The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1923, Page 4

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_> PAGE FOUR __THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE pr THURSDA THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE| LE EERE BOLO ETE Ie ec Cl eee CTT Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ' CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ‘ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - ee x Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE AS! The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or, a sei | for office by “an appointive author- | 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, | SENATE VERDICT SOUND Undertaken in a proper spirit there can be no sane objection to | ching inquiry into the fitness acity of any man chos { and ¢ | the contrary, there is! ery reason Why such an inquir. i On e should every in any be made, just as there ‘eason why a man unfitled| respect should not occupy public office. This reasoning. ap- | plies in every particular to the! case of Pierce Butler, the more 99 Gn ae | because, the office is exalted and ; important and falls into the cla: vered by the constitutional pro- | sion that the President may ap- point with “the advice and con- sent of the Senate.” ssumes that the judgment of the Senate | must join that of the President} and fixes a share of responsibil for the selection of fit men upon the Senate. Where office is filled by vote of the people time and opportun quiry—for the merits and deme: and for the selection based upon | the individual verdict No fault; can be found where the Senate, in | the exerci ers vested in it, makes the same in- that is the privilege of the mon voting body. Against the man who will short. ly be Associate Justice Butler of the Supreme Court of the United States was launched an attack, rather than an inqui From the nature of the attack and the cha acter of its source it was obvious its effect would be to strengthen support for the appointment. was accused, in effect, of an nence in his professi w brought his legal serveies in de- mand by concerns of great import- {ance. Why should an attorney be selected for the Supreme Bench who had never risen above medioc- | rity? He was charged with insist- ence, as Regent of the University of Minnesota, that the faculty should be patriotic Americans and teach nothing ‘but that kind of ”. Why snould any but a 100 per cent American sit on the bench of the highest court of the land? At the first opportunity and by an overwhelmng vote the Sena republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-! meee in this paper and also the local news published erein. | 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........... rari) Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).... naitsace deel 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) for the in-| of the] ndidates ABOLISH THE DEPARTMENT © It is generally understood that the cost of maintaining ' the license inspection bureau under the attorney general’s office out of proportion to the revenue collected. The cost of collecting some $70,000 in fines and fees is in excess of $40,000. a The cities should have the sole licensing of these places. Tn the past pool halls, theaters and other places of amuse- ment were regulated satisfactorily by the cities and village: of the state, There was no valid reason for taking local contro] away from the municipalities. Deprived of this source of revenue, the cities have had to raise more money by taxation to care for their police and fire protection. These businesses desire to return to the old method of city control. It works out much more satisfactory and at less expense to the tax payer and in addition restores to the cities the revenue that properly belongs there in ex- ghange for the police and fire protection afforded these v7 places by the cities. ARE YOU SURE? A woman with two stomachs is discovered by the X-ray in Allentown, Pa. She is Miss Annie Moore. The two stomachs, each almost normal in size, are joined together by Dr. Engleerth. That's something you never heard of before — probably never will again. For nature is great on standardization. While she makes our faces so different that no two are ex- actly alike in the whole world, we're all about the same when the-surgeon begins exploring our interiors. inst him, but the number was Somebody said something about the exception proving | insignificant and negligible. The Bisa rule. {small La Follette boc of radicals ; and certain Southern Senators, fearful of the Ku Klux Klan, com- posed the opposing eight. Right- mindedness, {ntelligence and pat- riotism in the Senate voted solidly for the confirmation. This should be wholly satisfactory to Mr. But- ler and we ‘are sure it is to the at large-—St. Paul Dis- s | Butler. Several votes were ¢a | | "You read about Miss Moore of the two stomachs, and say | to yourself, “Thank goodness, I have only one stomach.! “Enough indigestion as it is, without having two.” | | | é How do you know you have a stomach at all? Did you ever see it? : Did any one else ever see it? | Cee Of course not. You take it for granted that you have a| stomach. Every human that’s ever been opened has been) ITALY’S apt Ah found to have one, so you accept that as satisfactory evi-| premier Mussolini ot Italy is finding among the other problems Maybe you have two stomachs, maybe none. There’s|of the Fac government the -always the exception to the general rule, and no telling what , question of disposing of an annual -it’ll be. | increase of some 300,000 popula- | tion above what can be absorbed . caemmnce x | by the agriculture and industry of ii At least nine-tenths of what we think we know is hear-| his country. It is obvious that say — second-hand knowledge. You believe that there’s a | !ta!s pouanotaada 200,000, aa C i i , 4 r } whom there fs no work and peuniry, in China. But were you ever there to find out for | food tol its population, each, year, yourselt ; | What shall be done with them? The only proof some of our soldiers had, that they were in! The answer is simple. Send Europe, was the word of their officers. Without accepting | premio the Untied te tate rt ae =second-hand proof, for all they knew they might have been! Greece, and Poland, and Russia, in Africa. |and Japan. If we took all they = A favorite line of Big Talk makes much of the advisabil- | have to offer we would have more ity of careful investigation—such as “Don’t believe it unless (220.8 mujon immisranty ave ity ety gation 8 eve it unless | jringing divergent habits of you see it with your eyes. | thought and life into America, at- = ~ Alas, there’s so much to be seen, and life’s so short, that | ‘aching us more closely to the we have to accept rumors as authentic when a sufficient | ToUbles and ambitions of the Old =; umber of persons verify the rumors. jcoming the ‘harmonious nation In the last analysis, how do you know that the stuff you | Which is our desire and our great- + ase to run your auto is gasoline instead of water with a pe- | “t,turance of unity and satciy. } culiar odor? Did you ever analyze it to make certain? Even | (oarse. He only wants us to raise Af you tried, how can you be certain that the method is cor-| the present quota for Italian im- rect? | migrants from 43,000 to 100,000. € y : That sound With most knowledge based on hearsay evidence—rumo1 Hess. But it ig not. MUST NOT 3 ANS RRR sxebbbieodli. comparatively harm- It would open tion. Back of this is a definite peril: Certain groups are for- | oving to have the door opened to i her exc population. If we op- ened it for Italy, fafrness would ge conspiring to make the public accept faked hearsay as | vise of the rights and pow- | | confirmed the appointment of Mr.| | Word, and preventing us from ‘be-} blished fact. LOVE SECRETS t | -=-small wonder that the world is cluttered with misinforma- the door. Already Greece i clam- | ‘force up to open it for Greece. | we opened it for Italy and Greece we would have no legitimate excuse for barring Poles and Russians - Frequently people are only in love with love, when they leo meee others i Fmagine they love a certain person. They, crave for an ideat |“ Tne petter way, and the only way whom they can lavish affections. ery often, they are | if we are to make real Americans gn whom th lavish affect Vv ften, th i ‘istaken in believing that a given person perfectly fits that | of the foreigners who are here and eal. iwho are coming, is to keep the 3 : ae A door closed as tightly as at pres- When discovery comes, the disillusioned one sometimes ¢c?" Gers ig not the only land in insane with disappointment. | tre world. Australia, Canada,| | South America, all need man pow-} ler. There is no humanitarian rea- : 4 ‘son why the United States should I pinned my ideal on | always be made the goal of the | people crowded out of the old | World by economic, social, poli- i 4 «e.|tieal and religious causes.—Chi- Nothing except from one to three years of married life | cago Tribune. / can definitely determine whether the union is a fusion or two | Se ideal loves. | OPERATING COSTS AND #" After the honeymoon, we begin coming down out of the| INCOME INCREASE FROM | ft A 4 | ig clouds: The agate-hard side of life roughly elbows through! chicago, Jan. 2—Cost of oper- 4 firexemists of romance. Delusions and illusions vanish. | ation as well as the ircome derived) ucky, then, is the couple that finds it hasn’t made a mis- from office and mercantile build-/ q 3 That’s:why a-girl’s mother always is more or less wor- ling te 2 pe ey just completed by ied during the first year of her daughter’s wedded life. |the National Association of Build- +4 ‘Time is the acid test in love, as in all things, and nothing | sae ownere al Managers: TANS: i | dey 2 ace _ Ban serve as a substitute. i ? jcounted for the irereased cperat-! However, there is one certain way by which most of the | ing costs. . : ae of wedding the wrong person can be avoided. That | Comparison of °75 buildings} is for both man and woman to act naturally and with.,, Which contributed to the. survey, affectation, during courtship. If the romance is cunning-/ jn operating expenses of 2.2 per- f ed, each trying to conceal his or her “peculiarities” | cent an increased income of 10.4} sses” from the other; the road is being paved for The report for 1922 is) and disappointment after the glamour of the %rows moody, occasionally Then suicide is a danger. = In other cases, where mental control is better, the person =, merely says, “Well, I made a mistake. 1| the wrong party.” a 4 pereent: r rom 152 buildings located in 47 differer+ cities including. New ‘garerllad whotis always natural i Wn teers oe ea 8 natu: Is not i ‘rancisco an le. 2 t apt ee get into a The report shows that) rents; where he or she can be accused of arriving under ange from 80 cents et. Square | ‘|for loft buildings oe 00" ! per) ie —— | square foot for the highest type of office building, with a mean aver-, age of $1.90 per square foot. It is explained that while this average is less than the prevailing market price for office buildings, this fact jis due to leng time pre-war lease| made at low rates. i |. The tax valuation of land and} | building averages $9.95 per square | foot, according to the report. The | average relationship between the total tax valuation and rent shows the latter to be approximate 19.30 percent of the total tax valuation. The average net return is 7.39 percent of the tax valuation, and’ in reality, 5.9 per cent earning for | office buildings. The highest net income reported was from Okla- homa, due to apparent low land valuation, says the report. Among the factors increasing | Operating costs were increasey re- pairs and alterations, insurance, taxes, depreciation and fixed Little Rock, Arkansas, has the lowest tax rate, 1.57 percent, with Cleve- land the highest, 3.55 percent and Chicago a close second with 3.27 per cent the report shows. _ Heating is an important factor in building costs, the report show- ing an average of 83 pounds of steam per square foot must be fur- nished during the year, costing on an average 7.6 cents ard consump- tion 17.8 pounds of coal. The highest operating expense: | Was recorded in Duluth, with the lowest repoited in San Francisco. While Duluth had the highest in- surance rate, New York and Seattle registered the lowest rates. Duluth also showed the highest depreciation charges, with Omaha. reporting the lowest. Labor conditions treated in the re- port show that while the per cent in Chicago is the highest, the cost per square foot in maintenance is! much less than in many other citie: The matter of keeping a building clean varies according to the city, showing that in Pittsburgh it re- {quires 210 days of labor for each thousand feet, while in Iindianapolis only 57 are needed, with Chicago us- ing 118, The report also discloses that power can be purchased from central plants at less expense than manufactured on the premises, ex- clusive of depreciation to the power} plant. | The survey in Chicago shows thot it has 11.4 square feet of rent space for each square foot of ground. De-| troit, with 8.2 feet, is second. Aver-| age rent per square foot for both, store and cffice rent is $2.60 i New York, $2.48 in Detro’ in Chicago. The building values for | each square foot of rental space was! highest in San Francisco. In discussing the question as to! whether office buildings are profit-; able beyond a certain height, the re- port states “that it has been dis-! covered that both gross and net in- come increase with the height of a building up to twenty-four stories, with the gross income increasiny faster than the net, indicatnig that expense also increases with height.” It would therefore seem that the limit might be reached’ at a point where the increase in expense have offset the increase in income. Such a limit, however, would probably de- pend more upon the size of the lot than the height of the building, that is for very tall buildings on small lots the economiical height would be reached at a much lower point than for tall buildings on large lots. Cut This Out—It Is Worth~Money, Cut out this gslip, enclose with 5 cents and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Ill., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial pack- age containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pjlls for, pains in sides and back; rheumatism, back- ache, kidney and bladder ailments: and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole- cleansing ca- In Wash‘ngton, a woman is suing a man for $100,000 for # stolen kiss, but no doubt he would-be glad to return it. es eee THE RELAPSE EDWaRD! 4 | HAVE HERE A US] OF A FEW OF THE THINGS You SAID | CouLp GET AFIER CHRISTMAS- SHELL ouT/ south slopes toward the great Mis- souri, its emerald garden lowlands at its feet, the wooded fringe, all framed by the blue distant hills, its million dollar bridge joining it to iis twin city toward the setting sun, its capitcl as a crown on the north- ern hill is the setting of our capital city. God has favored no spot with greater natural features for the de- velopment of a great city—beautiful location, near great water power, limitless ‘coal beds, unrivaled ¢ seas of waving grain fields, natural stock“and dairy country, and ideal truck garden lands on the rich low- lands. The Memorial Bridge, the con- necting link between e end the gentle hill slop ural coulees in various portions of the city adaptable for parks and unken gardens. (It ready fav- ored with the state capitol, Fort Lin- colnj-eounty court house, two unex- celled hospitals, a business college, parochial school, Indian school, wholesale houses, seed house ‘ana florists.) Boost Bonnv. Bismarck. With the federal aid long promised d planned the harnessing of the Missouri should attract every sort of industry utilizing water power and iso develop great er traffic. The converting of lignite coal into heat and power, gas, briquettes and by-products would itself create y. Brick and tile yards, caramic schools could utilize our clays, Terminal elevators, great flour mills could supply factories for cereal and corn products, starch and | crackers, The fertile lowlands enriched by the overflowing Missouri offer great opportunities for all sorts of truck | ter city. EVERETT TRUE THIS COMMUNITY (S GETTING VERY iT1RED OCF YouR I STRUTTING AND |BULLYING } AS MORNING ‘ou PICKGD OW A WEAK, ICELESS FGL- LOW BECKUSG ‘You DION'T UKE WAS DE FEN Wen, SVPPOSIN’ I DID $ Sveposih’? I DID! Lemme, Terr ‘rou, Bo, ONLY | ANY SUX THAT INTERFERE [_ MANDAN NEWS | 2 Pioneers Pass | With the New Year! With the arrival of the new year, | two pioneers, John J, Kelley of th2| West Slope section, and William Mc- | Auliff of Zap, pass. Funeral services for Mr, Kelley | who died Thursday morning at 2: o'clock as a result of uraemic .pois- | | oning after a protracted illness, were | {held yesterday. He was 67 years of | age, and had come to this country | from England in 1881, locating first | in St. Paul and in 1883 coming to Mandan, and was for many years en- 'thony road. Mr, Kelley leaves a ibrother and several nieces in Eng- Hand. | Mr. McAuliff was a victim of } | pneumonia Monday morning at 2 | o'clock after an illness of 10 days. ‘While he resided at Hazen and } |Zap he was a citizen of Mandan for j almost 25 born in } : } state in 1861 and came to Dakota in 1898. By trade he jwas a tailor and conducted a tailor- ling establishment here and at other points along the slope. } | He leaves a brother, F, McAuliff {of Mandan, three sisters and another brother in the East. Funeral |vices were held for Mr. McAuliff |Glendive, Mont., who have _ beer jguests at the home of Mr. and’M \F. W. McKendry, returned to their \home yesterday. | Mrs. R. M. Welch entertained a |company of young people in honor Jof the twelfth birthday of her son, Lawrence, at a theatre party on New Year's eve. Mrs. Carl Bechenhauer, Gertrude Kennelly, who formerly has been visiting with relatives left yesterday NEA service morning for her home in Seattle, Wash. She was accompanied by her brother, B. E. Kennelly, who will |spend several weeks in’ California and other points on the coast. Ted R who has been ing with relatives in the city for gardening which could be taken care several days enroute home from St. of by dehydration plants and various Paul where her husband is a patient canning factories. Sugar industries’in the army hospital, returned yes- could handle the best production. terday afternoon to her home in Bismarck, georgraphical. with its|Glen Ullin. railroad facilities, trails and water Lr TE course should be the distributing Miss Cynthia B. Carter who came center for farm machinery, all vehic- to Mandan with Rev. and Mrs. F. H ular industries, agricultural prod-|Davenport plans to leave Friday for uct: mining \ operations, woolen Saskatoon, Sask., where she will re- mills, packing houses, poultry and’ side with her aunt. i products. Rovere eye pemar “England who has been a guest dur- Bismarck as the center of legisla-!ing the holidays of Mr. and Mrs. tion and law bodies should also at-|Leigh Smith returned yesterday vo ct higher educational inst:tutions,'her home. teries, book concerns and all it follows esthetic and artistic cul-! A number of the college students ture. |who spent the holiday vacation at Custer Park was the child of wo-|their homes in the city, are return- men loving the natural beauty offing to their schools. Clyde Welsh, Bismarck, Another similar beauty!son of Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Welsh, spo; could be mude of the coulee|left on Saturday for Philadelphia, coming down toward Third street|Pa., where he is attending the state from the hills northwest of the city.:university. Ralph Williams, son of Many would rise and call us blessed|Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Williams, and for utilizing another little natural|Robert Cohen, son of Sidney Cohen, coulée which starts at the north endileft yesterday for Minneapolis to re- of Sixth, runs down Seventh,{sume their studies at the University Kighth and Ninth streets and would of Minnesota. Bernard Porter and afford playgrounds and pleasant set- Archie Ison, sedan) at she Unser ting for the high school. There may |Sity of North Dakota, an Pee ae Tt apeeaee ort lattending Purdue university left on 7 ri t rand Forks and La- serving moisture at minimum cost,| Monday for G' to convert into little parks and sunk. | Payette. en gardens in various parts of the! city. | Much improvement could be made! on the approaches of the various! highways into Bismarck many of| which are dangerous and unsightly. Advertise Bismarck. What other cities have attained, | we can accomplish, constant publicity | given through various channels will} attract people, business and all that will help build Bismarck into’a bet- | dairy Mrs. V. I. Wilson of Hebron who has _ bee! ; J. F. Williams, during the holidays has returned to her home. Mrs. James Svihovee and son left Monday for Chicago to visit with her parents for two months. DOUBLE STANDARD TESTED IN SLAYING BY GENE COHN NEA Staff Correspondent _ Madera, Cal., Jan. 3 — The tiny cross-roads hamlet of North Fork, which boasts a power plant and populat'on of 200, is strugglng with a “triangle” problem that might BY CONDO | e polis. ; ‘A woman, apparently in revolt gaged in ranching along the St. An- | terday morning at St. Jose |chureh, ] a | | Mr and Mrs. Ray Davidson of | spending the past month in the city | Mrs, Stanley Van Drashek of New |Harrison and Fritz Tavis, who are | a guest of her aunt, Mrs. / stump the most sophisticated metro- | Y, JANUARY 4, 1923 ~ law”—but Jhow about men who mur- der wives? 2 Has a wife in a “Main Street” cross-roads the right to a “ove re- volt?” A coroner's jury took but a few moments to acquit Harlow. Jury Dismissed But a court jury could not agree and was dismissed. Another is being impaneled, They all knew Clara and find it hard to think of*her in the role of a wife defiant ‘n infidelity. They all’knew Fred, and find it hard to believe that he would slay without some such cause. And there the problem rests, wait- ing the impaneling of another jury. | There are a great many children | 40 or 50 years old. Statistics show that, much to the cow's disgust, the United States is eating more beef. It must be aw‘ul to be a burglar and have to stay out all n ght. A fool and his money soon pay a | dime for a nickel cigar. Yes, the good die young, especially the good resolutions, No matter how many autos are | sold there doesn’t, seem to be any | more room in the street cars. | Even after a man gives you his phone number it is often hard to | get. | Congress may stop send’ng out |free seeds. It seems they do not | raise enough votes. “Heaven,” says a minister, “is a million miles away.” Then a speeder often goes a million miles on less than a gallon of gas. You can always learn something. A clock passes the time by keeping its hands busy. Better make a resolution to ke¢p your resolut ons. The most popular reading matter im jail is the calendar. A man can be a self-starter and not get where he is going unless he is a self-stopped. A race between two fat men is funny, but the funniest race we have eer seen is the human race. French dress.ng for salads is ex- pensive, but French dressng for girls is worse than expensive. Last year was not as great as this year can be. “Germany Wants Peace” — heal- line. If we knew where it was we certainly would tell her. Near Pittsburg, Pa. bandits got $20,000 from a coal dealer. Bandits know where the money is? They had a $359,000 fire in the Los Angeles mov'e section, which was al- ready a pretty warm place. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts Dusty Coat and Nancy and Nick finally persuaded all the people of Whisper:ng Forest, Bright Meadow, | Old Orchard and Ripple Creek to go } to Dreamland. | Porky Porcupine was hardest of | all to’¢oax. But one day Jack Frost | blew his breath on the trees after a |rain storm, and covered them with | a coat of ice as hard as stone. As | Porky depends for food on the bark | of hemlock an beech trees and cot- tenwood (when he can get it) it left |him ‘short of rat'ons. Indeed there | wasn't a thing he could see to eat Janywhere. So at last he consented 4 | to take a little of Dusty Coat’s mag- | ical powder and go to sleep for a spell. | The Twins tucked’ him in a nice | warm hole between some rocks, then they put Brownie blankets all arth ME LS GOIN! To KNOW IT, ANDO HE'S | SOLN! to ‘KNOW It GooD!, | against the “Main Street” monotony, | around him and left him. “When he is declared to have flaunted in her | wakes up ‘t will be nearly spring,” husband’s face a declaration of sex | said the I'ttle dwarf sandman kind- | independence—and pad for it wth ! ly, “Then he can get all the food he Do You Get MS @ her life, ‘A man, who admits the murder of his wife, tells of this declaration and is ii tely exonerated by a coroner's jury under the “unwrit- ten law,” but # court. jury has been unable to reach an agreement. The “other man”, is held on a techn'cal charge, awaiting’ develop- ments. IN OTHER ARD- BOWSD SGG, WORDS AND (TS TIMSG To crack iYou My Tragic Romance Such are the elements in the tra- gic drama of George Harlow, power plant employe; Clara . Harlow, his wife, and H. C. Blanchard, son of a wealthy merchant, as they have de- veloped in and ‘out of court. “Why did you, kill er?’ Harlow was asked. Bike: “I came home late front the plant,’ answered Harlow, '“She:had been to a dance with Blanchard. And there in my own home, ‘n’my,.own room, I found her; with: this. man..He ran away. Then I faced her- “ ‘How Jong has this-been go’ng on, I asked her. ss ‘Long enough. As long as I Please. What are you going to do about it?’ was her answer. Then I ‘killed ‘her.’ ‘ ’ The “double: “standard?” murder for, it is pointed some have éalled i out, if Harlow's story betrue, Mrs, Harlow frankly championed in her st words “the sex rights of eman- | eipated womanhood.” Law Questi Further But in this aye donee the law. A dozen questions bob up. Scores of women who have mur- dered ' either husbands or . “other women” in triangle situations have been acquitted under the “anwritten wants.” | So Porky snored away, quite as | happy as you are on a cold winter's (night after mother has tucked you in all snug-and comfy under soft | quilts. - | “Well, now everybody's gone,” | said Nancy, looking around at the ; quiet woods. “I suppose we'd bet- | ter go back and tell the-Fairy Queen. | There isn’t anything more to do.” “Do!” excla med Dusty Coat in surpr'se. “Did you think that. was all there was to it? Just to give ach person a sniff of magic powder jand put him to sleep?” “Why, yes,” said Nancy. “So did I,” put in Nick, ny “Goodness, no!” said Dusty Coat. ‘That's only the beginn'ng. Sleep’s no fun unless you have happy | dreams. We must go arpund and | sprinkle more magie powder over the sleepers and send them off to | Dreamland.” “Oh, and may we go to Dream- land, too?” begged nites! ‘ |2“I should say so,” nodded Dusty Coat. We must go and\ keep them in order.” (To Be Continued (Copyright, 1922, NEA scien) —_———__+¢ |_ATHOUGHT | ” The Lord is good to all; ang his tender mercies are over a hie works. All thy works shall praise bless th 145:9-10, Years donot make sages; the only make old men—M, e fine en pede Swet- ‘thee, O Lord; and thy sa'nts shall,

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