The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 10, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in t! paper, and alsc the local news of spontaneous origin published here. in, All rights of republication of all other matta: herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Profanity There are two ways of saying a thing. You can choose whichever you think the most effective: 1—“Gridley, damn your soul, get the hell out of here and turn every gun you've got on the devils!” (Chicago Tribune) '|____ Editorial Comment || 3.75 Malt Extract The treasury department authorized a six months’ | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ET an tt a | i Still Sawing Woo ! ae ne “SATURDAY, APRIL 10, 1926 tress. She revels in lurury for a short while, and then, frightened, calls on Hardiman at his office for a show- own. He takea ‘her to a cabaret, hen home where he atiempts to orce his attentions on her, She re- mlses him and finds her clothes tune in the morning. She deter- ng Tomance@ ui issNo >= «Figen ea Bhi ly body From the public road a bulky po- liceman bellowed: “Stop where you are or you're a dead man!” His bullet whistled past Bar. bara’s ear. She dropped ten feet and landed in a heap. of the officer roared ag: “You're a dead man!” he insist a ace w a oe aay eta Compass, patty may fire when you are Bad Gridley.” J ‘ ismare! . D., and enter at the postoffice at ie second is the way Admiral Dewey chose in Firat Netionel Pictures Bismarck, as second class mail matter. Manila Bay. Published by arrangement wid . com eae eee eee ee beeen ene, Ponueeee ; eS i | Beautiful Rarbara Brown, with) She earessed a) an envelope Subscription Rates Payable in Advance “Pet” on Bunker Hill Le eee a diets ae erty Sieg parahiee sr id ublee sie Daily by carrier, per year. . -$7.20| Bunker Hill is the place where they fired the shez t Hien i the mysterious. Nan| bad entered for the frat time this pany by math per year, (in Bis ce: eard ‘round the world. The first battle for Amer | ddans. house rice a Pra on peite. aily by mail, per year, ican independ vas fought there. N 2 city | Here she attracts the host, the| ment, she had a ogether her z (in state obtside Blamarck)...... 2 5.0011 to seston ta ‘eolag tos lghEaTNaRATTH NT aaiek | muiti-mitiioned J.B. Hardiman, | honest calculations of ber value. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota + 6.06 | OMe, Se eay oP 4 es rounoisseur of youth, Barbara| “And my cost # to discour * Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | Because the only inspiration the young people of | arcakens in the morning to find Nan| age me—when | need that! > | Boston find in Bunker Hill is a good place to “pet.” | Addams had left ina hug and that} Almost immediately the lucky ‘ Member of The Associated Press | pa cles a | the servants have been instructed | dime failed her. She went out of : The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to th | to consider her as their new mis-|the bathroom’ window feet first. ., jexperiment with a malt tonic with an alcohelic cor- | tent of 3.75 per cent. Pabst’s in Milwaukee and | Annheuser-Busch in St. Louis were given permits { for the manufacture of this extract. It was to be! obtainable at drug stcres without prescription, to} mect requirements of convalescence. The treasury DETROIT. Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITiI NEWYORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg ane na NN chsrecbcdhit Bite (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ed dogmatically. But Barbara, a live woman, fied. She raced over lawn, garden, rough land, rock and hummock. At an intersection between criss- cross roads, she cowered behind a hedge. A moment later the po- nines to escape the gilded cage. . Now go on with the story. She would fight. She listened ill her ears ached. She heard the more of the cook. She heard the tlock’s Ucking. Nothing else. She A Sheep's Intellect | department allowed it to be understood that requests } Waited. Was 0 the creaking of|liceman, gun in hand, thundered If you want a little lesson in sheep nature that is | from hospitals had influenced the decisicn to make ; \ ee ba Bud tounater aber: eats Beawalteas Gave ee erec os = a lesson in human nature as well, go to the sheep the tonic availabl | | ‘mg she knew not where, butjother, _ pen of a slaughter, house, It is not a beverage. A Tribune reporter who | away. 2 Her monstrous shoes threatened Down below are hundreds of sheep. ‘They are all | took a dose of it at Pabst's wrote that it had the; Hera, was_ in “uncarpeted: room: | to 87 GR St avery ote She ae took their clatter once for the sound of further pursuit, and fled the faster. “I'm free!” gasped Barbara. ‘i There was an uncovered length of tough tree root across her path and it was to give Bar- bara her first lesson in individual- The gardener's storeroom, prob- ably. She fingered the prongs of a rake suspended on the wall. The same gest brought her to hang- Ing folds of clothes of some kind. They were of coarse material, to judge by the feel. She was begin- ning to get accustomed to the dark appearance of black molasses and that one wine} glass of it required a chaser and that two would have demanded an antidote. There is medical opin ion that it is valuable to a person groping his way | back to health, but it is nothing a healthy person} would include in his scheme of making life brighter. | alike. There is very little to distinguish one from another. They crowd about in a woolly mass which shifts here and there about the pen. One bleats and they all bleat. ‘The mass moves this way and that. Then a man leans over to a wise-looking old sheep wearing a hell. The old sheep bleats understand- ingly and starts walking toward the killing room.| As soon as it was made known that the two pec- gs lifted the garment and an- eon i be me. iy aul The bell tinkles and the sheep follow that sound,| mits for the making of the malt extract had been | ither from the nail, and folded|and ached. She sobbed into the r. issued Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the | Up to the very door of the slaughter house the | Anti-Saloon league, and four other league officials mass moves. Then the man calls to the lender | issued a statement of protest. Mr. Wheeler said | again, and the old bell-wether leaps to one side. that the so-called malt medicinal liquid could be He stands watching his fellows pass to their doom. | easily diverted to beverage purposes or could be Eagerly the creatures run through the door to their | added to near beer to make a potable beer. a death, The treasury department is evidently convinced Every day it is repeated. of the value of the tonic in convalescence and of its e hell-wether, their leade cold mother earth: follow the bell-wether, their leade ons, tals Mount Casco Barbara was running when she entered Mt. Casco at four of the late Winter morning. Running de- spite the agony in her left shoe Running from an army corps of monster terrors behind her. At the edge of the town the hem over her arm. On the next tail she found a cap. Her toes, vaintully, diacovered footgear. She ook the lot and advanced again. she found another door, groped or and found a key. A blast of cold air greeted her is she opened it. She thought of he warm bed she had left up- wtairs and weakened. Then she The Judas sheep leads sands is fe! vs. ei va a essness as e . Nevertheless er | n part of Fairyland | hought of Hardiman. Crouching,| demons abandoved pursuit. But thousands of his fellows to their betrayal. And the worthle ssness as a beverage. Neverth less the per- | now,” anid’ Minter Habbaub, TIes |. MeTeeabORUMRe TMCEIRY Seieldas Ltbee ebRiOIete . necurte'"7 Hatiars thousands always follow, bleating timidly, rushing | mits are experimental. If the ingenuity of the cit- e | now the Land-Where-Spring-Has- sought shelter, She found it on a « = blindly. But always, on the threshold of death,|izenship found seme way of getting a real glass of | Come!” low porch running the length of - | (To Be Continued) | (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) | as a temptation, I didn't realize |g. Re epee x the weeks parsed by that my din- GUARD BABY : FROM PILES s with Mr. Tremaine had grown; 6 | more more frequent until at last | I hardly ever had a dinner at home. BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING | Surgeon General, United States the leader leaps aside to safety. If a sheep could only investigate! If cne sheep | beer out of the 3.75 tonic the methods of handling it could be modified or the making of it could be! in all those thousands would only stand at the gate | stopped. i of death and turn back his fellows, fight them back | The drys weighed the probability that the malt | [fstaurant for the first time in myn = to safety. | was valuable to the sick with the possibility that politan Opera House. I was literally But sheep-thinking is the thinking of the mass, it could be used as a beverage and instantly decided | drunk with the joy of it all. | oe the mob that runs blindly, guided by a straw of | that the latter was sufficient to determine against | the knowledge that I, little, Mamie instinct. Tha sheep do not stop to investigate. it. Many grocery stores and drug stores handle gin-! Reilly, was one of the gay throng, it was to make me work with They hear the tinkle of that bell and follow. ger extracts. People remember that when they were fave,ene * happiness that Tenn mever ows voice In the world how many are like that! children they got a doxe of Jamaica ginger when} The realization that Mr. Tremaine gown and wrap, saying I had ¢: they had a stomach ache. The ginger extracts have ! not-ashamed of me among all it by bringing in new cliénts. I as high as 90 per cent alcoholic content, but an anti- the front of the first touse in the town, and gained by three steps from-a short cement walk. | She sat on the top step, her feet jtucked under her, safe from the jnameless crawling horrors which seemed to her s:lazed eyes to coil jabout in the pstch lawn, moving the grasses with their slow, sinister progress. The horrors were herd- ing toward her, and, with a sup pressed cry, Barbara slid back over the flooring until she felt the house door against her hack. She must have dozed there, tor IN FOOL'S PARADISE * ! That night | went to a fashionable Mamie you do not know what an incentive | my As long as the opera season jasted, | I went at least four times a week and | Public Health Service } To protect the Héalth and iife of aby during the summer requires of those entrusted with that baby's Garnet Wheat , his grand friends added to my plea-) thought she told the truth and so I i Sool’. nah | care watchfulness, patience, skill anu ; sure. lived in Fool's Paradise for three | A oF 3 awoke with a wild start, A Ss 5 Eayte 4 fs ‘Aa lisatqownes shee oie particularly knowledge of the~ ad- katiblobaucge Moet) * Associated Press patches from Winnipeg the Volsteadian _who took a tablespoon of that rey in hen Ie aavchatmannons the bases Ma day Ca ee ib ot | ditional dangers to be avoided which homb h exploded at her elbow. other day tcld of the discovery of Garnet wheat by would be climbing a tree or running for the lake.) describe to you my feeling. 1 had town Lola Lawrence came in. the|S¥™mer brings. One of the most a aade Scere el RROSEEee < portant of these dangers is that which results from the presence of the all too common house fly. This pest “unquestionably —_ kills many babies. It tracks its filth- laden feet across the refusé pile and the garbage can, it carries an addi- tional load to your table, to the food which you are preparing for your baby unless watchful care is limbs. ‘Then she smiled weakly. Prodding her in the ribs a news- paper twisted into a club lay be side her. A newsboy, busy before the sun, had hurled the missive at Barbara's doorway. She fdly unfolded the sheets, speculating on the uses to which she might put the strangers’ the dominion department of agriculture. This kind | All alcoholic compounds are not protested, although an heard eee ee eee shobs She saad it I =e still oes : e ae F ; e{ politan Opera Company but I had sat ing there and when she told = of wheat ripens ten days earlier than Marquis. | the Anti-Saloon league might affirm that there] <y far up in the upper gallery that Y was,-she asked if 1 would wear some | ‘A matter of ten days means much to the wheat | would be some way of getting ginger extracts into| could not see them. I was doing! of the new evening gowns for her. Tis aaa 5 2 A ty eae i ‘i 2 : something that I had never hoped to All_unsuspecting I put on one | growing regions of the Northwest. Canadian ex | beverage form and therefore there should by none. : Thad ah ambition to be one off thopght she would, like, perts believe that forty million acres of virgin soil! The point of view in the malt case is interesting j those singers on the other side of the When 1 walked in I found she was will be reclaimed as land areas further north ‘can | because of the values it establishes. be seeded to wheat. | that the possible needs of invalids are of no consid- It is apparent | footlights, but to be sitting in one of alone in the salon, I had an idea these luxurious boxes that I had been! that something was told cost over a hundred thousand) knees trembled e near 7 . ‘i . i i ion is: st ¥ 7 hi rhc! s sitti taken and the necessary safeguards property. i = Growing tests conducted in Canada demenstrated | eration if the other question is: Could a person not | dollars year was something too! the divan on which she was sitting, | ‘ken 'y one! hat Ga a wheat withstood drought better than|an invalid possibly get a glass of beer out of the| Wonderful for my imagination to As I had beer ught to do, I —— : It's stealing,” she warned her that Garnet i cera 2 conceive, ‘stopped and tur slowly around, f course, every house should be self. Minnesota and North Dakota | stuff or could he drink it as beer in spite of the pro- some other types. screened, but the home that holds ¢ silver dress did prove a good that she might see the dress from all ranee ine ates tea Ate But she put Into !mmediate exe- riculturalists have been conducting tests with Gar- | tests of an outraged palate and a tortured stomach? | advertisement, said) Ma- a baby 7 you sce, angle telly saecied SRO EAR, cution a conception seg peor arity aes ; ; . dam the late aftern f the; “Ef don't see why y 0 Worn. | CAE | fete (ed otlpspea) degkeaby) ni stinct and need, | = net wheat for several years. It has been grown| That point cf view gives the normal person annexe day. “We have had. a regular, ing nion't see why you keep on Wore. | Ould be protected against, flies, Pot an ton mn 4 Flies are attracted by the pres- who keep their houses and surround- ings clean and neat and protect all food are bothered least by these dis- ease spreaders, Flies'carry disease on their hairy ence of food. Careful housewives legs and sticky mouth parts and in- fect many a baby. They light on successfully in this state. | understanding of the conflict between zealots and rush of customers and all of them,/ :: Professor Andrew Boss of the University of Min-| moderates. A democratic success is founded on Sa iu recuabed, etbee yp should nesota states, however, that wheat used in Canada| moderation and tolerance. A democratic experiment | It is a popular thing, Julie = may not do as well in Minnesoa or North Dakota.’ can be wrecked by the lack of these qualities. In| the thing we want to do ye Experiments to date have not developed a wheat the Anti-Saloon league the lack is complete. superior to Marquis in yield and rust resistance. An extension of the protest against malt extract North Dakota experiments with Garnet have been | would prohibit the grewing cf grapes, grain, and The words came but venomously. | (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: The Shock of Real- ization. out softly She slipped her skinned feet out of her boats and caressed them gingerly with her fingers. She wrapped her feet in folds of the newspaper. Comfort is a relative thing. A warmth which the editor had never been able to put in his # most impassioned editorial invec- "You won't have milk, good peo- ple—but then, 1 won't have oat- meal.” as maint,| © covered | The grass was as green the bushes and trees wer | with tiny green and pink fuzzy buds, She didn’t stop until! she stood = oe : hee 2 é the will vere out, ta were | Clean bottles and nipples or in the tp the midst of what recog-|tive spread from her toes to her ~ more successful than those in Minnesota. fruit. It would prohibit the making of commercial -TWINS Ses - here and there, and on| Milk, which you: are. preparing for nized the clump-of rose bushes |apkles. Of the rest of the beacon alcohol with all its essential uses. baby’s meal and deposit there the The possibility that a product could be used to provide an alcoholic SE beverage would rule as the determining factor and Paint alone will not save your home very long.|if it could be so used the United States could not You have to keep up the payments. such produce or put out such products. the edge of the woods they could see little blue hepatica flowers, and the white stars of the blood-root. Marsh- marigolds were ready to burst into bloom over by the pond. Everywhere the birds were singing. Soft warm winds were btowing and white clouds were chasing each other across the of Mt. Casco culture she made thick and resilient inner soles, which she lifted isto the boots, When she stood again she was shod for a tramp across continents, As she ‘slid off the porch into shadow, a milk wagon disturbed in thelr winter overcoats of straw which stood sentinel.at the top of the vegetable garden. 3 Something squeaky and light- footed ran over her bare instep. A tat. She suppressed a shriek. Hurriedly she thrust her feet into material which causes jntestinal dis- orders of children. This is not a matter of guess work. Clean-up campaigns again and again have demonstrated by actual figures | the advantage of such campaigns in the saving of human life. To remove dandruff send your coat to the cleaner. THE-LAND-WHERE-SPRING- HAS-COME Mister Rubadub had enough _ soap and shampoo and polish and things left to clean up Petey Prairie-Dog : | a eel 5 fons before he quit. sky. S Lats Spear ee ‘ the shoes. She coufd have danced |the fore-dawn qufet of the village | The backstop of the players is a 25-| congestion in Manhattan can throw r. ony. ong The fishing .and hunting in the) the minuet in them without mov-|#treet, The criminal—now hardened i ss f cap hi ‘a But I know that Petey would look} “Why, this is. the Land-Where-| p; hs | News From the i} Hae stots sore eRe oe ay See a ean as dusty as ever in about a day. For Ltd a, | Pikes Peak region attra jousands| ing them, to the ways of™larceny—spled on : Spring-Is-Coming!” cried Nane; Shey | z State Univers: 4 “Where schools do not have outside will have a serious dis- | Petey lives under the ground most of | the summer as well as the winter. He likes to set on top of his roof, on his hind legs and «o, “Quirk! Quirk! Quirk” in his fun @ toy dog, at the same time jerking | annually, the dairyman as he placed the fam- ily quart -before the door. She boldly. embraced the plan of a fur ther félony. j The milk was ‘good. It washed be found under these American skies. Some youngsters start the game The most crowded. sections of the before school. A few jobless youths city cont 400,000 persons per pass by and join in. At noon the, square mi clerks from the great office buildings, for the ci get a little exercise. 8 iffi She examined the rest of her Ree ane booty. A pair “ef vast trousers and a coat. A heavy, patched vest, A cap that came w: rly, oer her irs. There was warmth, too, in \d the general average 6,000. | EVERETT TRUE is more than y Trucks draw up| Thirteen states in America bo: plin: lem, as soon as you) ind k off af righ 1 his short stubby tail, os though he Bee C0 ARR See re tesaue _ i gut ge ci 1, ass as y und teamsters sneak off a few min-| average of but six people s et ya ‘iB Ac tt irousers, which, despite all her| “You won't have milk, have outade activities your prob-| utes for an inning or two. Those; same ac worked with a string. But Petey has WHAT! [0,000 TOR THAT PROPERTY uy fumblings with pas fingers, | people,” she nodded at the trteane s of discipline will disappear.” | who have plenty of time kindly with- And, so far as the “melting pot” is| NOt enough courage to say “Boo” to NO WONDER YOu CAN'T z would persist in pulling the lower |door. “But then, [ won't have oat- Principal B. C. Tighe, of Fargo.) draw from the game so that the hur- concerned, more children ‘of foreign-|* ®00se. He's forever getting scared sece it!) WHY, THATS thins folds of her makeshift undershirt | meal.” address ‘on’ “A’ Program of | pled ones can ‘haven. few. minates Longe wavontar’ attend’ the puilic| at. something or other’ and popping - 10 CISTEN, bout her. The. wind whigtled| She went on her ws Extra-Class Activities” given at the fun, “Factory workers appear in mid- schools than do children of native-|down into his underground house UTTERLY RID= MR. Tevs, prc da gE ade haa ons: CRiBSr way. MBtepeRy. opening session of afernoon and after again. But they got him annual high | But 22 per cent of the popula- just the) up-her bare legs. ant. Give her more laws to break. working hours| born, J uw i schaol conference, at the Stute Uhi-| there is ‘u_veritahle "scramble for| tion are native whites of native par. {same and took him n ‘long way to| J ICUCOUS fob situ Tet ou ‘The moon was rising. With/it|She swaggered toward the First versity Thursday, | places on a team. Meanwhile a con-/cnts, It is now an old wheeze that | Serub-Up Land. | Bi Wrtat. WL Do. rose her spirits. Then her heart |National’ Bank on Main Street, “The school must assume respon- | siderable crowd gathers and the curb| the hardest thing to find in New| Then the Twins and the March VU became a weight of lead. She had| pausing to look over its steel-bar- sibility of what the student does/ and sidewalk is all but blocked, York is a New Yorker, Hare, rounded up long-legged old < SHAVES left something in her room—|red windows with b-ow-puckering after four o'clock,” continued Mr.| "Not the least of the involvements. ‘There ‘ack Rabbit, and he got spring-clean- | 4 are something like 15 per. sons to each dwelling and the num (IT DOWN TO something without which she could not leave, It ‘would be frightfully risky to get back into the ho: Her heavy shoes would make much Interest. Oh, ‘well, another time. She stepped out with a new blus- ter. No,*not that way. <A boy doesn’t walk that way, with a motion proceeding from the waist. Tighe, “And in your consideration of | what students will take part in these activities, do not overload one stu- a dent, because he seems peculiarly " adapted to the place. The reticent, [ed,to the Queen's taste, ! bi f actually owning al, Next they marched Bunch B; heme ix sectaie: a | off to Scrub-Up, Land, and if ev Such conditions are bound to cre- | ate “play” problems and social prob- of these games is the constant dan ger of losing baseballs. Young gam- ins wait in the street for a foul, grab the ball and run to some more isolated diamond. Then a collection ran old tramp needed # scouring it was i | i atudent may come to be an outatand-| is taken from strangers a ee ral that ave not easy of|° But like Petey Prairie-Dog, it noise. But she could take them|She must get the fo-us cf her 1 DA et utter he Hanchaen a\865 | puting: ap the HOTEy ere tied | eae eenere: that ¥ °F aidn't do much good, for banen yaa off. She ran to the door from|equilibrium higher. Boys walk -~ q the preliminary push. Have honor to play. The miracle ix that youngsters be-| "0 more than reached his home on which she had emerged, and|from the hips. Their legs seem to societies in the school, as an award salves come so adaptable to the conditions, the plain than he started into dig tugged at.thg knob. She couldn’t| dangle from the hip-socket, as if for leadership, character, academic Some recent figures on population | under which they are forced to live.| fr gophers again. open it. It had a catch-lock, they were braced under their arms, 4 honors and activity work. This will we —— —-GILBERT SWAN. |. Then came Colonel ’Possum from , The front door, she knew, was locked, There was only one course left to her. ,She gave no thought now to consequences. She circled until she came to the climber rose trellis which mounted up the side of the house to her bathroom window. She ‘ested it and it bore her weight. She climbed carefully, steadily. For a. moment she wrestled with the window. The price of its opening was'a éplit nail on a mani- cured forefinger. She clambered through, no longer afraid, oye strange e: tio She drew a deep breath to try it and clutched: at her pants. ‘They were slipping from their moorin, “So that’s why boys ir belts! She put her hands in her pcckets, retrieving the lower part of her coa- tume justin time. The sun was rising. The sitm lad who walked, flap” ping in pa’s castoffs, out of Mt. Casco at dawn, puckered up his Nps and tried valiantly to whistle, The effort énded in an abortive hiss. to practice,® be the only incentive which you will need for the sponsorship of extra- curriculum activities.” ‘long down south! | It was mite a pleasure to fix vy, the Colonel, and Mister Rubadub said 0. He shook a lot of persimmon ‘perfume all over him when he was! ‘finished and put prickly-pear perfume (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) - | Temperatures and Hi | Road Conditions | on his handvercnict. said M. Beatrice Johnstone, of the 1 @—_—_____________@i “Ah shuh am evah so extension division of the State Uni- | obliged, suh!” said Colonel versity, when addressing the weekly, § : ( - | convocation at the University Thurs- Bismarck-—Clear, 36; roads good. day. St. Cloud-—Clear, 48; roads good. Miss Johnstone further stated that} Minot—Clear, 37; roads good. ability in public speaking to some | Jamestown-—Clear, 42; roads good. degree was an essential part of the | Grand Forks—-Clear, 50; roads| equipment of the busingss man of | good. — today as it is the man who can speak Hibbing—Part “Public speaking is the only talent | that sells above par; it is alwa: marketable and pays good dividends,” much "Possum when he was ready to leave. “Ah | shall recommend youh bahbah shop | to all my friends. Good-day to also Mistah Haih and to vou Naney and to you Mastah Nick. With that he lifted his hat and wa gone “Good-bye,” called the others. \S| THAT Cvick SNOULGH “Something else \jnoted Barbara. cloudy, 40; | roads | ' 2 . q She opened ‘her lips to carol @ : will be. the ! ter Rubadub turned all his cans momen| 5 remnciy lesser han part of | rgo--Clear, 37; roads good. | ind bottles and jars upsid room a brilliant soprano note, start of am } the countr; Winona—Clear, 37; roads rough. | “Empty—-every one of them!” he de- of: the le!” waln desk | 0 5 cae San eee Mandan—Clear, 40; roads good. clared. “Now we can have a clean- she found what was ing. — Rochester—-Clear, 35; roads heavy, | im&-un party, then I'll lock the gate It. was @ torn énvelope in which { N Y ii + Duluth! roads good. and Serub-Up Land until next' year,” , | Ber-numb fingefs felt the round |b In New York i Mankato- ; roads.good. | Nancy and Nick rolled up their | contours ofa coin. She suddenly | beanis }seares ane tay all pitehed | stood straight, and proud, and de- iPM gs REPL ETI TEI | no time at all Serub- Land 4 » ‘ allege Nor, April 10-—What’s » few was as spick and span as 4 new! east property spool, “I’ve all I a now,”-she whis- gets warm enough Mister >Naliantly into the dark, FH A THOUGHT. | Rubadub then closed the |’ j fate and locked it, By lucky édime to give me cour. { ters from 10 to 40 None of us liveth to himself, and | Then all f f thi Ky axe, And! need it no ¢ goo a tor | nO man dieth to himself—Rom. 1487. | the iptle Posed OF eel giers be oe is enough i 5 ae SS Land-Where-Spring-Was-Coming. inty and When they reached the little | tee Jofe,ot lite” Seeurity is an in; that marked, the Place where erate Possessing ‘of, a wish discovers the Valley Land tegen MN stopeed folly of the chase.- A 2 “ ee began, they ay stopped a it @ home are

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