The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 28, 1924, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNECO. - - - _ Publishers/| ou? P&tdcrs may nave both aid issues which ai Foreign Representatives pil coh lig, G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT WHO FOR VICE PRESIDEN Marquette Bre AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or z 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 specia! dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year........... Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . 5.09 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. ............ 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) OLD IDEAS STICK LIKE, GL UE 0 Packard autos were equipped with “whip- sock strated make ¢} riage bod autos This incident is typical of all human progress. The first railroad passenger cars looked like stagecoaches, The first autos looked like horse-drawn vehicles. No matter how revolutionary a new idea may be, when people put it to practical use they invariably insist on retaining some feature of the old device or system that is replaced by the new. “5, quite naturally, the airplane is a cony of birds and in- ature’s “flying machines.” M couldn’t be blamed ng them. But the Ultimate Airplane may be an lifferent looking affair. the dashboards.” Packard engineers the coach builder who had the contract t 50 bodies. But for y: he had made . and he insisted on putting whip-sockets on the remon- to se for «cor en he human tendency, to attach a specimen of the old to new things, has a simple psychological explanation. Peo- ple simply have confidence in old tried-out devices, and they cling to them as a sort of life preserver in case the new outfit doesn’t work. Probably the builder of the first Packard auto bodies feared they would break down and have to be towed home “by a horse. In that event, a whip-socket wouldn’t be a bad idea. ~Radio, the most sensational mechanical development of recent years, changes swiftly. A new set comes out. You start to make it — and are apt to find it replaced by some- thing better before you finish soldering the wires, Radio changes faster than women’s styles, far faster. There has never in history been anything that has changed so rapidly—- that has revealed a public tendency to discard the old and adopt the new without regret or suspicion. This means that people are losing their chronic respect fe~ old things. They are willing to take a chance and throw old sh-heap as soon as something better id devices to the appe st) tendency may revolutionize human thought and even of economics. When the American colonies broke away from the old country and set up a republic in govern- ment, they still retained ‘the king-and-subject idea in that more important field, economics. The boss in business, how- ever, is gradually being changed by evolution into a pres ident of a business republic instead of monarch of his organ- igation. RUSS Two important developments in Russia indicate the Bol- sheviks expect to remain on the job indefinitel They issue orders to remove the word “Russia” from all maps and documents. There’s no longer any such country as Russia. Instead, it’s the Federation of Soviet Republics. Financiers say the Reds have abandoned hope of ever re- viving the value of the ruble. The ruble printing presses have been stored in the national museum. A new currency, silver coins, is being put into circulation. Rul@rs have con- fidence in their ability to hold their jobs when they, in effect, repudiate their own money. YOU Half a ton of blood flows through your heart every hour, says Dr. Henderson, lecturing at Harvard Medical School. This is a terrific amount of work for a delicate pump. It is obvious that life can be prolonged and health improved by getting plenty of sleep ang lying down for 20 minutes or so in mid-day and early evening. When standing, our hearts pump blood the full height of the body. When reclining, strain is taken off the pump, blood flows like water through horizontal pipes. SUICIDE Germany announces that 5106 of her soldiers committed suicide during the World War. ‘ That is a very low rate—much fewer than the number = that would have taken their lives if the war years had been _ peaceful. , ~ At least 10,000 Americans a year commit suicide. What irony, that people are more hopeful in war than peace! On the other hand, there must have been thousands of Germans who killed themselves but were recorded as victims | of enemy bullets. SOONER = -: Monday i in January and Congress take office first Monday in ~ January after election. ==, It’s a sensible idea. Most important thing for the public to keep in mind is that a political party by our present system $48 free to tinker with the laws for several months after vot- = e¥s have repudiated it and elected the other party to power. fhat’s a poor way to play political baseball. 9 JOBS New. wonders of science, latest movie sensations—these interesting. But,.after all, to the average man the most _amportant matter is jobs—plenty of work. =°The news along this line is good. Uncle Sam’s Depart- tt of Labor checks up and finds that the number on. the — roll of manufacturing concerns increased better than 1 += gér cent in February.. That’s not a Jot, to be sure. But it’s ent general gains since last June. &, Asan c this ‘spring, ee followed heel an enormous spa Kresge Bldg. = The Senate has adopted the joint resolution for a consti-| tutional amendment to have presidents inaugurated third | Times ‘are’ looking dirigible will start from Germany for the United EDITORIAL REVIEW —— Comments Uy den in thi column may or may no ba the opjnion of The ribunes 4S The day when the nominat Vice-President was conside-cd minor importance has gone. death of Mr. Harding and the suc- cession of Mr. Coolidge to the Presi- dene demonstrated the vital im- e of the Vice-Presidency 1a y that the American people are not likely soon to forget. When it was recalled that second place on the ticket had been offered by the winning combination in the} Chicago convention of 1920 to Sen-! ator Hiram Johnson of California and been by him refused, there was thankfulness in many quarters that | the convention had had the wisdom tc name Mr. Coolidge. | The signs mow point to the inde:| pendent gandidacy of Senator La Follette for President with the en- | dorsement of the new “third party” forces. It is generally recognized that this move ma ult in prevent- & majority selection by the oral college, La Féllette, it is! | admitted, may carry enough states | | in the middle west to prevent either lthe Republican or the Democratic | idate from having a majority of ral votes. | That would throw the election of President into the present House and of Vice-President into the Sen- at, The House would be restricted in voting to the three highest can- aidates on the elect roll, and would vote by states. This again would produce a deadlock, with neither Republicans or Denwerats having the majority In enough e dele,ations to name the President. The Twelfth endment to the Constitution provides for this con- lingency in a peculiagway. If the Hou.e does not by March 4 name a r President “the Vice-President shall act as President, as in the case of e death or other constitutional bility of the President.” But the Senate’ in electing the Vice-President restricted to the two highest names on the electoral college list. This variation from the formula prescribed for the House would doubtless prevent a deadlock. Senators would be obliged to choose between the Republican candidate ‘and the Democratic candidate for Vice ident. Except in the im- event of a tie vote, there | n election, and on March | elected would, if the succeed probable would be 4th the House still deadlocked, to the Presidenc Thes and they merit careful ehaeltioy Gea. They point to the necessity for the use of good judgment in the two national S, The quite aside from the always-present bility of succession to the Presi- by the death of the incumbent, prove of vital importance.— Minneapolis Tribune. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | One day Miss Pithers, the lady in Doofuhny Land, was mil; her cow, called the cow-that-turned- its-head. And while she was , sitting there on her little stool, along came a cur- ly black puppy that went “yip, y1p” us he hopped. And before the good lady could run for the house the black puppy not only went “yi but nip, ; d catching an end of one of | rings in his teeth, he pulled her st and pulled until half of her skirt was; | unraveled! At that Miss Pithers stopped milk-) ing and fainted and the cow turned its head and saw the black curly puppy and went “moo” at him and scared him away. The puppy dog went yip yip, and! hopped on and nearly but not quite | forgot about the whole business. Pretty soon he met the patent! leather cat striding along and im- portantly stroking his whiskers. “Yip, yip,” barked the pup, tryiag tract attention. “Get out of my wayg sir,” ordered | the cat. “Children should be seen and not heard!” The black puppy stopped yipping to at such an insult, “Humph!” he barked, “Children indeed! Why all eat is a> weenty teenty jyou can and I just finished eating half arn lady. I’m a wild beast, I | “Well, well!” cried the cat with | more respect ih his voice, “You don’t look so savage. Half a yarn lady, | indeed! Personally I haven't cared for yarn singe I was a kitten. Good- day, sir. The Early black puppy looked after him and) went, “Yip, yip! That fetched him, I guess he found that I amounted to something after all.” And he hopped on. Pretty soon ‘he met the flannel monkey. “You can’t do this,” declared the monkey, jumping up a tree and hang- ing by his tail, head down. “My goodness! That's nothing! I just finished eating a whole yarn lady,” declared the pup. ‘“Gobbled ‘her up just like that. I’m too full for climbing.” ®«The idea! You don’t look fierce,” suid the monkey. | pardon, sir!” The curly black puppy noticed the “sir” and also that the canton-flan- nel monkey staye@ up the tree and didn’t come down while he was there. He liked that and went on down the road thinking, “What a great fellow am I!” And so he went along telling peo- ple about his fierceness, each time adding to his story, until he met Nancy and Nick and Mister Fuzz Wuzz. And by that time he had eat- en not only poor, Miss Pithers and her cow, but the tiger and half the zoo Suddenly Nancy laughed. “Look behind you, Mister Hungry,” shé cried “canton- 80 “I beg your | pleted by Ma j; dan won from Steele, Valley jhas been received. MIA) wees Hie } mg J) Of i ) THE, BISMARCK TRIBUNE Too Much Competition 1 Quitll TAKE . YOUR DARNED oro SsKyill a rubber.band!” declared Mister Fuzz Wuzz stemly. “I suppose that what you had for saucer of milk.” The puppy so didn’t know where to look, “I—I guess I must have been mis- taken!” he said meekly and hopped | off to hide, (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Ine ) MANDAN NEWS Mandan Debaters , Meet Bowman| Grand Forks, March 28.—The Third | round of the annual state high| school debate league was finished! Saturday and pairings have ‘ been made for the fourth round which is| to be completed April 12, according to an announcement by Prof.’A. H. Yoder of the state university, who is in charge of the league. There are seven schools remaining in the fourth round, he said. The fifth round in schools will compete, which four will be com- 3, and the state ‘fin will be held at the state university May 18. Pairing for the fourth round ares Bowman-Mandan; — Milnor-Wimbl don; Rugby-Flaxton. “Cavalier was given a bye. In the third round Man- Milnor from from Souris, ahd Cavalier Bowman and Wim- in the third round. City, Rugby Flaxton from Mohall, from Mayville bledon had by M'CLELLAND SPEAKS Superintendent W. F. McClelland of the state training school was the speaker last evening at the Lutheran) !church when the Young Peoples Soc- | ,jety held their regular meeting. | NELSON FUNERAL Funeral services for the late Hans Nelson was held yesterday afternoon | at the Kennelly chapel with Rev. C.| J. Fylling of the Lutheran chureh in} charge. Burial took place in they Union cemetery. 1 SYMPHONY MEETS The first rehearsal of the New symphony orchestra will be held Fri- day evening at 7530 at the Elks hall. Announcement was made to- day that at Jeast 30 musicians will, be present. A large supply of music GRANDFATHER DIES Carl Sunmark left last evening for: Thief River Falls, Minn. where he has been called by the death of his; grandfather. SHOWS NO IMPROVEMENT i The condition of T. H. Feland, county commissioner who underwent | hospital is unchanged this morning, although he is, reported to have had a restful night. Improving Rapidly Mrs. H. A. Wilkinson, who was rushed to a Bismarck hospital last week, and was operated upon follow- ing her entrance to the hospital is improving rapidly. Country Club At Lake Made New Play Ground evils Lake, N. D., Mar. 28,-The work of turning the Devils Lake Town and Country Club property into a real playground for the people of Devils Lake and the Lake Region be- gan Monday. A full time man with team moved to the Country club property and has started at the work of repairing the buildings and outlining the work most important to the preparation of the grounds for play. One of the most beautiful sites for a club, house that could be found anywhere in this section of the country is located on the Country club grounds. It is about two hun- And there was Miss Pithers, the yarn lady, all neatly mended and dag as new. dred and seventy feet from the ghore- line and is just high enough so that an excellent view of the bay the big lake may be had. The site is breakfast was a+ mortified he | a serious operation in the Bismarck |? BONUS BILL l sunsrituTe MAY PASS THE SEN- ATE This expert editor's bonus bill ha: been ignored by a lot of cong men who never crawled up inside helmet ‘so far that only their feet stuck out to be shot at, and who nev- cr slept like pretzel in a French box car, Rerhaps the substitute now before the Senate,is a better bill, but this editor looks at it with the eye of a soldier, If the Stnate fails to pass the“present bill all veterans should write their congressmen to take up thé too-long-ignored Tom Sims bill. The Tom Sims bill is simple and uses up no tax money. The longer a man served in the army the more he will collect under the Tom Sims bill. Stated in a few words, the bill is as follows: Give all war veterans the right to shoot craps with loaded dice and they will collect their own bonus, FDITORIAL Another earthquake has hit Jaran,| doing very little damage this time. entists say Jap earthquakes ure caused by the pressure of the ocean. But our carthquakes in Washington are caused by oil. HEALTH HINTS To avoid sleeping on your back ave a boil on the back of your neck. FASHIONS Short coats of ermine are very po- pular this season, but not with the men who pay for them. HOME HELPS Unscrewing the wires from the bat- tery keeps the doorbell from ringing \while you are taking a bath. Is ADVERTISING inarried | st at a cafe, This made us so mad we are going to start our series of articles on how to get a divorce in our next issue. _ SPORTS... These army aviators flying around the world will not be home until Sep- | tember, and Teapot Dome may be over then, and most people will be thicugh discussing their vacations, and the aviators won't hi suit, so wouldn't it be nice if we, all could fly around the world until Sep- tember? SOCIETY In Denver, 3 bandit who robbed ant undertaker got only $3.40, This does not worry the . undertakers. Their business will be better soon. Spring increases the use of autos, and there will be more reckless drivers, HOW TO MARRY Turn the lights low and use a fiker needle for playing soft musie-on the phonograph. Then jump into his lap and ery. GARDEN HINTS A calendar placed in a conspicuous place in your garden enables the veg- tables to see whether they are late or early. AUTO. HELRS To test a used car drive it five miles from any garage on a rainy night. If nothing goes wrong then the car is perfect, TO-STAY SINGLE Get the girl’s parents to try to make her marry you, A fine way to stay single through June. (ASTAW -In business a necessity; at home they’re needed, too. Just handy s that work both night and day at catchin less odds atid onde that, ver Their secrets? No one knows them, yet a weird and mixed-up tale. Theit song would be a love and business lilt. A mixture of discarded things from scribbled notes to mail that, spread, would make a paper crazy- quilt. |. “1 love you,” and “Sincerely yours,” “We're mailing you today.” Such writings are reduced to _shredaed MI | that someone’s peddled at your door, scraps. He yoe borne “their little messages, are torn and thrown away and only. left a memory, perhaps. The bank checks ofga montn ago and many bills, marked paid; the ads are crumpled rather recklessly dnd then, at rest are laid-—just castaways, not needed any more, And thus a necessary part waste paper baskets play as home and work life travels to and fro. The secrets | buried in the scraps that pcople throw away‘are secrets only paper baskets know, ‘ (Copyright, 1924, NEA Servite, Inc.) | permits of excellent shade, is near- ly sutrounded bythe finest bjue grass and permits of, a good view of the first and ninth fairways of the golf course as well as an’ excel- lent view of the trap shooting. grounds. Possibly the first work that will be /dohe on the property will be that of preparing a place for, the foundation of the house and building that foundation. @s soon after as convenient the trap house, the pro- perty of the Gun club will be moved ‘to its new location on the Countiy club grounds, . A‘great amount of work lies be- fore. the members of this new out+ door club in the preparation of their |- grounds for the various ‘sports that will be represented. If present plans material will be a buay year! in thatthe club house must be moved to its new location, foundations must, be’ built, trap shooting grounds pre- pared, tennis courts built, fairways of the golf course worked over and put ingo, shape, greens, built and kept and a thousand and one ¢ playabli “Some people have imaginations! an ideal one for every reason, it] small things wail need the personal attention of the miepy! mer club. bers of the ATH = 1 » Use hespit: lity vane: to: ’ Toke ‘Without gru 11 Pet, 439. It is not the quantity of meat, but the ‘cheerfulnéa: “the guests Od makes. the ‘feast. Glarendon. { DAKOTAN CHARGES TEXAS LAWYER EMBEZZLED $600 Minot, N. D,. March 27.—Judge John C, Lowe and Frank Munz of Minot, have been subpoenaed as wit- nesses for the state’in a criminal ac- tion to be tried soon at Brownsville, Texas in which a Brownsville lawyer, A. L. Lewis) is charged with em- bezzling abput $600 belonging to Munz. The embezzlement charge is the outgrowth of a transaction between Munz and the Brownsville attorney, IGNORED | ‘eye. Published by arrangement Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Copyright 1923 by XLVIN (Continued) In the afternoon Mrs. Minor sug- Gested having tea in the woods, and they all walked—single file— five miles to drink their tea and eat their cakes (Larsing carrying the paraphernalia) in a pine grove on the summit of a hill, and then walked back again, clamoring for supper. Mary ‘had been monopo- lized by Scores and Bolton occa- sionally vouchsafing Clavering a glance. During the evening they were all too pleasantly tired and replete to dance or to play the charades they had planned, but lay about comfortably, listening to a concert of alternate arias and jazz. Clavering did not have a word alone with Mary. She sat om one of the divans between Gora and Todd, while Scores lay on the floor at her‘feet, his head on a cushion, one foot waving over a lifted knee, the perfect picture of the content- ed playwright. They kept up a continuous murmur, punctuated with gales of laughter. Clavering had sulkily taken a chair beside Babette Gold, whose metallic hu- mor sometimes amused him, but she went sound asleep before his eyes, and he could only gaze into the fire and console himself. with visions of a week hence, when these cursed people had gone and he was the most fortunate man on earth. His room was downstairs next to Mr. Dinwiddie’s, and he made up his mind to let himself out softly at midnight, throw pebbles t her window and whisper to her | a8 she Jeaned from her casement. Tt was a scene that if introduced into a modern play would have driven him from the theatre and tipped his pen with vitriol next. | morning, but’ {t appealed to him, somehow, as a fitting episode in bis own high roma#hce. But he was asleep before his head touch-| over her. with Associated First National Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Countess Zattiany. Gertrude Atherton ©” we come to the Woods to tramp? 1 want to lose twenty pounds this trip, and if you don’t you ought to, I vote we make Rolly carry a sack of potatoes.” “It's agreed then?” asked Mr, Dinwiddie, veiling his hope that it was not. But the assent was gen: eral, They were all as excited over the prospect of a picnic as it they were slum children about to + enjoy their first charitable outing, and It was settled that they were te start at ten o’clock. Mrs. Minor and Miss Gold went into the kitch- en to help Mrs. Larsing make sandwiches and salads, and the others ran down to the lake. t Clavering had tied the boat to a tree in a little inlet far down the lake, and they were walking through a wood of spruce trees and balsam. There was no leafy curtain here, although they could see one swaying on either side through open vistas between the rigid columns of the spruce. A trail was hardly necessary for there was no undergrowth, and al.“ though the trees were set close to gether they were easily circum: navigated. It was some time since they had spoken. His face was graver than she had ever seen {t, and she wait. ed for him to speak. She almost could feel those unuttered words beating on the silence of the woods. There was nothing else to break that silence but the faint constant murmur in the tree-tops, and once, beyond that leafy cur. tain, the sudden trilling of a soll. tary bird. Again, the tremendous. ness of this high isolation swept The camp and its gay ed the pillow, and did not lift an| party might have been on some far eyelash until the first bell roused | distant lake. him at seven o'clock. Then, how- j ever, he lay for some time think- | ing, soberly. XLIxX The hour between seven and eight was a lively one in.the upper corridor. There was only one bath- room on the second floor. Scores and Miss Gold took their morning plunge in the lake, but the rest preferred the less drastic shower, and_there. was,@ continual darting to aud fro of forms.clad {n bath- robe or kimono; the- vanquished peeping through door-cracks wait- ing for the bathroom, door. to open signal for another wild rueh down the hall, a.scuffle at the door, a triumphant slam and hoot, and loud vituperations from the defeat- ed. Mary cannily waited until the last, and came down, clad in a white sweater and heavy white tweed skirt, after the: others had cleared the generous platter of ham and eggs, and the mountain of’ corn bread .was a hillock of crumbs. ‘ “Oh, Mary!” said Mr. Dinwiddie, reprovingly, “and you as prompt as royalty. In camp——”" “I've no thought of going with- out my breakfast,” said Mary un- repentantly. “Ring the bell, Din.” The men had risen, but Claver- ing alone had determination in his He pulled out a chair beside his own, and Mary accepted it gracefully,’ waving a morning greeting to the others. “How good of you to keep this chair for me, Mr. Clavering,” she murmured. “It is shocking of mé to be so lazy.” “I'm sick of this game,” growled Clavering. “If you act today——” “Shh! I am sure you are going to take me out on the lake imme- diately after breakfast.” His amiability was immediately restored, but his gayety was some- what forced. ‘You are looking charming this morning, Miss Og- den. 1 wished last night that tHere was a guitar or even a banjo in ‘the camp, that I might serenade beneath your window.” And Mary actually blushed. She had slept dreamlessly, and be- tween the Nght mountain air and her new role, she felt as light- hearted as Eva Darling, who was’ holding Mr. Dinwiddie's hang open- ly. “Oh, Excellence!” cried Mis. Mi- nor from the other end of the ta- ble. “What do you say to having & Fienic lunch? Didn’t you tell me that you knew of a lovely gorge about six miles from here? Steak broiled between forked sticks! Po- tatoes roasted in the ashes! Filap- facks! Heavenly.” “Anything you say,” replied Mr. Dinwiddie rather tonelessly. “Want to put it to the vote?” “Let'me answer for’the crowd,” commanded Todd, “Tt is our duty’ He put his arm around her firm ly. “I am not going to pretend any further,” he \said. big for that. And you have never been anything but Mary Ogden to me, except, perhaps, on that night T have. practically- dismissed from my mind. I called you Mary-Og- den to myself until I learned your new name, and I don't think that name has ever come into my thoughts of you. And although you slipped on another skin with it you" were always Mary Ogden underneath. You needed a new name for. your.new role, but, like any actress. on the stage, it had uothing to do with your indestruc- tible personality. I say this be- cause I want you to understand that although I cannot play up to your little comedy any longer and go through the forms of wooing you as if you were a girl—I shouldn’t like you half as well if you were—I ‘do not think of yéu or wish you to think of ‘yoursélf"as anything but Mary Ogden.” He paused a moment, and she slipped her arm about him and they walked on through the wood. “I cannot go on with it because these days up here that we can spend almost altogether alone, if we will, are too sacred to waste op an amusing but futile game. Do you realize that we do not know each other very well? I sometimes wonder if you know me at sill From the time I fell in love with you until you promised to marry me, I was at one sort of fever-pitch, and when I got to work on tha play 1 was at another. No writer while exercising an abnormal fuc- ulty is quite sane. His brain is several pitches above normal ané@ his nerves are like hot taut wires that hum like the devil. If this were not the’ case he would not be an imaginative writer at all. But ho certainly. is in no.conditicn to reveal himself to a woman. I have made wild and adic love to you —sporadic is e word, for bo- tween my work‘and your friends, we have had little time together— and I don’t think I have ever taken you in my arms with the feeling that you were the woman I loved, not merely the woman I desired. And I believe ithat I love you even more than Ivdesire you. You sre all that, but so much—so much— ~ She had fixed her startled eyes f on him, but he did not turn his hea “There has always been s {ot <* talk about the soul. Sentiment»” ists wallow in the word, and »~/~ ists deride it. What. it really '~ t do not pretend to know. Probab'v as good a word as any—and “+ tainly a very mellifluous word— for some obscure chemical combl- t nation of finer essence than the obvious material part of us, that craves a foretaste of immortality ‘Tt is tory when in the wooils to eat our| while we are still mortal. Perhaps meals after as much ‘unnecessary | we are descended from the gods toll, and to enjoy a8 much discom-| after all, and unless We listen fort, as is humanly possible. Oth-| when they whisper in this unex- erwise we. might ag well stay in| plorable part of our being, we find town, We'll hilariously tramp 4ix|only a miserable substitute for miles with packs, sit on the damp/| happiness, and love turns to hate. ground, extfact earwigs, eat burnt| Whatever 'it is that golden essence: steak and ‘half-cooked potatoes, and | demands, I ‘have found it in you, then tramp back again, our spirits| and. if circumstances:had been dif- gradually rising at'the prospect of | ferent I should have known it long a decent meal eaten in comfort—" | ago.” ) “Eilljey!” cried Minor. “Don't| (To Be Continued), In Epistopal’ couritries,. ‘such as England, the-only: church days which nara RALIIE ie allbeeevendine a oe. are regular legal holiday: a from sult Munz lost the lend although the | Chiistmas,- are sige (Easter attorney later made restitution of the ; Man ter, i 3 Canaed te sees i abet 1 wherein Munz alleges that he. paid the attorney $600 to apply on a mort- gage on farm larids, The money was:

Other pages from this issue: