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> ‘E FOUR 3 + \set out nobly to be at our best, and fall far The Bismarck Tribune ° of that shining goal. We do the thing An ladependent Newspaper | we should not have done, and leave undone the THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER {thing that we should have done. (Established 1873) Yet out of this never-ending conflict of the |spirit, comes personality, power and influence, Marck, N. D., and entereu at the postoffice at Bis-/It makes us what we are. It is the secret of ™aarck as second class mail matter. lsuch tremendous personalities as Lincoln or Ceorge D. Mann .............President and Publisher) Roosevelt. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance I Being one’s true self is not e: But beyond Datly by carrier, per year . ean its accomplishments lie the rew: rds of life. Datly by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) , The great Bard was right: “To thine own self Daily by mail, per year, ‘ be true, and it must follow, as the night the Weis ty gsi shtsite or Nori Dakota . day, thou canst not then be false to any man.” Published by the Bismurck Tribune C mpany, Bis- Elimination More Imperative Recently newspapers and railroads gave wide publicity to a decision of the United States s |preme court defining the respective responsi- bilities of railroads and motorists at grade |erossings. Among other things the ruling sald “When a man goes upon a railroad track he knows that he goes to a place where he will be killed if a train comes upon him before he is clear of the track. He knows that he musc | stop for the train, not the train stop for him. |In such circumstances it seems to us that if a E OGAN E dri cannot be sure otherwise whether a sic MURR: <~ Pitta Ave. Be annie (train is dangerously near, he must stop and get Smtower Bids. Kresge Bldg./ Ut of his vehicle, although obviously he will |not often be required to do more than to stop and look. It seems to us that if he relies upon not hearing the train or any signal and takes On Being Yourself no further precautions, he does so at his own The difficulty of being yourself will be ad-| risk mitted by any one who has ever apologzed for| With responsibility for his own life thus] his own words or deeds by saying, “I was not} placed squarely upon the individual, it would} myself when that happened.” Perhaps this|seem that he could be persuaded to exercise + poor substitute for your better self is the crez-| greater caution in crossing grade crossings. ture of worry, or illness, or some intemperance It would seem so, but it has not worked out of body or spirit. But even the best of us ex-!that way. No diminution in grade crossing perience the difficulty of being always at his|accidents has been noted since the nation’s ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year .... Weekly by mail, .a state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako a, re year secede 160 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the) use for republication of all news uispatches credit+d | to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published : herein. All rights of republication of all otuer mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY (Official City. State and County Newspaper) ’ THE BISMARU,. {RIBUNE TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1928 | The Last Adventure | GREAT UNKNOWN, best. achievement. The great singer listen to it in comfort. We How naturally he sings! How much more difficult then To be at your best physically is a difficuit Yet behind that sim-| driver. [Beet tribunal This only must train his} phas often remark: PS, it is to be our- | cost serves to upon the urgent need for grade cross voice hour after hour before his audience can) ing elimination, better safety and warning de- and greater care on And the knowledge that they are not ple naturalness are years of grinding practice. financially liable for accidents which have them dearly in the past should not in- selves in that realm of intangible thing called) fluence the railroad personality. There seems to be a certain de-| relaxing their precautions against crossing ac- pravity into which we naturally gravitate. We} cidents. I handed down its ruling. place additional em- the part of the and their employes into Presidential Campaii Ritchie May In Editor's Note: This, the 20th | of a series of Presidential Cam- paign Portraits written for the Tribune by Rqbert Talley, tells the story of Gov. Albert ( Ritchie, Maryland. Tomorrow's article will discuss Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas. BY ROBERT TALLEY i ASHINGTON,| May 1.—Fifty-one | years old, tall, M good looking and a bachelor, Albert; C. Ritchie, three! times governor of | Maryland, is a re- ceptive although | not an” avowed nomina- Ritchie, an! Episcopalian, is a close friend and a loyal supporter of Al Smith. As long as the New| Yorker is in the race Ritchie intends to fight for him. But if the his-* tory of Madison Square Garden is repeated at Houston and : deadisck makes Smith’s nomination impossible, Gov. Ritchie may be trotted out as the second choice of the Smith forces as was Oscar Underwood in 1924, Refreshingly frank, mits that the mention of his name in connec. tion with the pres- idency is pleasing to him. Equal- ly candid, he ad- mits that he en- tered politics when a young law- yer because a judi- cio amount of helped his w business. Ritchie_ad- * is a Albert Ritchie wet,” a strong edvocate of state rights and perhaps the greatest vote-getter in the history of Mary- He is the only man who has ever Served more than one term as gov. ernor, in the long history of that} state. He was first elected governor in 1919 by a bare majority of 165 votes, reelected in 1923 by a ma- jority of 41,000 and reelected again 1927 by a majority of 61,000. | He entered politics as a deputy! city solicitor at Baltimore, then be- came people's counsel for the Mary- land Public Service Commission, ‘Was next attorney general of the state and finally became governor. Gov. Ritchie views prohibition en- ment as a failure, with the ex- Planation that the mass of the peo- Ple do not want prohibition, and as- sails the federal dry law as an in- vasion of die nen He thinks i state should be permitted to fipcite the question for itself. Maryland is one of the four states that have no state prohibition law) and it offers no aid to federal au-! thorities in this respect. Ritchie takes the position that it is a gov- ernment law and therefore it is up to the government to enforce : if it can. He is a “wet,” he ad- mits it and offers no bunk about “the sacred duty to uphold the Con- stitution.” “We have spent nearly $150,000,- 000 trying to enforce prohibition,” q says, “and have lost nearly four billions in revenues while the effort ‘was being made—and our last state {fs worse than our first was. Too Many Federal Bureaus . Ritchie is best known for} anti-prohibition view, but this| one item in his general, program. It has at- most attention prey it is the most colorful item. Ritchie believes that the from to much He ry a malting of r i and not government. Goy, Albert C. Ritchie Smith's Votes | ing said: ae ae ign Portraits—No. 20 herit Governor dictated by somebod haps 3,000 miles aw: Gov. Ritchie is on r who is per- ord as hav- Democratic party has al-| stood for the rights of the} because it believes that} through local self-government we} can best attain efficient goveram nt and best pr liber. | ties. This reliance upon and acquiescence in federal power is being overdone to an extent that} imperils not only the future of the! states as s'gqcs. but the Union it- | self as w | “Our goverhment has become the | mozt_fegulatory in the world, ex- cept Russia and Italy. Inspectors} and spies and official regulators| follow the 100 per cent American! from the day he draws his first! nourishment from his mother's cal spected breas “This great problem (prohibition) cannot be settled by trying to stand- ardize human conduct. A yard-}| stick cannot be applied to it} throughout the country, he com- qunities which resent this law can-j be clubbed into taking it. | “He (the citizen) is told what he, may eat, what he may smoke and} everything that he may not drink. | What he may read or write or see on the stage is prescribed, too, and not content with this the govern- ment advises him how to hang cur- tains in his home, what meat to} cook for his dinner and in the year; 1927, under the au es of the De- partment of Agriculture, there was distributed throughout the country a treatise entitled ‘A Pocket Essay on Kissing.’” | A Favorite With All Maryland’s Democratic and equal-} ly Democratic governor—a favorite} alike with the farmers. the oyster-! men and the city folks—is such/| despite the fact that he comes from the upper crust of Maryland ar tocracy. The Ritchie family line in Maryland runs back for nearly two centurie The of a Baltimore judge, young Ritchie grew up in a circle of quality and means. He took his A. B. degree at Johns Hopkins in 1893 and later studied law at University of Maryland, from which he graduated into politics by mak. ing soap-box speeches at ward ral- ies. He does not play his aged mother, companion, he has never driven an auto because he prefers not to} and has no hobby but work. The} latter has brought about almost aj complete reorganization of the state government during his three terms and doubtless explains much of the vote-getting popula that been his. golf, he reveres | TOMORROW: Senator Curtis cf Kansas. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Charles | RES. U. 8. PAT OFF. 900, ev nee seavice, we. ee | ELTINGE THEATRE jand Hedda Hopper head the jin “Love and Learn” at the Eltinge | for Wednesday and Thursday. the i 1¢ 0 is his closest | ¢; has | , At the Movies — 1 Esther Ralston, Lane Chandler cast _ Miss Ralston has had an interest- ing career in motion pictures. She Wi discovered” in the famous pic- ture, “Peter Pan,” which won her supporting parts to various screen stars. Her popularity was estab-| lished in “The Quarterback” in which she played opposite Richard Dix; “Old Ironsidés,” Paramount's epic of the famous old naval vessel, and “Children of Divorce” in which she ed with Clara Bow. Her first starring vehicle was “Fashion for Women;” then followed n Modern — Commandmnents;” “Figures Don't Lie,” and “The Spot- light.” Her latest effort, “Love and Learn” is said by critics who have previewed the picture as firmly stamping her as one of the leading lights appearing in motion pictures today. CAPITOL THEATRE Mystery in its most enthralling form, compounded with tragedy and rama combine to form one of the most startling, interest_ compelling dramas ever flimed, in “The Cat and the Canary,” the Universal produc- tion now playing at the Capitol Theatre. Almost from the very first foot of film of this absorbing mystery- play, action commences in ever-in- creasing tempo; c:imax caps climax; dramatic sequences pile up one after another, while the suspense is tem- pered with opportunity injected comicalities, contributed by Flora Finch, Gertrude Astor and Creigh- ton Hale. Laura La Plante, the vivacious blonde star deserves the greatest praise for her excellent portrayal of Annabelle West. A featured cast, including Ar- thur Edmund Carew, Yorrest Stan- ley, George Siegmann, Tully Mar- shall, Martha Mattox and Lucien Littlefield, give exceptionally fine support in their respective roles. Lloyd Jordan Takes Cornell Coach Job N. Y., May 1.—@)— dan makes out as well Y job £3 coach at Colgate 2 hes at tuicring the Jeanette, school football team, some ears are nhead for the urt and gridiron. Jor- eleven has won 29 ‘ed two and Icst but one in he has been coach. At Ccigate Jcrdan will be head coach of bee!:ctball and assistant mextor, He was a famous y of Littsburgh athlete of years ago, playing end rner’s elevens and ser- in 1922. He was ezack basketball pl: Pittsburgh institution and shore likewise in baseball and track. Hamilton, Lloyd Ji five or That Baby You’ve Longed For Mrs, Burton Advises Women on Motherhood and Companionship “For several years 1 was denied ; the blessing of motherhood,” writes Mrs, Margaret Burton of Kansas City. “I was terribly nervous and subject to periods of terrible suffer- ing and melancholia. Now I am the proud mother of a beautiful little daughter and a true compan- ion and inspiration to my husband. I believe hundreds of other women “ould like to know the secret of my happiness, and I will gladly reveal it to any married woman who will write me.” Mrs. Burton offers her advice entirely without charge. She has nothing to sell. Letters should be addressed to Mrs. Margaret Bur- ton, 2568 Massachusetts, Kansas City, Mo. Correspondence will be strictly confidential.—Adv. Plowing gardens. Phone 62 Dignity is cne thing hat can't b> preserved in alcohol. Wachter Transfer. “WASLINGTON ¢ LETTER . BY RODNEY DUTCHER The Franklin Institute, holding Washington, May 1.—Three old; that the modern movie wouldn’t| inventors, who have invented things/ have been possible without Jenkins’ | Pisses : Kpelle at oe) Projector, voted him a medal as the an ancient feud which has been; movie's creator. Jenkins apparent- brought before Congress. j ly gave the first large screen movie On one side is ‘thomas A. Edi-] shows, He says that the so-called Edison vitascope was exhiibted un- son. On the other side are Emile Ber-| der the name phanteecope in’ Ate lanta in 1895, liner and C. Francis Jenkins of The Jenkins-Edison feud only Washington. dates back 30 or 40 years. The tight Gata ona ae teat ance a ve New hersey, which prov|. ‘The Edison-Berliner feud dates back at least at 1878, when Berliner Perkins of New Jersey which pro- vides for the striking of a congres-| bs fs n filed _a caveat on a microphone with the Patent Office and Edison fol- sional medal in aad of ee and his many achievements. Con- e ic gress aeldoni gentita such a medal. ; lowed him 13 days later with ap- its last recipients were the Wright, Plicatton for a patent on a trans- brothers and Colonel Lindbergh. mitter designed to get the same ef- Berliner and Jenkins, both of! fect, but wi ich the Berliner faction whom claim important inventions | says didn’t work. My dear Marye: I really think Alan ought to be told about your friendship with that “Pede,” as you call him. Dear me, I do hope you don’t call him that to jis face. It’s too familiar, Marye. It may be only a straw, but it shows that you're thinking of him infor- mally. I'm sure you .can see that you mustn’t let him know that. The sort of boy friends you had before you were married mighi nave known that you didn’t mean any- oe thing by whatever you called them - igo ea called Lelie acrusinae foeeeaard Mrs. Leslie shows a letter from| but what would you do if this man eee a president of the American Tele-| suddenly addressed you as phone and Telegraph Co. recog-|‘“Marye?” I hope you insist upon nizing Berliner as the “first and| being called Mrs. Meredith by original” inventor of the micro-| strangers, though I doubt that you hone and the first to associate the| d' induction coil witl, the contact transmitter—two indispensables in telephony and radio broadcasting. Berliner patented the gramophone in 1887, a machine both vibrating and propelling the needle. This, he says, is the present Victor talk- ing machine. Edison had taken out a previous patent on a tinfoil cylin- der phonograph, but Berliner says Bae now. 0 he invented the mcdern disc talk-| heard it so much it. no longer shocks ing machine and the process of|me. And that’s proof of what I’ve making unlimited numbers of extact | been telling you. Humans can get copies from one master record. In| used to almost anything ‘no matter 1897 the Franklin Institute award-|how terrible it seems to them at ed Berliner a ~icdal for his gramo- phone, but on Edison’s 75th birth- claims the movies. Mrs. Clara aay tasseesnied Jem hs enor en Louise Leslie, who is trying to per-| pheus Discovering the Gramophone suade Congress to ditch the bill,| Record,” which depicted Orpheus has collected a stack of evidence tol holding aloft a disc record, Mrs show to all concerned. i ‘i “s i | age Leslie, protesting to Congressman Perkins, charged that Edison in- vented “only the absolutely value- less tinfoil phonograph.” Berliner was associated with the Bell Laboratories in their pioneer Naturally, they haven’t rushed up to Capitol Hill to make pubic pro- test. But they’re intensely inter- ested in the efforts of a girl lob- byist who is working against the bill on their behalf. And they hope to have it stopped, even though the House Committee on Coinage has reported it favor- ably and Secretary of the Treasury Melton, who makes the government medals, is said to favor it. The anti-Edison movement is based on the contention that Edi- son has claimed or appeared to claim that he invented the micro- phone, the continuous current trans- former, the sramopnane and the motion picture machine. Berliner claims to be the inven- tor of the first three and Jenkins lo. I declare it takes my breath to ling, lover, thriller and everything else they can think of. Anyone coming from another country and listening to them would think America was a land of free lovers, Oh yes, I’m using that ex- ple set us by our offspring. Anyway I’m sure you'll need a new vocabulary soon if you want to use an endearing term that means something. It’s got so that strangers use words that even en- gaged couples blushed over when I was a girl. But of course, I know he didn’t mean to be insulting. He’s typical of most of the modern boys and The argument as to the invention of the motion picture seems to rest on the point whether Edison’s kine- tograph, designed to take motion pictures, or Jenkins’ intermittent | gays, girls, however. And I’m afraid that shutter, enabling. them to be Re an ultra modern girl like you, produced on screen, was e 'D. , with , wil more important factor. Edison WANTE Extra clothing pares UN aoa ae ssech, wil salesman and tailors—S. E. ts his claim on th rd: Ar ia ce peneataas "S| Bergeson, Bismarck, N. D. n from a country where the boys and machine. girls are more reverent toward their | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern or CAM BELIEVE ME OR AGT, PARDNER BUT FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, I WAS “TH’ BEST STRONG MAN SUGGLER I VAUDEVILLE 2 au MY ACT WAS A PANIC fe TWIRLIN” ARTILLERY WHEELS OM ME ARMS, AN” BALANCIN’ A SEVEN HUNDRED POUND CANNON ON ME CHIA, WHILE “Te!” ORCHESTRY PLAYED TH’ LIGHT BRIGADE !=-TALK ABOUT INSPIRIN’ !. ~~ ONE NIGHT WHILE “TWIRLIN’ TH’ ARTILLERY WHEELS, AN” BALANICIATH’ CANAIOAS OA ME CHIAL, “TH” AUDIENCE GOES INTO A RIOT OF APPLAUSE, “1 A. HUADRED BLIGH TER IRRITATES GZ, ME, THINKING T AM STUPID ENouGH “fo BELIEVE —THAT POUADS OF CANNON FALL ON ME NECK: hear Frank’s boy and girl friénds} what he said. But I'll write again calling each other sweethcart, dar-| soon. Goodness knows I’ve] South American men. first. I wouldn’t wonder if we old} New York, May 1—Valets, chauf- folks go wrong yet, from the exam-| feurs, and butlers of Wall Street | | D ORMCCOY WHO CAN GE CANNED 700DS WHOLESOME The title of “Canned Foods” is generally restricted to foods put up in tin cans and sterilized by heat- ing. The object in all kinds of can- ning is the same, that is, to kill all microorganisms started, and then by the exclusion of all air to pre- vent any new ones from gaining entrance. Microorganisms speedily | render any food unfit for consump- tion because they induce fermenta- tion, There are many varieties of canned foods on the market. All kinds of food, including fish, poultry, meat, vegetables, fruit, etc., are put up in cans, and the United States stands today as the foremost ex- ponent of canned goods, the STE of this country\being considerably greater than the tetal of all other parts of the world combined. The first method of canning was a process invented by a Frenchman named Francois Apperp, a_ little more than a hundred years ago, and has been improved and amplified by modern mechanical devices and equipment. In this country the can- ning of all kinds of foods developed very rapidly during the Civil war period. The industry has gradually expanded because of the need of a greater conservation of vegetables and perishable goods of every kind. Today our canneries serve the need largely as community kitcnens in which all the rough and dirty work of preparing vast guantities of food is done for the convenience and nourishment of innumerable house- holds. Thousands of acres of fruit, grain, and vegetable land, and great herds of cows, and fisheries, are dedicated to their service. The details in cannery methods; vary with different foods. Some foods are placed in the cans in a raw condition, and others are fi! blanched or parboiled ,as with as- paragus, beans, and peas. P The time required to insure steril- ization varies. With some vege- tables, those of a tougher texture require a longer time for the full heat to penetrate to the center of the can; also, because of their pe- culiar composition. some foods need very long processing. As long as fresh, sound foods are used, if sterilization has been com- plete and if the cans are very tight, the contents, whether meat, vege- tables or fruit, will be of equal nu- tritive value to those cooked in the household. Some dietitians argue that the vitamin content is lowered by food standing in a can for months before it is used, but there is no evidence to show that this decrease is very great. Some of the best canned foods to use are: gpinach, asparagus, string beans, corn, French artichokes, HEALTHeDIET ADVICE & Dr Frank McCoy __., sip Me Fast Wary 20 HOT, t|do so while taking the orange j! Mi 70 Sole IN CARE OF THIS PAPER pineapple, (especially if prepared without syrup) and olives. Tee ee canned foods of any Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questiows on health and diet, add i to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. kind, be sure and examine the con- tents carefully as soon as the can is opened, and empty out into i dish, If there is a strong odor noted upon opening tke can, this should always be regardes as @ danger signal, whether with fish or any other food, and ircespective of the of the can. » ANSWERS shape or appearan QUESTIONS A? Question: Mrs. J. H. L. w ites: “I read your advice every day and think it’ is wonderful. Will you please tell me what causes the ivel- mg as if there is a jump In one’s throat? My coctor tells me it is nervousness. The ten years I have had this trouble have been terrible to me.” Answer: The nervousness you are suffering from and the lump in your throat are doubtless caused by some form of thyroid derange- ment, perhaps a small goitre. An- other cause of a choking fe. li the throat comes from pelvic di orders, such as metritis, enterit or from rectal trouble. ( Question: . J. a “When fasting on orange juice can one drink, during the day, water in which vegetables e been cooked?” Answer: If you wish to take the not vegetable juice dict you should You might try the veget: juice one day and the orange juice the next. Question: Mrs. B. ask: “Will you please tell me the food elements ef velatin?”” Answer: Gelatin ig a form of pro- tein, very beneficial to the body as a food. Those in health will find it advantageous to include it in the diet quite often, and it is tremen- dously helpful to those inclined to nose-bleed, on account of its blood coagulating powers. Question: K. L. writes: “I have used cocoa-butter for four weeks for a thin face, but it has not helped. Can you suggest anything better?” Answer: There is not much you can do for a thin face except through increasing the circulation through the tissues you will be able to make a “shapel face, This applies to the fat as well as the thin face. parents. At least I’ve heard that the young folks of the Argentine are not like the younger genera- tion in America. Mr. Northrop told me. He’s been to South America. When you wrote about your new “friends” I went over to the North- rops and had a talk with Bert. If I didn’t have to go and cut some rhubarb for supper I'd tell you In the meantime, Marye, lease don’t encourage that Senor edro. . Lovingly, MOM. girl. Some might call them bad; but I claim they are the victims of lack of education and lack of understanding. Their homes have never been proper homes their lives have been an endless story of strug- gle. They're not bad. They just don’t know and haven't had a chance.” GILBERT SWAN. > Si, yaa A OO BARBS | ——_——— The Sidewalks of New York are kind of exclusive these days. A seat on the New York Curb the other ° NEXT: Some information about —— [_ IN NEW YORK ‘ figures suddenly find themselves personages of importance. Servant day sold for $85,000. oe See where some of the cigaret manufacturers cut prices. Well, the ladies do love a bargain. Spring Poem: You Do It girls and maids in the homes of the rich have been surprised at their sudden popularity. Their phones have buzzed and they have received endless invitations to theaters and su) rs. e notion has prevailed that they were in a splendid position to get “inside information” on the Wall Street activities of their employers. They have k::n gpotted” and trailed; their market orders have been watched. In @ few instances there was some reanon for this, but as a general rule employers dis- courage speculation among their employes and their friends. A few chauffeurs and butlers, now drive their own cars, thanks to the friend- +f market. And a waiter in a Wall treet cafe where traders gather for breakfast made $85,000 in three anys the other hand, the man who hears more “inside” information Here are suggestions for the spring poet: «pring, gz, love, dove, tweet, swect, hi, mush, ss, brass, fair, p; prey, itty. Then read it and ick. Al Smith says he seeffho differ- ence between the peopl@of North Carolina and the people of New York City. He’d better take his next vacation in some other state |than North Carolina. A couple in California stood on their heads all night when a fold- ing bed locked up; the woman sues for $35,000 and the man for $5,000, Probably the man wants less be- cause he’s used to being stood on his head. ee Dainty little parasols for men are becoming fashicnable, says a dis- itch from Paris. Fifty million ee must be wrong, after For Sale—Fertilizer, Black than anyone outside the “street”| Dirt, Sand and Gravel. Phone never gambles a dime. barber, favored by a score of mar- ket manipulators. He has hundreds of “good things.” But he never plays . He has passed some of them on to close friends and he has seen them get the “mar- ket fever.” He is content with a rich patronage that recently made it possible for him to open a $100,- 000 shop. hs Statistics show that some 2,000 girls leave the small towns of America each year to come to New York. These same statisn:s show that the average age of a runaway. irl has drop} from 17 to 15. nd statistics being what they are, they chan; little from year to year—parti janty where motives are concerned. Girls leave home to vame to New York, so the records show, use of unsympathetic homes; because @ romantic- mindedness that gives the “big city” a magnetic lure; because of an un- plement or embarrassing incident 2 ier Dome, imp which breeds a ies! Oo ge as far at sible and find uiier Pfs “where nobody kno-vs you”—and, of jortment of course, the usual ass stage-struck maidens. A woman who hari mothered thou- sands of these runaways tells me that ther have wandered in from every city and hamlet upon this continent. “And thy’re not quit- ters,” she tells, me. “I’ve known them to wander up and down the streets, without food and without shelter, "re game kids—these youngsters who come to fight New York. And that is one of ‘“~ rea- sons J can say that I never have met what you'd call a realy bad He is a/ 62. Wachter Transfer. been given | ~~ | | | i as s, 7 . . . 4 i; | Vy