali about-without a war. He was in hor-| fell ill, you hurried here, learned ror of a war. He had traveled; he|from the dying man that the will remained and where it was, You made sure by. pretending to write letters in this oom, bringing your portfolio with ink and pen and of paper, Then, et Marshes! death, you inquired of Lewis for had seen nations and read their his- tory, and he knew what they were talking when they urged war.” He paused and looked at Gosford. “My father convinced that the South’ would finally set up an inde- pendent government, hut he hoped {legal meagures+to discover the dead war might not follow, He believed {man’s will. And when you find the that if this new government f¢ were | room ransacked, you run after the immediately recognized by Great} law.” Britain, the North would accept the| Mv father paused. ¢ inevitable and there would be 19; “That is you past, Mr. Gosford. Now let me tell your future. I see you in joy at the recovered will. [ :| see: you pleased at your fore: ght in getting a direct bequest. and at the care you urged on Marshall to leave no evidence of his plan, lest the authorities discover it. For sce, Mr. Gosford, that it was your intention all along to keep this sum of money for your own use and bloodshed. My father went to Engt land with this i Gosford somewhere And Mr. Go wir he cow had-a sum of money over certain powerful persons in’ the English Government, and so pave the way to an immediate. recognition | of the Southern Republic by Great; ! Britain, He followed my fathcr| pleasure. But alas, Mr. Gosford, it home’and hung about him: and so|was not to be! I sce you writing finally got his will. My father was| this release; and Mr. Gosford,"— my father’s voice went up full and ‘you writing it in terror—sw your face!” “The Devil take your nonsense!” cried the Englishman. My father stood up with a twisted. ironical smile. “If you doubt my skill, Mr. Gos- ford, as a fortune—or rather a_mis- fortune-teller, I will ask Mr. Lewis and Herman Gaeki to tell me what dence of this plan, bat my fa told me, and it is true.” _ My father stopped ‘by, the ‘and Lifted his great shoulders. “And . “Peyton Mar- like thet, table left its The Englishman put down his, pen and addressed mv father. “] would ad¥ise you, to re-|thev ste.” quire'a little proof for your conclu-; The ,two men crossed the roam _ This is a very pretty and stoop over the paper? my father held the crys manner and the bearing of the men shanged. They grew on the instant itense and fired with interest. “T see it!” said the old doctor, a queer, foreign expletive. “And I,” cried Lewis, “see some- thing more than Pendelton’s vision T see the penitentiary in the d of no evi special pleading for a c Now, sir, if I chose, if the bequ required it, I could give a further explanation, with more substance; moneys borrowed by the decedent in his travels and to be retu to me, But the will, sir, star self, as Mr. Lewis will tance.” im Mv_father seemed brodght w The Englishman sprang up with a cul-de-sac. His face tense ardjan oath and leaned across the table. disturbed. He stood by the table; | Then he saw the thing. and now, as by accident. he put out'| “My father’s hand held the crystal his hand and took up the Japanese {above the figures of the bequest \ rather j “THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1922 LOOKS LIKE A JOB FOR A DERRICK . I ee written in the body of the will. The focused lens of glass magnified to a great diameter, and under the vast a thing that would escape the eye stood out. The top curl of a figure 3 had been’ erased, j and the bar of a 5 added. One could see the broken fibers of the paper on the outline of the curl,;and the bar of the five lay across the top of the three and the top of the o be- hind it like a black lath tacked across two uprights. The figure 3 had been changed to 5 so cunningly as to deceive the eye, but not to deccive the vast mag- nification of the crystal. The thing stood out big and crude like a car- penter’s patch. | enlargement less like wood, his body rigid; then he stood up and faced the three men across the table. “Quite so:” he said in his vacuou' English voice. “Marshall wrote a ¢ by inadvertence and changed it. He borrowed my penknife to erase the figure.” men who see a penned-in beast slip out through an unimagined passage. There was silence. Then ‘suddenly, in the strained stillness of the room, old Doctor Gaeki laughed. Gosford litfed his long pink face, with its cropped beard bringing out the ugly mouth, * “Why do” you man?” he said. “I laugh,” replied Gaeki, “because a figure 5 can have so many colo And now,\ my father and Lewis laugh, my good changed figure in the will was black “Why, yes,” replied the old man, “it is! very pretty.” He reached xeross the table and drew over Mr. Gosford’s memoran- dum beside the will. “You are progressive, sir,” he went on; “you write in iron-nutgall ink, just made,. commercially, in this year of ‘fifty-six by Mr. Ste- phens, But we write here as Mar- hall wrote in ‘fifty-four, with log- wood.” He turned and fumbled in his ht- tle case of bottles. “T carry a bit of acitl for my peo- ple’s indigestions. It has other usese.” He whipped out the stopper of-his vial and dabbed Gosford’s notes and Marshall’s signature. “See!” he cried. “Your writing is blue, Mr. Gosford, and Marshall's red!” With an oath the _trapped man struck at Gaeki’s and. The vial fell and cracked on the table. The hydrochloric acid spread out over the Marshall’s will. And under the che mical reagent the figure in the be- quest of fifty thousand dollars changed beautifully; the bar of the 5 turned, blue, and the remainder of it a deep purple-red like the body of the will. “Gaeki,” cried my fatehr, have trapped a rogue!” “And I have lost a measure of good acid,” replied the old man, And he began to gather up the bits of his broken bottle from the table. Another triumph of M. Jonqi “The Triangular Hypothesis,” begin in our next issue. “you elle, will —_—____—_———* | A'THOUGHT | es Say not thou, What is the cause that the former days were better than these? for thou dost not en- qu:re wisely concerning this.—Ec- clesiastes 7:10. Men can be as original now as ever, if they had but the courage, even the insight. Heroic souls in old times had no more opportun't-es than we have; buf they used them. There weré daring deeds-to be done then—are there none now? Wrongs to be redrest—are there none now? —Charles Kingsley. | A black velvet frock with a Paris The pockets are also out- lace. dation. lined with |buttons which reach the hem. Gosford’s face ‘became expression- | My father and Lewis gaped like! were no less ‘astonished than Mr. | Gosford, “Colors!” they said, for the The frock fastens| jin front with a row of rhinestone | Tom Sims \Says There seems to be a great deal of |weather this winter. 7 What makes a man madder than the wrong tooth- finding it was | brush? | eight of ignorance is shining your shoes to listen to the radio. Half our cuss words were thought up by people as they got out of bed. = 7 If you think every watch chain you’see has watch on it you are wrong. Wish the man who divided the day into hours had made Tun-h hour longer, “Exposure,” says an artic ex- plorer, “develops cne(” Hello, short | skirts. . L What are you going to give your lwife for Christmas? Pick out, so.ne- [thing she can’t thro ‘A reader wr.tes in to ask if suede loves come from Sweden. No, te sot Prince of Wales has broken an- other precedent. We thought lthose chings we're broken’ long ago. The man who gets up the shape and colors of blankets evidently has # job designing overcoats now. Style hint: “mama these buttons lon my sleeve hurt my nose.” Clemenceau says he!l is brewing. A neighbor tells us brewing is hell. | One of the saddest sight of mod- Jorn times is seeing a man hugging a girl because he wants her vote. | Sa a | It would be great if we knew wio ‘was schding us Christmas cards. China’s boy emperor married a girl he had never seen. A little jmore rouge and we will be domg ithe same. Now that Harding has made Irvin 'Cobb a major our army is increased ‘to war-time strength again. | Conference of ectton growers to |be held in Memphis, Tenn., has started some talk among the boll weevils. ‘on of the man in Fulton, Our opin: who has worn a par of pants | | Mo. 125 years is he starlis up too much. | th San Francisco, a preacher was lyobbed just after services. Why do crooks get so far from Chicago? It snowed in Albany, Ga., for the jfirst, time in seven years. The wire ‘docs'not say how many coal dealers Haughed themselves to death. A man is a person who had rather go. to his Iudge and ride the goat ithan stay at home and be the goat. | A designer says any g'rl can be jbeautiful if she has the right lclothes and we say any clothes can H ‘be beautiful if they have the right | girl, | = i Christmas story: “Mama, bay {papa some toys so I can play with mine.” ADVENTUREOF | | THE TWINS | —_—_—__—_————_* By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy and Nick went to Bluster Gust Land to help Mr. Sprinkle- ‘Blow build a place to keep his new imagical airplane. | Bye and bye it was finished and ithe threée of them jumped on the weatherman’s magical umbrella and rede down to the tree-tops where the Green Wizard lived. Sure enough, there was the air- plane all ready. THe Green Wizard had just f.nished it. “Just in time! Just in time!” cried Sprinkle-Blow. “I've more or- \gers for weather than Santa Claus ‘gets notes at Christmas! I’m ever iso much: obliged, Green Wizard. Now lif there's any little favor I can do ifor yeu, be sure to let me know.” | “Well,” answered the other fairy |thoughtfully. “You might be p bit leareful of what kind of weather you ysend us this ~vinter. I don't» mind ‘for myself, but the Meadow Folk jand Forest Folk and Orchard Folk ‘don’t like it too cold.” | Wasn’t that just like the kind old |fellow! Not asking for a favor for ‘himself, but remembering — his friends. | Mr. Sprinkle-Blow made a note in jhis notebook. “Tl speak to Jack Frost about it,” isaid he. “I'll have to let him out |soon. You sce, I have him locked up with the cthef Nuisance Faries up there in the sky and he’s fussing jlike everything. But I'll tell him to |be very careful and not be too isnippy. Goodbye now, everybody. I jmust be getting along. I hear they jneed rain out west and I must go ‘Gnd see about it. Thank you all for everything.” | “Bzzzz! Hiummmm! Bzzzz!” Away jwent the little airplane, weatherman jand all! | Don’t Neglect ‘Your Skin | Ladies— A few days’ treatment with CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will do more to clean L | up the skin all the beauty treat- | ments in crea. | ation. An im- flexion is plexion is \guet ty: 4 PILLS | Millions of people. old. young and mildaie ag ay and Biotchy Sein: “They end tnd misery of Constipation. EnaPPM—Smal Neen Seem to ail, ‘ As i! ay care } 4 P ‘ ) “3 w \ y ¥y3 a is AL va” “We { ' Pe ea ae \ i ’ at aye? ‘ ’ prin WS