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mann. PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ina H 4 ement of the postoffice which had functioned The Bismarck Tribune Hdts Tocuiionan cain “Mulee sreetintines Hurrah, a New Football, They’re Off Again An Independent Newspaper and all the rest went into the discard and “Uncle : THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER |The" is still dispensing the mail at Noteh, Mo | ~ See (Establishec 1873) | Patrons of the postoffice dislike the service to; { oak a Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, |! Wisturbed by polities. It is the policy of the} efficient as that is pos-| overnment with rapid at is as it should be great business in it ad. regardles: esent histration to retain of politics as far in a popular form of nges in administration. ‘1 The handling of the mails is ¢ men in Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. George D Mann sident and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per year. $7.20 ord bd mail, Per year (in Bismarck) 7.200 self and efficiency is more to be cherished than! by mail, per year hat? some: Ue voliticin ae RTC: ce. (in state outside Bismarck) soo, that ; Gaeta snglithelia Nag, al, Job) Wulen, she) Dally by mail, outside of North I : 6.4) Knows nothing about | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ir mail service had more “Uncle Ikes,” the} = Ses - grow less, ‘Trained men are needed Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Th stoffice department + should be no use for republication of all news dispatches credited for sinecures to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontancous origin published here- i in, All rights of republication of all uther matter Young Men | beteln. ere also reserved, Col. Hantord) MacNider, at 26, is the youngest | Forelen Representatives nt secretary of war the country ever has had. | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY vy be the Youngest full secretary within a year aCtttcAgo emnoy oro Missouri Republicans are urging Secretary | PAYNE BURNS Ako eMITH iF. Davis to rum for the Senate in 19 | NEW YORK - - - Fitth Ave, Bldg. ld he do so, and win, MacNider would be in| - = —————— line for his cabinet post, and President Coolidg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) whenever he can e cabinet won't Revamping State Government Young men int hurt an. New York ment portant amen aim of which i sola attemptr 7 partment Beg 8 which is now i uit. The ex Editorial Comment periment in both t tates will b tehed | the students of state government ing Your Fortune Right Where You Are, Most states have outgrown the limitations of | i (Daluth Herald) i their co! ations, especially im such cases where . | (her eoRaU ALON HAs Soi <aatrlal. BAIAGGS 1 Too sy especially when we are young, | i Veparments veal growth ang b#ve the idea that we have to seek our fortune by | necessary expansion are impossil somewhere the farther the better, i times it as right to seek one’s fortaue by | New York is not attempting to correct all defect Heat to . ame S), OF cute Re trom where one is; but never | in state administration the ¢ election a oe ; ht at home have been thoroaghly | but is ty it were, a first step toward that end. It is maintained that progress in the directio cai ii 1 fie of jie place: ta | din the great majority of cases, place to of state government reorganization must ne eager a whe piace i fortune will be found right where we are | Yet if an aspiring lad lives in a small town, he | be slow. pheerongsiia to be voted on this Pall bs the (iy likely to feel that he must go to a big city, If] C Hebe voung| Weak feet, In most cases the so-called State reorganization amendment lives in « big city, he may feel that he ought to se" stunning negro Feet. ateh “support, the proper endme duces tt mber elective State ; : R d suitable exercises will g a ndment tw the mumber ; tive State | yo to a bigger city; and New York, the. metropoli millions ‘sleep, #4 sometimes effect a cure offic rom seven the Governor, | 9 " re Loca Mossad : re a are! the last word in this seareh for the far pastures! . wt icy Pelif the feet are not abused, the areh Lieutenant Govern Attorney Gen | that look sieanae: : pene oe ne ae a "LETTER FROM LESLIE PRES: |o not mind, Pil" just kiss you good | NBile th ght grows brouder| cy nports may, in many cases, be dis- Sal a conanliint ney yj that look greener until you get to them, is the, COTT TO RUTH BURKE ght because I love it be b h w before { Pensed with. eral, and consolida rtments int] graveyard of thousands of perished hopes i co i It will be but an hour now before | twenty: ¢lvil departments; zs Uy Exec | and ail the time th vgoiden, PI tun have me hips TOMES WW. DEAN | And all the time the gotden opportunity may have | =, a ’ tive audit and control; (i) taxation and finance; yeon waiting back home, where Mityl and Ts na Slate . NEA Service, (4) law; (5) State: (6) public des yarchites’|tound the blue bird of happiness after sear hing | 5 er insane. e hake ; - ture; (8) conservation; (9) agriculture and marlin world of ner icc actecpaite Poo hid come trom tae, tered had been bru ee ay ae : the world of fancy for it in Maeterlinck’s fantasy. |jyterview with his natant and: hie ithe s6Gl ' ket: (10) labor: (11) education; (12) health; 4 Consider, for instance, the case of G. A, Garver [mother in a state filled “with jealouay and mental hygiene; (14) charities; (15) correction: ( Jor Strasburg, Onio—a town, no doubt, you never !™ he finally public service; (17) banking; (18) insurat 9) | hea natn : . _ what had h i. I put my baby back in h ivil service; (20) militar heard of before. ing immediately to my hus e bed and took Junior into civil service; (20) military and naval affai | Strasburg has fewer than a thousand people. It) Fortunate! ohn had gone He was now sobbing as President Coolidge reported as nereasing responsibility and fixing authority |is the kind of town young pe £ : fr to the club to a busin rence.| though his heart would 1 being decidedly angry at the course ¥ lis kind o young people go away from in a ; would, Shippt At ne! : 3 ou don’t lk f owed his head on my : of the Shipping Board in defying his more directly are the chief objectives along with! their eager search for fortune. Many burs | old womar “ to hw policies. and ignoring him. Let us more ctficiency and better government at decreased | young people did that. But Garver didn't. Hej Vil murder Is hope so. cost. Most states have overlapping boards, two or right. there: In 1Sifsaburs, ‘though 4We town'| (re 60.80 talk to Ber this aft hing and 1 ee AS eM never mane Not, merely because the president a so duplicatinw ef: a na rE : @ ile yo out of ‘the hous ‘emember it, nomi v is just ,becaus e es right on this issue—the writer em- three offices duplicating ¢ ffort and expense on vir grew much and seemed tied to the post while | you must ph of here, M to you. Mother would| know w kind of girls there are phatleally thinks he is; but it is tually the same job. Those behind the reorgani-! many other Ohio towns passed it in the race. oo St ee ; q tole er it the (inv the: world: honestly debatable and there arc-in- zation amendment geek to distribute the work along | it was—and no doubt fs—a slow town, Its young |T have charge of them” | The “hoy ra cad. quickly,| Be quiet. ‘Then you will know| {crmed Persone who think etherwiae the lines of a great modern corporation, thus dis-} people, in the main, save those so indolent and am-| I soothed Hanna as much as face what others think of you. And they] is decidedly a public asset, for other (eating with, some antiquated methods im | hitioness that they. never get_anywhere either a: {Guid and looked in upon little Ja 1 De jot so, would! won't know. what you think of them.| reasons, posed by a constitution which in many respects has /home or abroad, saw no opportunities there, andj loving ministration. His If Daddy suid it was not so and] Don’t tell all you know. It is dis- eee cree Wonldh wither « 7 st OSS. ! ; i = ‘ere stil we Wi ‘oO said Was, y b vor 0 cing: ex i ei eal-j 7. ad : b és > putlived its usefulness | went away in all directions, Some of them, no doubt, | Were Still wet wita tears Se ee egy eg eta t | poreeins ©© lenen how "little it" Feal-leione-of the. ‘proper “relation, of :the Governor Smith in his statement to te electorate /found fortune where they sought it, too; but Mot /sobs. A little later he woke up and] know you have never told me an-un-| pon president and Congress. | He, does as diagnosed what is wrong with most state gov-| many, Not many do, somehow, Some disillusioned [had his dinner, but, poor child, le] truth in your life and you certainly! Sometimes one person doesn’t like | Mt like to use the “big stick” | Fe : ‘ a Le i 4 7 could not eat would not tell me ene about your|another because they are alike,| Nevertheless, it is e: i ernments of today. We quote in part {and unhappy, drift back home tater. It was very unfortunate, Ruth, be-| little brother which is embarrassing to both. able that he do so. Anger, even at Sha’. was tio drousteowl = j But Garver right there all the time. Hefeause that night, when it came tine} Little Jack said nothing, but - something else): 44 -ackood stimulant hat was the trouble with the Govern” ji unt a store. He was—-and is—the village store {fT us to go through that beaut:tulj you, Ruth, could have seen the w The man who doesn’t find fault {to # vigorous policy. cesneay ment of this and other States which led |) a . mn Nittle ceremonial whic -|he went over to that tiny little bed} with you is your wort enemy. Teahiatitte fekingihe Becet (eek 6. these anvoatigalleve aid Fepert3? | keeper, He has been that for forty ye: Instead | per IT taught Jack almost as soon :s{and quickly but tenderly picked up paints enough at the Shipping Board to un: ; 7 of going away to seek the pot of gold at the foot his brother was born, he dre: Buddy, Iam sure you “would have] Being mistaken now and then isn’t | (eas! i ie Hind Chat, weapon “It is clearly evidenced by the debate lof tie rainbow, he buckled down to the job right "450d: cried “with half as big a mistake as never being}then be in shape for bigger game. alabuasioha (Gt the. Gaaedltuticnal Gs a . d sht |" “Mover—," he has yet cause [ had mistaken. ; Har ae and discussions of the Constitutional Con [where ne was.” And now he is worth nearly a mil! ite to. aster” the of ‘th-—| replanting. self-respect and. loyalty Sa agetdical papers in Germany are tion, in the meetings and reports of the |tion, So far av money goes, he has plenty. And he {Hf you all fink 1 ar as grand-[and love in my oldest boy's mind. | | The wind is blowing in the trees. | agitating, fox the demolition of the Reconstruction Commission and in the de- + must have satisfaction, too j Mover says Toe nee Tea eee ete a ee ene ee ae lof atabues ofall Wie, Gahensuileens F Aas ae j must have satis + too. lence wt w ORROW — Letter from ‘Leslie | of saying farewell to beeveedees. statues ¢ raat of similar bodies in Illinois, | For the store he runs is known widely as “The | Buddy Nor nuts coNt: yl Prescott to. Ruth Burke Continued. jal tae don dingacrose: thes Uercertenytonthe Massachusetts and elsewhere. as alpen : oe Saag pate as gee There are times when we know|Column of Victory. ait Rien aie e. It was a | Largest Country Store in the World.” People | the world can't be as bad or as good] The column itself probably no one condition emphasized by several Governors | around there who, if they lived elsewhere, would | ™N liquid......Yes, that’s what she |as we think it is will pull down unless it is a vietori- of this State and by the members and by | jump into the car and go to a city to shop, go tol makes you think of, flowing water pal aS ous French army. It is the most every well-informed civic organization with {this village in tead_and shop there. People come| +¥ Gh, baven't-you heard, of the.wom=|;lh2 2 Wie MAD’ whe knows, ‘he reer ney ror eral une ante an interest in State matters. They all {there to shop from cities of fifty thousand to a hun-| an who made milli device to |S" = now seems like a ghastly joke, but it agreed that a State Government with a hun | dre 3 i s Ree ing Ane take kinks out of kinky hair?.... Throw cold water on a friend's en- | at least commemorates a real achieve- es we ice ee j dred thousand. It is though people in Duluth That's her mansion we just passed |thusiasm and he gives you the cold| Ment, and it is dedicated “from the 1p Doants, comm | jumped in their automobiles and ran over to Carl} New York, Oct Haviem, | :...Her summer on up the | shoulder. thankful fatherlind to the victorious and agencies, mostly independent of each | ton on a shopping trip. o eupital af the “World, at day. | Hudson is possibly one of the most sire army. other, some appointed by the Governor, some — | Xow this didn't just happen. Nothing “just hap |PF Here in tie tug, hee EN eee a tha ‘Sather cs (Ohy Titer eee teem ne erie et ae comm cmornien noth by the Legislature, some elected and many | pens." There is a cause for everything—Including clishlnt feeb do |e raise, Re meee. cand: | Ue PAPOR: | 5am ing but the stuffed pride of two en-| ex officio, was a cra and unworkable | a i ve 7 gs hy leading futurist artist....the beau-| ‘Those against everything and for] perors, one of whom is the only Ho- Misclure: (habit iwae swastetil-anaciese jfailure or success, which are chiefly products ¢f tiful white ances in an. Up-|nothing areas foolish as those for|henzollern whose statue will never . 7 és ap eee oud ente |right thinking or wrong thinking. town show » the young fel-loverything and against nothing. grace any Victory Alley. sponsible, and that it was as far as anything | “pope shop with Garver because for years prices the Vast Guibes whece There they are, the great and the could be from the theory of our Federal and {pave been lower there: because the goods there |T#k of seems to br small debe sanezand thesinsane, thoke State Co i santiy se ave: ee P Mere, vereus Z “\through the last grey of night, EVE who rendered great service to Prus- State Constitutions that executive power {are good goods, and honest; beeause courtesy and | ireueh che Ist grey of night, 1 RETT TRUE BY CONDO sia and those who rendered less than shall be vested in a responsible Governor. { ones sleep few great city will call its grind square dealing are as much to be depended upon = \ “They also agreed that an executive jt Garver’s as ice is at the North pole or heat at the | Their bed BEC h budget system needed and most of them equator. sleep......Here is a strange 1 agreed that the Governor's term should be | Garver has profited by seeing the buyer’s end of | Of unrestrained and someti Jonge r. They recommended the consolida it, by putting service first and making profit a by-| That’s a matter of viewpoint tion of departments, the vesting of power of | product of service. He has got rich at it—rich in a| This is no time for argument 7 ‘ Rhythm is in the air.. appointment and removal in the Governo He slow, poky village that never grew. I ail and an executive budget system, a longer | Opportunity isn’t going somewhere, isn’t seeking } down this f: term for the Governor and a system of Cab- | those far pastures that look greenest at a distanc ss and around, 1 inet responsibility lent 5 . square lights beckon from cel- a is y. lisn’t runn down the rainbow for the pot of gold hh nd gore gaudy lights beckon The upstairs up-town night club “refined,” if you find these places Those who come in contact with state govern-|#! its foot; it is applying intelligence and hard work | is a Pee ments know that Governor Smith has hit the nail |‘ # high conception of service to the job right az] '""" phe on the head. There is everywhere a divided author | ##"4- ity, slovenly defined functions and a multiplicity of boards and commissions piling. up the cost of} government. ny re to the cellars for us houldered little darke: is doing a strut before an -And what nprovised (Fargo Forum) strut. rons Sie | New York's new parole commissioner has take} a aawe ie ee Locarno ja stand that parole boards throughout the country | guide He is a young negro in- jshould take. Meeting in Ossining the other day, |tellectual, an associate editor of a There is great jubilation, and rightly so, over the Locarno security treaty. lie tae uae leading negro magazine. Maree tases ee ite gas jane nis direction, refused paroles to | Tecate s “| 14 first offenders after they had served their mini-| eta {mum time. Heretofore, it has been the practice of But don’ forget that this treaty is valuable for: the New York body to parole such prisoners at the | what it represents, not for any force it will exer-| expiration of the minimum sentence, but Alexande? | jungle folk in the British New cise. Europe is to keep the peace, not beeause the |Konta, thé new commissioner, dec‘ared that “men |Re# belt!” my guide informs treaty will compel it to, but because the treaty) who had commited crimes of violence would be re- ale tecdanceeec Nee thay represents an earnest desire on the part of all Na-| quired to show conclusively that they had reformed | all dancing... Rat-tat-tat he tions concerned to do away with we j before they were turned loose.” \fallen tan AG Cornea Sithan 7"? ere lies the real meaning of the treaty. It is| Reports from Ossining are to the effect that the asm of his beating.. The trom- an Andication of the way the tide in international , prisoners were greatiy disappointed. They had felt | bonist is describing arcs with his At an adjoining table sits a girl with the straightest und blackest of hair ..Her features are echoes of the jungle......“But 1 pia as body and bumping his head against feeling is moving —not a thing of intrinsic value! that their applications were a matter of routine the lights Muah, tehind him, ete a viewed aside from its background. and would be acted on favorably, just ag the board} Rhythm of graceful bodies. wy But Mr. Konta held other-; f- slow, insinuating rhythm... .Primi- tive rhythm waiters syncopating past strutting their trays to tables :...Their feet never stop...... Their voices never stop......Their hands are never still. previously had “done. wise. Paroles are too easy, to get in most states. They are given very frequently without any investigation “Uncle Ike” Politics. was-a weak instrument when used against “Uncle Ike,” postmaster at Notch, Mo. His real/and after the prisoner has served a ridiculously Acad Ukelele. Lady! Umm— 1 i ake yoal feet, Geor; -.- Can name is Levi Morrill but Harold Bell Wright | short term. When so awarded, they do no g004,| George “shake Wie fect? “Gan a duck utilized him as “Uncle Ike” in his novel, “Shepherd of the Hills.” Morrill is ninety years old and postoffice politics and red tape were set in motion + 2 te deprive him of his office because of the age. limit. _, Then protests ‘*tarted to’ pour in to retain the either to the prisoner or the states. They only tend peeing .-A slim, ender witen y e of , , {ed girl is gyrating in the center of to encourage crime and foster contempt for law jth, niotlight @ ckecciunted ayer fais and society. The action of the New York commis-|low her A bit revolting? Per- sioner is a healthy thing. 1 in'haps! Yet the rhythmic body seem: checking the erie rane it Is ong wax SPtid Mrcorfiow across the floor like a slow ing the crime wave. ybreaking wave. ‘She is almost 4 ce a oe OOOO THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1925 By DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING | Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service How should you care for weak lfeet? The persistence of the atti- jtude of abduction or turning out- {ward of the foot is’the one charac- !teristie symptom common to all weak feet. Certain symptoms begin to appear |when the arches are overstrained— !pain in the foot either just behind the toes or over the instep or in the jealves of the legs or even in the |thighs, and sometimes in the back. i The pain is not caused because the {foot is flat or everted or improper- ly used, but is caused by strain or injury to the muscles and the liga- ments. It comes on long before any deformity of the foot is noticed. | This pain is often falsely attri- ibuted to rheumatism, It is usual- ‘ly accompanied by fatigue and diminished ability to stand or walk. [It usually disappears when the per- json is off his feet. If such symp-| toms appear, do not go to a shoe {store to have the feet treated and ido not buy ready-made arch. sup- ports, but consult an orthopedic surgeon. Any examination by a good orth- jopedist is a thorough one and will ‘definitely determine whether the \feet are weak or not. He will pr jscribe arch supports and special shoes. The following exercises for [strengthening the arches are pre- ribed: Rise as high as posible on the toes , While on the toes, turn the [heels outward and the inner side of ithe foot upward, then slowly come down again. Repeat 20 or 30 time | Pl the fect with the tocs turn- in and stand on the outer border foot. Then rise as high ple on the toes and slowly s n, turning the foot so that the jweight rests on the outer border. | Repeat 20 or 30 times | When sitting down, a good jhabit to cross the feet (NOT THE LEGS). This brings the feet to rest on their outer border. yeling is also a good exercise for the feet. | Skating Is for the Feet kating, however, HOW TO CORRECT VARIOUS FOOT DEFORMITIES _There are certain common condi- tions of the feet which sometimes can be remedied by home treatment. Cracks or abrasions between the toes should be carefully cleansed with soap and water, dried with ab- sorbent cotton and covered with zine ointment. Absorbent cotton should be used to keep the raw sur- faces apart. Excessive sweating of, the feet may be treated by cleaning the feet with soap and water and then soak- ing them for 15 minutes in a 1 per cent solution of formaldehyde. Corns and callouses can be moved by the local applications, they should be prevented. If one in- sists against advice on cutting corns and callouses, care should be taken to have the knife or scisgors sterile and to paint the surface with tinc- ture of iodine, both before and af- ter trimming. If blood is accident- ally drayn, an_ antiseptic dressing should be applied. The pain of inflamed bunions can be relieved by rest and hot applica- tions, but the bunions themselves require attention of an orthopedic surgeon. How to Correct Deformed Feet ‘ Deformities of the feet, such a outward turned big toe and overlap. ping, can, in many cases, be suc cessfully treated by the various ap pliances which can be bought stores selling orthopedic supplies. For instance, there can be pur- chased a splint which is attached to the inner side of the foot with a up and to which is strapped the big toe. This splint keeps the toc in proper position. It can be worn t night, and if persisted in, will metimes straighten the abnormai- vs Small pads of cotton may be placed between the toes at night ti keep them apart. If large, roomy shoes are worn, the splint and the cotton may be left in place during the da. Ma systematic diseases first nifest themselves by symptoms iu the fee Gout is one of these diseases and shows itself in the foot by inflam- mation of the joint of the big to Diabetes is another of these diseases and it may first manifest itself by ulceration or gangrene of the toc Arterio-sclerosis and narrowing of the caliber of the arteries often first manifest themselves circulatory disturbances in the ve- sult in by feet, which ulceration and gangrene. none, each monument like every other—the Hohenzollern on a pedes- tal, and on a bench behind him two of the advisers who furnished his brains. There are a thousand years of| them, but the statues are all of one} period, and that the most recent and worst.” They stand, not for the glory of a nation, but for the arrogance of | a family, and of the two last of the family at that. The purpose is to impress the people. with the idea that it was the Hohenzollerns that made Germany. great. The easiest lesson to draw now would be that the last of the tribe, William the Least, hud more than his share of making Germany poor. At any rate, this Victory Alley has neither artistic, historic nor sénti mental title to preservation. Doubtless German conservation will keep it; but it would be better! gone and gorgotten. | ! We are still a conservative peo- ple. Everywhere else the labor movement’ isthe center of radical, economic and political theories. In Ameriea, the wildest demonstra- fion of enthusiasm at the meeting of the American Federation of Labor was at the declaration of ‘President William Green against any dealings with Russian organizations so long as they adhere to their present Philosophy of opposition to free democratic government. The whole long rule of Samuel Gompers was a protest against eco- nomic. radicalism. The- administra- OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON what shall we do?” asked the Twins when Jack O’ Lantern’: Party was over. “I don’t _know exactly,” said M ter Corn Dodger, “but [ shall tind out. There is always something go- ing on in High Jinks Land.” But he didn’t have to find out, for at that very minute along came Mr: Gipsy. “I’m telling fortunes,” she “Who wants his fortune told? “We! Me! I do!” We do!” shouted all the High Jinks Landers at once. “One at a time, please,” said Mr. Gipsy. “I can only tell one fortune at a time, and even then it won't be a good fortune unless you cross my palm with silver.” “What does that Nancy. It means that I have to have a nickel or a dime or a sixpence or a farthing,” said Mrs. Gipsy. “Here you are!” said the Scare Crow. “Ihave a dime. I found it in the pocket of this old coat the farm- er gave me.” “Then you get your fortune told first,” said Mrs. Gipsy. “Everybody please be quiet while { tell this gen- tleman's fortune. Hold out your right hand, Mister Seare Crow. I always tell fortunes by hands.” The Scare Crow held out his straw hand limply, Straw hands stuffed into gloves aren't very good to tell fortunes by, but the gipsy went right ahead as though it didn’t make any difference. ; “I see you are a man of parts,” she said quickly. “That's true! He is a man of parts,” nodded the High Jinks Land- ers solemnly at each other. “Broom- sticks, sauce pans, straw, and clothes.” “And you love the country, said. “That's right!" beamed the Crow. “How did you guess it “They say that clothes make the man,” went on Mrs. Gipsy. “And I see that clothes have certainly made you.’ “Can you beat that?” whispered the Hi Diddle Diddle Cat to the Man- in-the-Moon, who had joined the party. “You dislike birds!” said th gipsy- “Especially black ones. And let me see--I see corn somewhere. You have something to do with corn— don't you?” “I certainly do,” said the Scare Crow importantly. “I make my liv- ing by it. In it, 1 mean, I am night and day watchman in a cornfield.” “I knew it!” nodded Mrs. Gipsy. “I could see it in your hand. I could see the cornfield right in your hand.” The Scare Crow lifted his limp hand to his eyes and stared at it solemnly. “Wonderful! Wonderful What eyes you must have!” he ex- claimed. “I can’t see any cornfield said. mean?” asked in‘my hand. All I can see are some patches and stains and two rips in my glove. That's what it is to be # fortunesteller. Is there anything more?” P “Yes, I can sce an enemy,” said Mrs. Gipsy. The Scare Crow shivered. “That is right, you may well shive the ‘gipsy. “Your en- emy is Jack Frost.” ‘ “Will he be here this year?” said the Scare Crow. “I hoped winter wouldn’t come this year. Does win- ter have to come every year?” “Yes,” spoke up Mister Corn Dod- ger, “but I’m not the good fairy of the corn-field for noQhing. I am going to have the farmer give you 4 home in his warm barn. Don’t wor- tion of President*Green continues the same policy. And the elected dele- gates gave him an ovation for saying 80. ‘American organized labor is not only a good thing for the workers, who, under its methods, are. much the ‘best off of any workers in the world, but it is a good thing for all the rest of us, too. i It is our most’ potent stabilizing force. It makes for sound economics and good’ government. “Ground Gripper” shoes are a man’s moet valuable as- set. Sold exclusively by Alex ry, Mister Scare Crow.” ; ‘That's all,” said Mrs, Gipsy. Who wants his fortune toldenext”” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1025, NEA Service, Inc.) { —_—_—_—_-—__—_______—-° | A THOUGHT Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not high-minded, nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God who giveth us rich all things to enjoy.—1 Tim. 6517. w thy wil om When wealthy, sty not to be to wealth a servant, to. make wealth .serve:, thee: Denham, - apes epee a