The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1925, Page 4

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. PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEW (Establishea 18 Published by Bismarck, N. D., and entered Bismarck, ag second « 8 mail George ID Mann.... at the postoffic patter, Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Dally by carrier, per year. $ by mail, per year Gn L ¥ by mail, per year (in stat ide Bismarck) Daily by mall, outside of North Dak« Member Audit Bureau of Cire smarck) Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to u to it or not otherwise credited in t the local news 0! in. All rights herein are also r paper, and republication of eserved. orelgn Representatlyes LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY G CHICAGO. Tower Bldg PAYNE, BURNS A YORK - = ND SMI F WwW Tues 1 offer good New Y that 1 ults of Wiscon rhe re balloting in evidence spontaneous origin published her all other matter the Bismarck Tribune Company, eat mn President and Publisher | the e for republication of all news dispatches credited also DETROIT Kresge Bldg ork is something thoroughly wrong with the prevailin Glectoral system of the nation. In both New York | and Wi well 1 carefully manned evowed ¢ Republican party Cn winning tination for Sta Sen in Wisconsin, ‘There is little doubt that the Rep nominees for Senator from Wisconsin wil lected in the forthcoming special election. tt ‘ then remain for the Republican member Upper House to read La Pollette out of ty Such ap anomaly is po the di primary an th ator | vad Ibe will from war department finding. ean have the benefit: of inission's Must Have Support of People | Without public clean ment, the struggle hard and Iphia i Marines opinion backing, toward better The General old chief way discouraging. Phil 4 cage in point the ia returning thoroughly disgusted with bi He up the bi toh ar’ Job a tothe conden tle ted fo Mhiladelpiia city sinst hore Uiin 6.000 arre liquor violatic reflected Volstead on an absolutely vere convicted, whieh clearly mind toward t w enforce of the public “41 nt he “has not had the sapport of the p Philwelphia and does not now." His experience is that of many police Favoritism discounts much work of a polic ment. General Butler says it ig really a enforce the law gainst others, put not agai He work as dry “the up his saying crusader result in clearly caforcement hasn't amounted to a row of pi the arrests are made.” The experiences of Gene have law 1 Batler in Ph been duplicated in enforcement the d upon an of even has oti basis sust enforcement upport, continue One Result at Li the inadequacy President st of Amer Coolidge t¢ nine men has been appo tation defenses has spurred A commission make a survey of e situa n and offer s { tions \ i : | Governor Sorlie hag answered Bruno Lessing disparaging article on North Dakota most. effec tively ‘Taig is a most excellent year for North | Daketa to blow its own horn, ‘Phe more reason why | the state should support the Greater North Dakota | ‘sociation Babe Rath grandstand late has been v A lot o things in lawlessness, Act even basis,” many other cities, wing the Yankee games | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE govern- is | A ation in Butler of my post of polices ts daxity or ons, only the state! people of officials part game of nst me.” for Phil ows that after in, lelphis | Until | popular | s will > pinted 9 f people WE DID SONEHING THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER :17, 1925 y not the mankind, | though even then prob most dangerous scourge ¢ has now retreated to a few spots, and a few sporad here. Now, leper spec plan to rid th i York and serious PeRsonauy, world of the little that is left of the THUNK iT ‘disease in this generation LIKINK, I WouL? iit is not only. theoretically. p: Sweslen HIS. sible; they think it is practical DISPosiTion IF Once the last ¢ di ‘there will be no more fore Men will be in no more danger i | ABOUT THIS | of contracting leprosy than they ure SINBAD of being eaten b ber-toothed SITUATION. tiger, and for the same reason, It is interesting to realize that there are several other diseases dreaded, | which extinet. tter- | A few c it lists meet in New | comple i 0 u do so would require the intelligent may also become completely Yellow fever is already neart ears may see the last ease of + appear forever, — Malaria is Theoretically, it could be sly extermifiated, too, but to cooperation of so many people that ave to wait until intelli- elf becomes commoner, But it is already so searce, in y formerly infested communi: that a California doctor, wish- ing to try the malaria cure on par- s, had to advertise for a malar i strict where former- t have taken any random, We are improving, RHEUM HS. CUMMING | “BY DR. HL | Surgeon General, United States Pub- i lic Health Service | Rheumatism is a disease of popu- jlar interest because it is of frequent loccurrence and it affects persons of all ages, classes, and occupations, Acute rheumatism, acute articular | rheumatism, inflammatory rheuma- ti and rheumatic fever are terms independently of any ute | | quite FABLES ON HEALTH | TELLS HOW TO PREVENT ATISM comparatively common climates within the fever is a isease in all temperate zone. Tt occurs chiefly during the winter and spring months. Exposure to a cold, damp at- mosphere is one of the most frequent causes in persons predisposed to the disease. Acute rheumatism or rheumatic fever may or may not begin with a to one and the same dis-|chill or sore throat. The larger . A milder form of the infec-| joints are usually affected. Swell- [tion is called sub-acute rheumatism. | ing, heat, redness, tenderness, and | '"Sub-acute rheumatism may con-! pain are ‘the chief symptoms. The tinue for a long time and become! heart is frequently involved. chronic, Chronic rheumatism. and| In chronic rheumatism there is the different affections and deform-| stiffness and pain, In severe cases ities of the joints to which this term] the joints become enlarged and @ is frequently applied, may develop|torted and the deformity is sor times very great. One of the stock arguments used in favor of the {have always charged him with being a grand-stander | » | or sub-acute attack, "| Muscular rheumatism most fre- i Meni rer everal different diseases, in reali-| quently affects the muscles of the adoption of the primary was the promise ‘ are included under the term rheu-| back, the side of the neck, and the ARETE olla: to a cReeNE axtent a tne Oe sm. a side ‘of the chest, When the muscles Beahiinoiliies!: oss. “rave ine ane aneieibs a fae Nehtingwrawacbecmune| hysic inclined toj of the back are affected this type of b ' k primary | i ; | andj muscular rheumatism is usually call- for a case in point. Gove mith, the big | s Why not train them fox} ad attach a name to the condi-| ed lumbago. boss of the empire m Randolph | Ctddies? i i ‘ ry tion that more accurately describes! “When the muscles of the side of welll As | ROM with Dick Summers that would be it, for example, an acute inflamma-| the neck are affected the disease is Hearst, whose politi yo even more | ; LES uncomfortable unless it led to some- tion of the joints is referred to by) known as stiff neck or wry neck, Siti) than ils suecess ax ie lant j "ED thing nearer and dearer, [am sure physicians now as acute arthritis or) and when the muscles of the side . : | . A | “Do you know, Sally dear,” Paula | she Hasn't the slightest idea of mar-| beyaite Rutnlig the | Theum fever, meaning a general! of the chest are involved the co phenomenal, ¢ in tion brawl, which Editorial Comment continued, “I any sometimes like the | rying him, who will probably ask her eee eee oem piece condition accompanied by fever and] tion is known as pleurodynia, Mouliibe heard in. eve : of the nation, and fold woman in the nursery tale: “I! very soon to marry him. ee an eee sdetey en | iiflamed: Joints: | posure to colds and sudden expo Se 5 ae | wonder if I be 1’ Dick has perked up a lot since} of cheese. That's fall poetry. Rheumatism affects particularly} of the body especially after exercise which served to obscure completely the outstand- | A New Kind of Stril [“"Xnd'T should think she would won- feath, and you can hardly aa the joints and muscles or both are the chief exciting cause: ing issues of the campaign, Hearst, through his | Be ey nh unl UTES Hder, Leslie, Of all the moving pie- | ale ve a] Blankets are high, and coal is too,| The term muscular rheumatism in-| The muscles may be slightl: MG et Hiviad, resorted to Vituperatlon, curly in (Cincinnati Times Star) j ture sses in Los Ang she 1s | of ng the last year of| if winter does come, oh, what'll we ! dicate: affection of the muscles as|len and very sensitive. ae : | to viluperation early in| wore ig a new kind of strike. ‘The street rail-|the most popular. 1 have never | i she was not herself | do. distinguished from joint affections.! the attacks come on the campaign, and the Governor, not to be outdone : : : ane, he i known a man to incet her who was she was horribly Lumbago and stiff neck are varieties, npparently without cause, as a kink Pi ths cewile att-or madaitoging, came back witn| V2” COMPANY at Port Arthur, Tex. refused to move) not at her feet. n Mr. Surtoris, | jealous iter she became} Mary had a little lamb, which al-; of muscular rheumatism. in the back. following a slight twist Ree ne eee win cag from its barns last Friday night, and it still | Who is supposed to be immune, was | ugly and shupeless, just before her} ways got. into a jam, about which | MAY FOLLOW or strain. Frequent!v a patient may # barrage of gumbo, whieh spattered with unedite- [2 2% ee cefusdl. le coaiuleinin; A jvery devoted to her, and promised | baby was born, nobody giees & tenn TONSILITIS va the morning, as you ing regularity o' the Hearst-Hylan camp. ‘The 3 to refusal, Its compltint is against the that on his return he would stop off] Do you know, dear, I believe she ° aie Rheumatism may be an after effect with a stiff neck. . a s bug lines that the city authorities have permitted! for a long stay. vanished herself for her jealousy of | me F ‘ ig boss won. The result was a foregone conclu- i a While not think she has any,} P: y naking it possible. sort. Twinkle, twinkle, iittie eyes, look- wa lex sion, ‘This occurred under the direct: primary. te conmpete it the’r reet car lines, operat arrying, yet [am sure i Paula to be. together af img thoughtful and so wise, like dicaése, oe tala A few hints concer Another reliable advantage of the direct primary | aa senate: jou EMail do witeacend 1G ake should accept the eduplevolimince Miler. te the joinia, alo it may be caused|vontion of theumatian The ac ake! e-glredk PallWayog any | ously . do when s r child ‘ou know Bee had 7 wetoeua’sal ; se germs| The clo! should " ax'pictured by its early advocates wan that i wontd | ‘The action taken hy the street railway company | SUNY G1 Whi she i ea | thet kind of ievonition whieh And when she got there, the cup-/BY & focus of pus or disease germs] | The clothing | should always. Hromote hetier qualified men to office, Hag it?|o Port Arthur throw: f the greatest ques | a ¢ nthe sereen is not very | her absolutely merciless with he board was bare, because’ her poor | M,c¢rttin parts of the hed Sete ie REWedtnn see geian 3a Sd emenicaltcibited to MayorHylan:when-conclu | tion that disturbs urban transportation — today. | !« a ‘ mera hunts out, wittt}as far as human traits were husband had found his corkscrew. |. sounl infection, A. fo to the atmospheric conditions pres- = : Sta a ed to ) or Hyla pmeconelte | Kae eee 7 lunrelenting ferocity the firs ¢ e Ri ewhere 4 e hody : - Rivcievidence of his deteat'at the polls became Street railways are almost lw ena monopoly | eyes, the fini] an alid. that T'm not sof There was a man in our town |! Ae haat] ok iced /aiét ahOuld Be: ot tei anewer ‘that question in a city. Economists recognize such a monopoly rie | awfully ¢ y not he sure of and he was full of pep. He bubbled | [¢ ao the nein Milk! ia; alwaye an acoupte “Lam pleased with two things,” Hylan is quoted) 2% “nit Just as it recognizes the natural mo: | #™d then: unles eve but I certainly, over one day and ran into the gut-s trom this sp ’e heing const: ticle of diet in eases of rheu- by the Associated Press a8 saying yesterday, “first, NOPOlles Of gas and electric companies and tele-! has up to this time. pla ig! for the monotony of living as often) | — Be are ann focal inte beter srs aod nuncral % that a pulled Ying Sesterdayy UTS’ paone compani Competition means duplication, Kitls and sweethe ime (us Tecan, with a little joy and happi-' ‘These are the days the fatted calf tion are diseased tonsils, a chr of water should be taken and the ne pulled t mask off the big ham and ese | iowaste i nthe silver screen is over. ne returns from his vacation half killed | cally diseased appendix, hemorrhonds| intestinal tract kept open man from Albany, and second that I made the! 2d Waste. It better for a community to grant, This looks to me a long way off in} Paula Perrier thinks she is coming ‘by the prodigal sun. Son tes Gr © fotek of pm ie] Poracs uieee #o. Slewewe Meeripn cada vnderworlatutarest re vy, & monopoly and then regulate that monoply than to Paula's case—you sce [ became inti- east this fall. In fact, she spoke of , ithe root sm should have a careful physical ’ and u id interests spend an averag: permit: theswaste.of competition mate enough with her to call ber, taking a long vacation, and traveling | Build a mouse trap better than!" prolonged exposure to wet or cold! ation made to determine i of $400 per election district to defeat me.” ‘Today tt comp oe P: and for her to c abroad for four or five months. She thy neighbor and the world will tear; weather may be a contributing fac- sible the cause that is preducing This is the standard of public life it is under ‘oday the t ‘ackless and wireless bus has upset the durin Hee a wie illn ! kind cnough to ask me to go down your front porch. |tor in producing rheumatism. disagreeable symptoms. na Ree Pare: effect of the application of the practice of natural Uh ne ees: d her T couldn't do ‘ ——— __ |The common complication of cer-| When it has been determined that the direct primary. eee Bivet. cailwags a Be cia cardel Oe Perhap of luxury and Little Jack Horner, spent his life‘ tain forms of, rheumatism is the|in the opinion of the examining Whero the dircet primary functions most success MONOPE'Y. eae compas Vat ee too great and too insidious in a corner, so when he grew up he! damaging effect upon the valves cf| physical a focal infection exists in filly, wotably in W! : io thir contracts with cities on the basis of monopoly that behind her t tion for me; and beside, it became a politician. | the heart. the body this condition should be yy ably in Wisconsin, it has completely de find themselves subject -to.aev iti Th pathetic tragedy that is ever y through hard work that I — | Acute rheumatism or rheumatic corrected. i vk taiitional party lines, Wha. Democratic themselves subject to severe competition. The! her | eould temper this more or less eat-' Bachelors usually look worse than | % party does not exist as a factor In Wisconsin poli: /“°Mdition ean not last. If cities are to receive street! I have never known anyone who tish disposition of mine. no Mutttied ‘men because they haven't | —— = ee ‘ é aaa bi be ilway vice ey sti recorni incinja Was so fond of children, and yet s She laughed, Les but you who | gi is | are looking for, sitting li a . , tics and the Republican party is only a cloak any UEY&Y service, they must recognize the principl: jie refused to take the responsibility know me eT Ean a eeeanUG en re | ADVENTURE OF fiir ieatts ince ee candidate, regardless of principles, can don or dof of natural monopoly.- If bus service is practically’ of Bee's child. I believe she refused) of your friend i What makes a woman madder than epi sa all gone, so we can slip up this rope Eki nqpediency ae to supplant street railway service, the street rail- this because she atraldsthat ie! : ‘ SALLY. ja new dress fading? THE TWINS ladder and get on her deck. Then as political expediency dictates. would throw her into an intimacy! (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) | jase 5 we can hunt up the room where the —— i Way companies quiet. be merited: a. monopoly of 1e-——— ——--—-@|] By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON || captain stays and where the clock is The beauty crown rests upon a Monde unbobbed Ps Service. In the long run it means cheaper and failed to pay it. For 28 years it!’ * A THOUGHT | antihe what?" cried the Twins Head. Is the age returning when n woman's glory | °°t¢r transportation ‘both by thus and by street car. stood with its quaint window boxes|g@——-_____.____| “Where to next?” asked the Twins.| Tick Tock laughed again. “The is her hair? The experience of cities with competing street car among the towering apartment If it be possibl uch as Heth “Out to sea.” said Tick Tock, the Jog. That's a sort of ship’s diary ; lines proved that many years ago. hous ne, feeb! tes inst pa i pigs clock fairy. ‘ where they put down everything ee aaa cae ibis k das es Bee a lat a nrotest agai’st | in you, live peaceably with all men.|" What!” fairly shriexed Nancy and| that happens each day,” he said. Big Farms Passing | a ul ica) town. But |—Komans 12:18, Nick in their surprise. “Every boat keeps a log. It is very } Pie and Fat Men the town grew in upon it from all ieee tebat | said grinned Tick | important. Professor Alva H. Benton of Fargo writing in i ger, ; sides and pushed it out of existence.) Better keep peace than make] Tock, “Out to sea.” : “Here we are at the captain’s cabin The Journal of Land Economics, declares that| (Detroit News) —JAMES W. DEAN. | peace.—Old Dutch proverb, “But where shall we find any| nov.” bonanza farms ave a thing of the past. ‘The present | Will the wonders of science never cease? New York—Harvest time approach- oe here Bene Ae re. (ose. Consianed) generation has witnessed the passing of the great} JUSt the other day an investigator informed ©] 65° not only on the farm but on EVERETT TRUE CONDO marked the fairy. “On a big ship,) PERMANENT SUMMER TIME e bs farms of the Red River Valley, In discussing this waiting world that, after months of laborious re-| Broadway where the gamblers gather |; BY et gouree 1t ou really want AB pee FIXED BY BRITISH ACT ae ah eee search, he had found pie to be a food ik ahel a During the : now it, ships have more uses for] London, Sept. 17—UP)—Si situation the New York Times comments: [Bears a : in their boobs. During the summer = FLeLE: GRMGEE AhAN GAR pre EaE ERIS Tine . 17—Y jummer f . lacsic (Dalrymple tarm of 100,000: acre | Now, two other scientists, Sante Naccarati and| months the big gamblers move to WELL, WELL— ANOTHER ARTICLE ON eecate teal ata IE Ie mean he or ae eae ip the morn MMMM NiikHoro | CoGser, Atonta, Moshen | H. FE. Garnett, astonish us with the statement that/the shore resorts and to Saratogu. THE THEORY OF GFVOLUTION.,. WHEN WILL been for ships needing something toltice from the Home ‘Secretary's De. wood farms ee Gas : : tat men are, generally speaking, more emotional | They work while they play. When | ) THEY GET THROUGH DISCUSSING THS SUS- tell time by, I don’t suppose clocks | partment. : od farms, ranging from 61,000 3 down to 17.) 0" , . vacation season ends they come| ‘J@e@T, ANYHOW & would have been invented when they| Summer time in the future will be- Meee evo eliner been. ent split up into /thta Jean men and that neither fatness nor lean: ite thele old hawits: aw) ° were, »» | 8in at 2 o'clock Greenwich mean time ! mall holding: Road ae i sich pj: | Bess is an indication of intelligence or its lack. The Broadway sharks go about | | [jl a What ship are we going on?”|on the morning of the day after the el) dings or ure near extinction, Such biz i 53 . [their business of gathering in easy asked Naney who was beginning to|third Saturday in April i farma oz exist in North Dakota are almost withou: | Of CUTS the results of the Naccarati-Garrott in-| Mit yyet ST ee cdicalty get excited. day ig Bagter Dan terete cnet i i 8 hee z a‘ st as Cy j « . y, the day after the exception unprofitable venture | vestigation were couched in no such simple language | farmer goes about gathering are prion, 8 ship called ‘La Paloma’ that | second Saturday in April, It will end was not primartly sonsible for the rise of the big {tHCY termed “the morphologic index.” This is de-| staff of solicitors who } in ithe, United States to use,” said/ Saturday in ranean after the first f: . oak ne pea © | rive y dividi e le fe ryt int. E: ck Tock. gah Pees 5 farms, The Northern Pacific Railroad had received |"!¥ed by dividing the length of one arm plus the |to his joint | Each s “Ty the clock broken?” asked Nick.| suntmer init 2ceordance with the by charter in 1863 nearly 11,000,000 acres in North |/€"St® of one leg by the volume of the body trunk. | ects.” Each gaming hous Sort of—at least it had a bump ly iained! fe: Seen bimasreerat wi 8 : penearecey (eee). acres : Ne ratio ja high. it ameans thi ibiect i Sohorhe at ea toeaatdine and won't go properly. Somethin; aes rtime * Dakota. In 1873 the failure of Jay Cooke, financier ee ee eee eae ene sub et is, oun scheme of saleguardine went wrong with a lighthouse. on | Permanently. of the Northern Pacific, lett. numerous investors | 0" 5° $ anthropologis The same ingenuity that i i some of the Florida reefs and. the i 5 apa ee , 1s stors | a. ee ae : a s y that is put in-| ‘ penene, ch During the 5 with securities of little value in their hands, They | “2lichomorph.” If the ratio is low, the subject is} to the shady transactions of Broad-| iS ship struck a rock. It didn’t hit it] o794tg60 immigrants came’ ikeora y > t f sales # ae jaecaaale ay fer returns i vere employe 4 _ : manager to exchange their securities for land, In|. NO one Knows precisely what makes one MAN | ome legitimate business. I suppose) | TO BELIGVE THAT THE HUMAN RACE Wie tay ” that way the great farm aggregitions arose. ‘They |*4t #84 another tend toward leanness, ut it is sup-|it Is the thrill and the adventure o EVOLVED: FROM SOME CoWER ORDER PFC ge aL ‘4 é e Ce: . e e nivite. of the Rie mane dodging the law that leads some un- ie ANC Y Ban past Wed. their vicish he fat years were put to |20sed that the activity of the ductless glands eee BESIAe Gant antocthe ga oF DUMB ANIMALS @ myNor itt Not a ship's clock,” said skillful publicity use by the railroad company for [22™ething to do with the matter. Lam told that one of Broadwa ‘ : Miened Cathet the aE On ee attracting settlers. Lean years, accompanied by | Paustaking inquiry, confirmed the general hy |Diggest gamblers is, endowed with but they are fastened tight so that increased taxation and mounting overhead, wrote |Potuesis that a brachymorphological characteristi¢ | practise both medicine and law, nethine ab an aesfould leoren them, another story for the big farms. With time they |! found in the ability to rise to great heights oi) | Yet the greater | number of the a way that the swingine motion of ‘ lost the initial advantage they enjoyed in the way Joy or sink to equally great depths of despair. Also,! Oy are illiterate and uncouth. But the boat does not affect them even of shipping rates, In the end it has been shown |that 4 dolchomorph is not necessarily more or less | they | possess a native shrewdness eB eins Bub eae me vill nae that year in and year out the small farm operated |'telligent than a brachymorph. t Heel he een On shall never get there.” =? by owner or tenant with his own labor is a better| Amd that, along with the solution to the Great) Last week one of the best known | ae ane a Pe Ase ney disg economic unit than the bonanza with its elaborate |T'® Mystery: is that. istooor in gama cterans aan a not there, They. looked along at all management and elaborate problems. R 1 That Fail room in the Fisties, Only two davs phe be jpoats) in: the line, ‘but, no : ; i t ‘i ules That Fail hefore he had refused to pay $10,000 ‘on r, ” said Ti ; x The Dakota farm remains larger, and is bound ET OER for a large share in a coming theatri- L DON'T FIND IT _ HARD wiOhs T know!” said Tick Tock, “1 to be larger, than the average landholding further lahoma City Daily Qklahoman) cal production, “I can’t afford to To BELIEVES THAT YOUR einnt's ‘dey dock?” ask Uae toe east. Eight hundred acres in the western part of | A Connecticut pair who celebrated their fiftieth gamble” he said when he turned “Questions —- always questions,” the State, 320 to 480 acres in the eastern section, |¥¢dding anniversary the other day, announce the | 4°" the Proposition. ANCESTORS A\WA YS. laughed Tick Tock. -“But that’s all ‘ seem to be the most favorable units. But as in the |! Tules that have governed their wedded lives and| Miss Mary's, the one spot. in all ° right tens By ards Ree i case of the small tradesman who manages to hold |Made them bot prosperous and happy. New Mork in whieh sou could: find place near the edge of the water, out against the department store and the chain| “The six rules that are sent forth as possible The red auctioncer’s flag has. re- where Ener ron ae boat up on . blessings to troubled people are:~ Work and good | placed the Bonnie Blue Flag which Warele righbiont Of Uae weapon. Dhe NaN store, the.small farmer of the West hag apparently shown that his day is not over.” * Bven Col. Mitchell, the stormy petrel of the air service, says of the citizens named that their “study will be painstaking and fair.” Out.of this prompt cheer; lots of children; great faith in God -ection some good should come. Congress and the ings that do not always come for the. other; optimism; good health and team work: “ All of these so-called rules are excellent and some of them are workable. But good health and lots, 9! seek fame and fortune here, children are not rules; they Rape tae and bless- | question was ever asked as .to the waved over the place at 239 Central Park West which was known to | southerners from Florida to Texas. | It was the refuge for those who came | from below the Mason-Dixon line to No and each visitor's means to pay for lodging| and no visitor is known ever to have! firs 54 PLO. 988 SY boat sits up on a sort of high rack so that every part shows. If she has had an accident then the men can get at it to fix it up. They can’t fix up a boat as long as she is in the water. I suppose the “La Paloma” has had a bad scrape and' needs some new boards and iron to repair 5 Yes, sir! I wae right. Here is the dry dock and there" is the boat we pipeeammees | Telephone operators often sli; @ good “plug” for themselves, Be

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