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1 age ag Hite = prospect, and will greatly reduce its wheat acreage this| > next season. , factor it once was when you consider— PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. | BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - Publishers | : Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - 3 3 Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - : - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished 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......... cece cece eee ee BT20 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) WHY THINK IN TERMS OF WHEAT? Through page advertisements in the eastern news- papers, the Curtis Publishing company is doing a real; service in dispelling some of the manufactured gloom of the perennial pessimists.. Under the caption “For Business Men and Bankers to Think About” is the following very timely statement: . “How far should talk about wheat, mostly based on| impression instead of fact, be allowed to influence opinion | regarding the prosperity of the country at this time? “While realizing the existing condition of the exclusive wheat farmers of the great plain states, we find many re- assuring facts in the wheat situation at the present time. “The break in wheat price was based on July estimate of probable harvest. Since then the Canadian crop has deteriorated and promises a greatly reduced yield. Kansas, the leading wheat state, has a big corn crop in| DETROIT Kresge Bldg. fall? This means a better price for wheat carried’ aver to “The spring wheat states have a larger acreage in corn this year. Minnesota’s big crop this season is not wheat but ‘corn. ‘ “Viewing agriculture as a whole, wheat is not the vitai “That wheat represents only about 6‘% of the total value of farm products. ¥That relatively few farmers depend solely upon wheat for their yearly income. P “That perhaps half the wheat consumed in this country is bought by farmers themselves in form of flour, bran, millfeed, etc. “Then all this talk about our prosperity being dependent upon the price of wheat sounds ridiculous. “According to the July 1 estimate of the United States Department of Agriculture, the 1923 crop of. wheat’ was worth $61,515,000 less than the same quantity was worth on July 1, 1922. That doesn’t look so good. “Yet against this decline, corn, on the same basis, wil! develop $699,111,000 more than last year. “Force of habit seems to have kept wheat as a senti- mental index, for today, it represents only about half the | tion. jthrown aside her mask. Ghe stood | {ing to execute her plan to domi-} THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ j | Editorial Review HARD ON THE PESSII ce * iTS Some of our weeping philoso-| phers, just returned from Burope, | are ‘having experiences like that, of Dr. Johnson’s old college friend. He told the doctor that he had of- | ten tried hard to be philos but that somehow “ always broke through.” Certainly a great many cheerful dispatches from Europe break through, al-) most before our despondent trav-/| elers have finished unpacking } their trunkfuls of gloom. In the} first place, the crops are nearly! everywhere reported to be unus-/ ually good. France will grow more | wheat thig year than ever before | in her history. The agricultaral | news from Poland and Rumania} and Bulgaria, also from Hungary | and the other secession States, is | good. The outlook for the harvest | in Russia and also in Germany is; reported excellent. It is evident, | therefore, that the great majority | of the people In Europe are now! freed from the spectre of starva-| They have gone to work on the soil, the great source of the nroduction of wealth, and are sure- ; ly going to have enough to eat tnis coming Winter, That fact cannot | fail to be of great political signifi- | cance. There will not be mobs of | hungry men threatening a’ revo- | lution. ny other reports reach Amer- ica about as soon as our discour- | aged voyagers, all of a sort to dis- | credit their prophecies of dire and. instant ruin in Europe. The facts / quickly catch up with the theories and leave them a good deal shat- tered. Last week, for example, we were told that France had finally ONLY ONES KIN HANDLE revealed as the great imperialistic | nd military plotter, resolved to | sreak with England and to keep | her iron heel on the breast of, prostrate Germany, while proceed- , nate the whole of the Continent. | But in only a tew days a great chenge visibly came over the spirit | cf this horrifying dream. The, wu Tey Bie 2 HUH! WILL A Duck SWIM? SURE THING THEY'LL Bile, YUH GOTTA KNOW HOW THANDLE ‘em “T'S ALL AN* OU CAP HIGGINS an’ ME ARE THE Ws A GIFT ‘ars AL IN Tus CouNnTy WAAT EM THis WAY. French Prime Minister declares that France would consider it! “criminal” to do anything to weak- | en the Entente with England. | Moreover, communications are proceeding between Germany and: France looking to a settlement; the | great industrialists. of the two countries being notably active in trying to bring about a comprom- ise. ~As for England and France, far from having reached that defi- nite ruptureover which so many pessimists weré gloating, they are still negotiating, and the belief in’ both countries is that the next step will be a general conference j of all the Allied Prime Mintsters | in the hope of working out a plan of adjustment agreeable to them) all. Turning to conditions at home, ; our American revelers in gloom find their comforts being taken | uway from them one after another. | The prospect ‘of being able to avert a strike in the hard coal; mines is brighter than for several wecks past. As regards the general } status of business and emplo; ment, official reports of the De- partment of Labor and surveys by LETTER FROM ALICE HAMILTON TO HER SISTER, LESLIE PRESCOTT Although I do not know whether you will be able to read this letter or not, I am going to write to you. I hope mother has told you before that I knew nothing of your acci- dent and subsequent illness. I cen- tainly“ would have been about you had she told me. Even since Karl has been here and explained that you were better, and that Iam a really truly auntie, I-still have moments when I almost get a ind of n , Iam so worried for fear there still something hap- pen to you. r value of corn; while hogs, cattle, dairy products, poultry! products — each has risen to more than equal the value of | the.wheat crop; and the fruit crop is practically equal. | “Obviously, wheat as a controlling factor has diminshed., Once Maine elections were the keynote of national politics.! Wheat was the keynote of prosperity. That was before the! center of population moved to Indiana. That was the time! when all farmers were growing some wheat, and all were! affected by both the abundance of the crop and the sales! price. “Times have changed! “Give wheat its rightful place —6% of the whole — but don’t let it assume undue importance. “Fundamentally, the country, from every standpoint so far:as we can see, is sound; practically sound when judged by the natural creation of wealth as it comes from the soil.” More of this attitude toward the future is what business needs — less of the business crape hanger found too often in high financial circles seeking by ill digested statistics and! gloomy predictions to paralyze the normal processes oi business often for his own selfish ends. | Wheat of course is no longer the barometer in the Slope | country any more than in other sections where corn, dairy- ing and other farm products are fast supplanting the one} crop idea. - | i AUTOMOBILE PARKING | A plan will be presented to the City Commission for city | parking of automobiles. The situation on Fourth and a portion of Main is becoming a menace to safety. With the street car and the present system of parking there is no room for traffic to move. Parallel parking is the only solution. On the other streets where there are no car tracks it | must be decided by the city commission whether center or angle parking is the most advisable. If the angle parking is retained on other than Fourth and a portion of Main street, cars should not be parked at any greater angle than | 45 degrees and spaces should be painted-off at intervals so as to insure proper parking. E ‘ If the city commission sees fit to establish such a system, it will take special vigilance on the part of the police for a | few. weeks to see that the rules and regulations are strictly | en jay walking is a proper step now in the development of Bis- | marek: ~ In the busiest sections the use of mushroom guides at | rs street intersections are safer and more sightly than the pres- entantiquated silent policemen. 3 | Boubtless the city commission will give the recommenda- ; tiong-of the Association of Commerce earnest consideration. HOW ABOUT PRICES? 5 How er, Wall Street Journal prints an article with=this headline: ‘Wheat and cotton prices off 30 per ae 27 per cent, from March.” >>" ' Tt lists other articles, showing a price drop of 20 per. cent-on the average—a fifth. Wholesale prices, of course,’ but¥etail prices eventually will respond to them. &:basic natural law: “What goes ‘up, must come down.” true of prices as of water thrown in air by jesting lads. , $838.55 wen if our imports exceed exports during the present r (to end June 30, 1924), it probably will not kill Street Journal comments that in the 48 years since but three occasions in which exports failed Wall | April 1, and 782,198 tons on Marking out the paths for pedestrians to avoid |. ; ment; but with everlasting kindness trade associations indicate, in the words of Director Jones of the Em- | nloyment Service, “a healthy un-} dertone and a splendid spirit of: optimism practically , throughout | the entire industrial field.” Even, the maligned railroads are mak- | ing high records for efficiency. Tie | ten-miles of freight during the first | six months of the present ye: show the largest volume for any similar period in our history, be- | ing 7 per cent greater than the previous top figures set in the first | those chaps with no sense of humor half of 1920. at all. I told Karl the other night I All these signs of promise are, | would even rather marry him than a of course, conalstent/awitt the ex-| man like that. istence of many danger points | i ea both in international affairs and | ieee ves re to think domestic conditions. It is no time] 2; in that: somewhat to settle down into a complacent |°™?/Ruous category. Leslie, you but blind optimism, Busfess | 0n't mind if I tell you, will you, mien, aud Satatesmont alike aiecd to j that I really believe he is getting be on their guard against perilous | °V¢r loving you? Just after you were tendencies. But, on the other; ™arried he used to talk about you hand, there is no justification for | all the time and nowadays he lets the fears‘and the cries of alarm {me talk about myself, which, of raised by so many. When they | It was awfully sweet of you, dear, to think of sending me the pearl beads. Karl told me that he was the one who put the kibosh on’ your sending them over. Mean of him, wasn't it? Still, I’ forgive him be- cause he has been so perfectly won- derful to me since he came. Betty Stokley’s book is languish- ing. I’m not sure but I shall have to finish it yet, in love with an Englishman, one of terrified | since I received mother’s cablegrum}. I think she has fallen | | BOYHOOD HEROES : | a able to me. Some- |cour-e, i es I've though your marriage jthough it was such a disappointing thing that -you have just gone through with. I think you would have to love a man a lot to bear him children. I told that to Karl the other night, but he seemed to think that a wo- man would have to love a man a lot to live with him. He said, “Do you know, Alice, it isn’t so hard to do one brave or one daring act. It iw’ the constant monotony and mar- tyrdom of every day life, the little differences, the little pricks and selfish hurts that mar the happiness of ‘married pe Isn't Karl an analist? Sometimes I just hold m th when he says something to me that I know is as true as what I have just quoted to you. I never will understand why you did not fell inJove with him and marry kim, Hly asé any one could sce that your John Alden Pre: cott has not half the brains nor a It seems as quarter of the heart which Karl ha Kiss the Blessed Buach for me | right on th op of his little bald head. Pl write you soon again, | dear, | Lovingly, ALICE. | Mr, and Mrs, Adam Glos ot | Wayne, Ill, have been married about 62 years without a shot. | Although 99 years old the pos } master of Philomont, Va., can still | read the postal cards alone. i foretell new* wars worse than the worst ever known before, and pic- ture civilization about to be push- ed into the abyss, they are open to reproach for not taking into ac- | count all the facts—esnecially the | most weighty ones. Merely a few of these have een indicated above, yet any one not irrevocably com- mitted to despair must see that: they imply a world not given over | wholly to the civil one and still EVERETT TRUE : “BY CONDO meow! meow ! Meows meow? MEowW-CWERR ! meow. meow! quite livable for the vast majority of mankind.—New York Times. IDLE TONNAGE PIMINISHES, London, Aug, 25.—Tonnage laid up in the principal ports of the coun- try on Jaly 1 totalled 709,102 tons net, compared with 546,555 tons on nuary 1, according to figures comrileq by the statistical department of the Chamber of Shipping. A ye=x c70 | y Aede | KITT more than one million tons were ite | oe ___ —_-___________@ | A Thought || RES For a small moment have’I for. | saken thee; but with great mercies wilt I gather thee. In a little wrath I hid my face from three for 2 mo | ‘will I have m on thee.—Isa. | 54:7; 8, a | As freely as the firmament em- braces the world, or th { forth, impartially his beams, \ so} mercy must encircle both friend and foe.—Schiller, ATTENDANCE INCREASED AT JAMESTOWN COLLEGE Jamestown, Aug. 25.—A thirty per cent increase in attendance is ex pected at Jamestown College thi» fall, according to a foreeast made by William B, Thomas, registrar. This embraces an estimated enrollment of 485 ag compared with 385-last year Last year there were 134 men’ stydents and 201 women dents at: ‘It would be a queer:tide that didn’t turn times in a helt cent a Nevis eters the coll pee eee pied pes yearcare’for 175 men an j wonde stgdents. ; fi ITTY ~BRITTY JEVER BEEN ABLE TH HIT THIS NEICHBoR'S TOM BY THROWING AT IT. CEtT'S SEE WHAT UCTS WE CAN Hn rT tH irl th GWA Le ANT COORD a 7 Chicago reports improvement. Actor sang “Yes, We Have No Ba- nanas.” Audience gave him some, Gasoline men have hard luck. So much on hand they have to sell at a reasonable price. the Wheat” is a popu- “Through With “Through lar book of fiction, Wheat” is a popular saying. Don't even go near Deauville. French bathing beauties there are getting sunburned all over. Improvement in New York re- ported. One playing “Yes, We Have 'No Bananas” all day arrested, | Stay sober, Booze is dangerous |Toronto man got drunk and tola j about stealing $20,000, | Los Angeles man skated continu ously 40 hours, proving he must be a pretty good skate. Man in Paris whistled continuous- ly 10 hours. Men in Paris have something to whistle about. Bull almost gored a Mexican jfighter to death. It almost bores many American to death, U, S, wil build five radio stations in China, which may stop sale of receiving sets here. Volstead visits Europe. Prince of Wales visits Canada. All the lead- ing humorists travel. In Tokio, 900 army officers have been Ly It isn’t enough, Guam has a new governor. Now he can tell the people “Aw Guam!” Degoutte still leads the French in the Ruhr, German business is suf- fering from De-goutte, * Motorless aviation congress is go-, ing on near Cherbourg. Watch first page for killed and injured. Robert Bliss, new American min- ister, has arrived in Stockholm, but ignorance is not Bii Farmers will make the best sol diers next time. More accustomea to looking up at airplanes. It’s safe to take off ycar heavy underwear, ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS ’ Se By Olive Roberts Barton Mister Daffy Dilly Pee Wee was a dude, He; wore suits with wide stripes with big dots oth- suits like checkerboards in between times. He wore eye-glasses and carried a cane and looked quite as gorgeous as King Snookums himself, although he didn’t wear a crown on is head but a high silk hat instead, And I’m sorry to say, that some of the other Pee Wee Landers made fun of him behind his back—the boys most of all. Winky Wank and {Davy Dumpy and Dinky Doodle and | Tiny Mite and Georgie Porgie and the whole crowd behaved something’ awful whenever he was around, | “They should’ have been ashamed of themsclves, for ulthough Mister Daffy Dilly was a bit odd about his ¢lothes he had a heart os big as a watermelon almost and liked every SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1923” | SHE YECLOW SEVEN: The Wisdom of | Rabat-Pilai | NEA Service, Inc. 1923 BEGIN HERE TODAY British Monica Peter by the Chai- Seven, sioner of Police at Jesselton, North Borneo. His sister, Viney, is engaged to marry | Pennington, who is detailed government to apprehend Hung, leader of The Yellow a gung of Chinese bandits. Van |Daulen tries to Jesselton with the | news of the murder of Domberg, the | Dutch Manager at Kasih-nyer. Rabat- | Pilai, chief-of-staff to Pennington, | hates Chai-Hung bitterly. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Van Daulen turned to the Com- | missioner. | “Captain Hewitt, I must appeal to |you, I've come a long distance to- | night to inform you of the serious- | ness of the position in our territory, |‘not to answer absurd questions.” \ “Sorry! I thought you two had j possibly nfet before. Van Daulen, | this is Pennington. He’s responsible \for any action taken against Chai- | Hung and consequently entitled to ask what questions he chooses. Have |you fixed up a room anywhere?” |” “I expect there’s room for me at | the Rest-House, thanks.” | “Well, drop in any time after ten | tomcrrow and we'll talk things over. I'm sorry about poor Domberg. | Good night.” | He was barely out of earshot when ; Hewitt swung round on Pennington. “Rather a blow to your theory, what?” “Not in the least!” “You'll never admit when you're | wrong,” persisted the Commissioner sadly. “And you'll never admit when I'm right. By the way, keep young Van Daulen in Jesselton as long as you can, I shall be running up to Kasih- ayer tomorrow.” | Hewitt drained his glass and mad? | off down the passageway to his room. “I'll do my best,” he shouted back over his shoulder, “but Van Daulen’s inclined to be impetuous.” “Peter,” Monica demanded when they were alone, “why do you go | out of your way to quarrel?” “I don't.” : “But you do, dear. The way you | tackled that poor fellow, who'd rid- den goodness knows how many miles, made me feel positively uncomfgrt- able. He was dead beat, you know.” “I wonder who discovered the fine metal point in the pen-holder—and decided it had been smeared witn poison?” “You haven’t been listening. 1 don’t believe you heard a word I said.” He drew her to him. “Dear little woman, I’ve been listening most patiently, but you sec it’s utterly impossible for you to understand my motives. I’m a queer, jumbled-up piece of machinery, | sometimes actuated by reason, some- ee by a sort of sixth sense which Nature gave to me when she pre- sented me with Chinese eyes. That’s why I’m here, now, it’s exactly why your brother sent for me, and it's why I sometimes talk as do. I'm not like that with you.” “I should hope not indeed!” “Nor with Jack or Dawson—or even that prince of scarecrows Ra- bat-Pilai. Do you remember what I was saying before Van Daulen came |in? Somebody at Kasih-ayer’s in league with Chai-Hung—and I’ve got to put my finger on him and keep it there. It might be Vance, Whittaker, | their chief watchman, their Tamil apothecary; it might, on the other hand, be Van Daulen. I jumped on him right away when, as you say, he was dead-beat. Why? Because at such a time he was less likely to be on his guard.” “You've no earthly reason to sus- pect him.” 4 “Except,” said Pennington dream- ily, “that when he stooped to put that pot of yellow paint away a cor- ner of his tunic dipped into it.” Monica’s brain reeled. “But—” “He came away without bothering |to change. Perhaps you didn't no- ‘tice, but the bottom corners of his j coat curled—and the bulk of the | stain was on the under side.” “It’s still purely conjecture. He might have gone right up to the sign to examine it—and brushed his jacket against it.” | Pennington smiled. “He might—if he’d troubled to in- spect it with a ladder. The yellow Seven, if you remember, was painted ‘on the side of Domberg’s house—and | Domberg’s bungalow is built on piles ten feet or move above the ground.” She caught both sides of his cvat and forced him to. look at. her. “Do be careful, Peter for my sake.” He ran his fingers caressingly through her curls.* “There's no need to be anxious,” he said, “for I shan’t want to be 80 very alone. Rabat-Pilai will be hov- ering in the shadows. Holy Moses! \have you the remotest idea what the time is?” She shook her head and there was a wistful look in ‘her eyes. “It passes so quickly when you are there—and so slowly when you're away on these wretched expeditions. Come back soon, Peter dearest; prom- ise me you'll come back soon.” And Peter Pennington promised. “Evening, Van Daulen!” The Dutchman started, almost fall- peay And his manners were simply ine. ‘ “One day there was a ball game in Pee Wee Land,.And everybody was there to see how it would come out. Deffy Dilly .was there, too, right in the front row. First thing you. know, the ball cam long and. knocked Mister Dafty’s hat off, But he acted as if he didn’t care a bit and picked it up all mashed and everything and put it on again. : i “That's right,”, he said antly. “I don’t mind.” 3 ‘Pretty soon the ball came along and knocked his gane out of his hand, % “That's all r'ght,” he declared, picking it up as nice as pie. , Pretty soon the ball came along ‘all covered ‘with mud and splashed pleas- By Edmond Snell, ing back down the steps of his own Captain John Hewitt is Commis-! veranda. Curled in a chair, a cigaret between, his lips and a half-filled tumbler resting in the cavity in the arm, lay Chinese Pennington. “Oh! good evening! Thought i'd left you behind in Jesselton.” He plundered past Pennington, found a seat and began unlacing his boots. “D'you intend stopping here?” “If I may.” “Certainly—delighted, of course. No need to offer you a drink, [ see!” Two diagonal slits were all that was visible of the Englishman’s eyes. “No thanks. I brought my own!” Van Daulen paused with one boot half drawn off—and stared hard at his guest. “You — brought — your — own — whisky?” The Dutchman choked something back in his throat and discarded the boot. He was evidently ill at ease for, while endeavoring to. operate the second pair of laces, he got them hopelessly knotted. “My boy made your pretty comfort- able, I hope?” he jerked out with- out looking up. “Brought my own!” Van Daulen sprang to his feet, a ludicrous figure in one riding-boot and a gtay sock. “Confound it all, Pennington; this is too much of a good thing “And”—-added the man with the Chinese eyes—“ in case I have occa- sion to write anything—I’ve taken the additional precaution of bringing a fountain-pen!” . The Dutchman stood for some mo- ments, clenching and unclenching his fists, then dropped heavily back on to his seat. ’ “If I thought for one moment you meant to imply anything by these extraordinary breaches of etiquet—- Yd pitch you and your damned ser- vant into the garden.” Pennington moved a cushion to a more comfortable position. “I assume by that you don’t intend to ‘take any particular precautions yourself?” The lace broke, uch as?” “Keeping a close watch on the cook-house, seeing that your razor isn’t tampered with, setting a reliab: watch on the house at night, que tioning all strangers found wander- ing on the estate.” “It occurs to me,” retorted Van Daulen, “that if you were to leave estate affairs. to those who under- stand them—and occupy- yourself solely with the rounding-up of the Yellow Seven, you'd be rendering the island a. better service.” Pennington grinned. “You want me to go out and find Chai-Hung?” “Most certainly.” . “I prefer to wait for him here.” “You'll have to wait a long time.’ “D’you. really. think that? . I, hap- pen to know that Kasih-ayer is the identical spot selected by the Yellow Seven as offering a suitable stretch of coast-line to aid them in their fu- ture plans. They polished off poor old Domberg; that won’t help them much while Vane, Whittaker - and yourself are alive.” Van Daulen crossed the floor in his socks and poured himself out a stiff helping of neat spirit. “Why didn’t you put up at Vance’s or Whittaker’s?” “Because,” said Pennington sweet- ly, “I had “a notion Chai-Hung had selected you for his next I made a most interesting while you were away this afternoon. I succeeded in running to earth a pot of bright yellow paint, a tin of black enamel and two brushes.” Van Daulen spun round on his heel. “Where?” he demanded thickly. _ “Buried a couple of feet down ina neatly boarded recess under your own house.” “Under—my—house ?” “Bang under the steps.” Van Daulen leant heavily on the rail. “May I see those brushes?” he in- quired suddenly. “I’m afraid that’s impossible. You see, I sent them down to Hewitt by a special messenger over an hour ago. They’ve a finger-print expert down there—and paint’s a thing that can be easily rubbed off.” There followed a long period of silence during which a lithe, brown- skinned scarecrow, with an ear and eye missing and a mouth slit at either side so that its owner wore u perpetual grin, emerged from the living room and hung a lighted oil- lamp on a hook above the table. The Dutchman—still leaning over the wooden rail, filling his pipe from a bag of tobacco—observed the fall of darkness without turning his head. The servant paused on his way out, stared deliberately at Pennington, re- ciprocated the broad wink that. he received—and disappeared. “That stuff couldn’t have got under here without somebody know- ing it,” said Van Daulen. “That is my contention. Whoever was responsible for the crime had an accomplice in the house.” The other grunted. “Appears to lie between my boy— and myself.” “So I took the liberty of arresting the boy.” “ “The deyilsyou did!” (Continued in Our Next Issue) all over him, “I don’t mind abi send it to the clea: anybody.” But Nancy. was mad and sne stood right up. “You boys ought to be (ashamed of yourselves!” she shouted. “Winky ‘Wank, go homg and wash your ears. Tommy Tumble, you - need a hair he said. “I'll - Don’t worry, brush,-and. Davy Dump, you're always, a sight and so are the rest uf you. Come up this minute and apologize to poor Mister Daffy for being so mean." 3 And so they did, all of them, and they ae never mean again. But it taught Mister Daffy Dilly’a lesson, too! d sensibly ‘after that. ; (To' Be Continued) He dressed much more.