The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1931, Page 4

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| | iat Pe EP a = 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, ‘APRIL 30, 1981 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An 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 ‘as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ....... +++ President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ..... Daily by mail per year (in Bism Dally 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 . Weekly by mail outside of North Dak POF YEAT ciccecccccceessssoes Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Not Too Late Yet t President Hoover, following a precedent established by other chief executives, recently planted a tree on the White House grounds. In return he was given » certifi- cate of membership in the American Tree Associstion. | | The action was exploited, of course, in much the same, manner that other gestures of a president are exploited.) Cameramen flocked around and someone, doubtless, took | possession of the spade which the president used in dig- ging the hole for the tree. But regarded from any angle, the action was a prais y one. To plant a tree is to take definitc action to insure the perpetuation of beauty in the world. Most) men have a friendly regard for trees. Sometimes we} even endow them with personalities of their own—and) who can say they do not deserve it. Those sturdy friends} who shield us from the summer's heat and deflect win-} to them in wages and salaries and improved working conditions, Labor realizes now, as never before, that the man in the big house on Grand Boulevard has problems with own. And in his turn, the man in the big house frequently has a deeper appreciation of the loyalty and enthusiastic support which the men in his business organization con- Stantly display toward him and his interests. It warms the cockles of his heart and makes his burdens lighter. He wants his men to have their jobs and to do well be- cause he realizes that the happiness of many families rests largely on his shoulders. It is not an easy burden or one which the conscientious businessman can bear lightly. America is still a long way from realization of the communistic dream of collective ownership and mr age- ment, but it has displayed and is displaying a wonder- ful degree of cooperation. It is not an accident that the —are those in which employer and employed make com- mon cause. Two Blades of Grass Looking back over the last ten years it can be seen that the new technology, as far as agriculture is concerned, has a hard time gaining a respectable standing in the Northwest, largely for political reasons, The new farm has been a part of the process. mains strangely true. Just at the time when American j agriculture was about to have a new baptism of science | came the world war, with its demand for full capacity | preduction. The farmers were told to make two blades of grass grow where only one grew before. They rallied en masse and there never was a more instant and whole- , hearted response to a patriotic appeal. Then came the slump and over-production and the agronomists could see that it was more necessary than) ever to make the two blades of grass grow where only one grew before. But these scientific students were not gifted with political acumen and did not take the precaution to. explain to the farmers that their ideas regarding the two! blades of grass were fundamentally different from the idea propagated by the politicians during the war. | The politicians wanted big volume production, no mat- ter how achieved; the scientists wanted big production on less acreage, with better quality at less cost. Between the two ideas lay a gulf so deep that no bridge | could reach across. On the one side sat the gray-haired | ter’s icy blasts are friends indeed and lucky is the man who has trees around his house. They contribute a great deal to the surroundings of any home. \ It is to be hoped, therefore, that the president's action | will set many persons to thinking about trees. This is! particularly true in North Dakota where it apparently / was not a part of nature's scheme that trees should grow unaided. That trees can be grown here successfully, however, has been demonstrated for many years and numerous fine groves dot the state as proof of the pioneers’ love for) them. It is to be hoped that this affection will reach even! a finer bloom in present-day North Dakotans. | And just by the way, and for the information of those} who haven't thought about it, there is still plenty of time to do a little tree-planting this spring. Heading for the Discard Education, like a good many other things, is subject to wild enthusiasm and groundless fears. But the prog- ress is always forward. This fact is reflected by a recent bulletin issued by the | University of North Dakota in which Prof. Robert D.| Cole gives the findings of a survey in which he attempted to measure the results of the teaching in the schools of| the state. The study was intended to disclose effects rather than the actual and hypothetical factors entering | into them. | If this sort of thing is to supplant the “intelligence; test” about which the educational world has more or less gone balmy in recent years, the children of the na- tion and the taxpayers as well should benefit. A few years ago it was the common practice to apply one of these tests to an unsuspecting and innocent child and thereafter to regard him as normal, a nit-wit, or a genius, the point of view depending upon his “IQ” which is educational jargon for “intelligence quotient.” ‘The trouble is that the system hasn't préved out 60 well in actual practice. Too often, the boy who was classed as unintelligent has made progress much greater than that of his fellow for whom great things were| predicted. As a result the intelligence tests are looked upon with an eye more jaundiced than was the case a; few years back when an IQ, generally speaking, could do no wrong. Professor Cole's idea of measuring the results achieved seems much to be preferred. In rating students, as. in employing men, there are more things to be considered than native aptitude or ability. There are so many other factors involved in making any human computation that @ correct estimate can be reached only after giving each its due importance, Demosthenes was regarded as the greatest of the Greek orators, yet he was not a natural speaker. Instead he| suffered from an impediment in his speech and was something of a laughing stock. His perseverance, how- ever, was remarkable. He carried stones around in his mouth, so we are told—although to what purpose we never fully understood—and kept working away at the job of realizing his ambition. He developed what small powers ne had at the beginning until today he is rated as; @ model for all public speakers. After all, it isn’t the best looking horse which wins the race nor the fattest frog which jumps the farthest. Pro- | fessor Cole seems to have taken that into account in making his study, We hope this rational and commonsense viewpoint is; evitable. The sole purpose of Foreign Secretary Henderson's zeal |: an indication that all this balderdash about intelligence tests is headed for the discard and that this method of rating ability finally will be relegated to its proper place. A Common Interest ‘One of the most notable phenomena of the current bus-} iness situation is the manner in which employers and) employes are working to solve their mutual problems. Time was when the general attitude of workingmen always was inimical to the interests of “The Boss.” Those were the days when the political blatherskites prated about “bloated plutocrats” and the cartoonists delighted to show ouf commercial and industrial leaders as fat, hairy-handed ogres with dollar signs on their vests. ‘Today, however, we find employer and employe making common cause of their mutual problems. No longer does intelligent labor regard the employer as a man with un- limited access to a secret moneysack. Instead there is keen realization in the homes of the working men that the prosperity of their employer has a direct and import- ant bearing on their own prosperity; that comfort and peace of mind on Grand Boulevard means comfort and / peyc! peace of mind on the back street. If this needs illustration we can find it in countless cases. Railroad men, once regarded as among the most ‘arrogant of the laboring classes, are fighting side by side with their employers in the battle to keep the commerce of the nation on the strips of steel. They see their jobs vanishing in the smoke of competition between railroads ‘end other carriers. ‘Mechanics, butchers, bekers, newspapermen, bank, clerks of what have you, have come to know that when ‘the a ability to pay vanishes the pay check stops. have s selfish interest in wishing their em- ployer to make sue for his profits are reflected back ! inventions—absolutely oblivious to the hot and often fetid} ‘that science had explored and found a new route to sta- |sea: “The days of iron men and wooden ships?” jories and tongues, but that they didn’t understand what scientists, poring over test tubes, tables of statistics, new| | blasts of the political winds. On the other side were; marshalled the politicians, supremely ignorant of the fact bility and safety. | Pity the farmer who had the politician on his doorstep, but had not yet heard from the inarticulate scientist! | But let us reserve a bit of sympathy, too, for the young! county agents and college professors who had to be the footballs in this triple scrimmage. Not all of them real- ized that they were working at cross-purposes between two opposing theories. | If the young farmer in the agricultural school should | attack rather warmly and unreservedly the two blades of grass theory as he understood it, the young college| professor, imbued with scientific zeal, would call him a} bolshevik—under his breath. Neither the young farmer nor the young professor knew that each was speaking to the other from different worlds of thought—that each was occupied with wholly unrelated ideas of procedure. Paradoxical though it may seem, each was thinking) about the two blades of grass! On old-timer contributes a series of articles to The) ‘Tribune on early-day sport in North Dakota. Now what is the prairie counterpart for that good old phrase of the Editorial Comment Edltorlals printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- une's policies. The Girls Know How to Win (Duluth Herald) An Eastern phychologist started an argument the other day by saying that the reason girls so often won the honors in school was that they had sort of glib mem- they had learned nor retain it as long as the slower boys. That is quite a broad generalization which may or may not be true, but the girls seem to carry off most of the scholastic honors with unfailing regularity. In Omaha the other day they did it again, when grade school pupils from Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and South Dakota competed in a spelling con- test. The first three places in the oral contest were won by girls and three others won the written contest. Opal Hagen, a thirteen-year-old South Dakota girl, was the ; oral champion, and Maurine Lepley, an Iowa miss of | twelve summers, won first prize in the written test. Of the boys taking part in the competition none came nearer than fourth place, and most of them were van- quished early by words they knew but were too confused to remember. A kinder as well as more probable theory is that it is poise rather than memory that so often accounts for the supremacy of the girls. The Naval Disagreement (Washington Star) With Chancellor of the Exchequer Snowden rising in the House of Commons today to disclose his plans for raising the tax wind in Great Britain, it is easy to under- stand the anxiety and disappointment occasioned by the breakdown of the Anglo-French-Italian naval negotia- tions. If these come to naught, as the latest news indi- cates, fresh burdens for the British taxpayer are in- in patching up the Franco-Italian tonnage controversy was to make sure that Britannia might continue. to rule the European, and especially the Mediterranean, waves without undue expansion of her fleet. If French de- | mands for additional replacement ships between.1934 and 1936—the rock on which the London-Paris-Rome nego- which he is struggling in their interest as well as his! best businesses—and the most profitable for all concerned | technology does not necessarily mean mechanization, al-{ though the introduction of better types of implements |’ | “It never rains but it pours” is a trite old saying that re-| | Bomb Voyage! - |ing kidney, tiations have foundered—is enforced, Britain’s cruiser, quota under the 1930 limitation agreement with America and Japan will be thrown out of gear. The escalator, of “escape,” clause, providing for extra-treaty construction, can be invoked. If Britain builds beyond her treaty ratio, the United States would be at liberty to do so, too, as]: would, of course, also Japan. Thus the possibility of a new era of rivalry and com- Petition in sea armament definitely lies hidden’ in. the failure of the European naval powers to get together .om|. tonnage allotments. The disquieting aspect of ittis what must be the background of their inability or unwillingnéss| to do so. Obviously the gunpowder of suspicion is not yet extracted from the European situatton. When nations} haggle and squabble over displacement, guns and armor it means that their faith in the preservation of peace 18 far from firm. Statesmen who engage in such maneuvers Peychosis. They preach peace, but will not cease to plan cre the Tie that it may be broken. ‘The proposed German-Austrian customs union is cited, especially by the French, as the cause of the new ten- sion amid which the European naval states have agreed to disagree. Perhaps France is waiting a week or two to see whether the League of Nations Council at Ge- neva will outlaw the German-Austrian scheme. customs jurope. With the “general disarmament conference” less than @ year away, its prospects cannot be said to be Ligne give plain evidence that they are operating under a war ip Met Fast Mid BY DR.MCCOY WHO ares IN REGARD TO Bern COIET Wit pepe WHO.CAN BE ADDRESSED IN CARE ENCLOSE STAMPEO HOORESSED ENVELOPE FOR REPLY © 1926 M¢COY HEALTH SERVICE -LOS ANGELES- CAL: THE MILK CURE The milk cyre has been used with benefit in the treatment of many dif- | ferent kinds of ailments. This is particularly true with disorders ot the gastro-intestinal tract, cystitis, poor circulation, malnutrition, dia- betes, gastritis, stomach ulcers, float- valvular heart trouble, and neuralgia. In fact, the milk diet carl be used for a time with benefit in any of the non-catarrhal disorders. In some cases, especially where the liver is easily upset, the milk diet has been followed or preceded by a short orange juice, tomato juice or water fast. In others, the straight milk diet may be used. Here are some general instructions for taking the milk diet: The patient should begin on a one-hour schedule, taking an eight-ounce glass of milk every hour while the patient is awake. iThe milk’ should be slightly warmed by placing a glassful of milk in a pan of warm water. The water should not be hot enough to burn the fingers if you place them in it. At this tem- perature the milk will be soothing to an irritated stomach or intestinal tract. No water should be used with this diet, but it is a good plan to pre- cede the glass of milk with a tea- spoonful of lemon juice or a table- spoonful of orange or tomato juice. No water should be used with this diet, as the patient will not need any because of the large amount of water contained in the milk. The milk should be sipped slowly and taken exactly on the one-hour schedule. One should not take the milk at the end of 45 minutes, and an hour and a half at another time, or the milk will disagree with the patient, and one suffering from any serious disease cannot afford to be so careless. Do not add extra. cream to the milk. In fact, if the digestion seems to be a little upset, it would be a good plan to remove a small amount of the cream, but, on the average, use the milk just as it comes. Holstein milk usually contains just the right amount of cream for the average per- son. If you desire, the lemon juice or orange juice cr tomato juice may be shaken up with the milk and taken with it. " While on the milk diet it is impor- tant to use one enema consisting of one quart of clear warm water once daily. Many patients will benefit by remaining in bed for two or three weeks while taking this diet. It is a good plan to use hot applications over the region of the stomach or’ other painful areas. If possible a large BY DR. FRANK MC CoY hal’ Oe TMS PAPER therapeutic lamp should be used sev- eral times daily. Massage treatments should be used over the whole body, 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 the patient may exercise slightly by using the tensing exercises with the arms and legs,. The milk diet as given in this ar- ticle will agree with most people bet- ter than the milk and cream diet being given by so many authorities. An excessive amount of cream if con- tinued will eventually bring on a se-} ious case of acidosis. This condition will not occur if the milk diet is used. as I have directed in this article. The patient may then slowly change to other foods, beginning with the non-starchy vegetables which may be added to one or two of the milk feed- ings during the day. After several days, if no discomfort is experienced the patient may return to a regular diet. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Erethemia Question: R. M. writes: “I am recovering from erethemia multiform. Please tell me the cause, treatment and diet during and after.” Answer: Erethemia simply means an inflammation of the skin. | multiform type is accompanied with papules and tubercles which last for several days, usually accompanied by headache and pain. The usual cause is a gouty or rheumatic tendency. The use of a cleansing diet regimen, us- ing a fast for the first two weeks, should prove helpful. Potatoes Question: H. I. asks: “Which is better to use, the Irish or sweet po- tato? Do you consider fresh water and salt water fish good protein?” Answer: Both sweet and Irish po- tatoes are good foods and contain moderate amounts of starch, depend- ing upon the type of potato and the location where grown. The Irish po- tato seems to be better for some people, as it does not contain as large amount of sugar. Fresh water fish is a good protein. Salt water fish has the additional advantage of con- taining a large amount of iodine. Kleptomania Question: B. M. R. asks: “What would be your advice in the case of a BE SURE YOU'RE RIGHT— PREAL NAME WAS CHARLES - DODGSON. WONDERLAND! WAS: AOT BY (ATURE A NRITER BUT A FAMOUS MATHEMATICIAN. His LINCOLN, REPUTED ne) BEA RALSPLITTING EXPERT, ONCE ieee ANNASHINGION CORRE= SPONDENT HE SPLIT FEW RALS (N HIS UFE AND DIDNT The | @ young man who is a kleptomaniac? He is apparently in the best of health, has good home surroundings, and yet in spite of every precaution, money and useles trinkets vanish.” Answer: Kleptomania is a mild form of insanity and it would be a good plan for you to have the young man consult a pyschoanalyst or some- ‘one who, understands psycho-analysis. In addition to the mind treatment, it would probably be a good plan to have the young man take a fast, as this might assist in absorbing and eliminating any toxfhs which may be irritating some of the nerve centers of the brain. TODAY 1S THE- ‘AMERICA DAY’ On April 30, 1917, the city of Liver- pool celebrated “America Day” in recognition of the entry of the United States into the war. A special town Meeting of citizens was held at noon. It was preceded by a service of thanksgiving at St. Nich- olas church, attended by the lord mayor, city officials, the United States consul, consular representa- tives of all the allied powers, and leading citizens. The sermon was preached by the bishop of Liverpool. This day also marked the thou- sandth day of the European war. Two days later Herr Joseph Naumann, a former conservative member of the German Reichstag, was reported to have made in a lecture the following statement: Until now the war has caused us 1,300,000 dead. This, tcgethe: with the decrease in birth, gives us a re- duction of 3,800,000. The surplus of females has increased from 800,000 to more than 2,000,000. The natiun has bled as never since the Thirty Years’ War.” BARBS | ® One of the smartest shades in the list of the season’s fashionable colors is “ambulance blue.” To be used, we suspect, only in case of emergency. * OR It is estimated that a murder is committed every 40 minutes in the United States. At this rate our saxo- phone artists are doomed to extermi- nation. * * * The fellow who frequents the speak- easies says he does it for “more-ale” support. * Oe OK The British government has stop- ;ped giving free matches to members of the House of Commons. Starting its economy move from scratch, ap- parently. * oe OK ‘There are usually but two angles to the “eternal triangle,” wisely ob- serves the office sage. * Oe OK “Keep your hands to yourself,” as the bridge player said to his talkative partner. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) SS eee | Quotations | > " ‘We must construct a new spiritual- ity as perfect as possible, as total as possible. With this will come com- prehension of the significance of life. —Count Hermann Keyserling. ee * At present few people want 2 boom, but they do desire a substantial im- provement in all the markets—Wil- liam O. Scroggs, in Outlook. * ok OX There is no such thing as @ neces- sary evil; if it is evil it is not neces- sary; if it is necessary it is not evil. —Dr. Ernest H. Cherrington. * * * Washington is not ‘only one of the best planned, but is probably one of the best kept cities in the world— William J. Hobbs, associate secretary, Washington Chamber of Commerce. SEEARNSS Apmswr ? i 4 f Ey i Ey HF Pia i a 8 thinking fast. My plan was ui pe on the gun. my idea is to tell you what to aoe ne’. Gays, aren back from me = ie no rare ent read ao or my des! “Yes? Ana hat’s aha do a dance for you while yor yp at my “Beat = rig up ye er) — 1 don’t want to,” I rgued. Ces ; better go ste k.” mh tho i, have pacl & cllance to sock im when in the elevator. I believed he was just oe ‘nut, and probably a dangerous nr stay here. You've got halt CA hour before the at train.” I laughed at him. He seemed stupid. “Suppose in the hotel = out the kek ny: how about “Pll get you the next night. You've gotter do as I say. You mec a ass and beat it.” “Suse aoe going, don’t come back that's Cn tats all I want.” minutes,” I assui 5 I went into the hotel and called up Mr. Merrill. ‘When I told him, he said, sleepily, ue @ cop; he’s some harmless nut.” “Perht ‘and perhaps he has been lied fo geare ime out ‘ot town. Suppose I let him put me aboard the train and I hop off down in e yard at the tank while you get Walter rs a and Jim Crow-ey and in you think its some trick 4 hat f00l Fosdick to scare you out. og the games with this might be. This nut doesn’t want to shoot, he doesn't want money. He's a stranger here. How aa ite” ir. Merrill was wide awake. He agreed. came down in about fifteen miaures with a ig, bag, although there was nothing in it bg a few telephone books and a heavy door ag Down the path my mysterious one appeared’ again. ‘Got sense, I see,” was his com- ment. . “All aboard,” was all I said then, but we walked along and I tried to pump him. “You, don't like my playing, is that ite” “I never seen you play,” was his Bul ing answer. "How did you know it was me, ae poms —iive neg youlon the I decided to make a stab at Fe and as “No, need to pull the ae timer,” r Tenia A, grinning at hi “tye been wi t out, break my pace tne isa eSwell excuse, but I am interested 2 know who it was that Fosdick got to point me out to ‘ou!’ _ “He didn’t—I never heard of Fosdick!” That settled it. I'd have bet my season’s salary that I was on the rignt trail. “All right, keep it a dark secret, and I'm x id: Bel - Only eae lick pay; he hates to pay “He—T tell Pegg I iam know what bas are talking al And he shut up. I tried to wecaten, I tried gags, he said no mat ‘the station I had just time to hop a train. I got a glimpse of truck’ and’ suspected that "Mets and sus} and Crowley Were about, “So long,” I yelled to this strange Lea asI So oy the car plattorm, you back East if you ever come tha way!” eens ie man was even unbent: urpcieny to to te ins hand. I went inside and forward. Down in the yards where the train ities for water I slid out and beat Sater” ‘That ic? is inside, tele- Phoning.” A few minutes sates be he came out. ‘Waters was trailing him. Mr. Mer- rill came out later and we met him. Pla had the whispered, _exci honed to He “old Fosdick t ‘that he et ‘you ¢. £3 you'd never come “All right, let's have some fun, let's oe ge uy ee morning, ip Ra Pe | Stickler Solution fe then y wet office and fell. him tn \prearee. Til pop out with bird, later.” It was fe hurried down the street Grentook ‘Waters, who was close back of the nut, or what- ever the party was who tried to pull @ crazy stunt as that on me. teed ned “and pore when he fe tu rec me ya street pee ate. at's gu and Piage frisked anim of Aa thing even loaded! He started to curse me for not keeping my word. He wondered how ie next day he was given early breakfast Renita office. He and T remained k room. Tea tot lot of fun paling ht pine I got off the train. We fee pie. razzing laugh and had locked yy iy ‘the local hoosegow for the he et twenty years for Pla ghied had done, we’ made ia think he was being held for on T had to keep_out of sight. Pudge Waters d to Red Lite ipster when te valde, team arrived, Thad eee Pudge that Flan- nigan B peony to a ae his S cffice ahd marted to tell how worried he was about my disap- pearance, “He ‘® crook; are well rid ot him," Fosdick decla and his is wreathe? could yee from the crack in the aes “No, I wouldn't say that,” Merrill cried, He knew that I was listen- a Td tell him so to his face,” Fosdick in “Al Al Bien toll bien, ssa | | sefosdce {imped up and tk to COULD see OTE chat that the “this” the strange man mentioned was a revolver. When he had stepped out of the hotel shrubbery and stopped me, I asked him what was on his mind. The exhibition of the weapon was his reply. “What's the idea—broke and trying to sell Tie» I asked, to jolly him until I could get ‘Ree ieee ea ys cathe on in’ and ‘help | Tll_be down in fifteen | I brought out the queer ‘guy who had tried gucer uy I went on. “T Sula help it, boss, the; me right after I Dhotied you—he fot on the pare all right, he must ot jumped off again——' “Who ui oY dena Rated are you lerrill onalck dersaceled, Ferm trying to tell you that a trip to Europe for the rest of the season would do you good; it would keep all this junk out of the papers and make it unnecessary for me to tring criminal and civil charges against you.” Merrill was furious. “You aren’t a crook, Fosdick, be: cause it takes brains to be a crook; bed are just a dumb swine, Fg he Ing in money. You Bade sap —” I glow- what you ered i Frosal aded the Be 4 pong om “ lemme 0, chap, “I wasn’t e cet no coin un- Jess it worked.” him or Tl beat Ae up, and then Mr, Merrill will tell you what’s what, ” T insisted. Fosdick was frightened and more of a boob than I believed. gts ey aed some money ke, A t Poa too ogre od, playie ft fo day,” Fosdick ‘ a abl aneioned me to leave. ~ got ready for the e Merrit told os that ‘Thornton dick had, himself, told him that bid state cs er Forte made PH necessary to back to ae sa Get ready tor @ trip to I ceateely believed it, but gg had scared him into doing that. What should have been ores olher spanking and suggest pain sugges' ae eo n @ goofy house for the weak ae a inet ane wasn’t there to see, but his team trimmed us badly that first game! Whether it was because he wasn’t there and his team felt, better with- out him fussing around or whether it was because we were too confi- dent, I am not sure. This shifted us suddenly to third Place, with the Avaldas second and the Queen Valley lads in the lead. It was a slight fraction, and when we had taken the next two games from the Avaldas and Queen Valley had lost two of their three games with Danville we were back in the lead once more. It was easier for my Jey was doing half hy vine et snare j ing, and when we pee eeu i micks that | He and we I “It twas, ray a alite he showed me worth much tb me, especial; | to do to get the speed on a For that I gave him all I k t about my jug-handle drop. yale @ bundle by en came voi at ord lewspapers, unday all stamped, copy.” Dolly Dawson haa =a them, along with a kind letter. I f opened up these he rs to see what t wark marked. le! I was in the newspapers all oaht end how! i i What have the newspapers to tomorrow’s Pitching say about Bort? Read stallment e of y yt clen—545.1 Meters —Good Morning—Weather. Morning Devotions. erio 0—Rarly Birds, 5—Time Signals Progra: O—Farm Reporter in Washington —Old Time Music. 5—Time Signal Program Resumed. 8: t6—Aunt Sammy—Opemag Mar- 9:00—Musical Appreciation, )0—Markets—Weather Report, 5—Hosi Program. 5—World Bookman, (0—Address—Wm, John Cooper. 5—Organist. 30—National Farm and Home Hour. 0—Music, \—Afternoon Musical Matinee. j—Markets, High, Low and Ciose News — Weather — Livestock + Markets. 2:30—Afternoon Musical Matineo Re.. 3:30—Benjamin Moore ‘Triangle, 3:45—Varied Musicale. 4:45—Classical Hour of Music. 5:45—Stocks and Bonds — News— ‘Weather, 6:00—Organist. 645—Herr Louie and His Hungry 3 00—Daksta Melody Boys of Stras- \ urE. Is it not quite as important to save | our country and our fellow country- ! men and women when war cliuds do i not hang upon the horizon as when they do?—Mrs. Herbert’ Hoover. We are suffering in‘ our cities from * need of simple things.—Dr. Carl jung. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:

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