The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1924, Page 4

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PAU LUUIL HE BISMARCK TRIBUN Q Matter. Se a Ee WE a cc AT Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduce@ in this column may or may not express the opjnion of The Fribane: Tey BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - _Publishers|} Sic PM4ented nero in order that of impor t issues which are Foreign Representatives fe ERTL asc ‘4 G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ik GHIOAGO, = = = - DETROIT 19 Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. iu PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH hee aoe wf NEWYORK - - - - _ Fifth Ave, Bldg.|,,J¢ may be, tha : Po MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS laawa ite wachen une The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not af otherwise credited in this lished herein. All rights of republication of special d are also reserved. patches herein = MEUR AUDIT BUREAU OF SCRIPTION RATES PAYAB C irrier, per year - $7.20 D. nail, per year (in Bismarck) . 7.20 Y Daily oy mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.09 t Dza‘ly by mail, outside.of North Dako 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) POLITICAL FAITH HEREDITARY? This funny story went the rounds in America generations ago when the leading political parties were the Whigs and Tories. At a political meeting, a Tory proudly stood up and announced his political faith. Being asked why he was a Tory, he answered: “Because my father was one before me.” f “And why was your father a Tory?” : t “Because my grandfather was.” “Huh!” grunted the Whig. “If your father and grand- 4 father had both been fools, what would you be?” 1 “A Whig,” the Tory answered sweetly. TR ULATION D N ADVANCE Political parties for many years were automatically perpetuated because the average voter “passed on” his poli- tical faith to his children. Boys, raised in a Republican home, naturally became Republican. So with Democrats. Probably this was because politics was taken more seri- ously in the old days. Voters were gullible, believed every- thing the platform orators told them. They worked: them- selves into frenzies around election time— marched miles in torchlight processions, ever ready to fight with fists and bricks in support of their party’s candidates. In this atmosphere, a Republican father taught his boys that Dem- ocrats were Satanic. Democratic pas said the same of their rivals. Politics isn’t taken as seriously now. gence is higher. Vot Average intelli- rs think more for themselves. And, anne national drunken debauches, even long before Gentral Har- rison’s “hard cider” campaign, when liquor was served free nt in thousands of log cabins specially created all over the coun- try by spellbinders. oe : When women got the vote, there was much speculation » as to how many would be influenced by their husbands, in he Oh AT ht sense, of course. But all of us know households where hus- band and wife vote opposite tickets, automatically canceling 1 each other's vote. !¢’s claimed now, by many politicians who keep tab be- hind the scenes, that the political belief, of husbands is steadily less and less powerful in influencing wives’ votes. The interesting possibility rises, that a peculiar new period of history is at hand, in which children will have 4 their political faith educated into them by their mothers, just as their fathers used to guide their sons. At any rate, 1 the average mother has a lot more influence with the chil- dren than father has. errr oe WHY BARNUM QUIT DRINKIN Barnum, the cireus man, in his old age made a speech in which he gave this description of the popularity of liquor when he was a boy, along about 1820: “Everybody had barrels of cider i: their cellars ind drank cider spirits called ‘gumption.’ Profes- sors of religion and the clergy «ll drank liquor. They drank it in all the hat and comb shops, the farmers had it at hay and harvest times. Every sort of excuse was made for being treated. A new journeyman must give a pint or qu.rt of rum to pay his footing. If a man had a new coat he must ‘sponge’ it by treating. Even at funerals the clergy, Mourners and friends drank liquor. At public ven- dues the auctioneer held a bottle of liquor in his hands and when bidding lagged he would ery, ‘A dram to the next bidder.’ The bid would be raised a cent, and the bidder would take his boldly and be the envy of most of the others.” <e a -e- sa is i Raised in this atmosphere of universal drinking, Barnum drank more or less until he was 37. Then he signed the == pledge, went to his cellar and emptied his bottles upon the * ground, according to his biography by M. R. Werner. There-| i= after Barnum was a temperance worker, until he died 54! -years later. Numerous times he took the platform to lecture. | *...___ Barnum summed up his ideas about liquor this way: } == ‘We must kill alcohol, or alcohol will kill us, or our friends.” 4; gAt one of his lectures a man in the audience, while Bar- Baum was orating about alcohol as a poison, interrupted with: | 4 jp. How does it affect us, externally or internally?” Barnum 4 “answered: ‘“E-ternally!” Barnum was one of the first employers to refuse to have *<a drinker on the payroll. His contracts with performers and eother employes had a clause prohibiting the drinking of any 2. 4 ‘ kind of hooch. a Werner tells this interesting Barnum story: When giJumbo the elephant was brought to New York from Lon- q “don, his keeper celebrated his safe voyage by giving Jumbo quart of whisky. Barnum shouted, “I object to my elephant drinking whisky.” But Jumbo downed the quart and followed it with a bottle! Biot ale, having become a hardened drinker in England. Bar-} num raged. d WHOLESALE PRICES = Wholesale prices continue strong, which indicates the gasellers have confidence in their ability to find lots of cus-' omers. The authority, Dun’s Review, reports average wholesale prices almost exactly the same as last October. These prices verage a fourth higher than the low point of 1921. The purchasing power of the consumer’s dollar’ marks ‘ime at 60 cents on the-dollar. That is, a dollar buys only hree-fifths as much as before the war. To break even, a must be making a correspondingly larger income. ’ 7 a a A well digger who was buried six hours in Eastport, L. Swill recover, perhaps due to his subway. training. paper and also the local news pub- | too, the old-time elections were somewhat in the nature of} fe balloting. No way of answering this question in a broad! jeame rushing along as ‘had been shot out of @ gun. Jon trial, It was all, his fault!” cision just handed down by. it. Under apportionment and repr on the Massachusetts of sta r of “legal voters.” ; in doubt about the rm and it appeal- mesnin latter an- wers gl voter i reg- vote In other wor ister im f the court tha jislative representation is determ- jined by the number of citizens who take the trouble to have them- selves registered as qualified vot- ers. of a mew idea useful in othe states in getting people to regis and vote. Massachusetts won ay name a long time ago for its de- votion to the principle “no taxa- tion without representation.” Now ft is winning some notice with « urt di ration of the qwinciple resentation according to regis- tion.” And why shouldn't it be so? Able-bodied men and women who fail to register and to vote fore- close on their own right to a voice in government, and they do it of their own motion. They are en- titled fo little consideration, if any, in determining how they shall be represented in the halls of legisla- tion. They are even less entitled to representation than those who do not vote the reason that the franchise has not been conferred on them. Time fac phra; again we are faced by indicating that the fine about the people ruling is largely buncombe. Most of the ruling, in the first analysis, is done by a comparatively small part of the people, frequently by a nority, that minority being up of those who have the ¢ ship decency voting. Missouri voters had before them a few weeks ago twenty-one dis- tinct proposals for as many amend- nts to the Constitution, alia basic law of the state. There had been years of preparation for this popul: referendum. — En- , thu job. mi- ade en- of registering and been bring out the voters. Many of the propos: important enough to meri the vote of every man and woman in the state, positive or negative. ns were presumed to be particularly interested, ‘but the voters of that city fell down mi: erably. On a home rule amend: ment the city vote wa 7 ayes land 11,674 ne a total of 48,941 votes in a city which had a popula- tion of 773,000 in 1920. Out over the state the result was not much | more creditable, + | Sooner or later, if the voters do not mend their ways, some form o? compulsion will be brought to ‘bear on them to make them understand that voting is both a duty and a privilege. ! vote slackers of Massachusetts have disenfranchised themselves by their failure to register, They deserve ol that the court decision in question will bring upon them, und a e001 deal more in the way of legal discipline. When constitu- tional nroeress fails as it failed in Missouri becouse of the slothful ness, or worse, of citizens, the day of chastisement is at hand.—Min- neapolis Tribune, ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON — “You may go on with the trial,” de- clared Mister Fuzz Wuzz, the pipe- cleaner man, in @ loud voice, Naney and Nick wondered who was to go on with the trial, but by and by the patent-leather cat got up, pull- ed down his red jacket and stroked his whiskers, and said soberly: In the decision may be the germ some measure the: IFITEVEN LOOKS LiKe SouP fl. BE SURPRISED , | : “Too Many Cooks” | “NO! (uk Do IT * ae: i “Please call ister Fu “Good the duck!” Wuzz, aid the dog, and he sa’ je and the wooden waddle duck waddl jed up with a great clatter. | uack! —Q nie | “What do you wish me to sa | ‘ell how | the tin-so declared. ™ Idi: commanded | Wu | “Sure the duck, I will, “But ii ur honor,” | | Mis was in a bad way then,” said duck, “Don’t say, ‘Ill s: hundered Mi 1 allowed. Is this a trial or a grammer class, please?” mewed the cat. t Nancy and Nick forgot where they were and laughed. “Order!” thundered Mister z Wuzz so loudly that everybody jum, |". (To Be Continude) (Copyright, 1924, * PROGRESS By Berton Braley They fell a tree Which nature’ took two years to grow; They lay it low In half a day or so. And cut it up in boards and timbers that Will builg a flat And ugly row of house’ For workmen and their spouses— And call it Progress! ; They take a green And lovely country, quiet and serene, And build a smokey city Ugly and gray and gritty— And call it Progress! They take a hill Whose rugged cliffs gave every cye a thrill, Ang mine it for cement Till all its. sides are rent And gashed and gaunt and gray— And call’it Progress! “Ladies and gentlemen, I am ‘here to | take the part oftthe tin soldier, He didn’t mean to ‘run over the péanut boy and break fis nose.” “I object!” barked the rubber dog, “and please don’t get me excited or I shall whistle through the top of my head. "Perhaps he didn’t mean to do it, but he did it just the same and I demand that ne be punished.” Mister Fuzz Wuzz took a hammer and rapped lougly. “Order!” he call- ed. The cat and the dog and all the rest of the Doofunnies became quiet | at one “I just wanted to say,” said the cat switching his long tail, “that the tin soldier never touched the peanut boy. It was his horse.” “Then,” spoke yp the rubber dog quickly, “Let's punish the horse. I} insist that Somebody. be punished for breaking the peanut boy’s nose.” “We shall call witnesses,” said the cat with dignity. “I can show you that neither the horse nor the sol- dier were to blame. Will you to tell your story, Mr. Tin Sold “Certainly, sir!” said the tin sol- ier, riding up on his tin horse. “But. ou please, I’m a general, sir!’ “Tell your story, please, general,” corrected the cat seating himself with dignity and smoothing his waite neck ruffle. “That sounds much better,” said the general, “It was this way. I was riding along Candy Street in Doofunny Land, when~svithout a bit of warning, the wooden waddle duck though he My| horse shied to one side and then I heard a crunching. That’s the ‘first I knew of the peanut boy being ary- where near me. It was his nose that It seems to me That Progress need not be ‘A thing that must employ Man’s skill and science mainly destroy The beauty that is nature's, Why. should man’s | Trail wf advancement be so strewn with cans And brokén glass? to all we ome to learn, we Rgve the patience to discern \ That. beauty pays?SAh, when we do, Beauty shall glimmer everywhere we i ‘ Ine.) MANDAN NEWS AGED MERCER CO. FARMER IS DEAD Jacob Freschle, aged about seventy following a long illness with heart trouble. He was brought here sev- eral weeks ago from Krem, N¢D. He was single and efforts to locate relatives up to this time have heen futile. Burial will probgbly\ take place tomorrow in the local ceme- tery with services at the, Kennelly Chapel. SIGNALMAN HURT One cat's ninth life has been spent but in the death Wm. Ledgerding, N. P. signal maintenance foreman of Sweet Briar sustained minor cuts and a badly wrenched arm. Ledger- was being crunched.” “Hear! Hear!” cried the patent-! leather cat, springing up. “It is the wooden waddle duck who should: be, ( | a ding was driving his gasoline speed- er through the town of Judson when a cat ran from behind an_ elevator and on to the track. The “tom” was decapitated but the speeder wag de- ordered , down and everybody else sat down, uu happened to scare 's, ahem, the general’s Mister Fuzz said anyone could have | ag on the, been more scared than I was, he was | y ‘dandy’ here,” ordered “PH say he pic the Fuzz over again, ‘A Service, Inc) it wassvd away ‘here at noon yesterday |_ JINEWS SIMS PAPER SHAVED! SHAVED! VOTE AND YOU SHALL BE SHAVED IS LAW | Well, in Santo Domingo, a new law for the présidential election is that when a man casts his ballot he shall ‘be shaved. An official razor will off a spot of hair to show he has d, This keeps voters from re- ing. So, you see, some candidate y win or lose by a close shave. SOCIETY While down town tgday looking for 'w rumors to start, Mrs. Gossip ran vo j ne into several of her old rumors which had grown so she failed to recognize them, so now she ean use them all ADVERTIS! ’ The editor's pipe is missing again. It may be headeq for some baseball training camp to sign up as a rookie pitcher. Gumshoe, as the pipe is called, is wild enough to be a rookie pitcher. Reward. 4 FDITORIAL Here is great news. Dealers are claiming the new braided leather shoes make thick ankles look thin, If this is true we may see braided leather dresses soon. And why not braideg leather hats for the presiden- tial ring? sPorts ae A San Francisco woman who Will railed and Ledgerding thrown a doz- en feet. SUFFERS PARALYSIS Hans Nelson, aged resident, was taken to the Deaconess hospital auf- fering with paralysis.’ Mr. Nelson was found in his home beyond the end of Sixth Avenue N. W. in a ser- ious condition. He was unable to call for help and it is thought that he was in such a helpless condition for at least two days. RIPRAP RIVER_ Another stretch of riprapping work is being done by the Northern Pa- cifie railroad*along the Missouri riv- er at @ point» thirteen miles north’ of the city beyond Harmon, Many carloads of granite and sandstone have been brought here from Minne- apolis for the new work, This material is from the old piers t SHAVED! Published by arrangement XLI (continued) Gore regarded Ler with frank ad- miration, wholly unassumed. “Oh, you couldn't lose Clavey if you tried. He is mad about you. We jean all see that, and I knew It be- fore he did himself. It’s only— really—that I'm afraid you'll be bored to geath with so much shop if you don’t set up one for your- self.” “Oh, I never intend to be bored again as long as I Live.” Mary Zattiany was a very shrewd womaD and she determined on a bold stroke, Her suspicion lingered but had lost its edge. Gora Dwight ;was deep and subtle but there was 'no doubt that she was honorable. {“I shall tell you something,” she said, “but you must give me your word that you will not betray me— rot even to Lee.” Miss Dwight’s mind, not her body, gave a slight stir of uneasi- ness, But she answered warmly: “Of course I promise.” with Associated First National Pictures, Inc. ‘Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. Copyright 1923 by Gertrude Atherton tive ignorance of the denaturalized brain, she had believed that a bril- liant gifted mind could concentraze itself upon any object with equal fertility and power, but she had seen too much of the Sophisticates of late, and studied Clavering in too many of his moods to cherish the illusion any ‘longer. Play- wrighting seemed to her @ con- temptible pastime compared with the hideous facts of Life as ex- emplified in Europe, and she had vestrained herself from an angr: outburst more than once. But spe was too philosophical, possibly too fatalistic, not to have dismissed this attitude eventually. Clavering could not be changed, but neither could she. ‘There would bo the usual compromises. . After all, of what was life made up but of com- Promise? But the early glow of the wondrous dream had faded. The mistress was evidently the role nature had cast her to play. The visiow#of home, the complete matehood, had gone the way of all A “Very well, then. It {s this. I shall never return to America, 1|0Feams. ‘ sail in a fortnight. Lee follows ‘ soon after, and we shall be married XL in Austria. “But — but— his play!” Miss Dwight was too startled to act. “He must be here for rehearsals. Some {one has said that plays are n6t | written, they’re rewritten, and it’s pretty close to the truth.’ “I shall consent to his returning ifn time for rehearsals. Prolonged honeymoons are indiscreet. It is better to divide them into a series. I fancy the series might hold out indefinitely if adroitly spaced. : Moreover, being a modern myself, !I like new methods, And he will be too busy to miss me. I shall be: equally busy in Vienna.” | “But will he consent? Lee? He's \not used to having his plans made for him. He's about the-most domi- nating male I know.” “I feel sure he will when the time comes. It is woman’s peculiar gift, you know, to convince the dominat- ing male that he wants what she anes e Gora laughed. But she also could ‘urn mental somersaults. “I think it a splendid arrangement. Then we should not lose Lee altogether, for we really are devoted to him. He Is 4n adorable creature for all his absurdities. But I can’t endure the thought of losing you.” “You must pay me a long visit in ;Vienna. Many visits. I can assure :you that you will find material there, under my guidance, for a really great novel.” Gora’s eyes sparkled. She was all artist at once. “I should like hearsing.. He can arrgnge to have his first-nights tn September, and then write his next ‘play in Aystria, filling his time while you are ab. sorbed in politics. Heayens, what a theme! Some day I'll use it. Per- fectly disguised, of course.” “And I'll give you points,” said of the Minneapolis bridge over the' Mary, laughing, She returned the Mississippi river which is being re- placed by a larger and moye modern structure near the university camp- us. { *. , TALKED AT CHICAGO Postmaster “A, \B! Welch returned Saturday evening from Chicago where he spoke to an audience of about 400 members of the Chicago. Historical Seciety. He was invited early in the year to speak on the. Indian lore of the Northwest and added many fea- tures to the histori¢al facts which the society already possessed. The Chi- cago society is one of the strongest! branches of the Smithsonian institute and the Field Museum. ‘ Ai more de- tailed account of Mr. Welch’s visit will be published later. | DAUGHTER BORN A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs, Isadore: Emmil of the city. | other's embrace; but when she was ;@lone she sighed and sank back in her chair, .without picking up her book. Miss Gora Dwight had given her something to think of! The last thing she’ wanted was a se- rial honeymoon, ‘She wanted this men’s companionship and his help, But she had slowly. beén forced to the conclusion that Claverink's was a mind whose enthusiasms could only be inspired by some form of creative art; politics would mevér appeal to it, Ip ber. compara: DEMAND FOLEY PILLS FOLEY PILLS, a diuretic stimulant for the. kidneys, have brought relief to thousands of sufferers from kid- ney disorders caused)through the im- Proper -working of: these organs, é She was not sorry to forego the doubtful luxury of meditation on the sadness of life. When Miss Trevor's card was brought to her she told the servant to show her up and bring tea immediately. She was not interested in Agnes Trevor, @ younger sister of Polly Vane, but at all events she would talk about her’ settlement work and give a comfortably commonplace atmos- Phere to the room in which tragic clouds were rising. As it had hap- pened, Mary, during these past weeks, had seen little of New York women between the relics of her old set and their lively Society-lov- >~ ing datighters. The women between forty and fifty, whether devoted to fashion, politics, husbands, chil- dren, or good works, had so far escaped her, and Agnes Trevor, who lived with Mrs. Vane, wes practically the oniy repreveutative of the intermediate age with whom iS she had exchanged a dozen worda, But the admirable spinster had taken up the cause of the Vienna children with enthusiasm ,.and raised a good deal of money,;;be- sides contributing liberally herself. She was forty-two, and, although she was said to have been a beauti- ful girl, was flow merely patrician in appearance, very tall and thin and spinsterish, with a clean but faded complexion, and hair-colored hair beginning to turn gray. She y 1. hes Pcie ate TNT sti Re ne, mee eis that! How kind of you. And what] had left Society in her early twen- * i ying an air cross ” - ;, show them their parents’ pictures in the wilds of Africa. It doesn’t mat- © eleulenanrears is) the moat inter: ie end: ae oes Seas the seed catalog. This arouses their ter, but this proves the young peo- ve : : ambition, ple are not the only ones who are Sting country in Europe, and the} She came in with a light step ang BEAUTY SECRETS | flighty, most beautiful to look at—and de-|an air of subdued\ bright energy, Plump women can take off a few} MUSIC NOTES scribe.” very smartly but plainly dressed in pounds by volunteering in some com-| Feed the baby so much candy, you| “It will be heavenly.” Gora made | dark blue.tweed, with a large black munity drive for funds. will have to stay up all-night singing up her mind at once that she would| hat in which a wing had been ac { BOOK NOTES to it. Many people have acquired waste no more ingenuity to stop| rately Placed by tie best milli’ ‘It has been so. long since most of | beautiful voices in this way, but it is this marriage. Its modernity ap-|in New York. Her clothed? #4 thousands ug read the spelling book few canj rather hard on the baby. peated to her, and she foresaw new|so well-worn, and her grooming pautote from REBOTCR AUTO HELPS impulses to creation. ‘The Ameri-| was so meticulous, her accent s9 | Maivaiakestane Sonne: Leseans _If you are buying a used car the can Scene,” conceivably, might|clean and crisp, her manner so de- hlioieerch aimed geld on. coq. first thing to do is to move to a grow monotonous with time: and| void of patronage, yet subtly re- BROTHER TOM'S KITCHEN | “°C? Valley so the way back home with these daily recruits bent upon | mote, her controlled ‘heart so kind When peeling onions think up|!!! be down hill. describing its minutiae with the re-|that she perenially fascinated the something to cry about so your tears HOME HELPS ._,, lentless efficiency of the camera.| buxom, rather sloppy, preternatu- ~4 pvillenotiberarneted’ Bootleg booze will’ unstop a sink and with all her soul she loved Tally acute, and wholly unaristo- { BEDTIME STORY quick as everything. , beauty. With the possible excep-| cratic young ladies of the East ' Don’t laugh when your wife puts HEALTH HINTS tion of Bavaria she knew Austria | Side. her hair up in papers. It may scare] Never swallow a chew of tobacco tp be the darling of nature, Mary, who had a dangerous hab- /* burglar before thorning. pr argue. over politics, |; Once more she chose to believe] it of characterizing people in her pe POLIIIGS rf FARM NEWS this woman would manage Claver-| Day Book, had written when she poe jnresent eeouizeslonal ecors A Being protected by nature, ducks ing to his own good, and to the sat-| met Agnes Trevor: “She radiates | DERRe like \Asdetectlyorstory on't have to wear, galoshes. Istaction of his friends, who, as she| intelligence, good will, cherrinesy, | PaaS well knew, were alarmed and alert.| {nnate superiority and uncompre | They were too polite to show it,| mising virginity,” i E D uC ING but much of their enthusiasm for} “Dear Mary!” she exclaimed in { ‘Madame Zattiany had dimmed with} her crisp bright tones as she ee | the knowledge that she was a acl-|ed her amiable hostess, “How The world is simply wild’ about awn ., ‘entific phenomenon. Fundamental-|lightful to find you alone, I was causing, so it aggnie, and ‘calmena lee nee fee eather ong, fe" ty the brilliant creative mind is afraid you would be surrounded af [have come into their own, Through] The balance of the family can par- Quite as conservative as the world. | usual. | Til fade away, the hefty per-| take of what theyiietidasé, But me? ly. or the ,inarticulate millions) “Oh, my novelty is wearing off," ms and, too, I'll let the fat| I'll have a menu all.of my own, shy between, for they have cominon an.| said Mary drily. “But I will t foods quite alone. of fats and carbohydrates. While cestors and ‘common ‘’traditions.|them to admit no one else today. When early in the morn I rise, ll] they gain I'N slowly loser though I, They feared not“only to lose him,|I find { enjoy one person ata t! jhave my daily roll until my very sides | fight reduéing’s battle all alone. moreover, but had begun to ask one | One gets rather sited in New Yo: » |are,tired and sore. Of course I amj Tis the dream of hefty People, just} another if-his career would not be|of the unfinished sentence.” |depending that my fat will pay the|a dream that fades and dies. For | °" eed “Oh, do.” ” o jtoll, for it's not a breakfast roll, but | intentions seldom last, though quite Eeoeed yo.” Mary's quick eye tock onbthertloont inepiring. ("1's “¢B0 herd’ ty eivetup Miss Dwight concluded that such | note of a certain repressed excite- Ti put my auto up on jacks and | eating when there's food before your #2 UBcommon and romantic marri-| ment in the fine eyes of her guest, throw the key away. "Twill make me | eyes, and the daily exercising’s much |@8° might be a spur to Clavering’s| who had taken an upright chair, move by foot where e'er I go. I'll| too tiring, genius, which might weaken in a| Lounging did not accord with that [not throw off tomorrow what can (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) |conventional marital drama set in| spare ascetic figure. “and you Rae = - the city,of New York. U are quite right. It {s ‘seldom oze She rose and for the first-time] has anything ifke real. converse kissed Madame Zattiany.- “It will|tion. One has to go for that to be too perfect!” she sald. “Let me| those of our older women’ whe visit you in summer when he is re-|kave given'up Society to:cultivate the intellects God gave them.” . “Are there any?” murmured Mary. oe “Oh, my dear, yes. But, of course; you've had no time to meet them ic your mad whirl. Now that things have slowed down a bit you must meet them.” “I'm afraid it’s too late, I sail in a fortnight.” 4 “Oh!” Miss Trevor's voice shook oddly, and the slow color crept up her cheeks. But at that moment the tea was brought in. “Will you pour it out?” Mary. “I’m feeling rather lazy “Of course.” Miss Trevor w: 4 brightly acqufescent. She seated herself before the table.’ The man retired with instructions that Ma- dame was not at home to other callers, £ (To Be Continued) rs FOLEY PILLS will prompltv flush the kidneys thereby removing iniur- ious waste matter, Mra.’ 0.\C. Alex- paler a No. 365, Montrose, Mo., States:| “I received the pack » FOLEY PILLS,and have Baek geal ly benefited by their use.” : op ww \ 4 ‘ Rn 4 , +e

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