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PAGE FOUR “Er he Bismarck Tribune + An Independent Newspaper the modern Pullman’s service or the new speed and comfort that is being developed in air travel, The steamboat played its in the development of THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER the country. It panty the ibdiendy, the eae trad- (Established _ 1878) er, the barrel of rum and the soldier far up the inland Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| waterways of the west to pave the way for the march N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis-| of civilization, with its virtues and its vices, nd class mail bg ere) t and Publisher} It traversed the upper Missouri and it passed Bis- Rh iesthseaea marck in days when swimming buffalo delayed its Subscription Rates Payable in Advance course in midstream. It aided the army in its cam- patty by carrier, per year .... oe paigns. It helped the settler with the first and only ly by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . transportation he had connecting him with the markets arck) . ly by mail, outside of Non Dakota . It carried the broad-beam breaking plow in {ts hold and mounted guns that sent the Indians fleeing in Uae? Ly soni in Hlavel Ghrec yeas the, terror when they impotently assailed it with their Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, flaming arrows. It called strong, resourceful men to U per year .... sroscscvcecssccscsssce S00 lity service in the work of building empire. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Without it the river is lonesome today and its Member of The Associated Press beached hulks along the river seem pitiful ghosts of GIE The ew oe ee Ea yas pained their one-time splendor. j for republication of all news atches credite re ‘ vo it of not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and “ The river race ee the book of time to @ page of Varlso the local news of spontaneous origin ublished | yesterday that is always charming, for upon it is writ- rein, All rights of republication of all other mat-/ten the record of brave old days, Ge herein are also reserved. by mail, per year, V Min state outside Blam .00| of the world. Foreign Representatives ne LOGAN ei OSes) £ iH E NEW YORK --« Fi Ve. q est CHICAGO 6 eTROIT profower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ph te iia aly th - Whi (Official City, State and County Newspaper) clo: HOORAY FOR HOOVER! ave Secretary Hoover has written finis for a fine old js sustom of the political campaigns. He is not kissing Matbabies. When fond mothers hold up the baby for him a to kiss, he just pats the baby and hands it back. cide ‘The custom of kissing the baby in campaigns as prac- political technique began some years ago in Ten- . Sie see. It was tremendously effective in the back + }lo¢ountry. It was credited with sending at least one con- is gressman to join the Republican majority at Wash- : othe on. ar This man not only kissed the baby. He was other- PAaNgwise accomplished. He could play the fiddle in a way the that appealed to the mountain folks. He could lead a sanshake-roof meeting house prayer meeting, he begged from chaw of tobacco with much nonchalance and he had a to bway of making people feel that he was just folks. spe: He was a builder of political technique despite the andfact that he doubled in brass. Few were as versatile he in the matter of music, mixing of natural bon praia, But any man could kiss a baby and scores di ae ‘Then the custom received a blow in Oklahoma wh ofa man with squirrel whiskers having bird’s nest fe: cowtures overdid things a bit. He went to Washington, iafell in love with a comely widow and wrote soulful fivescetry to her which in time found its way into the WHAT GOOD ROADS ARE WORTH Thousands of people visited Minot last Sunday to see the ships and aviators of the Reliability Air tour. The great crowd came quickly and left just as quickly after getting a real thrill from their visit and the opportunity it gave to witness the rapid development of air trans- Pportatio The manner in which the crowd was handled, the speed with which it assembled and the distances it traveled were a tribute to quite another kind of trans- portation. They proved that good roads are creating new social and business centers, adding to the worth- while things in life and serving the ends of progress impressively. Minot is cashing in on the interest its civic bodies have taken in the past in good roads and their building. Within two hours any day Minot can draw a crowd from the Canadian border on the north to a territory 75 miles to the east, west and south because it has good roads. Good roads are bringing thousands of dollars’ worth of new business to Minot. The experience of that city is pointing the way to other cities, Aberdeen, South Dakota, is another city that has in- terested itself in roads and is being correspondingly benefited. So are Fargo, Grand Forks, Jamestown and Valley City. jismarck has made a good beginning, but its road situation still leaves much to be desired. More than any city in the state Bismarck has a right toa high- way system giving it easy and rapid communication by all-weather roads to every section of the state. Civie interest will be well directed if it turns with added in- terest to the road situation as an early objective, prete Al etetaadad t . eat Mothers who had permitted him to kiss their babies, | Editorial Commen t whiskers and all, took umbrage. They rose up and rayspoke their minds, Thereafter it was not good politics forto kiss the baby in Oklahoma. Gradually the reform TRIPOLI'S BEAUTIFUL JEWESSES, Atty, ad. (Vienna Neues Wiener-Journal.) liz Mr, Hoover has relegated the custom to the imbo of posed to be the nowt Resetith ee in Se aingorsotten things. He has acted from the constructive} older pictures they are often shown behind barred win- eduviewpoint, He has dignified politics. He has saved Matinee: Be Org ie ectien teammate | majhundreds of fretful babies from an ordeal, especially Siw hatian falwatent Bicg Jewish women of Tripoli tri¢when men with luxuriant whiskers seek the suffrage of| of cou; UNL ARS sha-beantital as in-olden angie Leen f thethe people. And he has saved hundreds of dignified] some are really marvelous. But there came new days St candidates that vast embarrassment that comes when a] &Nd new customs and a meane. world. There came the nosfond mother thoughtlessly hands up a baby to be kissed Rack > belate ee ee Susi 2 orn peiWho has just had a catch-as-catch-can wrestling mateh| that the most important job of a beautiful woman is to uni With an all-day sucker, dashed roses oh Latisaen passers} piers snemtea 5 . ‘ lewe out ni tl ti Fe Campaigns will be more sanitary, babien willbe hap-| Je™ "380,60 out Roy and huy three pounds of potatoes trlpier and candidates will be relieved of what at one/ garments of Solomon’s days. twostage of its development bade fair to become a solemn| Sometimes these Tripolitan women wear modern of duty which might have received recognition in party} Clothes on holidays, with short skirts and beige silk ae piatforms. stockings. And then they are really the most beautiful. ‘wor a’ bas THE GREAT GAMBLE "CHICAGO'S TALL BUILDING { Crop reports have not been more optimistic for years (Sioux City, Ia., Journal) 4 Altitude records are being broken in other things than chaover the northwest generally than just now. There if} aviation. The Woolworth buildiag in New York is to : in ‘basis for the reports going out and they are cause for] become dwarfed by other structures already planned H Tthe more optimistic attitude of all concerned. Appar- a ceagnes oe in Datsoll koi x We oe cages 2, i and another in Chicago to be calle ie Apparel Manu- | raiently as of today the farmer has won in the great] fuers' Mart. ‘The Chicago structure orll be: the 5 avinigamble. highest building in the world, towering upward seventy- ; Zeve ‘And farming is the great gamble with wind and sun, ae stories mid canting. Se Moc lmoEy + thy, uilding is one of sixty stories. e Chicugo structure + “" yeain and hail, drouth and insect pests. will have fifteen more. The Woolworth building is 792 will As a matter of fact the season is just here when the| feet in height; the Chicago skyscraper will extend up- threrop enters the critical period. Rust may sap the|ward for an additional sixty-eight feet. Th- Eiffel FM vitality of the plant, Drouth may blight it in vast eigen ee age acta ‘ ‘um the new pm S In building romrnes. Hail may pound it into the ground, Insect construction that engineers and architects have not yet willpests may destroy it. hed the limit upward. Yet a limit is bound to be Nev" he farmer knows this and usually he is not dis- Poached eventiwl Tat Hs be boned SnAE p calarone the posed to count his chickens before they are hatched.| Puiiding may tower in safety. et POW high a ey He has learned, too, that too optimistic crop reports are pica acu te the occasion for market reactions that are not in his « " ‘afavor, He is not inclined to enthuse too much, because BAINES: SPE ERE ROE ‘experience has taught him expressions of enthusiasm! Knowledge of how to live, how to combat, disease, t¢goo often cost him money. ped ie set hygiene. ennication, fieatcs, CAntne ~the 3 ‘ ‘ ing | Other branches o: ical science have aided in atti This is a time of anxiety for the grain growing} Siding to man’s life span. But we still believe that farmer. He watches every cloud. He prepares for the| business cannot go through a period of more than St rush and the toil of harvest. He is under strain. He eighteen months to two years of prosperity without has mortgages to think of and financial obligations to| running into reaction and decline. consider. He would rather, quite naturally, not talk] All the time we have been learning more about what Nei 4 igh makes prosperity and what unmakes it. With hand-to- Jpbout the crop until it is safe in the grain bins. mouth buying relieving business of the risks and + Un: o the non-farming public in recent years has come| speculative temptations of large inventories, with ' §t" sympathetic understanding of this attitude. So today|Jabor earning enough and having the time to enjoy ‘ ‘ enough of the good things of life to keep the factory me: everybody in the agricultural country is rooting for the| wheels turning at an even pace, with The railroads Ch¢ farmer, They want to see him win in the great gamble,| functioning smoothly in the transportation of an Ae for when he wins everybody wins. evenly maintained volume of freight, aren’t we about mo; And no man more richly deserves to win. The oe pel p lenatbenting of the life span of our periods Ge (resent prospect is most reassuring. We have gotten rid of smallpox epidemics. May the we get rid of distressing business depressions? ‘ Yes, but don’t bank on it. \ WILL THE RIVERS LIVE AGAIN? Steamboat racing is being revived on the Mississippi. E ‘here was a colorful river race finish Monday at New Stu THE WHEAT RUSH TO MARKET mot Richmond, Ohio, when the Ohio river packet Chris (St. Paul Dispatch.) Dex Greene nosed out she Betsy Ann by two lengths in a] Less than a'weele after the first car of winter wheat by 20-mile race up the Ohio. Thousands of spectators] arrived in Chicago from Wichita, Kansas, the term- ; St Jined the banks of the Ohio to see the finish. inals began to feel a sudden and unexpected rush. The x 8 ‘i ‘i : Chicago market received nearly 2,000 cars of wheat « izec Revival of river racing will bring memories to many] from Kansas, Oklahoma and Nebraska within the ‘irst + {ce who knew the Missouri and the Mississippi in steam-| week of the harvest. At Kansas City 200 cars c day boat days. They will recall the story of Jim Bludsce| Were being inspected, local elevators all over the "i A i" Southwest were experiencing unusually early and large -¢ and the flaming Prairie Belle—if she was—whose nose] business in receipts at a time when. in previous years, ~ was held against the bank untfl “the last galoot” was| the grain had just begun to trickle in from the thresh. ao Cae ss canskat: aehidh hat. d each woek 4 . e rusi market. whic! is increased each wee! , _ They will recall that epis of river days when steam-| so that receipts at Kansas City and Chicago have Nc boats raced from Cairo to New Orleans with a “‘nigger” | doubled those o! needs explanation. It may sitting on the safety valve and every ounce of steam|e found in the combine, which reaps and threshes in = F a single operation. Conservative Kansas authorities srowded on that the boilers would carry. estimate that there are 18,000 combines at work in the R They brit ite naturally to mind the harvest fields of that state alone, almort an igh cal will pide again ae ee cea equal number in Oklahoma and Nebraska. The rapidity with which these machines harvest a field of grain is as an important part of the national transporta- astonishing. A case is given of a farmer and his two system. There is a distinct effort to that end on wer oe # ferro boy, Sanding Gy acres st C lower ‘ississi " | wheat near iva, jahoma, ich previously require: ihe bis pend. Been elt the gouaidedes td the labor of 16 men. Harvest ig and threshing at one rivers. Quite char iayeid now in dis-| operation enables the al i i most thickly popu where bulk freight ton- i i a" lgable top Pricts page is most easily available. Quite probably it will tl finally settled basis ready for what is still called fall plowing, thorgh it is be wane the of service and done in the summer. Often, indeed, th: combine is fol- ‘The rivers will come back if they can carry certain) Large grain receipts now do not indicate a greater ield than last year. Wheat has been in the market for Masses of freight as cheaply and as advantageously | 2 yeck or more which, under old methods, would just be ; Bs the railroads. But the most colorful of the craft] srriving now. This year there may be a gap lee steamboat days probably is gone forever. Those| the end of the winter wheat harvest and the beginning sere the show boats and the boats that catered espe-|°f the spring wheat. due to the sped of new harvest- te passenger service, They cannot with rR methods, comething which has never happened be- surface of the true skin just un- derneath the epidermis presents a curious appearance like little moun- tain peaks, caused by the papillae, ‘which contain blood vessels for nour- ishing the derma and the live cells of the outer skin, eerniee sara ae oF pa" cles with exercise, In almost every. kin h}case, when @ hot bath fs taken, should be followed by @ cold one to parts. They are most thickly| temporarily close the pores of .the grouped on the end of our tongue|}skin and counteract the and next at the finger tips. We can} caused by the heat. Rubbing vigor- distinguish two objects as being sep-| ously with @ dry towel will also in- eae Cog oar fad vey aon ee ealrae to skin lose er, ig them and can be used to advantage follow. these areas of our bod: In some the cold bath. spots of our skin these touch cor- you will keen kin healthy puscles are so far apart that two/| at all times, you will encou: @im- objects even from one to two inches | ination, and your body. Mill feoction apart cannot be distinguished from | better in every way, a single object. If you wish to —— prove this, take two of your fingers] QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS about an inch and a half apart and| Question: Mrs. K. J. askat “What touch your back. In all probability] would cause a baby’s legs to cramp you will be unable to distinguish }and draw back at the knees?” more than one point of pressure. Atswer: Any time a baby’s legs In the lower part of the dermis|cramp or begin to draw back it is li- and in the layers immediately under able to be a symptom of some dan- the true skin, quantities of fat ean spinal irritstion, such as in- are stored. This gives the skin a|fantile paralysis or cerebrospinal plump and smooth appearance. meningitis. Some symptoms in a If you examine your skin with a| baby should be immediately reported magnifying glass, you will see large| to your doctor who can best tell you numbers of small pores or openings | what to do, in the skin. These are the mouths} Question: Mrs. J, asks: “Are of the sweat glands which are little | there any fruits which do not contain tubes composed of the same kind of | acid? all contain acid, does cook- cells as the epidermis but adapted | ing destroy it? I would like to eat for their special function. fruits but cannot if they contain acid, ther dermis nd ene in'a litle coll wiGch fruits’ donot contain eaid e dermis and ends in a little coil | w ruits do not cont fit! dene at errata) in the dermis or in the subdermal | either cooked or uncooked.” : Forson intend of Adams. Pennayl-|!872r. ‘The Sunctions of these glands| | Answer: Fruit acids are changed " are to cool off the body by producing y cooking. 80, had chosen two Federalist elec: perspiration and to discharge waste| fruits have less acid than when products, In cake parts of the skin| fresh. Manv people are afraid of us- these sweat glands are very close to-|ing fruit because of the acid, but lector had 12,306 gether, There are as many as 2,500/ could do so if they understood how hn tov or $071. oon to the square inch. While some per-|to use the fruits properly, It is and the lowest 0 . spiration is being continually dis-| better to use only the stewed fruits of pd charged through these sweat glands, | with meals, and take fresh fruits by ‘ Se pase Ririplaadrdath ftir J kn the amount | is usually 20 mall that Se ae an CoEE meal 5 a Is it passes off in vapor out being | of one kind it. Practic all state, with whom certificates of the] were made to buy electors in the| noticed, but on'a hot day the amount | fruits contain some ‘acid, but because Editor’s Note: This is the first of a series of three articles | state votes are filed, is no longer re-| Hayes-Tilden scandal of 1876. diseh: be so abundant as|of their effect upon increasing the on the functions and processes | quired to publish them. They will ere are comparatively recent in- ee Neary beads of sweat. It thett final sro in ie of the Electral College. now be sent by mail to the vice pres- | stances, however, where the electoral | may be interesting to you to know iy If you have ident, secretary of state and federal! vote of a state has been split. In ‘in structures are BY RODNEY DUTCHER judge in the circuit where lies the} 1916 West Virginia cast seven elec- a nedte setviney skin celle which find that ec frult fentat tae rial (NEA Service Writer) state, Thus there is no_danger of/toral votes for Hughes and one for|have been grown and developed into| will greatly benefit you. Washington, July 26.—The Elec-| loss. A Wilson. The margin for Hughes vic- pecial functions. This includes the} Question: Alice asks? toral College, which has no college| The nation knows the election re-| tory in the state was less than 3,000. |fair, sweat glands, oil glands, and|the cause and cure of low blood yell, no faculty, no endowment andj sult the next morning, but the elec-| In 1912 California gave Roosevelt 11 | tinge, a pressure? What are the different no campus, never was much of a col- | toral college and the rest of the gov-|and Wilson two; Roosevelt carried|” Writtle fingernails and rough! stages and effects of symptoms?” lege. ernment act as if no one had the} the state by less than 200 votes.|sealy skin are caused by a lack of| Answer: When @ person Now it has degenerated into a| slightest idea ot — had happened. ele tle tl ia ale electoral certain mineral Clements 4 tes ce blood pressure it simply means that i . vs corns lcctoral College is the term| The two houses of Congress meet} When the Populists joined with ries re peeatina is ie Soa Felice fled ph semper ee applied to the 531 presidential elec-| im Joint vession in the Hcuse cham-|the Democrats to elect Bryan in| piexion of the individuals who eat| general weakness felt, and a lessen- tors who will be elected on Novem-| ber to count the electoral vote. The | 1896 the Democrats divided electoral the right kinds of food. In fact,|ing of all functions, ‘The cure is to ber 6. Under the constitution, we| vice president presides. The votes| slates with them in 26 states, where] it would be a good plan for alllcultivate strength, This is accom- will then vote for presidential elee-jare brought from his offi t the | 197 of the Bryan electors were Dem- beauty specialists to become diet-| plished by dieting carefully and ex- tors rather than presidential candi-| Senate. Four tellers are appointed, |ocrats and Popul In that isns. ercising vigorously. dates. They are just so much mi vor two cee an two Hani x some fa ae ieee were Be : inery, ver, as they are|sentatives equally as to po-|Bryan an al siete ieee for a candidate in| litical affiliation. Bryan and Watson. Watson was a| Were ati Pan i bai abode sigh nt Sister ervey advance. soe Populist candidate for vice president | V° ry cm Oa ays lysimeadclees Seale <i te bes a Hite om Each state is permitted to elect] They read the certificates from and had 27 electoral votes against the th nerd ea ‘we'd gladly sen tarcon ot mg pee — ae ae each of a ane ress — in WET SOLES Sewall’s 149, ae te er ee nehto tien ae rall on the $25. ¢ and each of its representatives. Thus i rom one ler another. " there are two Ainctorsailatee and Someone soon arises and obtains| Horace Greeley died after his de-} A man fined $1 in a New York Bled peed eee mae aiey one elector from each congressional | unanimous consent to dispense with | feat by Grant in 1872 before the elec-| court for a traffic violation had only . new ¢ rb s. a op 0 ZO district, all elected by statewide vote. | further certificate reading, where-|toral votes were cast. It made lit-|a $5,000-bill and a $1,000-bill on his io Heer e pl Lava ees aee Persons in the service of the United | after only the results are announced. (tle difference, but most of his elec- Probably he was ju . al at them. é bead pee 7 ea States are not eligible as electors. Then they tabulate the result and| tors split up among other candidates. | his to buy a couple of Rnd the in one o! Pine ae pass it along to the presiding offi-| Congress rejected three votes which| wiches and a glass of ginger al = de is ne. hin ly men willing Each candidate will have his own|cer, who announces that So and So,| were still cast for Greeley. anight club. | Hy eer ete as iY aaa set of electors on the ballot. Those} the fellow who has received the} The practice of voting for elec- eyre attractive—IF. .. receiving the highest vote automatic- | most toral votes, has been elect-| tors by districts was ndoned| _ A promoter has bought John D. Led Y ally enter the college. In each state|ed president of the United States,|nearly 100 years ago, although re-|Rockefeller’s _birthpl: and will! It would be hard to begin to tell they assemble on the second Monday | with somebody el: vice president. | vived for @ year by Michigan in 1892.| move it to Coney Islan id neil the story of heartache and suffering in January to vote, which, of course, | Then they proclaim as much in the| Any legislature may switch back to| tion as an object lesson. Folk seek-| and actual despair. It’s been told is just so much formality. They| Congressional Record. it at any time, but they just don’t.|ing object lessons probably can find | thousand times in connection with transmit their certificates to the oe. Obviously, that method tends to split |@ healthy one whenever they pass a| dividual instances. And it repeats it- governor. Having gone this far, the} The electors are state officers.|the vote to the advantage of one| gasoline station, too. self daily in a hundred vlaces, colleges cannot area The miacteral system was saviatd a meer, and apdraniage ee heather: a oars ieee Fale do anes ord. T A_law passed by the last session|a sort of compromise between direc! ‘or awl legi s ju = ibeen of Congress gave the college its new popular election and congzessional| picked the electors, but gradually Pig bapcirg aman Jusened otf pears me. Not that I think it will keep ry correspondence school status. Here-jelection of the executive. Principal| they surrendered this right to the/ tt o"i) “pouty bait just as well] ™&y youngsters at home. | Each tofore it has been the practice tolarguments against direct popular ple until only Delaware and th _ t ys ‘of the Woolworth one thinks, of course, that he “is dif- send an elector from each state to| election at the constitutional conven-| South Carolina chose them by legis. | icy, weren + On top o! oolworth | ferent.” : carry the vote to the vice president] tion were the great advantage that| lature vote in 1828. South Carolina | *wlding. te But whether you take it from me, in Washington. would be given to the large states, | was the last state to give the privi- Prohibition Commi re ee from the social agencies, you'll The new law eliminates that ex-|ignorance of the people as to the| lege to the people in 1868. ps econ te, peel Pergo hen & great deal of divcomfort and \ pensive procedure and the electoral | merits of candidates and the alleged Gahaet mene Pea ry if you’l bring a few hundred mi petence of the le to pick h ipa dollars with you when you come to nt theve “ant any longer owen s/t BARBS } stention is ony good clean fun? [SAW ore POU trip to Washington to be had out} The original plan was to have the r see \ G:LBERT SWAN. electors intelligent, free-acting and f the college. ‘i " in | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) Maing Tr independent, but it never worked. Americans, per capita, are 96 Pde nygcele yo yy rolling Lewy : Under this law, the secretary of|early as 1796 Samuel Mil cents poorer this year than they|many curiosities Washington, D. ol possesses. Now can some city please |One Thin Woman $ [ OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ||ssktresahacbands"2"" Gained 205 (opyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) In Threg ; ‘ OF MIsTAd; MASOR,-I ert ” FAUGH SASON + ALLAY, YOUR f IN NEW YORK | monica s Tablets as Higte apestie STAYIN” So ‘Lone ta tH? N TALKING oY KING + NEPTUNE os, \ ing mail there came a little placard, | Fla. writes: “I 7 Ter! soi ! ied by a brief note which | Co lets & months 1 WATER !~~ Youse: BEEN 43] F PERSON ! ut GREAT CAESAR MAN, accompanied by a brief note wi 4 oon : ett Y WW AHOUR, AN EF ONE Vay ont RIVAL IN WATER, IS THE | |betore the boys and ritfs of Amer ig t t OB DEM CRAMPS SWIM | { ATLANTIC CABLE! I HAVE SWAM| [co 80rd of warning? It mae to a ee ee a el ; up AN! GIT; Yo", - AHLL \ WW ALU THE WATERS OF “THE ; they should make before they oe ironcad. . BE«HABIN A WETEAN’ \?. Giope tan You FEAR MY SAmety'| _|{onnlee soing te,New Zon them |Z HEAVY LOAD “To.CARRY WHS LAKE 2a. HAW un srrace. its tae et tee tans books HOME 10, Yo" WiDDER !. IT 1s NoTHING BuT = lems of the city’s social agencies, It| feel. e fe y is absolutely essential that they —s A HAND i BASIN, should be in a position joie decent- vl EGAD | tom he tne"always ast weak immediately.” | i WATER-WINGs,— * L06,- AND BOAT ROPE » ‘nd so the letter oes om, fF . To, KEEP HIM AFLOAT © j and girls of Aerien the a Apuieen r id appears in black type — oO. ~ |e nes ” closed per, : 7 ou can’t afford Z a week for a number of all ED. ' S| Eek ' lew Scant Sat Bee 4 ‘ . There Are Many Things You Can ‘foods one of thevthitee thet will phere you for Advancement is a BUSINESS TRAINING If you have not such training we offer you our services of Study 3 "Ese ope seat annaS sverags dinner ‘et ” Ste ck sane, eee meal. Of course, one Let us tell you more about our tomats, at lunch counters and such—|] School and what we can do for . but can this be kept up? And with |] You-..We will send you our cata 4 $1.76 left for movies and such, which |] patar?™ "*etent Free and Fost cost almost that amount for a good orchestra se .t. the amusement rossi- bilities are not creat. Yet one can live on it. Most fre- quently two or more sirls, strangers