The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1927, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUN FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1997 “The Bana ; “WASHINGTON 6, + t ‘ A ! J s i {because such an alliance would give greater mili- , The Bismarck Tribune |:;;; strength. Other countries are none too favor- Now For a Little Scratchy Autiinia‘Dance An Independent Newspaper ‘able. a ee oe. ; THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | But cne thing cannot be evaded, Something ha: ; t j (Established 1873) to be done with Austria, It is a question of her } I A r | I I , on 4 i subsidization by the other countries or her annexa- i : ; Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, °— t Biamarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at tion by Bismarck as second class mail matter. most wis George D. Mann. Subscription Rates Payable In Advance any. The latter course would seem t ; The threat of milit Germany age -++President and Publisher “attacking France is mainly a bugaboo. The Aus- BY RODNEY DUTCHER {sphere and today, we exert Sipnelnt ree fase ;, or military domination over all non- | fuvee te Th 16.—“Somehow. Csionial soil north of the canal with to have stopped to explain why our the possible exception of unwieldly policy of gentle benevolence, toward | Mexico, which has, proved rather a chaotic China was so different from | large bite: We had no competition. trian question demands settlement. Daily by carrier, per year ............ 20 ~ — : il, pe i ul ‘ i Lour comparatively rough and severe| But although we pushed out into RI ral ec ae ee eS The Censorship Craze policy toward surh nearby. republics | the Pacific as far as the Philippines, d Daily by mail, per year, Good, sible words on the subject of modern as Nicaragua, Haiti and Mexico. we found that in the period before (in state outside Bismarck).... and after Seward had declared On the one hand, certain sections el were those spoken Mondays by Dar Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot. ‘ literatu ft res » pulpit and the}American command of the Pacific ‘ Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Evans, professor of Christian Theology at Andover Condrees loudly Hepleaed the mamin: [utea, the other powers had penetrated q 7” Theological seminary. istration’s Latin-American policy and] into the orient and had begun ‘to i Member of The Associated Press MAC Ter Ue INE Geniag : ne: { The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| Dr. Evans is of the belie’ that Boston, throagh the use for republication of all news dispatches its Watch and Ward society and other organiza: credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- tions, has carried censorship too f He feels that Pee also the local news of spontinewvs oViKi there is a grave danger, if this censorship er published herein. rights o' cation of all ee Bas 5 ‘iti We MODUL DOT GARR: Other matter herein are also re: inues, that the world whl be robbed of some then lavishly praised its noble re-|divide China into sph of British, fusal to join with Great Britain in} German, eee et ting up the Chinese despite the {nese influence, by means ¢ fact that the Chinese had been much |0us wars and peculiar treaties, more unruly than the Latin-Amer-| this was very bad for expanding icans, American trade. . s Ayain, there were those who cheer- |, Then: came the Boxer Rebellion. meat ; F The United States, whose ‘foreign 4 ua Stak hihhehs ~ ‘of its most valuable literary works. | stily our iron-handed methods in yaticies, were then’ guided by Sec: 4 q Foreign Representatives It should not be forgotten that the prohibitel bie aA sa retary John Hay, could hardly part G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY books of yesterday are, in) many today’s psence of similar tac- tion a section of China—for one rea- CHICAGO DETROIT eeer Bly. Kresze Bldg. “MSi¢s. Books which university: students are ives esl oo i PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH to read as part of their English courses once were! LENS] int i cW YORK - - - _ Fifth Ave. Bldg. hidden in dark corners and their publishers fined 4 . for issuing them. son public opinion was very much against it, s a matter of fact, neither great i e best that our statesmen could ne nor high prai: n be accord- hope for was an even break with the ed the Yi rest of the world and at this point ies G theory. h Hay enunciated the pol of the jal City, State and ‘ounty N In this age, as in every , of course, there aie x j ony customed altruism ‘open door.” The new Chinese policy 1. : some worthless books. But it joubtful whether Hoth in this hemisphere and in the called for equal rights for American The Hinterland s orthles rks. doubtful whethe: ast, it merely followed out, enterprise and, theoretically, a kindly the quaint customs of New Yorkers, the perennial optimism and perpetual glossing over ign policies which have been well | attitude toward the Chinese, for Hay hose born somewh in an Towa corn. ¢f actual facts, as typified by some books, is bet- defined for at least three decades served notice that we were opposed : . x and whic ave been adhered to by to any more partitions. field, to refer to all the country west of Albany as ter than the honest and straightforward discussions ness Voss te RGhe hinterland.” ing problems which confront us. Newspaper) both Republican and Democratic | administrations. | Roosevelt and Taft continued the ie i i ber of Commerce announces that the meeting of it: | ideas with ch we agree is nv reason why we men| different because the ex- aded a little, but the Cool- panding United States has had to idge-Kellogg y has been virtual- deal with fwo fundamentally differ- ly that of their Republican predeces- ent situations. The difference began and has been marked this year to be apparent toward the close of notable refusal to aid other na- more than 1200 counselors, committee men and di- Should ban it from our libraries and tell the world rectors, to be held in West Baden, Ind, Oct. 15 to About its valuelessness, The mentally capable 18, “will he the first mee of the kind culled by able to select the chaff from the wheat. To for! bid the national organization and the first conference them this privilege is, in a sense, abrogating one the zi ces: alas to ak ant s in tightening their control over ‘Sata Lathes : , ‘ ; i i hi her lustries were busy at- on questions of national economic policy to be held Of the basic things on which this nation was found- taining their growth, The west was! As against Russia, which had ham- 4 nal liberty. being won and American: production | pered our penetration of Manchuria, and enterprise had not outgrown the | our game Japan's when those in the environment of the middle west.” ed: the right to per The bulletin adds that “the meeting place has PONT ze national boundaries. two countries clashed and Roosevelt been deliberately chosen with a view to affording, > tia and Prince Bdw ced | boldly warned France and Germany business interests of that region the widest pes-/ only two Canadian provinces still “dry.” And they A policy of gradual acquisition had | against any intervention they may n pursued intermittently, but this e contemplated in Russia’s behalf. s largely confined to straightening |The net result of that war from our out the borders of the United States | standpoint was maintenance ou. o.2 r to the south and the south- | open door in north China. ent their views on current | #¢ the only two that do net directly impinge on © problems.” | United States territory. ; sible opportunity to 7 at { economic and leg The people of “that region” shoul] appreciate miriag Re i Nevertheless, Secretary of} During ding’s administration this noble opportunity. It is to be hoped this will; A Kansas City man was arrested for careless | — ard, under Lincoln, had | our Chinese die con- i +4} cae ate Piet thie rather king. Maybe . dire ed av , ns in the Pacific and bought flict seriously with those of Japan, let those people from the eastern edge cf this rather, W#lking. Maybe the charge should have been When the gong sounds he rushes out He had forced the French | then allied with Britain. The Wash: broad country know t » and had sought to| ington arms conference followed, nin the Caribbean by , with these three nations and Franc base in Santo Dom-! banding together to avert Asiatic in Islands by purchase | trouble , and reiterating the “open er the Panama isthmus ; door” policy. of population and three hours from the ni! her along we go the more we begin to to the street and is pickd up by his! {yag'ine lunderstand just how i (fellow fire fan as he whizzes by in| and control ov ut the dome of the West Ba- | “reckless” walking. ang and hops in his car, The doctor, hay- | cut den fiitel js an hour's motor drive from the nation's | ~ Sees ime meanwhile been awakened, rushes!" {The far { ae wv Anne Aus om, centor of industrial production. = | oe: If anything nad been lacking to — She trieg then, a little feve: ris ear. other means, only to have Con- Pee the rest of the country wants to find out {convince Faith that her own vague for all her determination to be ? jgress refuse to approve his arrange-| Today our troops and airplanes are is going on, “the hinterland is the jfteurs were justitied, Joy’s chitaish! to remember when Bob had last k It happened the other evening at) ments. lin China in large numbers, but our Fas marae alts Nien elltko ic OT comment, uttered in sine ed her passionately, one of those [: one of the few popular night clubs: But the present policies began to | government is again preventing other ae j * age | , ment ufter her first evening at home| clinging, exultant kisses that had | A Young woman came in and people take shape under McKinley when our mations from obtaining a strar nce, says in a bus review: | following a summer in sa turned! made her so shyly and rosily ha ey oe i eld bul ne twoj government, determining to extend | hold on that country and apparently yg the United States has reached a con-| fe trick with sickening e| | t we of her marriage, She seemed to know her and — whi: its spheres of economic if not polit-| gaining certain gratitude from the eet 7Absgrunecnie tentlen ey ak tne oCta al He Does Love to Scrap doy had said. her eves puzzied and | began to cry, slow, despairing t Jack Kearns, the fight promoter, was] ical influence, looked to the south | Chinese, all of which is as helpful to , on in ch il He neral tendency rather than xf (Detevit New | distre Gee! Everybody seems! when she realized that she could not there. He jumped from his table to] and the t. It couldn’t look to the | our interests in China as any other 3 details must be studied by those who would | ‘ : etroit: News) | $0 funn: : ; s remember—it had been so long ago ther, They down and d yeast, for there beyond the br At-| policy we could a at reasonable conelusicns. But because the im-| The truth is that Charles A. Levine is the child] the morning following Joy’s re-| Uh, he kissed her now. but so differ, and talked. And, after a whi 3 iystie old-world en |\. Ih concluston; it. 1s,-worth: noting s e \ b ee lor : Hee cias z | turn, Faith set herself resolutely to| ently! Br young woman got up and sang a songz ‘that if our Latin-American policy had : pulses by which business is directed originate else-!0f ill-fortune. It is not a question of race or up| hard and uninteresting take gn te; otis Be hat nobody recognized, because it, : ioe Nbaausauplied tos@hina titewaulihive. ©” where and are tardily reflected in New York, the |Ptinging cr environment or any of those conditions| desperate effort to keep her mind off! head or was quite ancient’ and never t00f Thanks, perhaps, to the Monroe long since m 3 : neral tendency is not so easily or so promptly ; folk love to employ as a simple answer to a surpris-| 72i4 soo qumingung words and her | troubled —ax when Ch popula®. Bere: Doctrine, it found the republics, to| one and perh discernible here as in what New Yorkers mistakenly {iM phenomenon. Mr. Levine is simply one of those} methodically through Joy's, trunk War srateigec’ aneg is the story: Quite a few) Set SEE enn own ORNS: eel = . . ° ‘arine: . % ai ith | 2 ress rawers, vi ide: W; e erha there 7e-fight in 3 call the hinterland, where nine-tenths of our con-| SS ¢f contrariness who doesn’t seem to get on with | and dresser drawers, laying aside! Was she, perhaps, o see |e ; Be i ; Pee aga the garments that could be mended! other wives. the Mont. Dempsey, ry 4 4 sumers and a still larger proportion of our pro-| folk, So far us the public record goes his life is one] and made to serve the rapidly grow: {of romance? “Bat s very much i limeligh Daily Health | BARBS ducers live.” And “for thi reasons” he state {| Controversy, his days are given to arguments, his| ing child for another short period. | still “petted” open! w a taking on a att Gib Ss a suse that he would spend the next few weeks in the cen- | nights to prospective agitations over new problems. | 60h, Wannivie new eardite: Panh | oe ae emewed i es eet ey ervice Ai lowaleromen anno ten run 1 tral states, where, he concluded, “I hope to learn | He spends his time in a state of militaney. There ar2| worried, “Four new suits of under-) neighter, looked at little Mis, Minn amous special writers. BY DR: MOK : i ee me Days i Miliacb conditions at-tirse hand” ‘people who do that, wear, at Teast three new pettieoats nock as if he could hardly. keep his eu beatae oh ae for seal ie te ALGUEs thes waye Conueiast nilved. the i ai ‘ caer: ‘ ia A Sees rents A .| some new -and-wool shirfs—she| hands off her—or his lips fro Cy ey vedet purnal of e merican * é . The hinterland has potentialities for education! ‘ ne a pity, because Mr. Levine's peculiar talent | Goex take cold so easily; a new cont— hiner i Cee UP tae a certain tent show that jw pla: Medical Association and of Hygeia, |f™™ problem. | f : i KEREN Sena ‘or disputation, carried to a point of weariness, has |1 wonder if 1 can make her’ a decent; -“Mys , here’s 2 letter the town in hopes of a cleanup. the Health Magazine | , E é z : ¥ 5 : ' 4 5 : cout, i y some nice fur to bright-. fro: a er ma ede aha ceup th r to atory Vl teal ely tae, Pape ae The mills of the gods as reflected in the busy Los |cen his. In contrast with the Lindberghs and Byrds upf And let's see dresses, Leen grim cince Jim Tane had left £ONE about with this tent "show istion of his physician and has | Must be riding on those trains again, 4 Angeles courts have ground their way and Katie ;24d the Chamberlins, Mr, Levine seems somehow un- Messed os a bead to live in his son's house, peor Pua uiore: stares: aleus i en he is likely to! Coolidge refused a farm he was ‘The judge who handled this case is a learned man, | US: Her pencil began ta 1 aimless haven't” overdrawn.” She opened UP ind down Broadway, Oh, yes, You) had visited the photographer. I tHeenfonident igatekoo en ie phis i le vi ittls| marks on the blank below the th jope and slowly the blood "call the story! However, the courts hav Sd TE 1) ‘ an astute and earnest man, but, without any ey. tiles tsomerely ay public: view-of ithe queen little | Te rsibta liaiiat dec necdlie GE GerIEEA OR Gioee Fee, oo Alulavony senibmbcs ‘how ilby@legs|5 ureter ne caueia Maye: Mele a Fol Sie : s tion of expressing contempt of court, we must feel(man who has cavorted now for months ina semi-| complete list of doy's needs, What eet PER nEnE it would be w good stunt] usual photographer, having held. that | cone Wick Ter Coro ean tent et v ea ; eek ; fae ee ere to bring her to Broadway. Well she: lpteew iJ come back for more money to spend q that Solomon would have decided otherwise. We heroic twilight. Probably from his point of view Hesse Why a Bb ler ane a NENT: The dread spectre of pov cine! But the publicity soon ran the net s the property of’ the! in Europe 7 feel that Solomon. in all his glory, would have or-[eversthing is fine and enjoyable; conceivably he acts Vint What was wrone With her. ‘Copyright, 197, NEA Service, Ine.) 294,amd Patricia was in the position | PAGE aPner subject to certain re-/ ° fa town in New York dered Katie Smith reimbursed. Here's the situa. |a# he does by, choice, by will, by pleasure in his own! marriage, that blessed, adventure| Po Ttht lot NEA Service, THO Ts eee IST ee ae ae PLUM | Of courae; iever'yoneshnows thet a\aigte held ccmacr nition cocee A int i it 4 . she a " 80!) Oe reyy be sah ‘i ] 7 | er} ae i ., “ tion: {quaint idea of human intercourse. ‘ she and Bob had begun so what difficult: predicament, | Person who comes to a photographer | if it had been pipes that would have oa : 5 pee high-heartedly, so sure that they IN NEW YORK |+ Well, she dropped out of sight for| ¢xPects to receive or purchase prints! heen news. Artie and Katie were dancing. It was cne of the| But it is apparent that he does love to scrap. conldcmake ry model of am Stine: CHULTeue REA determined to{0f the photograph and does not ex Bae Shears modern scrambles—not exactly a minuet. Artie, i eye dere wae ene he pes hereelt ———™ be an entertainer in her own right, ee oa: at ithe: interme An Oklahoma city held a turtle seems, in the course of his earnest effort, inflicted John Bull Says Enough Is Enough oleic - One of the , When the crowd in the night club’ titiire manus) race, Anyhow that’s better than eR po 1: he fe é ‘ eezes concerning the found out who she was they weleomed id | betting on a turtle in a horse race. bruises upon Katie's feet. The toe-trampling so (Chicago Tribune) | ening thought — Ee her to Broadway. Which is a way! 9, ,,crdinarily of No Use See gained Katie and brought her so much of mental} Sir Austen Chamberlain’s remarks eva will loved her, that Broadway has of doing things—some- ; and, it has never’ The guests must have smiled P enytne i ks at Geneva Cherry and no Wer despite hoc ditticutt 5 tae, been established whether a person! amusedly. when two cowboys. from anguish that she prayed justice for veimbursemen: | be protested in England by the same sort of theor- dreadiul trap. fv GILBERT SWAN, , Who has himself X-rayed expects t ;/ countered in locating the bi a rodeo show shot up a Chicago hotel, i Bex aforonall sts in internati Le Inited States, sume, house with i Srraeraiie pA Seer tes receive merely an opinion and advice, | as rue mere san is sarees ee ea Dele eekne : wee a ee eee hated) arian ie : LOE eieet SG F Bae 4 copy of the picture, the original | @—————————______» Artie has his followers, of course, ere are | Wel or our going into the league of nations. Oh, no, no! For it she convinced fi ; i ge, plate, or all these things. Of course,! ; i : 4 RO, ‘ : e chasers to be found under the | ‘OUrse, | those who will say that in defending the suit he|The good sense of the speech, however, will appeal! herself that Bob still loved Cherry, gun. sander ths Justajingle he X-ray ‘plate gr even a print of | A Thought | was standing merely on his rights, whether he stood|to the mass of British opinion and especially we ‘ere, Vas only one thing to d One of these ix a rich lawye he ordinary person, ‘ : would have to go away--But, oh, she ‘i i cs ‘ ; | since it requires, special skill for, Walk while ye have the light on Katie's feet or not. These henchmen of Artie’s|suspect to the peoples of the dominions. It is the wasn't convinced! No. no! oe Ae Hee ae Gear eA beg a Mon alee which te inte eoteEAton, | darkness come pre pee, Benge will say that when Katie consented to dance with|dominions, as Sir Austen candidly disclosed, that ‘ te of myself.”’ taken his neighborhood fire more} “No rpad!’ You cannot ) is poser accidentoman be Involved aig Gar 5 Artie, whether she knew him as an execrable dancer |do not propose t» underwrite : i ts in| she Whispered. “live got to face this! semeusly TM say we can't, the youth ex-| the X-ray plate inc Presentation of) The very nlants turn with a joyful i ' ; ‘ ing--thi 2 Mt eae. e lawyer keeps in an adjoinin te p im-| transpor ight.—Schiller. rtie, whe Ww a re prop more commitments in| th Fatiik atoll. Tkceanit ob Ge longer Keane joining | Pia ’ lie aoe ee nsport to the light.—Schill cr not, she automatically forfeited any claims that|European politics and whether Mr. Ramsay Mac-, bad.” garage a speedy car ready for action.) “I've just run out of gas.” soviety of North America, knowh as : MATERNAL CARES. ' | society Nort 5 * i, me? eve reali from oneal spine, pea een seats it or not, te pressure for more —— TOUR Se ea - - —— snes seas s, j the jaealolaien! vpatee adopted] Mother: Darling, you were out i neck, fallen arches, sprained knees or any of the; guaranties by Great Britain has brought the home OUT resolutions that all pictures, photo-| awfully late last night. I’m afraid Fe ener : eee oe i i UR WA Ww graphs or other records were the|im de fashi other little ills that cne risks in the latter-day ball- | government to a choice between the league of na- thi By illiams | roperty of the man who made them, pee PAE Cheon aay : | Sees ere atthe je r of. the Jahoratory in-which they Daughter: Certainly, Mummy j were made, darling. I dined with—oh, well, y: d And there are those among Artie’s adherents who} Sir Austen's speech will make a profound im- LBA ies U a Bae os oe \" Th aa iffi . e 4 5 enes i 4 G Hl Toc, Fi us i ere also arises some difficult: "t know hi aren’t sc nice with their arguments, either. For | pression in America because it vividly discloses a A OSH, TUCK, YES, FER. lig Sets ate eke ae ee al jon’t know him, and we went to s sue of British commonwealths, Cc instance, one of them said that if Katie could gallo/ situation in which we, too, should have been en- | A/CPOIDouT ef HO. oer SHE TISS Him?! © Woz, to be controlled by the man" ‘whe Ren ae ee ee through one of these modern dances, accepting the |tangled had we cntered the league. Great Britain | TT. HE Ai COME IN HAST STARTN |in which the picture is made. \A hos. Hie clube snemotiike maine Dat ie postures and motions thereby necessary, and suffer | naturally and inevitably is drawn into many of the! [* ALLOWED TO T' GiT MAD. jpital may make such regulations as| isn't it, Mummy? Die ilies ae jare necessary for efficient. manage- : i ., jment. A part of such efficient man-! only thas T cast arated Me outs javement requires that the records of, punch é all cases, including the X-ray pic- : ‘tures, remain in the hospital. : hal | "There then arises the question as| ¢Postsee stamps, before being per- no mental anguish, surely then the matter of scuffed! complications of ccntinental politics. She was the® FIGHT ANDO IF shoes and barked toes should bring no tear rolling | chief factor in the creation of the league and is its most important bulwark, but Canada, Australia, down her fair cheek. Men can be cats, too, you} see, |New Zealand and South Africa are not necessarily But look here, Artie, you may be right, and the |cencerned in Europcan politics any more than we oS it) peter SrA S DANOTE Ras the pie ee seat yore rai judge may be absolutely according to Hoyle, and/are, and wisely, though perhaps a little tardily, = LINER or ae A Cine ria ‘government bourht the patent for all that. However— they have let it be known that they have gone as AN have been taken, or whether he may | Perforation of stamps from a man W. i : ‘a : a ‘ y A => itake a copy of the record and of the| Mamed Archer, paying him the equiv- We still feel that Solomon, in all his glory, would !far as they intend to go. The judgment and in- S |pietures, provided he is willin ae alent of $20,000, have awarded Katie that $10. That gallantry might | stinct of the people of the United States, expressed , Zz | pay for them, is to} — - aa ee re not perish from the world—and for the ‘| by a score of courageous and clear sighted men in. = | mee net ifeislea : FLAPP’ FANNY SAYS: safety cn the dance floor. ithe senate, saved our traditional independence at 7. leonee in Monntalien cathe pana “ ——————— the threshold of the enterprise, and the British do- 7 j one kind or another, but never have More Ties Severed minicns will serve themselves and the mother coun- AG, | Bean, wetted Pes ot the haber! Austria, strong republic, is watching the ties'try likewise in checking the extension of the gov-: > | have listened to the evidence and have {then rendered their decision on the | basis of what seemed most reasonable under the circumstances. | If the custom. were to develop for jall Persons to keep records of all | illnesses, including X-ray. pictures, | physicians would be greatly helped in -| having the material available in | Subsequent ‘illnesses. However, this | pullennium from the standpoint of health and disease control scems to be far, far away, which bound it to the old monarchy gradually being |ernment’s responsibilities. - severed. { That extension was certain to go. on indefinitely One of the latest instances came with the death | for there is an obvious profit in tying up the British of Prince Montenuovo, former grand master at the power as Gulliver was bound in Lilliput. The) court of Francis Joseph and a leading figure in th *;American people do not propose to submit them- old monarchical government. Inflexibly in the old | selves to any such experiment, As an independent days he aided Francis Joseph in the task of govern-|power the United States will strive to live amic- ing Austria-Hungary. What sorrow it must have! ably in the family of nations and to do its full; given him to see Austria become but a fragment of , share t:.ward peace and progress. But it will not | ‘ ay ‘)\) NY mn) yyy »” a) my ‘ = €é a Z -) 7 mi | ee its former self after the war was over—a fragment ‘deliver its freedori of judgment, conscience and ac- | -———_—_—_——_ icing on i ip which, whi. Pa | Old Masters almost incapable of existing on its own resources. |ticn to a European trusteeship which, while pur- | | a ‘ It has been argued that the smallness of Austria | porting to be an expressicn of lofty altruism, i ° Why ‘ 7 Z SS —" ( indirectly has been a cause of the recent street|quite naturall;, the organ of many national inter-. > CAT ; ¢ : [amet a inet that dend men eat, riots in Vienna. Where a country: cannot produce {ests of no practical concern to ux. The British do-| WiMett. nes ‘i 4 \tn little light and {EAB moat, - enough to meet its own needs and is forced to im-| minions are in it because England is in it, but they | Me ida : 2 | They eat it in the sient tomb, portation, there will be discontent. It would be; would he better off out of it, as we are, for, by WWM lle. We, abot f y i; e ef Fite, e, Kind valce of Spmieade near natural, under those circumstances, to expect some | keeping free from the ordinary vicissitud:s an.J/ SS Se | er. # sort of an uprising, if not now, a few years later. | complicated mechanism of the Européan s m1, we | ~ S gi me But Friendship is 2 nobler thing— i There has been much talk lately of the benefits| shall be able to’ use our full weight in critienl major | Sire. Ve Es SVs eS .... me Por qendship it ts good to sing. Freunde atthe thought and’ cries out tha'| thar Kf'we were © part of iat the lagus'in'a| [® (IF OLD FASHIONED GIRLS WERE LIKE THEY Say “Gertaullinoas | | Meltiatymenn inca 4 * es i] . ‘PAT. Orr, nd of his It inake fi i it would be » “dangerous” thing to do, presumably | part of it. pedicels hal aie GOSH! WHAT WouLo'VE HAPPENED To SOME O'US FELLERS. “aus “Austin Dobson: Fame ig'a; Food| busta ertcr will, tell you that, ’ : ‘ «| That Dead Men | goldfish and a canary, ere ey — - cee, diamant aia SS lie cad # ¢ - - . enact ey aint ms Maemprpmainnmennsnnnend sheciom.saskamamaizawewie SAIL Mois po Sei oo we obo os Sen pring a ements tna eae a PRR . ‘ vee Fits et nn 08 ah 9 8 00 00 0 6 Gm 0 mt 08 44s 90.b0 B98. eee : cacy thetenkatenindintncngrascmansnnnnatrarriite®-tnacshntatntenutnte etrranh tndncetidr ey GPO er ® ie nen wine

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