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PAGE FOUR Matter. column tay ge may nck oxpreat e opjnion of The Tribune. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - Publishers] Si2 Pxsented here tn order en of important fssues which jare FE: . Foreign Representatives i beng discussed in the presg. of ‘ Fi i ANY i % CHICAGO - - - =e DETROIT [rug seNNINGS STORY ABOUT Marquette Bldg. : Kresge Bldg. ~WAMON : % PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH BNEW ORE Us s/s os Fifth Ave, Bldg), Jennings. reformed train rot her of Oklahoma, has told hhis MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS story to the Senate committee The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or | Which is Hee eee republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not PAR EIIRE IG AY ILC STE TTS otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub-|mon, now dead, $1,000,000 when | lished herein. Warren G. Harding, now dead, was | All rights of republication of special dispatches herein | nominated for the presidency” are also reserved. fatornea SenuGr Denies Pennsyly. now dead, received | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year............ so'e's oOeeO. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) paar UAeO) 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) SRE SCS * DO YOU BELIEVE IN LUCK? A monkey almost strangled Cromwell to death when he was a baby in the cradle. For a few moments, until he was discovered and driven away, that ape held the destiny of nations in his hairy paws. How do you explain it? Luck? A matter of chance? Important events of the world and our own lives often hinge on such petty little details that an observer is baffled to explain. Napoleon might have won mired his artillery. * + Mohammed, pursued by enemie: Shur. < trance. Seering the web, the pursuers reasoned that no one could have entered without breaking the silken threads. They passed on. Mohammed escaped. That spider deter- mined the religious belief of billions of people later. The same cave-spiderweb story, by the way, is told about other historical characters—borrowed from Mohammed. Yaterloo if a rain had not hid in a cave in Mount THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class A spider promptly spun a web across the cave’s en-: EDITORIAL REVIEW ),000, Hi 900 and amount. In return for his million dolla says Al, Hamon not only to be ry Daugherty re. ved} wml H. Hays, a like | Secretary of the Interior, but. he | was lo ibe rewarded with a gener-| ous piece of pie in the form of usufruct of public lands, Hamon, | he says, told him all this in Chi-! cago at the time of the national | Republican convention in bt From buying his way to a portfolio | in the Cabinet, Hamon, according | to the story, was going to buy his | way later into the presidency and “become the biggest man in the | United States.” | Nobody, so far as we know,| thinks of Juke Hamon approx mating anywhere near the ideal! citizen, but it 1s hard to ‘helieve that Hamon was the blooming idiot | \Jennings makes him out. If the | Jennings story is a mistaken inter- pretation of things Han jhave said to Jennings, w t ; and if it be literally true as recited on the witness stand, there is no other concluston than that Hamon was so affli exaggerated ego t responsible for what he s: Hamon was quoted as “cost him like hell to get t York delegation,” and quite a bit ‘of money to carry Oklahoma for Harding. This is the first st: ment or even intimation that the If Cleopatra’s nose had been shorter, the condition of the New York delegation of 88 mem- ble commodity. be a surprise to Miller, So wrote Pascal in hig / bers was a pureh It will probabl su world would have been different. epigrams. Her beauty made her one of the most powerful DEO women that ever lived. Jomeq W. Wadsworth, Jr. A small boy in church, watching a chandelier swaying | Calder, William Boyce T back and forth, conceived the idea of the pendulum. Chauncey M. Depew, Her than L. Luther might have been a lawyer if a terrific rainstorm Tt, Henry L. Stimson, Herbert 7¥ed. in Doofunny Land yesterday, had not prevented him from keeping an appointment with a friend. Giotto, one of the early Florentine painters, might have continued a shepherd boy if a sheep drawn by him on a stone had not happened to attract the attention of a great artist, Cimabue, who fired Giotto with ambition. Nearly everybody believes in luck. If they didn’t, games of chance like cards would be entirely displaced by games of skill like chess. Ambition is kept alive and nurtured by hope. /.nd hope is lured on by a belief, whether admitted or denied, that luck will bring opportunity and fortune. . after all, is simply the popular way of expressing o> failure under the scientific laws of chance or prob- es. These laws are mathematical. Gamblers use them. Insuvznce rates are based on them. But most of us cannot accept chance as a satisfactory ex- planation of such crucial incidents as baby Cromwell escap- ing death at the monkey’s hands. Some prefer to believe in fatalism. Others are confident that the guiding hand of Providence is back of it all. QUICKSAND General Pershing has been writing a history of the World War. His book, begun during his recent seclusion in France, covers the period between America’s plunging into the con- flict and the armistice. The book should be what serious- minded people call “a valuable contribution.” The final history of the World War will tell it in a few hundred words. By the year 4000 the war will have become legendary, in the nature of a myth. Time is quicksand. Chinese armies once conquered Asia: and most of Europe. Their troops are estimated as many as 29 millions. But how much space does history give them after the lapse of centuries? . PERPETUAL The Abbe Moreoux, French scientist, swings his tele- scope and finds a swirl of “star dust” so far away that it takes a million years for its light to reach us. . What the Abbe saw, therefore, was the light that left the nebula a million years ago. Another million years must pass before earthlings with their telescopes will be able to see what that far-off place is like today. If you were as far from the earth as light travels in 109 years, and had a pow- erful enough telescope, you’d now be looking down here and watching the Battle of Waterloo. Light takes moving pic- tures of everything, carries them on through space forever. : DUE Every one’s talking about the rapid increase in traffic congestion, due to tremendous auto production. Any one with reasonably far vision can see the time close at hand when traffic in cities will be congested to snail’s pace unless double-decked streets are built. The other solution would be for airplanes to be made cheap and fool-proof, diverting traffic to the air. This seems the more logical development to expect. Whenever humanity needs anything badly enough, some one comes forward with it. That will be the way with flying flivvers. HOAX Fluctuations in foreign trade often deceive when they are figured in money instead jof physical volume. It’s now known that, instead of building up an enormous export trade during the war, we really were building up the prices instead of aetual sales. . For instance, final estimates show that/rubber imported Ant® our country in December averaged Py cents a pound, _eompared with 15 cents in December, 1922. It’s evident, how this two-thirds gain in prices shows up deceivingly in gomplete figures on imports. z BEAR 5g Russia was too optimistic in its claims about revival of 3.1 trade. Exports and imports last year totaled only million dollars (figured in our money), compared with ‘ the year before. ~~ In 1850 Russia’s foreign trade was 150 millions, or 3 Jions larger than in 1923. It grew to 1500 millions in 1912, x her slump in foreign trade is easy to understand. Ostracized politically by most of the rest of the world, Parsons, Charles S. Whitman, Og- den L. Mills, Nicholas Murr ler, Charles D. Hills, Jules 5S. Bache, ~ Siegel, Edward M. Morgan and William L. Ward, all ,of whom were members of the New | York delegation. In this list are |two former governors of New York, two United States nators, one university president. one former .member of the Cabinet, one near ,Yelative of a former President, one | wealthy ne aper editor, one for- mer postmaster of New York city und several men of sizable fortunes | | who needed none of Jake Hamon’s money to keep the wolf from the door. | How or when Senator Penrose fot the $25,000 does not appear from the testimony. Having pas Jed on, he can’t explain. go to the go convention, be-| ing confined to his Pennsylvania home by a serious illness. j If Jake Hamon uch @ ras Jennings’ story suggests, it| \is quite remarkable that somebody! | did not blow the lid off in the cam- paign of 1920 and start things go-| ing then instead of waiting for! nearly four rs. Hamon was a man of moral obliquity, but he 5 80 covert about his private life that |comparatively few people of Okla- homa knew about this phase of his life. Hamon money may have helped carry Oklahoma for Harding, but Mamon showed no interest in the senatorial or state election, and still the state chose a Republican fer the senatorship and elected a House of Representatives in the state, a majority of which was Re- publican. | A man as successful in business as Hamon usually knows what to do with his tongue. If in politics he was cursed with egomania. much is explained ‘by that simple fact. inneapolis Tribune. i | MUSSOLINPS DEEDS { Premier Mussolini has made his first speech of the electoral cam- paign. He says he will make no other speech until the votes are counted. He tells the Italian peo- ple that Fascism has saved Italy. | It hag. It has prevented a communist revolution. ‘Jt has ended the strikes. It thas reformed the tax | ‘organization. It has put the peo-/ ple back to work. It has strength- | ened the lira. It has done all the things which every sensible man in the country knew should be done, but which all | the sensible men in the country | put together were unable to do be- cause the political machinery was not responsive to their needs. No matter which lever they pull-| ed, they could not get the right sults. No matter for whom thi |voted, they could never get a ipar- liament ‘that would act sensibly. The ‘parliamentary situation in Rome was even more scrambled | than the congressional situation in Washington. | The people were so dissatisfied that they were on the verge of a communist. revolution. Musgolini' forestalled that with a Fascist rev- olution, _ which» almost jgained the support of the people. | Mussolini then did the things that tall the sensible men wanted done. That’s why Italy has made such re- markable ‘progress in ithe last year |and a half ag to gain the world’s admiration.— Chicago Journal of Commerce: Lary: THOUGHT i | e | blab-} Wrath is cruel, and anger is- out- i]- rageous; but who is able to stand| before envy ?—Prov, 27:4, Jealousy is not slove, but self- love—Rochefoucauld. He didn’t] ; instantly | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE aes WHAT Nex Rs ‘a | ! | Did You Ever Try to Empty a Kid’s Pockets? for THE LANDSAKES, | } ) ) ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS | | BY OLIVE ROBER AL NY] ERTS BARTON NEW Ss “Come in!” cried Mister Fuzz | TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1924. Watch for th Pictures, Inc. Lit (Continued) another gorge he knew of and sat for-hours among boulders and ferns on the brink of the stream, and sur- rounded by the maples with their quietly rustling leaves. When they returned, Miss Dar- ling, attired in ferns, was execut- jing what she called the wood- nymph’s dance, and Todd and Mi- |nor were capering about her mak- jing horrible faces and pretending to be satyrs. The rest were keep- ing time with hands and feet. All had agreed that not a letter nor a newspaper should be brought to the camp during their eight days’ absence from civilization. Freedom should be complete. It seemed to Clavering\ that the expression of every fate had changed. They all wore the somewhat fixed and dreamy 100k one unconsciously as- sumes “in the woods.” It was only a@ few moments before the onlook- ers had joined hands and were | dancing around the central fig- ures; chanting softly; closing in on them; retreating; turning sudden- ly to dance with one another... but with a curious restraint as if they were reviving some old classic , of the forest and were afraid of | abandonment. Only Mr. Dinwiddle, | a smile half-puzaled, half-cynical, ; {n his eyes, remained a spectator. | | They swayed rhythmically, like tides, the chanting was. very low and measured, the faces rapt. t GERTRUDE ATHERTON Published by. arrangement with Associated First National creen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. ' , Copyright 1923 by Gertrude Atherton 0 y 3 Y | Even Todd and Minor looked exalt- ! ed. Impossible to imagine they had | ever been Sophisticates. They | were creatures of the woods, rene- | woods had claimed them. \ gades for a time, perhaps, but the}) uzz to the Twins, “somebody ar- and I'm going to see who it is. They, y it’s a lady.” pair : o away went the three of them to, AY LEARN SECRETS OF ENSOY- call on the new arrival. ' : While covering the world se She was keeping house in an old 0 last year this expert editor decided candy box with a hinge lid that did i nicely for a front door and when the What the universe needed was train- visitors knocked she unswered at ‘2£ for baseball fans. { on J The seu were hard. Baseball “How d’ do,” she said sweetly, | Seats always are hard. If we had “How do you do yourself,” ‘said practiced sitting on the floor at Mister Fuzz Wuzz hospitably. “Wel- home, instead of using a chair, we come to Doofunny Land! {I do hope would not have noticed the hard you will like us.” seats. “Tm sure I shall. It will he a The men on cither side of us al- nice change,” remarked the new Ways ran out of matches by the fifth lady. “I've been sitting on a ma@ntel- inning. If we had practiced earry- piece for nearly a year, and al- ing matches we would not have had though the family I lived with were to ask these men for them and they would not ‘have run out, By the seventh inning we were try- ing. to think up new names to call ‘the umpire. A list of strong but re- spectable cuss words in our pocket would have made it the lucky seventh jfor us. These are only a few hints, be dusted. “Did you ever happen to know who—” began Nancy, but M uzz Wuzz stopped her. Sh! ta bit,” he whispered. “Would- you mind telling us‘ your! Watch story?” asked Mister Fuzz Wuzz, the sport page of Tom Sims Newspa- politely. {per in the future for even more “Oh, no,” smilled the dancer, “Do startling baseball fan training se- crets, if we can think of any. it down and I'll begin at once, 1 a favor at a birthday party, It HOW TO MARRY a lovely party--all pink and Cry a little every now and then white—even the white birthday cake ‘and let him comfort you. covered with pink candles, und MUSIC NOTES I matched perfectly. I was set ut 2! Musie hath charms to ‘soothe the place us a favor, and right beside me savage. breast, but don’t do any was a nice little man who nodded soothing while the savage breasts are and nodded at me in such a friendly trying to sleep. fashion that I was quite fascinated.” FARM NEWS “Why, that was--” began Nick. : 2 but Mister Fuzz Wuzz stopped him. _ Mosquitoes are getting ready for “Wait a bit, he tNee ce fac, Summer boarders by sharpening their Please 26 Coe Maden * pills on the grindstones.’ The board “Well, a dreadful thing happencd” Pills ‘are sharp enough. GARDEN HINTS sighed the dancer. “A little boy sat, ~ ‘ down at the place next to mine and | A fishing worm will break {f you right before my eyes, he pulled my try to pull him out of the ground new friend’s head off. I was so Without digging around him first shocked I fainted dead away right in} TO STAY SINGLE a plate of ice cream, and even when; Hit her in the nose every time she I was recovered I was too nervous to| tries to kiss you. look at him again,” “Is that all?” asked Nancy, “Yes, just about. I belanged to little girl who took me home, and IT said, I was treated kindly, but time went on 1 faded and lost my; beauty. Besides my legs and feet which are made of wire, got all bent out of shape. Iam no longer grace- ful, In plain words, I have lost my looks.’ sitting on our oak buffet; real fancy; nl cam fix you if you Tike,” saidj ones and strictly up to date. But ancy, “It isn’t a bit of use.” sighed the! eae EE Raye NARDIN Ok little dancer. “The only fricnd 1 0" looking there today, you'll find, ever cared for was killed, But if you instead of twelve, there are but eight. like, you may try. But my dancing, Then, peck within our cabinet daviscre seen ~ |where the Dresden china stands. Mister Fuzz Wurz and the chil-| What's there, of course, is piled up dren took the little Indy with them -VeTy neat. But missing pieces indi- when they left, and Nancy was as cate it's been in careless hands and good as her word—she fixed her up | Bence our Sunday set is incomplete, Tike tnew: Now guze into the pan shelf where The next thing they did was to|the tinware’s tucked away, Most take her to the ‘house of Hinky! everything we've bought is stili, on} Dinky, the nice littlé man who nod-| hand, but my, oh my, oh my, the; | ded his head all the time, “Oh, oh, oh! Are you alive?” } bail in 1910 and onlysrecently landed jeried the little dancer joyously wnen ! in jail. ‘she saw him “I thought the little | jboy pulled your head off and that BASEBALL FANS TO TRAIN | ts thing. ADVERTISING | Have you ever stepped out into the world, friendless and hungry, just because your’ wife was spring clean- ing? Then make' your wife read our articles on how toy!make spring cleaning painless. They really start next issue, and with them will be a! complete history of the origin of this evil, | SOCIETY | In Rome, a deaf and dumb man is in jail because the cops say he has at least 20 wives, Without fear of contradiction we say 20 wives 1s enough to make any man deaf and dumb. SPORTS A school burned in New Orleans so that afternoon the 500 boys and girls went to see Babe Ruth knock a home run, and he did. Christmas comes every year, but such a. day, as this one was seldom arrives FDITORIAL: Eskimos pay the‘dodteriin advance. If the patient dies the dottor re- funds the money. But just the same you couldn’t call this a case of money back if not satisfied. FASHIONS Printed voile, or gingham, or somo thing, makes an exquisite little sum- mer frock, but doesn’t cost enough to be very chic. AUTO HELRS Tires may be changed easily by smoking a cigaret while some me- chanic frgm a garage does the work. EAUTY SECRETS If you want to make a pug nose: pointed and dont mind snoring sleep with a clothespin clamped over the nose. q : ETIQUETTE Talking back to a woman than your wife is not polite WEATHER 2 We don’t know and you don't eith- er. other CARST AID There used to be twelve glasses | dents would make it seem as plainj with silver—silver dust scattered as day that tots had used the pieces in their band. Our silverware, though shining bright, will never look the same, It’s full of bends not there when it was made. The causes you might think of, very frankly, would be lame, com- pared to where the blame is really laid, All told, you'll find our dishes~in a very*banged-up state, The reason lies in who has been involved. A tiny four-year youngstér has been wiping them of late. And, knowing that, the’ mystery is. solved, (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | Women Support .National Garden A restaurant was. dynamited in you were dead.” “I was made that way,” nodded Hinky Dinky happily, “ond if, yon{ taurant steaks were badly bent. will marry me, you can take my \head off whenever you like.” “Of course I will,” said the little dancer. “I mean marry you.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) “Too much money makes us un- happy because we can’t get it. While Dempsey is hunting for a fight he should be careful to find one. he won’t lose right away. ' I Tom Sims Says. | a P In London, two men married the same nurse. Anyway, both need one. i To the pure all things are pure, Seon but to the simple all things are com- plicated. As the presidential candidates spread thqir political bunk so will they be in it dyring election. If golf interferes with your work get a job as bogs, Fire swept a broom factory in | Oklahoma, and no doubt several res- j Week Movement .: : Washington,’ April 1—Garden week, the second national event of its, kind, thas been set for April 2u to 26 by the general federation of womens clubs. pictures will contribute to the effort of the campaign. Mrs. John D. Sherman, chairman of the department of aoplied educa- tion of the, federation, who, has been nominated by Colorado, her home state for the presidency ef the fed- eration at the bi-ennial election in Los Angeles in June, has announced | the endorsement of the movement | by President Coolidge and Secretary Hoover, and'thaf‘the Bureau of Ed- ueation has asked schools to empha- New York. ‘ The longest jump on record is re- ‘ported in Chicago, ‘A man jumped size the work in their study on Wednesday. -' ~The program as, outlined by the Church and mosion |. Then\Mr. Dinwiddie did an imp- He inserted a disk in the victrola, and at once they be- gan to jazz, hardly conscious of the ‘Pransition, ¥ Ve V4 es uA “Miss Darling was executing what stre called the wood-nymph’s dance.” Pert) At nine o'clock the moon was on the lake, and several couples, an- ‘mouncing their need of exercise, went out in boats. ‘- Clavering rowed with long swift "strokes until the others were ,far behind. Mary, muffed in a warm white coat and with a scarf twisted round her head like an Oriental turban, lay-on a pile of cushions in the bottom of the boat, her head against the seat. She had the sen- sation of floating in space. From the middle of the lake the forest on every side was a mass of shad- ows, and nothing was visible but that high vast firmament sprinkled iby the arrogant moon. The great ;silver disk, which; Mary mur- \mured, looked like the tomb of ‘dead gods, ceemed to challenge, ‘mortals as well as planets to deny !that he was lord of all, and that jeven human emotions must dwin- {@le‘under his splendor, | “The moon is so -tmpersonal,” ;she sighed. “I wonder why the tpoets have made go much of it? \I’'m sure it cares nothing about lovers —less about poets— and |thinks the old days, when the world was a heaving splitting cha- ps, and glaciers were tearing what | Was ‘already made, of it ta bits, {were vastly superior to the fin- ished perfection of form toda: Like all old things. If it has th {gods in there,.no doubt it wakes ‘them up periodically to remind them how mucia better tnings were mn their fime. Myself, I prefer the \eun. / It is. far. more glamoring.” “That is because you don’t look lt in the eye,” eafd Clavering, sinil- Ing down on her. “You ‘really don’t know it half 48 well, and endow it with all-sorts of mysterious attri- butes. 1 think I prefer the moon, because i fe inimitable, You can planting sugge: Pelubs .. . Every, civic ‘organization has -beén i ls send tree day programs and tree tions: to schools and v - counterfeit the ght and warmth and heat of the sun, and even its Clavering and Mary walked to) coi¢r But silver is used to’ de- scribe the complexion ofthe moon only for want of a better word, It is neither silver nor white, but is the result of some mysterious al. chemy known only to itself. And its temperature does not affect our bodies at all. You cannot deny that it has exercised a most be- 9 neficent effect on the spirits of lovers and poets for all thé centu- ties we know of. Every pair of lovers has some cherished ‘memo- ries of moonlight, and poets’ would (probably have starved without ita, , aid. It {g a most benevolent old” god, and the one thing connected with Earth that doesn’t mind work. ing overtime.” “I'm sure {t must be frayed at the edges and hollow at the core. And when it is/in the three-quar- ters it looks exactly like a fish that has lost its platter.” : “If you continue to insult the moon, I shall take you back to camp and ask Minor to teach you how to jazz.” “I love the moon,” said ‘Mary contentedly, and pushing a cush- jon between her head and the ' sharp edge of the seat, “I'd like to stay out all night.” They continued to talk nonsense for a while and then fell silent. When the boat was almost at. the head of the lake Clavering turned it into a long water lune where: the maples met overhead@'dnd the low soft leaves kept up a continual whispering. It was as dark as a tunnel, but he knew every inch. of the way” and presently shot out Into another lake, small enough :for its shores to be sharply outlined under the full Hght of the moon,” which appeared to have poised it self directly overhead. Here it was less silent than of the larger lake. There was a cho rus of frogs among the lily pada an owl hooted wistfully in the for est, and they heard an angry snori from the underbrush, followed by.¥ a trampling retreat. “I fancy if we had Hngered quiet: ly in ¢hat passage we should have, seen deer drinking from that patch of sward over there,” safd Claver- ing. deer.” “But I was not thinking of “What were you thinking of?” “Why—you—in a way, I suppose. Ift.I was thinking at all. I was merely filled with a vast content. God! I-have found more than I ever, dreamed any man could im- agine he wanted. Vastly more than any man’s deserts. It is an aston- ishing thing for a man to be able to say.” Mary sat up suddenly. “Be care- ful. A little superstition is a good thing to keep in one’s bag of pre- cautions.” “I feel:good enough to' disdain it. Of course I may be struck by light- ning tomorrow, or the car may turn turtle when we go down to be married, but I refuse to contem- plate anything of the sort. I feel as arrogant as that moon up there, who may have all the gods inside him, and do not mind proclaiming aloud that earth is heaven.” “Well—it She was not su- perstitious herself, but she was suddenly invaded by a sinister in- explicable fear, and smiled the more brightly to conceal it. But she lowered , her eyelids and glanced hastily about her, wonder- ing if an enemy could be hiding in those dark woods. She was not consctous of possessing,.enemies venomous enough to sinate her, but she knew little of Claver- ing’s life after all, and he was the sort of man who must inspire hi as well as love . . . danger suredly was lurking somewhere . it seemed to -wash against her brain, carrying its message. . . . But there were no wild beasts in the Adirondacks, nor even reptiles, . - . Nora sound. The ow! had given up his attempt to entice his lady out for a rendezvous and the frogs had paused for breath. There was not the faintest rustle in the forest except those eternally whis- pering leaves and the faint surging tide in the tree-tops, That ugly in- vading fear was still in her eyes as she met his, 5 “What is the matter?” Re asked. “You look trightened.” “Il am a lttle—I have a curious feeling of uneasiness—as if some. thing were going to happen.” “Out of the depths of the hollow gloom, " On her soul's bare sands she heard it boom, « 3 The measured tide of the sea of doom,’” 4 ‘ he quoted lightly. “I fancy when ‘one is too happy, the jealous god: run the quickellver of| oar Kttle spiritual barometers dawn for a moment, merely to remind us that we are'mortals after all.” The shadow on her {gce lifted, and she smiled inte ardent eyes. bi ef ‘Ah, Mary!” he ‘whispered. “Mary!” a3 (To Be Contigued), — a fedgtatien ides in to every phase of | asked to co-operate in’ the worky/Ac- gardening. Friday is tree day :and| cording-to ‘reports:to the fede: the American Tree Association- will jon, school gardens in New York City last year produced food valued at $33,000 and: that, city is considéred one in_ which, gardening; conditions are the hardest. - > Bese - ”