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Man omer ftty ane soe =a tall stone monument) to New York, a gift. 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 - - - - - Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exlusively entitled to the use or 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. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ADVANCE SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE I Daily by carrier, per year. . . $7.20 EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced column may or may not the opjnion of The Tribun are pysented here in order t our readers may have both si of important {issues whic! being discussed in the pres the day. CO-OPERATION ON NEW LEVELS President Coolidge, in a recent message to the National Council of Farmers Cooperative Marketing| Associations assembled in Wash- ington, declared that the develop ment of forms of cooperation among producers and consumers is one of the basic needs of this per- iod of readjustment. It cannot be said, asserted President Coolidge, that the cooperative idea ha: any great lodgement in the practices of the great majority of the American people, but it must} find increasing favor, because all! Americans are at once producers and consumers. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... 5 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) HIRAM IS COMING Only a small portion of the people of North Dakota will have the opportunity of hearing perhaps the most shifty opportunist whose aspirations for presidential power have been pronounced and persistent. Hiram Johnson is coming, but not to visit all parts of the state. | The people that do hear Hiram may rest assured that they will learn his views on the latest questions of the day. He is not slow to pick what he believes is the popular side of any question. His views may become conflicting and inconsistent as he rapidly rolls up the list of measures that , ought to be taken to save the country. i Hiram became an advocate of the soldiers’ bonus. The veterans have a large voting strength. He had been silent ; on Teapot Dome until Secretary Denby’s position became unpopular. ‘Then Hiram demanded he resign. He was slow to utter an opinion concerning the needs of the Northwest farmer until he decided to come to the Northwest. Then he framed a program that would swerve the government far from that principle of marketing for which California is| famous and for which Hiram has contended so long. People of North Dakota will hardly be given an oppor- tunity of choosing between two platforms when they con- sider Coolidge and Johnson. For Johnson’s platforms are as variable as the winds. They are not based upon funda- mentals; they are based upon the trend of popular events and popular conception. “BIG DOINGS” If you want a few chuckles, turn back 44 years in the newspaper files and read what the people of 1880 were most interested in. In March of that year, we find: “Dennis Kearney, the *sandlots agitator of San Francisco, is sentenced to six moriths’ imprisonment and to pay a fine of $1000 for dis-, turbing the peace and using language tending to incite riots.” . . .:. Times haven’t changed much. “Agitators” sre nothing new. Every generation that ever lived has had agitatcrs, preventers of stagnation. soe Rk Nor has human nature changed. Now and in-recent years Amvricans have been sending relief funds to starving Ger- mais, Russians and others. In yellowed newspaper files we read of Americans responding nobly with money and food for Ireland’s poor, suffering from famine, in 1880. Be In 1880 the Khedive of Egypt shipped a huge obelisk (like The obelisk set the whole country talking. For Egypt was as mysterious and fascinating then as it is now when American and British scientific grave-robbers are prowling in the tomb of old King Tut. * * * * A national election in 1880, with the usual conventions of Republicans and Democrats. The campaign was very hot. the voting close. People took politics more seriously in those ‘ship is a form of industrial coop- !The stock exchange is of the same Americans have been so strongly individualistle that it is easy to overlook the numerous forms of cooperation that have taken root among us. The business partner-| eration trusts Corporations that are instance the same thing. intent. Division of labor and large scale production have gre: tended to increase industrial © operation and interdependence. To these must be added various forms of cooperative effort among farm- ers and consumers. There is much to show that co- operation in business, industry and finance is today reaching new and higher levels in this Country. The Federal Reserve Banking System. which must be counted part of the best banking legislation the United States ever enacted, is a form of cooperative endeavor that has united the banking strength of the ‘ation, without robbing the bank- ing business of its competitive and individual character. The Northwest Agricultural Fi- nance Corporation that will coop- erate with the War Finance Cor- Im THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE proving the Masterpiece <LUYye v poration to assist embarrassed but solvent bankers and farmers of the Northwest, is another example of cooperation on a new and higher level. No one will be helped who is not worthy or who can help him- self, but the financial resources of the Nation will be mobilized to points of greatest need. These are but a few examples, among many that might de cited, of the growing forms of cooperation in the industrial life of the Nation. It looks as if individual initiative and helpful forms of cooperative effort are being fused and extend- ed into a new and higher synthesis | of individual and social good. If strong, self reliant individualism can be conserved and further com- bined with growing forms of co- operation in the manner of the ex- amples cited, it will be another victory to the credit of the modern industrial order. — Minneapolis Journal. | MANDAN NEWS | PARISH MEETING HELD The annual parish meeting of Christ church was held Monday even-|! ing in the church Guild Hall. The} reports for the past year, which were read showed that the church has had a very successful year despite the fact that a number of families have| jleft Mandan, ‘The financial report| of the Treasurer showed the church | to be in a sound financial condition. The Women's Guild report, pre- sented by Mrs. McKendry, and the} Girls Friendly Society report, pre-| ented by Mrs. Paul Mueller showed plendid achievements. The follwing officers for the en- suing year were chosen: days, marching fn long processions with red-fire torches. The matter of a third term for presidents still excites the nation periodically. We find Republicans holding an Anti- Third-Term convention at St. Louis in 1880 to head off the renomination of General Grant, who’d already served two terms. toe ee Prohibition is a big issue in 1924. It was an issue though of less importance in 1880, when the prohibitionists held a political convention in Cleveland and nominated Neal Dow of Maine as their presidential candidate. * * * * American bicyclists held their first national meet in 1880, at Newport, R. I., 160 racing riders participating. Dr. Henry S. Tanner of Minneapolis fasted for 40 days. living on water alone. Any of these events of 1880, barring the bicyclists, might just as well happen in 1924. Actors, scenery, costumes and “stage props” change, but the plot of life is about the same in one generation as in others. ‘ MAKING HEADWAY We're steadily making headway with our campaign to get more of South America’s orders in the world market. Figures just announced show in 1923 our country sold South America 269 million dollars worth of goods, compared with 226 millions the year before. Optimists will see in this a big gain. Skeptics will wonder how much of the gain repre- sents higher selling prices instead of larger orders. While we’re gaining in sales to South America, it’s rather disconcerting to learn that South America is gaining even faster in its sales to us. : We bought, from her, nearly 467 million dollars worth of her exports in 1923, or almost a third more than the year before. For every $269 worth of goods we sold South Amer- ica, she sold us $467. GREAT COURAGE ‘ News pictures show Miss Bird Millman startling New Yorkers by a toe dance on a tight wire 26 stories above the street. Few of us would walk on that wire for a million dol-| lars. All of us would try it if the wire were only a foot above ground—and we wouldn’t fall. Courage and fear are largely matters of self-confidence. The very confident man frequently gets the'laugh, but the odds are in his favor in the battle for success. Most people underestimate their power and naturally don’t surpass. their estimates of themselves. A school to teach farming by mail is being started. First Jesson should be, “How to borrow money.” Victor Morawetz, famous economist, has married, so his theories may be in for a great. surprise. ete rer Wardens, F. W. McKendry, W. H.| | Vallancey. | | Secretary-Treasurer: 0. A. -Con- vert, Jr. | Auditor: W. H. Vallancey. | Bishop’s Committee—) McKendry, Thos. Wilkinson, E. B. | Wilkinson, Robert Wilson, E. R.| Griffin, E. George, W. H. Vallancey, | Otto Bauer. j PYTHIANS CELEBRATE Nearly 200 Knights of Pythias and |their ladies attended the diamend ‘jubilee anniversary program held Monday in the new Pythian hall on ,the 60th birthday of the order. ! | In addition to special ritualistic services, Grand Chancellor A. W. | Patterson of Grand Forks addressed | the general meeting on the history | of the order and went into detail on the growth of the organization since | Feb. 19, 1864 until today there are lodges in every outpost of the world where the American flag flies as well as a steadily increasing number of lodges in Canada. Louis Best of Bismarck and Ken Wiley of Grand Forks, both past grand chancellors also briefly ad-; dressed the meeting. | Following the general session the ladies heard Mrs. E. M. Thompson of Bismarck on the “Pythian Sister- hood” and a charter list was circu- lated and initial steps taken for or-| ganization. Twenty members were | signed last evening and Mrs. S. E. Arthur was named chairman to di- rect the preliminary steps. MRS. WIRTZ BIES Mrs. Mary Ann Wirtz, aged 51, wife of Marcus Wirtz, died suddenly late yesterday at her home a few miles west of Schmidt, N. D., follow- ing a heart attack. Mrs. Wirtz was apparently in good health and had gone into another room of the home to lie down for a short rest. Other members of the family found her dead some time af- terward. Besides her husband she two children. leaves Funeral services ce) Marcus Wirtz is a brother of Jacol Wirt2 of the Cummins Co, of dan. TO GLENDIVE E. G. Collis left today for Glen- dive to visit his brother and sister- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Collis of Sentinel Butte who were injured when their buggy was struck by 9 jer Rep: Northern Pacific train a week ago and who are in the hospital at Glen- dive. County Judge Shaw to Miss Veatha Swoboda of New Haas of Hebron. Twins in ‘his pocket. hind. climb to the top of this big, pocket.” .| U guess it sounds like a no bow-wow, LICENSE ISSUED A marriage license was granted by Salem and John ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Along the road of Beanstalk Land strode the funny giant “with, the Snap, the giant’s dog, trotted be- “I do wish we could see thing: whispered Nancy. “Let's ° try nd For the giant’s pocket was as big as the whole front of a house, nearly. “Stand up on my shoulders,” said Nick, “and maybe you can see over.” Q something we can stand on,” exclaimed Naney, not ‘too lcudly, for she didn’t want the giant to hear. “It's the giant's pipe. Come on, Nick. Get up here and you can sec fine. Oh! Oh! How big everything is!” Nick climbed’ up and both Twins stuck their heads oft of the giant’s4 pocket and looked around. But Snap spied them and started to bark so loudly they pulled their heads in again. They were just about to jump down into the bottom of the pocket again when a big hand grabbed the pipe and pulled it out. “I think 1 will smoke!’ chuckled, the giant. “My wife doesn’t like me to smoke in the house, so this is a good chance to have a pipeful, while 1 am walking home.” He pulled out a match from an- other pocket as big as a fence post— the match—not the pocket—and .| struck it on his great wooden shoe. “Ah, ha! Won’t Lena surprised he when I bring her home two little kinder no bigger than dicky birds. My, my! I hope she has some nice hot tree-soup for dinner, and soma fried elephants!” ‘At that he put his hand in his pocket again’ to gently pat his newly fcund treasures, when suddenly he cried out in his great voice: “They are gone! The Twinses are not there! Snap, where are those children? Did u eat them?” I'll tell you what had happened to the Twins. When the giant pulled out his pipe, the Twins were stand- ing on it, and losing their balance vay they went! But you'll never guess where they landed. Not in a thousand years! The¥ landed right on Snap’s back! But he was so big and his hair was | so long and woolly, and the Twins were so small and light, that when they fell on him he never felt a thing, but. went trotting along at his mester’s heels as though nothing had happened. 5 “Snap, did you eat those Twins?” demanded the jolly giant sternly. “If you did, I will smack you.” “Bow, wow, wow!” barked Snap, not quite knowing what all the trouble was about. # *“Is that a yes baw-wow, or a no bow-wow?” asked the giant. “Well, so I will not smack you. Now then, sir, we must hunt for those leedle kinder. Your nose is such a good one for smelling, Snap, we qught to find them.” . But look as they would, the Fwins were not to be found, Nancy and Nick ‘had grabbed Snap's thick’ wool and buried themselves out of sight. (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | them, FAMOUS MAN Is GUILTY- BIRTHDAY BRINGS UP OLD SCANDAL Edison has a birthday. He is hale and hearty at 77, having lived a clean life except for inveming the phonograph. Edison claims the phonograph was invented by accident. Do not. criti- cize the nice old fellow too harshly for this attempted evasion. It is only natural for an inventor to in- vent excuses. We contend Edison invented’ the phonograph on purpose, although there may have been no malice afore- thought. EDITORIAL This,is such an awful country, we: fave almost as much trouble in Washington as thdy do in European capitals. When things come to such a pass something should be done. But there is no need for restricting American emigration yet. POLITICS You can drive a dark horse to Washington, but you can’t make him president. + FINANCIAL NEWS February has five Fridays. This is unlucky for the than who wishes they were five pay days. FARM NEWS Beans without strings are promis- ed for spring, but what we need is politicians without strings. + MOVIE NEWS Save your divorce certificates. You may have to present them when ap- plying for a movie job. NATIONAL NEWS Coolidge, born on July 4,,has a chance to show, his independence new. FAMOUS MAN IS GUILTY .. GosH! Editor Almost Makes Such an Awful Pun In Germany, they eat sausage dur- ing grayd opera just as Americans eat peanuts at a ball game. If we were not so refined we would re- mark, “Oh, well, opera is a bawl game.” SOCIETY Are civilized people ‘more cruel than barbarians? 4r Paris, they played “that no banana song” at 3 cabaret owner’s funeral, by request. Let's try:and see the bright side. Be- ing afraid to die, now, Frenchmen will watch their health more closely. SPORTS Babe Ruth will be joined in Hot Springs by numerous other’ players, where they will bathe daily; \indi- cating we are-in for a-summer of clean baseball. Zach Wheat has ‘sign- ed with Brooklyn after fighting over his: contract which’ went against. the grain. f MARRIAGES Canadian girl has married a prince. That’s nothing. Any bride will tell you she married a prince, : FOREIGN NEWS Expert finds Italy is the key pow- er in Europe. If this is true, she can do a good turn. . RADIO NEWS Radio broadcaster gave a bagpipe concert, this being the safest way to play bagpipes. DAN DOBB ASKS Is it 3000 years Tut has been bur- ied or 3000 years they will need to dig him up? BAe Tangle». LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER ‘ I wonder, little Marquise, so much about you. I wonder if life was so complicated in the day when you put your letters from your lover, the king, in this little secret drawer. Oh, I wish you had, not destroyed That one letter to .me, who found its secret hiding place inside the beautiful desk, told so much and so little. I often smile to myself, little Mar- quise, when I sit here and write. I wonder what my mother-in-law would think if she had known that, reposing in this desk that she loved so much and which she gave me as a wedding present, was a confession which told you were the sweetheart ofa king. She is a Puritan, my dear, and she believes absolutely that’ every wo- man who breaks the seventh com- mandment should be stoned: She has forgotten all about the blessed Savior saying, “Go and sin.no more.” She has never learned that there are commandments which sa; “You must not bear false witness,” -for she is a gossipy old thing, you krow, and she tears her neighbors’ charac- ters, when they do not measure up to her standard, into little pieces. I couldn’t say this to anybody but you, little Marquise, for in the last. day or two she has been very nice and offered to make up her quarrel with me(I never had one with her). An Edison Achievement WASHINGTON—Thefe are 700,000 incandescent lamps in use through- out the world today, And half of them, | sa: “The History. of the Electric \Light,’ just issued by the Smithsonian Institution, are in the United States. All -embody, the original features as outlined in the} 8°. patent 1880. Song they miss- granted Thomas Edison: in te ‘}was going out n f ‘sb per- sons} appearance here, She said that She has invited me and little John, Alden Prescott. Jr. to visit het. I is a good deal for her to do and al ‘though the very thought of staying. in that musty old house and listen- ing to her old-world formula of hu- man conduct makes me almost physi- eally ill, yet,E have told John I would “I had planned to leave tomorrow, but last night Ruth came up as. John ‘told me all th hearing @ business dinner, people were saying Jack had had the billboard taken down because it ad- the vertised her coming. I knew better Todd's hoarseninig voice, she top- than th¥s because I heard Jack tell a man of the plan by which the Acme Advertising Company hoped to get back at the bill poster company. “It: doesn't make any difference,” said Ruth, “if Jack. is perfectly in- He is going to nocent in the matter. get the entire. blame. “Certainly, my dear, you carnot go away at this time,” she added, will look as though you were ous.” It was then, #itle Marquise, I decided to tell yo was the truth. should I be jealous of Jack? = jeal- that what I knew T shid to her, “Why | You do not know, Ruth, ‘that. the father of little Jack is:Sydney Carton, and fubliehed by arrangement with, Associated First “ional Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen version produced brrank Countess Zattiany. | Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Copyright 1923 by. XXVUE (Continued) “Tm on a review for the Yale now; @nd the new Century has asked me | for @ psychological analysis of the Younger Géneration, I'm going to ‘compare our post-war product with all that-fe known of young people and their manifestations straight back to the Stone Age. I've made & specialty of the subject. Witt bas helped me a lot in research. D'you think ‘he’s gone off?” “Gone off? Certainly not, Ev- ery columnist in town had some- thing to say about that last install- ment of his novel. Best thing he's ever done, and that’s saying all. He's strong as an ox, too. Why in heaven's name should he go oft?” | “Well, baby's teething and won't jlet any one else hold her when she gets a fretting spell. He's ,been up a lot lately." | \CTavering burst into a loud de- lighted laugh. He had forgotten his personal affairs completely, as he always did when talking to this remarkable little paradox. “Gad! That's good!. And pis public vi Ualizes’him as a sort of Buddh brooding“ cross-legged in his Il brary, recelying direct advice from the god of fiction... But 1 wouldn't have you otherwit The Mineteenth century bluestocking with twentieth century trimmings. ve. What now?” Rollo Landers Todd, the “Poet of Manhattan,” had stalked in wth a Prussian helmet on his head, his girth draped in a rich jblue shawlembroidered and fring- ed with white, a bitter frown on bis jovial round face; and in his ‘hand @ long rod with a large blue bow on the metal point designed “to shut refractory windows. Helen Vane Baker, a coftribution from Bociety: to the art of fiction, with flowing hair and arrayed'in a long aightgown over ‘her dress, fortu- ‘nately white, was assisted. to. the top of the bookcase on the west/' wall, Henry Church, a famous satirist, muffied in a fur. cloak,’a small . black silk: handkerchief pinned ‘about his lively face, stumped bepvily into the room, fell 2 & meap on the-floor against the bpposite wall, and.in.a- magnificent bass growled out’ the resentment ‘of Ortrud, while a rising but not yet prosilient pianist, with a long blonde wig. from Miss Dwight’s property. chest, thrpw his head back, shook his hands, adjusted a lcigarette in the corner of his ‘mouth, -and banged out the pre* lude -to Lohengrin .with amazing variations, Elsa, with her profile against the wall.and her hands folded across. her breast, sang what of Elsa’s prayer she could remem- ber and with no apparent effort improvised the rest. Lohengrin pranced up and down the room barking out Germai phonetics (he |. (fe not know.-a-word of the lan-, ‘guage, but his accent was as ‘tonic as his “helmet), demanding vengeance and threatening ann!- hilation. He brandished his pole in "the face of Ortrud; stamping | 10.tvAt . and roaring,’ then’ bending. his | 2° hen he had mets knees: waddled across the room |!#concelvably old, wise,lsillusion- ahd prodded: Elsa, who. winced per-| C4 céptibly ’but continued=to mingle her light soprano with the rolling bass of Mr. Church and the vocif- erations of the poet. Finally, at staccato ¢ommand of Mr., Gertrude Atherton of Youth, She was ting with the greatest animationie hardly recognized her and it w apparent that she had entered inthe spirit of the evening, quite renciled to any dearth of intellect! refresh- ment, The supper of hot ors, chick- en salad, every knowmariety of sandwich, ices and cali was tak- en standing for the ost part,\. Madame Zattiany, hower, once more enthroned at theiad of the room, women as well amen danc- ing attendance upon hi Probibi- tion, a dead letter to alyho couly afford ¢o patronize ® under. ground mart, had but ged to the spice of life, and itis patent that Miss Dwight hata cellar. More cocktails, highba, sherry, were passed continuoug and two enthusiastic guests ma¢a punch. Fashionable young act( and ac- tresses began to arriv| Hilarity waxed, impromptu spehes were gongs rose ontery key. Then suddenly some e ran up to the victrola and tuna on the, Jazz;. and in a twinkli the din- ing-room was desertédfurniture in the large room ujairs was pushed to the wall anthe night entered on its last pha Then only did Madar Zattiany signify, her intention retiring, and Clavering, to whoisuch en- ‘tértainments were too millar to banish for more than. moment his heavy disquiet, hasted to her side with a sigh of ref and ®. “No one applauded ore spon: taneously than Madam Zattiany, and she even drank a.cktall.” sinking sensation behinhis ribs. Madame *Zattiany madder, fare- wells not only with. gciousness but with unmistakableacerity:in her protestations of haig passed her “most interesting rening in New York.” KE Miss Dwight went > to the dressing-room with hemnd Clav- ering, retrieving hat ai top-coat, , waited for her at the ont door.» She came down radianand talk- ing animatedly to her Btess;ebut when they had parted a she was alone with Claveringher face seemed suddenly to tui to stone and her lids drodped. | she was ehout to pass him she shnk back, and then raised her es to his. ‘Now for it,” he thonht grimly he closed the dpor a followed her out to the pavemt. “The Lord have merc; nd then he made a sudden resdion. —_— | « RIX Madame Zattiany didpt utter a \ word during the short ilk to her house. It was evident tt she had dismissed the merry ewing from her mind and was broong on the coming ‘hour. At the»p of the steps she handed him tjlatchkey, but still lingered outsidfor a mo ment. As he took ve ae and drew her gently intghe house he felt that she was trebling. “Come,” he sag, hiswn voice” shaking. ‘“Rememberthat you pled over.into hie arms and they]: oth fell.on Ortrud. The non sense was over, ‘ ~ No one applauded more sponta- neously than Madame Zattiany’ and she even drank a cocktail. By, this time every one. in the room had been introduced to her and she was’ chatting as if she hadn’t & care’in the world. As far as Clavering could see, she had every lintention of making a Sophisticate ; aight. of it. ‘The pianist, after a brief inter. val for recuperation, played with feafening vehemence and then ‘with excruciating eweetness. Once his mother is Paula Perier. known this for a long tinie.” + “Did Jack tell you that?” asked Ruth quickly. + “No, dear, but everything that’ he has told° me ‘confirms pect.” y « “Aren’t‘ you afraid, it?” T almost fainted. had never ogcugred to me.: (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) “Twins” Wholve Never’ Grown years a young wheeling her “twin: man: hi they never grew: is’ out. satisf; ‘up, Now ‘tl They ‘ere. dolls. dainty Every me: children ‘persisted, howe: bought the dolls; Ever lavished @ mothe F, and ince she he Thave what I sus- Leslie, that Miss Perier will want her baby back, now that she is able fo take care of ‘That. thought Brighton, Eng,—For more than ten been along the front here daily.. Neighbors wondered why it} ane of the staid old fiction, maga- , hey sit, in high’ chairs atifer table. Once she engaged to be married, .She broke off her engagement when’ she Temembered a vow to’ remain with her widowed mother.’ The desire for @ | sadly, “two: of them: have: Bye Ne e's care upon them. Igraph. more cocktails :.were pa: then’ there’ wa: Suzan Forbes and the handsome young Wnglish ‘sculptress, which Madame Zattiany followed with pussled ‘interest; aid was'so de- lighted’ with herself,for guessing the word.before the climax that she clapped her hands and laugh- 2d like a child. ; e Mofe. music,”more cocktails, a brief impromptn play fall of witty nonsense, -caficaturing several of the distinguishéd company, whose appreciation’ was somewhat dubi- pus, and Migs: Dwight led the way own to Clavering watch- ‘Madame -Zattlany go out with the good:lqoking. young: editor of need: téll:me nothing ‘ble you wish.. This idea of copssion be fore marriage is infedl rot, 1 have not the least intenin of mak ing one of my own.” ‘| “Oh!" She gave a prt harsb laugh. “I should nevedream alg? pgs any man’s onfessian. They are all alike. Andmust tel) you.’ I cannot leave ygto hear i! from others.” gM Hevhelped her out Oher wrar chair and preceded down the hall “IT am a coward. A ¢fard,” shi thought hedvily. “Hav ever: toral cowardice ‘befor| 1 Femember. Not towarany, othe: ‘ines “which he had recently lev-]tan who loved me. } Oh ‘dt'tte'rut ‘by the wayside,| God! And I shall ne¥ see ‘spanked, up'and driven with a mag-|®8ain How shall 1 beg?” Mificent gesture ‘into the front rank | (To Be Contin) i |, .. Where She Spends\dr Time, GG ROSPECTIVE MAILI. see now Teacher! las: fy 1 Rate Nagpactin an “Yes,"": replies the (i a A cate acu a& ‘fs | e t