The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 1, 1929, Page 4

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aad 4 * are all members of the Northwest % to come back to the house and then to succeed ne has never happsned in American public life in bis case. Re of his conspicuous political activities in recent ‘Californian was the man the people would appreciate Aa Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- Marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @s second class mali matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .........--- Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outs'*> of North Dakota, per year ........ Sepeatisee 3 eke Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and lsc the local news of spontancous origin published herein. All tights of republication of all other matter hereir are 1°" also reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. NEW YOR ROSTON CHICAGO (Official City, State and County Newspaper) AN IMPORTANT BA? MERGER The First Guaranty bank bas made iiaportant nen cial history for Bismarck by its merger with the North west Bancorporation of Minnee : The merger in itself was an event to rivet Union with an institution controlling res £444,000,000 and still growing grips the imaginat It connotes strength, vitality, security. It is in line with the new tendency rapidly organiains the country’s banky into regional groups. The Guaranty, however, adds progress to the story of the rr ment that reorgan will take place and its name will b of the National Bank and Trust Cc Capital is to be $100,000, surplu: profits $10,000, This sou good. turplus multiplied tenfold. The merger brings the F Nation go, the First National of Minot, the James River tional of Jamestown and the Ci National of W: peton, the Grafton National and the Ameri change bank of Valley City into clo the Bismarck institution, as these its own element of r, with it ant any of Bismarck. 000 and undivided Capital is doubled, 50 1 This all is another straw of the many that the country is entering on a new cra business development, the better met and better ser which these bank merger d by the financial pools are, in effect. nds of which will be} There is al ringing note of optimism about it all, and North Da-| kota can find inspiration in and take cou ec from the development. Burton Was Waterway Champion ‘Theodore E. Burton died just as his two favorite sub- fects of advocacy were mo:t conspicuously before th Public, one before the home folk: tar and the mind of the western world. ‘They talk of the Ohio senator as a peace advocate, now that death has brought his public career under review, but Theodore Burton won his spurs and long held the attention of the country by another form of champion- ship. He was the advocate of sensible watery im- provement, the watchdoz against “pork” raids on the trorsury, a believer in canalization where such improve- ment was palpably wise. In fact, he antedated President Hoover by quarter of a century in just such admini: Lion project: Hoo- Ver advocated the other night in his speech at Louis- ville. Twenty years ago Burton was proposing in con- gress essentially what the president advocates with such a chorus of approbation. It has been slow in coming, but it has come as Herbert Hoover picks up and advances the idea where death stays its old champion. Burton's advocacy of river improvement was regarded by some in that earlicr day as a piece of selfishness. lie other claiming the | Being from Ohio, it was thought that he was speaking | for his home country when he urged deepening of the Ohio river to its junction with the Mississippi. But he convinced his critics that he was right, and the other day the great project which he backed with all the force of his tireless championship was celebrated as an ac- complished fact. It was a memorable debate when in 1912 he turned on the opposition and gave them the facts by contrast with their own plans of waterway improvement. The Mis- touri river improvement advocates of that day had stated that freight on the river amounted to 762,720 tons, in justification of their plea for millions for locks and dams. Senator Burton analyzed the figure to show that of this total 721,000 tons were sand and gravel carried in barges an ayerage distance of one mile, in which locks and dams played no part, and that of the remaining ton- nage only 4,000 tons really represented freight in the usual sense moving over the river. The Red river, running through Louisiana, Arkansas ‘and Texas, he pointed out in the debate, had been im- pro--1 by the United States at a cost then of $3,000,000, and only 62 tons of {freight had moved over it in 1911. ‘The Big Sandy river, running between Kentucky and ‘Virginia, had been provided with five locks at a cost of $1,500,000 and not a ton of freight moved over it in the year Senator Burton was reviewing, which was 1911. ‘The Kentucky river, in Kentucky, which empties into the Ohio river, had less traffic moving on it in 1911, when there were 12 dams, than in 1899, when there were ‘only five dams, and the record showed throughout con- stantly diminishing tonnage in spite of improvements. + Burton will always be remembered for his devotion to thee cause of world peace, but he was submerged in that rele by advocates of more conspicuous prominence and personality. Burton was not such a great seeker for the anyhow. He even retired from the senate, Frank B. Willis as senator when the latter died. Such Years was h's advocacy of Hoover for the Republican presidential n-mination in Ohio, He carly saw that the his cause against the candidacy of one of the favorite son com- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1929 ‘The Bismarck Tribune| Buying Your Farm as You Go owners’ conference at Fa ,» November 7-8, nt one of the constructive effor otiation to is state. Rr the tenant farmer is to yield to hen the malady attacks to instabilit n has farmers them bet leading topi h Dakota ‘lement in t the ind abou! de made dise: of 4 population, the 2 retention of h the G. N. D. A. has devised is to turn er into farm owner, To m thie plan sem of annual payments has been | nd contract forms embodying it have been | H ly tenant thus would pay w © landlord owner would nis farm made it poss would give the tenant an in ould tend to inspire in him th « property gives. He would Dakota farming wouid be farm better contentment that tick to the place, stabilized in its !o for outside tenant form of farm purciiase ought to be a biz farmers to c able farms. 1] dation and skilled farmers. It is not dif- u in this would be for North Dakota rming applied to such farm pur- ould not be difficult for the buyers to ma! ir venture, Payin: to the ified a lot and the correct farming on the part of the | and insurance also are given a) ho standard form of contract which | ed to apply solely to this type of buy- | of detail, of course, protecting both the b: i 1 obligating or, while t tag Ik conference should prove an important event from andpoint of the farmer and the business men who a kinhsip with agriculture. Special attention is n to the weed and dockage problem. Increase of tock on rented farms and supervision of such farms also will be du rom all angles. The G: cutline its immigration and entatives of the farm , the federal land ba Credit corporation and the receiver of closed banks will be represenied. The government very thoughtfully has provi J. Spiliman, the noted agricultural economist from vicultural depariment, shall be in attend or be diccussed ought to make it a highly education fercnes and productive of much good to the farm North Dakota, ater as- | | | Need for Reorganization \ The need for # thoroughgoing governmental rvorgan- | ization in Washington is illustrated by the recent an- nouncement of William J. Cooper, U. S. commi ner of education, that “the commissioner of cducation is no| lonzer valet to Santa Claus.” What Cooper meant was that the supervision of the herd of a million reindeer in Alaska has at last been (ransferred {dom the burcau of education to the govern- ment of Alaska, Just how these far-away reindeer ever came under the control of this particular bureau seems to be a mystery; but there they were, for nearly 40 years. Weshington is full of parallel cases. A complete re- organization that would shuffle all such jobs and deal them out in a more sensible manner is urgently nceded. Neichbors are people who live so close to you they con't insult one another except in whispers. Editorial Comment onde 1 A Never-Ending Charge (Duluth Herald) A recent news story from Washington reported that ‘he government pension bureau had just issued a voucher covering the funeral expenses of the last veteran of the Mexican war, who died about two weeks ago. The Mexi- can war ended eighty-one years ago, and the depart- ment announced that its books orf veterans of that war were now closed. But even eighty-one years has not been long enough to complete paying for that comparatively small con- flict. There are still nearly cight hundred widows pf Mexican war veterans on the pension rolls, and it will naturally be some years yet before they are gone, as many of the veterans late in life married young women. In fact, the pension bureau announced that on June thirticth eleven widows of the War of 1812, fought a hundred and seventeen years ago, were still receiving their monthly allowances. Coming down to the Civil war, the department reports that only about sixty thousand vetcrans were on the pension rolls in June, but that there were also a hundred and eighteen thousand widows and dependent children. Widows of Civil war soldiers are not eligible to pensions if they married them after 1903. No one grudges this help to these elderly or middle- aged women, for the service of their husbands in giving their time and exposing their lives for 2 mere pittance richly deserves this care of their loved ones in later life, but the figures emphasize the never-ending cost of all wars, even on the financial side. The misery and heart- ache and ruin all of them brought to millions of helpless men, women and children, who were merely pawns in the hands of a ruthless few can never be rated in dollars. And yet there are profit-mad corporations who will hire sinister plotters like the Shearers to hamper the country in every effort to make wars difficult and peace permanent. The Birthplace of Santa Claus (Minneapolis Journal) Mrs. Tillie Hart has lost her fight to save from the wreckers the New York house in which Dr. Clement C. Moore, more than a century ago, wrote that immortal to @ | OUR BOARDING HOUSE if aven help the host gnitaries in the wrong chairs, VERILY, You SHourd 4 SAY! THOSE muGs 4 FEEL ASHAMED OF WERE OUT “TO WING YOURSELF FoR GOING ME !~~ KNOWING SAY, USTEN , HIM FOR A osKow up THE owl's cLuB 4 —uaT I HAD A ee WRITES 1 pup Takia $97 BANK ROLL THEY Y pears ‘em |( ° 10.U.'S. + AWAY FROM “THOSE FRAMED 70 LAY AuLto td? | witd INK PooR MEN, THRU ME OVER TH" PuAcH, THAT FADES |) GAMING FOR STAKES Witd DECK AND DICE fw FIE ON Noule~ [ woud , GIVE THE MONEY BACK “Te BARREL AN’ WHACK ME FoR & Bioot ~~ MISTES , THEY CANT TAKE LI'L JAKE FOR NOTHIN: BuT A WALK! | tional. ° a democratic country, but | other day, se * x ok & 5 se * Kansas City wife got a shock from A two-dollar bill may not mean |USing an electric iron. Usually a hus- of at | with it. | Somewhere in New York there must be as out in that town's Al possible you will president's name in the papers, if he {and celery). No desert. , TR j WEDNESDAY Oatmeal with butter or cream, no on rs ‘sugar, Stewed raisins, ee ee Lunch Glass of grapejuice. Our Yesterdays || pice earns ©) Roast pork. cooked okra, baked egg- FORTY YEARS AGO | plant. McCoy salad. Baked apple. Major Davis of Mandan returned | THURSDAY | yes from Winnipeg where he | Breakfast i recentiy purchased 13 head of buffalo. eens eggs, Melba toast. Stewei | ; Lunch luck trying to buy something | uses on atk The largest plant manufacturing smokeless perman. Or how did he find + there are 22,000 speakeasies fuel, tha’ * The daily esti long about December it is barely see some college [tat 15,000,000 cubic feet. @}does something sufficiently sensa- * A saw 5100 years old was found the | Of course you can hear } s who puts the | older sows than that almost any day. | | misfortune, but you con't have a lot | band gets the shocl:, when his wife | | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | in the world oil and gas is said to be that at Glen- : boig, Glasgow, to be opened shortly, | in the city from the east tod: ated output of fuel will be 100 tons, crude oil production ; will be 15,000 gallons and gas will to- LIKE “TH’ OUT BLANK | “THEY WERE ber 3rd: | SUNDAY | Breakfast tomato of raw celery and ripe olives. Dinner Broiled Belgian hare, baked pars- Cream soup. | eggplant, nips. cooked lettuce. {cucumbers (no dressing). whip. si MONDAY Breakfast sugar), Lunch twelve dates. Steamed rice, | Head lettuce with olive oil. | Dinner | Broiled lamb chcps. | ach. cooked beets. i Bismarck friends yesterday Icoming the Hon. A. P. Hausen | state legislature. | Lieutenant Governor H. H. Raymond, Dawson man, arrived terday to p respects to officials at the capitol. were | Grand Forks, a member of the first ived of | sandwiches. Dinner Veal chops, cooked squash, string | Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for | the week beginning Sunday, Novem- (browned Baked Balad of slice Prune Wholewheat muffins, peanut but- ter. Dish of berries (canned without Glass of buttermilk, with ten or Dinner Vegetable soup. Roast beef, cooked | string beans, stewed tomatoes. Salad of chopped raw cabbage and celery. Jello or Jell-well’with cream, TUESDAY Breakfast | Coddied eggs, Melba toast. Pear | sauce. | Lunch cooked beet tops. Cooked spin- Salad of molded i vegetables (green peas, string beans | When lettuce is heated throu: Celery soup. Cucumber and olive beans. Salad of chopped cabbaco, Ice cream. FRIDAY - Breakfast Poached egg on toasted Shreddcq Wheat Biscuit. Stewed figs. Dr. McCoy will gladly answ. personal questions on health ‘ant diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune, Enclose @ stamped ,addresseq envelope for reply. Lunch Raw apples or oranges as desireP\, iy s? Dinner 4 Baked halibut, spinach, cookea cauliflower. Salad of sliced tomatocs: (no dressing). No dessert. SATURDAY Breakfast Genuine wholewheat bread slizht!y toasted, Peanut butter, stowed prunes. Lunch Spaghetti (wholewheat proc boiled and buttered. Salad of c cooked asparagus (canned) on |; tuce. Dinner Vegetable soup. Salisbury steamed carrots, cooked lettuce. aladd of crisp raw spinach leaves, raw ccl- ery. Pineapple sponge. J *Cooked lettuce: The mention of lettuce instantly brings to min raw salad vegetables, crisp and co! However, as a change, it is surp ingly palatable in the form of a cooked green, prepared in the foliow- ing manner which eliminates draining away of an excess liquid thus destroying the valuable min elements contained in all vegetabics. Separate the leaves of as much Ic\- tuce as desired, or cut the heads int quarters or eighths as in prepari cabbage, and wash thoroughly und running water. Put lettuce into a heavy aluminum pan over a low fic. The water that clings after the final washing affords sufficient moisturc. which will take about three or fo: minutes, turn the fire higher, co the pan, and cook for about ten min- utes. Serve hot with butter TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | A dinner was give last evening by Mrs. Scott W. Derrick in honor of 8S | Mr. Derrick’s birthday. Dr. R. C. Boyd, who has been en- Poem which has thrilled so many millions of children, The Night Before Christmas. The land has been bought as a portion of the site for a great apartment building. Even if Mrs. Hart had established the validity of her lease, she could have preserved the historic dwelling only until next summer, when the instru:nent expires. Still and all, the sentiment that inspired this deter- mined woman was admirable, however futile her effort. For the house could fairly be called the birthplace of Santa Claus, as that jolly old gentleman is now cencsived lt ad by the little folk of the Enclish speaking world. For if Dr. Moore was not the first to discover that Santa Claus has white whiskers, a red costume, and t nsports his gifts in a sleigh drawn by eight reindeer, then Dr. Moore—who, by the way, was @ professor of theology—was certainly the first to put the discovery down on paper. /.nd in «“hat charming form! For it was not much earlier than Dr. Moore's own time that Santa Claus first came to be essociated with Christmas. For a long, long time, the familtes of Hc:- land and Belgium had beer celebrating St. Nicholas Day, December 6, as a time for the secret bestowal of gifts up:n children, Eut only ‘1 the last centuries have the &t. Nicholas doings been absorbed into the Christmas festival. The gaily clad, red faced, white whiskered, jolly Santa who now annually visits every corner of America and every corner of the British his sleigh- Ta ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. iS MAS HAPPENED N PAGE feels indebted to love with ber Guardian, NARD BRE The changes ble a for ber futur gave her no answer. Could it concern Eva? She'd been troubled ever since she awoke and found Eva gone. Had she, she won- It was with more than a little trepidation that she went down at last to find Bob waiting for her in the lower hall. EVA ENNIS and her brother ROB- | tiaye . ” ERT. Brent fears ticten may sy eh eka taceamnt ed Im love with Heb and pl asked him so closely on top of the Jekty, eapecially after find- | most cheerful “good morning” she other locket like the ume he | could achieve that be answered in the negative before he'd time to think of anything else to say. “Then do come in with me and have a bite,” she urged, moving at jthe same time in the direction of jthe morning room where ber break- fast was served. eee Helen the helress. Hea: sudden shock would kil rt OB felt averse to calling after her that he could not stay, He followed, but when Ele!en motioned him to the scat that was meant for Shallimar—should she choose to come down, a3 she rarely did—he | Stood beside it and shook bis head. Helen seated herself, certain now jthat be was about to disclose some | thing of ap unpleasant nature. The frown that creased bia brow was | forbidding, and gloom vat his eoun- tenance like a black rider on a dark steed. tries to break wi refuses to relenue her happiness 0 7 Boe Eva unhappy, bat re- of Bob which has crives him to flirting with Cov and be tneghs that ete E at her eccretiz. NOW GO ON WITH THE stony CHAETER XXXIX M® WETHERING opened the door to Bob and her voice was| «picase sit down,” lown,” she begged. decidedly cold when she said she jor not ring for anything until you would see if Mi:s Nellin would re- | tell me what you have come to say. ceive him, 1 can see that it !s important.” Why Helen ever wanted to be| “It is most important,” Bob an- friends with peuple who had no! gwercd quietly, “to my sister.” conception of the proper time for} “On! Eva!” Helen cried. “Has calling wags more than she could | anything happened to her?” understand. “That,” Bob replfed, “is partly for Bob was awere of her disapproval you to say.” but it did not worry him. “Don't talk in riddles,” ficlen ex- Would Helen be up? That was all | claimed; “tell me!” he cared about—that and what be| ter gaze fixed on Bob's and he had to say to her, held it unswervingly while be hesi- Mrs. Wethering was surprised to| tated over bis choice of words for find Helen dressed and on the verge | what he was going to say to her. of deecending for breakfast. When| Finally he started off with @ re- she heard that Mr. Ennis was ask- | quest. ing to see her, she whirled from the| “1 should like,” he sald, “to ask dressing table, where she was put-|you one thing. Your answer will ting a last golden pin into her hair, | determine whether 4 can tell you ” and stared blankly at the woman | ™2reamout Bre tn, modded who had announced him, her head and continued to stare at “What does he want?” she said) him, as one fascinated against ber finally, and stupidly, she realized | ¥! “Why. 1.;." Mrs. Wethering was |opened bis lips again. The words about to say, bluntly enough, that came ‘hosrecly and slowly. : she was sure she did not know but| | “Were you ever engaged to marry Helen stopped ber. “Never ‘ mind,” the girl said Mr. Brent?" hastily, “Tell him £ will see him Helen did not answer at once. Rather her lips did not, but her eyes told Bob that he had not been immediately.” Nene Although she was ready to go > So FRE 8 down she stayed a while in her ee lee ae ce room to regain her composure. | sister that she had been Leonard's Whatever could it mean, this early | betrothed? visit from Bob? Bo answer, but fearful AAO MRNA (hea fier reflection, as she patted a) that a shocking one would be forth- bit of rouge o:o her pale cheeks, Coming, and sceing no way to evade | it, she inclined Ler head in the most | relueta dered, done anything to offend her? , she * | nt affirmative that had ever om her. The words, uttered them, sounded 1 plosion. Helen was s0 startled she dropped the gl reached for, ep over the breakfa: Bob turned on Helen called « ging her a tweed of out telling bes to do with ke said fo. ho, tell me!” has been deceiving you. You and Eva both,” Bob replied, eruclly abi too miserable even to want to find a way to soft en the blow. eee HELEN erled out and swayed awey from him. Bob reached his arms to support her but hiust his hands off amd stead: ied herself without help. “It can't be true.” she said weak- ly. Surely Eva must “ have known...” “Did you ever tell her?” Bob in- terjected . Helen shook her head. “No,” she all ‘I don't think I did, But it’s cone#able that Leonard should have lied to her—to a girl like Eva.” “Just the type he would Iie to,” Bob declared. “The kid's all broken up. ['ve seen it for weeks, but I didn't know just what it was.” “I must have been blind,” Helen sald, as though she admitted being guilty of a great crime, “I've seen them together and... there was nothing. Are you sure, Bob?” His name slipped off ber lips so naturally she was not aware of having spoken it. But it made an Infinite appeal to Bob, uttered as it was in acute distress, “Yes, I'm quite sure,” he sal more gently than he had yet spoken to her, Helen's voice broke @ trifle over her next question, “Was he engaged to her too?” she asked. “I suppose 80,” Bob admitted. “I haven't questioned her.” “Will you go gnd bring her here in talk to her?” Helen asked, “I'd rather she didn’t come,” Bob Answered, struggling against his yearning to comfort this girl who had, directly and indirectly, brought frankie to him and his beloved sis- er, ~ “I think you'd better drop. Eva altogether,” he went relentlessly on. “You've been extremely kind to her, but—it has brought her un- happiness” Helen cried out in protest. “Her career? Her music? She needs m Bob was stubborn. “No,” he said; “it she bas @ great talent she will feach the top somehow. She can't gd Want her destiny, whatever “Oh don’t talk ike an {dlot.” Helen exclaimed. “Someone must help her—especially now.” “RICH GIRL- POOR GIRL", AUTHOR OF “Well, 1t won't be you,” Bob re torted, grimly compressing his Ii “It may take longer, but I can give her all the help she needs.” “You're selfish and... unfair!” Helen told him. “If I am it needn't trouble you,” Bob answered rather childishly. | eee ; | **FQUT It does trouble me,” Helen fired back at him. “Ever since | Eva's accident I've felt responsible for her—in a way. And I'm not going to let you interfere.” “Not” Bob too was losing his temper now. “No doubt you've got another one of your brainstorms, |Perhaps you think {it would be | splendid of you to try to force that | Brent cur to marry Eva?” “No,” Helen answered, her o grown suddenly quiet, though her |eyes remained stormy. “He Isn't | good enough for her.” “So you know that, do you?” Bob's accents were terrifically un- kind, but Helen ignored his sar casm. “Yes, I know it,” Helen assured him, “I learned it the day after ++. the day after you called me a rotter.” Her head was flung high now and she spoke with a degree of spirit that Bob found unexpected. For a moment their eyes were locked in silent battle. “Why didn't you tell me?” he asked lamely.. n “Tell yout" Helen found other words beyond her for some few speechless seconds, Then she laughed, “You are forgetting Shallimar, aren't you?” she asked, “To he stopped himself, “She's @ good sport, Helen, But ip this she doesn't count.” “How gallant of you!" “She would tell you the same; ask her.” Helen's chin went up a notch higher. Somehow the movement, and the way sh> looked just then, basa Heed with a keen desire to make her pay for her haugbtiness with a kiss, ome He did not stop to reason, but tm 4) stinctively he knew she would be furious if he took one, and he want She' end of it, and where better could she weep than in hi Drevented her from She caid a number while be held her. Bob men closed his ears. But breathe freely until he felt that her struggle to release sening and saw boat taht te dene m1 it me 5 ed, “Yous rorielen ‘irene shoulder and he held her tight the precious moments of ber sur rr. They did not, of their free break it up. Mrs, in to say.that Helen was the telephone. The call fe — “She sald it is Ing very important,’ keeper announced, (To Be Continued) gaged in medical practice here for some time, left today for Minneapolis where he will visit before locating 2t Colorado Springs, Colo. Attorney Stevens, accompanied by Mrs, Stevens, went to Linton yestcr- day on legal business. Mrs, M. H. Jewell left today for ©: Louis where she will spend several days at the fair. TEN YEARS AGO Mmes. H. C. Keller, J. C. Oberg, 5. A. Floren, and Price Owens were in charge of the Eastern Star Halloween party at the Masonic temple last night. Mrs. Patrick McHugh, who 1s spending the winter in California, is now visiting friends at Pasadena. Chester Perry son of Mr. and Mr: W. E. Perry, celebrated bis sixth birthday anniversary by entertaining several of his school friends. Mrs, C. B. Nupen entertained guests in honor of the birthday an: versary of her dauhgter, Velma. RECORD RAIL TRIP Buenos Aires.—The longest non- > stop railroad trip thought to be that recently completed ever made 15 by a Beardmore-Diesel electric cn- gine which hauled a special tra:n from here to Cipolletti. The record run over a distance of 775 miles was made without a stop in 20 hours and 37 minutes. LAZY MAN'S WATCH London.—The latest watch to make and the clock goes for another two years. Nothing gets out of order and neither shocks nor vibrations can af- fect its regularity. BLIND BAND : Glasgow.—One of the best bands in the British Empire is the Blind Band of Scotland. Music is first learned by the Braille character s, is , and then the band i

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