Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - - - Publisher ‘oreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - . - = : Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BUR? DETROIT Kresge Bldg. 1S AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave, Bldg. iawn ms aac. SERN (TR rang oa zs ar | MEMBER OF THE ASSOC ED PRESS | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or | republication of all news d ches credited to it or not | otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub-| lished herein. | All rights of republication of special dispatches herein | are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE 1 Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) caenitcrantr ones Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota : @ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER _ (Established 1873) N ADVANCE (Official City, State and County Newspaper) MUNICIPAL SURVE BENEFICIAL The unprecedented increases in the cost of government whether local, state or national, has not only arrested publi attention but in many instances has brought about inves gations by civic bodies, businessmen and where community public spirit has lagged, the press has filled the breach. “From coast to coast, it has been felt that it 1s high time to bring about some moderation in the cost of public service ‘without impairing its efficiency or decreasing its scope for usefulness, : The federal government has pointed out that it costs $100 or more for each man, woman and child to operate the | various governm ] agencies presumably designed for their welfare. This is as much, if not more than many fam- ilies are receiving in income for each family member. Since ‘the beginning of the world war, national government ex- penses have nearly quadrupled, the cost of state adminis trations has more than doubled and municipal government has better than trebled. The easy sale of tax-exempt gov- ernment bonds has given rise to a huge public debt for all kinds of improvements. It should be recalled also that these public improvements are being made when the cost of labor -and materials were or are at the peak; and that when the * amortization of these debts comes the situation may be re- - versed. In brief, while the dollar is not worth a hundred cents as compared to 1913, time may come when it shall be {again back to the old level. This will mean that the labor- * ing man must sweat and toil the harder to pay the govern- ment bill for improvements that were bought when prices and wages were high. j Dissatisfaction with governmental processes is not a few thing. Many can still remember the wave of reform that swept over the country 20 years ago, and how cities vied with each other to secure a new deal in the shape of a com- } mission form of city government. The press was most active _ in this campaign. During the same period another set of men were looking into the business methods in vogue in all branches of the! government. Bureaus of municipal research financed by private funds sprang up everywhere following the footsteps of the New York bureau of municipal research. Philadel- phia, Dayton, Cleveland, Chicago, Cincinnati, Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis and a score of others, had such institu- tions which looked into every city department and pointed out better processes of doing business and yet on the same plane of efficiency as prevailed in private enterprise. : They issued hundreds of reports which the press printed . either in full or made large extracts therefrom. President Taft’s efficiency and economy commission looked after the Washington departments and laid the foundation for the in- stallation of the budget system by President Harding. Pro- : per budget and business procedure was demanded every- where. The only persons who objected to a thorough airing - of their delinquencies were the inefficient and untit public ser- vants. As was true in those days, it is true today and will = always be so. No one wishes to be labeled as incompetent, ; but shall the employe’s pride be spared at the expense of = the success or failure of the employer's business. And, in what respect is the public servant more immune or above 2 criticism than the servant of a private concern? Does the . fact that the many pockets of the taxpayers pay his tion. What is the situation in many cities today. = Rochester, ” ported by every Turn to newspaper in the city is searching every nook of the city offices to show the need and desirability of changing the government from a mayor plan to a city man- This is being done under the leadership of no Nowhere is there any prattling about smirching the fair name of the city and its : ager: form. less a man than George Eastman. Then turn to Kans: there, and finally get a complete. st pired' in Cincinnati within the year. -<published concerning that of Ci: people might have apoplexy. ® citizens have charged Governor 2 an efficiency expert to improve the % state offices. It is a pity that the 3 Jaw for by all means it should have been, the governor in this measure. 5 small, are awake to the si and honest desire as a r cheaper government, they will irrespective of party affilia. = tions say to him, indirectly that the legislature denied you the privilege of funds. If money is needed, le - tting directly from state rae it will come back us contribute a bit because others in the state in time ernment.” The governor is on supported by businessmen as a businessman, w as to, Ene Doubtless, the wor! iie-spirited citizens, ‘direct their attention to ¢ me . tention must be ‘directed to existing conditions and_publi salary alter the situation? We fail to discover any distinc- N. Y., and we find that a body of citizens sup- s City and see what is happening atement ‘of what trans- Should the same things =-be said of our city government that have been printed and ncinnati, some of our good Finally, how. many of our Sorlie with casting reflec- tions on the fair name of North Dakota because he desired business methods of: the bill was not enacted into and every clear- thinking and public spirited citizen should have supported If the businessmen, large and ituation ‘and the Governor’s earnest business man to get better and “How can we help you get the same results us and all through a more economical gov- the right track and should be means of securing public betterment. should be undertaken by a body of pub- but before this is done, some one must the need of betterment. Public at- That is dren and their parents be exposed to the ravages of an epi- demic of contagious disease due to the futile effort of an on their streets, in their homes and in their daily lives more ‘than they want the good opinion of an outside world, which vives at best but scant attention, to conditions prevailing elsewhere. Finally, by what process of logic is it proper to point out deficiencies in police, health and school work and not do the same thing with regard to other branches of the city government? In what pre-immunity bath have they been dipped? It is the propery function of a newspaper to tell its readers all about all branches of government, city, state and national. It would be remiss in its duty to itself and to the public to do otherwise. The Tribune believes it owes a sol- emn duty to the people to direct their attention to civic con- ditions. It will not shirk that duty nor shall it be swerved one iota despite threat or recriminations or misrepresenta- tion of i i motive so prove the wisdom of the policy it is now pursuing. THE CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL A World War swept over the land only a year or so after work on the great Confederate Stone Mountain Memorial at a teapot tempest occurs and ridiculous miniature ex- plosion is already sending magnified rumblings through the country, which threaten to disrupt even more seriously prog- ress on one of the most titanie conceptions in sculpture. The interruption is wholly inexcusable and deplorable. ternal strife because of noble convictions, has become the monument of a petty fracas over financial matters between the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, who conceived the heraie de- sign, and the Stone Mountain Memorial Association, which is organizing and fiance ae project. The brain of Gutzon Borglum is responsible for the colossal ideal of cutting in bas relief the granite panorama of a group of Confederate leaders massed on horseback with a background of marching troops flowing across the moun- tainside for nearly a quarter of a mile. His audacity of conception is a$ great as that of one sculptor, architect. painter, and engineer, Michelangelo, who some four centur- ies ago executed on the Sistine Chapel ceiling one of the most majestic artistic spectacles of any time. Yet thi Michelangelo had to paint practically every square inch of brush—an almost insuperably gigantic labor, covering four long years and leaving him physically disabled. And why? Because he was a rather irascible, not get along with his own workmen, and so had to work alone. ‘ Now, we are not trying to draw any parallel; but it should be the eupreme consideration. He is a man of independent, and not always popular opinion. in no position to judge. But certainly one can appreciate hi attitude in incriminating himself by hand mar the conception of his brain and soul. inefficient health department? And, all this, because a news- | | paper should not call their attention thereto because it might | lreflect on the fair name of the city? People want to be safe | And, the future should not only justify | Atlanta had begun, and cessation was inevitable. But now | A monument intended to memoralize the ideals of the | leaders of a lost cause, of men engaged in the bitterest fra- | the ten thousand or so square feet with his own hand and | sardonic genius who could | does seem as though, in a work of art, the artist and his idea | 4 Mr. Borglum is one! of the foremost sculptors of our day, and probably the most | competent to execute an equestrian statue of this magnitude. Whether or not he is at fault in the present squabble we are | destroying the models for his great work, rather than let a less understanding, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | DAVIS, WHY DO You SMOKE A PIPE AROUND HERE THAT MAKES SUCH A | DiSCusTING SoOUNe WHEN | Nou DRAW ON (T F | =e | | GEE, DO YOU ALow A LITTLS | THING. CLIKS THAT TO { we | | i | i . e : The Tangle LETTER FROM MRS. JOSEPH) not with the dead. It is very easy GRAVES HAMILTON TO MRS. | for those who have lost loved ones LESLIE PRESCOTT, to remember that. CONTINUED. I want to say a few words to you, | Dearest daughter, now that I am| my daughter, about your husband. starting away from you I am won-|I don’t think you understand him as ing if 1 am doing right. you should. ‘That sounds bromidic,| ince I decided to go to Karl so| docs it not? Girls have such ro- stily, J have been so busy with| mantic ideals they never seem to ‘getting my clothes and other ma-| realize that while romance is very {terial things ready for the journey | beautiful in frequent interludes, one \that I have not stopped to think of | can not live it day by day for a long what it might mean to leave you. I| while. Life insists upon the prac- m feeling today that I ought toj tical. y at home and help you with| John has a great load on his those blessed babies. |shoulders. You must remember, Leslie, that in taking over that vast steel mill that your father left, he Of course, dear Leslie, that is all) nonsense, I had no one to help me| ‘when I was bringing you and your| took over something that he knew | square mile. The average city dens Are presented bere in order that || New Orleans—any one of them our readers may have both eldes || ing in one squa ile. oer (eportant leaues which are j] ve one Sanare mi in the press o ona belng dlacutend ebieiDh human What can life be where resembles nothing so much as mush room spawn, pressed between gre gray walls where a bit of sunligh is a blessing? In the littered streets on a day you see the baby buggies line up on the sunny side and on the ho' THE SENTIMENTAL SEX | cones (Baltimore Sun) A he-man, as everybody knows, stern and harddboiled creature vith ‘one eye on tie main chance and a gystem wholly free of senti- mentalism. Hear him as he holds forth con- cerning matrimony. “I don’t care what people say about her, and I don't care what her people may be. The people who criticize her are home-made liars, and she isnt re-| spons ble for her family. She is good and sweet, and I’m going fo 2) Oe ha marry her and ‘be good to her.” Up in a window blooms a_ brigh! That was the hard-boiled chap| geranium, For those within and fo! signing off. The women, as everybody knows, are gentle and impractical creat- ures who yearn for love and noth- ing more. Give them a promise of devotion and the simple creatures | will follow one to the end of the earth. Hear one of their number speak- ing in confidence concerning the great adventure: “T just don’t know what to do,” says she. “I’m going to ‘get marriec| because I want a ‘home and somebody to care, for mo; but I can't decide between Jack and Eob. Jack is a dear, ibut if I marry him I'll have to j ibe Gh CR Reman geinanly out |Pueneuorbers andiday, workers alc! ‘of touch with civilization. Bob |'"8 Pena is woncrful, tod, and ‘he lives in town and enjoys the things I enjoy. But he’s poor, and we'd be cramped in some tiny apartment and I'd feel under obligation to keep my job and help pay expenses. If Bob had Jack's money I'd marry him in a minute; and if Jack lived in town, wherel could’ keep in on the shady side. Motherhood i: the chief industry of the ty, a breath of free life. along, and in poverty such as on sees in these East Side tenements scrawny geranium may be as a fiel of roses. the Metropolitan Opera. Avenue. sleep on the floor. nings when the workers of, which may evolve a president, about my eyes right now, and I must decide to do something while I ‘have a chance. It's just simply frightful to be in love this way and not know held a celebration, a feature which was the burning of the mor! LITTLE strong: and practical man to lean { NECESSARILY MEAN SHE IQN/‘T MARRIED _@ 7. New York, March 11.—The most congested district of New York is comprised of the six blocks that lie within Avenues D and E apd Third and Ninth stree' Thirty- ic lethargy must be’ aroused -to the point of action. the function and the duty of ev the name. And, that is what The . tends ‘to continue to. do. . Would the items of crime in the cit; _ suppress all news lh ailed to cope wt! want schools mn or 2 dilapi D Besar a \ newspaper worthy of ibune is doing and in- people desire that it while.an ineffi held up and their homes rendered unsafe? rendered unsafe through dated condition? Shall chil- three thousand humans, live in that small area, They gre mostly Rus- sian Jews, Irish and Italian, the pro- portion being in that order. | How- ever, just about every nation of the rth is represented in the district. A few statistics may help you to realize the congestion in which, these peoples live. They avi 185 peo- ple to the acre or 470; to the the crooks and tt we B ity is 17,840 per square mile. them in Alice's case. Alwa and knowing that your and my for- y J ‘ a h y_ for: \ Editorial Review y iahete figures atlkcnonee added) thought tortures me that I might| tune was at stake, he has been na- ll) tenes oe significance if yon can picture the; have in some way averted that|turally more afraid of doing the i Pate e reproduced | e ele population of Milwaukee or. Wail 1) eee ry eee eee ney [| ington, or Newark, or Cincinnati, of liv- are packed together in a mass that cool summer days you will see them lined district. Besides being New York’s most con- gested community this area probably many who pass it is a shrine of beau- For where so many crowd together poverty tags Greater joy lies in a sec- ond-hand phonograph than in all of A bright new shawl may be worth more, re- latively, than all the finery of Fifth However, there are some windows in which no geraniums bloom. There. are flats so crowded that some must In some instances beds are oc@upied 24 hours each day, In the mornings and-jn the eve- re on their way to and from their homes the streets teem with the milling throng. Watch them pass, human spawn out statesman, a merchant prince, a great man of letters—or an arch criminal. Anything is likely to incubate be- Hettinger, N. D., March 11.—Odd Fellows and Rebekah lodges, having paid all indebtedness on their hall, of JOE | ter up. I made my mistake: | nothing about. He has had to learn d knows I have had to pay this great business as he wént along, fa) C tragedy—yet even now I ‘gan't put| wrong’ thing than he would have my. firiger on the place whefe I made|been if he were managing the the grievous error. finances of strangers. : »| 1am afraid that I will never forget| I don’t think your father however, the last words of my girl over the! had the slightest doubt of John’s telephone. I wake up in the night|ability to go through with it, and 5! with my heart beating fast as I hear| neither have I, but, Leslie, you must ‘I them. When I am driving through |do your share. ;|the streets on the peculiarly peace-|| Remember this, dear, men ate ful errands of shopping or calling, I| complex animals. They work and © worry and strain and stand staunch until all at once they drop every- thing for a moment and try to forget, and in this forgetting they want to include everything and everybody. They seem to want to run amuck among l:fe’s foolishness for a little while. £ (Copyright, 1925, NEA Serviee, Inc.) have the great desire to tell chauffeur to hurry—hurry for I f as though I must get to! Alice im- mediately. [ find myself in that same state of mind as I was that fateful morning when I drove hastily to Karl's house to find her dead. I know I must not think of it, for I have to live with living people and TO (NSN SAYS Scientist claims he can add 60 years to life. Probably take you that long to pay his bifl. my d t Ss can boast the highest birth rate of any community in America. ing it is better and you tell the truth. Seattle man picked up the phone. Tried to flirt with central. Judge fined him. One time he had the wrong number. C) a id One law obeyed by the bootleggers is that of supply and demand, The only way to save our pedes- ‘ trians is to let them start dressing 4 was| like traffic cops. 5 Years ago getting arré considered a masculine trait, “Work .is the only road to suc- cess,” writes a successful man and ruins many,a hope. (Copyright; 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Due to a food shortage, Canadian bears are eating porcupines, so won't have to brush their teeth. Thirty camels have arrived from ‘Australia. If the circus tires of ‘them they can be sold to bootleggers for mascots. a ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON y ~St. Louis doctor says 40 is the idea) age for love, Wonder how old] he is? We would,say about 40. posal bay A man tells us he kept his wife 2 | under his nose until one day she got mad and punched him on it. “Where are we * going?” Fine laces are worth their weight woods. touch with mother and all of |hind those great gray tenement|in gold. Fine weather is worth its} “I've got to stat spring going,”| So into Ragsy Land stepped the my friends, I wouldn't ask for | Walls. weight in coal. answered the Hare, “It’s too silly| visitors. = ever pee mes —JAMES W. DEAN. the way things hold back and hold| “Hello,” said a sleepy voice. “Is “A girl has an awful har Los Angeles chorus girl got $5000| back unless someone comes along| spring here : time. I'm getting wrinkles LODGES BURN MORTGAGE for a broken heart. No telling what | and gives them a push. I have to| And there stood Mister Tatters she would have gotten if she had broken her leg. ; and the Ragsies.” Contractor in Indiana got caught t- | stealing chickens. Maybe he intend- spring?’ asked Nick. “I which one to take.” : gage. ed teaching them to lay bricks. they lived under the ground.” " Dear, trusting unsophisticated “They do,” .answered the March creatures; how sorely they need a| @——~~———__-__--@ | Ghost near Fort Worth, Tex., was| Hare. “And that’s all the more rea: a horse. Guess that son for them getting busy. 8 a night- THE MARCH HARE WAKENS THE RAGSIES asked Nancy as the March Hare galloped ‘along over the’ meadow toward the give several people pushes. First of all I have to get after Mister Tatters “What do-they have to do with thought Spring, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1925 Don’t Gamble in Marks or Francs‘ ‘By Chester H. Rowell “revaluation” of old bonds or government has shown courage ping up the franc. Don’t sell francs for a fall. can prevent. Don’t buy them for a rise. these securities that_the prese based. which are limited by the Dawe can from time to time export whole paper cost of the war. wealth to others. mans, but good for Germany. Its injuries cannot now be not going to be given up. riot. of France. Now ‘both are reaping the thousand billion for one, is now up to par, while the French francs, hav- ing gone down to about one-fourth par, can never be ‘stabilized at much above that level. But France has at last learned the most vital lésson of all. Its politi- cians are finally beginning to tell the people the truth—something they never do until’all the lies are exhausted. ‘ Answering critics who scolded the government for allowing capital to flee the country, Herriot asked any- one who knew how to prevent it to give him the benefit of that knowl- edge. A sarcastic observer might reply: “Use the methods you prescribed for Germany under the same circum- stances.” But the French have now begun to learn that you can not reverse the flow of economic forces by criminal] laws in either “Germany or France. STILL A MAN- KILLING JOB 4 President Coolidge does not want anything done to make his job easier, He is fortunate in age, strength and temperament, and thinks he can stand it. But is that not thé very: reason for choosing this time to consider the problem? It ts too delicate a mat- ter to take up when it is needed. The best time to consider how to keep the presidency from being @ man-killing job ig when there is a man in it whom it will not kill. One quarter of the twentieth cen- tury is already gone, and the presi- dency has killed most ‘of its in- cumbents during that entire period. 1 killed Harding and Wilson, and shortened the life of Roosevelt. ‘Taft was saved by..the fortund of Don’t speculate on German bonds or French francs. German government warns against counting on any further best men in France, aided by some With the exception of reparations payments, The human cost was terrific. cultured: middle class of Germany and transferred their cy The securities, and the French and resourcefulness in prop- They will not collapse, if the stronger ones in America, You are not safe in betting on more confidence in them than Herriot has. Let them alone! If you must gamble, go to Monte Carlo. No great revaluation of German bonds and private securi- ties is likely, because it is precisely on the devaluation of nt soundness of Germany is transfers of s plan to whatever Germany without endangering the ex- ~ change, Germany has its war financing behind it. It did perforce what no nation has dared to voluntarily. It made what amounted to a wholesale capital levy, and wiped out its internal debts, public and private, including the It impoverished the whole But it cleared the way for Germany. It was bad for Ger- undone, and its ‘benefits are France is in the reverse position. “The French govern- ment is poor, in a country that is rich,” said Premier Her- Germany looked out for Germany, at the expense of Ger- mans. France has looked out for Frenchmen at the expense consequences. One of them is that the German mark, after having gone down to a 2 sherk Jo shed Merete serving only one term, at a compara- tively quiet time, and Coolidge, so far, is tough. But,a job which so far this cen- tury has killed every man in it who served a maximum term, and has bgen survived by only two, one of whom served only four years, and the other of whom has not yet served two, is a man-killing job, ARE THEY REALLY THAT BAD? “The ultimate fat-head” is what a writer in Vanity Fair calls the ficti- tious character at whom many pur- veyors of public entertrinment, news and instruction set the’: aim.* This imaginary person, who has legs sense than any one whom the purveyor in question personally knows, is the one you must “write down” or “play down” or “speak down” to. Hence the flood of drivel, for which he is the supposed market. The comic journal’s si ical. explana- tion is that there is no such person, but that the editors, directors and orators who condescend to him are really addressing their own reflec- tions. Which is, of course, only the quip discourteous. ". But, more seriously, are the peo- ple really as stupid as. those who play'down to them pretend? Are any politician’s constituents half as foolish as his speeches to them indicate he thinks they are? Is even a “movie” audience as ar- rested’ in mental development as the stuff they are fed’ implies? And are ‘the subscribers of ‘any newspaper as half-witted as some editors treat them? For the sur- » vival of democracy, let us hope not. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) 7 Mr. and Mrs. Jones learned that the heart is a pump, eonsisting of several cavities which receive the blood brought from all parts of the body through’ a system of, tubes known aa veins and arteries. It is made up of a mass of mus- cles, These. enclose several cham- bers. When the muscles contract they force the blood out of the heart. Each .chamber of the heart is equipped with valves which keep the blood moving in the right di- rection. ¥ Much of. the heart trouble is the result of these valves failing to work properly. . Many., disorders of the body affect these valves. The edges of the small pieces. of tissue, com- posing the valyes,, may become pit- ted, which prevents them from clos- ever saw. Hadn't been washed or combed for months and he'd slept so long he could scarcely get pis eyes open, “Ig Mister Tatters up?” asked the March Hare sharply. “Just*getting up now,” yawned the Ragsie. “Come on in.” . looking sleepler and grimier ‘even than the one who had door. “Well I should say so,” said the March Hare. “The ‘robins and ‘blue birds hhve heen “bere for a week. ‘And here ou. and ‘your Ragsies -| haven't even’ started to push the clover up through the ground yet: You'll have to get buay, at once, Mis- ter Tatters. ‘Get all the roots un- -| packed down under the ground here, jswered the apont —_—_-——_—_—_4| mare. Anyway, it was horse on| starts under the ground.” ae them. By and by they came to the place — WEN A WOMAN SAYS SHE ‘by the dog-wood tree where a cave: | In New York \| hS CONSTANTLY LOOKING. Boston woman divorced, Husband| like place led straight down into the o—_—_—___ —___-»— +! FORA HUSBAND IT shot at her with a shotgun. It real-| earth. ly was the parting shot. “Down this they went and by and Lightning hit a statue in London, “Knoek,” anid the March Hare, where maybe stattes think evil thoughts. A barber tells us he is finding bobbed Wair a°short cut to wealth. | March Hare, Kick!” i ‘So the Twins kicked. By and by they heard someont say. “Hi-ho-hom! What's’ that noise Go and see, Spudsy.’ s Three wrecked fishermen off the Atlantic coast used shirts for sig- nals. Not’ always best to keep your shirt on, - ¢ ying business is acha ' by they came to’ little wooden door, The Twins jumped off and knocked asleep. /It's .a. good thing J came, opened! ‘Keep on 3 ‘And suddenly the door was and business believes:it., Keep say~ by the raggediest little. Ragsy -you| and start pushing green things up. I hope you didn’t forget the snow- drops this ‘year.” “No,” said the little’ ragged fairy fellow. “I told one of my men to set his, alarm clock so'he could waken extra early and attend to the snow- dro} FABLES ON HEALTH FUNCTION OF THE HEART ing tightly, and the blood, instead of passing out of the heart, as it should, may remain in the heart, or may run into another chamber. Every automobile owner knows what poorly seated valves do to his gas and oil, Often, also, the muscles’ of the heart become weak, and the pump- ing is not strong enough to force the blood to the limbs farthest from the heart. The blood is a fluid, in which floats the cargo of food and other body. requisites. Passing through the lungs this blood picks up oxygen. In the stomach and intestines it picks up food. Along through the body the blood picks up.the worn-out cells and im- purities, and carries them to the proper organs for expulsion, a rolled out of bed and rushed for the door. “Farmer Greenway is digging his garden,” said the March Hare, “and he’ll- be. putting. his seeds in before long. Mix plenty of red paint for the beets’ and radishes and yellow 4 paint: for. .the.-carrote,” advised the March. Hare. “Never fear!” said Mister Tatters who wi ide awake now. “We'll attend to.everything. But it’s a.good thing you canie,; Mister Hare, or we * would have slept all summer.” : (To. Be Continued) | (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Ine.) AT ey hought , Belicve on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house—Acts 16:31. aie [Faith lights, us through the. dark to victory.—Siz W. Davenant, CUT THIS Send. this ad-and.ten cents to Foley & Co,, 2885 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Il, writing your name and address OUT—IT IS WORTH MONEY ps.” 5 “Well, I'm. glad. of that,” said the March | Hare, “The snow-drops should have been out two weeks ago.” “Go and. get washed in the creek,” called Mister Tatters to all the little e ragged fairies around him. “Spring 2 is here and the-tce is.gone,. Then hurry’ back and: help me, to get: the, roots. unpac hee a “Yes, sirl” they das they, all clearly. You will receive a sample bottle of FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND for coughs, colds z> and hoarseness, also sample peck- ayes of FOLEY PILLS, a: diuretic stimulant for the kidneys, and fe LEY CATHARTIC: TABLETS for con- - stipation and bitiousness. Thése de- pendable remedies are free from ‘op- jiatés' and have helped milbions: of people. Try theml. . hav. hi i \ a i | | 14 é »)