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. PAGE FOUR _. Phe Bismarck An Independest Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 2 (Established 1873) SP ee ces Sy Pyblished A the Bismarck Tribune Company, » N. D., and entered at the postoffice at of » as second class mail matter. D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily dy carrier, per year. e $7 Daily by mail, per year, jismarck) by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... Daily 3 outside of North Dakota lember Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ia exclusively entitled to the ; use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published here- in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved, jai. Foreign Representati G. LOGAN PAYNE ‘COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Ghosts of a Grand Past The ghosts of a grand old past come out today to walk the streets in Williamsburg, Va. ; They are the ghosts of May 15, 1776, when they were men and lived a stupendously daring hour in history, an hour that changed the world's ideas of government, an hour that has echoed and re-echoed throughout the council halls of the world for a tury and a half, I on May 15, 1776, was inaugurated formally the greatest statement of civil liberties known to man, the Declaration of Independence. The colonies had seen the way, to be sure, but there had been no formal action. It remained for Virginia, with clearness and without fear, to put down on paper the realization that a break with England was inevitable. The Virginia convention on that eventful day passed the Virginia Resolutions and planted the seed that was to grow into the Declaration of Independ- ence. The mark of great hands went into that Virginia document. Patrick Henry’s was there, Edmund =Pendleton’s, Meriwether Smith’s. From the Vir- ginia document to bud Jefferson's immortal ‘masterpiece that made the thirteen colonies the Tribune’ pons begin coming in. Mr. probably live much as farmer. no background of desi: for them. {harshness of cold and plain fare. Nature is beautiful. It is her beauty. face of Mother Earth one bit. It a curious thing, how of the great outdoors” are. outing there, And the tourists! dumping ground i: western considerate of the other fellow. (Ohio State Journal) general strike is a terrible thing. civil war. : misery for ca misery for everybody. course among the poor. one's kno’ United States of America. The situation in England presages much woe. It is a war, a install a furnace and even a bathroom when the cou- | He may buy a new suit or so of clothes and smoke better tobacco. Aside from this, Mr. Root Fitch, millionaire, will Root Fitch, The sudden dropping of a fortune from the heavens does not change a man’s habits and whet new de- sires all ina moment. It cannot mean jewels, motor | cars, trips to Europe, night life, silken raiment and | all the standard luxuries of living to a man who ha; { It just means poking along pretty much in the} same old groove, with a bit more comfort, a bit less Vandals of the Shoe Box admirable family to take a day out under the trees and admire But leaving shoe boxes, tin cans, banana peels and other trash dvesn’t help the fair inconsistent some They rave of the beauties of nature, then go away leaving a litter of papers or other refuse that spoils an ideal picnic spot for any others who might choose to haye an For many the only common the side of the road. ate you can tell the main-road because of the rubbish along the sides of the pike. Picnickers and tourists should be a little more | | Editorial Comment The General Strike in England A If at all prolonged, it means misery for labor, ital, misery for constituted authority, In the sweat of his face must man eat bread. Not for many days in a compact little country like Eng- land can production be stopped and transportation be halted without actual hunger, striking first of And to be hungry, to see children hungry, is to be desperate. Hunger no authority and recognizes no law. England suffered terribly by the war and has not = After the Virginia convention had dared its dare,|Tecovered. She has never got back to her old basis Richard Henry Lee bore the proposition to the Con-|f industry and commercial confidence. For more than seven years she has been stagger- ing along, hoping for a turn for the better, now see- ing signs of it, now finding them to be a mirage. Before this present calamity befell her more than a million men were out of work, and widespread un- employment means widespread unrest, resentment. and despair, whose natural culmination we now wit- =tinental Congress, where it was finally adopted July 2. The work was completed July 4, when Jeffer- ~son’s draft was adopted and published to the world =.and the thirteen colonies became no longer English. President Coolidge is to speak .in Williamsburg _-today and the governors of the states that grew from the thirteen colonies are to be present. We cannot hear Patrick Henry tell the world of liberty’s sweetness, We cannot see a re-enactment “cof the great scenes at Williamsburg 150 years ago. But we can read the glowing lines of Jefferson, and = we should read them, for a busy America seems to forget so easily. How our Habits Change A new book, entitled, “Reluctantly Told,” is being .exploited. The book, by one Jane Hillyer, purports “to be the story of “how one feels as the mind dis- . integrates.” ~ “A vivid, authentic account of a mental break- down,” the blyrbs “Jane Hillyer tells of the “delusions and terrors that afflicted her as she lost control of her reason and then of her stay in the asylum, her gradual recovery and her return to nor- mal life. “Here we have a book on insanity in which we are + spared none of its torturing ghastliness, none of the bitter and actual experiences of treatment.” Which is an interesting commentary on today’s point of view as contrasted with that of a genera- tion ago. Then insanity in the family was not only t d; but shame. It was the skeleton in the family clo: Today makes an interesting experience, an adven- { ture, of it. At the same moment that Jane Hillyer makes book food of her “ghastly incarceration,” the strong arm of the law lifts its weight from the banned “My Life and Loves,” by Frank Harris. So another self-experience story, “everthing told personal modesty,” is ready for us! world as compared with a decade when “Conf of an Opium Eater,” by Thomas De Quincey, was the one daring tome of the sort! We, for one, like a world which makes capital of anything and everything that happens—comedy or tragedy. It takes some of the splinters out of liv- : ing! Mocking the Monarch 4 The day’s news tells of an aged woman of Italy thrown into prison because she mocked the Iron Man, Mussolini. The law of the land says that the Tron Man shall neither be mocked, scorned, derided, ridiculed, blamed nor belittled. Mussolini, it would seem, is as anxious to keep his , dignity unscratched as to make and unmake mighty * empires. Dangerous business this! . Empires wax fat and mighty when builded by *" monarchs who put empire first and self last. : The Napoleons who fight and battle and at and stew to make all the world and his wife kow-tow : low before them, soon lose the scepter and feel the loneliness of an Elba about them: « Love can not be legislated. Honor ean not be leg- jslated. Respect can not be legislated. The good } works and the dignificd conduct of a monarch will gain his ends of self-pedestaling much sooner than commands to the subjects to love, honor and obey. i A Milion For Mr. Fitch Root Fitch, retired 65-year-old farmer of Michi- gan, wakes uyi one fine day to find that he is heir to a million and a half of dollars. Whereupon Mr. Root Fitch hitches up the horse and drvies around to the paperhanger to tell him to | geome over and paper the dining room. The new mil- ‘fionaire, seeks a special papering rate by offering help in smearin* the paste and hangin’ the ceilings. Mr. Root Fitch had to hiteh up in order to get, to because he had no phone. He now, maybe, he can afford one. _ ‘probably shinglé the house, ness. The expedients tried by a hard-pressed govern- ment to tide over the trouble and to avert disaster ficiaries. ture trouble. the people and for the government. never ends of itself. Self-r ment cannot stand the pressure. ite he had “done nothing.” The government's subsidizing of the coal miners to keep them from quitting, work. last year sowed the seeds, as was evident enough at the time, of fu- The more the people are taught to look to the government to provide for them and to adjust their personal affairs for them, the worse in the end for The emergency seemingly requiring such govern- mental interference grows by what it feeds on and nce soon learns to lean and to lean harder and harder, and the time comes when the govern- Indiana True to “Jim” (New York Times) When Senator Watson of Indiana contemplates his big majority in the Republican primary of his state, he must be pleased, not astonished, at his own mod- eration, publi have undoubtedly aggravated the situation, The establishment of the dole system, though it may have been necessary in the emergency, op- pressed the taxpayers and did not satisfy the bene- It was charged against him by his Re- opponents that for twelve years But to this the man in the whom all Indianians love to call “Jim” may now 5 , retort that doing nothing is the great art and se- for the sake of art, nothing deleted for the sake of !cret of winning votes. If necessary, Senator Wat- i son could have done less and won more, These personal experience tales make a colorful] attitude and record on the World Court. vote for it. Take his As a good ious | Republican, he wished to stand by the president and But his political managers at home told him that if he did so his chances of election to an- other term would be imperiled. Consequently he went to the white house and begged to be let off. any party obligation. Watson’s vote was “not needed.” for Indiana. is not needed. cleaves to him. torship, but the presidency. and outraged Senator Watson. President Cooldige graciously released him from Noses in.the senate had been carefully counted, and it) was found that Senator That was enough Her heart beats true to a man who is so popular, belongs to so many organizations, can be on both sides of so many questions, that his vote Indiana, at any rate, needs him and All admirers of the simple-minded Hoosier sena- tor must regret that a cruel slander was put in cir- culation against him in the last days of the primary contest. This was a story that what the honorable Jim was really after is not the United States sena- It was alleged that if he were renominated as senator he would at once drop everything else and press his presidential can- didacy for 1928. Nothing could have more afflicted It is true that some of his impetuous friends have now and then named him, doubtless much against his will, for the presi- dency. He does not deny that at.one time he thought himself fit for the vice presidency. But with an expression of real pain on his noble face he stamped upon the calumny set afloat by his adversaries. He made a statement in which he “plainly said that ha! rain-barre! fairy. was not a candidate for the presidential nomination.! 4. ‘About! If he were not a man who swears to his own hurt! and.changeth not, it might be that the la figures. of his vote in the Indiana primary would-lead him to search his heart anew and ask if such a great favorite with the. people ought not to be ready to obey them when they bade him go higher. As the case stands at present, howevér, the sengtor appesls to the country not to regard him as a presidental candidate. With this request it will cheerfully and unanimously comply. retired for the! In one | i | { “ AWAS ReSPecT hers * VERY UNBECONING © MAMIE’S GREAT SURPRISE My face, I was sure, was getting redder and redder but I stood by my Mami guns. “Last, but not le ie Riley,” I sald. “I had someon 8 day ‘tell me be loved me and wanted me.” A i “So have I,” suid Mamie quietly. I id been stretched out on the sofa but I sat up with a jerk. “Mamie, you haven't really Mr, Tremaine again ?” es. “And talked with him?” “Yen “Oh, Mamie! ‘What did he Tell me all about it.” “You are tired, dear. 1 ough! not to keep you up. ‘I told the men that you have had enough excitement for one day.” “I couldn't sleep now unless you told me all of it.” seen say? "ano RENENBER - The SELFISA, GRAB IT ALL FoR YOURSELF SPIRIT IS VERY, BUT FoRGET Abo T NTE 5 ) Of wees | “7 \ Bun ano GET A Baskel } Rouwo AND WE'LL TAKE { HOME A CAR LOAD = TAESE BoAUTFUL HER OWN WAY | of internal secretion. SPRING “Well, you see, Judy, Buddy suw had me last night. At first he could not believe it was I, but he finally recog- nized me although. he did not let me or anyone else know it. He was so| p, afraid that he would lost sight of me again, “This morning he came into the restaurant about 10 o'clock. You know that there are less people there at that time than any other, He walked directly over to the hit- checking room. “The first word he said to me was, ‘Mamie, why did you do this terrible thing?’ “Most people would say “E did the would make you think that I intended to do you any harm?’ “I did not—I could not-answer. ith that he came back into the at-checking room and grasped my shoulders, “‘Answer me,” he commanded, “No, you never did. But Lola Lawrence told me that you had sen! her to Tortentio also, and that when you had grown tired of her she sud- denly found that Tortentio had no more interest in her votce. She said that same thing would happen to | me.’ “Buddy fairly shook me. “‘Mamie, do you think I could ever right thing, Mr, Tremaine,”’ I an-| love a woman like Lola Lawrence?’ swered. he demanded.” “*Please, please, Mamie,’ he piead- ° ed. ‘Don't high-hat me now. I (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) couldn't stand it. Did 1 ever say —_— 4 anything to you that for one moment|; TOMORROW: Greater Than Love. y, Me “TWINS The Twins and Yhe Whiffet trudg- ed along and along and along, and pretty soon they came to the water- ing-trough under which the toad lived, There she sat under a totdstool umbrella, to keep thé’ drops off that splashed’ over. ; “Did you see a little lost shadow around any place?” asked Nancy. “This poor little Whiffet lost | shadow when he was crossing the sti _ No.” said the toad, “That's a silly thing to do, But since it’s done, there is only one thing left. That. is for him to keep out of the sun for Well, I didn’t come for advice,” said the Whiffet. “J came for mv shadow, thank you. I for one don't cars to-sit under a watering trough an bye . “Good-bye!” said the toad. “The life suits me. You might ask the rain-barrel fairies.” The rain-barrel fairies were float- ing around on the top of, the rai barrel in little leaf bani ‘They ‘had nets and were fishing fo- skippers. The Twins and the Whiffet climbed up on the edge and ¥atched them. “Did you see a steky shadow around anywhere?” asked the Whiffet. goodness!” cried one’ of the vain-barrel fairits. Your suit’s all shrunken up. Did you fall in ° “In?” sang out the other tiny crea- tures. “I asked you a civil question and I expect & civil answer, not a ques- tion like a step-ladder,” said the Whiffet, “Yes, I fell into the drain and my/suit all shrank up. But that makes *o difference. I would know mv sh.dow anywhere even if,1 am diffe jt.” a look!” cried |Nancy as a kw fell over the rain-barre! and pase-d on swiftly. “Maybe. that’s your shadow, Whiffet.” Fut when the Whiffet turned to lovk, he lost his. balance and fell spiash! down, down and down, right te the bottom of the barrel where he Settled and lay still. ~ : The rain-barrel. was deep, and fish- ig a Whiffet out of the bottom of it yas no easy task. But Niek had a happy thought. ‘We'll pull out the bung and. the water will run out,” he said. “Hurry, Nancy, help us pull.” “How about us?” shrieked the first “How.” “Us? shrieked all of them. “Yes, and how about us?” called out all the skippers. “We can’t swim without water.” be “You'll all have to hunt another rain-barrel,” said Nancy. And out came the bung. “And out rushed the water. an The Whiffet was saved, but his purple bombazine suit was shrunken more than ever. \ “Your shadow will never know you now,” said Nick. “You look’ more than -evér like a fat little sausage. fe nothing but get fat. Good-| . on the fire escapes... Nurse-maids appear in droves along the Central Park driveways... Sccretari Professional men tell you politely that “Mr. Whatzus will over the week-end”... Fancy umbrel- las in store windows.....Gayly dev- orated raincoats in others. . = bies with polished hansoms begin- ning to line up at focal points Everywhere one turns the noises of subway diggers may be heard ee Surely, summer has coite! IN NEW YORK 7 disakiikicat hi anata 1 think you'll have to get a new shadow.” “T can't,” wailed the little fellow. “Don't you remember! The fairyman said that no person in the world could have two shadows.” “That's so,” said Nick. “Let's fol- low the shadow that passed over the in-barrel just now. It went that way over the top of the hill.” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) not be in eos grand lady who dwells at the foot See-sawing up| of Fifth Avenue who still goes cab- 1 noted a sign| bing in the grand manner.... A good s Irish Rose”| half hour before the drive begins will soon celebrato its fifth anniver-|the. cabby, clad in silk hat end sary.... Ahd many are the wheezes! raiment tobe found chiefly in old going about Broadway in this connec- | copies of Godey’s Lady’s Book, drives tion... One is about a woman who| forth his chargers... refused to admit she had attended the first performance, “for fear of hetraying her age”. Another is that the company members will take a week off to have their faces lifted... mansion while strect gamins from Washington Square make fresh re- marks from the sidewalk,....._ B and-by out peeks @ maid who trips to the cab and makes it ready for the dowager.... Finally “her ladyship” The East Side begins to move out+ arrives, “AND, AS T WAS SAYING, LT DION'T NOTICS ANY IMPROVEMNGNT. WELL, SIR, 3 Ger BUSY AND &KRGFULLY ADULSTSED THE POTENTIOMSTSR To SEG (F< COULD) FIND THS DEAD SPOTS, AND XE THINK | Z MUST. HAVE PVT IN ALL OR Two SoLID{ iHOURS GOING‘'OVER THE SET BuT |; For THS UPS OT MG, = DON'T SSM TO; pe ABLE TO GET ANY IMPROVEMGNT., . Guess Ber HAVE TO--" i a SS A | “1 Neighbors | +) Creek schools participated in a pro- He sits at attention outside the, ERR Neen USAT HEALTH SERVICE — ; MOTIONS AND” - ge EM TEALTt canal, to be stopped and sugar to be liberated by the liver. A gumber of investigators e shown that the secretion of adre- nalin iby the adrenal glands is i: creased in great emotion,’that pain’ excites the glands in question to pour into the bléod stream an in- creased amount of adrenalin and that fear and rage do the ie thing. It makes the blood. more rapidly coagulable; in-short, % prepares for fight or flight, such as be nec- in times of danger, fear, rago Bodily Harmony The lesson we can draw from these s is that in digesting, assimilat- ing’and rearranging the ingredients of our diet, the pody works with a precise and admirable harmony in which all the organs and.cells inter- play; that-good nature, especially at meal time and just preceding it, or ‘better than good nature, @ cheerful, courageous poise, gives digestion and assimilation @ boost and allows the inner harmony of the system to go on pleasantly and efficiently. On the contrary, starting the day or the meal with cross, fretful, angry feclings tends to check digestion in the ordinary individual and to throw a greater stress on the inner h: mony than is necessary for our c' tomary vocations. ¥ Strong emotions of fear, anger or peevishness at meal time will retard digestion and increase the tendency to sluggish elimination and the pro- duction of \ poisonous substances. Chemical states and emotions are linked together. Let us maintain them at their best, for our pleasure, for the pleasure of-our friends and for the greater joy of living all round. ce ; BY DR: HUGH 8. CUMMING Surgeon General, United States = Public Health Service The action of’ emotion seems to be largely through certain glands known as ductless glands, or better, glands The glands of internal sccretion are the thyroid and parathyroids in the front of the neck, certain parts of the pancreas from which insuli was recently obtained, the gland at the base of the’ brai: adrenals above the kidney and parts of certain other important organs. Possibly many other organs and tissues are involved, but be this as it may, the fact remains, that the organs of internal secretion play 4 large part in rearranging and regu- lating the chemical changes in the body. The story of the so-called ductless lands and fheir relation to our ac- tivities, personalities, etc. is an in- teresting one but fs in the main aside from our discussion tonight. Upon the activity of one sct of these glands, however, we must dwell, since a great deal of work has been done to show that they are active in our ‘defense and are active in emotional) states. These glands dre ‘the adrenals. Adrenalin Each adrenal gland is composed of. an external portion and a central portion. From the central portion can ‘be extracted a ‘chemical co: pound called adrenalin. Adren ‘by the way, has been. made by the chemist and is used in ‘surgery to stop bleeding. If adrenalin is: in- jected into the bluod it cause the pupils of the eyes to dilate, hairs to stand erect, blood vessels to be tight- ened, the activities of the alimentary steps in and all go haughtily down the avenue.... I rub ee ¥ e hay nding still? really an airplane circling overhead?.... Am I dreaming about the chaos of motor traffic?.... No, I am not. A shrieking motor horn warns me that if I stand rubbering another second [ shall never get ‘back to the office to write my daily stint..,. * Saw Barney Fagan, little known to ‘this’ generation, though at 76 he still appears nightly in a Broadway production. . But what grandaddy can ever forget “When. the Robins est Again”.. ..Yos, Barney wrote it +... And got the huge sum of $25 when in 1880 he sold it to one Frank Howard.. The song carned something like $75,000, thereafter.... A really phenomenal sum in a day when pies- ‘ent-day methods of “plugging” were. unknown.... ° - BARBS BY TOM SIMS Our annual coal strike scems-to have gone abroad for the summer. ws You can have everything your chil- pene need by not having any chil- ren. - Never stri &@ match in a powder factory or play bridge witli cxperts. In Philadelphia a reformer says the world is growing worse. It is. There are too many reformers. Fine ‘wedding present is a “Small- pox” sign for nailing on ‘the door when bill collectors start, * Babe Ruth is getting-home runs. ‘Now if Dempsey would only fight the aoe would be much. more. enjoy- able. - Saw Jim Templeton, a name hear more of some day comes from Pendleton, Qre., ‘the round-ups grow The you'll Jim * 3 saAinimay trainer “claims he has 7 ug leas to do the ‘Charleston, his story is “From Cowboy to Society } ancer".... A peculiar mixture of| sme, oi te time we thought fleas ithe: rough’ guy. and. the eathete..../Teineted: the Charleston. Came to New York from the no} Th ‘west cow-country and wound'up as a! jay in 'wallet feature. He can still ride ‘hot This summer he #0 old hit-an@-run is very popu- baseball, but not in the. game i played by autos and pedestrians. o- ——_—____—______—--» [" NEWS BRIEFS | President Coolidge spends night (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Ine.) aboard the Mayflower cruising to Williamsburg, Va., to speak. | News of Our . 4 They mix strange drinks on Br ee Cadet Hamilton S: Hawkins, son of Commander of third cavalry, Fort ee dies of polo injuries at West oint. Federal reserve board announces larch commodity prices were lowest since autumn of 1924, and five per cent less than last summer's. ,_Hlinois public welfare director de- cides to name a sanity board to ex- amine Russell Scott, convicted Chi- cago murderer, thrice saved from gal- lows and adjudged insane by a jury. Judge Cole in Cass county disrictt court at Fargo ruled that Emil John- son of Fargo, charged with engaging in the liquor traffic, was illegally serving time. MENOKE! Mr. Heaton of McKenzie shipped a carload of hogs and the Yeagle {Brothers shipped a carload of, cattle Saturday morning. c ‘The pupils from the three Appfe gram at~Apple Creek school No. 2 Friday evening. A large audience enjoyed the entertainment. The school was so crowded there was hardly standing room. A dainty luncheon erved by the teachers after the program. Miss Emma King of Bismarck spent the week-end visiting Miss Camell ) Agnew. r. Abe Huggins gave a dance in his pavilion Tuesday aight. A darge crowd was in attendance and a fine time was had by all, Mrs. Arthur Norlin returned Thurs- y from a year's visit with friends an latives in Sweden. Miss Alice Rockey is spending this week with Mrs. Eva El; ‘Mr. and Mrs. W. T. 1 1c. Miss ‘Nellie Dance and Mr. Royal Thomas jwere Sunday dinner guests at the A. C. Dance home. Mr. Francis Rockey, pe has been tending high school in Bismarck, is now ill at his home there. Mr. and Mrs. Chris De Groot and family visited at the Edd Ebling home evening.- in Poltzer, treasurer of school No. 48, near Plainview, Minn., sted on charges of misap- ing $3,291 of school funds. man of St. Paul resigned as newspaper librarian of Minnesota state historical society. Morris Olson, Fargo, 'N. D., finish- ed fifth in midwestern zone orator- ical contest at Kansas City, which was won by Joseph A. Mullarky of Augusta, Ga, al Subpoonas were received in St. Paul for soore of Twin Citians to appear Wefore the federal grand jury at Cleveland, presumably in a new liquor investigatioi : Margaret, 15-year-old daughter of Rev. and Mrs; E. C. Horn of Fairmont/ Minn., was found-dead in a bath tub, apparently from heart disease. i KNOWING HIM HE: What's the idea of dating this. lathe the 14th when this is only the (Oth ? - SHE: Well, my dear, I’m going to. xe it to you to mail.—Sunny Maga- zin . 4 Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Grove visited at the W. T. Dance home Monday night. Mr. Hi seda Miss Minnie J. Nielson will give a lecture in the town hall Saturday night, May 15th, on the consolidation chools. Miss Madge Ruriey will ¢ here. Everybody is urged to Mr. L. J. Agnew motored to Mandan Thursday evening to have some work done on his ci ‘Mise Nellie Dance, teacher of Apple chool 'No. 2, closed @ very successful,term Friday, May 1 ‘ Mr. and Mrs. R¢'M. Ludemann and Mrs. August Klipstein motored to jismarck, attending the Herold Lloyd picture, “For Heaven's Sake!” Thurs- day night at ‘the Eltinge theater. BRITTIN Mr. Ennen ‘has started to build up ee The fire destroyed his whole place. Mr. Whiteaker is able to be out and Jason around agai Aid met enjoyed Georg: num has purchased Flapper Fanny Says: The Ladi ‘M ‘Hoover's Wellnesday. All ‘themselves, eating ice-cream and cake. | 4 THOUGHT {| i Sai oe stad abet a fe love ‘his life shall and preserve it—Luke die a , , The essence: vf trie nobility is lee see are st se is gone, like ‘the 6 Sictied tibwer iY) MAY 15,1926 a