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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUN Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - 3 3 Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Foreign Representatives G: LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - . Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | Kresge 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) we. otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub-| Its _ pe | charte ty jibe to appoint the county attorney, | | she cif, engineer aud all other ot lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ficials. All will be answerable to the SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVA Daily by carrier, per year..... Bones Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . .. 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. i ed to work together for the govu j jof the county instead | political friends lunes | ing politicians to county off who ire deputies to do the w hot to mention ti THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) tent men would be selected. The ave to produce results. It is the (Official City, State and County Newspaper) jcity-manager plan under another | EMPLOYE REPRESENTATION Surveying the operation during the past four years of its plan of employe representation, the ‘Pennsylvania Railroad System reports that as a successful method of establishing and maintaining cooperation between management and men| the plan has passed beyond the experimental stage and is | now an accomplished fact. Based on the fundamental! idea | ” wages and | working conditions must be settled by joint action of em- ployers and employed, the plan has probably gone much fur- ther than most other industrial relations plans in that final that every important question affecting employ decisions are largely joint decisions. Unquestionably some program for achieving industrial | is necessary for national progress and public welfare. Labor unions are today properly considered essential in the struggle of} workers for fair wages and working conditions, but they are | essentially militant organizations. Supplemented by asso- ciations or conferences composed jointly of employers and employes, with emphasis placed on common interests rather | than divergent aims, an increased sense of personal dignity | and responsibility, and greater pride and interest in the day’s | pe Cooperation must be substituted for conflict. : work should result. velopment of large scale indus sonal dignity. By giving the employe a voice in affairs of mutual in- 4 : terest to management and men, through regularly elected | representatives, some one thousand concerns in the United States are attempting to find a substitute for that former} personal contact when grievances could be aired directly | with the boss. Whether the attempt is always successful is a question. | Certainly there are instances where employe organizations have been fostered by the management chiefly to prevent unionization in an industry, and the subsidized company as- sociations resulting are a sorry travesty on the flaunted in- dustrial democracy they herald. Hoodwinking the working- man with the sop of company benefits and entertainment, the representatives frequently become mere acquiescent pawns. But where the plan is an honest effort at cooperation based on square dealing and mutual confidence of both man- agement and men, the first step in an approach to a more} democratic industrial order has been taken. USING FOREST “I NTERE t An authority on forestry says that out of 1,000 to 2,000 ‘al trees planted per acre on a nursery area only about 500 would survive, and only 150 per acre would eventially attain ; a diameter of one foot. It would therefore be necessary to plant seven or eight seedlings to’ produce the average saw log, and it is probable that a tree 150 years old had originally 1,000 or more companions that perished. The average age of trees cut for pulpwood is 80 years, and a pine saw log 100 years or more. hot meet the need of reforestation. In- addition to artificial planting, therefore, this forester = suggests that existing forests should be treated as “capita! stock” and that in lumbering operations only the annual “in- = terest” should be used. This would be an amount of wood from the whole area equal to the year’s total growth in all the forests. $ That is a slightly different method from the one which uses forests as crops to be continuously harvested. and re- newed. It may be a harder method to make effective. it is important to have all these possibilities pointed out to the public again and again. DEMOCRACY IN JAPAN The Japanese revolution which began more than half a century ago nears completion. Autocracy steps down. mocracy wins. After a bitter struggle in Parliament, in which a liberal cabinet was deadlocked with the reactionary House of Peers, the “manhood suffrage” bill was passed. Women are still political ciphers, but otherwise the fran- chise in Japan will now be almost as free as in America. All men over 25 can vote, without property qualification, provided they are not objects of public or private charity. This change is momentous for Japan and may be momen- tous for America. It spreads the vote from less than 200,000 to more than 10,000,000. The ruling class in Japan so far There is no » telling what the attitude may be when the government is “+ subject directly to the will of a populace which, while kindly, courteous and intelligent, is intensely patriotic and ? has been, on the whole, friendly to America. “highly emotional. _ THE FLY borhood club to war on dirt. ou can swat in ife time name | | world, Kansas City goes to the |) i city manager form of government by an overwhe'ming majority. ‘The diift of the large cities to this sys tem is becomign nol land, with nearly a million people, has now been under city ma government for a year, Cincini with over a third of a million, vot-| American minds are about to engage Ct last November to live under the | Great Britain in a trade war in an ame system. Now comes Kansas € manager ‘The fir: ago. Now there a 31 past government as is mé takes this form. Only -.,And it is this personal dignity and interest in his work that the employe must regain. During the proces: ry the pendulum has swung | from the day by day personal contact of the boss and his assistants, working side by side, to the impersonal machin- q ery of elaborate supervisory organizations. Scores of super: visors removes the lowly employe from the d fi who he never sees and never speaks to if he does 4 a cog in the wheel is a monotonous business. One must have some connection with the motivating springs to preserve per- away from thoughts of anytuing. from being foolish’ by the tear of|Edison estates in what others would say. some very promising room in a movie than an overcoat. Du dos because she does understand him, something different from the methods * Having to work is the only cure i ee i for those.worries caused by not hay- _ Plantation in Liberia ing to work. It is bzelieved by sardines and pickle bottles may in-| @dvantageous in h still the desire to become a safe| latex and greatly blower. duction. makes us wish we were young’ partment of Commerce for inves enough to throw rocks again. | gation of new sources of rubber sup- These facts show rather forcibly why it is necessary to develop a farsighted forestry policy for this country. Sim- ~~ ply planting a tree for every tree cut down or destroyed can- ruins your digestion. of those trying to assert themselves| Cessity of doing sometning Lo 1eucce have nothing to assert. a man who had just finished mash- ing his finger with a hammer. wiJl go before it needs repairs is to|@ lend it to a friend. the more liable you are to move to|Cheese Club or by members of it! a sanitarium, | trying to be happy. West 48th street and spring their husband was worth $27,000 to her.| ver the radio or in the theater, Will your wife believe it of you? At present the Cheesers are engag- “Civilian Clothes.” WIP (6509 Met.)-8:15 E. T.—Police| Sound” and won the brown derby for} band concert. Don’t swat the fly.. It’s almost a waste of time. p But clean up rubbish around your premises. Don’t allow | i your neighbor to suffer his to remain dirty. Get your neigh- R. program, anniversary of Battle of| Springtime is a_ time of joy to Appomattox, Civil Wat Songs, etc. |the kids on the East Side. ti Induce your city to keep streets and places of business ‘One garbage pile will breed more flies in a season, than THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Editorial Review _ Comments repruduced tp bili column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. Thsy are presented here in order that our readers, ray bave both aides of important lseues which are being discussed iu the prese of the day. THE COUNTY MANAGER COMING | (Capper’s Weekly) Taxpayers woo realize — that | bout $y per cent of their tax} ney is spent within taeir county, | ld watch the experiment of chester county, New York. | are soon to vote on reating tue office of “cour: | president,” whose duty it will | president” and will be expect for their ov tneir own for This would put an end to elect-} t more comp ounty president” being directly werable to the peopie, woull MORE CITY MANAGERS tate Journal) of the outside ie (Nebrask To the surpr lnspecting a blorids. tree. Upper Right: Harvey estone as he looks with 4 he. Lower right: Edison and tone in conference under palm trees. Center: Henry bord. Ry NEA Service Akron, 0., April 9.—Three great effort to save millions of dollars! yearly to those affected by the high prices of rubber. only a jitt!e smaller than Cin nnati, adopting a city manager tee ainibe They ave Henry Ford, Harvey S.1 charter. Dayton, with about 17. {Firestone and Thomas A, Edison, 000. peaple, =n o ety 0 PeoPle. ch since. the “flood. | To years ago Firestone, promi Tensor Bie were 13 city | Rent tire manufacturer, suggested ag ities in the United Stat one appeared only 13 yee » rubber restriction act, which 347, of which | curtailed production and exportation come into the list in the | of raw product. ar. Such changes in city! This suggestion now has become arely has been abandoned, once | t i of the restriction act by Great Brit- large land holdings in Florida. | “Rubber restrictions this year will | cos prican cur owners leas nd it very li 0,000,000," says. “Every 1 advance in teost of crude rubbey means an add * tional burden of about $75,006,000 7k Jouded upon the American people. j I In the spring a young woman's 80 Per Cent in Tires fancy uxgnay wains to tnoughts of; “About 80 per t of the world’s salads. supply of rubber is grown And, one might add, in the spring} young man’s fancy lightly turns ions of the Far res supply. Righty per cent of consumed in’ Ameri nobile and truck ti y round 14 ¢ the restriction Love is something which makes! that you did kiss her or pound when sorry that you didn’t kiss het came operative Tod. it is eee cent hig nd indications point to Hall, pl The only issue decided in most ar-} further 2 guments is who can argue the best.! Ford, have ay Ibeen ca A foolish man is,one who is kept gations in Florida. nd pote as are growing. On the Ford f Nothing feels mpre disgusted atj/Labelle and on the government ex- extreme vanity than a big foot in| perimental farm near Cocoanut Grove! a little shoe, some varieties of rubber trees, ¢ in a pre — plants and shrubs are grow A straw hat seems to take up more] very encouraging manner. ike three men in Florid When a man thinks a woman! several important sugg n’t understand him it usually is|ing new processes — of 8 Sie now in vogue in the Far E son that a greatly improved method of Pienies are dangerous. Opening|tion is possible and that it may be tening yields of duce-cost of pro- Firestone is determined that Amer- Keep your eyes on the stars and|icans shall produce their own rab- the world will trample on your toes.| ber. He was instrumental in having pig Congress vote an appropriation two A lavender hat on a grown man! Years ago, giving $400,000 to the De- iis ply, and $100,000 to the Department A legislator may grow purple in| of Agriculture for experimental pur- the face with anger, but you never) Poses. see one speechless. He now has a compl a tion in Liberia, on the west co: A You never know what some peo-| Africa, operating a rubber planta! ple think until you make them madjtion and preparing to plant rubber enough to tell the truth. on an extensive scale. “The British restriction act lim- Swallowing insults eventually, its production and exportation to} Just one-half the normal crop,” Fire- od stone s: On the other hand, a great many| “Ameri ns must awaken to the ne= the grip now held by foreign inter- za ests on a commodity so important to Grand Opera was thought up by| our welfare and prosperity.” ah Erase The way to see how far your car | In New York | FORD, FIRESTONE A | RUBBER MON ble. Cleve: il ND EDISON UNITE TO BREAK : YOPOLY NOW HELD BY GREAT BRITAIN “¥ ride, Arthur} ) penny and was But the whirling circle . He edged happy hed up e with | yme ed in line for the f fe at all now| 4 warning, because of the furthering Suenyols And to this end Ford, Firestone clo j and Edison are bending their efforts little friends | to produce rubber in this country on and took hold of the red ho 4 preen mane, The merry-go-round swirled r, wistfully ws the] Ju And| und form and he > production as a! finds that= has been | the sort. sh M 75 per cent of. the this column i nt of personal attivude. fortun | You know, I love Leslie; | have ince the first time! five minutes afte: 1 Jeoked upon her face 1 knew irre- _ * = i vocubly the difference. between pas. fore these babies grow up, either Eu-| the facts on them all in three years. ent years producing Dovotl, Jolone Bre per-| Someone h not one seat was i- the box offi little as $30 in s Fla, for a performance. trees must guarantee a rental of $1000 a m near week for the th Various communities who! had hi ide over many 5 often keeping: neighbors ing a recent conference of the from going 1o court or jail, The tixst] witching, more Ed made woman to hold such a re, Minnie Curto, Bellevue Hospital| ‘fo sit with her in the same room and not be able to put my hands on once the “Gas House? district and in| her dark hair or to kiss her when its day the retreat of some of the! I come in city’s toughest gangsters. She presides over what was able thrown ashore when race the h a telephone line whic friends anyw! million telephone before the boat is docked, make hotel reservations ce, Ine.) PROM JOHN ALDEN ‘OTT TO SYDNEY CAR- hin TON—CONTINUED ding with heve is} fathom Thas a f life just « char z th h to live in the nd joke und meet ends, but nothi Now I you, Sy simply impossible sit xy MOK always loved” h jTsaw her. Within ed} sion and love, suid ut! Goethe, that “the beautiful is great- pen must contain good.” It is the Yet the producer! with love and passion, You on without love, but you love without the high- est and most glo: fied of* passion. the to want my of | id all rowing, mo: is} she was n | plain hell, Syd. ges to fortune.” because they or! nnde. their weaknesses, BAN. It is perfectly astonishing, Syd, how implacably unforgiving a good clining. too, but the excess is still |tions are on a civilized basis, The] tional’ debts. now I have had another mis h Leslie, Syd. § possibility to acter, She always at I shall look upon; does and when she} ot do anything of me house, is the best that not a said, I think it was er than the good, for the beautiful T have hardly ince long before her father ne while she has been 2 ‘beautiful, more be- eresting than ever r go out of the house is It it were not for the blooming old steel business I would just light e contains| out for parts unknown, and try to plugged in-| forget her. But Shakespeare) was r home-| right when he said that a “man can talk to] must give host reached by the 16] My two b America y ean} need much of me in’ them, will certainly father's care—one who can and their temptattons, and oe at s EVERETT TRUE — AND T OREANIZEL Ihc rIRST CON. SOUDATION AND TF PUT THROUGH Sone VERY PROFITABLE DEALS. 3h WORKING RIGHT NOW ON A DEAL THAT T.KNOW GOING To TURN THINGS UPSIDEsPOWN IN THe WHOLESALE FIELD} TRADE THAT § WAS To BE RECKON WITH, AND THAT. 1 WAS OUT To SHoW tm GOING To PROVE TO THAT BUA Qr PikerRs JUST WMAT © srent a ~& a ~ New York, April 9.—-Much of The bigger the house you live in| Broadway wit is manufactured in the! . who are press agents, artists and so Much miserv is caused by people|forth. They meet daily at lunch in! new jokes on each other, If the New York jury decided a woman’s|Jokes go well they are soon heard Re eee ing in a “brain teaser” contest, each, Let your little boy play in the|member being called on to ask a dirt and he may be a@ divorce case| Question that cannot be answered. { lawyer when he grows up, _ (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) |8tumped the members are: | z How many husbands has Peggy; aoe —__—% | Joyce had. * 5 Who makes the plays dirty? Evening Pick ||. If Marty Herman’-and/Al- Wood, o¢—_________ -—_———¢ | brothers, had\ the same name, what Some of the questions whigh have would that name be? Choices for all tastes are in the How can you be protected from air tonight. Among them are: jbad booze? KSD (545 Met.) 7 C. T.—Holy| When someone asked where would! Thursday Service. Broadway have gone if it had gone} KGO! (361 Met.) 8 P. ‘T.—Comedy,| straight, Harry Hershfield, the presi- dent, answered “into Long Island Ik the day. WJZ (455 Met.) '8:25 E. T.—G. A. SoA WEAF (492 Met.) 6 E. T.—Yaried|they ean go out in the streets to ‘ogram rebroadcast whe play. Then around comes the street (476 Met.), WGR (819 Met.),| carousel in bright new pfint. It is Met.), WOC (484 Met.),| only six feet ‘in ~ diameter, but it WCCO (417 Met.), WWJ 362.7 Met.),| whirls around and around in a mad WSAI (325.9 Met.), 8 to 11 E, T.| merfy-go-round if you have a penny WJAR (305,9 Met.) WCAE (462 Met.) 9 to 11 ET, WEAR he ot! 8 to.d0 E..T. WOTS (263 Q to ada took his bright wagon to Avenue to cf (389.4 Met.),] And so the other day Cologero Fi- hen| - BY CONDO IS 7 BI SS SONAL PRONOUN — FIRst PERSON — SINGULAR (NOMBER — NOMINATIVG CASES — SUBIECT OF SYERY SENTENCE YOU et L NOTIFIED Tue THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1925 Man May Soon Be Only Cook By Chester H. Rowell Schools to teach cooking to bachelors are opened in.Lon- don. Why confine it to bachelors? In these days of fem- inism, married men are likely to need it even more. One is tempted, sometimes, to fear that there will soon be no jmore cooking done unless men do it. They do the wholesale cooking now—and the housewives buy it retail, in cans and cartons. “If wishes were horses, then beggars might ride.” Modern Aladdin-magic has almost made the wishes into more than horses. One automobile to each family is already in sight, or reached, in many American states. In Cali- fornia, with one car to every three persons, it has been passed. Engineers, plotting prophetic curves of motor jabscissae and population ordinates, are already fixing the point of intersection, only a few years ahead when the American people will have one automobile apiece—one for each person, including the proverbial “beggars” as well as the decrepit old, infants, cripples, and the inmates of prisons and asylums. That means much more than one apiece for those able to use them. It is unbelievable, even with the mathematical curves to prove it. But even if we arrive only approximately at that point—where can we find the roads, to run all those cars on? A conspiracy to “bootleg” Armenian immigrants across the American border has been unearthed in Canada. The business of smuggling has been an established industry for many years. With the new quota law, the temptation to extend operations to other nationalities will be increased. And there is no hope of ever completely stopping it. Shall we therefore start an agitation against the immi- gration law, on the ground that it “encourages lawlessness” ? Or shall we enforce it as best we can? And, whichever answer you give to this question— would you make the same one, if it] rope will have learned to do without were the prohibition law? cannon fodder, or else no conceivable birth rate would give France enough WAR NEEDS CANNON FODDER— | of it. The world must raise babies FRANCE NOT RAISING IT for a better purpose than that, or it Mnehexceasiictabirinevlover (deathal| went ee eon ecmee elms in France last year was only some SE 1S 72,000, as against 95,000 the year SEORRER IT ROLTTIGSY. U before. ‘The rate in Germany is de-|” Once more, common sense knows Sver 001000 a year, ‘Whereat ‘the| What to do with Europe, but polities French are, as ‘usual, greatly con-|#0es not dare do it, That was the cerned. case long before the Dawes plan eae bili hey| finally stabilized the business of Bu- the world were civilized, they! rope. Business men knew what to would not need to worry at all, They! do, but politics was afraid. Now-a do not, in fact, worry in regard to| sinilar Situation a : the nations with which their rela- Tt cia. curity, and impends as to interna- r If Japan will not per- tremendous preponderance of Ameri-| mit a world compact for peacé ex. ca they do not regard as a menace. If cept on terms which Britain and |we get two hundred millions and| ‘America will not. accept, there is they have only forty, we may have @| nothing to do at present but estab- five-to-one advantage commercially,| lish a European compact for the Eu- but we wil also have five times as] ropean part of the job. That can be many people to support with our! done whenever France will permit greater wealth, and the French willl Germany to be a party to it, and be quite content to support well} whenever Germany will consent to whatever population they have. have its eastern as well as its west- The fear is not the legitimate rival-| ern frontiers included, Everybody ries of commerce but the illegitimate] knows this, but the politicians do one of war. If that were removed,| not yet dare do it. When they are France would no more fear the| ready, England can lead in arrang- greater German population than Ne-| ing security. Then, after more trav- vada fears the population of Cali-} ail of the politicians, America can fornia, or Canada that of the United| lead in arranging disarmament, And States. But now, the danger is that] finally, after still more travail, this these 300,000 extra German babies,| time by American politicians, the 20 years from now, may have to be| debts may also be arranged on bus- stopped at some new Verdun by aliness principles. Any intelligent fourth as many French babies. War| “Dawes commission,” left to itself, demands cannon fodder, and France| could formulate a solution to all is not raising it. What the alarm-| these questions in three weeks, We ists do not realize is that long be-|will be lucky if politics dares face FABLES ON HEALTH MANUFACTURED ILLNESS In addition to'the “chronically ill” ‘There was but one way out, go class of people, another group, com-|home and complain sick like she dic monly known ’as “procrastinators”| the first time. i have their place in society. The plan worked, and all during Mrs, Jones learned ‘something |her school days she side-stepped dif- about thése, and then she read ajficult propositions, until she actu- story which enlightened her very|ally came to the point where she be- much. lieved she was ill. A little girl, 8 years old, on her| After she was grown she called way to school, was taken ill. It so|herself a nervous invalid. Her happened that that morning she was|friends called here a procrastinator,, to take an arithmetic examination|and her doctor, who never could But she was really ill and.had to fe-| find any physical basis for her com- turn home. plaints, called, her a neurasthenic. Several months later, while on her| The ability, or willingness to face way to school, she again was seized| reality squarely without compromise with the dread of an arithmetic] is of supreme importance in main- exam. taining mental health: woman can be. I know that Leslie} see one some place?” ased Mister is right but there is such a thing as| Whizz. charity and mercy and these are the| “Yes,” yawned the mayor. “My | greatest things in all the world. I| cousin's wife's brother had one and fealize this, Syd, because at the|I just wondered if this one was like present moment they are the things} it—that’s all. Let me see—a snuff 1 want most and cannot get. box made of gold that opens at ‘the I can think of nothing else except| end and has a thingumbob that you Leslie. I am unhappy when I am| lift up, with your finger. Just wait away from her and unhappy when I/ I'll call my chief clerk” And he | am with her and I think perhaps the| called loudly, “Forty Winks, come thing that really hurts me most is| here.’ tt she seems quite happy all the} Forty winks came shuffling out of time, She is exceedingly polite to| a back room, yawning and stretchin; me, asks my opinion of things, looks| just like the mayor had. “You'll at me affectionately, but still keeps) have to find a more comfortable me out of her heart. ledger for me to sleep on,” said he, She goes about her work of get-|“‘or I'll find another place. One thing ting the apartment packed up al-|I can’t stand is an uncomfortable most with enthusiasm. She reads| ledger to sleep on. me long letters that she received| had, they ‘had the le from the people who are recon-| so-I could sleep in ce.” structing our house, but she reads} The Twins and Mister Whizz look- them in the same affectionate tone| ed to see how Mayor Snorealoud was of voice with which she reads them, taking this, when to their surprise to Ruth. She asks her advice on| they’ saw that he had fallen asleep the decorations of the rooms, per-| again, leaning against the doorwa haps oftener than she does mine, And looking back quickly at they (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)| chief clerk to see how he was taking ‘ it (that his words had not been aes heard) didn’t they see his head fall over on his chest and his eyes close “ADVENTURE OF || !tigecr stenier \ For goodness sake!” cried THE TWINS Whizz. “Snoozer Town is ce: the sleepiest. place I ever saw. ‘BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON || wonder they can stay awake long enough to eat their meals. If I ever come to—" AT MAYOR SNOREALOUD’S HOUSE} Suddenly he sto) 4 The ‘Twins and Mister Whizz left] were both sound colons on teehee the policeman sleeping peacefully! “Well of all things!” yawned the with his arm around-a lamp post and|fairyman, “I never saw a place like went to hunt for the mayor of Snooz-| this. Full of lazy people who—can’t er Town. —do—any—thing—but—” They soon found it because his} A loud snore and Mister «Whizz name was on the door plate. It said: | was asleep too! “Mayor’Snorealoud,” in plain letters.| Snitcher Snatch, the goblin, slipped Nick knocked loudly about five] up and slyly put a grain of mugic tips while: fhe ener opeel and | snuff on the end of everybody's nose. there stood the mayor himself, yawn- | He’ i ing and, aERPLEDINE 8 though he had the thee MaDe + mayne donesall been asleep since istmas. } “Achoo! Achoo!” went eve: “Hum hot Oh, hum! What do you|them, fairly Focking the house oft inc ‘want ?” foundations. ‘We're after a rascal,” said Mister ‘ Whiz, “His name’ is Sniteher | was awaneeney everybody in town Snatch and he’s run off with the ‘Continved,) NEA Service, Inc.) (To -Be snuff box belonging to the Fair Queen's uncle” ¥| (Copyright, 1925, “You none ae ae Sxclalnad phe oo .- mayor blinking his eyes in surprise. A Thought * —_—_—_—__. _—____.4 Ho, that. hei Ing often “Let me see! What kind of a snuff Silver?” meth his neck, shall suddenly box is it? “No, gold!” said Mister Whi he destroyed and t! ° pt i ‘that without. rem: ety soe Mer ieanbere mind conduces ‘an little $o..wi or eve; B stubborn ‘temper fe tpericaae. : with your thu a thingumbob. yon itt