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a. 4 “PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune ‘ An Independent Newspaper \ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1573) on by tho Bismarck ‘Tribune Company, Bis- 4 D., and entered at the pustoffice at Bis marek as second ciass mail matter. George D. Mann .. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .........+ . Daily by mail, per wear, (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year, .....President and Publisher tinued to eat, walk and sleep at Doorn, emitting pro- tests, complaints and explanations every so often; but the real man—the imperial war lord who held fleets and armies in his hand—died with the field-gray sol- diers in the Argonne and along the Hindenburg line. The shadow still hangs on, but its existence is impor- tant to no one—not even to Wilhelm. It is the fate of most of us to be symbols of some- thing outside ourselves. Our lives attain coherence and nobility only when we identify ourselves with some force or movement in which others may share. Wil- helm of Germany was supremely unlucky in that he tied | Coming in on the New ‘Allocation’ se Z Mm > ii i A STRONG FOOTING at right angles, then, placing the (in state outside Bismarck) .........e+.+++- 5.00] himself to a thing that was doomed to die. The world Foot trouble often drains the|hands on the hips, sway slightly to Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota .....-.- 6.0U) advanced beyond the idea that he embodied, and he system of nervous energy and in| one side and then to the other, catch- SeMAE ME TERLAA Wai Gar’ Wear... .scc... 1oy died with it. this way assists in causing more| ing your weight on the big toc of Weekly by mail, in state, per year ......+.s00 1.00 Weekly by mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota. Member of The Associated Press Member Audit Bureau of Circulation The “white lady” of the Hohenzollerns may flit through the deserted palace at will; it no longer mat- ters. The last of the kaisers has been dead for a decade. A PREVENTIVE NEED serious disorders. One suffering from flat feet may not feel any local | discomfort and yet. wrong positions of the bones of the foot may throw the entire skeleton out of balance. Many cases of sciatica and pains in personal questions on health and diet, uddresssd to him. care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressea Dr. McCoy will gladly answer | . % a sparen | k and legs can be traced | i t < The Associated Press 18 exclusively entitled to the The problem of crime is the problem of adolescent Ee ee onaroe of the feet. seit beitnic dd % use for republication of all news dispatches Cdl youth, Kighty-five per cent of criminals are young \'°it is essential to health and vital- x ' {to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, M4) 6, and women between eighteen and twenty-five jity to have strong feet and legs. |each foot as you throw your weight ' also the aes nee c baat fatlvether i at years of age One can not possess endurance with- et to one side ee the ies herein. rights of republication of al i deed . ; = it taking a sufficient amount of ese exercises, if persisted in, i ter herein are also reserved. The child aets upon impulse—to him the present is exercise by walking each day. Ath- | will gradually bring back the mus- « 3 everything, he has none of the fears and experiences letes, regardless of their special| cular power in the necessary 1 GELOUER PAUNE COMPANY of the past to warn him and he has no perspective branch of sports, realize that “road- | musclés, and your arches will soon v 1 ‘i dj of the future. He is reckl f the et Seed work” is vitally important to their} return to their normal strength. « NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bld iG THOM hd: . He is less of the consequences. N success and they walk or run many | You can then discard the arch sup- ‘ CHICAGO i DE ald, Criminal careers are progressive. Rarely is a mur- Wh) OF KX is miles daily. ports, and your feet will be strong $ Tower Bldg. reage BIR] Gor or even robbory or burglary the first offense, The NY LATIN-AM RICA Th ‘Not only isa person with weak | enough to wear shoes with lower Poh he ee (Official City, State and County Newspaper) SEAL DRIVE MERITS SUPPORT Health becomes more and more a matter ventive practice and the emphasis has been away from curative processes. Communities rect their efforts at shutting the doors on d Their energies are applied through sanitary proc to rendering the development of health perils impossible or relatively so. The whole country is organized in of pr now di- se. s shifting | rule there is a progression from the thoughtless rowdy- criminal career does not always appear on the court records, because crime goes largely undetected and criminals lie to judges and prison officials. fost criminal carecrs begin in early youth. As a ism to petty larceny or embezzlement, then to robbery and burglary, and then often to murder. The question why do these youngsters first break away and how this evolution in crime be prevented? Many criminologists seem to be of the opinion that pee Oy a BROADCASTING-| —7e feet apt to be deficient in endurance, but the repeated jars of walking, not being properly absorbed by the limbs, are conveyed to the spinal column and produce a distinct jolt- |ing of the nervous system. The most effective means of in- creasing the tone and strength of the feet is through the use of special exercises to develop the foot and calf muscles and to increase the circu- lation of blood through them. A heels. At least wear those low- heeled shoes when walking, and con- tinue to take the “pigeon-toe” ex- ercise, and you will keep your feet to be. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ruptured Duodenal Ulcer Question: Reader writes: “My husband was operated on one year ago for ruptured duodenal ulcer. as strong as nature intended them . awn i so a ; very good exercise can be taken| Now, with a careful diet he has had various ways to make health paramount by prevention the evolution can be checked and prevented and crime ; while walking and consists in simply | acid coming into the throat as be- of disease. can be stamped out by the simple process of dealing turning the toes inward, pigeon toed, fore, also has phlebitis in his left Standing high on the roster of these organized dis- ly with the convicted criminal. They enthusias- as did i eae in a way, oa i Se we remedy these condi- ease-combating movements is that of the Christmas tically announce that the gallows and the lash will cure tniphin the ground aiid ther took is “AsaWert “Tdo woe kiow WHAt you ! seal, with its purpose of combating tuberculosis—the|everything. They scornfully brand as visionary, ideal- later termed its ravages before so- “dread disease” of Charles Dickens’ di the “white plague,” such were istic and sentimental all those who differ with them. They fail to realize that the adherents to the policy | arched naturally. | Another good exercise to accom- | plish the same purpose is to stand mean by “a careful diet,” but ap- parently your husband’s diet is in- correct or he would not have a return FAA AOD 2A ROWE KEE OE. BHE Ie ( ; ‘ M Saath barefoot on the edge of a thick book | of the hypochondria. I have special ' ciety turned to war against it and began the great of punishment alone may be as idealistic as those who {and attempt to grasp the edge with| articles on both this subject and crusade which now takes the form of the annual Christ- | place the chief emphasis on prevention. the toes, phlebitis and will be glad to send mas seal drive. Since then the disease has been| But the fact remains that after centuries of punish- . F = 4 Maik Big ti Obesity is a frequent cause of flat | them to you if you will write again, brought to a standstill and even turned back. ment and torture, hangings and electrocutions and de- ZS date aN | BARBS { ta have erie ine PHIINABiphiae es ret Fecal on the Sane ans on pues me fale al weal Science has discovered that fresh air and rest are |capitations, whipping posts and solitary confinement, VAAMERIC AN |e - secadionallly polite and city officials nope ae Lege a eee ess on a large stampe pe. the great essentials in curing tuberculosis. ‘That is, | prisons and prison camps, erime has increased and crim- Don't pick a fight now. The All. |can face it, : one can not expect to correct flat win taken in its early stages and subjected to these and to | inals have become more bold and murderous, When the HIST ORLY | America selections will be out pretty bho: _, |feet until the weight has been re-|,,,Question: = Mrs. 0. G. asks: fi 5 5 ils it i i : road In accordance with our pre-Christ- is|“What about bananas? I have sunshine, the‘once dread scourge can be controlled. So | cure fails it is time to find a preventive. soon, and then the scason opens. ith our pi duced to normal. An average foot is toned 4 4 Nikas ho » Gtaamoviditig thous “ootattl December 6 7 eee mas custom of printing one alarm-| equal to its task, but there is a limit | Hever seen them mentioned in your ee © teatter oe usaHelis HIG ACL 1492—Columbus discovered Hispan-| Potatocs grow wild in some parts |In& fact, the information is hereby| to its endurance. Until the normal eles ents Melba toast—can it and in the proportion as these are provided, so is the jola (now Haiti) and built alof Chile, In this country it’s the eine AL Biel a bate weight has been reached it may be at fe oh meat or eggs as a ratio of success in fighting against the spread of the Editorial! Comment | fort, La Neviad. farmers who are gradually growing |is a traffic patrolman named Sassie.| necessary to use arch supports to | 8K" Combination | aceng:/ ¥ t = disease. Tuberculosis seeks out its victims mostly 1790—Seat of government removed ; wild. aniaeae ** * Jassist in relieving the burden, but ta anaGe:akoutdl ie. pio a. } among those who lack means of fighting back, the z Ce ee ede) A human, being uses) 44 annacled |e aa oe ee eee OPTI Te, oe noi | tom auhealtinistand pointy they are y _ undernourished—which means, very largely, children— picked tad den Le LE Tees opened. }in the act of speaking, says a medi- aay axtlaining the prospective bride| _An excellent exercise can be taken te cme iin ernie : + those lacking in comforts, the worker subjected to Fc ie SAH ORG! Tea Gy Covet nat | 1883—American Anti-Slavery So-jcal journal. And sometimes not!*'got cold feet.” You can’t blame a| when standing with the fect crossed: | Well with any other kind of food but i 1 sapping toil. Pete MnL Tee Aides aaa beheaues U aha tb Ms ciety founded at Philadelphia.' much else. [man for wanting to be comfortable| Pass the right foot over in front of | Pecause of its liquid absorbing prop; « BRO eipHt Aeainat tuberculosia thus has taken’ the | op lupeieue curves heed Nhe ditties of the Gershwin | 1889—Jefferson Davis, former pre BS hala _ .. jon a winter's night. the left until the heel of the right| Srics mime Je Cons eay 1 .. gees : See ae eee Tat CRTARWCNSC ELMER EERE dent of the Confederacy, died’ The municipal budget in Phila- : : foot touches the outside of the left | onstipating. ¢ form of raising great funds to provide the rest so es- | brothers. ly she tapdances. guidly she in- ‘at New Orleans, La. delphia contains an item of $100,000| (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)| heel. Point the toes so the feet are R ing Hi d Thighs * sential to combating it, to finance open-air camps| tones between-us-girls dialogue. ei) ogle through \ educing Hips an Peas Sere iis afflicted snay find that essential contact | helt binoculars, applaud mightily. “Yet'in/148 "years alicia : oer a Would A i ee si i ber her. nr ae : ef sere ae tI i" oe no one will remem! tees c te be with pure air and invigorating sunshine. Demure was London’s Betty Compton. Her smile would you suggest one of those 1 Such a drive now is on here, in common with like | was ievous but reliable. She lived 148 years ago, Coe eep aes) te Gad drives all over the country, to raise funds by the sale|but she is still remembered. Reason: Sir Joshua rae ire reducing the hips and 1 of Christmas seals. It has started out well, but the | Reynolds painted her portrait. At the time she was thighs?” BERD Rc og ae fe) Ur 20. She was the daughter of the seventh earl of Nor- taal Ss ae 2 2 ge isfied with what has been j i ‘i i Answer: The vibrating machines } cause is too large to be satisfie a thampton. Her combined hair and wigs Piled up enor- welt aia WL atlamcet ace oxeele 1 accomplished so far. Burleigh county was second in| mously above her white brow, bright eyes, litle pointed the state last year in the amount of cash raised on th seal sales. It is worth striving for to be first this r, and besides the mere honor of achieving that there is the cause to consider. There is none more v.orthy. The way to make the top of the column in Dakota’s support of the movement is to keep ing the seals from now till Christmas, when the ceeding year. This is not the time for any let-up, therefore, here in Bismarck and Burleigh county. According to the seal association, the need in the state is great. In 1925 the number of deaths from tuberculosis in the state was 318, of whom 40 were children under 14 years of age. In 1927 there wei 301 deaths and 1400 known cases in the state. The chin, of drapery, revealed the toes of her slippers. Joshua painted her against an expanse of foliage. She concealed her slenderness in an Smenne Sir Her parents paid him about $1,050. It meant nothing to debutante Betty. When she went home she called Sir Joshua “a poranous little man.” Later she became Lady Cavendish, presented her lord with eleven chil- dren, died at the age of 74. on behalf of an anonymous U. S,. collector, record price for Reynolds. THE QUICK AND THE DEAD (Chicago Tribune) English picture publications show a great liking for illustrations of excavation of antiquity. Evidently they think they are good for circulation, that the Brit- ish public likes to keep its mind on what is being dug 928 B ©neaService | THIS HAS HAPPENED geeks another TH BEWEY GROVES case and bag. Jerry slyly shoved the new dress. ing case out of sight under the bed. Then after bidding goodby to the landlady and giving her a dollar, she followed Alester down the stairs. eee N the dresser she had left a note for Myrtle who was out with George. With the note she Teft Jerry’s mind than Alester's deter+ mination as expressed by his stance on the Ritz carpet—his feet apart And then Jerry was paged in ac- cordance with a prearranged plan. Evelyn was instructed to advise the hotel operator that she would be with Mr. Alester Carstairs. Jerry knew that the mere mention of his name would bring results that hers ‘would not. “I'm glad you waited because AUTHORS “LOVE FOR TWO%c for yours,” Alester told her. “It must have been picked up by this time anyhow.” you tell me what causes a jerking of 5 ; The portrait has always remained in the family. But “Is this all?” Alester asked, ta@|and his arms folded across bis| “But I haven't another heavy my flesh all over my body? Worse ; drive closes. North Dakota raised $940.10 for the | tast week Baron Chesham, Lady Betty’s great-grandson, ing up the other two pieces, chest. coat,” Jerry wailed. at times than others, twitching as ‘ cause in 1909. In 1927 this total had jumped to $25,-| decided he could afford to part with it. For Manhat- “That’s all,” Jerry said with aj There was a five-minute wait.| “It was my fault,” Alester de- many as four or five places at the : 968.27. Support of the movement increases each suc-|tan’s Knoedler Galleries offered more than $500,000 perfectly straight face. clared. “You'll have to let me get you another in Atlantic City. “He handed her his light topcoat and helped Jerry put it on. Then he took the wheel again and in a few seconds they were spinning along at 45. eee ELL, she'd have to send her lent to assist in reducing and this is likewise true of the bicycle appar- atus, but you should also take plenty of long walks each day to assist in hardening your muscles. Muscular Jerking and Twitching Question: Mrs. R. asks: “Can same time.” Answer: Your trouble is caused yy some nervous disorder and you 8o that the cause may-be ascertained, oo | Our Yesterdays | i ‘ : t h 2 Sh {now I can lunch with you,” she mother a coat without a fur old idea that all tuberculosis was’ inherited is now| up in Palestine, in Carthage, Egypt, Nineveh and ‘Tyre, este ite propentsand [for owe wooue The wire, hed|eald to him a ittle later. told leotiar Pesaran Shy eared Sn eee co known to be erroneous. It is spread by conditions and ghee elie oe pele for bt meena in ee Usited fin he doce ot im {agreed not to keep the rqom to-|D— my friend, that I,couldn’t wait | hadn’t resisted Alester’s subsidizing from person to person, States, but an American publisher uses it for variety North Dakota applied its funds last year to good purpose in the war on the infection. There were 2,598,627 stamps sold at a cent each. The money was applied to maintaining Camp Gra: k, the state’s first fresh air and nutrition camp for i providing equipment for the children’s building; to nursing service; to health supplies for schools; to edu- cational work in care, cure and prevention of tuber- culosis; to school prevention and corrective work among children. The North Dakota work is absorbed in the general | accomplishments of “the crusade the country over against tuberculosis. In the past 20 years the death rate from the disease has been cut in half—a saving of more than 125,000 lives in the year 1928 alone. These accomplishments are the best argument for support of the cause. It now remains for Burleigh county to discharge its ‘duty by this praiseworthy movement and to put over the local seal drive with the shining success of leadership, BERLIN’S “WHITE LADY” The spectral “white lady” has appeared again in the former imperial palace at Berlin, and superstitious Ger- mans are saying that this foretells the early death of ex-Kaiser Wilhelm. This “white lady” is the ancestral ghost of the Hoh- enzollerns. Ever since 1806 she has flitted into view on the eve of disaster. Her appearance, legend says, is always followed by some catastrophc—death or some- thing else. Wilhelm, it is said, saw her a few days before the final crumbling of the German lines in 1918 ard not much for that. Tut had a great vogue and his period, the revealing of its riches, caught the American public imagination. But that was a flash so far as the pcople in general are concerned, It is not necessary to press the distinction, but the American people are interested in today and tomorrow and not so much in yesterday, If a new and revolu- tionary automobile engine were invonted they would be standing on tiptoe. If something were dug on Mars they would be running around in circles, but most of them pass rather casually by something dug up along the Nile. An adverse critic might dismiss. this as unintelligent, but it is rather a matter of temperament or habitual point of view. The past has a greater hold on an Englishman. This has its advantages, but his problem is to get away from it and break with traditions which are holding him back. The American is urged to get a better hold on his past in order that he can hustle the future more securely without finding that he has been chasing a wrong idea or that he is going entirely too fast. He’s apt to do that politically. He takes the profit of his temperament, economically, industrially and mechanically, but contracts some bad debts socially and politically. SCHUBERT ON THE PRAIRIE " 5 (Duluth Herald) Thirty-five or forty years ago Minot was a rough- and-ready little cow town in Northwestern North | Dakota. Its rich farming land had not yet been taken up to any extent and its few hundred people were far enough from the settled sections to the east of them to go their own way without much interference, if any. Saloons and dance halls were abundant, and when the boys came into town from the near-by ranches they had so much fun that some of the old-timers chuckle about it yet when they talk about the old days. About 1900, however a large block of land near there 01 for monez. He leaves atter warn. he go home her to Adlai NOW GO ON WITR THE sTonY CHAPTER XXXI1 ERRY could scarcely contain her laughter as she told the hur rledly made-up lle to Aloster. Ask Miss Ray if she’s ready to start for Atlantic City, indeed! She saw the expression on his face change to a black scowl and guessed that he believed she had an engagement with Dan. She had hoped he would think that Dan was the man, but she hadn't dared to announce his name +.» Alester might know it wasn't true. gether any longer, but Jerry\feared Myrtle might not find another place soon. She didn't want her to bear the expense of a double room alone. She was seated in the car and Alester was shifting into gear when she exclaimed that she had for- gotten something. He helped her out of the car. “LN just be a minute,” she said and ran up the stairs. Once inside the house she went to the pay tele- phone and dropped a nickel in the slot. A short wait and she got her number. She was glad that Eve lyn answered—it saved time, Then she told her friend what’she want: ed her to do. Evelyn agreed to do as she was bid but Jerry was con- scious of her reluctance. She was sorry that Evelyn did not approve of her plan, but all that mattered now was to have her do as Jerry had requested. “When she knows why,” Jerry said to hersef, “she will appreciate the joke.” Finishing her call to Evelyn, she rushed upstairs to get her dressing case, And this time when she left the room she thrust the key under the door. ~~ “I'm not used to this case,” she explained as Alester took it from her. “What time is your date?” Alester asked. “One o'clock.” “You'll be late,” he said. “why don’t you ‘phone and say you're not another 15 minutes—it would make me too late getting started for At- lantic City.” Jerry felt welt pleased with her- self. She was going to drive down after all, and Alester had no rea- son to believe that she'd jump through a hoop for him at the snap of his fingers. They had a delicio of squab en casserole en dessert. Jerry looked in her plain blue dress and tight black hat. Alester had checked her old sports cost and she'd pinned the orchids onher shoulder. Not a few people stole frequent glances at her antmated countenance. Jerry tried to forget Dan Harvey. elee ‘HE drive to Atlantic City was delightful. It was one of those fall days when the sunshine is like liquid gold and the sky as blue as Irish eyes. The cushioned seats of the roadster were deep and soft- springed. Jerry relaxed and told herself to enjoy the good the gods provided and stop thinking of a lean brown man who held you like @ gorilla against a pounding heart but would not kiss you. She~had thrilled to the Holland tunnel under the Hudscn River—to the gently winding curves and un- checked speed, and to the thought of @ great stream flowing over her head. luncheon ‘nstincts thus far only to yield over the loss of an old coat. She could make up for the fur with a dress later on. She wondered if clothes were very expensive on the Board- walk. , But perhaps she'd better not buy anything more until after the show opened. Everyone said it was go- ing to be a hit, but Jerry had been reading the theatrical news with great fidelity. She discovered that an appalling number of shows flopped. What would she do if “Summer. time” rolled over and kicked up its legs? No job}. No money—nat even a hali bedroom she could go back to! The day lost some of its bright- ness for Jerry. There wasn't a dark cloud in the sky but her spirits dropped like a barometer before a storm. She kept her eyes on the road looking for bumps. ‘When they were down past As- bury ‘Park she asked Alester if they’d reach Atlantic City before dark. “Yes,” he said, “we'll do 70 pretty soon. “Take me to the Everett Hotel,” she said. “Evelyn's staying there.” “Wouldn't you come to the Am- bassgdor as my guest if I asked Miss Starr to share a suit with you?” Alester said pleadingly. “You don't know how I feel, Jerry, hav- ing s0 much money that isn’t mak- Was shé—Jerry Ray—wearing |;, i life any:pleasanter for you.” John Russell of Valley City is t visiting relatives here. E. F. Welch and C. D. Drummond of Chicago are visiting in Bismarck ¥ with friends. “ It is expected that the traveling public will soon be able to enjoy the comforts of the new vestibuled train jon the Northern Pacific. b; should surely have a diagnosis made 5 Fy Dr. Spencer of Fort Yates was in the city on business. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO A. J._ Johnson, watchmaker at Cook’s Jewelry store, is off duty with a burned hand sed by the explosion of a flash light pistol. Mrs. John Hamilton, sister of the late James Staley, has arrived in Bismarck from her home in St. Paul. Ben Belk, employed as a reporter on the Jamestown Alert, is in the city for a short visit. Mrs. J. W. Foley and the Misses Bessie Waggoner and Edna Win- chester have returned from St. Pau! They were on the train which ra: into a freight train near Elk River, but were unhurt. TEN YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Walters have returned from Chicago where they were called by the illness of their ‘ daughter, Mrs, Angeline Dursema. i Vi i ae * hids and riding beside a mil-| « a” > Mrs, He “Waldo Coe of P compelled him to abdicate his throne and flee to Hol-| Was opened up to settlement by the government and t scowl Hike that, she | coming?” : «| tox But st is.” detey: responded n.Henty. Waldo Cop of’, Bort land. Mipet has been growing in stature and grace ever ee name had|,O% fo 1 couldn't do that, Uonaire in an imported car, the linstantly. “Why! I'd be back in land, Ore., a former resident of Bis- Now she is seen again. The old imperial palace is a museum, and a night watchman affirms that the specter’ was seen, by him, gliding in and out of the suite for- merly occupied by Wilhelm himself—which makes it ob- vious that whatever happens will happen to Wilhelm ard not to a lesser Hohenzollern. Wilhelm, for all we know, may be quite unworried by all of this; indeed, the man who used to be the Kaiser is, in some ways, in a rather enviable position. Nothing that can happen to him—not even death—can be much of a misfortune for him. When November 11 Now it is a lively town with about seventeen thousand people, the center of a large trading area and the social and political headquarters of North- western North Dakota. This development was brought to attention the other day by the news that Minot has been picked as the outstanding example in the United States of small.city oraniization in the nation-wide observance of Schubert week, Its activities in honor of the great master of mel embraced schools, churches and clubs and Peni od sored with remarkable enthusiasm by many of the town’s leading citizens. The honor was awarded by the Schubert Centennial committee of New York. popped into his mind. She could be lunching with Evelyn or someone he did not know. Alester hesitated a moment be- fore speaking. Then: “All right,” he said, “I'll drive you over to the hotel. Have your things, brought down if they're packed so we won't have to come back for them.” “But I've decided to go on the Jerry protested. “It’s really from one to half past.” same Jerry Ray who, @ few short weeks before, hadicounted her pen- “Come in with me,” she invited when they stopped before the Ritz. Alester summoned a doorman to whom he turned over his car and ‘@ dollar bill to see that it was well taken care of. He was not a bit loathe to learn who was to be Jerry’s luncheon companion. In fact, he had intended to intrude into the situation whether she asked him or not. . nies and pulled down the heels of her stockings to hide the darns? Yes, she guessed she was, The coat she wore proved it. Well, anyway, she would soon be able to send her mother a coat with a fur collar. And she could fold this old thing over her arm when she got to her hotel. She hoped she wouldn't &@ warm wrap in Atlantic City. |p, They stopped at a gas station New York watching the clock right now if it weren't for you. And I'd probably be having a roastbeef sandwich for dinner. Evelyn says the Everett is'a nice place. “Well, would you come to a little party” ‘Alester urged. “I've wired for fodms.” i “Not tonight,” Jerry sald ficmly. “We're going to work all day to- morrow for ‘our final dress re- “Tomorrow night, after the marck, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. G. A. Rawlings. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Falconer and daughter Helen, have gone to San Antonio, Texas, to spend the winter with their son-in-law and daughter, Lieut. and Mrs. Robin A, Day. They will also visit their daughter-in-law, Mrs. A. B, Faleoner, Mrs. L. V. Vincent and daughter Ruth of Billings, were the guests of ” later on and Jerry removed her ?” Alester ay led. “You Mrs. George E. Munger. F iri ‘ train,” Jerry replied. hare. od [SHOW ppealed. : of 1918 came and found him roosting in uneasy safcty From a crudr vrairie town without edvantages to a “and I've decided to take you,” |"[YHOUGH Jerry was not familiar coat. -Alester noticed that she tried /mugt come, then, Jerry; the R HOUSES EXPE} 81 Say the Dull: boriler; Lis life had really come ae uous national exemplar of the musical culture vasebadine ip fe you,” |" to hide the worn lining. When be| party's in your honor.” POO! ES EXPENSIVE @n end. Any su>:-quent event vas ho-nd to he ia thly representative of an archaic idea—the idea of Kingship, That idea, along with much other accumulated by the centuries, was blown to § by the guns on the western front. When it van- ‘Wilhelm, too, vanished. flesh| and bones of him still exist, of course. y-baired old man with a, withered arm has con- ented by Schubert is certainly a noteworthy will have ty keen his ear \ Portsmouth Sun: have found a room in Oxford in which Shakespeare M in which he oe Titus pe conta in Denn, Se one Dallas Journal: That Ohio cha} who ccnsumed more te the ground, thon fifteen nourds of ceuerkraut in the championshi: contest certainly knows his cabbage. “ Alester returned. But he said it very ‘pleasantly. , with the hotel, pevertheless she led the way with well assumed as- do when she got to the Ritz? “Come up and get my things,” she said, to gain time. “We haven't & porter.” The’ tandlady stood by with watchful mien while Alester en- tered Jerry's room to get her sult: ing for her. “He'll be along presently,” she said without mentioning any name. “Don't wait if you want to lunch at some other place.” She knew he wouldn't “lunch at some other place.” Not even the Rock of Gibraltar seemed firmer in got back in the car he casually drew it over to his side and when | “Yes,” she said, “I think I'll put my coatiom,” ~~ « ; ‘When she discovered that it was missing Alester inquired if she had anything of value in the pockets. Jerry said no. “Then, if you don’t mind wearing my topcoat, I'd rather not go back “Who will be there?” was thinking of whst Dan had said to her about keeping her reputa- tion unsullied, and suddenly she knew that she didn’t want to go to a party Alester would throw— and not because she hoped to marry him, (To Be Continued) One rain that wets the river ma the poultry house on a cold, wet - Bark should be pesied from tresht ark 5 ly cut timber that is to be used for posts and poles. treated with preservatives they have to be peeled anyway, and if they are not the peeled posts and poles will season better and last longer in the ground, 2 SE REE SER Spee eee a ' rw? L $ ee} 3 ci in 4 surance to # certdin location in the y| “The whole show.” a night may do more damage to the “* 4 he ae “fer {ia to Micot end to the leadership that Jerry shragged. If ste could only |Iobby that appeared to her to be a |ser1Z became ctananed ip the Sos | | Jerry frowned. “Drinks?” she Hi fiock than the cost of ne 6 the For Wilhelm, born under an unlucky star, lived too Ce ee cuitc put over that mythical luncheon en | good meeting place. car. : ba pd for tl sc wane thea” The roof of a poultry house should Tong, In his life he came to be « symbol for an out-| Omaha World-Herald: There will be lots of politics e wouldn't mind re-| “ Alester was taken in by her air!" im a, saved her present! Hy Fyeetrts - a be made watertight. system. He was the supreme figurehead and|in the air, but the fellow who wants to get the drift . of surprise at finding no one wait- sal er 2 iy. jerry sal is _more.