The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1926, Page 10

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PAGE TEN The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper $$ $$, something drab to irresponsible blues, pinks and stripes. We have scen twu-toned shoes come and go. Necktics have burst forth in a blaze of glory, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER and golf sweaters have grown outrageous. (Established 1873) Can it be that man has emancipated himself from | is slavery to whi acks? Nature generall rT th 18 ck Tribune Company, | is slavery to whites and blacks? Na ure Ze iy | pint Wb. 1 ee at the poutattins Hi arrays the male of the species In the brighter plum- ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - Nothing If Not a Lavish Entertainer 4 tu Tike A Douate Bismarck, as second class mail matter. George 1. Mann..........President and Publisher Snbecription Rates Payable w Advance Daily by carrier, per year... Daily by mail, per ye (in Bismarck Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation “ Member of The Associated Prena The Associated Press is exctusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alsy the local news of spontaneous origin published here- in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are alsu reserved. 5.00 - 6.00 Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO DETROIT | Tower Bidg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | ( iificial City, State and County Newspayer) | i Safeguarding the Banking Business George A. Bangs of Grand Forks spoke to the. bankers in state convention without mincing mat- | ters or using Is to gloss over ation that has been generally known for years. pointed a way out of the present slipshod methods | of banking to more solid ground. The legislature con well use his sermon as a guide to remedial and constructiyg. legislation to protect the depositors of | the state, Yointing cut deflation as the chief contributory | cause of our financial condition, he then tackled fea- turgs in the banking situation which can be con- fed by the state through the passage of proper! For yéars many of the main props of ane banking have been swept away ¢ legislation and slovenly supervision, ystem cannot be charged to any one admin- jon, it has been gradual and cumulative in its growth, largely due to the laws that are supposed to protect the banking structure of the state. Banks with insufficient capital, frozen assets and inefficient management struggled to keep open dur- ing the serious period of deflation by defying man of the laws. It was deemed inadvisable to prec’ pitate | a panic by forcing the issue when deflation first | but the inevitable result followed in North ota us in every agricultural state in the union. In- North ta the capital and deposits involved were insignificant compared to lewa bank failures e of other agricultural states. In numbe ed banks presented rather an impressive total, int the footings were not as much as three or yanks that closed their doors in some » west cities. Thy other words, North frem a closed bank situation, is’ not so f as many neighboring states, except our failu: © been better advert Other states have seen to it that very little crept into the news columns about their closed be A political situ- aton here, most destructive in its tacties, broadcast N rth Dakota bank closings in theyhape of making then poli Fortunately the tide has tured. North Dakotans are realizing that, com- pared to other states, their state is one of the bright Spots on the agricultural map and that every day, in ever: » the banking situation is becoming vastly improved. Such frank speech as that uttered by Mr. Bangs wili aid rather than retard a complete recavery. He small He} legislation, safe—aid 1 issues. roints out, too, that dishonesty played a very part in the closing of banks. In most cases yn of the law w evar mistaken attempt to save the b: and to protect rather than injure the de- Positors. In closing this editorial, it is most fitting to give additional emphasis to Mr. Bangs’ excellent sum- repeating the antidote he prescribes to as- sist banking back to more stable conditions: “The success of banking institutions depends largely cn the intelligence and ability of those intrusted with their management. There is suggested then for consideration and discussion the proposal that some sort of an examination and licensing law be evolved, modeled to some extent at least upon the laws applicable to the professicns. “With the thought that conditions may be made Ynore favorable the following suggestions are offered: “A non-political banking board selected from nominations made by the State Banking Asso- ciation with long terms and very ample au- thority, i “The: gffice of state examiner should be non- politigals>He should be well paid and his term should be lengthened. The examiners’ foree and their compensation should be materially in- creased. ‘ive competition should be eliminated the consolidation of many of the present banks, and ample power should be given to the state banking beard to accomplish that purpose, 25 well as to prevent the excessive granting of charters in the future. j “A commission of experienced bankers should he selected to revise, codify, and recommend con- servative, reasonable banking laws.”, ' The Male Struts His Stuff A new phenomenon is chservable on our streets. It is the three-colored hatband for men. In some cases it is four or five. The sight is Passing strange. Just a few years ago a gentleman of, say, 40 would liave had to cn- dure ty 3 of the multitudes for daring to wear rightly than black ‘or pearl gray. have been mistaken for an actor. If he were a good solid fellow like a broker, for | instance, or a big creamery man, his appearance wuld have been against him. Few would have be: " P tioved him weighty or substantial enough for such a gentleman: He would have been stamped as _irre- sponsible; mothers would have warned their daugh- ters about him, his credit would have been bad at tiie bank. But time has wrought a change, and many a gaily- straw shields from the sun the bald pate of @ sericus-minded citizen; we no Jonger twist ou? necks as the male marches by in brave pnt aiaal Is this significant? Does it portend anything? We -have: witnessed the evolution of shirts fram ‘age. Is man returning to the color scheme that was | intended for him? Fear alone has kept him from blossoming forth -as peacock, Man would wear a pair of Zouave and a green velveteen jacket were he not of losing his dignity. That horrible institu: | tien known as the black string tic is worn by our iticians, not because their tastes run that way, but because years ago some officcholder decided the | thing e him an appearance of solid importance {and lack of frivolousness. Hence, those who have | wished to look like statesmen have endured the black tie and even—Ged preserve us!—the hard- | boiled, armor-plated shirt. ' Women have decked themselves out in the colors ! of the rainbow, and man has looked on with envious ey But sooner cr later it had to happen. Some- thing has given way. Something has snapped. The hard on the eyes, parades blithely down the avenue nd excites no ccmment. What is next? Violet trousers? Mauve dress suits? Don’t be surprised, for the male has been stifling his desires for some time. Once he breaks loose there will be no stopping him. EST es Signboards in Heaven A 14-year-old girl from California is received with acclaim into a New York pulpit by a pastor who calls hr “the most extraordinary person (in America.” The reasons for calling her that are be- cause she is able to mouth all the exhortations the revivalists use, and because she had a “call to serve God.” F The girl’s call came when she set off at the age of- nine to try for a job in the movi The docr wouldn’t open when she arrived at the place where she was to seek work. This she interpreted as 1 call to the Divine service. The door had jammed on hell and the movies. Many men and women wept and prayed with her. Up in a clearing in Minnesota a group of people stand and pray solemnly for a sign from heaven. The group asks for some direct, outward manifesta- tion of the presence of Divinity. Nothing unusual happe: Sinclair Lewis stands in a pulpit in Kansas City and calls upon God to strike him dead, and takes out his watch to give the whole thing a dramatic touch. We are seeing a great deal of showmanship in re- ligion, and wonder sometimes if there will be any signboards in heaven, It’s all in the way you look at it. We had thought American women were just about the most beautiful in the world, but 75 Arabs from Tunis, now at Phil- adelphia’s Sesquicentennial, agree that desert women are more appealing. American deficiencies, it seems, include skirts that are too short, unveiled faces, too much paint and rolled stockings. The flapper may be the idea) of Those gentlemen don’t prefer blonds. Benito Mussolini is a great man, the premier of Italy, a forceful, dominating character to the world; but to the cold eyes of the psychiatrist he is only a hypobulic. In plain language that is something akin to a hysterical, old woman. Now we're wondering if Napoleon Bonaparte per- haps wasn’t really a wood nymph. Editorial Comment — | “Taxi, Sir!” (St. Paul Dispatch) Beginning Sunday an airplane taxi service will start from St. Pau! to serve a territory from 300 to 400 miles in radius from the state’s capital city. By it the man from Duluth can come to St. Paul in an hour and a half, and the man from Fargo, N. D., can make the trip in two hours. Work started Thursday in St. Paul on six hangars to house the fleet of airplanes to be used in this service. As indicated by the name, there will be no sched- uled trips or service as that, given by trains or Paul calls an airplane he would a taxi, names his destination as he jumps in, and is on his way. This is but a beginning. Those who remember the beginning of the automobile, will undeystand the dubiety with which some still regard the airplanc. {But it may safely be predicted that in less than. ten jyears the airplane service of the northwest will be an important factor in our transportation scheme, jand that provision for St, Paul’s very convenient ‘airport will then appear to have been common-sense | farsightedness. b The Superpower Reality (Chicago Journal of Commerce) he pooling of the power resources of the Middle West Utilities Company, the North American Com- pany, and the North American Power Company, has jlarge significance in the development of the elgetric power industry, Much has been dreamed and written about super- power, What a fine thing it would be—so some have said—if power produced in Colorado could be sent to Chicago, St. Louis, or, Indianapolis. And while this theori ing has been going on, capable men | in. the electric power industry have been doing mych tu bring the dream to realization. They have been confined within the limitations of present-day meth- eds; yet they have made superpower a reality to an] extent far beyond the ordinary comprehension. The reason that power produced in Colorado can- not be transmitted to Chicago is that it dwindles away during transmission, A given amount of power can be sent only a limited distance. Bound by this limitation, the clectric power industry is ac- complishing superpower by indirect. means. The industry cannot transmit power thousands of, miles; it can, however, transmit power two or three hundred miles. Therefore it establishes power sta- tions at right intervals, and arfanges that when a plant at one place needs power, it shall get it from a plant at another place, and that this plant shall set its power from a third plant, and,so on all along the line. \ ‘ In effect, the various power plants are runners in a relay race. The full distance cannot be covered by a single runner, but it can be covered by a se1 of runners, e busses. The intending passenger to or from St.| Kresge Bldg. ; violent hatband, resplendent in the summer sun, | ORDER OF EVERYTA ING ON TRE MENU * knew any other father than the man mother married. D with the intention of having} “Mr. Robinson has been kind to me ness her marriage, Joan] in a negligible sort of a way, but Meredith silent so long’ that I] both my brother and myself ’ have felt that I must say something. grown up in the care of servants. Not | ea ‘Well, when is the marriage going] one of them seemed to care enough | ea to be? Hadn't we better be going?” ] for either of us to stay very long} 4 won't be any wedding,# with us. Consequently we grew up Judy,” she answered. almost without any restraint. We “Changed your mind, did you? Be-| grew up without any love. And cer- tween matinee and-night, us it were.” | tainly without any feeling of depend- “No,” she almost whispered. ‘If ence upon or respect for anyone but didn't’ change my mind. It was | ourselves. has it not could think xo home with you tonight one cent. that tomorrow I Joan, da} anything except yourself bores one to . \ THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1926 Christendom owe their high tion to the Christian religion, ted States Senator Joseph E. 08: ni- Rans- the English speaking section of the International Eucharistic congress of: the Catholic church. solemnity bol representation of the body of tion to God ily m fairs. senator said, the Notre Dame Uni. iversity football squad, which in 1924 {won the national championship, con- ij quering every opponent, before each |game aad prayed for Victory. ‘Women Are Men’s Equals “In Christian lands, women for centuries have been the equals, coin- panions and helpmates of their hug: ands,” said Senator Ransdell, after }a brief resume ‘of the slavery of women and informal divorce methods tof pagan countries and Roman and Grecian history. Lord showed the dignity and honor of womanhood by His great devotion to His Blessed Mother, whom He ever loved and honored. The model held up to women from the dawn of Christianity is the Peerless Mother of our Blessed Redeemer. “The influence of Mary on the moral elevation of women ean be overestimated; and every im| lie = of history is forced to ad: that woman is indebted to the Chris- tian religion for the elevated station she enjoys today in family and social ife.” Nearly ‘a score of nanies of noted men, members of the Catholic Church, were cited by the senator as examples of their deoply religious character and of the worldly success. “The most remarkable soldier de- veloped by the World War was Mar- shal Foch—the ‘gray man of Christ? del, of Louisiana, said in addressing} that day marked the Papal ith le known to the ere possiBle. | great public, although its productions ish I could! are exerting an influence so kindly ‘ n without | and so useful that they improve won- Go home. with you feeling | derfully the lot of the blind. ; must get up and} The American Braille Press, which arn my daily bread before I could} has its headquarters* in| New York, fae Tae but which carriés on its. work in T am sure you don’t wish that,| Paris at 74 rue Lauriston,.has in ef- I said. “Working for one’s) fect charged itself, with the task or Hip bend ise. svbesday: furnishing to the blind an abund- Yes, I know, But never ance, of books, journals and music. to try to amuse] One knows that the blind can read death. And] as quickly as the seeing, thanks to work far too 0 you know, dear, I doing changed for me, and it has broken my heart. t the drug store sheik but not of the genuine article. | You will find from it that r | three years old. | “Let me go back, Judy, and tell ou my story from the beginning. | tl hes do not make happiness and that you can buy anything except what you want most. : t “My father-died two months before my brother and I were: born. : mother married again when we we So you see I ne t 3. CLIVE ROEERTs RARTCN 8 THE HOUSE WITH SEVEN POINT-! ED TOWERS | When the Twins reached Misty! 0} Hill in Drowsy Land, they knew, 0 just what to look for. The Fairy| Queen's letter had said, “The Dream-| Maker Man lives in a castle with} seven pointed towers.” There it was right on top of the hill, its seven towers painted seven| different colors, and ali its windows | 0! shaped like stats, ® track disappeared, also the! little car they had traveled in. There they stood all alone at the foot of the | n ii. “How do we get up?” asked Nancy. | “There isn’t a path or anything.” Nick looked around. “I don’t know,” he said. “I suppose we have to walk. But just then there was a buzzing |p! sound ‘like a great bee, and «what should the Twins see but an aero- plane leaving the castle on top of the It flew down and landed right be- jde them and a jolly aviator got out anid shook hands. “Are you the Dream-Maker man?” asked Nick. “We're looking for him. We'd like to know if our china ele- phant and toy clown came to the moon, The Fairy Queen told us to come here. “Righto!” said the jolly aviator. “No, I'm not the Dream-Maker Man --I'm his son, Snore, There are three of us, Snoozle and Snuggle and Snore. We do errands for our father, the Dream-Maker Man, in our air- planes, We used to use mares—night mares--but they are all out of style now.” ° “Snoozle and Snuggle and Snore!” cried Nick. “Why, that was the | name of the little moon man who opened the blue gate for us when we fived on the moon.” J “Righto!" said | Snore, again. “Righto! Snoozlesnugglesnore was godfather to all of us, so each of us got a third of his name, But if,you wish to go to the castle on top of the hill, get’ into my airplune and Tl take you there. There is no path because thieves would come up and steal the-dreams Father makes.” Bo*Nancy and Nick got into the airplane and Snore got into the front ‘seat and away they went right up the hill toward the castle with seven towers, The Dream-Maker Man had a spy xlass'and was looking out of one of his star-shaped windows, He had seen everything that went on. As the Twins approached he waved a green handkerchief to show how glad he was to see them. The airplane settled down on a wide porch, and they all got out. In half a minute, there was the Dream-Maker Man himself, shaking bands with them, also his other two sons,‘ Snop#le: and Snuggle. jo you came all the way to Misty Hill to see mo about your lost friends!" said the Dream-Maker Man when Nick had told him his story. “Yes, sir,” sole Nick, “That was right! That was right!” said the host. “The moon is full of countries queer cities, ‘ou could never find Inco and Flops without my help. * I'll do what J can.” a (To Be Continwed) knew that I had more money to spend xether that I played with. was impressed upon both my brother and myself by the servants and all money could buy anything. r! Greater unhappiness than one who going to matry a millionaire, show- ing Chicago has some smart Dux. is someone dancing. doesn’t. talk in your sheep. “Judy, Bud and I are very rich. 1 hink before I was six years old I han all the other children. put to- Early it hosé about us—even Dad-—that “Today, Judy, hat it can buy I have found out your unhappiness, ————_____——9 BARBS | aad By Tom Sims In» Pittsburgh, a fireman ow some dog is liable to bite him. Women are strange. Even though ne in New York was single and out £ debt she tried to poison herself. Clare Dux, the opera singer, is Getting so when you see a picture {a knock-kneed person you think it Just because a woman says she eeds a new hat, that’s no sign she So live that you won't be afraid to a_still ex- Two burned to death The news losion in Louisville, “Ky. WHAT'S THS Matter WITH ‘You = tou HAVEN'T Saip A WORD ALL EVENING. ! t ' tem doesn’t say if they caught on; got al” | médal. for saving five kittens, but DIDN'T WANT To START ANYTHING U! when you have as much money as I have you think: all your friends are hypocritical, and whenever anyone 1s nice to you you feel like calling them sycophants. “One day when I was fhun usual I strayed i ore bored incoln| She was pretty, well dressed, and soft! spoken, and I became rather interest- | ed in her conversation.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA. Service, Ine.)| TOMORROW: Dancing for Money, o Park and there IT met a gir could be we Suppose } someone els shortcake certainly is the berrie: Words are strange things. A spoiled child is too fresh. The honeymoon ends when the in- surance agents begin hanging around. A grouch can pep up any party by staying away. Becoming a stenographer protects the hands from dishwater. -Nothing upsets a man more than breaking his leg or getting the paint on his new car scratched, Running a farm is about as ex- pensive as sending a son to college. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) Sve BSEN SILENT, SIMPLY BECAVSE a marvelous invention—Braille print of which the letters, figures and notes in music and all the other familiar characters used in printing are made up of combinations of dots x at the most--embossed on thin cardboard, and can be deciphered by touching them with the tips of the fingers. Those born blind as weil as those, who haye -lost, their ‘sight ac: cidentally (there“are in France more than three thousand war blind) learn very readily this method which per- mits them to follow a text as rapid- ly as we read an ordinary book. New Process Rapid Nevertheless, until recently no eéf- fq@xt was made to find a practical and rapid process for issuing such volumes for the blind in quantities. In order to obtain a page’ in Braille the characters were marked in soft: wax; from this an impression was taken in plaster which was permitted sheets of cardboard were subsequent- ly pressed, these when dry constitut. ing the leaves of a book. That pro cess was not rapid. The American Braille Press has perfected all this in_an almost unbelievable manner. But, one asks, why is it 41 Anerican terprise “operates France? It is because since the first months of the great war and ev when there was no question about the United States having to fight side by side. with the Allies, Ameri- cans, touched by the sad lot of the wounded, created in\ France the Per- manent Blind Relief War Fund, a work of rescue.for the war blind oc- cupied, especially at the time, with the re-education of these unfortun- ates. ° : The war over, Mr. W. Nelson Crom- well, one of the most eminent. legal practitioners in the United States, and a sincere and faithful friend of France, who supports in our country some twenty works of philanthropy, interested himself particularly in the question of the blind. He decided to continue and to acai largely the. work inaugurated, while assuming, incidentally with ‘very generous pe- cuniary participation, all the respon- sibilities of the presidency. of the or- ganization that had. become the American Braille Press. To second him and to represent him in France, he chose one of ‘our young compa- triots, M. Georges Raverat, who, en- tirely familiar .with American meth- ods, directs in a masterly way the organization in the rue Lauriston, where the services‘ of the American Braille Press have their origin and are the work in large part of blind persons who find inthis the mean: of earning salaries of from 700 to 1,090 Franes per month, «s ag Used ok has been chosen in, Braille, its text, eing ‘person who dic- form of recording. phonograph, and indjcates the marks of punctuation and agra) i gia oly: “gar The numerous cylinders thi pleted. for each book are thefeupon placed in succession in boxes on the cover, a number in Braille indicating thgir order, and are, ‘then carried to a workshop where blind ' workers, be, men and.women, arc “compos: ing.” With surprising ease ‘these at first place a eylinder record in a repro- ducing honogra; yh which is at their deft. tf the chanism of which works or stops at their will, in order that they may h by means of two receivers the repetition of the text| jand the incidental indications,. Upon Nuncio,| composition 'WOMEN OWE THEIR HIGH POSIHON,T0. CHRISTIAN RELIGION, SENATOR J0S. | E,RANSDELL SAYS AT CATHOLIC MEET a ‘ Chicago, June 24—()—Women int—who led the allied forces to vic- tory,” said Senator Ransdell. “On July 18, 1918, he. consecrated the al- lied forces to the heart of Jesus, and urning point in favor of the allie: Military Men Cited Rear Admiral William. S. Benson, { The senator, speaking with great|“the genius whd was the efficient of the Eucharist, the sym-|head of the United States Navy during the world war, General Jacques oi | Christ in the holy sacrament, declared | Belgium, and General Joseph Haller {that the frequent communion devo-|of Poland, were other military and 's very helpful to men.| naval men whom the eenator men- not only spiritually but also in world. | tioned. “A scion of the great ducal family en on the athletic’ field, the] of Norfolk in Emgland, many branches of which have retained their faith for centuries, is Sir Esme Howard, the ambassador of Great Britain to this country,” continued the, Sena» tor. “He is a convert to the faith of his-forefathers.” Dr. William Marx, chancellor of Germany; Giovanni Papini, Italian writer and philosopher, first an un- believer and finally a convert during the world war who wrote a life of Christ, whom the speaker said, “the ‘Church claims as one of her leading sons—a modern Paul, a frequent com- municant”; Timothy Healy, governor @eneral of Ireland, “the foremost man inthe Island of Saints”; Vasques Mella, Spanish orator and_ political leader; Paulo Frontin, skillful en- ginecr of Brazil; Dr. Hépolite Irigo- yen, -ptesident of Argentina, who, the senator said, “like our Blessed Lord, h ke friend of the poor and often es his entire salary to them”; Ad- inijro Yamamoto, of the panese na’ Josq@h Lo, steel man facturer, often called the Chine: Rockefeller; Henri Bourasga, journal- ist and member of the Canadian parliament; and Patrick E, CrawkeYw.- of New York, president ‘of/the New. York Central lines. deitt o2 Millions of devout men, women and children, like the noted men named, are da or frequent communicants, thronging the churches every hour of every day. in every land. NUMBER OF BOOKS FOR THE BLIND Cardinal Cerretti, not long ago, visited the establish- ment of the American Braille Press, the event marking his interest in a in Braille to a sceing person who compares it with the text of the book in ordinary print. Mistakes Corrected The less important -mistakes- punctuation, wrong _ letters—are thereupon corrected by means of two punches, of which one levels down the defective character, and the oth- er raises the dots, by means of light blows of a hammer. For more seri- ous mistakes—omission of a word, for example—the blind person makes by means of a little machine placed near him, a note “in Braille” to in- dicate the error by showing the num- ber of the plate and of the faulty ine. Rigorously corrected, the plates of zine are sent to the pressroom. They are placed in a special machine which with rapid movement presses power- fully upon them, shects of thin card- board gently heated in order that they may better take the impression of the dots. Each sheet is covered with characters both on its face and reverse, thanks to a process called “interpoint.” Remains then the gathering of the printed shects and the assembling of each volume by a-blind person who makes certain of the proper number- ing of the pages. Pceily, a book passes to the bindery. Plenty of, Choice Thus, thanks to the initiative of the “American Braille Press, books for the blind are no longer rare things, as they, ware less than ten to harden and on which dampened | be iss that there is no need of thinking of reproducing it here. Let us sax sim- ply that the catalogues include at sent a choice of novels and scien- 52 French in 85 E jh authors in 117 authors in 10 3 Roumanian in 4 volumes 2 Serbian in 4 volumes. Two catalogues of music include well-known classical and popular works for voice, piano, organ, violin, flute and mandolin. Finally, and this is absolutely new and unique, the American Braille Press issues nine journals or re- views: ' “Le Courier Braille,” French sem weekly; “Le -Brailie Magazine,” monthly review, in French; “Le Courrier Musical et Litteraire,” monthly, in French; “Interallied Braille Magazine” monthly, in Eng- ‘ lish, a review of the great American and English magazines; “Braille-oves Riznica,” in Serbian, ,monthiys{ “Revist Braille,” in: Roumianian. 10 monthly; “Braille-a Zhior,” imwPatwo! ish, monthly; “American Review for the Blind,” English, monthly; “II Progresso” Italian, monthly. The American Braille Press issucs also music and calendars; it is work- ing at present on the completion of the Petit Dictionnaire Larousse. « Free Distribution All of the books issued are dis- tributed free. La Societe de Secours aux Blesses Militaires (French Red Cross) of which General Pau is President, is charged in France with the control and-distriution of books in the different depots which have been established, whether private institutions. or municipal libraries or whether by the efforts of Com- mittees of the Red Cross, Little Joe 7 Gee PEDESTRIAN TRUSTS THE AUTOIST-AND THE AVTO\ST TRUSTS. THE . PEDESTRIAN. THAT'S wHy , {8 machine’ placed before them, the]. stereotyper, ang by means of a key- board, all the combinations of dots needed for the letters or characters are instantaneoysly formed by them and imprinted in relief upon ao plate ‘af pure ‘zinc, which “constitutes for each page of the book to be repro- duced, a matrix which serves for its is necessa! print in relief, But Botore Acta = 6 ine 8 . and corrected ie there be need. #'PUNG Pervoh, reads , the pea le oa te

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