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od “5h Ube F198 PM BEAD eons aa <7 Tr uw “. = f i! Bw o ed re ke 8. ie a a t ‘. 4 F t a k v. es € te ee mo . See DEPRES CCAS ESD 4 ddde4 tJ ’ ° = DS Cawne de ita Sey PERE Soe creas > Any railroad man will teli you it’s a good one. ‘PAGE FOUR _ The Bismarck Tribune Ap ludependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismerck ‘Tribune C mpany, Bis- Dy and entered at the postoffice at Bis- ond class mail matter. ADD seeeeeeeeeves President anc Publisber Subscription Rates Payable in Advan Daily by carrier, per year ..... Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ..... . Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota . 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 oe ¢ seeee Member Andit Bureau of Circulation ——— Member of The Associated ‘ress Tho Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news uispatches credited 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 other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN Leetshi oul Ls ake Ni YORK - - - Fifth Ave. ie. CHICAGO ‘ie DETPOIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) EVERY TOWN’S PROBLEM The Association of Commerce is sponsoring another trade-at-home campaign. It is designed to meet cer- tain specific conditions. It should have the support of every citizen of Bismarck. The question involved in the specific case is one of competition, new competition that is one of the devel- opments of the times, @ more elastic transportation system and high pressure production. In the line in which it is evidenced here and in many other lines the identical situation is beginning to bob up everywhere. It is a new business hazard for the manufacturer or the business man in the average city of this size and it will result in inevitable adjustments, For the present there is no more effective means of combating the concern which comes in from outside and bids for the favor of buyers in communities where it pays no taxes and maintains no organization than a vigorous trade-at-home policy. That can not succeed unless it has the loyal and active support of local buyers. In the present phase the problem is distinctly one of home-town loyalty. Bismarck bakers have consider- able investments in first-class plants. They produce a good product. They pay taxes. They do their share to promote civic activities which make and keep this a good town to live in and a good community to do busi- ness in. They give a splendid service which all of us take for granted, but which we should appreciate more if for any reason it was suspended for a week, No city can afford to build a wall around itself against outside concerns, of course. Yet no city can afford to have the local concerns which help to make it prosperous suffer by what in the last analysis is un- fair competition. Home and business investments in Bismarck will re- main stable and will increase or decrease in value as local institutions are supported and developed. Dollars spent at home do double duty, the advertising economists tell us. Those sent away from home are gone forever. The trade-at-home campaign of the Association of Commerce is timely. It should receive the support of every person here who has a dollar invested in Bis- marck or who gains a livelihood here. A NEW VACATIONLAND A distinguished party of United States senators is in the state today to attend the dedication of the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge across the Little Missouri at Chal- loner’s Ferry, near Watford City, and to enjoy a short outing in the picturesque Rad Lands country of North Dakota, where Theodore Roosevelt was once a cattle- man. North Dakota welcomes them. The bridge dedicated today is a milestone in its progress. It is a connect- ing link opening up a scenic highway of commanding beauty and making more accessible one of the most picturesque regions of this state. At the same time the state is dedicating a new state and federal highway as further proof of its progress and development. North Dakota’s state highway department is keeping well abreast of the times? The work it is doing and has done is the best proof of its efficiency and is of the greatest practical value. The new highway makes easily accessible to North Dakotans a part of the state that has much natural charm, for it is rugged, picturesque and it is rich in the traditions of the west that was, while qualifying as about the last bit of real west there is today in the country between the Missouri and the Columbia rivers. Thousands of North Dakotans have never seen this section of the state. They owe it to themselves to see it. The Bad Lands of North Dakota are ideal for a summer outing. They have as much and more distinc- tive charm than the Black Hills of South Dakota. They are destined to become more a tourist Mecca than ever before. The bridge and the highway opened today will speed this development. : Antelope still graze in the Bad Lands hills. Deer are plentiful. There are pretty streams and wood- Jand reaches, cool springs and picturesque cabins, gray buttes and grotesque creations of fire and erosion, sunsets of matchless glory, blue haze that falls upon the landscape with a touch of velvet, cool night winds that bear upon their wings the restoration of sound, re- freshing sleep. Then there is the ineffable spell of praimie land, the sense of bigness and breadth. Those who have known it yearn for it when they leave this state. It is restful in its grandeur. ‘There is an ideal Vacationland in North Dakota , Made more accessible today by the opening of the Roosevelt bridge and the new state and national high- ‘ways. North Dakotans should “see it first.” THE RAILROAD’S UNIVERSITY There was an interesting story yesterday in the news of the promotion of Louis Hill, Jr., to the job of trainmaster on the Butte division of the Great North- ern. It was by way of promotion for the college youth, ; who more than a year ago began the serious business tof life on the railroad his grandfather founded, as a ection That 3 is the Hill system of making railroad men, James J. Hill began his career as a transportation of empire as a dock hand in St. Paul, Hill’s father, had his first job F an either in his new position for he will ‘with rugged men in a fascinating game me : ride in the cupola of little red’ cabooses, eat, pel. the, freight . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - tunnels and trestles, toil up grades and coast smoothly down them. He will learn to be alert, resourceful, to accept responsibility, to think and act quickly. The men who carry on the operating phases of the country’s rail transportation are no mollycoddles. They perform a useful service, safeguard a great deal of valuable property and serve society in a most use- Tui capacity. They live in an atmosphere that is big with action, devoted to duty, slaves to the slogan of “On Time.” It will fall to the duty of the trainmaster on the Butte division to discipline the brakeman who goes to sleep, to choose the conductor who can move dirt when the work trains go in service, to know the switch- man who stuffs a switch list in his overalls pocket and goes out into the maze of a railroad yard at mid- night to make up and move a silk train worth millions. They are fine types of men in the great majority of cases. Youth can be taught much that is worth- while by them aside from the mechanics of the trans- portation game. There are some real thrills coming to young Mr. Hill. He will find them in the roar of the rotary snow plow clearing a mountain cut in winter, in the flere of fusees on starless nights far up in the mountains as they are seen from the fireman's seat box, around a curve and across a high trestle over a rugged mountain stream. He will live clean, work hard and learn. Yale cannot make a railroad man. The Great Northern can. And it will make a railroad man out of any young man who will spend two years in the train service of one of its mountain divisions. That's why Louis Hill, Jr., is there. INSULATED KITCHENS The Canadian department of the interior has issued a booklet dealing with insulated walls in dwelling houses. It points out that one of the advantages of insulation i¢ that noises from the kitchen cannot be heard in the rest of the home. Under certain circumstances that is an advantage, of course. There is nothing particularly inspiring about the clink of pots and pans. But the thing works both ways. There is nothing that sounds better than the sizzle of chops frying in the pan. ‘It makes a din- ner bell needless. In some homes the only thing @hat ever gets father downstairs on time for breakfast is the noise of breakfast preparations. | The noise of tre frying pan is fully as potent as its aroma. Think twice before you sound-proof your kitchen, THE ARMY MULE, RETIRED Dolorous news comes from Baltimore. An experi- mental unit of the U. S. army stationed there at Fort Leonard Wood has done away with the army mule. A new six-wheeled truck is being used instead. This may not spread, of course. Army officers are Predicting, however, that the entire army eventually will adopt new trucks, and the mule will go on the permanent retired list. It’s really serious. What is an army without an army mule? And where will the country look for its past masters in profanity if the mule passes? The army will not be what it used to be. | Editorial Comment | A MALIGNED MONARCH (London Daily Mail George III was a monarch much caricatured, much maligned. Do not eanpoae he really wondered how apples got into apple dumplings. Dr. Johnson's con- yersation with him—perhaps the most blissful moment in that great man’s life—proves that the monarch had more in his-royal head than the wits of the day pre- tended. None the less, he did delight in little, simple things, as greater personalities have done; and was never s pleased with a birthday present as when somebody fave him the smallest watch ever made—the size of a silver twopenny-bit and the weight of a sixpenc: History has condemned much of his poli we cannot but admire one trait. His greeting to the first American ambassador to appear at St. James’s, after the independence of the United States had been recognized, was a fine example of the way to take a licking gracefully. And what other monarch, since the Chinese emperor, Chin Nong, ever wrote a treatise on farming, and a good one at that? THE TOLL OF THE FOURTH (Duluth Herald) The Fourth of July continues to take American lives. i Only the method of tragedy has changed, not its deadliness. The old-fashioned Fourth killed many through ex- mioaives of one kind or another and in one way or an- other. Yesterday's accidental deaths include few from this source, but they include some from drowning, which is part of the old-fashioned story, and some from auto- mobile and airplane accidents, which are part of the new-fashioned story. Aghast at the mounting horror of Fourth of July disaster, this country denatured the Fourth by largely abolishing its explosive features. : But while these features are gone and their trag- edies with them, which is on even though new metho to do the killing. Perhaps if we tried being careful we could achieve more than we can by substituting one set of perils for another, its toll of good the tragedies keep ls have to be discovered A NATION-WIDE STRUGGLE ‘ (New York Times) Political battlegrounds, like issues, are not made by the campaign strategists. They are made by events and personalities. erefore so early it i Mr. Hoover's managers to speak of “the chief battle- ground of the East.” Governor Smith's campaign directors have not so confined the struggle. If they had, their war maps would be worthless. For many cross-currents are flowing between the parties and the have s much. more pleasant en- | most picturesque mountain divisions of | ground’ candidates, and the campaign is going to be all over the place. The Democrats have two peculiar conditions to face at the outset. Newspaper articles such as those re- cently published in the Jacksonville Journal and The Houston Chronicle exemplify one of them. The Flor- ida paper's political editor, who had opposed Governor Smith’s nomination, concedes that his choice was na- tionwide in ‘ope and comes out warmly for his election. _ Disappointed Drys and other anti-Smith voters in Florida are assured that Congress in the next four years “will determine the political, soc’ | PRET S | | We're in Favor of a Li t Home | - ittle ‘Arctic Relief? Right Here a MLE 7O THE Rescue! H'My Dear Mom: Tam no glutton for punishment. Consequent you sugges cient cousins iz out. A little of my life might do .hem good, but a little | ® of their life would finish me. Here is one point where TI dis- agree with you. I don’t believe in inviting people to visit you in a spirit of obligation or of charity. If I ask anyone to visit me_ it means I really want them, and that I expect them to be good, congenial company, I seem to remember both of these cousins rather painfully ways sat around and waited for someone else to start something. Should they ever come to visit me of their own accord—that’s a different matter. I'll do right by them. But I’m not a philanthropist, spreading joy and sunshine. I’m a selfish, modern woman, who is going to escape everything unpleasant every time she gets a chance. Anyhow, life is quite exciting now that I have ceased, temporar- ity, to be a careerist, and am be- ing just a dangerous female. For- tunately, Alan is taking quite an interest in Alice Carver, and so he doesn’t notice that Mr. Shelton is taking quite an interest in me. You know, I have decided that I love intrigue for its own sake. Mr. Shelton has a tremendous in- terest in me just now, beceuse, by all the conventions, he shouldn’t. If I were free and unattached, think of him twice. When I see him and Alan together—and_ those two really like each other—I real- ize that Alsn is much handsomer and younger, and much more my ideal of a man. But I like the dea of interesting him. For I have a feeling that I do it slightly against his will. I am sure he was violently in love with this girl whom I am supposed to re- semble. It would be so easy for me economic conditions under which Americans will : E ii panes whose proprietor cently chief host of the party convention—de- plores Governor Smith’s pecpibien stand and any move toward modification, by indirection or otherw yet it favors hi ction and, like its Florida contem- porary and Josephus Daniels, looks to Congress to pre- vent a chai the Dry laws. One article asserts, he that the only way to elect a Demo- for the party to support Smith fail to take into consideration the plai political fact that many candidates for Congress will seize the cl of ing all the way with the nominee, however wet, realizing that his coat-tails provide their only safe vehicle to Capitol. ‘he other regional disturbance calling for Demo- cratic attention is in the normally Republican farm States. Mr. Hoover's campaign board may concen- trate on the as it promises, but there is no ques- tion that the food belt will be a red blot on the war map at Republican headquarters. Wisconsin, Minne- sota, the Dakotas, Nebraska and Wyoming are nev. certainties even under orginary political’ conditions, A this campaign begins, ir restiveness is appar- When the hard-fought border states are added to the doubtful territory, it is obvious that a meeting of palitease | fn Waskingten aeneet eoatine se “battle- where—in the South as well as in the West, East and in oe} North, statisti dictions "Rigi at ct Raya wish that the terri ee likerige. Ons. MArEaRigde vs ® from my childhood—women who al- | I'm perfectly rure that I wouldn’t} to reduce him to a state of abject | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ae THERE'S. No NEED oF US “RVING To HIDE “TH” ELEPHANT FROM Vou, WE HAVENT. TAKEN OUR VACATION YETI. ae AND TH’ THREE OF US Ek SLIGHTEST HINT WAS SHOWN, HAVE DECIDED NoT~To INCLUDE ‘|| THAT I WASN'T WELCOME,- ANYBODY ELSE IM OUR VACATION J. PLANS “THIS YEAR ! = BLUASTLY 41 COULD PERSUADE ME “TO SPEAKING, THAT MEANS You! SORRY, BUT You AND ~ Td’ KEROSENE ga slavery—-since it is all in the cards— that at times I feel I ought to resist j the impulse and fight in my own | class where there is some wholesome | competition, But other times, when Alan wants | to play bridge, while the moon is out ;on the water, and I catch a certain far-away look in Brother Shelton’s eyes, I feel quite sure that there is no point in not fecing the inevitable. All my love, mom, one , NEXT: Mom upholds old-fash- ioned marriage. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | pelican sees | ei | IN NEW YORK | New York, July 13.—Few of the | “heart interest” songs that find | their way from Tin Pan Alley can | duplicate a real life story that now | goes the rounds of the piano pound- | ers’ pathway. | The characters are one of the ; most popular composers and a cute chorine who crossed his path. She | had made her mark in the chorus of the “Follies” and, again, in “Kid Boots” and, thereafter, in one or two other productions, The song writer, after the fash- ion of smitten young men, saw a golden future for her and a ro- mantic one for himself. Her tal- ents merited a better opportunity, he though. If she only had the right show and the right setting she’d land right into the big time. And so, even as the songs “build a little dream house” for their her- oines, the young composer began to build a career for the girl friend. He built an elaborate revue for her, {trapped it in the most lavish fash- | ion. What did expense matter? He ; snapped his fingers! The costumes were costly and the numbers richly mounted. He stopped writing songs to give this his whole time and at- tention. He figured to go with it on tour, to direct and to coach the girl and the play into success. Finally it went on—for just one performance! Followed a quarrel. The girl sailed for Europe where, I am told, she has remained. And, just the other day, Con Con- rad—one of the best known names in the Tin Pan Alley belt—filed a petition in bankruptcy. The sum dropped in the “flop” was given as the reason for his inability to meet certain creditors. PRIDE - HAW. LAMP ARE GREAT ! EGAD,~ IF THE ACCOMPANY You te NOW, - | WouLDat? Go, IF You - IMPLORED ME Oi} BEADED Well, mayb: he can write a song about it some day. »* 8 Speaking of Tin Pan Alley, no less an authority than Stella Ki: tells me that the song style i: ing back to those dear old lines about “my dear old “you can’t tear my heart asunder” and “vou can’t break my heart again.” The old melodies, however, do not linger on. The sentimental old words are now tricked out in jazz time for the one-steppers. The eral effect is that of an old- ‘ashioned girl with hairpins and red flannels shaking a cocktail. I note, for instance, that one of the “hot things” of the moment actually has lines that go: ‘When my pals turned me down, you're the pal that I found. . . . You're a real sweetheart.” After which one expects to hear thatthe latest slang is “twenty- three—skiddon!” One reason for the high cost of | those 26-story tower apartments has | just been calied to my attention. It seems that each time an ele- vator is started on its ir Prep aell trip the cost to the building is 20 cents. The average elevator rider somehow fails to consider the fact that elevator riding is quite as ex- pensive as taxi riding, for instance —particularly where electrical equipment is used. The traveler to the top of one of those. sky-tipping towers actually covers a distance of several hundred feet. A traveler to the top of the Woolworth Tower goes almost 750 feet. It’s the equivalent of several of Manhattan’s short blocks—enough ‘to set you back 15 to 20 cents on a taxi meter. . GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) OO | Atthe Movies ,; + ELTINGE THEATRE ‘inge for lay an iturday, James Murray, Eleanor Boardman and Bert Roach, is a human, true-to- life story and deals with the ups and downs, both serious and comical, of a young American couple who typify the great American people. It takes its backgrounds from the amusement piers of Venice, Cal., to Coney Island; includes a honeymoon sequence at Niagara Falls, street scenes from one end of New York city to the other, steamer excursions By Ahern HME, INDEED LET ME TELL You “THis M'LAD, HE oF A HooPLe Is THERE Is NOTHING KNEE I's PREVENTING im, POISON- In any case where an injury has Pierced through the skin it is im- portant to remember that cleanli- ness is far more important than the application of antiseptics. The lat- ter, while valuable, usually do not teach very deeply, and the applica- tion of iodine or any other antiseptic to a punctured wound that may reach in a half inch or more, is not very effective. hile a via) may use anti- septics, boiled water is about the best thing that a layman can use to wash out a wound. This does not mean washing the wound in any water, because the latter may be full of disease germs unless been previousy heated to high TM Jevitable, and temperature. All dirt, blood clots, splinters, and other foreign sub- stances should be washed or pulled out. After the part has been cleansed bron Gat ed the water which is all to cool to a moder- ate temperature, it may then be treated with the antiseptic. The of using the antiseptic first is that it may coagulate the tissue and seal in some poisonous matter that could have otherwise been re- moved, fim If the cut is wide, it is well to bring the edges together with very narrow strips of adhesive which may be cut in the form of two triangles, with the narrow ends joined to- gether. The narrow part may be placed over the cut, but by no means allow the entire opening to be cov-' ered, since there must be adequate room for drainage of any poisons that may form. After this the cut should be covered with sterile gauze which may be obtained from any drugstore, or if this is not obtain- able one should use cloths that have been boiled or baked. Accidental ee are almost in-} it_ is advisable that every household has a simple first- aid kit on hand to care for those, emergencies, Blood poisoning is not the common occurrence that it was a half century | ago. This is because of the im-| proved sanitary measures that are now employed. possible that at some future time a surgical asepsis will be so improved that dying from blood poisoning will no longer occur. hen blood poisoning develops in the person who received ordinary antiseptic measures, it is usually be- cause his Slood is of poor quality, and this permits the infection to spread. It is wonderful to see the effect of diet on these cases. If the rich foods like hed fats and pro- teins are elit from the diet, and fresh fruits and non-starchy vegetables are substituted, the body seems to take a new lease on life, and the healing processes take place more rapidly. When a child runs a nail into its foot, it is not as important for the mother to see if the nail was rusty ‘as to see that the foot is soaked in clean hot water. Even if blood Poisoning is actually forming, one should soak the foot and leg in hot up the Hudson river, and dramatic action shot against the backgrounds great steel mills of Pitts- of the burgh, Pa., the big kodak factories of Rochester, the Loop district of Chicago, and the great automobile a facturing plants of Detroit, ich, The story begins with the life of, an ambitious young clerk, employe of an institution which has hundreds more exactly like him. He becomes enamored with a shop girl and the two romantically marry without thought of the future, spend a honeymoon at Niagara Falls, return to Lid so and fall into the aut ocer so many young marrie couples, whe fail to emerge from it despite all their puny efforts against the circumstances which life throws about them, AT THE CAPITOL One of the most poignant and Ligh dramatic ones in the nw rey story, “Nevada,” as pic- turized by Paramount, is the death of Ernie S, Adams in the arms of Gary Cooper. e two are pals, closer than brothers, living the lives of roving cowpunchers with reputations as two-gun men. In a battle with cattle rustlers Adams is shot down by William Powell. Cooper comes upon He aca just.as his pal is breathing “I've: always been looking for a quiet Pipes to settle down and rest,” says Adams, “and now I've found it.” Cooper goes nearly mad when his friend dies. He cradles Adams’ head in his arms and vows vengeance, Like a uund .on the trail he sets off in search of Powell, a killer who will not be stopped. He finds Powell. with Thelma Todd, the girl he loves. and she begs him not wrestles for his hatred very strange manner, manages to keep his pisses to the girl and still avenge 8. John Waters, director, has han- dled this situation in a very skillful F re it at Bie, capital to- ¢ itrange has fot festared le in “Nevada.” Cleveland —Where is Christopher Columbus buried? This is the ques- tion, Historians have been telling the pons that ‘cari ny tre Gared Cocco, who attended the Pan-Ameri- lies a good vengeance Stat ig | $8853 Botte RBQoiRS ASTER SRHRSAe STATA FERRE SS | water, and every ten minutes dip the leg and foot into very cold water for one minute. This may be con- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. and diet, addressed tinued for several hours,to stimulate the circulation and assist the body to wall off, or the blood to carry away, the pus. By using this method on children I have, within a few days, seen the expulsion through the original opening, of objects like has| splinters, sand, glass, and enamel. Most of the soaking should be done the first day, and the process may be repeated for perhaps an hour on each following day until the wound attains a healthy appearance, after which it is only necessary to cover the wound with a sterile band- age to prevent dirt from entering. It is good t» allow bleeding at the start to wash out any foreign sub- stance. Then use this washing treatment without waiting to find out if blood poisoning is going to develop. Care taken in this manner may avoid much misery and prevent serious consequences, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: W. L. wiites: “What causes white spots to form on one’s nails? Have been told they indicate that something is wrong with the system in a nervous form. Is that right?” Answer: The person who has white spots on his nails is usually nervous, due to some form of acid- osis from which he is suffering, which acidosis interferes with a normal distribution of silica to his growing nails. Question: Mrs. N. W. asks: “What do you think of chocolate as a drink?” Answer: Chocolate seems to pro- deal of biliousness, and of course, requires a large amount of sugar to make it palatable. I never recommend it at any time as a food or drink. Question: Mrs. J. H. writes: “I am 60 pounds overweight and would like very much to practice your fa- mous frutt juice diet. However, one problem confronts me. I am in the second month of pregnancy. Would the diet prove harmful?” Answer: The fruit juice fast would be decidedly beneficial to you at this time. Fruits contain prac- tically all the bone-building material you require, but while taking such a fast your body has a charice to elim- inate impurities and your system will be cleansed to more easily meet the ordeal you are about to go through. After the fasting keep your diet well balanced, and do not make the mistake of thinking you must “eat for two.” If you will send me a large, self-addressed’ stamped envelope, I will be glad to send you some articles called the “Mother- are Series.” Ask for them by this title. is-date in. MERICAN HISTORY JULY 13 1584—Sir Walter Raleigh’s expedi- tion landed in Virginia, 1753—College of Philadelphia (Uni- versity of Pennsylvania) char- tered. 1787—Law passed forbidding slav- ery north of the Ohio river. 1865—Barnum’s museum in New York burned. eh 1. BARBS | oe If that legless aviz:-> &fie to fly the Atlantic at least he'll have no kick coming. . nd The New York welfare council says New York is no place to be without friends, a job, relatives or a bank account. Well, maybe not! oe @ An Indianapolis man drove his car head on into a truck loaded with amite, but it didn’t go off. Lots of drivers cross railroad tracks with- out looking, too. se 8 Michigan conservation officials say the automobile is “a menace to wild life.” But maybe they haven't tried the experiment of loading an automobile with a little gin. Now that cigaret lighters are the vogue, what in the world is one to pick one's teeth with? An airplane tri2 to Venus would cost $1,400,000,000, according to a scientist's calculation, But there are places right here in the United ites where you can spend that much on a vacation. | The husband who sued for divorce because his wife knocked him cold with a skillet probably entertains the opinion that she left him flat. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) SHORT SKIRTS? OLD! Berne, ety tye under the sun.” Rec. ords that when Charles III wedded Beatrice of Portugal Genevese wom- en of the period paraded with skirts ers the knees, in honor ofthe oc- casion, Scrvice Berlin.— W 1300 of them in all parts of Germany, fd trying to forget. the same of ped into Franz's ‘was to become enganed, widows preferred, ob- a loan of money or jewelry, and San abaent himse:f on the press! pretext business in sha soars, OS ee Oe eC —