The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR "The Riemar | | The Bismarck Tribune! | An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER i * (Established 1873) | Published if the Bismarck Tribune Company. k, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at as second class mail matter. i George D. Mann..........President and Publisher _—_— Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | =Datly by carrier, per year ... see eee oe B720 | ‘Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 7.20/| Daily by mail, per vear, | Es (in state outside Bismarck)....... «+ 6.00) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. «+ 6.00) Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | Member of The Associated Prese | ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatche: sredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa. per, and also the local news of spontaneous ongin published herein. All rights of republication of all | other matter herein are also reserved. | SSeS Foreign Representatives | ac’ LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | Tower Bidg. Kresge Blas | ; ‘PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH oI ‘NEWYORK -' - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | (Official City, State and Ceanty Newspaper) | a } | = No Perfect Crime Cupidity guided the murderous hands in the Sny- =der murder case. Those who perpetrated one of the most heinous crimes of the age, found the hus- | band no barrier ty their illicit relations, but sought, | to use his death as a stepping stone to an easy fortune through insurance upon the victim's life. | Mrs. Snyder and her paramour foolishly believed | they had committed a “perfect crime,” which in po- lice parlance is a murder baffling solution. The crime experts found the Snyder case most easy to detect and unravel. Murders planned to =the smallest detail usually give the police little trouble. It is the crime committed on the impulse i “of the moment, without deliberation or attempt { ..to cover tracks or manufacture alibis that stump “and worry the guardians of law and order. Moralists may seek to draw some lesson from the columns of nauseating evidence which the pub- lie has devoured during the last few weeks. There “is nothing new in the various aspects of the Sny- der case. It will take its place in the list of cold- “blooded murders acuated by the usual sordid mo- = tives. Fortunately, justice has been swift in this case. = Both criminals have been convicted and at the ~ present writing public opinion seems to favor death @as a proper penalty for the transgressors. Expe- , rience has proven that the death penalty is a most £ efficacious deterrent of such crimes. Time may arouse those sentimentalists who work to prevent alumni through scholarships and “$40 a month,” | This article also cpp.sed spending $200,000 for a football stadium when funds for instructional pur- | poses were lacking. Another article took the fac-! ulty to task for “endangering free speech” by re-! striction of lecturers at the university. | This is very interesting. It is somewhat rare fcr undergraduates to stand | up in meeting and talk back to the faculty. | It is even rarer for college students to criticize any athletic policy which results in winning teams. | The University of Georgia stands high in athletic | rankings; protests against “oter-emphasis” on| football or other sports usually come from elderly | alumni, not from the students themselves. All in all, Cheek’s articles apparently have! started: some talk. | It’s strange;,but what, in the name of heaven, |! ‘an you expect when you urge people to think for themselves? Thinking is an activity rarely in-| dulged in these days; unfortunately, this is even true of students at universities. Few people bother’ to think for themselves; that explains a great many of the less happy features of modern life in coi-; lege and elsewhere. i Once a man starts thinking for himself he be- gins to question many of the established customs | and institutions and rules with which he is sur- rounded. That is inevitable, for the simple reason that.so many of these things have no sound basis. | It is true at universities, where football coaches are paid and honored more highly than professors; it is also true in the outside world. \ “Think for yourself”’—oh, by all means. But, if} you go around advocating that, don’t be surprised if the people you are exhorting presently arrive at conclusions that disturb you. | The Real Criminal | Francesco Caruso, uneducated Brooklyn | eae has been found guilty of first degree murder and will, unless some higher coyrt intervenes, die in| the electric chair. | Caruso killed Dr. Casper S. Pendola. He admit- ted it; told the jury how he had done it. Yet the | real culprit in this case is going free. | Here are the facts in the case: | Caruso’s little boy had a sore throat—a very bad | scre throat. Caruso tried his traditional remedy | of tying a bit of colored flannel ab5ut the boy’s | neck, but it did no good. So, at the advice of neighbors, he called a doctor. Dr. Pendola sponded. Dr. Pendola at once discovered that the boy had a virulent case of diphtheria. He gave him an in- jection of diphtheria anti-toxin at once, then left to make other calls, promising to return as soon as possible. It was too late. The boy died shortly after the doctor left. And when the doctor returned Caruso sprang upon him and choked him to death, crying “re- i A Hard Task-Master | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE To no one, not even to Bob Hatha way, did Faith ever tell the story that passed between herself and Cherry during the hour Faith permitted to spend with her sister, the accused murderess, in her cell after her fdinting spell that second with sera when she joined Bob Hathaway, who had been waiting for her in his car before the jail. It was not until she sat beside him, saw the devotion and sympathy in ‘his bril- liant blue eyes, that it occurred to her to wonder how Cherry’s tragic Mississippi flood area. Even 4ur- ing a flood a fellow can’t have any fun. ) ‘ Pink sea monsters have been dis- covered in Canada. The tourist movement from the states got an early start this ye Those Chinese are going to be about the business of war fur a lon, time, it seems. Then just think how much longer it'll take to find WEDNESDAY, MAY.11, 1927 X. . Editor's Note: This is the 3ist chapter in the story of a former doughboy who is _ revisiting France as a correspondent for The Tribune and an advance guard ot the “Second A. E. F. CHAPTER XXXI Monuments — monuments —onu- ments. From the granite Poilu 0 Vouquois Hill in the of throwin; a hand grenade to the plunging Blue Devil at Dun-sur-Meuse with his bay- onet “at ready.” Everywhere, through the devastated regions of France, {there are monuments—monuments— {monuments. A gold-lettered shaft at Seicheprey in the St. Mihiel sector, two noble columns along the Marne at Chateau Thierry, a tiny, single shaft at Lucy-le-Bocage. And from Americans too. Monu- ments erected by American divisions before they “partired for Amerique— toot-sweet,” with helmets, bayonets and machine guns. An “adduction d’ cau” (wash house) at Apremonct erected by the citizens of Holyoke, Mass., a wide granite memorial at lois, in the Argonne, and a bridge constructed by the state of Pennsylvania at Fismes where the reduction of the Marne salient was completed. And there'll be more after the American Legion completes its pilgrimage to France this September. Everything but Power Monuments — monuments — monu- ments. k PRIVATE fe | PFRANCE j with two remaining teeth and a ber back, PAUL ADAMS MRA Serves Yet, up at St. Juvin, which is not far from Grand Pre and Exer- mont and Sommerance, the villagers need some electrici| The little vil- lave lies on the side of a mud-plas- tered hill. It was destroyed by shell fire. It has been rebuilt. And when the Signal Corps of the 77th Divi- son rolled through a huge quantity of wire was left behind. Since then the villagers’ have molded many con- crete poles to carry this wire. All they need now for full and satisfactory electrification is a “hook- up.” But there are no funds in the budget to provide for this boon. Wouldn't Cost Much An aged grandmere at St. Juvin net, told the“story recently. Wit fine appreciation, she pointed to the monuments of France—to those she knew—at Romagne and Cuncl. And, with a shy aversion of her eyes, she suggested that an excellent memorial would be the establishment of etec- tricity in St. Juvin. It would cost very little, she suid, because St. Juvin already has the wire und the poles. Monuments —~ monuments — monu- ments. ae But only feeble candle-light in the village of St. Juvin, which is not far from Grand Pre and Exermont and Sommerance, TOMORROW: = Snapshots. | Bills Allowed By {|| | City Commission | Mrs. Mary Hays, care of poor 10.00 tate Bonding Dept., premium on bonds + 935,00 N. P. Railway Co, freight 3.63 Markovitz Grocery, groceries. 9.21 Bismarck Dairy company, m 5 1.36 Mrs. C. Robidou, house rent 7.00 U. S., Revenue Collector,- o taxes .. 201 Gussner's Grocery, groceri Mrs. Letha Trousdale, c: detention hospital ... 27.17 City Auditorium, pay roll 49.00 Blue and White Cab Co, 50 Dieter Bookbinding Co. 33.25 ing books . i C. McClurg b for library {A. Detention hospit care of poor . salcbice b company, taxi’... G. L. Spear, county treasurer, special assessments . Markovitz Grocery, sup) St. Alexius Hospital, care of poor ab haap sas St. Alexitis Hospital, care of Yellow Cab Co, taxis 4.70 Capital Steam. ‘ taundry i 3.09 Blue & Wh , tax 11.35 Missouri-Kansas Chemical Corp. supplies .......... 30.00 Webb Bros. repairs and sup- plies ...c..ee. sssgubentsn's 90.00 > OO IN NEW YORK || New York, May 11.—Casting an eye over the annual Internal Revenue office report and noting that 9,000 new millionaires have appeared on the scehe, it becomes easier to under- stand’ why the old aristocracy of wealth disappears in Manhattan. “The 400,” identified for so many years with the last word in social standing, has become little more than js there still is a little today. egister” is crashed annually by new names, and there has been more than one bit of news- er talk concerning figures in iety scandals” who continuc to be on the list of “who’s who.” Apparently it is no leeger par- ticularly difficult to get rich. Dow- agers of yesteryear continue in ja 5| small and exclusive circle, but no longer are they bowed to. = punishment of crimes involvin men where a ¥ : Tuesday afternoon of the trial. news would affect herself and Bob—| Ut who won it! poor ses 71.20) es {court seske to mabe the penalty ft theevime. (Sat the doctor bad, with his needle killed ihe boy fhe Tunas by tating vnc | hee marge Ge foe a uae a iagl Manet tis Cotton: 8) the ounea generation f sci ’ s A uaeeime. + A Ff 3 ler’'s arms, je narro' ne erry was acquitted—oh, dear God, id you ever notic: at a lady al... .75| gives little heed to the match-mak- any two murderers ever deserved the electric chair,| , Technically, of course, Caruso is guilty of mur-| Which the county regarded as a bed! was she doubting, too? Wher Ghorcs| is seldom ostaokena’® brary Association, “| fags for “social benefit” or for the Gray and his mistress do. ‘pe der. {good enough for prisoners. And -iff|was acquitted, what could the poor, Pee eseeye 4 supplies Sosein tn sie 1 6.98 weiding of powerful families. :“10'0) t EY But ‘ignorance—black, untaught ignorance—was | that hour Cherry whispered, betweep| storm-tossed little ~ victim’ of cir-} “Pick Saints to Win,” said a head- | Nedwick’s Book Store, books 2.83) 1 havi Fd ——_—_____.~ Sac coal sesieaibel terrible sobs that tore at Faith’s|'cumstances and her own. gjndisci-| line jn a. Kansas City newspaper.| Bismarck Tribune, printing |. richest Heroes of Legend : | Sreat heart, the terrible story of her| plined nature do but come to her—|We started to read ‘it, but it was :. 145.29] night clubs, Ai = A few days ago, in the city of Tampa, Fla,, a| Caruso was in its grip. Mentally, he was in the wedding night, her night of supreme! Faith—for a home and for the tender| about, the St. Paul, ball team and the old type of aristocratic cafe has _ number of old men in gray uniforms gathered for|™iddle ages. His ignerance caused Dr. Pendola’s) could never forget— far more veaseng | er fae ce on ate or months | nota ‘story about AL Gmith at all. eee teh patra GEMvite cepa Be Giich usl'e Genes ne ay Meleg haelt death, and will eaure his own, i a doctor, daet.|OHld, Deo, Inatend ot fone, need. 1 eee 6.00] few ' places cam Become. traly ox: _ with flags and bunting, and did everything a city le selectric, chair will remove: Carneo: trom: te |, 202 Raith, willuparad’ DItsIcBER teed che LRT ae ae toe asters | p 14.35! George Rector, proprictor of one =ecan do to make these men welcome. ee eens be oe peerene ee nore him Cherry's cold hands held tight i sider, for a single minute, letting Bob | a | Jarrell Aan of the moat, tanious a the old time : visi > Uni _| will not affected. still exists, lurks in| hers. share the terible responsibilities $ plies .05| gathering placés of~the “exclusive,” \ .. The visitors were members of the United Confed narrow city streets and in country towns, in tene.| "Ne: No! A. doctor would teD\{that would be hers now? ‘And yet | All doved und, lovely, women dear| Hughes Electr 26.83) writes wistfully in a recently pe | erate Veterans; men who had worn the gray and Churchill! And he would use it inf—to give him up, to shoulder’ these to rhyme: ..| Washburn Li lished diary those dear old days. | ime the stain aid learn in the civil war. ments and on farms, imore deadly than the plague. the ‘trial. Wd rather die than—than new burdens without him— Thal Cestonita,, Alene ands their sete 18.70) The younger generation of soclety # 4 i: ” . ii 0 be acquitted just because the ju “Di ‘* "t gris 1. Cl .. enue. 4 fF tute Record, print 5 . 15. like tl Like the G. A. R., the numbers of this organiza-| The country faces no task more pressing than the | fe eet ne. and it, Oh: Faiths Tl ry orn eeety sont Fit wns just ne | Burn like’ tall candies through \for-| French’ & “Welch Hardware 2 | Uke dhe Younger generation of all « ¥ z j tion are dwindling. Each year there are fewer to! ‘@Sk of enlightening the unfortunate Caruscs who} don't want a baby! 1 don't want| sudden relief of knowing that Ban: | |i eemenstiy, = 3 i Co., supplies . 1.05 | ing life and the world. It will dance esha. (itheicouvse of act fi the last |e its slaves. Chris’ baby! I wish 1 were dead!” | ning was through with his evidence | Lighting the Past’s dim arras with) J, B.'Smith, supplies 65 Guinans as quickly as it b 3 or anvery Aew Years tne las For the rest of the hour that had] that unnerved the kid. Buck up, dar-| , 7 their names. : Central Meat. Market, oie ein a brownstone ball- « confederate veteran, like the last union veteran, Was Uaneaaas bean granted them, Se piasree mb ling, | im going to be busy. tonight Aroibd (thelr: fhces:.warh the. eager caltes for detention hospital 8.75 Foor “indeed, far more quickly re is ee, ss and exquis ym- | worki: ti H ; ¥ ef e » Ellin Hi aeiok- ep et eypatonay thenranksimreivery | |. <i stdicap sack oe prectiont ot thei Aine pathy. of her great heart to confor’ Relig. Nov T'wonts tall. you until 1| Wherein all other lights are sunken whit. 12293] sa over, social traditions" a. marry . an ei @ little sister who had been trap- if there’: i 12 oe . | Waterwo: “ 0, i in, isti- * Yat there is something highly impressive, to a| ci” Tree association, has devoted most of his life| ped 'so hideously ‘ba “unworthy see if there's anything to it | Yet "ebting, back, the seekers: Police Bent, nay roll 136.00 cated, anhattan weekly an article thoughtful man, about that gathering in Tampa.|*® the cause of forest conservation. terest hate in one. soul-shattering| ane MORROW, Faith is kept from’ tiame of hair, a bright immortal | Federal Meter Com” Baer yi) pera s ber ge aio seal « . A . : A E . .» SUPPIi 80 | ions th = The organization that convened there did not con-| This spring he has inaugurated a new campalen | day, . dona (Copyfishe et Wea seen Tinea tegen Mueller Co., upplies oes. ane rtey a room dances: She deplored sist merely of a small group of bent, aging men;|— GTOW trees for growing people.” He points out! “But what am I going to do, i it yi, | Bunply, whore, they ok Wachter Transfer Co., labor —_6.00/ tite hosts of “gate crashers” and z Be Z . *| that our population is increasing at a rate of a mil-| Faith?” Cherry moaned, beatin 4. urely, where they have passed, one| Standard Oil Co., gas ... 0.00| ‘dance cutters” at affairs that are nor ie homage that Tampa paid these men|™’ 4 “4 Fi breast with her clenched hands. | B. ARBS Aiter Ont, 5 Oscar H. Will Co., supp! 8.25 | reputed to be fashionable. She found ye come simply because they were brave men who Jan: a year, and a meant an ever-increasing | in jall—in jail! And 1 may have to c : Weating this solance to the datk-| Lahr Motor Sales company, thers far from stimulating intellect- had, in time past, risked all for their beliefs, palnion our, vera wanting. to yeats. Faith doekctt belicys that Wee a Surely, newcomers to Oblivion ee acciise . ae ane ” A i ! got) «4 EM 5 ” (A supplies 2,75 sey = For the veterans who marched down Tampa’s| He urges that our idle land—there are more than/ to" have a baby, and that in. a fow Ngan rterepeaeeline Pacific’ fects | MAY, still, desery im that all-quench-| Jarrell Hardware “Go. sup” At the foot. of Fifth Avenue, in streets did not march alone. Dim, shadowy figures 81,000,000 acres of it in America—be planted with! more days they may tell me I’ve got stonped at New York. Now. if the ing gloom, FF plies sa sees+ 83.16] the shadow of the Washington Arch, ‘a H . 5 y fig pepcnan ‘to fo to prison for the rest of my! ladies are willing, probably. we'll| fie “sceepOvGt titted atid alight. | Wachter Transfer Co, coal 106.95| where tradition broods in the old # strode before and after them; long-furled battle | YOUns g : life! Save me, Faith! Oh, God! I|hear of several naval’ en, ts.| Mike tapers burning through: the) Hoskins-Meyer, supplies ...._ 7.20| ‘red brick row,” each year finds the © flags waved at their van; the echoes of ancient bu-| . !t is a worth-while suggestion, Unless we take] can't bear it!” f Maybe the fleets were'sens toi _wimdy pe aoe ian | Waterworks Dept., water .:.- 820.65 invaders closer to the citadels. Giant @ % gles rang clear in the air as they passed. Legend-|the subject of forest conservation very seriously,| When at last Mrs. Webb, the mat-jmake the night elubs safe for the pga Bm Chas. H. Gobel 17.50] apartments rise at every "corner ABcet DA PAP RE, : ORD hi . son. | '2", Who had been waiting just out| buyers from the middle west. i bringing merchants, salesmen, boot- our grandchildren won’t have any forests to con. 4? ; ary heroes, gigantic and commanding, moved with y of earshot in the corridor, called to)'The only other place we can recom 16.15 | leggers,. brokers, whatnot as next- © them, unseery but felt by all the multitude. serve. Faith that her time was up, Cherry! mend for the fleet to viet is ati! A THOUGHT 16.25| door: neighbors of white-haired. old hs P: git i evita had sobbed herself into a state of de-|Chicago, Besides the local civil war. = Ci 32.66 | ladies’ who still, of Easter mornings, The bitterness of the civil war has passed away. spair that.resembled calmness. Faith| fare there, the “Windy City” h:.< 17.53] step into their coach-and-fours, The years have erased the scars and burns that it Used to Miracles kissed her tenderly on lips and! ad considerable trouble with the|. Thy rod and Thy staff, they com- as left. What remains to us seems epic and of legend; We are used to miracles, in these days, and we| cheeks and eyelids, then tiptoed apne of late, although the Br tish| fort me—Psalm xxiib:4. . city. tenes . | 47.52] -Up Fifth Avenue, once the impreg- ‘ 2 Y re Peel hardly any. any attention ko then. any. 100 join Mrs, Webb, in the dark, evil-| may not know it. | eae State Record, printing ...... 7.00|nable fortress of ‘wealth. Benjamin @ great poems of heroism and sacrifice, written in YPAY eny. alhenvon. y more. —_—__| smelling corridor. D |, Of all created comforts'/God is|Humphreys & Moule, print- Winter, an immigrant from Poland, blood over G0 years ago so that we might have he-| Perfection of the television apparatus, by which| Her ‘kindliness comforted Faith} Schools for refugee children are|the lender; you are ‘thé borrower, ete + 112.50/ has proved himself stronger TE sess end idesis. ~ a man speaking over the telephone can see the face| somewhat, but her eyes were, heavy| being established throughout the! Not the owner.—Rutherford. ete urgh peer. Gar: nears 220.70 tie mleaty pRocketellers. a, 5 e Fy 4 — ih sa at i es ti > T, havi 2 . The United Confederate Veterans are one of the|°f the man at the other end of the line, in a dis- pli 4 ~ pt42]en over ‘the mansions of pages repositories of these great tales—the other repos:-| tant city, is one of the most amazing things that OUT OUR WAY Ne aloe Ss mre n +30 Rocketeer aut sin oe tory, of course, being the G. A. R. And that is| modern science has done, ae + VEE i 7 i Waterworks Dept? pay roll’. 108.60! on once ‘sacred soil Pipe ry * why, though their numbers shrink, these gray-uni-| But we're used to it.’ It tails to excite us. In 7 GZ *ATS Cuz You CONT - seat pPevt pay roll ......° 112.85 propert A and won, He can, and will, 4 formed men bulk larger than ever. The civil war|# few years’ time the device may be in general use; DO YOU MEAN “10 Zi| UNOERSTANO SNIPES. ¥ 19.60] building cast eth ‘the gia : “was a war of heroes; these are the remaining men|f it is, probably we will take it as a matter of TELL ME THESE ER-Q |’ uy Hi 6) .00 | Rockefeller neighborhood. This bar- i ‘ - DION' You NEVER HEAR LONG AS A OuMB FB = of a magnificent tradition, the last survivors of a|°Urse, and cuss the phone company if the pictures SNIPE ARE GOING TC ere HUNTIN COVER GUY. HRILL GO belt. will ered the multi-millionaire fais or clants, we see are the least bit blurred. FY RIGHT INTO “HSI” Cine nts Meant: Welt. Howe wen ce} i PN ialpieeg en aes Fs They were present at the far-off, legendary wars Science has made us just a bit hard-boiled. BAG WiTHouT ANY 2 AINT A BAG CONER ? TH’ IlRacers it oor rk sat is or wealth becomes more and more * z ee . err and so we honor them as, once more be- Se ee INDOCE MENT WHATEVER? \\NERY BEST KIND oF COVER, || AN’ A Oume Guy Modern Machine W. 310! ere, fuillionsires, ‘there are ‘tem By i ime, - iew. . 4 4 y staeles . 10, times: at mi ere ast. time, they pass in review. . THATS QUEER ~—WITH INFINGTE |\ NELL, WE, SCARE 'EM AN Bismarek Spring Service Sta- sufficient income to crook iraath Editorial Comment GOT TH COMER rs 2 Dropping Another Custom s en SPACE TO FLY IN. THEY Mou Gor TH lies 2900] once eetaly "hallowed ates, = When Charles Dickens visited America a little ork SELECT THis PaARTCu 116 ————— _ @ Jess than 100 years ago, one of the things that im- Tne enian Toaeeey” BaG IM apse ee Copelin Mator Co, oo . Justajingle af ia Breased ‘ck lee Biat was the prevalence of the great} «an American Tragedy” is the name of the 'T DOESNT Sou Carpenter Lamiber Co. ayy <a | — ‘ American habit of chewing tobacco. He complained | Dreiser masterpiece barred by the police dragoons; plies ii 2250| "Ihave s cold; Wa in my head” = bitterly that in the best hotels, on steamers, in| trom public sale in Boston. “A Boston Tragedy”| plnnenncet the melden fair, eg a aad tae Daa might be a proper characterization of the silly per- 3.25| “It’s the only te that's. Pos 4 i ys results, as can be imagined, Re! formance of the city police. For, while the book found rather unsanitary. : of Dreiser will suffer nothing from its rejection, ; This time-honored habit must be vanishing. At] sp, offending city may suffer more than its police H any rate, the Pullman company announces that| force now believes possible. ey "keale. ryche lnundry if og chewing tobacco is used so little now that drnate| 1¢ is rather easy to understand how the resent: Firs Dep, eet ‘oll A aes ener. ee. from Pullman cars. They! ment of certain religious crders might induce the! mellis wa boarding pris- ry authorities to place a ban on the sale of “Elme- Gantry.” But it sorely puzzles the denizens of the provinces when they come to consider the exclusion of “An American Tragedy.” It is not at all pos- sible to understand what the authorities were think- ing about when they decided that this interminable Piece of depressive fiction shall not be offered for Lenhart prog Jarrell “Hardware “Think For Yourself” * iabor You could easily get almost anyone to: endorse the proposition that people ought to “think for themselves.” But if the results of this could be the endorsements might not come so i sale in the American Athens. Mot long ago the faculty of the University of] ‘True enough, the average reader of “An Ameri- t ) expressed the wish that students. could| ran Tragedy” mi think for many days after the melt o1 reading that all world is a deep, dark blue. | But the same effect might easily feliow a close perusal of a sermon by Jonathan Edwards. Even “Paradise Lost” and the “Divine Comedy” make rather depressive bedtime reading, If it was the intention cf the Boston sultans to keep from the | Bestonese everything conducive to Lecingpeabres ta Slr of Aa tan ra :

Other pages from this issue: