The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 11, 1926, Page 4

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(im state outside Bismarck). . { t Hy Bismarck, | z George D Mann.. i Sul + Oaily by carrier, 1 3 Daily by mai | : ally by mail, per ( wae 3 Daily by mail, our Member Audit Bureau o ‘PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune, An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1973) per year... year side of North Dal scription Rates Payable in Advance per year (in Bismarck). f Clreala j 2 Member of The Associated Press i The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the |; fia -Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, hit Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at {ning ; second class mall matter. President and Publisher | 7:20 3 : use for republication of all news dispatches credited ; to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alsc nerein are also re: served. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY nerrarr CHICAGO Tower Bldg. Kresge Big. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK eurun (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Ave Bld te iccal news of spontaneous origin published here-; life within iu. All rights of republication of all uther matter | understanding and love and spiritual discernment. Corn Belt in Revolt : Action of the sota and Mlinois begins to look as fronts every farm consi who » corn feed a large portion of their crop, | true, is We: And whether life be lived on a but in lowa and Illinois a market, is imperative. ‘lonely pr a roaring city, it has one mean- The slump in the corn demand hag precipitated @ | ing——happiness, joy, now and always. most ious situation, ‘The crisis has focused aes SEAS & national attention upon the plight of the agricul- Honest at Least ' turalist the nation over. Joseph S. Donovan, Boston business man, retires some surprises a e Price fixing panac in the tariff ma freight rates prev: national capital. cago by the adm cs of Republican lea west Republicans backbone of the Agriculture ip sah air against the (V much agai ference of opini feats. a, om i to stwbilize agricu a be avoided. amt ture ca divorced from po! correction. Probably + _sgittture. dual.” untzone is’ moved’to ask it, nevertheless, bn read- ing Of- the’ aetion of Prof. Sarett, Northwesters |New York loads for Europe thet calls at the part ‘University, who ‘has announced .that he will flee to/of Halifax enters Canadian territorial watera, and ‘the’ wild country of northern Wisconsin and hide |New York sees nothing unpatriot‘e about that, ‘The himself away far from the towns. g For, ‘he declares, our civilization is a farce and: #ilfe in our big cities is a tragedy. | “Probably Profesvor Sarett is making the ment )8 Mttle too severe, hand, { Bumber of very delight{al ‘things | ow organizing to fight in earnest * the agricultarali: & has a decided advantage over + Mississippi and Missouri va 2 In Iowa conditions arc most id 200 banks have closed with m © verge of forced liquidation. a of agriculture. = The indignat‘on . carried as far as = of Congress. A deluge of z Chicago address. = dine has apnounced a bermanent way out. has stirred Was though the problem that er will re the next Congre: will not aid. ent through the help temporarily. g of freight rates can bring relief. wards that are ive more intelli eration. North and South Dakota farmers corn belt farmers of lowa, Minne ngton and it con gent Unless something i9 done, there are going to be | ional elections. | Some revisions With the Panama ¢ more on Fortunately the kotas are in better shape, but here, too, agriculture ig not receiving the 1 other industries more favorably represented at the enjoye Equalization low 1 of the Atlantic and Pacific coast the farmerg of the acute. More than the Da- dd by Recent pronouncements at Chi inistration reflecting the attitude uders who in the past party and without Republican victory is impossible. toward agricultural tion does not meet with the approval of the middle legisla- have een the whose votes a the biggest single industr ry Hoover ‘has meeting recently at Des Moines) ‘Which is more important to the North American the White House and the halls Gontinent as a whole—bringing Atlantic shipping is have resulte 6 hington administration. t Pre: Tecting some of the impressions gai tackled of one of thts nation’s most acute economic problems—the future The West and the Waterway yin J America and it receives the least of. governmental attention. Secreta &reat industrial problems, but the best minds at, wt a 5: Washington to date have produced nothing but time Editorial Comment worn platitudes in the treatment some Even President Coolidge was stirred to action por or preserving tae costly and wasteful transhipment ned from his, business of New York and Montreal? Iture. Hs anguments seem sound Economy t culture of one of its big factors commonly set down in the ledger of business gs overhead. . Barm organizations must be strengthened - and workable. There are many existing agencies $ engaged in the marketing of farm products. Cor- iu relation and coordination are needed, Political 2 Panaceag as overtures to the 1926 primaries should One of the most crushing burdens that agricul- ies today is taxation. if ficiency in every statehouse of the land and every i y hall and courthouse will dp much to reli and ef- and ities, Federal marketing regula j¢ 1s Peace Hidden in the Wilderness? & Ig-it better to live in the city-or in the country? © ¢Bhatyof course, is rather a dum) question, since “Ahe, abe obviously is, “It depends entirely on the tions can be modified to stimulate cooperative ven: tures and certain abuses in, the great primary mar kets where the farmer must sell his product need as a result of the wave of indignation vver the middle west some of the major issues will ‘bo ‘settled, but it is a hard and uphill fight for a agri- easy to |conflicting currents that buffet and toss us” unmer- cifully We live by machines—sometimes we find oursely living like machines. And the strain is immense. . ' Yet the remedy does not necessarily lie in rung way to the country and burying ourselves in; abins by secluded lakes. Many a farmer who | s alone on the Dakota prairies or in the Vermont | |mountains {s driyen just as feverishly by bis acres [as the city man is driven by his business, i { What is needed is nge of viewpoint. We) os lo liv iu 6.00 nave become so saturated in the age of inachinery | j that we have forgotten the true goal of our exist- jence—“to have life and have it more abundantly. | Just what does that mean? Simply that we ex: | ‘act from life the full measure of its beauty and i | truth and meaning; that we do not “nourish a blind | | brain” but develop our powers of | And how are we to do that? Well, for some of | | us, ke Professor Sarett, perhaps, it means quitting | the city and hunting solitude, But it nad not) mean that for the majority. ‘ It is everywhere—blazoned actoss the at night or hidden in the laugh of a child at} y, locked in a book of verse or wrapped in the | s of a mother playing with her baby, reflected | from the jagged outline of a city’s skyscrapers at sunset and divulged by the April wind over the | meadows of the upland farm. Have an eye for it; | seek it out; and you will find it, beyond measure. | And, having found it, you will see that life's mean- | ing and life's truth follow, clése behind, All that is beautiful true and lasts forever; and all that is from ‘business at.the age of 45 for the very simple reason ‘that he has made all the money he needs. When he went to work as a boy he vowedd that he | would quit when he made a million dollars, That moment traving arrived, he quits. “I think I've earned a rest,” he remarks. Of course he has. Every man ‘has, at forty-five, though few are able to take it. But how wise Mr. Donovan shows himself. He is one of those rare men, apparently, who realizes that money is useful only for what it will buy. Enough is enough—more than that does no one any good. For 2 million dollars he can buy | {anything ‘he'll ever want. So‘he lays off. And ‘how refreshing is his admission that he looks forward to getting out of the harness. He spares | us the customary: bunk about “service” and “devo- tion do the job.” He was in the business for the nroney; having got all he needs acefully tire: Hunt the bright side, Some prices are down. You can get 1925 calendars very cheaply now. (Minneapolis Journal) to Great Lakes ports serving forty million people, speed. So we find curselves in the midst of -las though you had dropped j life as easily as I s' sregular nightmare to me. I’ wish I} that in spite of all this, all that I “Is that Harold MacGrath, the ‘ THE’ BISMARCK TRIBUNE “MONDAY; JANUARY 11; 1926 Only a Few Days Old GUARDING THE TRAVELER’S HEALTH IS VAST WORK 1 BY DR. -HUGH: 8.“CUMMING were made by service ‘officers of — drinking, ‘cooking and washing wa- Surgeon’ General U. 8. Public Health| ter. systems on 917 vessels, k Service These are some of the precautions Some conception of the magnitude | which have been taken to protect the of the work of protecting travelers | travelers - agai: infection. It is may perhaps be formed if I tell you] hoped that. the/day is not of that there are approximately 3600] when the American public can be . ’ water supplies used by common assured that all of the drinking wa- ‘ riers in our interstate traffic and|ter provided for their comfort on all when I tell you that about 50 per|our intestate carriers will have been cent of the water supplies. used byj inspected and, certified as pure and the railways and about 25 per cent] safe. of the water supplies used by vessels} In the past, typhoid fever has been were certified as safe by the engi-|the menace of seamen. Today sces neers employed by the United States|the Engineers Corps of the United ~ | ‘* Public Health Service during the|States Army, the Bureau of Light- } past yea house, the Navy Department, the if This work is of course carried on| Housing Corporation,- the United co-operation with the state depart- | States. Shipping Board and progrés- } mente of health and the facilities of | sive id enlightened commercial these state departments are used so; shipping organizations united in the fat as is possible'in carrying out this] effort to insute safe water supplies work. The work of the health au-/and sanitary water supply! systems thorities has been gréatly aided by] aboard our vessels for drinking, cook- representatives of the rallw ing and washing. ‘ . panies. The American Railway As- Siowly but surely the federal serv- + 4 sociation, through ice is building for the future. Re- surgical section, cently in order to provide for more be keenly alive to effective measures of the interstate ing and protecting the. patrons uarantine regulations relates to ‘+ » carrying out the sanitary measures. Tinting water furnished by inter- state common carriers, an advisory committee has. been jointed by the surgeon general of the United States Public Health Service. One of the functions of the advisory com- mittee on™ official water standards will be to review the present Tre: ury Departm standard for drink- ing water on interstate carriers and to recommend a standard or stand- rds which will be a classes of water suppli — And Look at Him _ taloe Daring the past i in the cot trol of water suppl! ed on cars, 1647 were inspected and certified through the co-operation of the state departments of health. Ninety-four sources of water supplies on vessels were also certified through the c operation of 14 river and lake city health departments. Over 3800 s: ples of water from water supplies used on, cars were analyzed. Three hundred! and sixteen — inspections WAY OUT COMMA INSTEAD OK IN PERIOD WHICH LEAVES YOU TO HOW SAID MOUSE GOT MIDDLE OF THE HEESE PERIOD (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) tists and writers and bring fat rent- als, And Walker has moved more near- ly into the heart of the Village— No. 6 St. Luke's place. This address is associnted with much artistic and literary tradition. Upon this little block have lived more poets, artists, radicals, lecturers and writers than’ probably any other in New York. Two doors away lived Max East- man, of “The Masses” fame; a cellar work; another held Sherwood Ander- son, and an attic saw Maurice Beek- er, the painter of primitives; Ma anna Moore composed her prize-wip- ning poem, and Genevieve Taggard spun off her lyric verse. 1n this same bYock lived Tammany ‘Some substitutes may be as good as the real article. But money is a LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEN mined on and that is that I will not Aas and mies sea pore poor substitute for happiness. os . PRESCOTT TO SYDNEY allow anything to be done on the and the new mayor doex not scem to 7 Tre . RTON matter unles® I am on the ground.| New York, Jan. 11.—Two visiting] have known what d guished folk jth ese ietried Vide in raver Dear Syd, 1 would never forgive myself if there |. er from Kansas City were plead-| Have, been rubbing elbows with him|}of evolution. Wonder if it was after T am sure you cannot conceive} should be a rea! accident and T was | buyers from Aansai dh all these years. looking at = few students, what a shock your letter 4 | absent. I would always fecl that I] ing for seats at the box o of A —GILBERT SWAN. w r vee You probably have heen might have prevented it. Broadway's most stampeded musical] (Copyright, 192 Sten acer cer mere cola than about it for a lony time and have] T expect you have already seen by — tend h mo oe y. - *. average hus- got used to it but it came to me like| what [ have written that I am not No-—nothing downstairs in the ‘ ind has to fire tl Ser iaggars lightning out of a clear sky. It was] myself, old chap, or 1 would not be nd nothing in the balcony in Bandits shot a man at @ poker game in Lexington, Ky. It ought to be against the law to rob a poker game. Sometimes the honeymoon is pver when the licker runs out. dead and | talking of accidents in this silly way | the $5.50—but there's something gaod n telegraphed to come and{ but of your going away and my en-|in the gallery for $4.40,” chanted the for your burial.| forced confinement to the house, s funny, Syd. It’s] But I can’t talk very much about y ‘truth, TI] your leaving, Syd, | feel too strong- out of my| ly on the subject. part with you, ) and what makes the parting doubly r than ever. hard is that I'm not going to see you at her I ask I had be on_up there?” i visiting: buyer somewhat he* planked down his absolute, could almost lose DERLUST «. A-wee little scamp, with the heart one that is vouched for by lof # {ramp, was scolded one day by ould have | myself, “Who are you, John Pres-| Miss A. Page Cooper, ai clever young} his mother. He wasn’t jes bad, but the cott, that a woman like Leslie could] member of the staff of Doubleday,| troublesome lad | was constantly but of course | bring you wealth, succegs in busi- | Page, publishe: teasin’ his brother: getors have been! ness, a love that forgives all things} Mrs, Harold MacGrath, wife of the}, When his maw threw a fit—well, dd with my leg qutyand wonderful® children to carry on] author of the popular “Man on thejit rubbed him a bit, and he pouted straight before me, and now I cannot] your name. Box,” “The Celleni Plaque,” etc,, was}an’ fretted all day. "Twas just the even go to New York to sce you off] “What are you, John Prescott,|attending a meeting of a woman’s}same story. Said he, “They'll >be and it’s all on account of that, damn | that makes you worthy of such bless-|club at which MacGrath had been} sorry, ‘cause now. I'm.-.fer. runt moving picture business. ings as your wife has scattered all| speaking when’ an elderly woman aare ‘ The whole thing has become ‘ 2] about you?’ And worst of it all is|came up to her. The thou; ys ago] cight-eighty. There’s one thing about driving on a slippery road. You don't have to worrv about who will care for you old age. When a man says the world isn't ing) any progress he means he ** " { The man worth while: is;.the man who can smile when life goes along ** # like a radio set. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) ht of it. thrilled him. The wandcrlust filled him with cue had never given my consent to let] have, ‘d, and no man on earth has! writer?” asked the stranger. ing to hie down the road, He packed Representatives of twenty-one States and Cana- Resolutions adopted at the Des Moines Corn Belt’ dian Provinces, gathered in St. Paul to consolidate Conference were virtually a hostile. demonstration the demand of an inlanit empire for an outlet to ,and there is one thing I am deter-]TOMORROW: This letter continued. | course.” Not $0 the wea, speak for forty million Americans ~ ident Coolidge, whose hands more or less tied, but at the failure of Congress great development must not ‘be sidetracked to agree upon any sensible plan that will extend at the ‘behest of two Eastern ports. And to agriculture some of the benefits conferred upon these spokesmen: also. make it clear that industries not nearly so important to the nation’s pejther they nor the citizens whom they repre ‘welfare as is the stability of agricultural conditions. sent are blinded for a moment by the smoke-s:reen Some of the difficulty arises over the great dif- of counterfeit patriotism that New York throws up lon expressed by various farm in her contention for an “all-American” route, +etoups as to what must be done, Secretary Jar {through a ship canal linking Lake Ontario with the es of conferences in hope | Hudson River. of ironing out some of them and evolving a plan} New York warns that the St. Li that will help. How to handle and to control crop | would divert traffic from New York to Montreal, ‘pluses seem to be the most urgent problem press- | which would be most unpatrictic. Ing for immediate solution. One policy should govern, however, and that is that price fixing or government subsidy is not the Former Governor Lowden of Mlinois has suggested that some credit organization similar to the Federal Reserve system be provided and Canadians when they insist that — this yrence route As a matter of fact, the St. Lawrance route would divert no traffic from New York to Montreal. But it would divert traffic from New York to Duluth, Superior, Cleve land and Detroit, just as it would divert traffic from Montreal to Toronto, Port Arthur and Fort William. If this New York contention were true, Montreal, ‘of course, would be praying for the waterway’s suc- cess, instead of fighting it tooth and nail, as she is. Diversion of New York traffic to the American lake ports, and of Montreal traffic to the Ontario} lake ports, would be no unfair invasion of any vest- ed rights of those Cities. ‘The cost of transiipment of through freight is a dead weight on commerce Where it can 4 voided it is a needless, uneconomic waste. -New York and Montreal have no more right to object to the through shipment of Great Lakes freight to Europe th: Minneapolis has -a right to vbject to the through shipment of lowa freight to Duluth, Had Minneapolis followed the New Yo line of reasoning, she would have objected stfenu- ously to the building of railroads’ west to the Red River, on the grould that they ruined the formerly profitable bus:ness of tramsferring ox-cart cargoes to railway cars and steambcats. In truth, New jerk will gain from the St. Law rence waterways more than she wiil lose. Whatey builds up the prosperity of the Central West and she Northwest’ inevitably buijds up the prospe of the whole United States, and. as the United States proppers, so prospers New York. New York's contention for an “all-American” route through an Ontario-Hudson canal is camou- flaged as a patriotic move to keep American ship ping from passing through Canadian territorial ‘waters. Which argument is all bunk. Every shiv «weeks. The doctor si them raid part Mg the mill. As Lager em bored with he. To me, hi ie up a lua ak—aalie hiking he'd ———————_.______.._@ it is, I'l have to stick around and it}at the present moment, nothing “And you're his wife?’ munch, and a broomstick completed looks now as though we could not|would seem so splendid, as to throw| “Ye; his load. r | News From the | pull off the thing for at least three Jit all over and start with you to the 1 will not] wilds of Africa. be able to get down there before that | (Copyright, 1 3. “Well, then, tell me, who writes} “Gee, maw’s gonna miss me,” » 3 books for him?’ thought he, “She can’t kiss me to- NEA Service, Inc.)| “He writes them himself, of|night when I crawl inta bed.” He | State University | + y “Mikado,” a light. oper: chosen as the mid-year \° ment to be offered by the Thursday Musical club at the ite University. Parts have been appointed.to mem- bers and rehearsals begun. It is to be presented in one of the local theatres early in February. Elroy Schroeder, Holmes, a senior in the University, who as Mikado will . sing the leading ba: rt, = Mi - i Carol Miles Hump: » instructor in public school music, has the role of Katisha; E. Clifford Toren, ‘ planned to run ‘far, where all run- x _| “Weil, well! It's mhighty hard tolaways are, but he sat. on the curb Fo ~| believe.’ ‘Now just to think—my two|stone, instead, you reach it in the space of time it} boys went to school with him, every-] A thinkin’ an’ thinkin’; with eyes takes to sneeze. body said they were smarter than hejkinda blinkin’, he jumped at -the WENTURES They stopped at a sign post which|—and they're Just book-keepers now.” Yirst supper, call. The runaway said “Nobody’s Land”-—and there threat was the all kids get—and the -TWINS was nothing there, cither. x Now that “Jimmy” Walker is nice-|his folks never knew it at all. ate But suddenly # house bey tc ~ise|1y seated as mayor of New York se ae lage ‘TGN | out of the ground almost at their|can be recarded that he is the first ere’s really nothing scarey abou! OLIVE ROERRTS very feet. On the front door it said| mayor to come from ‘New York's west}an automobi! turning a Lime When. Tweekanose had skipped ovt|“Ub Glubs House. Nib Nob of No-| side. <= But so dog-gone many people do it of the little house in the woods, Inch} b-iy's Land.” Brooklyn has furnished @ goodjwhen there isn't any corner there. o’ Pie and the Twins looked at The house settled itself finally and] quota and so has the district to the ee other in’ dismay. Il the shutters flew open with al north by west, but that section which] I'd give a poor man the price of a p All the time they had thought him eek. + pie, “worn | Syitternationally famous under the|good meal for his wife and family! Wesley College faculty member, h a little old lady with queer ways,| “Come in,” said Inch o' Pie, “we'll] title of “Greenwich Village” has fur-|any day in the week, except that,|the role of Poo-Bah; George And weren't they fooled though. | Visit my wise friend the Nib Nob xt| nished the greatest city with a native|what ‘do \I want with’ another wife| oem, Alvarado, Minn., senior, Mia aslght des kana suid: Nak: He'll certainly tell ux how to] sor far the first time. and family? of Pish-Tush and Monte Shunk, An- nearby housed Theodore : while he composed some of his ‘ 3 a Tweckanose. But don't be as-| Walker was born on LeRoy street, selmo, senior in medicine, that of fi * air . y Le . Hie oem omnammasin airs njshed, at anything you may seo) which in the old days was center of] | Now wo kuow where the still wa- | Ko-Ko. Pic. a rusting bow] °° hear. . a large colony o! ish. (Most o! ré.that run deep, run. Down i . Pic sles. plumb aaieguating «how (To Be Continued) residences have long since been re-|lot of bascmenta,” own iN S) A total of 145 North Dakota Uni- Sudden; thew heard voices ad] Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)| modeled and cut into studios for ar- micierer) versity graduates, largely from tho looking in surprise toward the place He got a drum fer Christmas and | School of education, were located in thes volcan wera. comin item, youll ne.sure Knew how to treat it schools over the United ‘States dur- never believe me when I tell you made such noise around the ing the year ‘ending Dec. 31 by the i ‘ house Recommendation Committee of ‘the Pe ee a oor ie cae ake: Seu "Hts maw told him to beat it. University of North Dakota, accord- were talking to cach other in alia Shik ing to a statement recently issued by language. NOW, HONESTLY— the committee, ew» DOU tke Swine and tock 3 PLEASS BRING MS =) | Who ever teld you you could ie Of this number of applicants who * i i n r ry. very sect Positions, 1 were faduat- Le ania AnD) Bas Amer A BaD aces or arrcs AS Experience ‘has ‘taught a flock of ;¢d from the Universit: iit cummer Gans owas paying 7 AN Sip GLASS OF MILK, ~ People that the proper amount of; While 31 had’ completed. their courses his nose (all geese talk throu; TRAT‘LG BCE AUL, : snooze helps one to be more effi-| in former years, noses) ‘such stupidity! Such pide =a : ae VOAcbia atthe (nike : stupendous, stupefying stupidity S loc] —_— OO Why don’t they go to Ub Glub. Ub = It not, why wait until it’ is too TH Glub Knows everything and he hates Pearihea late? Benefit by the: experience of | A OUGHT a | nosed rascal. And then we would 4 uch more 0 grab! at aLeenl, “peshaphi cnc’ba cable 4m hold of success and hang on. re are the nlne?—Luke 17:17. go back to our comfortable roost in { < Do you know what is m hard Biue Goose Land und steep the wine hin posts the cele ea the HlOe| to bear than the reverses of fortun of ter out.” ‘: It the basene: the hideous in- real purpose of the Ontarjo-Hudson substitute, of course, 1s to force all’ the ocean-bound Great Lakes sipping through the . already congested port of indict- |New York. ‘ It tng good ‘to find the States of the Midde Weer fi a for the right to lnk the Lakes (with the Atlantic. There is sizable 4 ppposition in part of the Hast, bat epite its dther resources, pase’ of Kea Eee aiaeane' amt : soldier his bar, and all nak . Goriaat il admit that for once you == = = 4 Me up ieri You say you paid’ p, bh ig mur rn aie tana "Thank you, friend ie,” said — HM-M-M-M-A— F-DON'T~Kewow —) | ten bucks for & pint of whisky— neue officiel naperta in iat Tee Ganz, “You hive enough brains to -WHAT --5 ~~ WANT--4 whoa TARA pitten by a sake? |color was a compliment to royalty. *€ =) * perceive a good suggestion when you Y : . % Bi juh-uh, — stung 4 hear it, even, if vou were born a HAMS -M nem -— WELL +- Now-| jby 2 bootlegger. : RETESET : i Frenchman. Let's hiss as as i a8 ‘S-- 2g : pes SG ME (ean 0: dhe Gus canes yt Aa ASEDE Klee |. HUMANITY'S BROMIDES: everyone but ourselves. = = = ‘Yes, sir, I: been achewin’ |ter- And they both fell to il like for = ¥ baccy fer fifty years, and I'm nigh ely Leetaral” said Aah p° Pind: 4 conta 90 years old.” “It took two sillies like thos ie " to put an idea into our heads. ©: i pe “Osteopathy” means “the science gone to Ub], 7 < of the correct manipulation of the ¥ Glub, He'll h idea to give us” bones.” Think of the edge an osteo-| fi , “Who is Ub Glub?” asked the path has om the rest of us whem the iy : Twins in one breath. by needs a new pair of shoes, “Ub Glub? Why, he’s the magician REA i who pretends to know nothing and knows everything. He’s the Nib ‘Nob of Nobody’s Land. Come right along, my dears. The nisht is dark and the wind is high and there isa] (CET'S Go, Sistee — feeling of snow in the air, but if we] ~ 3M HUNGRY lr hurry we can get to Ub Glub’s house ~ AAR before Sick orem salsa) MG CET THIS Biro wair KNow they are ing!” hissed}: Gage to les * ng ; Tee HE SETS THAT way Bilt sc ‘ou certainly said thing,” = = hissed Oie to Gand C a Weren't they the slangy old gee ae 101 * * Inch o’ Pie threw open the door fid drove the two wise «birds out into the ‘woods; then the Twins sat down. on the backs of the birds, Inch o’ Pie jum; iT iF Borough the alrete Un Gh COLON EVERY rou! M in saobed nd. Zz : / é : we seh ox ‘ a

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