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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1925 | et ‘ONE CHILD WITH MEASLES The Bismarck Tribune: 30°00 {yc antahgscet| WHITE COLLIE FOR WHITE HOUSE which Mr, Warren An Independent Newspaper | was an officer did not violate the anti-trust laws. — | ~ oe THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Rejection of Warren was solely for politic#l rea | MAY INFECT 20 OTHERS (Bstablished: 1873) sons, ‘The Democrats aided a purely party quarre! Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| in the hopes of making political thunder, \| By DR. HUGH S. CUMMING although the skin does not actually | Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at peel: Bismarck, ag second clase mail matter. | i | as in scarlet fever. * | Surgeon General, United States This process Jasts about a week, . \ Public Health Service and the fever will disappear. This . + | ¥ 4 Isn't it a pity you can't trade in} League Face: st | George D Mann........-..President and Publisher = The whole world awaits with the deepest of in- | is a description of a mild case of Subscription Rates Payable In Advance t t ‘ . allan i" {your ummer suit on a new win-| From blie health dl t | measles. “i erest the resu e League ¢ at a public healt! standpoin Dally by carrier, per yeat...... $7.20 ee ee Jter sui Levery parent should recognize the| Some cases of measles are more Daily by mail, per year (In Bismarck) 250 | end Hostilities Ia the Balkan area. The council) i — [fact that measles is a disease of | malignant. The child may suffer Daily by mail, per year of the league has ordered troops to withdraw and with a pile is the man! prime importance. It is a disease of|from convulsions, from high fever, (in state outside Bismarck)... Dally by mail, outside of North Dakot . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 5.00 | to retire to their own frontiers 6.00 e when bills come along) close association. A single child in| and excessive devolpment of all the | the beginning stages of meas! jeasily infect fifteen or twen es may|ordinary symptoms, or the rash - ; ; when it appears instead of being red Lives of great men oft remind us! people and because of this fact it|/may be a bluish-black discoloration, that our lot is more sublime, jis highly important that in appearance much like a recent » i . {known or thought to be suffering | bruise. iving is more than 300]from measles should not be allowed| In all cases great care should be years old. Which is how long peo- ito come in contact with well per-| taken that bronchial pneumonia does have caten too much on Thanks-|sons who have not had the disease | not develop. Bronchial pneumonia j until the fever accompanying the dis- | is one of the most fatal of all the |, ., [ease has passed, and the patient re-| complications of measles, While dd sit-|Jeased from quarantine at which | severe cases may not be grave most time he should be free from nasal] should be constantly on the alert Doubtless the League of Nations will be most - effective in treating with European problems. Its Member of The Associated Prevs sphere of inf The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispa es credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also P7eblem is one most likely tobe settled by an the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | akency such as the league, IY the council of t in, All rights of republication of all uther matter) Teague is unable to. settle a minor controversy | herein are ulso reserved, | A oF ft ence must necessarily be limited | without America’s participation, but the Balkan Now and then ron the a spe a looking | bet Sse Cc in, een minor powers, its future is uncert good cnow idischarge and free from a cold. lest bronchial pneumonia develop Forelgn Re the sake of peace KE 00, is the p of ne! ae A a oretgs Representatives . thes ey peac in Europe, it i the hope ot nearly eer: 1 ! ‘The first symptoms of measies| Measles is a serious disease and CHICAGO. ‘ H civilized nation that the le: mandate ia Nothing's free in this world, even | usually appear about ten days after} spares very few exposed persons 4 " Tower Bld DETROIT tf this instance will be most effective. Failure will! | though you may not realize just} exposure. At this time the eyes of | who have not had it. ba Saye BURNS ART & Kresge Bld. | oi a decided set bac : a i how you . jthe child ‘usually become red and} | The old idea, still prevalent among NEW YORK ee AND: SMT I; # decided Sou UAcleant Me resumption. OF Pon] deems ons axscan |watery. The eyelids show signs of|the uninformed, to the effect that 1 NE 7 : : Fifth Ave, Bldg. ditions in western Europe which the League pact | ussing the weather never does | puffiness and the eyes themselves are | children should be exposed to meas- ——————= | save promive of elimination but we do w sh winter | sensitive. les early in order that they may | t F Newspaper) | ne during the cheap season | In severe cases, the whole face is| have the disease and get it over . ‘ . a a — i swollen and puffed, the throat is|is erroneous. G . Jew Ty ; |parched and dry, and an irritating | Chilling May Weather and Earthquakes New Type of Locomotive | and be merry and to- | Cough adds. to the discomfort. € | Cause Pieawoita Weather conditions are the fuses which set off A new type of railroad locomotive is being tried Hes ow you will have to go on a) The child is apt to come home) A child with measles should be put earthquake out in Sweden in which the locomotive is driven by | sie and eee eon en from school feeling drowsy and ir-|to hed and kept there as long as it : t The to porte twine W Délsel ar ootprints | Tittble and complaining of chilly |has any fever or cough. The room This iacthe heory, pul forwurasnysDr: Kohat Wf ee ome containe <a’ Deis ler. fo t6 potprints | sensations. He may even have aj should be airy but it should be dark- Sayles. of tlie Unite R Z oil engine which is used to run a pump. This pump ; 7 mousine.| chill. At night the irritation in-jened because children with measles ee Fates Hugeum) OE Canby supplies water under high: presuuretazdrive tnectur | f creases, the child is feverish, the| are very sensitive to light. Mass., who opinion upon the study of SUPE ater under igh: pressitre to: Grive Re Nur | sueh Ai {whites "of the eyeballs show ‘little| The bed clothes should be thin be- Weather CONAIUGHS which prodeled ‘eevee enrth. | UNS | ae talk i red lines upon them and the suffer-| cause the child is apt to become too mere art { vehe mew locomotive made 50 miles an hour in audience ler gives the appearance of a person| warm, kick off the comforters and atakes H . ‘ bout to cry. suffer from a cold. A chilling of recent tests. Its inventors claim that it does aw Keeping a daught | suffer. accent He does not attempt to upset the aceepted opinion | yj eae 5 et Sean iteall fight nae ake (ee hay There may be a few little red|this kind may predispose to pneu- Penal ; ae \ MLION | With the jerking in stopping and starting and the ne tebe fe Un ot the hard palate and it ou | monia, Food should be light “ane of sic 4s to q nial qeiture of cart | vibration while running that is characteristic of the | aa sely on the membrane of ‘the | should consist chiefly of nutritious a © age iat <aFUNENANOS “esl oe , 1 eT ; ; F side the mouth you willf broths, soft boiled eggs, and the like. ae et ing a hat eartiegtakes recut 1 ordinary locomotive. » collie clan scores again, The place of Panl Pry, the W hite House } gueeine and dancing sare just as | probably eo some: small, S00 ae Milk, unless. certified and_ of stresses and strains set up in the rock fornvrtion ale banished beenive of his mean disposition, will be taken by this different as a couple of peas just| ped, reddish spots. These are call-| known purity, should be pasteurized. . by the shrinking of the earth's crust. The qutke To Study Diseas jure white pedigreed Scotch collie pup, called 101 Tee ia t NEA eat ) cd ‘“Koplik's” spots, and are one of|A little iced lemonade will prove * U Subic hen eect ueecet an erent be pour 'o Study Disease | Mrs. Coolidge by Mr. and M rome N i 3 oe ’ [the signs of measles. comforting to the inflamed throat, cin no iohger withstand them A specially equipped station been set asid> ; =| j Child Should Be and “is_usually well borne, particu- Bai ft Lat Pirbright, Surrey, England. to make a study of | 4 x what r. Sayles is attempting to ye $ 1 " { \ aa ‘ ; ! i na to expltin 1 fing foot and mouth dise The work under | ‘ why the quake occurs just 4 fe moment it does | ; ’ justcat the moment ied the dircetion of the Foot and-Mowh Disease Re er why not a month sooner or three months biter? His ans | Kept in Bed larly in. older children. ' |. A child showing such signs should| The child’s eyes should be kept ' jbe kept in bed. At the end of the|clean and should the fever run high ’ |day the fever will be higher than|the comfort of the patient may be o 7 e -TWINS [it was the night before. There will] increased by sponging with tepid {be great restlessness, rolling and| water and alcohol. Every child sick Ly ouwa ROBERTS BAD TON | tossing about the bed, frequent re-| with measles should have skillful yearch Commit wer is weather conditions. The FROM * | Phe British ministry of culture furnished the | of ' H . F constitute the finger which pulls the trig | ie Griuiktcnialgiry Ofaericy Iture furnished the | COTE TORU quests for a drink of water. attention given by the family phys- 1 i station which includes both barns and laboratories. | Almost befor: sou at lookin | Heavy, heavy thangs over?” |. These manifestations will continue | ician. In this connection he points out that the s! Research work and experiments will be carried on) ter, dear Ruth, Twill . you.| te be feeling hiuch bette ked the Clown, picking up a for- | for mained a four dase ane one morn- when the fever, and pough have in the rocks are such as to cause the line either b1 jy ie phe di pigss in th as a (Em afraid, however, P will not bo | for a dong time, She is going to] feit and holding over Nancy’s |ing When the child is having its bath | gone, the child may be allowed to be ws 7 her with cattle, sheep and pigs, in the hopes of finding Je to stay as long as T would wish,| live with him when she gets hom | head. some little dusky red spots will ap-|up and about the room, but should rise or sink. ‘means of curing and controlling the disease, Paula Perier will re in nd while it makes me quite unhap-| “Fine or superfine?” said Nancy. | Pear on the hair line, not be allowed to indulge in violent ‘dthe Clown winking at | Within twenty-four hours this rash| exercise because measles weakens .., will spread over the body and the] the heart muscle to some extent. . it is perhaps the best all of Tittle over aw wid TP have prom-| py. in a way V Sally that 1 w ortain her. | thing all around fe Where the tendency is to ris ne,” si Corn Dodge ve says, the quake | would be caused by a sidden tightening of ie load Change Ritual Perhaps you will come back with! You know, of course, that we have it was Mister Dodger's pipe} child will look very much bespeck-| | The cause of measles is not BNCUNS libal Atsthie BAUKAT HGINOHE ‘The Episcopal church has finally dropped the | Me, You say rou are per Well | dack’s mother with us now. it ‘over Nancy's head,|led and swollen, In from five to] known. We do know, however, that ' ; | : ; jand [think a little change would do! seems to me she worse and] he didn't know it. seven days the rash will begin to| the infection of measles is found in Where the tendency of the land is to sink, a sud- | word “obey" from its marriage ceremony. | you good. dary | shail he done with the|fade and within three or four days|the secretions from the nose and den Increase of tie load on the land al the eritleal | ‘The inclusion of the word “obey” in the cel | you, tor s taken a notion that Tam] owner?” asked the Clown, thereafter will be entirely gone, leav-| throat beginning with the first stage : ; ' _ , | hat compl skein of the children too much in the|” Naney ‘thoueht and thought, and/ing behind, perhaps, a faint mot-|of the disease; therefore, a person moment would precipitate the quake. probably had very little effect on whether mar: t ane Hanna with whom she is in| everybody in High Jinks Land crowd. | tling of the skin. suffering from measles should not Everyone knows that the atmosphere exerts a | were successful, Is expulsion probably will have ( M: , ; u . oa nar Jed around to hear what she was go- a 8 : econ by the throwlig ieee! to bite in contact qzith ‘ paalde ede a Bade tn, : ! Sally. took home with othe r et went| ing to say. ° the outer layer of the skin of | well persons until the period of fever pressure upon the land, which is approximately 15) just as much, thou s only been| to Joh nd said she} “He'll have to say his AB great many little bran-like flakes,!has passed. pounds per square inch, It is changes in the at-| ‘The success of marriage depends far more on the | the ove + you co thoneht J . was unkind to his) over fifty times,” said Naney laugh: : hard ve how the girl John, instead of com: 5 a. ? mospheric eiforts of a husband and wife to make it a success pressure, or biatrometric pressure as H jenanged already. ade the mistake of ‘ol sr aaah’ Chowne hg. | sume number of people in an eastern is commonly called, coupled with jtbnormal de: | than on mere words in a marriage ceremony. Twas dubious at the t self and. 2 Wap Oe Go ira. eee Gate Domne: | NENEY ay Your] town, would probably be governed creases or increases in rainfall which precipitate | over Sally’s plan to take the girl into You have to say your AB C's over! Ween en hat, Mister Bethe tk | by five commissioners and a few ad- supthauaked agcotdi = Sayl \ . so : home, but 1 know now that fifty. times.” , We shall.now go on with the for- ee A 4 earthquakes according to Dr. Sayles. |} Your chance to have a miilion a year income is | cigne coy bath: Of th ie oe i them first," | £2it" ministrative employes appointed by) ‘ . Whore the land has a tendency to sink, heavy | just one in 1,500,000 but don't worry. There are | gives Sally soothing tu do outsic nid Miste ‘eT Hever bad| oc? the Clown. pleked up the) next thom, ainfall with high barometric ure will act only 74 of the variety in the United States. joe hes ty hacks an ie eens ny use for books, Hving jas 1 do, in Mlgeavy, belay whet Hanis over?” fe ee . ‘lhe olpaw. she bieeiites Arse Rd” AWUGE ° r that ¢ . of course, it is th child, should ha corn-shock, But Vl say anything | ; y 2") of administrative overhead, there is the straw which breaks the camel's back.” Where | 7 - j making of Maggie Stimpson name, ad that is the| that Ide know as many times as you | AMG al! the rest of It | J 9 [also a state university at Reno with the land has a tendency to rise, lack of rainfall andj me don that 1 vee yee en eee is ulways trying to stirljike. Ton nly like to be agree Law ere the. owne? Hee Hye . a student population of over 1 per low barometric ipressure will turn the trick j Edi ial C tout cele pretty ities art cae) tence part] ables, but T want my corncob pipe] “fee him empty a_pitcher of water | ay of the total population of the « aah eh chile einanait itorial Comment a he (ee [| batek’ , Wik miteecioeee state. 3 points out that prior to the earthquake | was in Californi jwas terrib ou know Yo kn oT se is red’?” spoon. Fs 7 ae ' ° ! ee. oe Do you know “The rose is red'7"| Muy fasMON ened Old King|, New York, to do as well, would felt in New England on Jan. th was a de sei Wa lear : sked Nancy. le. “Somebody had to emp i have to have a great state university s broken to be accused lunkind to him any way. Mrs. Prescott wa ed him of telling an un father scemed to be dmother instead of him. NEA Service, Inc. “The rose is red, {reel 3 x teas of a hundred thousand students. If ‘The violet blue, pitcher of water with geaspoon:, [the divorcees think their temporary Sugar's sweet, \ was’ fea ho “aus ‘counting Mister|exile a hardship by reason of the _"And so are you. Dadzers verses on his fingers to be| “lack of culture” of the wooly west, : Lee Do a sure he didn't miss any this is the answer. Correct,” said Nancy. Suddenly he saw what the Clown| The American Federation of Li nstead d to the registration ‘ ficiency of rainfall coupled with an unnsually low Abandoned Farms and Food Supply | nl Ma barometric pressure. The land in New Enghind, o a ‘ the thing (New York Times) | in an of lock in the mor i | i ! it is significant that, while more than 75,000) ing, Tam looking for great thin | | he says, has a tendency to ri Lest anyone think that eh and rainfall could not be farms have been abandoned in the country since | ™").0e sin air pressure ficient to have the 1920, there is a marked increase in truck farms near | and Karl are s stent aie 4 ‘eas holding, and it was his own| bor is opp: necessary effect, Dr. Sayles calculates what Me) cities i : ‘ ; ‘of next week So Mister. Gorn, Boiler jerown, He didn’t laugh then, but) of aliens because the registers would H cities in th . Somehd her, the big por- nee : ; lofi ‘ainfail ‘ . ba ow or other, the big POP”) Kuyt is not yong to m 1 plea: everybody else did. 'be used to spy on the unions atiiensy. In ee and barometric press? ation must be fed, A steady drift to the cities | i ean have mygenaeeppan shat iee “What did I tell you,” said the! Doubtless the fears of the union- meant in New Englend at that tine. | tre ; i ‘ 7 | saath ; S 7 +, | Se Crow. “He who laughs last,|ists are not unfounded. Our union- from ‘the*rural districts @ ‘ ste IahonS rs kel care — Scare Crow. “He iS 5 1 - 4 he drop in aly pressure, he says, meant that »| he rural districts continues, but there ts hop 2 etween the acts: “E think} “Certainly,” said Nancy, “Where's |iaughs best, Mister King. You have| busters in America ure capable of : | that the problem of food supply will be soived in sa good show, but it's a shame| the, Ried Piper? to dip out the water yourself. And|a lot of things in what they imagine ‘ “Here,” said the Pied Piper step-! ping out. “How will you have it, re Crow weight equal over wide areas to as much ¢ a ‘ y n a mil} part py the fruit and vegetable gardens in the sub- SW | they have to use all those old t lion tons per square mile was lifted from the land.) yy), | } Why didy ¢ pew We The deficiency in rainfall amounted to eight] “1° the city zone more poultry yards and apple | BN | (cows 925, NEA Service vn back |is their holy cause, and this may be among them. old} And yet, precisely this system of you can’t. have your own er until the Jast drop is gon oy} Old King Cole was a mer said the Scare Crow. indy ! 4 3 i i if om] and soon he was laughing as! registering and keeping track, not + 7 inches of rainfall, This, he says, meant that Me) ong peach orchards are to be found from year to ee ; never heard of any other kind.” | heartily iybody ‘else. Indeed, he | only of aliens, but of everybody, has \ land relieved from a weight which it wou'l | ; abe w York, Oct: 28—"Phose whom: [RANGE BEHAVIOR “| oentan Si Sag. Don't laughed so hard he spilled more|always been the custom in many of ‘ love die ‘ i such. a, Ung ya3 50 vhs Ce: on't! water than he dipped. the countries from which these im- ' ye Yr. But, after all, the main dependence of the | 4.0 Gyas love wie sean, Kensington, Eng the balcony] you know tne poem about oherwise have had upon it, amounting to 3 But it was all in fun, Nancy and! migrants come, and it has not had city workers and drones must be upon the grea it might be n{of one of the hous white-hair-]" ‘To market, to market to buy a fa 224,000 tons. | wheat and stock farms of the West. There need be I method ¢ an of 80 spe ufternoon hog, Dies: Nick decided es Le aL res erate Rea Maeri . aiid Careers | no fear that good arable land will be overlooked. | below. In her ‘ Home: again home again, Jig Itty Everyone was jolly, and nobody | once recognize that unionism, fx not ge a “a 8 | The lean yeras have to be taken with the fat. Mos I beater and later a Union| “Well, Pll dance the first kind,”| MMC? 413% Oo tinued.) HE eae e She wore a hat crowned with] said the Scare Crow. lals, bells and] So the Pied Piper began to play sands stopped toland the Scare Crow began to dance. watch the ex y seene, “Hold on! Hold on!” said the heir average ay (7 aes a _ | Clown. “You're losing all your years, 8 mont The | The largest map in the world s . If you keep on you won't Mand the being made at San Francisco. It is have anything left but your clothes of 4% In to be 600 feet long and 18 feet wide.] and two broomsticks.” BY CONDO tion. There are increases of farm lands in|or club, 20 were execute Interviewers who have sought her out agree that, in | f EVE CAND THEN, MRITRUS, WHAT Do You, |greit in sie and yet yearly smaller| If any alien who can once smuggle \cpexaa. an compli: i Fae ea : law and their average MaRS ic writing.a novel. a ‘yeur, and weekly ro: | [oxee an empire In. epnee;, In California, Oregon; | i in accessibility; “infinitely in is safe ever after, the immigra- THINK THAT FELLOW SAID W f “vs all part of th views and articles, she is a housckeeper of the | — eS and Ha the Southern States of Virginia, ed one ina hos first grade. is happily married and has a garden | 0 arolina and Florida, The last promises to NT and yet one, more uniform than any | tion act will be of little protection to PUT MY PROPOSITI equal body of humanity on carth.| American labor. pie Minis of tie Beutel {of the abandoned farms are no worth cultivatin rveling. They #! | tn spite of the ravages of the boll weevil, cotton | men ad x lands are still held at a high valuation. Droughts | Pewee ty th |do not make good ranch land a drug on the hatin \ | market. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) | War on the existence of unionism, — oe lor refusal to deal with unionized employes through the union is futile, short-sighted and wrong. The defense of the rights of the employer should be against unjust demands of the unions, not against their right to be dealt with to make any demands or bargains. - For this system, in the long run, is the only way to make the immi- _ [gration act effective. And labor is It is a gréat country we live inj) the chief beneficiary of that act. And the critics again are mi ways marvel when they hear of a woman who Is | eer and at the same time fas ful paper achieved a filled her mission as wife and mother Mrs, Millin, the famous author of “God's Step- : A good dea w terri oi a Ne children,” lives at Johannesburg, South Africa haute, eal of new territory is being opened to ke, and in waich she works herself, add immensely to the food supply in the next ten ‘This is written in Reno, Nevada, Speer The busiest woman in the world today ito an enterprising wide-awake western Queen of Rumania. She has a big job on her h ek a town, which the outside world! knows for only one thing, and thatj the thing which concerns the na-j tives least of all. } if ever a woman had. He: it you want to | Rust Proof Wheat swift It is only a night’s ride away from i a cred » the “Kid call it that, is pretty well marked out. And reason- ny.iehey. credit: tothe kid California. and yet it is already 4) po yicaiy attectioned one toward “carec Drop- ably familiar to the world. Yet she is one of th: Word from Winnipeg is that Samuel Larcombe rh ; r f the wor! aving " = ; puaetapaet The pigeons in front of the Pub- famous mothers of the world too. Having # brilliant | famous agriculturist of Manitoba, has deve!oped | tic no plgeaie, Intron he Pu and famous career has not made her one jot less |, pust-resistant wheat, It is not claimed that the | over. many i (St. Paul Dispatch) per” gang. different world.” Last night it was the homebody, the wife and mot _|new variety, which is given the name of “Axmin: | {ter pay Kifth Summer in California; this morning] another with brotherly loves in hon- 4 Mary ‘Roberts Rinehart, Kathleen Norris, Ethel 5 Sil f : 2 ee H jt was winter at Truckee, and to-| pr i - one er.—Rom. s aie ; peu | ste 100 per cent proof against rust, although | where their next coming Yay" it ig crisp autumn in. Reno, the 12:9, 10. arrymore, and of course, Schumann-Heink, are it | so far it has shown an almost perfect resistanc om. Tt i nin friend, 5 ‘i Q Ce n almost perfect resistance. alter Peenee re vein sharp air and the coloring leaves) 1. nt catty in love with himself the top groups of their respective “carcer’ fields. | Yet all are home-loving, all are mothers and all ap pear to have a great deal of time for their fam- ilies Speaking of the impending winter which in California we forget is a part of the normal year elsewhere. ‘Tomorrow morning it will be sum- mer in California again. Thus mod-! ILAPPER FANNY says! t i | 1 Why should there not be a wheat that would br immune to black stem rust? Professor Bolley of | | North Dakota developed a variety of flax that Was | fore he ees homing and ae {immune to flax wilt—a discovery. that saved the} The birds fiutter around his h flax industry of the Northwest. A few years ago| Me approaches, and eat from his ja variety of wheat known ag “Kota” was soll on its | pigeons in his fami rust-resistant quality and while it seemed to be | there were tens when he be how whe t He able to defy the attack of the fungi better than older | likes ine fi ian? will find no rival. areely hits ins on his way do d ‘Franklin. crn improvements defy the laws of| space and time. The woman who upon marriage says, “Now my career. is ended,” believes that only because she wants it to be true. She is tired of the effort of that career. She welcomes the release which mar- Reno, to its exotic colonists, who come, here as’ to a hospital, for anj loperation of social surgery, is “out' he < Ns 7 0. | ones "—t i ir! pn one Pe ore ata dal pacn table: Wad varicties, it. was not entirely immune and its yield | Geta of the world” —that is, ut of their! 3 ere is no contes etween family and carecr ly s Jackie Coogan, up and ¥ ‘inci | was said to be not as high. | paced as Doan = : ye They are as provincial as the na- for woman. wondering how he up h TOUR “PROPOSITION + tives, and find the adjustment from If the newly developed grain should prove all; movie child roles when that is now claimed for it, it would simply add an: | me ae na nothin = other facet to the problem of the surplus. Black | of the vaudevili : - g A stem rust has done more than its share in keeping | drome. “Toy Town” boasts quite 4 May Revive Appointment production below normal and in decreasing our| menagerie of animals o| = There is gossip that President Cooli will try F; ch the human mid here g p that ‘oolidge lexportable surplus. it has not been an unmixed jas attendants and ente: You MEAN Mcuanht ‘ than the native of Reno would find PROGOSCS ee it in the reverse direction. But to jthe true Nevadan, it is not out of | the world. | It is the center of his world. And a good world it is. Even the vast! New York to Reno much harder Both are as much within the grasp of woman as they are open to man. s wh $ ; ie He t : ainefs. But free ene i teanich consbiente ; to accomplish the appointment of Charles Beecher evi in that way. If the average yield per acre /Mmany of the animals won't stuy uninhep Nevada are something of in-| é = _ Warren as attorney general. ‘There is some talk! o¢ yy - ; ; dwarfs. Recently the ys ont a ; merc pases vil) native and go to {CL NOMA Dakota could be increased from 10.1 bush-|iarge ind had to be give spiring beauty. «sa and sil eels Ps act baa a a ire and g0 © |els to double the amount, due to the absence of dam: | The baby elephant has been rep ‘in the mountains is, gold and si ie Uni 8 . se who are conver- by one more juvenile, also, and a iT ¢! sant with the, facts declare that Coolidge felt bitterly age to the crop by rust, the problem of the surplus \fawn became a deer ‘and departed soil of upinatched Fichnene. quiere 4 th tion of the senate in foie ti ae anos would become even more acute. Yet that is exactlv|to a zoo. is enly, 8 little of it, but wha! ere e action ate cting the appoint- j inte at as is b hat ment of Warren for whom the Preaident has ae oe , one, for/leyeh the phepent anoyp aa the wart ee cee eet town | And to the natives, it is home. om les of wheat in time will become immune, each | —_j years 8! i Gaal RE al a ‘come ine, in two years sinc e has In empty space, Nevada is a great 4 admiration. . : crop surviving the attack being stronger than the|been caring for babie Conditions have changed which might pave the) ast, We may see the time when, without the addi-|°4¥ the show, onl oungsti hav. i way for a confirmation of Waryen. Senator Ralsto| tion of a single acre, our wheat crop will be double youngsters have cr is dead and Senator Ladd’s seat vacated without) wnay it is now. To what expedient will those re-|, New York was nearly two prospect of immediate appointment. Both Ladd and) s74 then who now insist on reduction of acreage Behind: the vresbcet thal hers the empire, nearly as large as France. In people, it is a little town. The) total population is perhaps a minor suburb or country county seat fur- ther east: But it must have all the parapher- nalia of a state, It has a governor, seeing the musical comedy, Ralston opposed Warren's confirmation. a PMA TE + = = rather than a bold grappling with, the problem |No, Nannette.” It came to town j = legislat the usual complement| : wot * 4 cthesRederal Trade Commission has. just |, * i ja few weeks ago. Which explains a legislatures A ‘The favorite song of the modern _vepaalge ene one ' | while it is still possible of control? he romaine. of 0m dad de oben to fofasiate softigers ua Unites Ptitgeesias gerehushand is, Earaing jut congréssman. PORES Ores Soe