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omnes NS SPT SE TESTE: PAGE FOUR ’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY’ 27, 1926 eae a ; 1 ji ; ! a ‘ enough. Let's give a little thought ‘to the sing of! : le ii , iden! i. He stood framed ‘in ‘the doorwa: i] The Bismarck Tribune ““ Tihehta: | The Old Iron Fist Again ; ee eee between, tiving ahd dining room % ‘ i Independen: pun ra Rend’ pt vi “4 brik. ss,.td So nee - No, the cows were not to blame! be finished in just « Blngts, Batey,” ! THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER A . ; { = } : Age Needn’t Blush at Youth | - ea = = — —— The thard writing garret buckaroos called Janet, behensitinlb bel It is really too bad, but those elderly gentlemen | ft. Youvsee, to give the| Barry Colvin accepted the chair es Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | who blush whenever they even think about the ways stock, of 6 WHR oui of We, font forte Rites hints Beat, we Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice ator our young people are at it again. A retired quickly turned around and sent back ‘Fair, thanks, Mr, Rand. It’s Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. - gs ergyman in Cleveland rises to remark that Amer- on the stage. Each cow was expect-| quite a pull t ed to wander leisurely to the opposite I tn't to complain.’ George D Mann.......-. .-President and Publisher —— i} s youth is degenetating into a set of flabby, soft wing. be turned around an then | @ lot ef work to get . 4 Subscription Rates Payable In Adv: | carefree, conscience!ess —oh, well, you know the wander back. If this could be done started right in anything, Barry,” ; often enough, then even three cows observed Jimmy. (or was fetwo?) could seem to be aj “Hard work never hurt anyone,” herd. put in his father. “I’ve certainly The trouble was that none of the ‘had plenty of it.” cowboys knew how to turn a cow eae Me CODatiy by carrier, per year........ +87.20| custome ESB al Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck Raf Re TS Oi tel + pally by mail, per year j The nothing so very new about this sort of (in state outside Bismarck)..... +++. 6.00 / thing. From time immerorial it has been the cus: Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota + 6.00) tom for th patie 7 ive 0% i , " | © graybeards to take periodical wallops | around. They tried \all the nearby| It was exactly five o’clock on his wie : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation at flaming or nearfedhing youth. Alw the ery | {Ford accessory shops, but noboay!twenty-seventh birthday when Jim- Lae anna ta tf ~ i sel seemed to have any cow accessories. By. Rand looked at his watch, walk- ch Member of The Associated Press of “what is the younger generation coming to?” is | Also, there is sometWing fearsome |ed into the manager's office of the re The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | perd in the land. about a cow to.one who is in the| Manchester Auto Sales Company and muse for republication of all news dispatches credited | 1.0. in 19 i habit of seeing nothing but herds of {decided to call it a day. Ba | wild taxis stampeding down the high-|_ “See you in the morning, Mr. te twit or not otherwise credited in this paper, and als ind 1916 it was Ue samp. Our young = the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | men w assailed frecly, in press and pulpit, as © .iu. All rights of republication of all uther matter) lacking the sterner virtues that should characteriz Train. I'm celebrating =f birthday ladies of the cast, who sel-|by ‘being punctual for dinner to- heen beyond 134th street, | night.” ‘ re ai herein are also reserved, == the free-born American male, It was pretty gener- | nicky. Knees knocked and| ‘The manager turned his head os H. Foreign Representatives ly agreed, among the viewers-with-alarm, that | wae ae eat ce Bid seattered. Khrig tel i ee Ure eo | a cowboy or two lost his tan when|get heart failure.” be _@ LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | America’s younge men weren't whgt they used to be. DETROIT | Then came 1917 H - e 1917 and the war. Bossy stomped and mooed and re- ‘They’re apt to, at that,” laughed of wer Bidg. ; Kresge BU4Z.| Wwiat happened? fused to be turned around. Jimmy. “There's no telling ‘how Me th PAYNE BUKNS AND SMITH Bari f | At any rate the company has dis-!some people will react to” violent 2 NEW YORK : é Fifth Ave, | e giddy, spineless young men, who had seemed beng ant cowboys Re gone eo i chest a e, $04 let ine ch oes SRL OTE RENTS aT IT to care for nothing but ease and pleasure red seek WHEE aerate S08 ee Of ere mee ee eee i Re ‘ 5 , | las beth LUN be ol s. The theater is dark while an-|Mr. Train.” * fz (OMicial City, State and Coumty Newspaper) | that they could stand their share of pain and dan | other production is under way. “Not at all, Rand. tt would be pe a ‘ger and hardship and fatigue and darkness as well lo, it doesn’t do to bring New| pretty to squeeze five into your fe F : ickins ¢ , | ke . 4 Transfer of C. B. een cay el ny. The rant of the graybeard faded and was | aca See eae SWAN TINNY climbed into the “demon- Those have seen the rapid strides made ‘ “ » whe airre 5 m Tea, md sé co Those who have seen the rapid strides made bY |neard no more when the barrage lifted at St. Miniel| (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) /strator.” a Mandinme sedan. | the rae eee é expertly and ‘was off. THE YELLOW STUB) tt was precisely. five-torty when he entered he Taed frome te lab ut" t busy in the kitchen. (Continued from page one) For pert oT he announced trium- details, dad, I've heard ail this for/ nantly after greeting his mother he. Indian Department has seen fit to transfer C. B.| cold North Sea waves on their dark hunt for death. M® Pickinson to Mt. Pleasant, Mich. despite the fact) Even the biindest of us saw, once and for all, that | ig that it may be a promotion. our young men, no les; than half a century ago,! i “9 the Bismarck Indian school will regret tiat the | and when the destroyers went slicjng through the | The Bismarck Indian school no sooner forges; Were the proper stuff of whieh to build nations, the | ‘i v 3. last 15 years that I know o! cheeke "1" bu ahead than there comes a change in management. But now the war is over. And the old, old cry “And 30 years ago tomorrow,” re- elten ube Someta pedaguer? wa sumed Henry Rand, “I first went] “I suppose that’s what brapght to work for Royal ‘Brothers. I’m|this miserable rain,” observed Janet. getting old.” He smoothed his bald] Jimmy strode to. the front win- spot. His gray eyes—they were|dows. Outside it was almost com- Jimmy's and} Janet’s eyes—twinkled| pletely A cold November rain merrily behind his spectacles. “| was falling, whipped by a strong started in men’s furnienings.” | wind that stung to the very bones. aqienry Rand laid duwn his knife.| “Not exactly cheerful weather to ‘They still remember around the store| celebrate the twenty-seventh anni- how I used to linger tovinely over|versary of the advent of the well- the socks and ties and shirts that) known Mr. James Rand,” he remark- I sold. They tell me that I almost}ed, He went back to the kitchen. hated ,to turn them over to a cus-|“Quarter to six and after. mother. ie Where's the punctual Mr. Rand this rd again. pre to it, anyw xi = Mr. Dickingon, ably assisted by Mrs. Dickinson, has | 's being hi made this schcol a model of its kind. They have} What is ¢ entered into the community life of this city, and} Nothing whatever, to many will regret thetr going. Our young men—and young women—are our only A One has only to visit the local Indian school to | hope. We older ones’-what hope do we’ ho'd out? th see the great improvement under the Dickinson | 'None at all. We have jearned to bury our ideals and th regime. The grounds have been put in better shape. fine impulses und noble hopes beneath a layer of ha There have been some modest additions in the way caution and conformity. No splendid, daring chal- fa of buildings. Mr. Dickinson has managed wonder- ; !enge to hidethound tradition and deadening custom > bay fully with the small approprfation available, and | €an be expected from us. It is for the young to do. vel in has brought tue registration up to the limit of ac:| So let's have a holiday from this eternal criticism Eablet tesla alle DA PCIE oR ca et we commodations. __|9f our youth, ‘The young men and women in Amer- fata : ee -|the automobile game, for instance,| hungry.” iC by The Indian girls are well taken care of, and have | !t today are not a whit worse than ithe young men ia ta aaetpuee that ee ests momldicaime dee iS Footsteps ere, ened vontette he ies at made frequent public appearances here in connec: and women of 20 or 50 years ago. Probably they're That was the end of it. the creating in the mind of the cus-|now, maybe.” hazarded Mrs. Rand. fis tion with various civic meetings. It has been | Petter. Lay off. teaayal oe. Solent nk Gata a sete vay.| The doorbell rang. “No, it must be matter of general comment how neat the girls} ; re : (An intimate story of innermost) | Today Tam writing to tell you that pedals esis Hn) nology thens' want oMIHeNEy Rardil te cae Harry Colvin’ Jimmy took fa. appear in their regulation dress, and the fine morale | Nige thing about” Hy is that you emotions revealed in private letters.) | it is to you, dear friend, that 1 owe IN ares Tr was unknown, But they}his hat and coat. “Just in time for wl the sbility of Mr. and Mrs. Dickinson, for both of oo TO SYDNEY CARTON ‘ TL wont-down tute thes devtha fort on the sale of a 15-cent hand- velabers ‘must have been et east a em are in the Indian service, and have worked | We Just can’t figure out why some men are skinny.) 7 oo iat tak to you last nieht,| Sane wort o John adie as I did in selling a suit of} four street cars, derailed, then,” At diligently to bring this school up to its present high ae oe dene Byde Myo heace: coeketee CTR LIC OUEN HAEL roo tee tone aathavs whett.you were wrong, (eet ewer: “Bither, that or an oN igandara. Some way I felt that everything i] ly old Jew who moving dad. ‘That shows you didn’t have the “Mra. Rand called from the kitchen, j . e in the world to cling to was} picture actress, ry | oN Jan. 27.-—1 " proper sensi i: ye | 0 te If Mr. Dickinson desires to Stay, effort sould be | Editorial Comment | ani Out of my Hie, : BEE ee ner eon Ean ene Eto ela New Ton aoe saan te moc | tee Ld worksSa Wendt ell one SHER To ee ev work of the Dickinsons here, It will be hard to The Vanishing “Road” ‘and friendship as 1 had nothing to tinzed with commercialism. | into water. ‘ : “You should, absolutely. Meee: Goin cabpose aagEhing could replace them. ‘Their service in this section since sep aeons eres say when you were leaying your} But you, dear Syd, I can mever| Poets are not supposed to know) “Not on fe, dad. When I/nave happened to your father? heed ast ceed (New York Times) for a long journey with the what you have given me. To|such things and, since Harry Kemp] sell a big one I clean up several hun-| Traffic is real heavy now and he a ie Carly aqnalaeene Alien th conditions| syeaking recently at Harvard, Jane Cowl pre returning. d Leslic Prescott I shall be in|is a poet, he can be excused for the|dred dollars, The commission on the! might have been knocked down by surrounding the North Dakota Indian. Xe ? i seaaced es d, my heart was too full, [debt forever. experiment about to be disclosed. |other is only about a fourth. Tell] an automobile.” ot x z z ‘ dicted that in another dozen years there would be] 1 have not so many friends that I] I can never tell you just how I feel ere me, would you work’ as hard fer! «Not. a chance, mother. He most whe a Should it be impossible to retain their services at/ny more spoken drama, The idea is not mearly so could let tay best one go without af toward Leslie, 8 ‘ v In years agone this Kemp was be-|three thousand a year as you would! ixely is caught in a street car tie-up. lie Bismarck, the best wishes of the community will| witd as it may see ‘The official organ of the a that would tear my” hea! Ree, qenere gone ‘ oO) Me ae like}ing wooed by a nurse who used a ee on This weather is enough to cause a lot fo —_fo'low them to their new fie! Actors’ Equity Association presents figures to show {\Do.you know, Sydney Chrton, what] ed little duck when I, almost, insane'| came nie’ of the tapes Cf Grecwmich | in Mes, Bal She turned ts iemony [Ofte int ) y lVoaaetierd baci to mie? : i 3 ame one of the sights of Greenwich | 11 ind. e turned to Jimmy.| Mrs, Rand went to the ‘kitchen ake sh Wass a that Broadway producers are “losing the road.” “7 tg peettste me? with hunger sua shams jett him out-| Village. Sightseeing bus drivers ‘You and your father are at it from] window and peered out..dt was quite ‘| What Is Lesson of These Gin Parties? Fifteen years ago there were 1,540 theatres open| You were the one person, man ot| was against all ele ae saps its eee a eae and Kemp's coer. peniee pede poke a hese lahat Oe neni cetts bt mH The city of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, a suburb of|to productions on tour; today there are only G74,; oman, who, after my baby came.) and it seemed as though all women’s | waistline was not as poctic as in yes-| | She sighed. “I suppose you in- Tede, Jimny's and Barry's. favorite. 1 s€ Cleveland, is very highly exereised just at present| Since the day of the old stock companies tlie major|the only man in all my life that | Oh, Syd: I'wish you were not go-| teryetT og He ad settled down to the herlt your. father’s obstinacy.” | Barry and Janet were there torether. ™ —pecause of certain revelations that have been made portion of managerial profits had been made on tour, | have really trusted. You have made] ing, I'm sure I shall miss you in the| rentals would cenlenger fit poeta lenough anyway,” chimed’ In -Janat. PE i tee oll ae ca ake th concerning « party which a number of high school! Ag Equity puts it, New York the “shop win-| have Brought Ruck mg farth in. Cod.| <CSUET must tell you something that | PUTSS-, He organized a colony and, ‘ party ,do you in-] “What time is it, James?” Mrs. tit yoys and girls held. ASG" but the roed was “lle couiitos cover’ wisi] {call the timeiyou were aitagalMassTEMWHUIM nce caare see tent oEa Tea eer eee dn eet eee Rand's manner was agitated as she : 3 eae each Bune y little drawing room: at <tholiwase nol-gclig aways <D-auill loyo| Oe Ce ee ee Oh, 1 almost forgot.” her brother) kept opening the oven door to look A nthetic gin flowed rather freely at this little goods were sold." In order to gi the | Plaza, peatably Winking 1 henaeonn Gee: going awny ail loye| ; answered, “I've got Uickets for @lat the roast chicken which was long F affair, and after it was over two girls—both under impression of success on Broadway, managers fre-| hard ‘and callous, 1 was trying to| (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) gilecga dye deaaa wr tectitted | endcgo ewe just ape, ere} since cooked and which she was 4 16—ran away from home because they feared the quently extended the original run until the not rej Pa" my breaking heart xo T could Dicecne als : The Cowboy.” Tho’ cowboys were| “You old’ sport,” laughed Janct.| “Slmmy glanced at his wateh, “Six- scoldings their parents would give them when the, sult was a cons'derable deficit—which they relied on] its hurt. Tcould ‘not speak of it. | ued. + This letter, contine recruited from the great closed “What theater?” | « | thirty. Gosh, that's not late, mother. i é fie weak ; : spkees where studios are studios, and| “None of your business, And I've| Heil be here wny minute now.” party came to light. the road to make good. For the same reason they ee ener eecee nana 1h. RSS Sen a __|small, and not particularly strong.'got a ticket for Barry, too. I sup-|' “~ wish you'd call the store, There have been the usual exclamations of sur-j charged moderate prices for tickets. Today when a say to. this, I suppose. It sort of They mete a conehiy pad of at eee you'll have Bo. trouble dragging | James.” sd « : 3 prise and horror, from the best people in town, the | production ceases to pay expenses it goes at once | VENTURES sounded as jthouh Miss Bobb. wa: laniate, aioli a oo ohigkare| than Cinna aia! arigts 2 nil butt dandy ops ({ J Moual holding up of hands, the usual “wonder what to the rond—er, more frequently, to the storchowse. DEP EMRUt It heels her cheoti (gate “Barry Colvin,” observed the clder| hall. Before ‘he could pick up the : this world is coming to” sort of talk. And, in truth, The playgoer may observe the difference in the the -TWINS Made, andiwiat if she couldn's. sew samgubyions, hey wate St commer. * acc ewe em ete mighty | receiver the phone bell rang. i @ it was rather a bad situation that was uncovered. price of his evening's entertainment. He pays for OLIVE aprox |" een : could find in’ a day's walk through! "Who said he wasnt?” ‘retorted ae ae canyperbaia ate i ™ But what's the answer? all he gets—and frequently for so much more that compas Biabt Bere cthe train gave another the enamant district, The, Areal Jimmy. , re tan grd none eet ie “| a The superintendent of schools of the suburb just he ceases to be a playgoor. There js still a con-| At last the Hidy Go Land Express j:e her balance. She went out. all Pett et lap eaies caenttes | this the home of Henry Rand?” } about hit the nail on the head when, asked what |siderable number of those who lay the golden xs, | evened the thecttle met tha emia etaner foes and feet, and if the Tin] And Kemp insisted on realism. (A lawyer. You mark my words.” Mrs. ih a re ae | Mes action he intended to take, he remarked that the but the mortality is considerable and increasing. | wont choo! choo! with two iad little sharp gun just in Une and| Was it five2)canywherer a herd of lime aa aeetepeke. rn SMBH) tunes Rand, tis son” : & whole thing was more a matter for the parents to, It is not all the fault of the manager. Railway | snorts and a lot of Ifttle snorts. The aug Mee ne probeply Souls SN had to cross the stage. “If I were as sure Jimmy would ets ye weg aie: Silionr j 4 settle than for the school authorities. . rates, hotel bills and actors’ salaries are almost eheele gave a jerk that almost threw| “{ think we were,” said the Tin hi Ft Aa eat Cue the Dlosd’ of ee man’ Td be satisfied.” Gee hare que. Your father tee { 3, Very true. But, as is often the case these days, double what they were. Radio keeps many at home. | Mister Limber Legs out, and after Sodier. S any plainsman in an audience, Henry Rand spoke with the ‘heavy|just been found dead in a room.” e€ the parents awoke to their responsibility after the Moving pictures have taken a heavy toll. The, road "7 dene rosin in one-car ter MATAR a cre a | hes fea ia ik Oe gee esas bait beateaa) Mh (To Be Continued) th damage had been done. manager who can fill his house at prices ranging | Tin Soldier and Miss Tootsie Bobb, Made for each other. Let's get] of the East Side kids had as a wite "ane ioweea hea head to stare SRT Le NEW Ior ler We have too thuch fallen into the notion that Upward to $2 refuses to take a chance on a spoken | ‘ME Jorsty doll with the ern he = tie es eer down at her napkin. “James will be . SE bringing up a child in the paths of decency and jdrama—for which, win or lose, he will get only half | their eyes on ¢ vtaer (oh, yes, . Setting married soon sooure with; | | Temperatures and RY Mf honesty is a matter for which the state should be|the receipts. As the number of available ‘houses | Nick had palnved. the soldier eye) | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO + [there were tears In her cyes. ‘They Road Conditions M3 responsible. If you don't believe it, consider the nes smaller, the “jumps” on the road become PSE i : y to her. ae eT } ‘Moving picture censor boards that practically all of |longer, greatly adding to the expense account, Yet had deen taken by t AND DUEING. | YOU DON'T MEAN WENT ON i mothe and ude shoulder.| (Mercury readings at 7 a, m.) our states have installed. Equity alleges against the managers serious errorsa| pis: purple SERS derns vy) [TAS ATTCRNOON — | THE STORE, SIERETT, chance, mother. Not fiseases “Gees ah Gok . s fl What has been the reason for these censorship |By retaining galleries and charging mpderate prices | low cockade. f ‘ Now, THIS (3 IMPORTANT— You Mean raat ela ag sw good, aa aca erage ~ ‘boards? Why, we have protested that certain parts|for the seats, they might have held a large part of oa eh Sales had been quite! |DURIN@ THE AFTERNOON, fit a cigaret and strolled into! St. Cloud—Light snow, 5 above; of many films “would have a harmful effect on the | their old patrons, - By: intelligently combining their | Miss Bobb cul in the latest fashion.| [1 WENT IN THE STORE ) , 1 eR ee miles ino Cleat; 2abora)rdads gos children”—and s0, instead of waking up and seeing} forces, they might have cut down expenses that | Besides she had the brightest com-| | FOR ~~ : “ | eee ee een tending” good| Jamestown—Cleur, 3 above; roads to it that-our children didn’t attend shows thac|"ow “are duplicated and triplicated.” Especially |£yen, and'a mouth état. was a mere = H % money on lessons for. ne mtoth-|. Hibing—Snowing,’6 below; roads weren't good for them, we passed the buck to the| they might have maintained their road following by | dot like # drop of red ink, i er with the dishes,” Tangy agreed, fair. ° state and made tht censors responsible. sending out good companies instead of palming off | ,)/,fhouldn't ae Senta ialie we to = Henry Rand and bis’ son found] ,,Mandan—-Clear, 10 above; roads ‘And public dance halls! We have dance hali in-|a lot of second-rate actors as “the original Broad: | next car, hadn't heard it all and told commer able, Save n. we ee Grand Forks—Clear, “8 below: a! <svectors galore, and any number of laws touching cast.” Equity thinks that there ig still time to }™4, later: H ' Ne ] lite the third of his, three‘ cigare roads fod. ‘on. what may and may not be done at such places,}ecover lost ground; but one wonders. In New] Miss Bobb: vt holy fentine f day, Tingering over “W like an. epl- dee Cloudy ARabove; roads Fargo—Clear, 8; roads good. a Winena—Snow, 5 . above, Toads "piluth—Clandy, 7° 02. ” ului lapdy; 5 Rochestor=Snowing, 8 Sabo all in order “protect the yi J York State there are only twelve “open” theatres, |™y bones that this trip is all foolish- to! le young people,” As in B Beret lieoea eT Mink syecmce SunmosEd tO te the case of the movies, this simply means that we,| Where in 1915 there were eighty-five. In Texas] chasing the Rag Doll who ran off ‘as parents, haven’t been wise enough or energetic | Sixty open theaters have dwindled to virtually | with Miss Crinoline’s clothes.” e1 - e. TimSoldier: “Yes, and of all places. 3 ‘3 a x , enough to look after our youfgsters ourselves.. none. to go! Tin-Can Town is only another ; ‘Absolutely. “Thon there is the automobile, which comes in for board and spending change, i eer name for Dump Town, or rather. I 1 ' + 9 ., a * y > Te t Ited in the old soek.” jsuch an awful pagting whenever the sins of the Get $1275 Car for $12 should sey, “the Town Dump, Its} reuirhrift,” obsorved his fether, “is , arg discussed. In the name of common (Little Fal's, Minn., Transcript) where people throw théir old tin cans; jy s E ” inh.” i a great virtue. and -rabplan: “Like punctuality, eh?” ‘laughed ! When parents let a boy and a girl of teader| “Wonderful and weird are the selling schemes,” | Miss Bobb (with a shriek): “How . fi : = fe a (pr ears - ‘ t ts terrible. Suppose we should * be Jimmy. “Quit talk ne plat itudes, dad. 3 scoot about in an automobile until 2 in the |84¥8 the Motor Magazine, “which periodically flit 4 “ Do you know what I wish you'd let : an le dumped out. Then we should only De ye wt or bles antl: : “morning, night after night — who is to blame if|#¢T09) the business horizon, tarrying for a brief {be rubbish and lie there for the rest| | (j 5 ay me of our lives.” What fomething happens, the parents or the’ youngsters? While in‘our midst. Just now the’ old chain sales | qth" coliter! “I should save yo Let's inject a little inteligence into the whole |S¥stem is back in vogue on golf balls, hosiery and; Miss Bobb: “Save me? Usly mi itiation, Just for @ change. | If high echool young even automobiles. A man in a building on the auto- | Oh, no, you'd better e Belinda or > } wy fers today are worse than they were 20 years ago mobile row in an eastern city does it ‘this way: Talavoley Wane Or tel Mes, siees: OF Black ‘Dinah instea: cane they aren’t at ‘al}, but let's admit it for | YU buy a book of 12 coupons for $12. You sell the | Tin Soldier: “No, sir!’ I shouldn't} sake of argument—is 1¢ tecause they are sud-|COUPCHS at $12 each to 12 friends and end the gids |*4Ye Syons, but vou. T, like you | ‘ : aly and mysteriously becoming “cussed” and bad,|'° te company. The 12 friends each then buy a | anybody who tried to hurt you, so I = a 3 T've been able to do.” Dopause we aten’t devoting the caro asd wisdom |°tTact book of 12 coupons for $12 and so on.| "SN! a. Nancy said, the soldier Tee stoked ‘wall stays : : P | p ttielr upbringing that our parents deyoted to us?| When the 12 friends have each sold their 12 cou-| wildly waved his little tin gun, and i ‘Ite our fault, of course. We parents ‘haven't been | 2008, You get a $1,275 car and the company g ts By oc lers bis Salanon. x Mins p the job. ‘ Paes ; ? $1,884. Involved in the first sale on which you get | just in time. out he would have gone, restrictive |YOUr car dre yourself, 12 friends and 144 of their | plump on his head! [ens or Penne.” for ach obe of them |e he BA ue _{&@t his car involves 157 times 144 or 23,608 more | saving after alll 1 know you would 4 E d y if ‘ . “nis | People, For this group to get each his gar involves: Heee bare. exes : rt ° the tivi nr “thay | 187 times that or 3,549,456 more. people, and for edch are, tar|% thom to get his car involves 167 times that og | i which 10' five times as many