The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. George D-Mann President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advan Dally by carrier, per year..... Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). Daily by mail, per y (in state outside Bismarck).. Daily by mall, outside of North Dakota. Meunber Audit Bureau of Circulation 20 . 6.00 + 6.00 Member of The Assoclated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published her’ fn. All rights of republication of herein are also reserved, (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Mitchell ‘estimony Col, William Mitchell, storm center of the ragin aircraft controversy, has been given the opportunity he has demanded long and loudly, to have his charges of criminal negligence, inefficiency, nl bureaneracy in the administration of the nation's air defense tried before a nonpolitical, nonmilita court of inquiry. The fiery air colonel has made very good use of his appearance before the pres: ential aireraft: inquiry and loosed a witherin of facts and conclusions with a view to en crediting the present military organi gation of the country If these charges are found to be substantiated by the facts presented in Mitchell's testimony, drastic reorganization of the nation’s defense administra: | tion is necessary, But, at this point, it becomes evident that military technicians differ diametric: on the is: e before the presidential investigation and under these cireumstances it is impossible for honest citizens to come to a correct opinion yomty Pee tenn Mie courée at the present. air probe hao} The writing is remarkable because of the specd | ; : ae and legibility wi ic an be produced, F brought out two things very plainly: (1) that there! _ eis . yon Es it can be produced, Fitth] MAE elion: wetweew the ‘Army: aNd N (2) that rade children, it has been found, can form near:y | MOEA riy Gle-aerVicd nag ‘wot aevetone < rapidly One third more letters a minute by using the new as our tragic experience in the world war would, Methods, Older children have as striking success, Nirdiis ts: expect | The broad edged pen, with which it is produced, i 7 * and the letter forms, Hewett developed after an See that the oo country a he ie hen’ exhaustive study of medieval manuscript, In his aie ts ai - Hea eC a eect ih 0) i researches, he concluded that the monks who copied | Mitche. makes he sertion ba he project u ks Fy i i books h nd, before the invention of printing lated the law which places land operations under 4 D the jurisdiction of the Army Here it becomes evident that the widening scope of the two great arms of national defense has caused direct derstanding. One branch of service the other. misun- is ous of The testimony of Army air corps officers, tend ing to back up Mitchell's sensational c| ges of inefficien and negligence, indicat weakened morale within the Army a service itself. Mitchel! is authority for the statement that there are only 22 pursuit’ planes and 22 bombers in the Army ait service capable of tained fight condi This g ement has been frequently exploited by air serviee critic heen su under tions of war. ind has never categorically dented. If it is true, immediate action by the next Congress should be taken to right the situation. The presidential probe and public opinion as whole will not be very greatly influenced by Mitch ell's demands for a unified air service, his warn- ing that the Atlantic coast is open to attacks from the air, and his claim that stupid management on the part of the Navy bureau of aeronautics is respon sible for the Shenandoah tragedy and the failure of the Hawaii nonstop flight. Neither will counter- charges denouncing Mitchell as an agitator and in- cendiary unduiy influence either the investigation or public opinion, ly presidential The nation believes Mitchell is an honest man, & competent soldier, and a qualified expert on aerial defense. It appears that Mitchell is to a certain extent justified in his bitter attacks on the Army and Navy air service because of the apparently poor condition to which the Army air corps has been reduced. This fact is practical testimony of air service officers. In view of cit cumst. Mitchell's unprecedented tactics are partiaHy explained. Yet, in the final analysis, the nation will not forget that Mitchell violated age-old Army traditions in furthering his campaign for im- proved military aviation by a vituperative campaign carried over the heads of his superiors. Such conduct cannot be condoned yet may be par- donable, To what extent the end justifies the means is difficult’ to estimate. All these interlocking phases of the aircraft dispute will have to be threshed out by the presidential hoard. will act fairly and freely 8, press The board amuel Rea Announcement yesterday of the retirement Samuel Rea as president of the Penns i d marks the close of a career which exemplii in a notable way the opportunity American indust offers to brains and ability, Despite Rea's ‘shortcomings tionary labor policy of later year eminently fitted for industrial leadership. And he attained that leadership entirely on his own merit Rea was born at Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, it 1855. The death of his father when Rea was 13 made it necessary to go to work early in life. Hc started clerking in stores and hiring out as farm laborer. His education as a railroad engineer began when he was not quite sixteen; from James Mc- Crea, later to ‘become his predecessor as president of the Pennsylvania road,‘he secured a job as chain- man and rodman. He met with varying success as a railroad man. At one time, when engineering work slackened, he notably his i obtained a job as cashier and later as ticket ageni | of the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad, returning to engineering at the first opportunity. In 1892 he accepted an offer to be assistant to the ‘president of the Pennsylvania road. At one time he was president, vice-president, or Girector of over one hundred companies in the Pennsylvania System, which number he was con- ‘ptantly reducing through mergers. After climbinz ‘step by step through almost every department of ‘the system, he was elected president of the Peun- sylvania Railroad Company on January 1, 1913. Rea’s philosophy of life is expressed in the fol- owing words: “Noman should ask for more than ee ‘When that is given, the rest is up to him.” 4 “He lived that philosophy. ‘To'the staunch fndt all other matter) proved by the, s—he was a man} vidualism of that maxim may be attributed a large portion of his sucees | More About the Corn Show | The © how which will be held in Bis: | |marck next month is calculated to be the biggest ‘corn event in the history of the state. It will be Jthat if Burleigh county is willing to roll up its] | shirt-sleeves and go to work to put the show across jin big sty Prog of committees sponsoring | jthe exhibition Is commendable, Posters, literature, and advertising have been | mailed to ry county in North Dakota, Funds |Lave been aequired for staging the show, and there [will be no lack of dollars to make the event a sue cess. It remains for Burleigh county farmers, busi-| hess nen, and citizens to provide the necessary en | husiasm without which no event of this nature ean} ket along | The city of Bismarck should feal a vital interest | in this Corn is one staple crops of the] [ state. Exhibitors will be here from every part of] the state. The show will prove valuable in cement: | jing commercial relations between the capital city nd other communities. It will serve to establish | the position of this city as a leader ia North Da | kota development, Bismarck hag this annual op-| portunity to cultivate the good will of the entire} | Editorial Comment The Latest Handwriting (McClure's M ne) A determined movement to improve the legibility | of the handwriting of school children has been un-| dertaken in a New York private school. The mas- ters concluded to teach “Broad Edged Pen Writing.” \which was perfected in England by Graily Heweti. | Although this style of handwriting is becoming al- |most universal in England, after in experiment of | several years, it has been taught in this country for| must have been specialists in dwriting and must, trom their own nece y, hav ‘overed the t- est and most legible methods of writing. Spence: writing, Hewett found, were developed in an effort | to copy the style of copper-plate engraving. This new handwriting closely resembles print, | not becaus an imitation of type forms but be- cause the type forms were originally cast with man- uscript lettering and the type forms have retained their original characteristics while hand writing styles were changing, Index Ficayunes your morphologic You didn't mow vnc? Pititul ignorance! Such a simple Divide the length of one arm plus the length, of one leg by the volume of your body trunk and the result is your morphologic index. If your in dex is low it denotes that you are a brachymorph, Which is science’s little w A high index on the contrary prov Your Morpholo; (New Orleans Times How is index? sou i had thing! Y of si ing you are fat. S you are skinny or, in the impressive language of wisdom, you are dolichomorph. | ante Naccurati and H. E, Garret, scientists both, have worked out a number of interesting facts rel- ative to such individuals and find there is a correla tion between a man's morphologic index and his mentality and emotions. They find the fat man more temperamental, but not quite so high in aver- age intelligence as the longer-limbed brother. Of course the two scientists prudently refrained from coming out flat-footed about the fat man’s inteili- gence, but leave each to draw his own conclusions after he has worked out his index. The two ph: cians shirk all responsibility for this condition blame it on ad the eccentricities of the endocrine | glands. Apparently even the thyroid “has it in” for the fat man. Stanford’s Rich Legacy (Louisville Courier-Journal) Luther Burbank emulates Luis Pasteur. the example set by Like the Frenchman, the American | refuses to commercialize his scientific discoveries, Declining offers varying from $100,000 to $250,000 made him by eminent financiers for his plant-collec- Be and plant processes at Santa Rosa, Cal., M Burbank gives both to the Leland Stanford uni- versity for less than one-half their value. Older and richer universities of the East that had planned to capture the prize are disappointed. Stanford wins a rare legacy. The Burbank treasure is entrusted to safe hands. Leland Stanford will guard it well, and, if possible, | enlarge the plant wizard’s achievement. Experts } in horticulture and arborculture will watch over | the gift. Sciantists will reverently protect and | develop the work. A great deal yet uncovered in the field first broken by Mr. Burbank may be ex- pected of Leland Stanford. | Mr. Burbank, it is gr ing to note, will not retire, Age hag not yet withered hig zest or dul!ed the edge of expectancy in his chosen work. His’ already rich life is marked by a standard of pro-! fessional ethics unexcelled in the wide realm of , Sefence, How Radio Is Growing (Good Hardware) In 1921 the United States’ total radio sales were $5,000,000, In 1923 the sales had jumped to $120,- 000,000. Radio is a business that has grown from nothing to sales of half a million dollars in five years, And the experts say that ra@io is still in its in- The wise ones say that before long there. will be as many radio as autos. That means, then, that in a few years the new users’ sets will increase the number at least three and a half times, to say noth. ing of the sets that will be replaced. Annual sales will probably total in the neighborhood of $2,000,- jan and other “modern” styles of hand-| This year they will total $500,000,000. | fancy. There are now in use about 5,000,000 re- ceiving sets. There are 25,000,000 familes in the Hl country, of which about 17,000,000 énjoy motor cars. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Th HE S DRAWER—CON: TINUED, nore ado, Little Mar- made up my mind that the! thing would be to. tell VE knew about the girl M Stimpson. You see I inclined to dim- mie’s way of d was sure The Tarigle : e Football Season Opens ; ; par PUAN I — | not for dancing t “But I wanted to talk to you_ about! Isn't it strange t Hannah and the children, Leslie, do you know that you are out wacet much that you do not know what! * that woman is doing with them? To- day when I was in the nursery for! a short time, Jack struck little Buddy.” In New Yor! three bandits with but couldn’t brush the Tom Edison, to want Coolidg nto tell me that you ad didn’t mind it “L mean to tell that 1 have t Charleston, a jumpy dance! he Charleston should come from | certa on famous for good roads? a jeweler attacked feather duster, a speech of only one word over the THURSDA CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Pub- lic Health Service The human body is the most com- powerful — structure quainted, and average person, educated person, himself. There re who seize upon a truth and— magnify them until they make people believe that nothing else is important. One person, for example, proposes *s health hy BY DR. HUGH | | i i | | plex, the most with whieh man i yet how little th even the avera knows about certain persons few grains of to save the co breathing exercises, another by lechewing every bite of beefsteak fif- ty-seven times; one, by eating no jmeat ‘and another, by taking a glass | of hot water every morning before | breakfasi. | Good habits in eating have a lot to do with health and efficiency and | perhaps even with disposition, not to isay, happiness, Next to colds and es of the respiratory tract peo- sually suffer more from | ple | gestive troubles than from almost any other ailment, Good eating habits require that you take into account not only how to eat, but what to eat, when to eat it, how much vou should eat and what vou should not eat. Every por- son should study this subject for himself. Be regular in. vour eating habits, Eating at all hours of the day and night is sure to cause trouble If you suffer from indigestior skip a meal oceasionally and give’ vour stomach a chance to rest. but { do not counteract the good effect that this has done by overloading your stomach at the next meal. Do not take violent exercise, or full baths immediately following a full meal, Many Eat Too Fast and Too Much Most peonle eat too fast, and many adults, nerticularly those of seden- tarv habits, eat too much. One's mental attitude has | to do with digestio: end worry seriou interfere with diesstion and nutrition, | The.average growine boy and girl need three sanare meals a day. much anxiety, anger and children who never have seen They should he tanght to ert cows, wholesome vegetables and shonld not é - be allowed to over-indulea in A cer called “Yellow Charles-| starches and sweets, particularly be- e | ton” was executed g Sing, but; tween meals, Overweight in adults, particularly after 30, such usually an indication that individual over-eatine. kinds of food at least, or he may be doing both. Everv extra pound vou carry is | iust thet much more extra strain on heart. liver, kidneys and other in- IRREGULAR EATING VERY INJURIOUS TO HEALTH Y, OCTOBER 1, 1925 Reduce your in-take of starshes, such as bread, potatoes, beans, peas, banana: also your fats, such as but- ter, cream, fat meats and chocolate. You should also limit your sweets, particularly pastries and candy. Take systematic daily physical ex- ercise, out of doors, if possible, and do not. over-sleen. é To Gain Weight Eat These Foods’ If you are under weight, and have no oreanic disease, then’ you will most likely gradually gain weight by increasing your consumption of but- ter, sugar, cream, chocolate, bread, ats and milk. Get p of sleep.and try to get rid of your worries, if you have any, One ef the best appetizers is a brisk, ont-door walk, filling the lungs. with good fresh’ air and this exorcise is suitable for both sexes and for all ages and for fat people and, for lean people, Goffoe, tea and cocoa, while ap- narently not harmful to the major ty of grown people, should be used in eration, mod ; ! No discuss'on of food is complete ta reference to vitamins. In to vrofein food, such as meat. egec and fish, needed for re- ratwing the hodv. and the carbo- hydrates such as bread. notatoes and corsala: ond cnears and fats for fuel and eneray, the hodv requires nv: or swhstances which we omin or vitamins. “ are very necessary for good found in many of our veh a3 butter, cream. letinee, veost, eabhare, peas and to- y alsa in certain fruits and uch ag oranges, lemons, 5 hernies, nnd many others thet conld bo named. The fonction of vitamins can he compared to the ienition enark, crhasea awn evorey ig insignificant but without which the engine cannot run. Our rrecent knowledwe indicates sthet vitamins are absolutely essen- to ovr nutrition and growth. Miroral. calts, polary, which are very are sronerally nresent in narv. well-balanced diet in sufficient ouantity to supply our needs. There are certain excentions, notatly sotinm chloride, which we cnnnly in the form of table eslt. Sodinm hieswsonate is also supplied as haking soda. Mooh of the ohtained from iadine we reauire ‘3 drinking water, In in which the drinkine wa- ter is deficient in iodine. goiter is ver" prevalent, cansing a great deal of sufferine and disfigurement. In such districts it has been found neenssary to supply iodine artifi- cially m off, ternal organs, inventor, seems i 4 cated voure wns job, He made, “ted voure people. who hav» satis fir d the other requirements for un versity entrance, can not write edu- Sven | radio. ceed was Ma. instead of} settled the question entire! z cated English, “I hope you told her, then, that if t Britain has a coal crisis, If| Poor teaching in the preparatory us the logical to fix up| it happened again she would be dis ts another we can let her; Schools, is not explanation enough. at th fice, and T would} charged,” Mrs. Prescott interrupted. ours antilsnext! spring, These ‘schools do furnish satisfac- to be mentioned in the mat-| “I did nothing of the kind,” | re- : eer ae tory training in other things, and tall; neither ld I have to] torted. mnih has been with me} you might say one who feeds hub-| their English teaching is. certainly to J it. cars . She was with] py eggs every morning is just egg-, Not uniformly worse than their other I ordered the roadster, thinking I] me before | came, and I) ing him on to something desperate, | teaching, would drive myself down, 1 would] would trust her judgment in— the} . a A better explanation may be the go leisurely, and get the whole sub-| care of the children above any one rhaps this world eatastrophe! slovenly spoken English. that has ject well fixed in my mind. But,] el »{ which Doyle draws near is only) become almost fashionable. And the alas, you can propose as much en Ihave nothing more to say."| the end of the bathing girl season, “democratization” of -edueation, wish, but when your mothe Little Marquise, you were re- uae which brings to the institutions of is living with you, your time leved of meddling “old women in| , posed of often as’ she wishe came out of my room T met John's moth the doo “You're not going out again?” she demand “Yes, As IT 1 answered shortly. your home by having a lover instead of husband. There — are m who an on but unfortunately John's mother does not belong in that eate- gory.) some | want it, in the | New York, Oct. 1—It was mid- way between midnight and dawn. group of newspaper men were standing in the landing field at the New Brunswick flying field. A ro-| tating beacon shot its beaam against a low ceiling of fog. The direc- tional windbag puffed and flute: ed rather listlessly. Occasioy the mechanics at the field flooded the area with a powerful light that turned night into day. i There was something cerie in| the setting of the ‘seen newspaper men, keen rivals fame and keen friends in a of it, stood there, ini eyes and their e¢ titing for the far-off drone of a motor or the first flash of the pilot’s lights which he would turn on upon first sight of the field. Minutes passed then hours. Still no word. from a pilot who ha left Bellefonte. The slight died entirely. The wind bag limp ganst its supporting pola. Then the. fog came up in banks like the gray and serried hosts of a Hunnish enemy. It closed down upon the watch Would the pilot get through now? A loud jangle of an outdoor tel phone bell. A call forgone of the | newspaper men. “It's the offfice,” he sail as he returned to the group. The office, that great impersonal thing so per- sonal to a newspaper man. “It says Casey Jones just called up from Pit\burgh ‘and says he wouldn't leave the ground now for a million dollars.” ". “Well, if Casey Jones can’t get through, I guess nobody can,” said another newspaperman, guess not,” said re all sunk in the “You said it,” chirped tache of the flying field. guy Casey won't fly there ‘isn’t a pilot in America will fly. He's, cra- zier'n hell about taking chances, but you never heard of him taking an impossible chance.” Then the telephone rang again. It was a report from Bellefonte that the pilot had returned there. He had been within 15 minutes of New Brunswick when the wind died down another. boat an a “If th, tude of Bellefonte out of the fog, In all America I doubt if there is any calling more romantic than that of the flier. And it is in truth a |calling. And among all the fliers I doubt if there is one whose name stands for more than that of Casey | Jones, who is “crazier’n hell about | taking chances,” but never takes an | impossible one. I would like to hear tof the aircraft investigators calling { him to testify. I believe’ he could | tell more about flying than General | Patrick or Colonel Mitchell. He is ag important a figure in aviation ad- vancement as there is in America| 000,000 a year—figures so big they stagger us. The | tory of radio is a real business romance. But I suppose he’s too modest to it in the summer. In Newark, andits got $10,- aa Tein, 000 worth of s, so now they], 1he, Univer ean make themse! some diplo-| jel) English.” mas. The more you live as if you were| he can write Every entering student take an examination to see whether | hates 500 words of ‘winter. the,oniy person in the world the| English clearly and correctly. more you are out of it, Star them—must take a special Six Cleveland men who raised, glasses and said, “Here's looking at you,” never will look again, ve no university A fossil horse with claws has been! found in Asia. In a few years you, versity work who ha: | may find horses with bumpers here. | at 1 — ordin This is a great country. It has; The puzzle is to EVERETT TRUE SUCH VvocumM&s, out'LT IND ON® IN THERE THAT Ans a PARTSED. credit. ss not acqi know why SANS “A Fool AND HIS MONGY SOON) The nice thing about not getting ut you want is you still think you miner we think we will Ai ry winter we think we willl save! ity of California has | “popularly known as “dum- | simple | manded. “pay a fee, and for which they old men who never have seen trains actual majority of ostensibly edu-| the victim of this method. BY CONDO So Wou'VG TAKEN SOME OF YOUR OWN MONEY AND BOUGHT THAT Book oF} QUOTATIONS WHEN WE ALREADY Have Tw NO PouBT, MY DEAR 7 { | | | | i higher learning whole regiments of students -fronr homes with no tradi- tion of hooks may be another, At least, the experience of this university—-and it is by no means nd) exceptional—indicates that we are ng up the best educated gen- eration, statistienlly, in the history | of the world, and that, somehow, it ‘}isca generation that cam not write {| its own language, | FEAR CAUSES SUBMISSION | BUT NOT OBEDIENCE { For as many ages as some had {| the authority to say, “come,” and | others the duty to “come,” commands have been enforced by fear. It is the easiest way. want is a particular action, you can get it by frightening the actor with has to! the menace of something which he worse than the act com-' | You can make a child eat his por- Those who fail—which is most of | ridge by beating or frightening him. | course | Incidentally, you also make in elementary composition, for which | possible for him to digest it im- But you have “made him mind.” And, from emperors und tyrants. to; r ‘The purpose is to guarantee that’ parents, “making him mind”, hes, no one goes on to the higher uni-, been the supreme purpose. . Now comes the psychological age, | a minimum capacity to write | and the specialists have been trying y straight ahead English. | to find out what really happens, not an | to the acts, but go the character of | i | And the result of numerous ques- | | tionnaires is that the result is sub-| | mission rather than obedience; sul-| len resentment rather than moral dis- | cipline. | An illustration: A boy, attending| a school where bright boys are not! sent, Was a persistent truant. His! mother worried until it made her ill. His brother and teachers appealed to his sympathies, and frightened him with the menace that he would seriously injure her if he persisted in his truancy. So he kept on “playing hookey” with the exact result they predicted. He was desperately resolved not to hurt his mother further. He could have accomplished this very simply, by merely stopping playing truant. This solution apparently never oc- curred to him as a possible one. So he_took poison i ks This case happened to get into th news. How many others are there in which the same situation exists— that mere “discipfine,” the compul- sion of action by fear, will not even compel the action, and will add noth- ing to character or self-control if id. YES, AND tt savs “HIS*, Movey, not HERS IT'S AODRSSSED TO a cer tHe HE Fools talk, —JAMES W. DEAN. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON One day Old Daddy Cracknuts drove his automobile up the road past the Twins’ garage. | “Hello, Daddy!” cajled Nick, “Hello!” answered the squirrel gentleman socially, as he waved his tail at them. Having both hands on +] the steering wheel he couldn’t wave them. Daddy. was a very careful driver and careful of his car—very. He wasn’t a one-handed driver, not for a minute. t “Hello, Daddy!” called Nancy. And again the squirrel gentleman called “hello” and waved his tail in greeting. “Daddy takes good care ‘of his car,” said ‘Nick to Nancy. “He a ways drives slowly, and keeps it oi sed and clean and in good order. He ! If all you | everybody, The thi: a little distance past the garage, came to a sudden stop. “He must have forgotten some- thing,” said Nancy. “He's stopped and coming back.’ J But Daddy didn’t come back. The Twins saw him jiggling the gears and brake this way and that and fi- nally get out and look at the engine, “Something must be wrong,” said ty “Come on, We'll go and help im. m. So both of the Twins went over to the place where Daddy Cracknuts was working with his car. “What's wrong, Daddy?” asked Nick. “That's just what IT was going to ask you,” said Mister Cracknuts. “Lean't find. out what it i “Mebhe it's your battery Nick. Daddy climbed into the car again and stepped on the starter and turn- ed the lights on and off. “No—that’s all right,” “Ive not the battery.” (“Mebbe it's the carburetor,” said said he said. don't know what that u might be right,” . “Will you look and see? | ‘No, it's not that,” he said finally. No! It sure you have is, but said Daddy. , “Have you enough oil? isn't oil. Are you enough gasoline?” “I just bought two pints this morning,” said Daddy, “and I haven't run forty feet since. It | ean’t be gasoline either.” By this time quite a crowd had collected. The Bunnies and the Woodchucks and the Mud Turtle families, also Ringtail ‘Coon annd his nephews, Cornie and Cobbie. Even Phil Frog was there and all the other frogs. Then Colonel 'Possum shuffled up and after him came Mrs. ’Possum with, the five little 'Pos sums hanging to her tail. There were a lot of others besides, but I haven't time to tell about ig is that there was quite a crowd, and every person in the crowd was offering some reason for Daddy Cracknuts’ car getting stuck. Some said it was the brakes, and some said it was the gears, and some said it was no water in the radiator and some sald this and some said as. But nobody could find out the trouble, But just by chance Nick looked into the gasoline tank. “Your gaso- line is all gone, Daddy!” he cried, Pp engee your a yn ‘The ea!” exclaimed Daddy. “What do you suppose has hap- pened?”.. __. (To be ¢ontinued) (Co ight, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) A THOUGHT f , Bure religion and undefiled before God is thin; To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction and to keep himself unspotted from the world.—James 1:27. In faith and “hope the world will disagree, but all mankind’s concern is charity.—Pope. o—__-__________» | LITTLEJOE | >————__________¢ OF THE WEA ww THE WEEK DAYS - ie TOMORROW n | has fewer ‘répair bills thai the forest or an low folk” mae ut eely had he. Daddy's: ear, rwhle ei ae \ Ww Pre ae

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