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“PAGE FOUR. An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPA The Bismarck Tribune PER gentlemen in Pawhuska, who used to get fat eff the Indians, hate him, of course; and that, perhaps, is as good a,thing as could be said about him. He has done.a hard job and has done it well. (Established 1873) Bismarck, ‘as second cl: mail matter. George ID. Mann. Subse Daily by carrier, per year.... i. Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). . Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot Member Audit Bureau of Ci: n Rates Payable in Advan -—~ Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at -President and Publisher « 6.00 Member of The Associated Press to it or not otherwise credited in. herein are also reserved. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited | s paper, and also | the local news of spontaneous origin published here-| inde All rights of republication of all other matter | Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY SE ection erence CHICAGO DETROIT. * Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg.| great bridges across raging streams; a poet who 7 PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITIL {sang to relieve the load of pain borne by his fel- | NEW YORK -- -__—=Fifth Ave. BRig.j lows? Splendid; you should he proud of him.| f (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Meanwhile, what are you yourself doing? | Sa Ee | It is a fine thing to have ancestors you can be | 3 A Fine Commandment! proud of, But it's far finer, and more in keeping | New York had a rather stormy time of it the: with the American tradition, to spend your own life | other day when the school board held a publie hear 480 that your children can be proud of you, ing on the question of reading the Bible in the —————— public schools. Mctor Coaches | The arguments t were tossed back and forth, pro and con, at the hearing were, for the most part, But it remained for a League serious and _ intelligent. woman representing the National Securi to pull the discussion down off the plane of com- men. sense. the schools. Why? Because the Bible the Ten Commandments; and one of these ments si “Thou shalt not kill.” Children should not be taught that ment, she argued. This woman objected to having the Bible read in conta command. command- It might put wrong ideas in their minds and make them reluctant to be soldiers when’ they grow up. Now there are many id arguments ing the Bible in the schools, and many other valid But the proposition advanced s super-patriotic lady is enough to take one’s ns against it. breath away. it leads you. tinsel are false. are places of filth, disease, ‘Fsufferings, doubts, confusions and hopes. inh, no. dbabits the body of some “foreigner.” limb from limb at your side. orphans by war. Away with peace! pray for war. There is a form of patriotism that is ennobling —that realizes that war is a horrible, unspeakable, Periments. é t n evil, and refuses to consider it until there is no other As Austin F. Bement, vice president of the Lincoln way cut—and then marches off to die with a clear Highway association, said recently: ‘Road build- ? understanding of what it is all- about. But there is another form of Patriotism, too per- verted and unthinking to deserve the name, that ner gives birth to such remarks as that made by the Weakness in our highway engineering. In Michi- lady’ above mentioned concerning the ten command- am, at least, we have yet to learn how to salvage ¢ gments. 8 i Mi Sepurity League cuts loose, Cloture Court is worthy of earnest consideration. of almost equal weight. : ..iFor a delicate situation is involved. tion. .~-of the whole nation’s will. ‘ing, cloture possible. x voted for the rule in ‘1 for read- Follow out her train of reasoning and see where Don’t teach your children that war is a dreadful evil, to be avoided as long as it is humanly possible. Don’t teach them that its gaudy trappings and fine Don’t teach them that the stirring | bugle calls and the beautiful, waving flags aren’t to be found on the battlefield, and that the trenches pain and torment. =Don’t let them guess that the soldiers on the other épide are human beings, just as we are, with human Teach them instead that it is a splendid =thing to march away and cut off the life of every mortal soul you encounter, provided that soul in-| ia Tell them “Sthat ft is delightful to stand knee-deep in mud and “carrion with the drum-fire tearing your comrades Train them not to think of the women whose husbands and sweet-|@chievements made known in the annual interna- hearts are torn from them by a cause they do not i mnderstand; let them never hear of children made Let the olden, golden dream, aida S ‘ ‘bf, an age when swords will be beaten into plow- Today Michigan is crossed and criss-crossog by $ ysBares vanish forever. Bring “up your children to Keep our nation reasonably well prepared for but which cannot stand modern heavy traffic. It is swar, of course. But be always ready to restrain folly to attempt the saving of money on mainte- n impulse toward nausea when the Nation- nance of roads whieh cannct immediately be Fe- |The Senate’s action in invoking the cloture rule in.connection with the debate and vote on the World Only once before had the cloture been used—in the debate on ratification of the Versailles treaty. Powerful. arguments have been advanced in favor of. its use, but the arguments against it have been “~ On’ the one hand there is the ancient tradition that the Senate must always be a place of unlimited debate—a deliberative body wherein every member shall be allowed to speak his mind without restric- On the other there is the plain fact that, at times, a very small minority can block expression i ‘eee Senator Robert La Follette, the elder, was a’ stout ‘opponent of the cloture and an expert in the use of the filibuster. In 1908 he talked from 1 o’clock one afternoon until 7:05 the next morrting to prevent @ vote on a certain measure. Representative Theo-| pages dealing with President Wilson's Cabinet is ‘ dore Burton of Ohio, formerly a senator, spoke for | the emergencies of contrasting characters. The 12 hours and 10 minutes at ‘a stretch in 1914.}chief comparison is between President Wilson and Others have held the floor nearly as long. As might be expected, La Follette protested bit-| great office with calm assurance, perfectly ‘self. terly in 1917 when the Senate adopted-the act mak-/ poised, ready to do in the quietest and’ most matter- e *s/of-fact way startling things, announcing impertant - believe that the time will come,” he said,| policies with the air of a man taking a drink cf’ “when many.of the senatérs who are now. clamor-| water, and evidently ‘prepared to -be the animating ; for this change will see the ae invoked to ps Se them of what they deem rights.” . He prohesied truly, Senator Jomes A. Reed of| other hand, Mr. Bryan appeaty from the first as im- 917, was. its | deferring to the domination of the President. If Would that we had more like him. oi, ad Ta ig You Can’t Live by Ancestors’ Deeds The daughter of Jim Bridger, famous old far- | learned that you cannot | incestors are libeled. | | 4 {western scout, has just collect: damages if your { She sued a moving picture company for damyyres | heeause a film, she charged, gave a misleadinc | ‘view of her father as a drunkard and a “squaw | }man.” A Kansas City judge threw the sult out of | | court, declaring in effect that we must stand on our own feet and that the reputations of our fore hears are not matters of vital'concern to us, | | ' That has been our theory ever since American pendence was declared; but somehow, we seem to forget it all too often, | Who was your ‘father? ‘A judge who served | with wisdom and honor; a soldier who fell fighting | bravely for his country; a worker who helped throw | The introduction’ of the motor céach in recent | years was the otcasion for loud howls from many electric railway cgncerns, which complained that | they would be ruined if the automobiles were al- lowed to compete with them. The wiser clectric lines, however, after enfitting | av how! or two discovered that the motor coach game was one two could play at. In consequence they began to buy and operate moter coaches them- | bselv Now 280 electric lines are using motor coaches, compared with 46 in 1920, according to John A. Ritchie, president cf a coach manufacturing concern. ; The result\has already been felt in better trans- portation service. ‘The public has been the gainer, | and the railways have found that they could gain, too. 4 Most of us kicking about where we are shoul be | glad we aren’t where we are not. [ Editorial Comment ! story From the Pittsburgh The lights are out a tremendous progress in the last ten years. . Ten) #0rgeous and successfi years ago the whole country was experimenting. The public had just awakened to realization that Beautiful women lu: Tt was hap-| grace aml tac crumbled ynder traffie. ment in gravel.on main trunk-lines: Was an expen- sive error. Now, however, looking back at the charming woman. brought seven hund tional convention cf road men in Chicago, we dis- cern the great progress that has been accomplished. Ten years,ago Michigan was trying to piece to- gether serviceable roads between its larger cities. lars. paved trunk+lines, and in the nation, transcontinen- jtal roads link East and West. The whole. country has profited by the early ex- Roads now are being ‘built to endure. the receipts were not ing is no longer a rule-of-thumb enterprise. It has become a science with definite data as its basis.” (é ‘Yet, with all this progres, there still remains one “I've got a_ bite. thing on my hook,” highways which have served out their usefulness “Pull it up. Let's So Limber Lo’ placed and which must be used. it right through the puoi, ve “Let me see that, New Light on Wilson eer (New York Times) In the Februray World’s. Work ex-Secretary Houston begins the publication of his “Eight Years With Wilson.” The first instalment does not go4 beyond the’ garly weeks of President Wilson’s first term, but, even. in this beginning of the narrative there are clear revelations of character, with a few incidents brought to light not before published. It is evident, that Mr, Houston intends to write with entire frankness, so that his book promises to give us from inside the Cabinet“a great deal of infor- mation about the workings of the Wilson Adminis- tration. Ex-Secretary Houston is not a man to surrender his own judgment ‘or lose himself in idolatry. _ He writes with great directness, with no hesitation in expressing his own opinions, and | parently without fear of treading upon sensitive plants which grow beside the path of politics. These qualities bid fajr to make this work of his both piquant and instructive. What will most strike the reader in these firs! them came h and I got someone el under his arm—the as it turned out to be. “Yes, sir,” said 3 was very well educat itials on it ‘P. M. “Poor Mister Havalo actly “I'm sure I'm very said poor Mister Hav: “Shall I wring it asked Nancy. “Do, please,” said “Yes, please do. I me: “I've got a bite, too Sam just then. my hook and it’s so lift it.” “Pil help,” said Ni “Perhaps a shi ful,” said Sailor Sam, about ‘the sea. “It laughed striped and shapeles: bank, “Jiminy Jordan ter Havalook. “It’s candy-stripéd = shirt mumps! never’ expected to sec Mr. Bryan: We. sce the former stepping into’ his cS | went down the. drain.” and directing: spirt of his-whole Adniinistration, | iq feo, “unter i especially to be his own Secretary of State. On the had had nibble. Sure, enough Teddy ling up a polka dot ‘mersed, in partisan politics, thinking mainly. of how pulling up.» polka 4 | Dinah e ‘other. many: deserving Bemocrats—deserving because th had supported. him — he. could provide with jobs, | smile—indeed. he ‘already displaying ignorance of ‘the important | R: quéstions coming up in his de it, ind meekly | 25. #0, pleased | jomin he p Rblapered Nick. hat if am n hazard. Some of the early roads held up, but manyj his money it Bs ag tig et ds Michigan’s own experi-| wanted some more to give to hom ERS cried the dolls excitedly. So ng Legs jerked up his line, and there dangling from his hook hung a striped collar. ter Havalook. ike the collar that helongs to my candy-striped shir looks more /like a Oh, my poor di of innermost | emotions revealed in private letters.) Sun: THE END OF THE HOSPITAL | BAZAAR | nd all is dark- ness in the, auditorium which last week sounded with the joy and j One Flaw * [Inughter of all Pittsburgh. © . “ rthopedic Hospital jazaar \ _\(Grand, Rapids Press) an oft the’ ausudard for alli Ginie ond Read byilding in the. United States has made! ai other cities as being the most ul, both finan- cially and artistically, of all similar! entertainments ever held in America. red the money The pearls that were presented? t the entertainment committee by Mra Karl Whitney in memory of his wife, fifty) thousand dollars, which is two hun-' dred and fifty thousand more than] they expected to get for them. This, with the other jewelry, grossed for, this booth, more than a million dol- red and Other booths were just as success- ful as the jewelry although of course The flowers alone brought over two hun- as large, ed. oh | Crinoline crossly. my skirt yet.” “Let’s go back Sailor Sam. (To Be Continued) dred thousand dollars. This booth was presided over by Mrs. Graves Hamilton and all the flowers were donated by herself or her friends. It is thought by the Orthopedic committee that the net sum to be given to the hospital will exceed three million dollars. Of this Mr. Karl Whitney, Mrs. Joseph Graves Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs, John Alden Prescott and Miss Paula Perier con- tributed nearly half. Miss Perier bought things wholesale at every booth, Her most expensive purchase was au old Spanish shaw) that had belonged to Marie Antoinette and wag @mother of the wonderful ‘things that gwere given tothe bazaar by one get out of your way. : seat | ..{ which would make ‘little erippled| Mr. Karl Whitney.’ ; If you don’t got everything coming the automobile was to become the universal mod’) children walk with atraightened| Mra. Hamilton, although not quite|to you -maybe you should be glad. of transportaion. A period of roadsbuilding hys-) backs and limbs, from the pockets, of | so layish, proved a good second to f teria followed upon this realizaticn. Pitsburgh millionaires with s@ nigeh| Miss ‘Perier in “her purchases~ Only solution of the coal problem those ful-eharity enterta ingyziut tomorrow the John” Alden Preseetts ang their frends: will be interested in the ahooting of the much talked of and greatly awaited “Hot Steel” at the Graves Hamilton Steel Plant. The rush for tickets has been enor- mous but oniy about a hundyed -and ‘fifty’ of Mrs. Preseott's special friehds could be odmiiad. (Copyright, 1926, ‘A Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: Telephone Conver- sation Between Paula Perier and Leslie Prescott. who worked so of this: wonder. ment, are rest: iss Perier and hat the coal dealer. asks. Turkey ‘has adopted the Swiss C Code of laws, and no doubt it goe: along like clockwork. without haying any pupils. large this spring. bills will be even larger. There’s spme- cried Limber Long Legs as all the dolls sat around the kaundry pool in Hidy Go Land. see Hurry!” button hole, please,” said “It looks ex- ‘ither of ‘om the laundry. Then the Twins remembered that! the very first time they had’ seen the poor worried little fairyma been carrying a bundle o he had laundry wrong bund! 3 Pithers, who ed, “it has in- ok! That's ex- declared Belinda, excitedly. much obliged,” look, out for you?” the fairyman. an, do, please.” 1" eried Sailer “Something is on heavy I can’t ark. Be care- who knew all zebri Nick, giving the line a strong pull, and landing ‘something, 8 out on the ried poor Mis- my shirt—my a8. sure as irt! 3 it again.” “No wonder you didn’t get your undry back,” said Nancy. “It all , quite clearly,” look, looking around to find out if anyone else Bear was just sock and Black Poor Mister Havalook began to pn to. grin: ly he, almost, laughed aloud. be “clothe: at, thee th: Ld ristmas,” that the Hidy Go people found atl" et handkerchiefs and things — 1s of things. . Two pock- a wighty and that fairym: there, every stitch of} ~ Dinah ssid would He had “A lot of good that does me,” said Calamity to Mrs. Jiggs. “I haven't. found a thing yet and I suppose I must go for the rest of my aays un-| covered.” | But.at that minute she felt a pull on her fish hook. She was so excited as she said afterward, that she al- most dropped the line and all. ; What did she haul out of the laun- dry pool but a lovely lace mat! “Didn't I tell you?” nodded M Raggedy. “That’s an antimacassar. It would make a lovely wedding veil, though it is intended to put on the backs of chairs.” Mandan—Cloud; “Well, that’s’a start,” said Calam-} Hibing—Cloud; d “I shall put it in my| i : Road Conditions (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck—Cloudy, 9; roads good. St. Cloud—Clear, 25; roads good. , light snow, 27; Mankato—Clou toads fair. Winona—Snow, 30; roads heavy. Rocheste: now, 29; roads Grand Forks—Clear, 8; roads ered. Jamestown—Cloud; Fargo—Clear, cov: re le 14; roads good. ; oy 3 ge ing. Duluth—Snowing, 18; roads fair. Minot—Cloudy, 14; roads good. | (EVERETT, You tT HAVE A MISERABLE Cook GLCUM \ HEADACHE, THIS MORNING. Ue . HEADACHE, EH © THe ANSWE THAT 1S, GET A NE pace NEW BooTLEcceR, THE ANSWER TO \s,° se TT & NEW WHEESZG {it “I haven't found] “We're not showing our hand in a boat,” seid (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) ss If you think women are cowards just blow your auto horn to make we have found workable is to pay To the small boy Utopia is a place where it is possible to teach school They predict women’s hats will be We predict the (Conran 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) ————_—_—_-+ Temperatures and ough. ly, 9; roads good. roads roads improv- tis! | WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1026 By Ernest Lynn BEGIN HERE TODAY, - HENRY RAND, | noticed that they, wei heavy black: lashe: blue, with ‘perhaps half a middle-aged he saw an automobile pass him and od a cheap hotel. The then slaw down Ld in a gas-filled room, a welt on the hack of the when it reached ther He could see two roung men in the front seat. One oi them ‘was speak. i , clewa are a womat’s ing to her. ‘ ee ee eine, MNP Of © || "She drew away:to the inside of the Janet Rand “per en. | sidewalk and quigkened her pace. The automobile kept even with her. She stopped then and glanced around.’ She was plainly distressed. He hur- ried. One of the men was getting out of the car, - breaks . Sagement with Colvin hecause of the * Jimmy, learning ite era Td ‘here 5 ere with * DETECTIVE MOONEY. They learn that the ticket in a permanent reservation in the name of THOMAS FOGARTY. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VII “All right, Mooney.” Jimmy rlap- ped the detective on the back. We'll go down to Mr. Fogarty’s hotel and let him.¢ry to explain this.” “Not so fast, not so fast,” shot back Mooney. For all of his sur- prise, he had been doing some rani: thinking. He turned to the’ tic! seller, “Have you got two seats ri behind this one for next Monday nitRe wha I do.” Th ” at I can do.” je youn; man began to sean through a stack] 84: of tickets. “Here you are—seats 30 and 31 in Row 1. Just what want, By the way, has Big Fogarty get into a jam?” ‘ “Pm not saying, brother.” Mooney reached for the tickets and tossed a bill through the grating: is y The ticket seller flushed. “None of NN. my business, of course, but if fou A can get anything on Fogarty you'll i ue the first ‘one that’s been able to lo it.” . “Yeah? Well, they all make mis- ‘takes sometimes.” Mooney pocketed the tickets. He turned to Jimmy. rf b to} New York, Feb. 3—When a good, Fogarty yet. We'll have a chance}!old-fashioned dime museum opened to find out a few things about him jon Broadway recently and introduced and Monday ‘night we'll get a good|the passing throngs to the ‘skinny look at ‘him. ,. | man, the fat lady and the rubber- They turned away from the win-|necked gentleman, it created much dow, leaving the clerk ablaze with|chatter and amusement. curiosity. But in years long’ ago, when John “Why wait?” Jimmy asked Mooney.| D. Rockefeller was making his third “Fogarty’s the man we're looking} million and Henry Ford was turning for. Why give him a chance to getjout his first “lizzie,” there was a away?” 4 “wonder of wonders,” known as the “He's not running away,” declared; Eden Musee. The name sounds fa- Mooney. “I know the kind of gent] miliar, doesn’t it? we're dealing with, and I'm not talk-| Nowy if you happen to play chess, ing to him I have something] you surely have heard of Pillsbury, more to go o1 one of the famed champions. What has the Eden Mugee got to more to go|do with chess? Ah, that’s the story. on,” Mooney ‘had said. Well, they} One of the attractions of the Musee had it. What they learned about} was “Ajeecb—the Great Fogarty was sufficient, in Jimmv’s] Chess mind, to put him behind the bars for] terfes! a lengthy: stay. a‘ . | machine ‘that “clicked | mechanically “Crooked. as a snake,” declared|and yet played chess with. all comers Mooney, after a talk of several hours|—an¢ beat them, Jt gainéd the repu- witha friend in the Mansfield detec-| tation, of being unbeatable. Thou- tive bureau. sands tried to figure it out. To all “A ward heeling politician and the| intents and purposes it was a purely heat little vote buyer that ever threw) automatic figure. Yet. most folk felt an election. , Mixed, up in a lot of} that there was a “trick” somewhe: high. pressure. bootlegging und sus-} There was! After all these years. it pected of knowing a lot about one orfis ‘revealed that Pillsbury was con- two ‘high-jack murders. But they} cealed within the mechanism. and can't get’a thing on hi We'velarranged the moves. ~ heard a lot about that bird back in Walter McDougall, rape er rs Lu Jimmy was besi her. “Sorry to. keep you *waiti he gaid hurriedly, lifting his hat ras delayed inside. He wondered jer he was “get- ing away” with his bloff.. He wasn’t looking for trowble. He suddenly thought of Janet. He saw thet he waan't' fooling the man who was getting out of the car. He was handsome in a way, but a loose-lipped mouth apoiled what otherwise would have been'a down- tight good looking face. “What a smooth worker you are,” he’ sneered to Jimmy. “Come on, nt} 818ter, hop in.” Simm; curb. edged over toward the ‘Beat it,” he said quietly. Let's take a crack, at the wise ‘he man at the wheel was climbing uu} out, too, Jimmy could smell liquor. dom| He ‘stiffened. Suddenly he lashed out with his fist and ht the fearest man flush on chin, (To Be Continued) , beth Basra oad er.” je mystery of ‘mys- The miracle of the age an Grafton. writer and cartoonist, sp{ps the yarn. “Got plenty of money and plenty of} McDougall has just tuned ton influence. A professional bondsman, | hook, by the way, called “This, 1 the ”. Life,” in which are’ contained many They had .gone later to the: May-Jamusing reminiscences ¥ ' fair Hotel, ‘where Mooney hadi learned{| McDougall was and is * a the number of Fogarty’s room and|shark. He used to go to the ‘Musee romptly had learned from a cham-/regularly to try and heat the “me- Permaid that Fogarty ‘had not slept} chanical wonder.” in his room the previous Tuesday ‘I remember that .Pillsbu: night. - would stand “beside the fi “That was the night tefore your} relates, “and prod along ww pley- er’s murder,” said Mooney, “the/ers. She would remind them ‘that night this H. A. Jones of New York}even a freak show's time could be registered at the Canfield hotel. Tt) taken up. Pillsbury was’ might not mean a thing and then) skinny. man, which explai again it might. This fellow Fogarty’s| could secrete himself wi' been living in the same hotel for five] Ajeeh’s abdomen was a mi years and the maid says ‘he’s often| that could be manipulated and the ott all ni i plays thus made. “Still, i “One day she enforcing the plain, got th the} move-a-minute rule on me cather + theater ticket he bought and he’s got/ rigidly. I had made several to account for that, too, trick moves and several minytes Rand, it doesn't pay to went by before the wizard a things ‘too fast. Now when we se€/ move. I knew all the time Pill hs the playing and in my ¢: I Biurted outs wité our keops the limit and lets you nap over your moves, I want a square deal, see?” ““The crowd that was looking on epee and some of them hu left the place, They thou; me crazy. The quick-witted ‘illsbury rebuked me, fearing posure. ‘ “Later Pillsbury admitted. that I We've gone pretty| had him ataniged and that he didn’t public cousidered see Fogarty. I'll be busy Sunday|the mechanical figure unbeatabl. and part of Monday. Suppose we —G! T SW. get together Monday afternoon andj (Copyright, 1926, NEA’ Servic Riga one, seceptied rf Mr. Fogarty. at'll give, you Monday morning to| @————_>~——____+——-® look around for that. job you were : talkin’ about. “That is,” Ke added | i A THOUGHT \ Si aees Iota site mast conan |” Sik aa dear which is holy unto ere lo no! need one.’ re “Pm ‘begin Magee ‘think it might] the neither cast ye your pearls not be necessary.” Jimmy ,answered,| before swine, lest they them “although this Fogarty thing looks| under their feet and turn and most too good to de true, rend you.—Matt. 7:6. ee ee Sunday morning Jimmy sent a tele: gram to his mother and sister: “Feeling fine ‘and Write to me.” He sent address. : The: day passed swiftly. evening: he :hunted up: a chi Slipping into. an empty pew he listening to the “a while the ehurch radually ied up. He reached for a hymn book and idly skimmed through it. Most. of th ‘hymns: were. familier: to: him—Jenet wsed to play them’ on Sunday eve- beg at home. =. f le became gradually. aware of a girl sitting just across the aisle fi ae ae could see oe ought: rred enough to ly tip-til seemed | ea not, see her eyes, and she wore hid’ most of her hair. What he Seat t ate waned was black ‘and ge ey” mT himaelt on [his ness, st listen gl ’ ry’ wife "he ry help admiring him. Mooney, it seemed, had some other work on his /hands in ‘Mansfield. There was an automobile theft ca: which the chief had told him to lool was’ there. ) The fool is willing to pay for any- thing but wivere No’ man bi tof which e supposes ‘hi abundance already.— rogress. pthat slong this} to have jimmes. . ted home |- He had walked for | ron JIM, | lock, before he ‘became dimly con 2 re sous she was walking Mea eae Siaty, Mataintcr [ef him. He wohdercd, half. gailtily, JANET, hin mother, and BARRY | Whether she might got i him cor. ‘Janet’n flance. tere her—there one near. « ede fon are, saldag, alles - |. He was about to turn around when to accommodate ‘itself to her gait. « ele, | ” e. a oy 4 ' } ‘ ob 1 ‘ ‘ e) o. -@ eo. * im ( ’ a ” %e 1@ e, af v, ,* a 6 . ¢