Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “~~ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1922 Thus racially grouped and cut off from real opportunity there. seems to be little chance that these people can help themselves or be a benefit to the country. their native tongue exclusively and thinking thoughts of their home-lands, they defy efforts at Americanization and miss all! chances of achieving helpful ci |zenship. They have not benefite: themselves by coming to America. They have simply carried their | ‘poverty across the “oeean. And certainly they have not helped thi jcountry. They are what. the. re. port calls:“sore spots” on ‘Amer- | j ican civilization. A proper immigration policy, of (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service) crossed and examined the stuffed animal closely. It was, as the pre- fessor hdd said, redolent of tur- Bona and the musty, spicy odor of taxidermy of other days. He was| ' fingering one of the long, still silky ears when the door suddenly burst open with ‘such force that it banged against the wall and Griswold strode in, stopping short in ‘speechless as- tonishment and affront when he held the intruder, Then his glance traveled to the rifled desk and found his voice in a string of oaths which left him pant- ing and mottled of countenance, “Just a moment,” Mr. Griswold,” Barry remarked smoothly, “Your desk opened by official aythority | ( AT A PLACE RIGHT LE FTHIS WAN 4 ‘HALE A BLOCK. THEY HAVE WHAT & CONSIDER VERY GomD GATS AND THEIR RATGS ARS MODGRATG, Teo. where the public elementary schools have been closed since | = September and seem likely to remain so indefinitely as the “result of a squabble over a bond issue for teachers’ salaries. ==The teachers struck when they failed to obtain a raise, and 8,500 children are idle. ‘ There may be some adequate explanation for such a dead- Block, but it is difficult to conceive. Its evil influence can Ra be estimated. The break in the regular school routine “is the smallest part of the damage. Children and their elders ‘Sare-assimilating false ‘standards of public economy and duty. Phe right of every child in America to a public school educa- i tign,er its equivalent and the obligation of every common- 3 wea va to see that it is provided are being slighted. : j atever quarrel, political or social, may be raging “ground the schools, it should never be allowed to permeate or | _———— Screen eer A THOUGHT | —_—_——___________4 And the evening and the morning were the first day.—Genesis 1: I think that nothing made is lost; That not a moon hath ever shone, |’ That not a cloud my eye hath cross- ed; But to my soul hath gone, Speaking = ; ] F ra ee eee : + ° { | port of- what had occurred must temper rising again. never r Hi E B I S M A R C K T R I B U N E A EVIEW | have: descended upon him. We had a| laid eyes on the woman! Z — - — : — EDITORIAL RB | sympathetic little hour, in which 1| “Mr, Griswold!” Barry asked * Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D,, as Second Class pmcea on eta =i learned much that had no bearing| quickly. “What was that Mog’s Matter. ieee ee ued a ed | upon the crime but which I will tell | nan J zs —|] the opinion of The ‘hribune. "they | you of later, and at its end. he was ioeareah as gone fia * } re esented here in order ry juite willing to e je opiate an s “ a vou BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - Publishers || cur feaders may have both sides “AND THEREFORE YOUR HONOR, et ‘a Tittle rest fin@ surcense from| himself up. “Now that you have ft ee MmueTeaRe Bae ete met ee ea Ti Sia OF his grief. He fel§ into a deep sleep| asked your last idiotically irrelevant Foreign Representatives il the: aay, iS MAN 1S GUILTY almost at once,’ but tit was then| question, Sergeant Barry, will you G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CONTRIBUTING To THE ;mering mud I could make only | 8) Bor td te) hare CHICAGO é ci & 2 a DETROIT | VALUE OF MUSIC DELINQUENCY OF THiS fate search. Bere awas (tare | BBC Bary gece | wou eae. oh ‘ : d ; Saks IOMAN'S CHILDREN THROUGH pentine nowhere but in his stud card iy request. | Marquette Bldg. | : Kresge Bldg.) it is possible to make an ap- Wwe “So we.drew a blank, eh, Profes-| He still stood stroking the stiffened, } PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH proximation of our esthetic and FAILURE To CONTRIBUTE To sor Semyonov?” Barry shrugged.| drooping ear of the beast and re- NEW YORK a Z 5 Fifth Ave. Bldg. | cultural improvement by reference HER SUPPORT / “Sorry to have kept you up all night | marked: Paste : a hace SC ANC et eee : ~"! to so uninspired and otherwise un- Ls and made that: request of you for| “He looks quite lifelike, Mr. Gris- me . 7 SCOTS 7 >} J interesting a document as the cen- nothing, but I had a hunch that; wold, with that dejected expression. fees EMBER TOR THE SEU Oe D ess _______. | 8us#_ report on bee te ae ‘someone who had no business to do; 1 should not have called him Marcus ° a ‘ | John C. Freund, editor of Mus} so had ‘touched that ‘trait of | but Mopus!” ps p. . ve Y | i. Portrait o! 1 }i The Associated Press is exciusively entitled to the use OF America, points out in a statetment | Mrs. Vansittart last nigh@ while the| As the name fell from the detec- republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| in which he directs attention to paint was, wet and brought away| tive’s lips the change in the man be- : wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | the offi tatisties ig vindication | traces that they would try to get|fore him was instantancous and p _ herein | of th sertion Bee mas some | rid of at all costs.” hideous beyond all description. His ris . * . 4 *, ee ¢ years ago that the American peo- | .It was the professor's t to} sallow skin turned a sultry gray , t All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are ple were spending $600,000,000 2 shrug, Md ee OL Saale VaRvE RIE DMR anal geenied te F . also reserved. year for music. Now comes the | “I know nothing of that, for 1I| wither like a mummy that is un- 1 sears Bag Tee CA A —| belated census report to say that j have not yet heard what you may | rolled. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION \the value of the products of the} | have to tell me, my friend, but the} “Mopus!” It was a mere, breath ¢ — —_—_— —_—— ~ ——— | music manufacturing industries in | myself known: to him not only as| that issued from between the thin, SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE ADVANCE | 1919, exclusive of sheet music and | his neighbor but as the person you| dry lips. “Mopus! She called him Daily by carrier, per year $7.20 | books, was more than $500,000,000. | know at headquarters, he admitted | that!” i (RSE Oo ers Ce Rr dd er srtetesesesS)Oa| These industries comprise more me. I think the’ poor yung man was] “She?—Who,” Barry's voice rang Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . . settee ++ 7.20! than 800 plants, employing 70,000 glad of somegtty to talk to; for| through the room and then indeed Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) 5.00 | workmen and represent $300,000,000 | after your departure the full’ im-| the mummy came to life, ‘ . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota...... 2. 6.00! of invested capital. turpentine I did find, and in 2 most] A harsh, choking cry replied to 1 — as . eee -~——}| To make Mr. Freund's estimate unlikely place,” he observed. “You| him and Henry Griswold staggered : THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | good, it would be required that | forget that horrible stuffed dog in| over to the chair by the table and (Established 1873) only $100,000,000 be accounted for the apartment of Henry Griswold.”| flinging his arms wide buried his istablished 187¢ iy BUQIHIONAl ex penditivesenieredt | “No,” responded Sergeant Barry,| face in them. ‘ See een i a y additional exp y ‘ RINGS DUXURIT | at In the sums expended for | | thoughtfully, “I have not forgotten| “My wife!” NGS L ES | thea entertainment, for ex- | the dog.” | (To Be Continued) Scientific grave-robbers continue bringing loot from the | lal we eee in fairness Hy fol hee CHAPTER VIII (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service) tomb of Tut-ankh-Ame: , ruled Ev: a due allowance for its mus eat- | | “You may have forgotten the dog, 3 mb i Tut aur kh-Amen, k ng who ruled Egypt thousands lures, though it is impracticable to | | but I have not forgotten my break- | of years ago. This loot—estimated to be worth as much as | segregate them with the accura ¥ | | fast!” Professor Semyonov laughed.| 40 million dollars — will go to museums, so the looters are | essential to an official report. | |“You Have had yours, Sergeant?! (@) is: called “archaeologists.” | Music teachers multiply and con-| Then, while I make my tea I hold ' They would be called grave-robbers, even ghouls, if old | tinue to thrive. They are not | | you to your promise to tell me what} ee i ED | enumerated in the industrial cen- 5 Speeuiingiine ' Weer | Tut-ankh-Amen had been buried recently. Time seems to | ta: Gatentithods | | aieneee unle CL our / investize nS ‘make a lot of difference, black is black one year and white | of music in the ) choo A j It seems fairly evident, theu,| aan | tify to the growing aspirations of | lthat Miriam Vane, the portrait | "i ‘a Ss i the years. Mr. Fi 5 | | painter, was born only a few years Arlee ontneceoniis dewa Soe Guna Eee ie that between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000 | | ago.” He remarked when the detect- } After a person is dead a few thousand years, the atmos | make a living in whole or in part | | ive finished. “I wondé who iwhabit-| tm Reading (Pa.) about 600 gai- ) phere of respect and reverence vanishes. So it’s considered | in some employment growing out j.ed that splendid body before that.) tons of booze was seized in one ' proper to lug forth and display the mummies and treasure, | °! music i j and what havoc she wrought in the! raid, Reading maketh a full man. « + found in Tut-ankh-Amen’s tomb. ; a wile tis) tee Mos] Ne sib asl ad! as “| asa : F “ae - Ra etree ha | definitions, to, make fine-+ seg- = = . ly she burie: 1 ; It must please the old gentleman s spirit at that. for he | résations, As, for example, those | GA SS “ a S ta sauvics, ) | past of some kind but as I told the SUiey akinesia se pel » was forgotten and his tomb buried under drifted sands | would do who would contend that | .200LU ne SR OT ORG Oe See Mn CoSES| balla it need not have béen a dis-| ments,” be a ' until recently discovered by ¢ vators. His glory lives |a considerable proportion of the Sage eh i creditable one.” Barry’s matter-of- : / ; u , r ) rs. § ; Oe ce rnufactur.| ent restrictive provisions. In the ame) ; again by reason of his grave-robbery. j musical Instruments manufactir~ |e eee eae citizenship, of E fact tone was in sharp contrast t0| - Germany is building America a 4 : * ed for Americans to play on never | ; the dreamy, almost mystic note! >: nae i 2 i His tomb had been robbed previously—about 3000 years | produce real music. Someone ses | course, any such liberalization | e @) ; Q which had come into the Russian’s| ant oe which she could fly i ago—and resealed by cemetery officials. The robbers left | to protest that untold millions go ehoula be patie: to Fespondionl ye? | voice, . OSI EIR eaS A GEY LCsahe s. behind a treasure of antiques—beautiful robes, gold-plated | in for 2. He would subtract | 08 amaierante of zelt-shataining | by Waste, lone tes reminded ‘him. "No,| prrtt, Nosthwestern Stove | Works All this was costly in its day—still is—but cost and gen- | jor ee an axe hink that |eW-comers to establish them- ah AA, dp a their stoves burn too well. \ P 4 Sstly iniits day— SURE ZeN- | he would be wrong. We think that | 2¢ : see at : ; Banquo! fiat + uine luxury are two senvarate things. Many a prospector | the humblest of them has its place gel ape eeuteae and prosper: , | “I think ‘so, mys@if.” The sergeant! Blind pianist’ ‘lost the church’. Ki , | during the Klondike rush would gladly have traded gold for | in the cultural scheme. All con- | ''% pate : H Hae “T won't keep you from your| money playing poker, which is hara- . . flour. pound for pound. To a staving man, flour is worth | Aelbute) to the nee AS pet ares [Lip sias any longer now, profes-| er to play than a piano. 3 Bae Rees caeel Fy not of mere ise, as e cynic | mers crue a million times its weight in gold. | would insist, bit of effort toil ADWENTURE OF } wall you tet By the reai! Our bootlegger-tejls us when he So | achieve the melodies and harmon- Ph | report of the medical examiner| was seized with the gripe. it kept From Tut-anka-Amen’s tomb, the scienific looters bring’| ies of the higher life. Jazz, and} THE TWINS i | after the autopsy? The full report,| him in longer than when’ he wes the king’s favorite chariot. Stripped’ of its gold and jewels, | folk muste, and the popular sone | 4 y/ S junetner thie al ph Sine to the! seized with the suitcase. it is a plain two-wheeled cart such as the average modern | ea Saute eee vay storey DnOnys| By Olive Barton Roberts | Semyonov. oT make iatieiaeanes Bx-Ki corn boy would scoff at. | But Mp, Freund also views the| ,, Sa et is ‘age. to (Continued From Our Last Issue) When T had completed my search | ence to the distance from which aa aie eeneniet : of Saxony rps . sa 94 1 4 4 ji vhol-| ,, "Oh, says” said Nancy one day to) professor Semyonov replied bland-| there I left as I had come, That| the shi t that killed claims the Diet keeps him poor. , This chariot didn’t even have rubber wheel 1{ must | matter critically, re ying not whol) xick, “I think L'il send some valen-| jv: “The policeman on guard outs AUeUMhmeNtnG divadesteoeuanas Gar liee eee mp Mrs. Vane may| Many of us are kept poor by our , have been decidedly uncomfortable, bumping over cobbled | pean we ibe en poser oe tines myself. I'm going to Forget-| side Miss Shaw's door happened to| the floor below as you know, on the ny. apltn aimee the detective | diet * pavements or muddy ruts. It’s a safe guess that Tut-ankh-| vortormances, We give the best| Me-Not, the little fairy, and.get Fer | je an old acquaintance. He helped] skylight of Mrs. Vane's studio, but | started slightly i ayes z RPET AT - ae? e nerformances. e give the bes" "to help me make up some verses melity ‘openathe sche seman skelighs| aneaiiees?: aangund ane tedgett oo g Figures show Dartmouth boys Amen would have traded half his kingdom for one of the} wrench, German, Russian an i pee meer: 4 per ; ylight! aw ny Tuns aroun e edge ‘But you have calculated that al- ‘ ; ith : a a te ane “All right, I'll go, too,” said Nick. | in “the main hall which led to the|to the outside row of windows of | y, al i i spend only five minutes a day with flivvers that Henry Ford has made available to rich and | Italian grand operas. We have the lows ready, sir, You said,last night after| .+ . t Stns 3 Ga RUINS) oN “\ |iargest number of symphony or-| “That is, if Mr. Stampg can sparc | rd9f! From there I descended the| the extension, where the second sec: | we returned. here to your soome that | Sits 80 We would like to see the poor alike. vite aie ge er stene vapid: ertonts auanwnonst tuete rat wry | {ite escape to the window of Miks| tion of the fire eseape begins and it must have been fired by eomeone| Daztemouth girls’ figarce, The king’s drinking goblet is found—carved from gor-| (ones to the musical. profession, | “Sure!” nodded the little fairy) Shaw's studio, and found her hud-! continues to the street.” j she knew who was in the studio] Was i 1 + geous alabaster. But that didn’t make the liquor taste any | our teachers can stand up against | Postman. “My helper, Stridealong, | died up in a bare, hard chair in “Was Gordon Ladd out or asleep?”! with her and that she may have even aviators will try tq tly better than if it had been served in a stone mug or cheap | any the world over.” Nor need we | 18 cured of ‘nis rheumatism and says | slamber that I fear was not a nor-| demanded Barry, half ineredulously. | turned from her canvas to aveak to| 2Tound the world this spring. etter than if it had been served in a stone mug or cheap Bee earn olo sorted. testimony | Bé’ll) bei back tordeliver mail tomor-| mal one, for a small carton of tab-| Professor Semyonov smiled mean: | this Ae On) ca eran Spring always makes one fecl like _ ; drinking glass. ee Phennd: Ake campaign in, | tow. He will help me to sort the | lets was beside her. I.went through | ingly. opportunity for an unimpeded | ‘™* leatiecreaaierennt Eerie spe. | letters while you two are away.” | the entire attic, examined the piti-| “Neither, at first. When I ap-baim—_1” . ees 3 . . i stituted by the last national recre-| “uo. thank . you,” . said , Nancy. fully fe Aacthenctnings i ; feat laa B08 Learning to skate causes many a . The things we consider necessities today would have been | ation congress, meeting at Atlantic | , » the you, said | Nanev~/ fully few garmen d other things | peared at the window of his studio 1) Again the professor , smiled and be ~ Z Ree maT EE ; iF 4 fe », Bee ii i ei 5 and four pa or other stains,| could see through the door that led isttime 4 i signifi te , dreamiond luxuries for the ancient kings. Tut-ankh-Amen’s | City, to enlist the co-operation of | “And will you tell us where Forget: anit four Bainter atl siaet oul ibe ens theis sha | this time it was with a significance ie igeie Pre wee Meret i i i icia E dl s- | ° A 4 any ‘adica save soap. 0 his . He was tramp-! which t ; — * tomb yields a gold candlestick. He had no convenient elec- es eau lene anaes one in a place in Fairyland | Climbing farther down the ire| ing up and down, and though I 4o| veclew ‘cn Speen teiowpnld bel phe United States has 229,887 po- ? tric lights, no movies, no hot running water, no ice, no fast Be pele onleariouc. ie cen | ding Hearts Hopee, ete escape past the windows of my own| not pretend to be a psychologist, I/ “You forget that I HA se ee a is the reason Ireland | trains, uo newspapers to keep him informed of far-off |eant'of sencral desire.” The very | Wutes te Hind. loving valentine.) apartment, 1 came to. those ot my| would be willing to swear that sor-| fore I had made my search of all| * ‘rouble handling riots : a ah = ae ie “t ac é ive 5 e qriswold. ow alone, griei at tore at his| the aparti f e Se ape, | doings. : hee Saat en ee name to another” | Jack Cut-Up. He writes the comic} dreams must have been deep. He| heart-strings, was reflected upon nis| pontwe enn a ‘professor. “ T teas] pAftet fetting elected mayor of ; Of course, maybe he enjgyed his life immensely, not | fom one oad oe te aan of | ones, that aren’t so kind.” smiled as I looked at him and made/ face. He was in solitude, aware o/| pect your professional reservations,| ransom (W. Va.) a woman changed | = knowing the difference between crude services performed | ihe movement, is but evidence of | , Then let's go to see Jack Cut-Up | sounds in his throat like those of| no cavesdropped, and yet I saw‘no| my friend, but 1, too hace eyes! In| "ct mind and refused to be, mayor , i by human slaves and the instantaneous services of elec-|the “unconscious search for sones ie Nancy eae ee eae an exultant dog over a bone. And] signs of either grief or fear.” the studio of Mrs. Vane, I observed|°"? We a" Prove eg } tricity, steam and other modern scientific slaves. |which will tastingly eu the | Van! Whol auHeteiithe purple fairy en ery Ae eed Fenjzeturaed hens erofensor,sthe the Teueed inden shade, the little} American Tree Associatiin poll 4 Enjoyment is largely a mental attitude. And, if we have jaa al nnne Dect ene eae who flics with his eats and tried to| honor in his sitting room was the 3 for s soporitic madd from al on the ee of Sed horenicteanes plant a million trees, so dort’ worry ==proper appreciation of our modern conveniences, we realize | PAWNy Jaohalte mnaertallons et tae ils TN the moon-man, only objact in the whole apartment | formula of my own which is less) small puneture which had pentrated | Pout shade for 1943, = agp ape i rans eat ys | estheti ae M0" | off the moon. that gave Any evidence of having) harmful and more effektive than | j i g “4 and iS. vard. a “ s, let’s!” pre: Nancy. ‘i it, and ‘ apo cornofusdn.a) king, jugget bysenicleny siendards Cae sae musical’ “oh, yea, lest” agreed) “Nancy.llibean elennodl inthe last decade) ‘aad | that in. which Mise (Bhag wadi ic that ae tae lsstubnuee corte Bares White beaver was), caught : = is ho o | “He was the one that stole the Fairy |] found it redolent of various chem-|dulged, With it I returned by wa: i its | Rear Fort William (Ont.) which may Portland Oregonian. Queen’s wand. I remember how | j 5 A y way) the strip of garden. Some of its| HELP FOR UNKNOWN ARTISTS fia p Quaens wang, ieals, among them also a strong’od>r) of the fire escape to. Mr. Teas blank, staring windows were direct-| “®V® turned pale from overwork. EL \RTISTS | : z Serra ap | mean he was. of turpentine.” window and rapped on the cake-| ly in’ li _—" The dome of the Grand Central Station in New York has | THE Se EER amie Beare ureek fer eres Ser “The dog” muttered Barry. “The | ment, He was astonished and re-| Net anothee tt ase subject| 4 conden doctor saye Bolsheviam is b~-=-been secured as a great display room where any artist Who | 1, tne report of an analysis IPAS Fairyland Where the valen, | Old stuffed dog!” _ {-Lsentful, naturally hut when I made | could Barry persuade that e¢centric due to bad Ce We nen there 4 | so desires may show his wares. Here the unknown Who: \the distribution of:poverty in this |¥ing fairies lived. . i ON so Be 8 seat to utter and the lather de.| “#S Something loose in their heads. 4 Bes onal aa verty ac ‘ame, ci i | ifically conducted by Porget-Me-Not blew th ki parted, still smiling, to.teave the de- ; 4 ' } because of his poyerty and lack of fame, could get an inc y, scientifically cond ., Forget-Me-Not blew them a Ss eres 4 J Miss Martha Miller is a famous } 2 ri A “ ; Tniversity of Chie ste ccna tective ii ‘ , ‘5 | _ of space in one of the more exclusive’ galleries will have a [professors ob helt miversly ot cuts Bad dace eeateatn ed a somer. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO [i ite ita Seer ireeective big game huntress who fainted be- ; zechance to hang his picture with every advantage of lighting | rine inck of a proper immigration | “"“a yelentine!” eried Jack. “Sure! —— =| ever, and descending the ‘stairs| tne pad voves neon ence because ; ~ and position. The accessibility of the location will encourage | policy in the United States. T can make you one in a minute. I] “JIMA STRANGER JA PLACE TOWN Here THREE \. | Sereeant Barry easily persuaded] ty : ia | 3 avon ; A STRANGER OWN, HRES 4 things. : ‘4 he visits of dealers and art collectors. Wealthy patrons.of | Virtually as thes p hee in Oe know Flap Doodlevand what a nui-] “HeRe SIR, AND BLOCKS HAs VERY ATTRACTIVG Kei ge to unlock the door of ‘Henry a5 g ara e ie . ; 2 according to the report, 19| sance he is: *s this? , , iswold’s temporarily empty. apart- | ~ art in many cities are supporting the enterprise. Vee naedu coeleoreteudiacn peekona' (rv mace cemtits cay MIM A CRANK For WAITRESSGS OF THE Member hinge ee They say Babe Ruth, ex-baseball | Many an artist who has arrived at producing pictures of | there is no “problem of America Sood SRua,. ' HFrarece TYPE, BUT THE After dismissing the janitor he| Paver, has reduced 20 Panae Le | beauty and merit sinks in the process of commercializing his | poverty.” And even in their pov-| Who emptied some salt in the pond?| ‘CAN ‘Cou DIRECT |RPILL OF FARE IS NOT SO proceeded to force the drawers of ge ata boarding house. j ==talent. Blakelock, one of America’s greatest, walked the | erty ae i torslie tora A a wig Put tophd on the milky Waites MS TO A PLace ie desle Beal, and with aispetca Tn -Romeiewn Woneeecaineece nine , Streets cold and hungry without a chance to display or sell | tre Tciny ietors found that on| \rwayt ne Poor Meom-Man! WHeee X CAN which it was filled told him oth lag 10ny e. Fiae Worth 20,000) Italian’ lire, | =Smasterpieces now valued at many thousands. late side of a slum street only pov | Who flops his great ears, and grins « and in spite of himself the, rigid Bue tot ey as much as one good } America has advanced greatly in the appreciation of art | erty-stricken immigrants from one like a poodle? First ecass { en pad, fixed, glassy stare of the ean -} and in the promotion of education for artists. To insure |Furopean country huddled togeth-| None other, my dears, than Flappy| }MEAC € * Melancholy, moth-eaten old hound a F i ith a legitimat ket is the |€". while the other side of the} Flap Doodle.” in the corner seemed: boring into|, alent, however, a connection with a legitimate mar! S | t aes ee HALE Diss eee are z i 7 4 street was occupied exclusively by| “That's fine,” said Nick, “I’ll take is consciousness reproachfully as ; “next great step. immigrants from some other Euro- | it.” though even in death the beast | - |pean country. And many of these} But Nancy looked doubtful. ““1 would guard and defend his mast- — A SCHOOL ROW immigrants, the report points out, | think it’s rude even to send to a bad er’s possessions. 4 1 s ii ; is ty” shley es caldcahe: : Leaving the desk\at least he & : A : 7, kfort, Il run instinctively to poverty 'y, 1 A strange state of affairs exists in West Frankfort, IIl., i i al 1 3 creed By W, J. McCormick = U. S. Representative-at-Large From i} Montana. Charges of corruption and brib-_ ery had been bandied about by both ’ sides in a certain election contest, and among the witnesses called by, 8 congressional committee’ hearing the case, was a colored man named as all colored men in stories are named, Ragstus. “Did anybody offer -you money 2 or te! That all my lost years.garnered he In this thy casket, my dim soul; And thou wilt once the key apply, And show the shining whole. interfere with their regular operation. A community where such a state of affgirs can develop is in a bad way. ‘Jemone'of us has more than a faint idéa of what's going on at nis is illustrated in a report showing that a billion ‘coco- is @ are gr bed under the American flag, most of them 0 Nine coconuts a year for each of us. are the only countries in the world Boys aati able’ to get it imports in a | course, would exclude pauper<im- migrants or those likely to be-| come paupers. Likewise a proper | cities that Have no use for them. Rather it would place them here and’ there throughout the country ioe Shere ds a seneng for thelr jal 9 chance for them to be- fisetia eftizens, MYSTERY IN AN AD eld not wrt ndr ercmstnes. tho Iwys thnkng f u.-Mt m St.P 2Ist 5:30. Vry lvng wash. Fifi.” Figure, your yourself, , ‘ RAINBOW BY MOONLIGHT nd, Jan, 31.—John —George’ MacDonald. |: it’ out says'he saw a brilliant rain- “the sky. at midnight by mooh- bow light. Yea, moonlight, and I think your interview at head- quarters with the chief during, the last hour must have told you that ‘a minute Griswold blinked, Then he replied with a gulp: ; “The Gotham. Realty Company.” “Who is the president of it?” ““I am, and I rei to reply to any further, question! “But Mrs. Vane had stated to wit- nesses whom we can produce that you and she knew each other before she ever came here,” Barry dedlare4, “Then she lied!” Griswold cde cual rs for your Vote?” agked the cHair- man, “Yes, sah, a man give me $5 and give me §$10.to vote for Mistah Harris, the Democrat.” | “Did you. take it?” ““Yea, sah.” + “You got $10 to yote for the De- mocrat and $5 to ‘vote for the Re- publican, How did you vote?” —-- “Well, sah, I figured that the Re- | Publican was the least corrupt . of the two, so I voted atraigh Repab- ASS system of caring for immigrants! London, Jan. 31.—This advertise- even you cannot combat it. Who| told me to vote for Mistah: Robin- < . after their arrival-would make ‘it| ment appears in the “agony+ column” owns this hoyse next door?” son, the Republican.” COCONUTS impossible for euch large groups| of a London. newspaper: ». “Jane He shot #he question,so unex- “Did you take it?” . “2°Our country is-so big, and its activities so varied, that | to settle dewn in their poverty in| —Demnts and pel revd, mny, thnks; pectedly at the angry ‘ad that for| “Yes, sal, and then another man “