Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘as second clas mat) matter. President and Publisher George D. Mann . jubscription 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) ,... Datly by mail outside of North Dakota ‘Weekly by mall in state, per year ... Weekly by mail in state, three years Weekly by mail outside of North Dak per year ... sete eeeee ‘Weekl7 by mail in Canada per year . Member Audit Burcas of Circulation Member of The Associated Presa The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein All Tights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newnpoper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS use or (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK Vocational Education in North Dakota Since vocational education was definitely sponsored by the federal government in 1917, by passage of the Smith-Hughes bill, that form of education has made a fair degree of headway in North Dakota. This is proved by facts published in the latest state board of administration bulletin. The bulletin states that federal allotments for voca- tional education in North Dakota amounted to $74,416 for the 1930-31 fiscal year, and $80,229 for the fiscal year that will close June 30 this year. ‘The greater part of this money is spent to help main- tain agriculture teachers in state high schools, and smaller amounts are apportioned to keep up the trade courses at Wahpeton Science school and the agricultural college. A yearly allotment of $10,000 is for training men and women who have been disabled by injuries or disease, making them fit to earn their own living in vocations best suited to their strength and skill, The bulletin contains several pictures of crippled youths and children who have been physically salvaged and! the helpless one back home. whose lives have been made useful and happy by aid of Sorry newspapr accounts of crime, folly and stupidity the small federal fund dedicated to that use. Since rehabilitation work began in North Dakota, ai stage, who can do nothing on earth to avert a tragedy survey shows that over 400 cases have been up for exam-| that they do not deserve. ination, but many of these could not be helped because of old age or subnormal mentality, or crippled conditions | that could not be remedied. | The board of administration bulletin gives a list of 140 persons who have been rehabilitated in this state and’, thankless job when it sent them down there, and prob-| are now employed. This seems like a very good showing.’ ably no one will be more relieved to have them return) in view of the short duration of the work and the small amount of money available. H The term vocational education, as described in the | bulletin, is “that form of education of less than college grade which is designed to meet the needs of persons| over the age of 14 who have entered upon, or are plan-| ning to enter upon, useful, productive employment in agriculture, trades, industries or horapmaking.” | The main object, then, is to take young people in their | formative years and give them the training that will! make them self-supporting after they become indepen- | dent integers in the life of the state. | Undeniably, this is a good branch of education for | the agricultural state of North Dakota, and no matter | what restrictions may have to be placed upon federal | and state expenditures, this work shuld be allowed the normal, healthy growth that its relative importance en-| titles it to. | The Danger of Waiting Life can play foul jokes on people sometimes. In a large middle-western city there was a grocer, who} worked very hard and saved his money religiously so that | his old age would be provided for. H For 50 yeais he stuck to his grocery store. He worked} and saved too hard to have very much fun, but he was; looking forward to the day when he could retire. Then} he would have his fun. He would have money and lei- sure, and he would make up for the years of hard work. Weli, he finally retired—money in the bank, an assured income, a nice home, everything he needed. “Now,” he told his friends, “I am going to enjoy life.” And just 24 hours after he had retired he dropped dead. If a novelist put that in a book we wouldn't believe it. We would say that things don’t really happen that way, and we would accuse the novelist of straining too hard| for an ironic effect. But life takes quecr twists that are not permitted to good fiction. It all happened, precisely as it is described here; and all we can do is admit that there are times when wisdom and prudence are horribly confounded. As a matter of fact, this sort of thing happens fairly often—in a little different way. Not many people who have prepared for a carefree and leisurely old age die just as they begin to taste their reward, of course; but they get cheated out of their dues, just the same. They find that leisure, after a lifetime of hard work, is boredom. They find that they have forgotten how to play. They find that the empty hours are depressing because they do not know what to do with them. They find them- selves feeling that they have been put upon the shelf, and they grow 10 years older in 12 months. Perhaps we aren't meant to be too cautious. Deferring one’s happiness to the end, when one will have time and the means to take it, is risky. For most of us that gilded tomorrow will never dawn. If we don’t get our happiness along the way we shall never get it at all. That is a lesson worth learning. The real joy of liv- ing is not something that can be banked and drawn on at some future date. It has to be taken from day to day. It is compounded, usually, of many little experiences. The haze of an autumn afternoon over a flaming wood- land; the confiding smile of a child, nestling in one’s arms for a fairy tale; the smell of a clear wind as one trudges along a beach by blue water; the sudden revela- tion of tenderness in the eyes of @ loved one; the brief, vanishing Strain of a bit of music—of such things is « satisfying life fabricated. You cannot postpene them, you vannot wait for them. You must get them as you go along. or you will miss them entirely. f A Relief for Washington Perhaps-it- is just as well for everybody concerned | was held—and a good job the marines did in that con-/ about what he says. He can be as indiscreet as he likes, and they won't have to reprimand him. They should, and probably will, feel much better. Waiting in the Wings When a young racketeer named Frank Marco turned up in a roadside ditch in New York recently, having been taken for a ride by other racketeers whose enmity he somehow had arousd, a perfectly respectable femily back in Ohio got a very bad shock. Young Marco had been away from home for years. He came back for a visit now and then, wrote occasion- ally, and seemed to be prospering. It was understood that he had a job as salesman. The family believed that he was “making good” in an honorable, praise- | Worthy manner. But all the while he had been a gunman. He was in Chicago for a time, one of the roughest of that city’s \time what he had been. | This sort of thing, tragic as it is, happens continually, though usually on a smaller scale. A young man leaves | home, goes out to make his way in the city, and is sup- Posed to be “doing well”; then, through some accident, | his loved ones find out that he has been following a for- | bidden path, and there are heartaches for everyone con-; cerned, | A consideration of such things emphasizes again the! | peculiar helplessness of parents; that exposure to shocks} | which is one of the prices people must pay for the high| | privilege of raising a child. | Throughout childhood the parent is more or less free! from this danger. The youngster is under his eye most, of the time. To be sure, there are exceptional cases; | {but these are generally the parents’ fault, and a mis-; fortune that we bring on ourselves is a little less cruel) than one which comes in spite of everything that we} j can do. Hl | But sooner or later there comes a time when the | youngster has to go out on his own. And then the par-j ents are helpless. They have done what they can to give their child a good start. They have pointed out pitfalls | and snares, as well as they could see them, and they have provided what armor they could. Now it is all out of their hands. They are, literally, at the mercy of the | fates. | | For most of us it turns out rather well, for the world jis not quite as bad a place as it might. be. But there |are tragedies enough, in all conscience. Youth is im- | petuous and hot-headed, and it will, now and then, take {the poker by the hot end just to see if it will really burn. | And when it. happens the chief sufferer, always, 1s Behind every one of the | there are invisible victims in the wings—waiters off- | 5 Will They Return? It ts gratifying to learn that our marines are to he | withdrawn from Nicaragua. The government shouldered | | than official Washington, Nevertheless, there may be in the land a few skeptics who will believe in the marines’ return only when they see it. i If you will let your memory wander back a few years, you may recall that the marines were to have returned as soon as the 1928 election had been held. The election neetion, incidentally—but the marines stayed. Now we; are told that they will be pulled back after the 1932) election. Well—we can but hope for the best. The Expense of a War If the added drain on the federal ‘treasury imposed by the pending soldiers’ loan bill looks rather onerous— And if it makes you uneasy to reflect that another soldiers’ compensation bill, extremely expensive, will probably be necessary in another decade or so— ‘You might console yourself by the reflection that all lot this, after all, is just part of the price we pay for] the privilege of going to war. Whether the current bill is a raid on the treasury or a matter of simple justice, it is a war expenditure; the kind of expenditure that any war makes inevitable. That would be a good thing to keep in mind the next! time this nation ponders the advisability of getting into an armed conflict with some other nation. It is a costly business. 1 Editorial Comment s printed ‘below show the tren: 1 of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- une's policies, The Farm Gains on the City (Minneapolis Journal) A check has come to the shift of population between farms and cities. For the first time in ten years, the de- partment of agriculture announces, the farm population of the United States increased last year. Putting it another way, fewer people are leaving the farm and more are moving from cities to farms. The peak movement from farms to towns and cities was in 1926, when 2,155,000 moved, according to the de- partment’s figures. Last year only 1,543,000 made such a shift. Against this is the statement that the move- ; Ment from cities to farms last year was the largest since 1924. Last year, 1,392,000 went to farms from ci‘ies, against 1,396,000 in 1924. | Thus the net movement.away from farms last year was rough gentry; then he went to New York to pursue the! same calling, and eventually he came to the predestined | end of the gangster; and his family learned for the first | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY | Bye, Baby Bunting, Uncle’#Gone A-Hunting! FEBRUARY 27, 1931 What is your question? Whatever ; it may be, unless it be a request for | legal, medical, or financial advice, it | will be answered without cost to you, | and you will receive the reply in a Personal letter. Write your question clearly and briefly, enclose two-cent | stamp for return postage, and address | the Bismarck Tribune Information | Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, | Washington, D. C. Q. Which can go faster, a man on | oe Skates or one on ice skates? M. | A. The ice skating record is bet- ter. The roller skating record for 1% | mile is 1 minute 20 4-5 seconds; ice skating, 1 minute and 13 seconds. Q. Are more passengers lost at sea , or on trains? P. 8, | A. About 4,500,000 passengers are carried on vessels subject to inspec- | tion for one passenger lost. On rail- {roads 201,000 are carried to one lost. Q. Has Lindbergh ever had to take to a parachute while flying? M. W. D. | A. Lindbergh has made four emer- gency parachute jumps. | Q. What became of the Monitor and the Merrimac? E. S. | A. The Monitor was lost n a gale , off Cape Hatteras, December 31, 1862; the Merrimac was sunk by her cap- tain after the federal troops gained control of Norfolk on May 9, 1862. Q. Must revenue bills and appro- i priation bills originate in the House | of Representatives of our Congress? | S.M. K, ' A. The constitution provides that all revenue bills shall originate in the | House of Representatives. It is cus- tomary for appropriation bills to ori- ginate there also. This, however, is not necessary. Q. How is the Holy Land governed at the present time? A. J. F. A. Palestine is governed by a gov- ernor general appointed by the Brit- ish crown under a mandate awarded to Great Britain by the League of! Nations, Q. Has a parasite been found which uh bexerminate the Japanese beetle? | A. The Department of Agriculture | says that this problem has been giv- en attention since 1920, and at last one seems effective. Tiphia popillia- vora was one of the first parasites in- troduced and one which gave little Promise at first. After a slow start, however, it Js now increasing rapidly and gives much promise as an im-| portant factor in the biological con- trol of the Japanese beetle. This parasite is particularly well adapted for use in the natural control of the ‘Japanese beetle because it is a speci- fic parasite of this pest in its native land, and in this country this ten- dency is preserved. + Q. Where did the Polynesian wom- en come from who went with the mu- tineers of H. M. S. Bounty to live on Pitcairn Island? M. K. A. After the mutiny, Christian, who had taken charge of the ship Bounty, returned to Tahiti and re- mained there 10 days. When the ves- fel put‘to sea 9 Tahitian men, 12 men, and 8 boys were aboard the vessel and they begged to remain. Others were taken aboard after visits to islands in the vicinity. Q. How many children in the United States are especially smart? L. Y. H. A. There are about 1,500,000 spec- ially gifted chiidren in the country. Q. How old is St. John Ervine, the English dramatist? G.W.L. A. §t. John Ervine will be 48 dur- ing 1931. Q. Should a person knock before opening a door into a business office? R. L. B. "A. ‘The door is opened without ocking. Q. How old is Seth Parker? V. B. | A. Phillips H. Lord, who created the character of Seth Parker, is 28 years old. Q. Where is the largest closed au- ditorium in America? F. H. A. The new Convention Hall in | Atlantic City is the largest in the | world. The seating capacity in the | main audiiorium is 49,000. This in- cludes 30.000 on the floor and stage and 10,000 in the balcony. Q. Who was the sculptor of the | Lion of Lucerne? E. M. B. A. The Lion of Lucerne was copied from a model by Bertel Thorwaldsen, the famous Danish sculptor. The Swiss artist was named Ahorn. The statue was dedicated in 1821. The lion was chiseled out of solid rock as @ memorial to the Swiss guards who died in heroic defense of the Tuiler- ies. > Q. Who ts restoring Robert E. Lee's early home? M. J. B. A. It is the intention of the Daughters of the Confederacy to re- store Stratford-on-the-Potomac, the birthplace of Robert E. Lee. It is said to be the largest mansion in the State of Virginia, and is the only ex- aimple of this particular old English type of home in America. It was built in 1729 and 1730. Q. Can you tell me the length of ; Browning's poem “The Ring and the Book”? R. B. A. “The Ring and the Book” con- Sists of 20,934 lines. _—— | Clear Lake o— BY ORE ENCLOSE STAMPEO HOORESSED ENVELOPE FOR REPLY SERVICE -LOS ANGELES- CAL: WHO CAN BE © 1926 MECOY HEALTH DAILY MENUS Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, March 1: Sunday " Breakfast—French omelet; toasted cereal biscuit; stewed raisins. Lunch— Stewed corn; buttered beets; shredded lettuce with peanut butter dressing. Dinner—Roast chicken; asparagus; small Lima beans; salad of grated raw carrots and chopped celery; apple whip. Monday Breakfast—Breakfast food (toasted) served with cream; stewed figs. Lunch—Baked potato; spinach; salad of shredded raw cabbage. Dinner—Vegetable soup; roast beef; steamed carrots; small green peas; raw celery; Jello or Jell-well. Tuesday Breakfast—Coddled eggs; toast; stewed prunes, Lunch—Eight-ounce glass of grape- Juice. Dinner—Baked halibut; string beans; salad of sliced tomatoes; baked pears. Melba | Wednesday Breakfast— Wholewheat muffins with butter; baked eggs; stewed raisins, Lunch—Boiled rice; buttered pars- nips; celery. Dinner—*Stuffed pork chops; baked tomatoes; salad of head lettuce; dish of berries (canned without sugar). ‘Thursday Breakfast—Eggs poached in milk, served on Melba toast; baked apple. Lunch—Pint of buttermilk; 10 or 12 dates. Dinner—Roast veal; spinach; salad of minced vegetables in gelatin (peas, string beans and celery); cup custard. Friday Breakfast—Cornmeal mush with butter or cream. Lunch—Cooked lettuce; _salsify (oyster plant); salad of grated car- rots and beets. By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Smith called on | their daughter, Mrs. Clifford Nelsen, while in Driscoll Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Stiles were call- ers at the Halton and Joe Paulsen |homes Wednesday. Mrs, Ed. Erickson and daughters |spent Thursday with Mrs. Carrie | Nelsen and Miss Hazel. | Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Beyer were Sterling cailers Thursday at the Carl Beyer home. |_ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Neiman, Mrs. Robert Sharp, Sr., and daughter | Florence visited with Mr. and Mrs. | Robert Sharp and family south of Sterling Friday. | Wayne Olson was a week-end guest j with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John Steeg of Driscoll. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Olson enter- tained a number. of relatives and friends at a whist party Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Schoon and family, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Bassen | land family spent Saturday evening at the Adolph Hansen home. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Peterson en- tertained a few neighbors Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Christensen and Mrs. Albert Hammer called to |sce Mrs. Koterba Sunday afternoon, | who is ill. | | Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Olson, Mr. and | Mrs. Henry Olson and family were entertained at the John Steeg home in Driscoll to a lovely Sunday dinner. Mrs. Ben Arne is visiting with her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Pasley, for a few days. Mr. and Mrs, Robert Sharp and jfamily from south of Sterling were Sunday callers at Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heeman, Mrs. F. B. Pasley called on Mrs. C. Koterba Monday forenoon. “Dusty” Cooke, New York Yankee outfielder, whom Merle Hoag, Coast: league flash, will battle for the left field job, hit only .255 last year. One of the largest collections of skulls in the world is to be found in |the Royal College of Surgeons mu- ‘seum, London. There are 6,000 speci- mens, some dating from the year 9 B.C. 151,000 persons, But the normal increase of 359,000 births over deaths on farms last year brought the total esti- mated farm population as of January 1, 1931, to 27,430,000, compared with 27,222,000 one year before. This net movement cityward was the smallest since 1922, when the net was 1,120,000 persons. Causes, sig- nificances and effects? They are for anyone's conclusion, in wide variety. Women and the Death Penalty | (Washington Daily Star) The state of Pennsylvania this morning took the lives {of a woman and a man’ who were guilty of a wanton | murder. The case has attracted much attention, not j from the circumstances of the crime itself, but from the fact that one of the participants was a woman, and the spectacle of one of that sex going to the execution chair or gallows is especially abhorrent. Nevertheless, the law makes no distinction as to the sex of the guilty. Juries may soften their hearts toward women who are accused and are proved guilty of capital offenses, and lrender modified verdicts. Judges may, within the dis- PASQUALES BANDIDOS! CMON. We'tL MAKE A STANO RIGHT HERE! cretion permitted by the law, impose less than death sentences upon them. Pardoning boards and executives 1 may grant commutation of death sentences that have been given to them. But when all these recourses have failed the woman stands in the death chamber upon precisely the same footing as the man, and the law must take its course. Perhaps such spectacies as that enacted this YARDS. = Ep = SSS SS AWRIGHT WITH ASABER , BUT I GoTTA KEEP 500 YAROS AHEAD F O' THEM — MY SIGHTS ARE ’ SET FER 500 Dinner—Broiled fillet of sole; as- paragus; beet tops; salad of lettuce and tomatoes; no dessert. , Saturday ‘Breakfast—Coddled eggs; Melba toast; stewed apricots. Luhch—Oranges, all desired. Dinner— Broiled steak; string beans; salad of stuffed celery; pine- apple whip. ‘Stuffed Pork Chops: Have the chops cut about an inch thick and trim off all fat around edges. With a sharp knife slice each chop through, ; back as far as the bone, making a sért of double decker, between which place a tablespoonful of the following K Mc COY Wiad to Malte’ pie - IN REGARD TO HEALTH € DIET WILL BE ANSWERED ADDRESSED WN CARE OF THIS PAPER dressing: Crush a sufficient amount of Melba toast (grinding through a food chopper is better) and moisten with milk. Add the desired quantity of chopped celery, minced ripe olives 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. and raisins. careful to moisten only enough to Mix together, being hold ingredients together. Fasten the layers of each chop together with toothpicks and bake until thoroughly done. Drain on brown paper just before serving, and garnish with un- cooked puffed raisins around the edge of the platter. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Hoarseness Question: Mrs. L. M. asks: “What would be the cause of my becoming very hoarse when a bit tired? Iam ‘H % past 40, very thin, can’t gain, but do not feel badly. Am very fond of walking, but after I have walked a while I suddenly become hoarse, and lately become hoarse after talking. Also, if I walk upstairs a little rap- idly I breathe a; though I had run a race. Are these signs of being tuber- cular?” Answer: Hoarsness may duc simply to having a small lung ca- pacity. If you do not have a cough and there are no other signs of tu- berculosis, the remedy for your con- dition is to take plenty of deep breathing exercises so as to enlarge your lung capacity. “ Vitiligo | Question: M. M. C. asks: “Is there | any cure for vitiligo? This is a very distressing disfigurement, and I would st like to know if diet would help in any way.” Answer: This disorder may be prevented through using the right f diet to overcome acidosis, but there will be little effect in restoring the skin to normal color. Drainage Question: M. C. G. writes: “A relative has had an operation for gall stones four months ago and the side has not completely healed up yet. Is that usual after those operations?” Answer: It i: often necessary to keep open the drainage from a wound for a long time, especially after a gall bladder operation. The surgeon can no doubt explain to you why this has been necessary in the case you men- tion in your letter. goons eee einen | Today Is the i | Anniversary of J LONGFELLOW’S BIRTH On Feb. 27, 1807, Henry W. Long- fellow, American poet, was born at Portland, Me. Afte> graduating from Bowdoin | college at 18, in the same class with Nathaniel Hawthorne, Longfellow was at once appointed professor of mod- ° ern languages at his alma mater. He resigned in 1835 to study and travel in Europe. On his return he ac- cepted at Harvard a post similar to that he had at Bowdoin. Longfellow’s poetic gifts made him at 34 perhaps the most widely read poct in America, Poems which helped establish his fame were: “Evange- line,” “The Courtship of Miles Stan- dish,” “Excelsior,” “The Wreck of the Hesperus,” “Paul Revere’s Ride” and “The Village Blacksmith.” His fame as a poet rests on two points. First, he gave expression to the commonplace emotions of Ameri- can civilization with charm and sim- plicity; second, he did much to spread European culture in this country. i ARBS | ) ! A scientist says that a man’s en- ergy is worth a cent an hour. That’s what we thought after we saw our first heaverelent or Pehr Evind Svinhuvud has been elected president of Finland. And there, as the Fins are saying, is a name to conjure with. | * eK OK The stock of the Boston Bruins, champion hockey team, is up to $300. Here's one instance where stocks have, risen on a “Bear” market. ze ® A writer asks what the scrawls on @ telephone pad mean. Probably that the operator is having difficulty getting the number. se More than 1600 men working on two big liners in New Jersey were laid off. So now the men are at sea. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | Quotations i Ne a The year of recession served a use- ful function in our economic scheme in weeding out unhealthy conditions, —H. J. Klingler. xe OK A little hard.luck never hurts any- one for it builds character.—Irving T. Bush, xe Oe ‘When everything is new and star- tling, the human mind just ceases to be startled.—Walter Lippmann. * ek * I find the average speakeasy &/| pleasant place to sit down and eat.— Heywood Proun. es * OK To me the most gratifying ‘thing about the present unemployment sit- sep caeneeerenmmeRsCarneineommetenrttersmntystopmmemmteatnttatenal cnn [ Sticker Solution —} who REINETH in aut pepe AND_ RAGE, To NEITHER vice A PREY, MAY HOPE TO REACH A , GREEN “OLD AGE, AND FIND THEREIN wis stay. +The thnee missing words, each com- uation is the way that it has devel- oped and aroused public conscience.— Gerard Swope. ** * Stop your ears to the people who preach the doctrine of universal do- as-you-please, which is only another way for universal go-to-the-devil.— Dr. L. P. Jacks. KFYR DAILY SCHEDULE Saturday, Feb. 28 550 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters: i:00—Music. 10—Weather Repor 15—Old ‘Time Musi, rlingt rain Markets, 1:15—German Program. 1:30—Organ Program: ‘Morris. 12:00—G Market: ‘une News & ismarck Trib- ‘Weather; Lunch- eon Program, . M. :00—Grain Markets: High, Low and ig Ose. :15—Musical Matinee Melodies.. :30—Slesta Hour: Good News Radio \ Magazine. 00—Music. —Music ncle Paul's Kiddie Time, tocks and Bonds, ismarck Tribune Sports Items, ismarck Tribune News, 50—Music. 6:00—Dinner Hour Organ Grace Duryee Morris. Recital: ia \—Helen Ferguson. egislative Tidbits. tudio Program. —Arnold Christianson; Ballad t ¢ Singer —Tiny Kk ‘Harmonica. Kerche: Studio Program. Popular Dance ‘Program. ~ Today in Congress eee FRIDAY d nate ident Hoover's veto Votes on 1 of veterans loan bill. Conferees meet on amendment to eliminate “lame duck” sessions of congress, Lands committee continues oil shale investigation. House i Considers Jenkins “bill to restrict immigration for two years. Census committee Votes ‘on propos- _to inerease house inembership te feet a comb, which helps in the weav- ing of his web. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: the letters, poe Ree NETTERS aod “THEREIN,” #8 shown above. mM Ea voters In George Washington's time | took auantity to make quality in style