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i } "PAGE FOUR. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper \\be THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by tho Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- ind cl ail matter. George D. Mane suite cnsosssProsident and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by maria Daily by mail, Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state, Weekly by mail, in state, Weekly by m outside per year lembe: T YEA se..ee years for ~f North Dakota, Bureau of Circulation dit Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches 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 PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO *F error Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) WARDEN JOHN LEE North Dakota loses an honest, painstaking public fervant in the death of Warden John Lee. His record at the state penitentiary was without blemish; he always regarded public office as a public trust. John Lee made friends readily but he held them. In no small way his public services have contributed to the upbuild- ing of North Dakota and much that he did will never be known, for he was a man of few words, and never did he boast or seck the limelight of publicity. It was hard to get statements from Mr. Lee, but he plodded along faithfully doing each day's task to the best of his ability. Warden Lee developed the state prison farm. He believed in putting out as many trusties under God’s great canopy as he could, feeling that in contact with the various farm duties the process of reform would work better than behind cold walls and under strict discipline. But the late warden was not soft in his discipline. Years as sheriff of Ward county taught him prison routine and the value of strict discipline when pres- sure became necessary. The fact that there were few escapes from the state institution and that discipline under Mr. Lee was far above what had obtained there in the past is tribute enough to his system of dealing with the inmates. He was a self-made man. He struggled up to the important post of state prison warden through his own merits, As a legislator he was careful in the dis- charge of his duty. Caution in all matters was one of the distinguishing traits of John Lee. His popularity and reputation for square dealing won him the office of sheriff in Ward county at a time when the move- ment of homesteaders brought in some desperate char- acters. It was no sinecure to be sheriff of Imperial Ward in those days. John Lee handled the job with: out fear or favor. His appointment by Governor Nestos enabled Mr. Lee to enter upon a broader field of prison work. He sought to improve conditions at the state institution and none of the inmates ever found him unsympathetic to a just demand or to a plea for leniency. John Lee will be missed by a host of friends and by many unfortunates whom he helped to the high road of success. LIONS IN LABORATORIES Nothing can be much more interesting, to an Amer- cause serious trouble when the rea Again, the market is being financed largely by “boot- leg” money, loaned by corporations which will with- draw it when need comes or money rates fall. Bankers declare that when the crash comes it will be a case of save-himself-who-can-and-devil-take-the-hind- most. But the gamble continues, with the gamblers hoping to outguess each other as to how long the de- bacle can be postponed. It is a great life, but when professional speculators express surprise that the public plays the game so blindly and so eagerly, people who cannot afford to hold the bag should use caution. Shearing time must come, MOTORISTS PAID FOR ROADS The last decade has witnessed a notable expansion and improvement of the public highway system of the nation, and in that period the federal government has contributed to this result by expending $613,993,977 on roads. The national government has promoted road con- struction, but from its treasury came but a small frac- tion of the total funds provided from all sources for highway construction and maintenance. Pennsylvania and Illinois have both spent. more than $100,000,000 for roads since 1918. Highway appro- priations of a number of states now reach high in the millions each year, and all states are spending large sums annually. Several states owe their improvements, at least in part, to the stimulus provided by offers of federal aid. Loath to lose the federal dollars, a number of states created active highway departments and provided them with working funds. For them it was the beginning of systematic highway construction. It took their mo- torists and their farmers out of the mud. The funds given to the states in the form of federal aid came from the buyers of motor vehicles and their parts. From 1918 until the automobile tax was re- |pealed the government collected $1,100,000,000 from car and truck owners. The nation owes its good roeds to the operators of motor vehicles, who consider their tax dollars well spent. HOOVER AND HIS GUARDS Already, Herbert Hoover has had a taste of the loss of personal freedom that goes with election to the presidency of the nation. On the day after election he found his Palo Alto home guarded by several unobtrusi capable-looking men in civilian clothes. These men watch over him until he finishes his time in the White House. They are secret service operatives, charged with the safety of the president, and in recent years it has been de- creed that the president-elect also must have their protection. A number of our presidents, notably Roosevelt and Harding, grew tired of this cternal vigilance, and delighted to outwit their guards. But the surveillance is necessary, for all that. Mr. Hoover cannot e: ape | Editorial Comment SPEAKING OF MILLIONS (Savannah Press) Whatever the ability of American men to make for- tunes, there is one feature of their prosperity which is undeniable—their propensity for holding on to the mighty dollar once it is within their reach. There is an old adage concerning “shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves in three generations,” which implies that riches beget carelessness which is doomed to see the downfall of the rich man. Not so with the American. All the outstand- ing great fortunes amassed by Americans have been in- creased by their heirs, with one exception, that of the ican, than the history of this country during the last three-quarters of a century. During that period the country emerged from its Infancy and reached a fusty, energetic manhood. The change that came upon it was profound; even yet we do not see clearly just what has happened to us or just where we are going. But the process of change has ft least gone far enought so that we can pause and Jook back to study ourselves objectively. A good many novelists have tried to interpret this @evelopment for us. One of the latest to do so is Thames Williamson, whose “Stride of Man” puts under @ microscope the whole astonishing swing from a fron- tier civilization to an era of factories, mass production and big cities. The hero of this book, born in an Oregon log cabin, Brows up with the new industrialism and becomes a kind of Henry Ford—a super-energetic maker of auto- mobiles. He lives and breathes only to make autos; and, in his mind, his workers are only rather eccentric machines, indispensable but fit only for the perform- nce of such tasks as cannot yet be entrusted to auto- matic whirligigs. This man may fairly be taken as a type. He is mod- rn America personified. He can recall the days of oxcarts and the pony express, but he remembers them only with impatience. He himself has killed them for- ever. He exists without a background. Nothing mat- ters, to him, but the production of solid, material things. When someone reproaches him because the industrial age has made no contributions to the arts, he is pained; has he not given his city money for an art museum? To the end of his life he remains ignorant that a man or @ nation can have any higher aim than the erection of factories. Yet, accepting this man as the incarnation of the ‘American spirit, it is impossible to feel that he is wholly (wrong. The pioneers struggled west with very definite, ma- terial objectives. They wanted to find a place where life could be easier, where poverty could be eliminated, where every man could have enough and to spare. They were, very definitely, out for the full dinner pail and all its appurtenances, Industrial America is the logical result. As the pio- neers, without exactly realizing that they were doing it, performed a work of incalculable service, it may be that their children, the industrialists, are doing like- wise. Herbert Hoover has said that the complete abolition of poverty is now a possibility for us. And that work will be done, not by the poets and seers and artists, but by the energetic men who are obsessed with ‘the job of producing an ever-increasing stream of ma- terial things. We are not quite finished with our pioneering. Amer- ica seems to be a sort of laboratory, in which the great possibilities of the age of industrialism can be tested the benefit of the rest of the world. The day of had its hard, cruel, unpleasant aspects, our own. But much can be forgiven an era I thing to conservative bankers and if ‘of prosperity—but | ff stock-market prices to earning power is inevitable. the ultimate outcome. Aaneasiness as to continues Gould millions, and in this case it was the fact that the heirs were so bent on getting all that was coming to them that the fortune was soon diminished through legal fights. ‘he heirs have built up and added to most of Amer- ica’s big fortunes. J. J. Astor left $20,000,000 at his death in 1848. The Astor fortune now exceeds $150,- 000,000. Vincent Astor alone is worth $100,000,000. When Meyer Guggenheim died in 1905 he was worth $50,000,000. Now his heirs have $500,000,000. Two Standard Oil partners of early days, Stephen Harkness and Charles Pratt, had $50,000,000 between them. Now the Harkness fortune is about $400,000,000, and the Pratts have $300,000,000. The early Du Pont left $30,000,000 accumulated by the family in 100 years of powder making. Now the Du Ponts have $500,000,000. Old Cornelius Vanderbilt's $100,000,000 has grown so that one heir, Frederick Vanderbilt, has that much. We seem to know in America how to make the dollars left us grow to more dollars, NORMA TOWNSHIP GOES 100 PER CENT PURE- BRED SIRE (Minneapolis Tribune) On Tuesday evening of this week a dinner was held in Valley City, N. D., to celebrate a unique event. The event was nothing less than this: Norma town- ship in Barnes county had achieved the score of 100 per cent in the matter of beef and dairy sires. a‘ Norma township in Barnes county—which is the township west of Fingal, N. D., was the first town- ship in North Dakota to “go purebred sire” 100 per cent. This extraordinary result had been brought about following a determined campaign staged by the Greater North Dakota association in cooperation with Tom X. Calnan, the Barnes county agent. When the campaign was initiated there were about 60 farmers in Norma township owning sires. Of these about 25 had pure- bred animals. By last Tuesday all of the 60 farmers had been converted to the purebred sire movement; and happy indeed is the outlook for Norma township’s agri- cultural future. We scarcely need dwell on the commonplace that the slogan “more and better livestock” points the way towards a stabilized and solvent agriculture. Hence when we find that the movement for more and better livestock has achieved so striking and dramatic a tri- umph as that just mentioned, we know that a great forward step has been taken. What has happened in Norma township is happening, in greater or less de- gree, throughout the northwest. Were Norma town- ship an isolated instance, there would be less reason for Jubilation. Fortunately it is not. The mighty move- ment for diversified agriculture, which means stabilized agriculture, is definitely under way throughout the northwest. Norma township is simply in the van of the movement, and makes, therefore, a conspicuous symbol of what is taking place in our economic hinterland. Since a stabili: and solvent agriculture is the eco- nomic foundation not only of the northwest, but of the city of Minneapolis, we may rejoice in the fact that this souation is being made more strong and solid every day. Several lessons are to be derived from the record made by Norma township. They are: First, that the mes: of diversification may be definitely “sold” to the farmers. pe gereds that the necsbeist has no more ralaahle asset an energet competent county agent heart-and-soul on the job. Third, that a far-seeing and active development as- sociation like the Greater North Dakota association can accomplish wonders in leading a state into the right economic path. - lessons should not be ignored. The Tribune has constantly preached the benefits to city and country alike of city-and-country tion. That is indis- pensable if agriculture and industry are to have a bal- anced and mutually profitable development. The record made by Norma township is a brilliant vindication of this belief; and it also shows what may be expected if more efforts of » similar sort are made. One would search a long time to discover an omen testifying more to the great future lying ahead of the concerted action of the Norma town- peat ime y Toledo Blade: One drawback to the modern political is the impossibility of broadcasting an old- torchlight procession. : ion comes. Money is not cheap and, according to leading financiers, it will not be cheap in selling at prices which do not yield in| many cases nearly as much as do savings-bank deposit. it. It is one of the prices he must pay for his elevation. | } ewe LET ington, Nov los Day extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary from the Republic of Chile, was instrumental if not chiefly re- ible in the matter of arranging dent-elect Hoover’s visit to Latin America. Ambassador Davila is one of the most progressive and energetic members of the diplomatic colony here. Until he was sent on his mission to Washington he was a newspaper- man. He hasn’t been here long enough to determine whether he would rather be that or a diplomat. But he was so long the editor of a morning newspaper in Santiago that he still does a great deal of his work at night from force of habit. His journalistic reputation in Chile Was so great that it was assumed that his diplomatic achievements could never quite create another rep- utation to equal it. But there be- gins to be some doubt about that. Few newcomers in the corps during recent years have made such a favor- able impression. Conversation with Davila reveals that he knows far more about the United States—its business, politics and history—than the average Americano. * * 20.+-Senor Dr. We found out just how up-and- coming Senor Don Davila was last spring when he flew to the Foreign Trade Convention at Houston and back. The ambassador threw a luncheon in honor of the Latin-Amer- ican good will flyers which was at- tended by War Secretary Davis and Navy Secretary Wilbur. They were telling him of their attempts to make the country air-minded. It appeared that Don Carlos himself was so air- minded that he habitually hopped into an airplane as unthinkingly as one might mount a bicycle, a buggy or motor car. So he was offered an army plane to dake him to Houston. : : It was rather surprising that Chile didn’t lose a perfectly good ambas- sador, as things turned out. He flew first to Fort Bragg and then toward Montgomery, Ala, Forced down at DESTROYER. MAY Ap I MAY He MARKET, WASHINGTON 4 ambassador | Zi EGAD SASON, HOLD A. "THE FUMES OF MY MoT TRIFLE OVER-POWERING, BUT tris Ansa M HARMLESS, — |ADEED, ~ EXCEPT ~0 “He Auris IS A SECRET FORMULA oF MY OWA, Pot tT on soe / TER, a A Eufaula, Ala., he proceeded by motor to Maxwell Field, but meanwhile he lost to the world and there were erious fears whether he would be seen again alive. However, Don Carlos flew on in a new plane from Maxwell Field, bound for Houston. En route he ran into a tornado which subsequently nearly destroyed a town or two in its path and had a miraculous escape from that. But the tornado hurried him on to Hous- ton and he made the 650 miles in five hours. At Houston he made a_ speech which the Foreign Trade Council deemed worthy of several printings. He demonstrated that the remark- able growth of our trade with Latin America was not due to war's for, tuitous assistance, but to a cycle of development originating from the powerful expansion of American pro- duction and merchandising. This demonstration virtually ruined a rather general impression among business men that the war really was responsible. Leaving Houston Friday night the ambassador had to get to New York Sunday noon to see his wife and children off for Europe. He sent his army plane on to New Orleans and went himself on a sleeper. At 7:30 a. m. he took off for Montgomery, had coffee and gasoline there, and flew on to Fort Bragg, where he dined and took another sleeper land- ing in New York early Sunday morning. Once, in Santiago, Davila was a mere reporter, covering fires, fu- nerals, murders and all such matters for El Mercurio. La Nacion made him its foreign editor and he was so good that he became managing editor, whereupon he introduced American ideas of journalism and built La Nacion up to its present commanding position. As editor and publisher of La Nacion he founded an afternoon tabloid, Los Tiempos. He raised newspaper salaries and effected a journalist’s retirement fund under which, with government adminis- tration, each employe of a newspaper contributed 5 per cent of his salary jt be matched by 5 per cent from the OUR BOARDING HOUSE BEA fe M “HooPLES MotH-o- owner plus 20 per cent of the paper’s annual profits, - * * Davila was always strong for close cultural relations with the United | States and was importantly instru- mental in making Chile a good friend of ours. Meanwhile he and numer- ous other Chileans were betoming disgusted with theit government and Davila fought for a new deal. A general house-cleaning was effected in 1926 and when they asked Don Carlos what position he wanted the ambassadorship to Washington, hoping that he could promote some more Chilean-American friendship and do something to clean up the Tacna-Arica mess in which this country and Peru have been em- broiled for these many years. He has been doing well at both jobs. He’ got the Peruvian and Chilean delegates together at Ha- vana and was responsible for restor- |ing diplomatic relationship between the two countries after a lapse of 17 years. The Tacna-Arica ques- tion remains unsettled, but the out- look has become considerably moré hopeful. | Our Yesterdays TEN YEARS AGO Cc. J. Elliott, internal revenue agent, arrived from Fargo to estab- lish a permanent office in the fed- eral building. Employes of the International Harvester company enjoyed a danc- ing party at the Elks hall. Music was furnished by O’Connor’s or- chestra. i) Albert Sheets of Lakota was named assistant attorney general by William Langer, attorney general. Miss Beatrice MacQuillan of the state board of control visited in Far- go with her brother, W. H. Mac- training corps. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO The first severe blizzard of the season swept across the Missouri slope from the northwest. Drifts ranging from 3 to 7 feet in depth were piled up. Major J. S. Murphy, prominent politician, former government offi- By Ahern A MAN, AMM DIA! 1b CLASS, ~~ PASSIN’ AWAY ‘WN A FUR CoAT fw uw SES” ONE REQUES’ BEFO’ I Go BEYOND, ~~ LET ME WEAR Vo’ PLUG HAT, AN” AH‘LL ACHIEVE A LiFe AMBIT on in the new government he asked for | ta’ Quillan-of the Agricultural college | * FRACTURES AND BROKEN BONES (Continued) It is better not to try to remove the clothing from the injured part before the arrival of a doctor unless the patient is bleeding profusely. Bleeding should be stopped by pres- sure: if from an artery, the pressure should be close to the wound between it and the heart; if from a vein, the pressure should be close to the wound with the wound between the point of pressure and the heart, Arterial blood comes out in jets from the direction of the heart, and venous blood in a steady stream from the direction of the extremities. A broken back is very serious and may cause death unless handled by an expert. No attempt should ever be made to turn the patient with a broken back over on his face. The best position is directly on the back until a doctor can make a careful in- spection. In fractures of the skull there is nothing that non-medical aid can do except to keep the patient on his back with the head slightly raised ‘and apply cold compresses to the in- jury. If the surgeon is greatly de- layed, it may be advisable to admin- ister castor oil to clean out the bowels, Compound ‘fractures should be splinted as are simple fractures and in addition, great care must be exer- cised to keep the wound clean, Plain boiled water may be used to wash away dirt. One must be careful to keep the jagged edges of the broken bone from doing more damage. In most fractures it is advisable to apply. cold compresses to assist in reducing the swelling until the eectoe is able to make his examina- ion. Never attempt to transport a per- son with a broken long bone without the support of a splint. If you should be injured, yourself, where no help is to be had, you should use the same methods of splinting that you should on another person before you attempt to travel. The after treatment of fractures must be handled by a doctor or hos- pital. The condition is too serious for amateurs to attempt treatment. However, should you be out in the wilderness where no doctor is ob- inable, you should put padded splints about the injury and stretch the injured limb in as ncrmal a po- sition as possible. The site of the injury may be treated with cool wet compresses. The digt should consist for the first week almost exclusively of raw fruits and non-starchy vegetables. In practically every fracture of a long bone it is necessary for the Surgeon to use a stretching process termed “extension” to prevent a shortening of the limb or overlap- Ping of the bones. Some people have abnormally cial atid pioneer resident of Minot, was indicted by the U. S. grand jury for perjury. Captain Grant Marsh of Washburn was in Bismarck to meet Mrs. Marsh, who was returning from St. Louis. FORTY YEARS AGO Rev. C. B. Austin and family left for an extended trip to eastern cities, General Hughes returned to Bis- marck after visiting friends Chicago. Henry Gramps returned from a visit in the east. Mrs. Gramps, who accompanied him on the trip, re- mained for a longer visit in Minne- apolis, ene ST rie Sct crate eae ey IN NEW YORK | a New York, Nov. 20.—Ten o'clock on Wall Street ..... Another 5,500,- 000-share day is starting. The sun swings slowly up from the river.... It finds its way to the tips and tur- rets of the skyscrapers... . It splashes, over upon, the streets, mak- ing bright, golden eddies on the floors of the narrow canyons where gold is a drug on the market, yet hidden from all eyes. Ten o'clock on Wall Street...... Clerks lie stretched out on tables. « « « « Clerks lie with dictionaries as pillows... ... .Clerks lie with heads propped on telephone books. +... Clerks lie collapsed at their tables. ...... .Heads numbly col- lapsed into piles of papers, rows of figures........C'erks come list- lessly through the doors... Their faces are pasty white. Their faces lined and drawn. ..... Their eyes circled ..... But their collars are white and their linen spotlessly clean. ee automatically into place, . puppets, of a mechanical ballet... . sun finds its way to the windows and begins to spill its gold lavishly, freely, generously in the rooms where men battle for gold! Collapse for gold! Slave for gold! Ten o'clock on Wall Street..... Another 5,500,000-share day is be- i «+ For days and days ve mounted and mount- .+++e+..- For days and days the Hoover bull market has been on + e+e. High above the street are perched the agents of the public, AG professional speculators, the lls and the bears, the spenders and the wasters, the gamblers and the investors. ....... High above the street, in the mahogany caves of the modern cliff dwellers, men wonder how they can go on handling the vast volume of business that swamps them, - It’s fet, to be done! It's got to be done! Something of the spirit of the football yell leaders gets into the air! They rush from their mahogany caves....... Dap- per, well groomed, pressed pants, carnations in button holes, they rush to the floor of the exchange! Ten o'clock on Wall Street! other of “those” days has begun. ... .. The flood is on...... .The tickers are swamped before they can start +++... Shares by millions ...... shares by tens of thousands...... Get your bids in! sales.in! .... . Gotta represent the clita . et it’s: got A done. .... Rui all, run, crow: and shout! ..... ‘Crash the. posta! + eee. Get your. bids in! ,,. Swamp. An- in|, .|the speakeasy ..... brittle bones. This is because of wrong feeding. When we learn to live properly, our bones will not be Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal pPehintnd on health care of the Enclose a stamped envelope for reply. over-brittle and should a break oc- cur, the knitting together will take place rapidly. After the break has healed there may be a kind of neuralgic pain for a long time. This can best be treated with alternate hot and cold appli- cations or deep therapy lamp and massage. Should the bone be allowed to heal in a wrong position, it can- not be straightened unless it is sur- gically broken again and properly, reset, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Soft Teeth Question: Reader writes: “My dentist has told me my teeth are softening. What is the cause and cure for this?” Answer: The softening of teeth is caused either through lack of or- ganic minerals in your diet or be- cause of a systematic acidosis which is destroying these mineral elements as rapidly as you are putting them into your body through food. I be- lieve the tendency toward soft teeth is usually developed in early child- hood or even before the child is born, If this is recognized early enough in life it may be possible to bring about structural changes in the teeth, but usually the best that can be done is to prevent the trouble from becoming worse. Erythema Nodosum Question: Mrs. N. R. M. writes: “I am a woman of 34 and had erythema nodosum about eight weeks ago and am weak from it yet. Can you tell me the cause of this disease, and how long it lasts?” ~ Answer: This is an inflammatory skin disease marked by tender red nodules due to exudation of blood and serum, and accompanied by in- tense itching and burning. The lesions appear in successive patches, and the disease lasts for several weeks. It is considered highly in- fectious but can be quickly cured by the application of certain remedies which your doctor or druggist can furnish you. Normal Weight Question: .L. J. writes: “Please state the normal weight of a person from childhood to manhood.” Answer: The weight would vary with the height and measurement at the different ages; also in relation to glandular activity and temper- ament. No set standard can be used, pu gael case must be judged separ- ately. the tickers! .... .There is an air of madness about it all. Ten o’clock on Wall Street! .... Men sit comfortably in the ticker rooms of big hotels.......-Men sit comfortably in the ticker rooms of brokerage offices......... Men sit comfortably and smoke Coronas, pass cigarets one to the other and watch the antics of a “board boy” as he placards a wall with the mar- ket quotations. .... Men sit com- fortably and smile to themselves, ip five points this morning.” +. “Yep, I’m carrying 2,000.” “Umm .... ten grand in two Not bad, my boy!” ... 6 0 and take their hours! Men sit _comfortabl! profits from their losses, without 4 any further exertion than handing a bit of paper to a messenger or go- ing to a telephone.......Men make fortunes between 10 and noon, and do not leave their chairs... . Men make fortunes while TS collapse for them ,... .The cus- tomers must be served! ._* & Afternoon on Wall Street! A gong® rings! The door close! ++. ++ Men more wilted than their carnations make their way out. The sun has long since swung over. The air is chill. It bites through their overcoats, Behind they leave the swamped tickers’ and the srpniped clerks. The swamped clerks ry armies of figures. Stenographers, clerks, bookkeepers, tired and worn. + «+. Two weeks extra pay, boys! Three weeks extra this week! +++ And a hot tip on a sure thing tomorrow .... .So into the night... With lights blinking from the ma- hoganied caves and collapsing men going out for coffee or a “shot” at Night, and a Moon swinging over from the river +.++2+A moon that drops puddles of gold at the feet of men too weary to see its transient beauty. GILBERT SWAN. | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.); [BARBS 1 o—————___—________- New income tax figures show 283 paying income tax on 1, ayear. A profit is not without hon- or in this country, It sometimes happens that if you become too keyed up, you get locked up. se @ said to be the: largest block of con- crete in the world. Maybe the f° est, but ‘ley Dawes and Nick eee Sometimes you ask the boss for a sabe and all you get is a rise out im, . se 8 England’s new te! ance pledge forbids drinking eceunt in the noon and et vening. Si amendment.to the 18 cone Liquor shall not be sold-during selipiss of the nid se @ Butterflies Terauize another at a distance of s to eight feet, according to scientists. Butterflies, howeter, do not borrow from one anol . (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) to him, | “ ee a eR Se gee = - am