The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1924, Page 4

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pa meer nh Wa i PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUN Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. i} BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Publishers Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively 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 speciai <iispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year............. . $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . . issy (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 NEWSF al’t (Established 1873) Record. MR. DAUGHERTY’S REPLY : Sar A sigh of relief generally would have been felt had SOUTH LSU Harry M. Daugherty resigned several weeks ago as Attor-| Returns from South Dakota ney-General of the United States. It would have been much better had Mr. Daugherty, who was named in the Cabinet chiefly because he was a long-time political associate of the EDITORIAL REVIEW ———— Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They psented here in order that both sid CONVINCING FIGUR Recently we published some fig- there was a light decrease on ac: count of the hard winter, and the | farmers losing about half of their cows, ang only $46,381 worth of Cream sold, But in 1923 there was a big increase and $77,401.80 worth of cream was sold. In 1924, the | first two months’ sales are excel- lent. For January and February, | 1928, the sales of cream amounted to $2,015.40. For the year 1924, for January and February, the sales ure $3,724.56 almost 50% increase. Certainly these figures al story that is worth reading by those who have gone broke trying to raise wheat.—- Emmons County | ures submitted by Martin G. Schmidt as to the money made by | cream produce This week Mr. Schmidt has compiled some inter- esting data along the line which we publish he : In 1921 there was $52,397.85 paid out for cream in Linton, If 1922 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Time to. Wake Up Hiram John- | will overcome y lead. Per- | Jate President Harding, stepped out when Mr. Coolidge A tne Saal became President. It was characteristic of the fairness of |equally confident about the result | President Coolidge that he should continue the policies in-|0! the Norm Colne EUG 8 augurated by Mr. Harding because the latter had been | advantage he had in North Dakota | elected President, and to continue his appointees in office. |of a divided opposition, has made a | It is quite evident from a study of the “Coolidge mind” that |remarkable run. oun | it would be reprehensible to him for one to be elevated to |%mph for him ana not ree | the Presidency by accident of death and adopt policies in| puntican ni behind the | conflict with those the voters had approved, or overturn the |Californian. The great Pregres- | things the elected President had done. is aL Re ee ae a New situations, of course, alter the course of any official, | Senator Norbeck, the three Repub- no matter how he was elevated to office. Mr. Coolidge show-|tican (Representatives, were band-| ed commendable courage, if foregoing political advantage, |« The Republican reg- | in continuing Mr. Daugherty while the latter was being | ¢ condemned but not proven guilty. But when a situation arose wherein Mr. Daugherty as a public officer could not perform the duties prescribed by his office by the Constitu- tion and the laws, it was manifest that Mr. Daugherty should go, no matter what injury might be done to him personally. | For it is and should be an inexorable law of public service that duty to the public is paramount to the welfare of the individual charged with that duty. It would have been in- excusable if the President had endeavored to sit in a judicial capacity and brand Mr. Daugherty guilty; it would have been equally unfortunate had he allowed sympathy for the ac- cused official to transcend the plain duty of his official po- sition. Mr. Daugherty has gone and the country will be glad. Nor will Mr. Daugherty’s answer invoke public sympathy. The Attorney-General argues that he could continue as At- torney-General and at the same time render advice to the Tresident and conduct his department without conflict be- couse of the investigation. The President’s argument is con- small} and the m ine may be supposed to have the | best of it. Last Fall hardly anybody e: ed that Mr. Coolidge could car- | the State Proposal Convention, ; as the did in December. Relief for | the farmers was then the main is-| And the sue. The President has done all in| s power for that purpose. Much | is made of the oi] scandals later | in the campaign; but Governor Mc- M who seems to have beat- en Senator Sterling, needed no oil scandals. ‘The man who reduced the price of gasoline from 26.6 to 16 cents must have been a hero to} voter dBi Ford. It is sur-} ng that he didn’t run even fur- | ther whead of Sterling and John-| e done. son than he seems to ha Mr. Johnson ma In January he roaring | the Administration’s policy | | ing arms of s to the Obregon Government. He is not a constru vinci ig: Mr. Daugherty’s plea is not. here is much with regard to the Attorney-Ceneral’s crack on the character of evidence permitted to be adduced before the Senate committee with which the fair-minded public will agree. It is possible, as the Attorney-General claims; that enemies he has made in the discharge of his, duties as Attorney-General are behind the effort to drive him from public office and besmirch his character. Mr. Daugherty will have ample time in private life to conduct his defense. COVERED WAGONS OF TH# ik On the outside of the envelope was written: “To be opened only after my death.” This had been penned and sealed by Captain Hyde-Pearson, World \War flier and a> mail pilot. Death came to him when his pian i among the Pennsylvania hills while c: York westward. This was the message he left inside the envelop “To my beloved brother pilots and pals—-l go 1 with a cheerful heart. I hope what made may be of use to the damned fools, they say. When w 7 bad fellows. But everyoue in this wondertul aviati ; ice is doing the world far more good ihan tie public can appreciate. We risk our necks; we give our lives; we perfect a service for the benefit of the world at large. They, mind you, are the ones who call us fools. But stick to it, boys. T’m stillyvery much with you all. See you all again.” urifice f This brave flying captain was as surely a pioneer and explorer as the courageous Americans who, only a few gen- erations ago, went into the unknown west on horseback or in covered wagons. The men who fly are developing a great new transforma- tion service. They have the prophetic vision to realize the future of aviation. Willingly they gamble their lives. A thoughtless public may imagine the fliers risk their necks for the sheer adventure and thrill of flight. Truth is, they ‘are as serious about their work as the mounted scouts who | invaded our western plains at the head of millions of settlers to follow. | Flying is a serious business, not a circus performance. This much we learn from the life and last message of Cap-| tain Hyde-Pearson. The captain quite evidently had a premonition of death. It is not the custom of men, unless they have such premoni- tions, to leave envelopes marked: “To be opened only after my death. Many will wonder what he meant by his closing lines: | “Stick to it, boys. I’m still very much with you all. See you all again.” g In those lines is the firm belief that death is only a change —a: farewell flight into unknown but better regions. Hail and farewell, brave Captain Hyde-Pearson, as you fly west- ward into the sunset. ‘ SEX Nothing is impossible to a superscientist. Prof. Harms, the German, has‘been experimenting. He predicts “sex! transformation”—for, instance, changing roosters into hens! to increase the supply of eggs. Interesting possibilities for : ts who order a boy and get a girl. But Prof. Harms} ‘ doesn’t promise that much, What a pity, that brains possibly capable of changing roosters into hens are not applied to simpler and more useful services to humanity. Genius hhas a passion for the impos-} sible. If it were practical, though, it wouldn't be genius. | lanes after cities. This is better \tive statesman, except in the mat- ter of tariff rates on California products, but he shrewdly espoused the particular emes of agricul- tural relief dea 0 the South Da- kota Congressmen. x t his soul, and all -his and managers set theirs, ying South Dakota. Else- where he was making no visible progress with all his mo- tion and “emotion. If he eceods in winning the tvol otes of South ota, the friends of virtue oppressed and the “onder dog” will only be grieved that the couldn’t do so on the nuath of hic shi s; thet be yoked to the the friends of Mr. almo-t ome break in the set n gloom. a s of irritation South Dako There, if any- yvandering ftinerant of might look for an eag The to, the fl Dlers who find Lesarsay as st proofs of Holy Writ ought to be common. But just there, in the face of varjous difficulties of pecu- liar local’ moment and at the height, perhaps, of the flood of po- litical sensation and scandal, Mr. Coolidge polled an extraordi- nary vote against a politital com- bination of extraordinary strength. His steadiness, his integrity, the solidity of his character, the quiet courage with which ‘he stands by the taxpayer in spite of all the|{ froth and flourish of noisy politi- cians, have produced their effect in South Dakota, even in circumstan- ces most unfavorable and a public | machine. Even of tlea J temper ill-disposed to sober rea- soning.—New York Times. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | “Come along and see Hinky Dink!” | said Mister Fuzz Wuzz to the Twins. So away they all skipped through | Doofunny Land till they came to the place Hinky Dink lived. There he was sitting on his front porch, nodding his head pleasantly up and down, up and down, up and down, as much as to say “Every- thing is all right-—the world is a fine place.” “Hello, Hinky,” pipe-cleaner man. “Why, hello, Fuzzy,” answered the other pleasantly, but not stopping his nodding for a minute. “And who are your friends?” “Nancy and Nick, the Twins,” in- troduced Mister Fuzz Wuzz. “We've come for a story. Do you know any today?” “Yes, I always know a story,” nodd- ed Hinky Dink. “It’s the only story I know. It’s about me, and it’s sad.” “Oh, come now, Hinky, you cer- tainly don’t look sad,” declared his rs. “Won't you tell us?” “With pleasure,” smiled Hinky Dink, “I hope my nodding doesn't make you nervous. ‘ “One day I was sitting in a store with my hundred’ brothers, when a called the little _ The army may name it: th present plan of ae ing them after radio stations. lady came in and said she wanted {1 don't de a lot of speech-| iy the friendliest way. nc. Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. Copyright 1923 by Gertrude Atherton Lt (Continued) He had always felt that the im- agination, what is called for want of a better term, the “creative faculty,” was there, but it was lethargic; it sometimes roused it- | self to spurts and ‘flashes dur- ing wakeful nights, but slept like | @ boa-constrictor that had swal- lowed a pig when he tried to | invoke it, No doubt, as Gora had told him, his life had been tdo easy and agreeable; he made a good deal of money with no pfrticular effort, he was a favorite with the cleverest men and women in New York, and he had no one to think | of but himself. His mother was | dead and his sisters married. And ; there was no dowbt that if you were on tqp, @ personality, New | York was the most enchanting place in the world to live in, just as it must be the most unsatipfac- | tory for the poor and insignificant. To have conquered New York meant more—several . thousand times more—than conquering all the rest of the United States put together, with New York left out. Moreover, it was the only place where you could have any real fun, if you wanted your fun with the sort of men who drifted to New York from all parts of the nation as naturally as pilgrims went to Mecca. if it was your fate to be a South German Confederacy. That would make a powerful combina- tion, ahd as Bavaria has always hated Prussia, she would be the last to lend herself to any schemes of vengeance the north may che- ish—particularly if she remains @ republic, And, of course, she would assume her share of the Allied debt. . . . It would be a won- derful thffg if it could be brough: off. Vienna”—her eyes sparkled— “Vienna, of course, would be the capital—and again one of the great capitals of Europe, Perhaps the greatest.” “Were you ever closely associ. ated with Hohenhauer in any o' his schemes?” “He had no immediate schemes then, He only awaited events, While the old Emperor lived no move was possible; he was most illogically adored by his people. But Hohenhauer told me more than once that he was only biding his time.” ~ “And what of that preposterous estate of his fn the old Galicla— sixteen million acres, wasn’t [t? Did he expect to hang on to that under a popular form of govern- ment?” “He would have retained the castle and a few hundred acres, for he naturally had a great affection for his birthplace; and divided the rest among the people, whose natu- ral inheritance it was. But he could do nothing antil the proper time, for such an act would un- doubtedly have resulted In confis- cation and banishment. He would have accomplished no good, and Published by arrangement with Associated First National | | i} litician, Washington, course, Legian inca ot lost his immediate power for use- was the goal, but that, in-bisvopin- know yet what favors are but anyway she picked me out with a lot of other things in the store, and took us home. “The next thing I knew I was on to buy favors for a birthday party. TO INEW S a lovely dinner table with a big PAPER birthday cake covered with candles. table had lovely silver fulness besides. Like all those old-world statesmen, he knows how to play a waiting game.” “Sounds like a great man—if there are any such.” “I should certainly call him a great man,” said Mary, but still with that note of complete per- ion, was merely moving from a lit- tle small-town to a big one, and he thanked his stars he did not have to live in a place where there was nothing but politics and’ society. In New York you had only to help yourself to any phase of life you wanted. SIMS things on it and flowers and dish and glasses so fine they looked as though a breath would melt them.” | “I was sitting beside a beautiful) TEAPOT DOME RECORD IS WRIT- china plate, and who should be stand- | TEN ing at the place next to mine but the! The spring building boom is on loveliest tissue-paper dancer I ever) cornerstones are being laid, every | fans? looked at, one of which contains data to sur- “She balanced on one foot and her prise people when it is opened up a pink skirts were made of paper 1ese- hundred or so years from now. leaves. She was so beautiful I al-; A record of the Teapot Dome affair most eried for joy. hould be included, and should read “I nodded, and about like this: “Shortly after the World War ex- perts predicted the next war would be in the air, Then came the Teapot Dome war and proved their deduc- tions more than correct. “Statistics gathered from the March, 1924, headlines in the papers showed everybody in the United States had threatened to resign, “Oil was knee-deep in Washington, due to the fact that every time a senator was tapped he became a gush- er. she nodded back’ I really fell! in love with her. I couldn’t take my s off her, she was so lovely. | By und by the children came in. A little girl picked up my beautiful dancer; “but'a hoy got me, and the first thing he did was to try to find out how I was made. He gave my head a jerk and of course it canie off. t's only balanced on, anyway. “Just then I heard a shriek, and ooking I saw that my dancer had fainted. She had lost her bala and fallen over in a plate of cream, “The boy put my head back where their skins were very valuable to fur- | it belonged, and the dancer came to, riers, the oil making them slick and but she wouldn't look at me again. glossy. No doubt her nerves were shocked; “The Teapot “Dome war ended at seeing a headless man, I don’t) Christmas Day of the year in which | suppose I looked very beautiful. ‘it started. | “The boy took me home and I sat on the mantel-picce for months, my} Atway heart slowly breaking when I thought | new of my dancer. lof a “One day at housecleaning time they said I was dusty and threw me! into the ash-can, so I came here to TO STAY SINGLE tell a gir) when she has 2 ore pimples or signs ouble chins, ETIQUETTE | It is not polite for a chaperone to| tonal PLAN TO CORNER THE. OIL you start your training for year I was so weakJ,.could catcher, but I couldnit cussas far as] second base and the fielders out of bounds. tled baseball fans, maybe, ish to you. but the woman is wise. When her husband does come to her he will be used to staying at home. grab him around the neck. on until preacher arrives, | “By the end of 1924 all Washington | find the water is on ‘residents had grown web feet, and| have something to !last until you get it paid for, i has returned home reciting “The Face | fon sonal indifference in her voice. “He not only has immense brain power and personality, but farsightg and a thorough understanding of the people, and sympathy with them, Even the Social-Democrats liked and trusted him. And he has more than the ordinary politician’ astuteness in trimming his sail but coming out, nevertheless, at the end of the course exactly at the point he had aimed for. [If he captures the bridge, to change the Mary smiled as she remembered the contemptuous remark of an- other New York convert: “Oh, Washington is merely an island outside of New York,” and she fell to wondering what New York would have been like if it had not been fed so persistently by those streams ‘of eager ‘and ambitious brains debouching into it from ev- ery part of a by no means unambi- tious and negligible commonwealth. Another island, probably. Certain- SPORTS We have a letter. “Dear S: When the season opened last cuss a were | A Fa: So that’ Our next issue begins training In New Panini pried ly it was the most exhilarating simile, he'll steer Austria out of ae eda end ne matt married 2" place in the world today, with its|her deep waters, No doubt ot years to serve. atmosphere of invinctb! curity | that Bais This fool- is may sound foo! “Exactly what was the part you intended to play in Austria?” he! asked. “You have never told me.” “I thought we were not to talk of that. It is impossible to make deliberate plans, anyhow. Only, there is a part for any one who loves the country and has the brains and the wealth and the 50 litical knowledge to help her.” “I have never quite understood why it should be Austria, Why not Hungary? After all———”" “I never cared for anything ia Hungary but the castle, whiga ©75 wonderfully situated in the moun- y/ and prosperity, its surging tides of life. No wonder it was impossible for the intensive New Yorker to realize that four thousand miles away a greater world was falling to ryin. She told him something of the old political lite of Vienna, contin- ually agitated by some “Balkan Aug it core you | Question,” of the general dislike of radaiva jarajevo had been the dea e By. delving jcarctally, sOUnicRe many of Eurepéan peace; appréhensions of the day when he should ascend the throne, for he was intensely clerjcal and reactionary. If he had HOW TO MARRY Pretend you are fixing his tie and| Swing MUSIC NOTES Change seats in a canoe. If you! ADVERTISING Gumshoe, the editor’s missing pipe,, the Drug Store Floor,” and|survived until the olf Emperor's screaming for his malted milks. We} leath, and (here had been no war, taint OCP aN marae ae cur he hus been hanging around the jit ws tful it there would not} (tion and. the peasants the | drug store cowboys, The reward of-laaye been a “palace revolution") fered for Gumshoe is withdrawn. within hs of his succes-| ost picturesque and interesting EDITORIAL in Europe. But even if Buda Pesth It was also possible that the sion, fall asleep, if she aed ill, f 4 q i Rgua ees iy & ~ | had appealed to me socially, which live, T'never saw my dancer again. imcvcure her poputarite, YY | ygat Gee oraven and. finding Ris wag |eoe!S Womd have had thelr reve" it never did, there were deep per I often wonder if she wound up in GARDEN HINTS [heck Home again in Indiana, proving |.2t10% for they were becoming ef | sonal reasons that made me dislike the ash-can also.” ‘ ‘ You will need a hose and a bath-/he had almost as much sense as a|/eutened and discontented, Sit | aiungary—I never spent a night in ¥ “Don't you worry, Hinky Dink,” ing suit for watering your garden wild duck. Everything is relative, or |° panen Apher nieneN eee the Zattiany palace until I turned ried Mister Fuzz Wuzz, “I think I during the dry spells, Teomaening JIRA tees OF Lethe Government were in sympa-| {Ne Catllany Ponce ee oat ET eae Gel ee ; re lh ee a su inenn (tile Primes | Cnnye bted sinc Vienna am Ben) J. right. We'll be back to see you to- Histditinee ter eubiadid (Claver:| Sole Suene tun DEA, rst years morrow, Mister Nodder. Keep up mers | NATIONS (Gigi | (To Be Continued) | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | ere reneerenaniee® | MANDAN NEWS ROOF WAS ABLAZE The fire department was called out | Saturday to the F. E. Koctke home, 18th Ave. N. W, Fire apparently had started in the roof of the residence | from an overheated chimney. Dam- age was confined to the roof and kit- There’s much too much of sober- ness within this world of ours.} There’s much too much of dreariness | and sad. With every rain of solemn) come the melancholy showers, Andj why, when folks can just as well be glad? The man who wears a grouchy look will have a bad effect on everyone whom he may chance to see. - You’d rather dodgé than greet, ‘him, e’er chen, your spirit, too, is wrecked, for sour- ness is catching as can be. CITY FEDERATION ae look upon a dreary day; the r ; cwty | SKY. i t as spooky clouds, go The first meeting of the newly | §*¥.0 Overcas’ ; formed city federation of women's | (rifting slowly by. | You'd rather clubs was held this afternoon, March {ave the sunshine and you're glad | TONIC: | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc,) in Europe, and later I made it my home. It is the mostifagcipating: city, to me at least, jn, the world. Besides, Hungary {s in the hand of _Horthy and Bethlen, who have no more idea of making a republic of it than of permitting any one else to be king. There is no role for——" ) “Hullo! Hullo! Hullo!” . + Qlavering sprang to his feet “Shall we take the bull by tha horns and go to meet them?” he Ing. “Hohenhauér believed that every throne in Europe would be over- turned before the middle of the twentieth century, and that it was when clouds have passed. Bright |the part of wise leaders to preparé things are much more pleasing to the |not only themselves but the people eye. + for a republican form of govern Well, you yourself are just a cloud|ment. He had the greatest admira- that hides away the cheer, whene’er tion for the principles on which you travel hand in hand with glcom. | this republic was founded, and said "Tis better, far, whoe’er you are, to|that Europe was to be congratu- shun the scowl and sneer. Send|lated that we had made the mis-| asked. ‘Poor devils! They'll hate crabbiness and sourness to, their|takes for her to avofd. Much as|us for looking so’tresh.” doom. the rest of the world congratulates fc ND Just let your optics sparkle and be|jtself that Bolshevism was tried cheerful; ’at a boy. Your friends | oyt in Russia and made a ghastly wat Nese ind shee spp eeiatto et s mess of improving the condition of i fj 5 A a fore the masses in gests good-will and joy. What better |the underdog, before tie maltor Gee eae reee Orie their heads. I’ve no doubt that he uu ‘They were forced to submit to a vast amount of good-natured chaf- fing, for they had invited it, but it was the sort of chaffing with which 81st, in the public assembly room in the basement of the Farmers State Bank building. Miss Bertha Palmer, deputy superintendent of pubiic in- struction was the speaker of the af- ternoon, Her subject was “Beauty Spots” of North Dakota.” NAMED CHAIRMAN Mrs. R. A. Countryman has been chosen by Mrs. W. A, McIntyre of Grand Forks, state chairman for the Women's Coolidge clubs, as Morton county chairman, and will have ac- tive charge of the work here. Other appointments made are Mrs. A... Jones of Lisbon, work in Ransom, the residence of Mrs. D. C. Tilkins at 407 Fourth Ave. N. W., having con- tracted to purchase the same, DAUGHTER BORN A daughter was! born to Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Beckley of Sioux Falis, S. Dak., the first of the week, according to word received here by Mrs, J. K. Porter, sister of Mrs. Beckley. Mrs. Beckley before her marriage was Miss,Emma /Coleman and is well knowh in Mandan and Bismarck. RETURNS » Mrs, A. H. Peterson, one of a com- W. Rowley will assume ownership of | # Cass, Steele, Richland and Trail coun- ties, and Mrs. J. R. McKenzie of Car- rington in Foster county. HOUSES SOLD Peter Wagner, 108 Fourth Ave. N. , W., han purchased thelfine pealdencel Pet ee |of Herman J. Tavis at 205 Fourth | é rth | ¢__ © ‘Ave, N. W., and will take possession \shortly after the first of the month.||.. Ab THOUGHT | |Mr. and Mrs, Tavis are expected to: @.. = us |return from California shortly after} He that tilleth his land shall have | April 1 and will move their house-! penis of bread, but he that follow- hold goods to the residence Mr. Tavis after vain persons shall have pov- lowns located on, Third street N. W.,| erty enough.—Prov. 28:19. : ‘to the west of the A. M, Reriden pro- Peon, 'perty. Another real estate transfer will be effected June 1 when Dr, B, mittee of four from the United States chosen by the national president of the P. E..0. Sisterhood to revise and rewrite the organization by-laws, has: returned ‘from Macomb, Iinois, Keep your working power at its maximum—W. R. Alger. * will be the next Chancellor of Aus- tria, and that when he gets-the reins of power in his hands, he'll keep a firm hold on them, which is more than any one else has done.” “What do you suppose has brought him to this country?” “I fancy he has come to obtain the moral support of the American Government in whatever plan he may have made for putting: Austria on her feet again.” “Have you any dea of what that plan may be?” Clavering was watching her intently, His ear at- tuned to every inflection of her voice. But her tones were as im- personal as-if reciting a pige out e ‘of ancient ‘history, and her gaze It is ‘not clean-up time until you| wag frank and direct.’ *’ can leave the windows clean up, “{ can only guess. Personally I + f a ,,|#hould ‘think his. present plan Things are getting so a dog can't) you14 be an alllance with Bavaria bury a bone without worrying over some probing ‘committee ‘digging! it| #a@ eter Mouth German States—a up. this amiable company would have victimized any pair that had re cently met, and found each other's society suddenly preferable to that of the crowd. They were all very tired. Mr.{ Dinwiddie, after refreshing his‘ guests and himself with highbalis, went to his room and to bed. Rollo, Todd ‘announced that it was time to go back to New York to rest, and all fell down on the divans or floor for hal& an hour before going up to revive themselves with a hot and cold shower. But fatigue passes away quickly in the mountains. They’ were at lively as ever the next morning, al though they unanimously elected to spend the day..on the-lake oF idling in the woods. c (To Be Continued), LSI TG, FARES SED VOL ARETE Ne aL knocking the, ball over the fence ana | LONG REACH a chasing it. F pa IBC Re A very wide seplloped vertha an Detroit ok ri poisoned by | batiste embroidered in French: em- pide Piers nies jogs, Perhaps be-| proidéy and inset with fillet and Va- lenciennes lace reaches nearly to the + BEAD TRIBUNE WANT ADS, “| wsistling of\@ black ‘eatin “gown. — od l. Tom Sims Says_ | (pores The boys’ kites are making some people look up for the first time since last fall. More people would be sensible if it didn’t take so much practice, \Woulan't it be nice if we always were as nice as we sometimes ure? The trouble with guessing at the height of spring dresses is you never can tell what designers will bé up, to next, Our government prints a booklet on keeping worms out of the garden, If we could: turn loose some flying fish they would help. a 2 Sing Bing reports a good ball team this year, maybe with the idca of, ‘: p» A

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