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i 2 “ = SSS ETT ROP PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE = THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 . The Bismarck Tribune [eave sao pe pare er kK An Independent Ni ne eee OVER ‘THERE--EIGHT YEARS AFTER © faneFietEte and are served. The bobtblack ‘works Mitently, as | a rule, | Sometimes he asks, “Dark or light, sir?” Some- ; [know that he has never boot! times he ventures to suggest new laces. {And I can’t desert him now, Why, hi But for the most part he ix silent.” He knows his! Writer Sees Why Armistice With Memory Isn’t Signed _ . Pee Ee eeeck hed hand timidly. —° i Publ marek Tribune Company.| job, this bootblack. een \“Phere ‘are’ others. who believe in eae the 4 Un areal a the eitetfics | [rote ae Beenie By Alton H. Keteham ican army stopped the German drive’ 6f white French crosses, emblazons¢ J ‘housand or more in each, all beauti-! you, too, Judith, and who, buffer = Bismarck’ as’second class mall matter. No seruffed tte, no, clay loam cinbeded fie se ne Nte TE-TAC TAT amit |casare CoMnemeraees” ies Yavir’ Mane @ane MOR gag een CA ater sea! GUNN rea dochod inte ih sad : in vigi 4 | Paris, Nov. and the | sq commemorntes the Yanks t oques. nis F q George D. Mann..........President and Publisher| and upper escapes his vigilant eye. {breadth of what was the Western | valet. This aren is the least-reconstructeag A quarter of a miliion men sleePinZ, ed'trom chem, She pulled her hand : He could get by with one dab cf polish, But who! nt. of the World War finds it dif-| Belieau Wood, just outside Cha- | of any of thone devastated. The ter in these ridges! Is it any ‘away, “If you'd only let alone, * u It, even after eight ra to|teau Thierry, is @ wood no longer. raza is churned into great mounfs—} that Ypres harbors a secret grief? | all of you!” she exclaimed. “Ther Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ever knew a bootblack content to let his customer | f pre's svapaesines’ -$7.20 ‘ ‘ 5 ice with memory. Blasted and gas-choked trees, grown, sea of tough and hummocky carth si‘holes still pock-mark Hill 60, nothing you can do. We don’t think Daily by carrier, Der YORr *simarck) J... 720) 2 With less than two and generally three applica. Sas “ints lengths” ard| up wich. "underbrush and creepers.’ Many. little towns shown on pref Shell ‘holes #0 poche ge,| in the same language, Dr, Dorn.” Ny ail,” r year, 4 tions and as many vigorous rubbings? He misses | }readth es, too, to understand; | thrust jagged splinters to the sky, war maps are not to be found st all and 3 betes ge. hs || He drew back, sadly. “I'm afraid Daily by mail, per ei 5.00 a z ‘ {the physical sears of che conflict and, but. few of them will ever grow, Others are tenan-ed only by ba water-fillad chasms made by the ex-| ye don't, But ‘I'm sorry. 1 wish I (in state outside Bismarck)... ......-+-+ Boo| no chance to send our feet forth into the world en-' the Lig and little gathering places of | again. ju few hardy souls who refuse to live] plosion of 19 mines in 1917, mines} could heip you.” Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota......- 6.00) cased in resplendent glow. ‘the dead are so easy to find! in w great semi-circle at one end| elsewhere, Wich General Plumér’s British sap] "Judith yer were filling with ~ ‘ ember Audit Bureau of Circulation No Angel iis’ rane Raphael at hi {There has been 1 vast amount, of | of the wood are buried the hundreds] The forts at Vaux and Dagumont iny pers haa ivhored 1 year to site, tears. Turning abruptly, she walked &q- No Angelo at his marble, no Raphael at his can-| poconstruction over the French and| of American Marines who fell in the front of Verdun, which bore tne} beneath the “trong -asition of the away from him down the hall. vas ever toiled with more painstaking care. | Belgian countryside, Wit there was| fierce fighting. ‘The long rows of; brant of the offensive, in which the) Gezmams, F tai ‘On the porch of the building Myra es | amount of ruin to hide. graves are carefully tended, wnd! Crown Prince lost 500,000 men in| The craters are veritable lakes! and Will Wetherel were waiting for ig lication of all news di on the front-that-was from| from a tall staff in the center waves | three months, are simply no longc>] now, 150 feet wide, iad no att her. use for republication of a mect that he receive his accolade—this stooped-| the sir, from train, from automobile, | a great American flag. in existence, Kk ows how deep. Shell fr.gments,, Wetherel was wearing the memor- the credi it or not otherwise credited in this pa- cer tat ales the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of al = uther matter herein are also rese! able green riding suit. “You see us ae jog © cad tye irosd = eal . “E alwa; "weur these breeches for the “Blood jand Sand’ rehearsals, Th it 80 much easier to wallow ‘ } lait backed artist who works so well for 9 little. i ' The West Shows Maric i! Foreign tatives The “wild and waolly” west knows its corn and ies these a tae alebe ake ; G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, turnips. j the passionate love to Dona Sol.” = _ CHICAGO PETROTTig.| Queen Marie of Rumania was feted there as she tecablon, “Dune tet them mabe yoo fower Bidg. has been in no-other spot on her transcontinental self-conscious about your breeches, ~ c Will.. Thank God, there are a few people left who live as their own judgment dictates. Don’t ever apolo- gize for anything again. Let's be done with apologi: ‘y «Myra was looking at her curiously. “You sound = little bit insane, Ju- dith, like Hamlet in the ‘Get thee to a. nunnery’ speech. What's hap- pened to you?” i Judith only smiled. id just trip. She had a taste of that phase of America which all first-time visitors, royal or ctherwise, expect! of America, | t ! : ND SMITH se vont PORNS Ath inte Ave, Bite * "(Official City, State and County Newspaper) Charley Russell's Funeral ortege filed over the dusty, ng to the little cemetery Mont., a few days ago. {| We have patiently explained to the world that primitive wildness and woolliness is no more over: here. | ! People across the seas have listened and smiled ; A shabby, old-fashioned black hearse, mute SY"; nolitely, most of them not believing one word of it. | hol of a more peaceful day when the bodies cf me"! Tr they confessed henestly their one big disappoint- | were taken slowly to their final resting place, led nent when they finally did see America it would be! = the procession. Two horses of this dray type, noth: | the absence of all these imagined bits of savage ing jaunty or spirited or ritzy about them, plunged! Grama in this New World. along, drawing the old hearse. It is very probable that even the English-blooded | Behind the hearse plodded a horse without a rider. Queen Marie rather expected some savagery over ! ‘The horse’s rider was ahead. He was the man here. 1 drawn in the old hearse. , North Daksta doubtless reascned so when it Charles M. Russell, the “Cowboy Artist,” was be- called together its Indians from the reservations to: ing buried as he had asked. ‘ake me to the ceme-' adopt the queen inte the Sioux tribe with a gor- tery with hosses,” he had said. ' geous ceremony of war-dancing about the queen as | Acclaimed in sophisticated, metropolitan centers she knelt on a buffalo rug. North Dakota and the of the world, selling his pictures of the west at Indians did an especially gracious thing for the, $10,000 each and mor Russell preferred to live--, queen. i and die—where “hosses” were to be found. ; We wager it will be an outstanding impression of | ‘t write very well America which the queen will talk about when she’ : . 5 i 2 en It was because Russell ery ae tine goes home. ' Romagne cemetery in Franee, resting place of 14,116 American soldiers, is shown in the upper photograph. | Most of its dead were victims Member of The Associated Press call he The Associated Press is exclusively “ “It is high time this song to him was sung. It is|* {32% A-dramatic funeral 1 sage-bordered road leadin = just outside Great Falls, t her. Rric are beth a little crazy thes | days,” he said. “He's been nutty ever since ‘he came back on Christ- aay with that ugly bruise on head.” Myra’s mouth opened. “Christ- fy? Did Eric come back “Sure thing,” replied Wetherel. Myra turned to Judith. “You didn’t tell me, and he did'nt tell me.” She was silent a moment. “And you . + , used my sorority house to entertain a i phim ii Traitor!” | eo ith was very white. “Listen, | Myra,” she sail, “you'd hetier walk | away quite fast today. And I'm just (a little afraid I might slap you. - ‘ Wetherel shot a frightened glance Judith’s desperate face, and, seiz- jing Myra by the arm, walked her 1 hadith went down r ‘ 4 judith went down into the sunken j of the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne campaigns. At the left below is cne of the great craters of Messines Ridge as it looks today. At the [Sine by the sundial oe on a or-spell very well that he : l i to himself and glory to his state and his friends. + ait Si right below is one of the German “pill boxes” that Belgian farmers now use for storing their crops. The slit in front, near the ground, was {stone bench. In fifteen minutes, the | 4 The winter of 1884 went down in history to} { » for the use of machine gunners. eed etre bell Hite acho picked i i ‘ | ene i : \up the Horace tex a \ ranchmen of the west. Terrific cold and blizzards, Editorial Comment ] from on foot. One who so sees it y little town in the area from! The “Red Zon Here the Lost! bits of uniform cloth, and accoutre-|side her and started wearily for the t \ realizes quickly why the people still; Chateau Thierry to Rheims dears Battalion fought its life away, and| ments of all sorts still litter the; building again. : killed cattle by thousands and tens of thousands, = | * i é i can’t forget. rs thet will wot be entirely effaced the Hindenburg line of conerete! ground, | Most of the class had assembled The foreman of the N Bar R outfit, where Russel? Cass County Must Make Ready | Twenty Miles From Paris generations. trenches and empiacements, are near, Only a week before my visit 117, when she entered the room, but she was a cowboy, wanted to write a letter to the boss; 5 e j To, the north of Meaux, 20 miles Dormuns still is haif in ruins, and here, and hard by a fleet of rusty | bodies were recovered from a trench,| saw that Erie had not come jn. a 1 king for bel i (Fargo Forum) | Gut 6f Paris in the region of the first a little town just to the north stands, and abandoned tanks lie half sunk/ buried b; single shell explosion.| A little group by the window up in Helena, asking fo P. i| Forces in Cask county that are interested in the| battle of the Marne, many traces exerted and forlorn. | dside mud. | Hundreds lie still buried under the turned and eyed her, then put heads He couldn't write or spell much elther, and asked ane ¢ hensive ‘and serviceable| the invasion remain. despite exten-/ | The Gloomy Glory of Rheims Belgium’s Ypres—New, but Old | churned heaps of earth. |together again, She could hear a Russell to help him. Russell, with jast a few pencil! (ev lopment of) a. comprehensive. amy pe sive rehabilitation. Fences are down, In Rheims fiers js the gloomy| ‘Over on the Belgian front I visited} On Hill 60, frogs croak around) whispered word here and there. jusse Pp ~ ij highway system should turn their attention now to| altogether or yawn wide where shells glo’ f the fed cathedral, now | Ypres—-that same that gave American | grim. concrete “pill-boxes”—-emplace-| Soon, she began to listen with des- strekes, “wrote” his letter in picture form. ‘. ‘ ielativ 4ui| went, through; many. houses. stand, somewhat réstored. The entire task| newspaper reeders such diffleulty | ments covered with four feet of con-; perate eagerness. “All smashed u Tare were bat. two figures in it; a, solitary, | ‘He question of obtaining legislative action that will | Mettod and ruined, along. the white | of restoration will require 60 years,| during the war. ; | crete, reinforced with railroad ‘iron. she heard. the . z ran open.the way to the carrying on of highway paving | reaches of the broad ronda. . | The road from Rheims to Verdu Ypres is a new city, none of it more} Grass grows on their tops and wi the shuddering ved on the barren prairie, her tail frozen v ; starved cow on the oe ° : 1 | Operations, essential if certain heavily traveled roads} _, Small cemeteries dot the count#y-| still is a torn and battered thorough. | than seven old, despite thé) ter fills them, together with shells.; Rea: Ci ‘0’ empty off, so starved an object that the very skin seemed | ae ie sunitelnnd hing like | tide. Signs of destruction multiply.| fare. Lines of trenches, grass-grown grenades, battered helmets, and all ju; ” Cracked; a coyote, hungry, tov, waiting for this sorry .10 this county are to be maintained on anything like) qu ‘at once the road dips inte *h| and silting in, stretch away into the| go. The people strive to forget,| the wrack of the battlefield. Some (To Be Continued) ig “ait ‘a satisfactory basis. pretty valley, where a little, white-| distance. Cemeteries are closer to-| but they cannot, they told me. are beine used by the farmers as! Shea in dead, and. Judith can’t he om) ry uite- | Ay walled town nestles by the slowly-| gether; thousands of black German| About the town there are 208 ceny | storchouses and rranaries. ! wondering about Eric’s bruished eye cteries, with British, French and) Scores of them stretch grimly’ off and his talk, of. making. Shea shut ap. American dead to the number of a| in ragged line to the horizon. | oh Se aie = mouthful. . ‘ “The Cowboy Artist” was made, That rough,| There no longer is any question as to the neces-| slowing Marne, The town is Chat@au| crosses, for such as Schneider and ~ postcard picture was copied from coast to coast.|sity for paving a portion of the Cass county high-| Thierry, where in 1918 the At r-| Von der Goltz, lie next to great fields ‘Art dealers beseeched him for work., Great galler- | way system, with attention first to the eastern end} ~ — a po ies made room for his western pictures, of state highway No. 3. For 42 years “Cowboy Russell” sent his horses] Over this road there is pouring an ever increasing and cattle and cowboys and coyotes out to an ap-|load of traffic—a burden so great already as to preciative world; to kings and presidents and great | create a maintenance cost that is prohibitive. industrial powers, In something less than two months the state ‘Then the other day he died, and journeyed to the} legislature will convene, and it is during the 60-day ' By Tom Simo Goods bought on time sometimes are paid for late. i \ Forbidding college students to use | automobiles reminds us that words q & “ ‘ike “verboten” do occasionally -~' WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE desk. “I hope, Miss Martin, that bounce back, no matter how y grave behind his beloved “hos | period that body will be in session that ways and} It's difficult to say just what the moral of this ' means for carrying on the paving operations that | y, ill, and. . interrupted bitterly, I's more than Febeltions, senjor, on), ‘Save held ae EY eee. Gy, they have been stepped on. ' story of Charles Russell’s life and death is, if any.’ git highway experts agree are necessary to a satis) home, though popular, hebthee|Mar Wall, coon. You're eomtne ian professor, are rivals for the favor of | this. time disappeared. I trast you I marelente ser .mon*shop- _ If the reader wishes to point his own, perhaps 4. factory solution of the problem, must be developed. | and sister, children of a wholesale| something to shock me with. I can {UITR MARTIN, Fay | oar to work only for the good of Pers are better sports than women, * tribute paid Kussell by one of his pals, Horse: | Qtherwise, we face a delay of two more years before ! guys beautiful, clever httle, Cherry| ie DEAN TIMOTHY BROWN dtenp-|‘8<,,"niversity and . the immortal: SOONe git. 5 conve, they're nek Brewster, another man of the Montana range, will getting started on this all important project. | into their Every town has i SAC kat bas tee brerptt proves of Judith’s. t: Roo aranasior ve okie ‘i professionals. i f ‘ wats circles with clan of “anelaey a , oye accuses Erle of desing with ju smiled, at e “dean's } help. ‘ an epee peal ae Repeated traffic surveys have disclosed that the | and the Warrens moved comfortably ra. ex ment. “Faith, followeat ts An poison’ i-| brows drew together. es you never see: WALL T've known Charley Russell for 44 years, in sun! et over highway No.3 is so great as to make |nd freely in the second circle estas th were followed! | Quo. ‘etek, bin, “I was only. thinking. that 1 was) STREET BROKER HELD FOR BED q + a : and shade, and he sure was for his friends, and 85 Permanent hard surfaced roads essential. The growth bytous Mrs. Warren had high hopes! “shadowed? Oh, Cherry,/Oy a de-| yMYRA ALDRICH is toad of Jedith.| Sv novee, tS Neosh Rooms, couly, Nor) SPEECH. imp! on.| President and Mrs. Coolidge went white a guy as ever came down the trail. He never oo teargic durizg the last two or three years, while | silver-blonde little Frances to Geor tective? Oh, I wish you would behave Fad The dean: ignored swung a mean loop in his life, never done dirt to ‘| 4 | Pruitt or young Ralph Cluny, grand-| Yourself! We'll aif have nervous!" judith learna Jove affair) “In. th F clear to Northampton to vote. The ane aninel, “if I.don't mest him inthe Mle phenomenal, probably is merely a beginning, for son of the old man to whom Cherry meeeation before you're safely mar-| of Dean heats. ot a) al in the fay sg ae po aie te ot en we heart- ia ie z 6 further increases are certain to come out of the con- | was engaged. to roundup Over There, it'il be my fault and not his, centration in Fargo, and its environs, of industries | Both Faith and Cherry knew quite r ‘ is wh 5 thope you can| _—— “Kitty”. Gheq Artes: to. blackmail) help us.” é : Ty. Cobb, who is hunting in the Mrs, Brown, and also threaten to| Judith stood upi-"“You are insult-, Rockies, resigned as Detvoit “I'm geting an awful kick out of Yeause I know he'll be givin’ me a foot-up, no matte 3 ®| itt” Cherry “laughed, wh seeped givin’ me a foot-up, no matter, tho will attract products from a constantly broad- Well, that Frances Warren had con-| 001 40h, um “eostively dieiiied te how ornery I am. ening area, wedding because it would throw her sok ie yey ae important . ing,” she said. “I-have no connec-| Maybe the young man missed a si Fargo’s packing plant, the creameries of Fargo | snd of" Cluny lenders sf'the tatg| tHew, do you know you were fol- Erie won Trek Tee” she made a’move-| Famous last fines: “Be sure to ‘The bootblack. No epics have ever been penned and Mocrhead, the highly important local produce Inask eles Ft tiew. enually ett lead a spoke /aahaeall CON: ‘ met rig ed door, but the dean be this letter ae soon as you've : " » | that a Pruitt we er and. _ to him, No orator has chanted his praises, His market, . Bay. nothing of the steady growth cf the accepted Cherry's inetation te: an foros ‘tlushed Bheek pS mi lor the “Pray do not be hasty,” eee (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) = name rarely figures among “those present.” He is | city as a trading center, are factors that will make | as bridesmaid if her brother, George,| “Oh, my dear!” the light, tinkling| Chtistmas. holidays, tries i ou might be able ; net ordinary speaker or even wore at noonday | fF added traffe—and more traffic means a meunt-| snzieuy {0 befvand faith ad not|ngh Tage oat There vas ne dash : iaecyee T Justajingle | “| = Kiwanis, Retary or Chamber of Commerce luncheons, |‘ Toad maintenance cost, But Cherry bothered her curly,! when I kept besing a tenay pn at ‘ ‘ ere.» We have a But the bootblack, Consider him who all too oft | The time to begin laying the groundwork for | scheming little head not at all wich| man «everywhere I went. Why do/ op, returns, his: arrest.” oe = jg altogether unconsidered! We clamber into. the {legislative action that will permit the construction | causes, so long as the results pleased | they, pict ous auch homely sleahat u | not know anything about Shea, Dean| Th, fm clock simply didn’t ring shoe stand chair, bury our noxes in our papers, or |of paved rcadways where needed, is now, and it is|that she herself would become, by! Positi monkeyslike! And | a Whe®,. Sadigh tas Brown, 1 aot, him casually, once atl it eursly was . merely stare into space. up to citizens of Fargo and Cass county, most | Mire a wilb ole pa oe vays, needs a shave. Short,| cael ipa Tt cost him one day's pay. +; Ordinarily no man cr woman exchanges greetings | vitally concerned in the issue, to turn their attention | innermost iieglee aol thet Aer wae “Hate mused ihe dean, “he be eS a aay with the bootblack. We neither say “Good morn- | ‘™mediately to the question that a well worked out | ding party would reflect credit upon, Check!” — Bill ughed! gan to call you Judith rather early, 1 ing” nor “Giv ine.” ’ i. ted to the legislati her own pre-nuptial social status. | rather uncomfortably, for Cherry's ‘ He) didn't bot. ‘ ing” nor “Give me a shine, program may be presented to the legislative assem-| “Faith looked at Bill Warren curi- high ‘spirits in the face of certain, A ind o_o Cate ena ges a8 SGA CT oa ga aR It is the only sort of shop where mere presence bly when it convenes in January. ously as he tapped a Turkish cigaret | seandal were grating on him as well cHAPTEI . é this ie ot . ink. ill go.” as But when thou docst alms let not 4 tells well enough what we want. A delay of two more years would be extremely \ieeg keel Was tala they fine een eeat: inte. shop, he hung! for me? waked Judith, frowning.) | “Justia moment’ said. the dean, thy left hand know what thy right Unspeaking, unseeing, we merely extend our feet | unfortunate. bother to shield Cherry? Somehow around the door. If { had funch with’ Pe at Big readin) 5 Panag 7 | paren ceiving thet votes Waters hend decth-—-Matt, 6:21. oat eileen eet si RE AU nie AIM ot SR she had summoned Bill Warren to; —well, with anybody, parry ae f cr havequmad nee with, Waters.| Charity in various guises is an in. * 7 | .__-- her rescue, after her father had seen| and dropped he before Faith's “Eve was smiling meaningty at Ju-|1 shall you to get informa.|tryder the poor see often; but court- eat Old Masters - +! {heg in Chris Wiley 's romdster. ods: aires theta Te oneal begahns dith, “Well,” she afd, “excuse me,” tion of whereabouts for'us be-|exy and delicacy are visitants with > | ARMISTICE DAY jaa he extended his cigaret ease to-| litle shadower you ever saw! Like) "jylith” unsed” ‘tor Brie, “What! stud Bie, Tuntare. inning na, 8 | neh, Cre Age. setmenn: ERROR = 5 r bares cher +e he . ou e in a slap-stick comedy,’ docs that mean. | pena ‘on it.” * | th e's She took one, put it between her iy. f Ye a ten hare ich and. ears | (Florence Borner) |ipar and leaned forward to light it| “He trailed ux to ‘Ye Olde Logxe| why worry? “atten dinner delllbe, | , Rae donked. at Ninite extreme. Content to breath his native air is t Armistice? PinGiing, maten. Cabin’ tonight and ate the two dollar) over with you. * jr, Dorn was standing in the} In his own ground, What means this Day of Armistice? “No,” Faith spoke sharply, snatch-| chieken dinner at the very next table|° Judith tossed her head. “All| outer room. At sight dith’s | 5 . The end of human sacrifice; ling the cigaret from Cherry's lips.| to ours. I suppose he’s on expense ac-| right.” flushed face and angry eyes, he fol-' * Whose herds with milk, whose fields! The quenching of the dreadful roar, |“You know you promised Dud you) count, and doesn’t give a hang about | se lowed her.out into the corridor. \ with bread, that echoed out from shore to shcre; iwouldn’t. You've caused him enough | the cost. Chris and 1 danced, of| The note was from.the dean's sec-|.. “Is anything . wrohit,; Miss Mar-| % Whose flocks supply him with at- As cannons, long, and black and grim, [heartaches for one night, Cherry) coutse, and saw him making retary. It rénugsted dudith’s pres- TT sala Goan, { tire; Sang prelude to the funeral hymn. Don’t encourage her to do things she pe. lence ‘at his office the following day.| “Yes,” anaprad, iavdith. “Every-; . Whose trees in summer yield him ; . 8 ® ; shouldn't, Bill.” be y hired him Erie read it over her shoulder.| thing’s wrong. 1 just Prevented my-! . # i What means this Day of Armistice? “Oh, bottle it!” Cherry eried a himself!” Faith exclaimed, as if she ; When they had finished, he read it} self from ‘calling ‘ your excellent) In winter fire. Peg ae : grily. “Everybody smokes, TI had suddenly scen a great | “And | again. “When did you Inst see, Shea,|dean a cad to his face. And now { ‘That tears have fled from women’s eyes; God, I'm getting married Pil bet it’s Chris Wiley that has been! Tugith?* : I'm kicking myself ‘for preventing: Desh who cen: wabontern‘dly tind | The mothers, who had sent their sons, do as Tsplease then. Oh séuiding those anonymous Teteerat Tt daaieh: sinstad, ulus ae yon aeklove” 5 ’ Hours, days and years slide soft; To face the peril of the gress alt down, and don’t look a Besece the last words were cold of that?” 2° ° * |)” Dr. Dorn’s eyes wideried. “What > sway H The sweethearts, and devoted wives, ; tian martyr: There's oceans to tell lips she bit her tongue, for “Because I believe the dean means| is the mat ? B In health of body, peace of mind, + : Who hourly feared for loved ones’ lives. you, I suppose Dad raised the roof?| was sure that Cherry had not. told to question ygu about him. You re-| turned on him. “Dean! day. - oe ® Just my luck to have him on a West| Bill Warren about the four scur-| member thag Shea once called. you| Brown just-asked me, under penalty s What means this Day of Armistice? Tenth Street car for probably the| rilous blackmail epistles. by your first name in front of Denn| of dismissal, to act as’ stool pigeon * Sound sleep by. night; study and ease! + The hase, oJ red price, first time in a year! : “Anonymous letters?” Bill jumped! and Mrs. Brown.” - | in his wi ed ‘liftle ‘yiee campaign. ‘4 xt, sweet recreation, of lite, pure! » at a sac! Hy our do you do such insane| to his feet, “Good heavens, Cherry! | Judith nodded. i; a And I turned and walked:out of his = And innocence, which most does ife, and hope and liberty— things? Everybody knows you're| You didn’t tell me that! 1 don’t want! “Well,” said Erie, “they can’t find] office. i oe { The end of hate and tyranny; A engaged to Mr. Cluny, and yet you| to ae dragged into this mess!” Shea. I was-c; ‘ta myself yester-] Dr. Dorn _ looked di i gO dstatign: { The ousting of a noxious bi throw yourself wide open to scandal pe down!” C) snatched at! day and questioned as to his where-|dith, please try to 2 ‘ The ending of eternal feud. . by being seen two or three times a| his eoat, her small face Coe ee - | abouts. ot they won't find| Someone. _ mi _ Thus let me live, unseen, unknown; | + 8 & ‘ week with ein Si sai tamoteen Pi haeiaae b Me him, fies foe toe ag Pipelines 3 : g unlamented let 3 t guess ’s tattling,’ y , ground town, 1 now i H i i ae age ll het manne thie, Day of Armas Chori “flamed. “I “didn't realiy| slggwh, under the verandah of tho| they're after him. Hell just ile lbw aCIf someone does ‘ Bree ae : bing | The Saagl reece ‘ i date with him. ; in Middleburg till this blows over.” _ : 4 elk where I lie. { teachi a kindly creed: 2 walking along on . heart be wild leap of} Ae ie ba bas A. Pope: Solitude. | To help a brother in hia need; and offered me a ‘bot she not cry out, she|. Fram-his vantage behind the Back pane ie seeking for some wiser plan,, ly goeetinn Charsy vantelly massive desk hid; danctum, e professor : \ To benefit our fellowman. with her great, . fright brown| ith, ith ait’ turned vo him, “You dont ELBeBL insulting oo eyes, (ve Be ned.) € i seme, that P:ktiow' whera;Shea in, F \e yt Conth . m, e we tS eae What this Day of Armistice? (Conyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) | the oo} "He shook his head, as if horror- i * ipmaret land. struck. “Of:eout ao: But the 0 s | “Please he se ie | dean will never believe you are in- te: : “cleave to that