The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1928, Page 4

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| The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) _ , | PAGE FOUR —— Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck fs second class mail matter. George D. Mann ....... Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail, per year, (in Bisa Daily by mail, per yet (in state, outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, out and Publisher 7.20 ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ...... 10 Weekly by mail, in te, three years fur 25. Weekly by meil, of North Dake " Sriesetae 5e per yea ureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled io the Wot for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspuper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication ef ct! other rontter f are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. 3 DETROIT ICAGO SS Eniesge Bldg. Tower Bldg. State and County News:aper) (Official City, DEMONSTRATING A HOME This is the age of demonstration. Modern merchan- dising or service dcesn’t, want its goods or modations taken on faith based on meve wants merit proved. Where patentec devicc cerned it wants the processes of operatio taade clear to the buyer. Whether it be an airplane tha: is desire: or an auto that is to be bought. a new breakfast food to be placed on the market or a new siyle of hair dressiz to be popularized into the vogue, the inevivable demen- stration precedes all these. In season and out, in sone nook, the store-goer is,almosi always sure te find a dizzy blonde of the d gentlemen are said to prefer or a radian‘ brunette busy in cookery, laundering, seam- stressing or beauty practices, demonstrating the latest progress of civilization in these lines. waukee railroad put on its new electric Olympian with monster new power locomotives, it ran a sample train over the entire line, stopping at the main cities to dem- onstrate the new luxury in travel and the intricacies of the motive power that operated the outfit. So it goes on endlessly. One asked to buy with assurance, install with confidence, eat, drink or wear some product with inculeated faith in its virtues. Here in Bismarck the demonsiration idea is just being given a very effective and utilitarian application to en- courage that home building which must precede the bigger and better future Bi ‘ck that is the dream of As the result of a happy inspiration when he decided to build himself a new home, Kenneth W. Simons, loca! Associated Press man, sought the co- operation of the furnishers of material and between them they put the new home at 811 Mandan street on display, d, after it had ‘been built. Realtors work this plan with great success in the large cities. Putting up blocks of new residences, they set aside one, furnished abou! like the normal home would be, then throw it open for inspection by prospective home buyers, The { is to instill the idea of home-owning and multiply ing. There is triteness in the obvious fact that # community of home-owners makes for solidity in financial conditions, leads to finer family life, to higher vic d2pendableness and to progress and happiness. And in the proportion as such homes are of modern construc- tion and equipment, so is the ratio of assured health con- ditions increased in a community. That the Bismarck demonstration has made an en- couraging impression on the men and women here with the home-bug buzzing in their ears is obvious from the response of the public to the invitation to visit the house and inspect it. That more than 700 persons did so Sun- day is significant of the home-longing in the community. Not only home building but home furnishing. It showed that Bismarck people incline to the latest conveniences, with which the demonstration home was amply equipped, ‘The way they examined the gas and electric fixtures, the furnace, the kitchen and bathroom plumbing and the laundering machinery revealed a potential field of greater business in such fixtures. . The demonstration will continue a week. Those who have not availed themselves of the opportunity to see the house should visit it before it is closed. All in all, the demonstration was important from the Point of view of the impulses that it must have set up. It should influence the field of real estate, building and house furnishing. Future perspective may reveal it as city which the community is fond of thinking of as the Greater Bismarck. More and better homes conceivably might even lead to the city beautiful in which architectural luster would replace present shabbiness in the state's public structures. A MODERN RADIO EPIC There aren't any pirates any more—except in China— and the red Indians of the west live peaceably in reser- vations, while the cowboy is as prosaic a workingman as the auto mechanic. High adventure has pretty much vanished from our civilization, and the daily life of most of us is devoid of real thrills. But once in a while we can sit in our living room arm- chairs and come face to face with all the suspense and glamour of heroism and death. The other afternoon—it was a Sunday—the. radio stopped being a simple diversion and became a gate through which the idle listener could come in contact with something as intense and desperate as a Viking sea raid. A blinding snow storm was sweeping the middle west. It was cold and there was a howling gale. It was a day that made the stay-at-home glad he could be inside and warm. Suddenly the radio broke off its musicai program. A voice announced that two aitmail planes were long over- due. Pilot Tilden Johnson, flying from Cleveland to Loutsville, was missing, and so was Pilot Lawrence H. Garretson, flying the transcontinental route west from Mew York. The radio man asked for information about those planes, bullstins. Johnson and Garretson were still missing. Station after station on the routes reported them overdue. ‘Weather reports became worse. The central Ohio region, over which Johnson must be flying, was being lashed by ‘® flerce storm. Conditions were even worse over the Alleghenies, that ominous hurdle that Garretson was trying to clear. Into thousands of homes, safe and secure and warm, _ the radio brought the cold breath of tragedy. Some- “where—up beyond those white snow flurries—two anxious “men in rocking, swaying airplanes were fighting for was pirsuing the sir mail. Would the two pilots win? ‘At last came the end, First « bulletin that a blazing = | 1s ieared that most mail order and othe: foreign buying When the Mil- ; focal point in the development of the ultimate capital i There would be intervals of music and then recurring H ‘their lives. Death, riding the white wings of the storm, | poo had crashed into a mountain side on the Penn- sylvania-Ohio border. He, too, was dead. | We are sheltered and secluded and danger never | touches us; but once in a while we can share in the {gallantry, the heroism and the tragedy of the young {men who fly the air mail. We send our hopes and our | sympathies winging after them on their brave swing | through the sky, and the experience uplifts us. We | confront the elementals and the screen of day-by-day | trivialittes drops. In spirit we ride with the air mail. ‘The bravery and nobility of the airmen become a com- mon possession of th2 race. A GOOD RESOLUTION What would happen if an employe of a bank should tell its patrons to do their banking business elsewhere, or if 4 salesman in a store should whisper to the cus- tomers that prices were lower and quality higher at an- rh ntile establishment? In either case the dis- 1 employe would lose his job and the respect of al ion't the citizen who trades out of town just as ai to his home town as the employe who deprives loyer of business? Those who buy by mail or go shop are telling the patrons of their town that t u'd do better elsewhere. They take away from | the home town merchants not only their own business ibui that of others. | Like bargain-hunting and window-shoppity. buying at heme with practice, becomes a good habi. just as out- of-t trading grows upon one as & bac habit. And it dicta; hi jis from force of habit rather thar from any hope of ‘profit or gain in salisfaction. Seldom is there a legiti- mie excuse for trading elsewi ere than at home. Wha: wouid be the dividends payable to Bismarck if every citizen 0 December 31, 1929, could truthfully say ‘he or she had pet violated « community resolution for 1929 to “buy at heme?” ‘he extra dividends that would accrue to the benefit of the community and each of its ‘citizens would be more business for its merchants, more money in circulation, more employment and more pros- verity for all | TiS PROSPERITY | Virgil Jorda::, chief economist of the National Indus- \trial Conference Board, tells a New York audience that {Our present prosperity is “rather a state of mind than a j fact susceptible of demonstration.” The word, prosperity, nas had less real and definite ; meaning this past year than in any year since the war, ‘according to Jordan. It is, for the most part, he says, “an illusion created by extraordinary financial con- ditions.” These are not { words. There will be ‘plenty of people to disagree with them. Doubtless we shall be able to assay them more wisely when the present astounding stock market boom has run its course. Its; climax may reveal to us whether conditions are funda- mentally sound or otherwise. WIVES AND SKYSCRAPERS Rebecca West, English novelist, returns to London after visiting America with a distressing tale about the hard- ships of the American woman. Most Americans, she says, “live skyscvapers with their women perched high in the air where they can't keep a dog, much less keep a family.” Lives of American women materially inclined thus become tzagic, she says. This is a saddening picture, and would be alarming if it were true. But, as anybody who lives in America knows, it isn't. The percentage of families living in sky- scrapers, or anything approaching the skyscraper, is so small as to be negligible. Rather more than 50 per cent | of all Americans own their own homes. The amount of misinformation a visiiing Britisher can | collect about us seems to be absolutely unlimited: | Editorial Comment SAFETY IN THE AIR (Detroit News) How safe is railroad travel? How safe is travel by automobile? How safe is travel by air? The personality of Miss Amelia Earhart bespeaks the truth that flying is particularly fortunate in the char- acter and common sense displayed by the most famous fliers, men and women. The above were questions she discussed in Detroit last week—with common sense. There are hazards in all travel and locomotion, even walking. Comparative statistics are as misleading as they are interesting. It depends on how well the rail- roads are managed and their equipment; on who drives the automobile, on the machine itself, on road ‘and | weather; on the qualifications of the pilots of airplanes, on the worthiness of aircraft used, on the routes flown and the purposes of the flying. As flying is so new, lumped figures of its casualties are an unsound basis of comparison with similar figures upon other modes of transportation. Inexperienced pilots are | numerous, many obsolete planes are flown, stunting answers a demand of the moment, and army and navy | flying is far removed in demands and conditions from commercial flying. With all said, flying is safer than | is generally supposed and is getting safer. THE MEN OF RYE (Cleveland Plain Dealer) i All England mourns the seventeen men of Rye. Great | storms have been sweeping over Europe, and over the seas which wash the European coasts. The seventeen | dead men of Rye were members of the life-saving service, and in a day of raging waves they put forth to rescue the crew of a stranded Latvian steamship. The lifeboat capsized in the gale, and all were drowned. And almost |at the moment when these men were making their sacri fice the Latvians were in process of being rescued by a German steamer. The tragedy at Rye is said to be the most lamentable episode of the entire history of the British life-saving service. The hardy, amphibious men of the towns and hamlets along the English coasts are such excellent sea- men that usually they can take care of themselves in any weather. They are deterred by no peril when there is a call to work of rescue. The Rye tragedy is appallingly pathetic because Rye, though famous for the heroism of iis sons, is but a small village, and the loss of the seventeen able-bodied men assumes the proportions of a major calamity. All the women of Rye, young and old, patrol the beach seeking | for the bodies of the men. The village is dumb in its | agony and grief. But all England and all the world hail Rye today as a home of heroes. And, after a while, this will be Rye’s consolation. WHEN TO KILL THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1928 And Now, Ladies and Gentlemen, i i BARBS °e Among other notes of prosperity, ' the Department of Commerce reports that the supply of nuts is adequate this year. eee gress for 15 new cruisers. You can't | tell when we'll have a hurryup call for good-will envoys. “ee Among the mést valuable tips of advice furnished by Mr. Isaac New- ton, ‘ see iad iat tteeet i EH tT cit. THIS HAS HAPPENED / . Bate introduces JERRY RAY to ALESTER CARSTAIRS when he is on bin account, he be ‘a chorus, nm tor di He seemn afraid nfter arcing @ hootlerger, TRIG NOLAN, there nnd begins to heavit; jerry bers him to m1 when she tt can Ay—with e atorma nee eater pre. e aterm, NOW GO ON WITH THE sTORY CHAPTER XLII A STREAK of lightning, jagged and blinding. had flashed in the wake of the plane. Dan knew that he had flown into the active storm area—that he had passed, Just a few seconds before, the cloud that had launched the thunder. bolt. And he knew that the storm was ahead of him as well as to his rear. They were right in it. He set hie Ups grimly and prepared to climb higher. The altimeter indicated 2000 feet now, but to descend and try to make a landing was impos- sible. Dan was sure they were over the Atlantic Ocean and to fly in- land to make a forced landing meant they would be carried with the storm. which was blowing ip (Time) The famed Hindu doctrine that thou shalt not kill even @ bug—much less a human—was sensationally re- linterpreted last week, by the potent ascetic, sage and | saint, Mahatma Gandhi, Quoth the Mahatma: “Just as a surgeon does not commit himsa (killing), but Practices the purest ahimsa (nonkilling) when he wields his knife on his patient's body for the latter's benefit, similarly one may find it necessary * * * to go a step fur- oe and sever life from the body in the interest of the sufferer. from the northeast. Their only chance seemed to be to ride through ft until they could get above the clouds again. Be fore them loomed a donse bank. Dan kept the nose of the plane up- They shot through at one end and found themselves in the clear for a moment. Then the ward, Plane nosed into another thick gloud as it continued gaining al- titude, Dan glanced at the alti Hag Three... four... ive! All about them now the lightning cracked and thunderous echoes The clouds were black—hanging lower than the white fleece that aviators made an earsplitting din. love to sport with. Dan knew that he could get-above them if... Crack! That one was near! eee work theory that if you stay in one place! long enough something will happen President Coolidge has asked Con- | © You: — << —<—<——— ing in New York wrote to his rescuer @ poem of thanks. great teacher. Experience is a eee A plumber was shot on his way to in Chicago, sustaining In the Pacific there is a species of shark which eats only the brains of lits victims. ¢ Moved for bathers from Hollywood. ‘That's one hazard re- the day to stock speculators is the (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, -Inc.) Thomas Hussey of Batavia, N. Y., A man saved from a burning build- century. A UT control so that she could not take hold of it. He knew she must be in an agony of terror. Who would not, with all hell bursting around them and no place to go—unless you wanted to fly right into it? The rain had stopped, or rather they had left ft behind them. These were lightning clouds that must fire their bolts before releas- ing their torrents of water. And Dan knew they'd been in the clear long enough to dry the wing fab- rie. In the realization of their utter helplessness Jerry forgot every: thing else . . . her rehearsal. . . her mother. . . Dan prayed for rain. It might be of no avail to them . . . prob- ably it wouldn't be . . . if they were struck . . he thought of the words he had spoken to Jerry + +» preferring to crash with her rather than let another man have her . . . it would be a miracle if that did not prove to be their fate. For a fleeting space of time Dan sought to hold ‘the ship level, try- ing to suppress his instinct to soar higher. He'd had some bitter mo: ments with unbidden images that had come to him . . . Jerry in Aleater’s arms . . . God, he'd like to crash to. carth to escape living in a World in which such a thing as that could happen! Now. he was nosing upward agaiu. Jerry's life was too pre cious to be destroyed at the whim of a.fool who wished to escape his suffering, he told himself. But that pause in their climb. . . it seemed te have tlimed their arrival at ceiraiy spot in the air with that of a dait of forked lightning that struck but a bare few feet away from the cockpit itself. Que wing was scorched. It be gan to smoke. Dan's hand’on the control was frozen there. He could not open his eyes. He did not know about the wing that was smolderiug. But his senses were clear. He struggled mightily to shake off the paralysis of shock. The plane waa banking . . . he told himself it would go {nto a nose dive, . . eee RY lay limp in her seat. She ‘was spared this last horror. The dazzling, horrible flash so near had stunned her. Dan‘s strong will forced obedi. ence from his momentarily help- less body. His eyes came open and he saw the burning wing. His imagination, always active and acutely alive in situations where Jerry was concerned, jn- stantly conjured up a picture of her crushed body being devoured by hungry fames. - He believed they must have drifted over land—they hadn't been so very far at sea. His mind told him this in a subconscior fort, working mechanically w his conscious thoughts of Jerry. If they crashed it would not be to a watery grave. . . In response to a tremendous ef- fort of will his body muscles re- sponded to the agonized call of his JERRY was too frightened to}mind for action. He had seen a move, but Dan was glad that diaconnec be had ted the second |ter way to save tl than his own life! the ; girl he loved bet- Comes the Critical Part of the Act | { December 18 | 1787—New Jersey ratified the Consti-| Water, which may be flavored with} Question: i tution. '1799—Washington was buried | Mount Vernon. '1878—Gold and paper dollars had} hours. Once the temperature has! soaked in water for thirty minutes i} same value for first time in 18 years. has worn the same hat for half 2 was found praying on State street, he Said he was “awfully drunk.” In the distance to his left there lowered a menacing bank of sullen black clouds. Rain clouds beyond a doubt . . . If he could only reach them before the wing was destroyed . . . He thanked Alester Carstairs at this moment for his mania for speed . . . the plane was swift + + . it shot away like a ewallow straight toward the ugly blackness miles away. Jerry did not regain comeciousness before they disap- peared into its ebon depths. But the rain that washed into her face quickly revived her. She opened her eyes to find herself enveloped in a dim, dark, deluge of water, “Dan!” . . . she sobbed aloud when she saw his shoulders rising above the back of his seat—just as she had seen them before that last terrible crash. Jerry knew nothing of flying. But her ignorance was not so com- plete that she failed to realize that Dan was having trouble. Some thing must have happened to the motor, she thought . . . they were no longer flying smoothly or climb- ing steadily. In a few more seconds they were out of the cloud. Jerry could now see the damaged wing. A part of It was gone and a charred, ragged edge outlined the portion that had been burned away. But the terror that had gripped her earlier in the flight had now disappeared. They were out of that inferno of crackling lightning bolts and deafening thunder. And though she did not express herself [ rite E ds ig i i HE Ee “4 i 8 3 § Hl g BS lenty of iter bottle ' until head becomes congested, relief can be cotton, | day, gradualiy your! tance. You will feel weak at first, to/ structions, tol after effects, such as tuberculosis disorders. requires nourishing food at this time 4s erroneous and has probably re- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the ‘Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. have been prevented by the method T have just outlined. ic exercises shuld be taker. the second day after the temperature 4s normal. and short walks taken each the dis- but your strength and vitality will quickly return if you follow these in- and you can avoid the bac kidney ata By During fever the hacking cougt will persist, but you will not raise much mucus until the fever has dis- appeared, and then you will probably notice that the mucus increases for to} about a week or two. This is nor- mal and the mucus will gradually dis- @ppear if you follow the correct diet. These plain commonsense instruc- had through applying a cold compress] tions have worked without fail ir is date in MERICAN HIST ORY at | Visable under any circumstances to get When Charles Thurstin of Chicago WEY GROVES) ATIOns/ ers aes in words, she took courage from her supreme confidence in Dan's skill at flying. eee ae were nosing down now. Oh, how glad she was of that! To get back to earth! ... She gave little thought to her failure to make good her word about getting to Boston on time. Her chance was gone. She knew it and uncomplainingly resigned herself to her ill fortune with grat- Itude to The Almighty for saving her life—and Dan's. It tragedy had befallen him it would have been ber fault... she had insisted upongthe flight in the face of adverse ther cond!- tions, she told herself. Then she remembered that they hadn’t landed yet. She looked aver the. aide of the ship. They wese dropping swiftly . . . the earth seemed to be coming up to meet them with a menacing threat to extinguish them. Jerry closed ber eyes. She was seized with a new terror. She couldn't endure it any longer. ‘When she opened them Dan was Ifting her out of the cockpit, She was too weak to struggle out of his arms . . . well, she didn't want to. He held her until some peo ple who had witnessed their land- ing from a nearby “farm house came running to their assistance, “Jerry, Jerry, Jerry!” It seemed to Jerry that Dan had repeated her name ® thousand times . . . she didn’t think it un- manly of him to let his voice shake, bis hands tremble, either. Jerry's story might have run a piliterent course had they not heen “rescued” so promptly. Two to the forehead. thousands of cases. It is well for you This sweating should be continued! to cut out and keep this article as it several hours and then a tepid bath) win prove very valuable in case of a should be taken and the patient! future attack. placed between dry bed-clothing. If the fever continues, an occasional’ followed by’ a brisk rubdewn, Th hi follo a rubdown. This! Question: Mrs. E. 8S. B. asks sweat may be repeated each day for! “what are symptoms of toxemia, and the first two or three days. what would you advise for one suffer- An enema should be taken morhing| ing from same?” and evening, using ® bed pan if nec-) Answer: Toxemia is one of the essary, since it is not advisable to/ principal causes of all constitutional expose the patient for too lons &/ disorders. Some of the symptoms are time to the cold air. If the fever| coated tongue, foul breath, headaches, remains high and the patient does) nervousness, melancholia, and enough not sweat, he should be given warm| others to. fill this page. The cure is sponge baths every hour until he/in eliminating all of the verious starts perspiring. causes while curing the present tox- It is of the utmost imprtance that) emia through stimulating all of the after the beginning of the attack no} excretory functions. food of any kind be given except Raw Starch Soup I. M.S. writes: “A cer- tain health book recommends raw oatineal water. out of bed for at least twenty-four| be placed in’ a ivoned eet QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS mia lemon or orange juice. It is not ad- normal and your appetite has} then beaten until milky, ther returned, you may start eating any} strained, and it is then ready tc kind of food in proper combination.| drink. It is claimed this makes blood However, you may not feel very| rapidly. What do you think? Is it hungry for a few aie a Pan ad-| too starchy?” visable to gnly use acid fruits during! Answer: st: foods this period. The theory that the body) class of foods seule are ea ta proved through cooking. The raw but is broken up through heat. The cold raw starch soup which you write about is composed practically of beepers else but starch and wate: , of course, cannot be truly called ‘@ blood builder. : Stiff Neck Question: M. M. writes: “Am Seventy years old, have been healthy all my life. Just now have strange feelings in the back of my head close to the neck, more especially when I move my head. There is no pain— just a cringing feeling, rusty-like, as if the parts need a little oil. Will you tell me what is causing this?” Answer: Your trouble is probably due to a slow growth of calcium around the different parts of the cervical vertebrae. This does not al- ways cause painful distress, but if the calcium forms between the vertebrae it will produce a tight feeling. The best treatment to take is one which can be given by a doctor who is skilled in manipulative therapeutics. betel: ne bending the neck he le e the forma- ‘on of Saditional cache, ie young people in love with each other would inevitably have come to a full understanding had they been left to themselves after such a harrowing experience. But eager hands tore Jerry away from Dan before he'd got over the wonder of having her safe in his arms sufficiently to respond to the urge within him to kiss her. And just when he would have done it and made ner his own a yelling group bore down upon them, and his chance was gone. eee ERRY was completely bewil- dered with the events that fol- eo lowed. For no reason that she oO a could ite she tad become a vere, | Our Yesterdays ine. A resourceful press agent, Ee ee ee perceiving an oprortunity to cap- italize upon her narrow escape, saw to that. As soon as she could convince Dan that she was able to continue to their destination he had hired a farmer to drive them to the near- est railroad station, and though they arrived in Boston that after- noon, it was too late for Jerry to rehearse, even if she had been equal to it, Mr. ‘Hule received her icily when she came backstage. Evelyn was nearly distracted, but after a quick appraisal of Jerry’s appear- ‘ance she turned to Dan for an ex- planation. ‘Then she insisted up- on accompanying Jerry to Mr. Weinertz’s office to plead for hier. Jerry took leave of Dan and he promised to be out front that night. Jerry declared she would be able to appear if Mr. Hule and Mr. Weinertz would permit her. Very fortunately for her the company’s Dress representative was in con- ference with Mr. Weinertz when Pe girls were admitted to his of e. ‘The producer, scowling fiercely, gave Jerry a chance to tell her story before reducing her to the ranks, witb all the sarcasm at. hi She had not finished her recital when the purveyor of free apace burst out with a whoop of joy, “This show's been passing out i 3 ee YEARS AGO 9 » Plano tuner, is spend- ing the week in the city. 5 S| The Silver Star Dancing club is to be reorganized this winter. Captain John Belk contemplates = {scarting @ restaurant in the building {on Main street recently vacated b: Helgerson and Holt. Pe Mrs. W. B. Watson left for Ohio and Pennsylvania to visit friends. TWENT-FIVE YEARS AGO Mrs, E. J. Raymond of Dawson is visiting with friends in the city. Party of-friends at cards. Mrs. J. H. Marshall and Flora/ Mc: Donald gave a party for Mrs, Fraser and daughter Ellen of Brainerd, Minn., who are visiting here. Miss Helen Hughes has gone tc Glendive, Mont, for a visit. . ae seu swore AGO f erly of Velva is hi attend @ session of the te i board. state canvass- Mrs. 8. W. Corwin, who is in @ lo- cal hospital with influenza, is much improved. Paul Jewell, son of Mrs. M. H. Jew- for the lack of a good yarn to hand ell is in a hospital in France the newspaper boys,” he declaimed wounded Nar eee influenza, aes here's o mature 3 Wit. il De. c. Hibbs has relied ere’s a natural, J. W. . C. C. Hibbs has Jake Aa feruated, | “ot Bi|Milwaulee, where ha ee he course it is, elyn exciaimed.- Bruce Covault “Why don’t you rush a photogra- Viola Hibbs 2. Ane Dher to the plane and get some —_—— pictures before Mr. Carstairs takes RAZZBERRIES FOR FRENCH PAR- hy A eee, ee ‘Th al oma of gram- pralstogiy. “Swell idea,” ne anid mar isn't: used in the best of circles Pleasantly; “but we've got a better pe! Paul Lombard, humorist and one. I go out too field, hire fer of good French, is urging ‘a ship fake a good crash. Miss French parents to keep their off- Ray can be snapped in the ruins.” hee from attending sessions of "*Oh, no,” Jerry -cried. “You ‘lament. He claims that group of mustn't let him do that, Mr. Weln- {| Political leaders mix thelr metaphors, erts. It might . . .” she stopped He has cited some of the verbal io egypt had | been on the Phapaers eae aah atie body. pol urt Mr. Harvey’ e reputation.” when her better juds- |, xc With to regulate death, Try ment came to her rescue. She held You see what she will do tc Saleh oR ootat fee oto, cmp, soy wor! ©! wouldn't mean a thing to the press agent aa mae nae Shay begin to walk.” ew, : thank . Minister, “Well?” Mr. Welnerts sald, tt. | MANS heard me with » friendly’ eye.” . ing his busy eyebrows. 4 cee thelr arms so tightly (Te Be Continued) dance.” longer know on which foot to 4 starch cell is very difficult to digest \ Mrs. A. L. Kershaw entextainet a : . € 4 ds

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