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second NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Eerie icine leaieana a t Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail per year marck) Daily by mail per yet outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of Dakota din’ Bis- {fhe Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST _ ecient ad Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as $7.20 1.20 5.00 6.00] Writing @ prophecy of doom on the ‘Weekly Dakot ‘Weekly year years by “mail in state, three by mail in Canada, per Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North ta, Per Year ..seeeeesere De —_—— Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of .50 | iron ore in the Lake Superior district 1 naked eye. They will recall with what wonder and awe they watched it dash across the heavens, night after night, until it finally disap- (peared into the outer space which even the wisest man has been unable/ to measure. Things like the expected appear- ance of the leonid meteors brings |home to the watcher just how small jand insignificant he really is. It makes him think of the power above and beyond the knowledge of man which causes it all. And sometimes | these thoughts are very good for us. When Resources End! Not quite like a mysterious finger palace wall, but rather ominous just the same, was a recent forecast in a middle western banking magazine that present reserves of high grade will be entirely exhausted in less than 30 years if present rates of shipment prevail. Of course, new deposits may be found in the rich Minnesota and Michigan ranges. If not, there are extensive low-grade reserves there pil news dispatches credited to it or \ SAY, UNCLE SAM!— CAN'T You SEND ME ANOTHER CANARY ? THE CAT GOT THE LAST ONE YOU matter i} i i rect. not otherwise paper and al spontaneous or! Ail rights of repul \° herein are also reserved. jewspaper) Representatives Foreign SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS és: Bl & BREWER ncorporated) credited in this news- Iso the local news of igin published herein. lication of all other a (Official City, State and County Ne [PHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON which may, through some cheap new process, become commercially avail- able. If not, there are still vast de- posits elsewhere in America, and wa- ter transportation is still cheap. And yet— The forecast, somehow, is discom- forting. For it points to a fact that we like to forget; the fact that there is to be, some day, an inevitable end to the natural resources of the earth. Oil, iron, coal—some day, soon or Step-Mothers The case of a little Washington girl who appears to have been cruelly ‘mistreated by her parents has touched the hearts of most of the people who have read about it, and yet it serves only to illustrate the fact that Amer- §cans usually are more than good to their children. | ‘The little girl also had a step- mother and the inference is that she, 'gacking the personal interest which | ghe might have manifested in a child ‘of her own, adopted a course of faa] tality and ill-treatment. This seems fo prove another popular notion swhich, however, frequently is incor- It may be there is something to be baid in behalf of the parents in this pase; that they may be able to justify themselves in their own eyes; but whatever may be said, it will hardly fonvince the rest of us. If we are average Americans, we tare too deeply imbued with the feel- late, mankind will have used up the last of them, and there will be no Possibility of getting any more. | In former ages, perhaps, this would not have mattered quite so much. But the civilization that is being devel- oped now is founded, in a peculiarly intimate way, on just those commod- ities. Skyscrapers, railroads, automo- biles, all the great machines that do the work of the world—they come back to this triumvirate inescapably. To be sure, a cheap synthetic gaso- line will be devised some day. Water power may replace coal very nicely. But who ever heard of a synthetic steel? Can you imagine a papier- mache skyscraper, or a locomotive built of cornstalk fibers? Yet this approaching end of the great age of steel is a certainty which we need to look at occasionally. We need to be reminded that we are not building for eternity any more than the Babylonians did. The proudest) city sky line will some day vanish. The most imposing manufacturing existence, the Painleve ministry of France was forced to resign follow- \& a S(NAKYW 9 SLiodn stone O'Neill, who upset temporary theater. terpiece” is heard, unless some commo} seems most hard-boiled of New York's re- viewers and reverentially they stand in the presence of O'Neill’s ‘“‘master-. piece’—“Mourning Becomes Electra.” *e A personality almost as extraordi- ce term. Gladstone O'Neill, wed the handsome, romantic player| of whom Booth said, “He is a better Othello than I.” Brought into the world in a hotel room that looked out om Broadway ... for seven years a child, roving from city to city while his father toured in “Monte Cristo.” ... Hearing his patient mother wish for the com- ing of that day when this barnstorm- ing of a nation would end. ... Spend- ing most of his first eight yeats in dressing rooms, hotels and trains, 1S TH WORLD WAR ANNIVERSARY vy) PAINLEVE RESIGNATION On Nov. 13, 1917, after 60 days of ranks Deputies. S A re The Socialists refused to support the government. ‘ecord. In addition to the ing its defeat in the Chamber of/Clemenceau took the war portfolio. |Stephen Pichon was made foreign He had held the same ‘The crisis came in the night during| Portfolio in 1910 and was known as a debate over the government's lacki|a rclentless advocate for the recov- of firmness in dealing with the Bolo|ery of Alsace-Lorraine. Pasha scandals. Georges Clemenceau, heading a new! Luckenback, sunk in the Bay of Bis-/ government, formed a new cabinet|cay on Oct. 27, 1917, arrived in anjand Secretary. His first marriage, to within 48 hours, establishing a speed) Amcrican port with a story of the sinking in which five of the crew sashimi | were killed. secretary. | Twenty-four survivors of the D. N./on the university and took a job in Every sort of tale has been built about Eugene O'Neill. . . . About his brooding and melancholy and all that... .As a matter of fact, he was suspended from Princeton just be- fore the final exams for a typical col- lege prank. He could have gone back had he chose, but O’Neill was fed up| New York as a mail-order house clerk; Kathleen Jenkins, took place when he was 21. There was one child, Eu- (gene, Jr. But youthful “itching ing of the sanctity and value of childhood and of child life to con- done an offense against either. Most parents issue warnings to each other that they fear their offspring are be- ing spoiled—and then do a perfectly good job of spoiling them just the same. One of the hardest jobs the average American parent has is that of keeping from being too kind and too considerate of his children, and) few make a complete success of it. ‘The average man or woman eets| too much pleasure out of spoiling a vhild to deny himself the practice. The step-mother aspect of the vase, seemingly proves the idea that it is common with step-mothers to be mean and cruel. And yet there is too much evidence on the other side district will lose its smoke-cloud. These things constitute, not an ever- lasting framework for human activi-: ties, but an insubstantial back-drop; which will presently be removed. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the || trend of thought by other editors. || i They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's poliies. New York and Minnesota (Minneapolis Tribune) | Has the legislature of a state au-! thority to reapportion its congres-! sional districts without gubernatorial approval? | The supreme court of Minnesota, in) BEGIN HERE TODAY Rich old MRS. JUPITER te robbed and red daring 10 Mary's brat! Killed by n ear a her, inj money. house, ts recognized Qs one worn by a “gate-crashe! he eject night of the murde: a e K RU them. of the Bcoyen, there. day. Back to the Buffalo Blackfeet Indians in the Glacier National Park are going to have plenty of meat this year and it will be of a kind to bring back memories to the old men of the tribe, for the buffalo have come to the assistance Indians again. An Opportunity fo justify this fallacy. Nearly every- jone knows of cases in which a wo- man has become a second mother to group of children and has done a {first-class job of it, making as many sacrifices for them and treating them with the same consideration as her pwn children. | The trouble, of course, is that step- mothers, like mothers-in-law, have been subject to too much generaliza- tion and the black sheep have loomed 80 large in the foreground that they wbscured the great majority behind! ‘There are scores of legends and stories illustrating the dependence of the Plains and Mountain Indians upon the buffalo for food before the white man came, but the present use of the bison recalls none of these. It all came about when E. T. superintendent of Glacier Park, visited the Yellowstone Na- ‘tional Park and learned that the buf- falo colony there had grown too pop- ulous. It was to be thinned down. Scoyen suggested that the meat be used to feed the Blackfeet and the proper government authorities ac- cepted the idea. But there will be no thrill of the chase for the Indians, even though the oldsters may recognize ‘the fla- ver. The animals gre to be killed in slaughterhouses and packed in the modern manner, and the meat will be sent to the Blackfeet reservation for distribution by the Indian agent Persons who are not ordinarily in- terested in such things may get a ‘thrill out of the “night of the falling hairs” expected in the near future, probably after midnight next Mon- It is an opportunity to see one of the manifestations from beyond the a decision handed down last month, answered this question with a ringing; affirmative. It held that the word “legislatures,” | as used jn article 1, section 4, of the’ United States constitution, refers only to the legislative body which makes the laws of the state, is not synono- mous with the lawmaking power of ‘the state and does not therefore in- clude the governor of the state. The effect, of its decision was to set aside Governor Olson's veto of the reapportionment act passed by the last legislature and to establisa the validity of that act, which divides the voting strength of Minneapolis three ways and: throws its third, fourth and tenth wards into two rural districts. ! In New York state a supreme court justice has just answered the same question with. an. emphatic negative in refusing to grant an application! for a court order providing for a con- gressional election on the basis of a reapportionment resolution adopted by both houses of the legislature last. spring. | Reapportionment by resolution was attempted in.New York state after Governor Roosevelt had threatened to veto the Republicans’ redistricting plan if it was incorporated in any legislation submitted for his approval. The resolution, of course, was not) subject to his veto, but Justice Staley’ of the state supreme court has now| ruled that redistricting can only be) accomplished by the enactment of a; law, which means that redistricting | must be passed on by the governor before it can attain that status. Al resolution, in other words, is not; enough; reapportionment, in this jus-| tice’s opinion, must be effected by statute and a bill must be submitted | to the governor for his approval be- tone it can become a law in New York state. alters the fact that Minnesota has a reapportionment act of its own that! court or the further fact that th's! legislation must continue in effect so long as the state court's decision is not reversed. Still, it is clearer to- day than ever that the position which the governor of a state holds in re- lation to reapportionment legislation | needs defining by the supreme court} ef the United States. As matters! stand now, the Minnesota legislature! can redistrict without regard to the governor and the New York legisla- ture cannot. Here, plainly, is a ques-| tion of law which will continue to vex the states and cast a shadow of uncertainty and doubt over all redis- tricting legislation until it is an- swered, and finally, by the highest The New York ruling by no means i has been upheld by the state supreme| § Sphere of man’s influence and knowl- court in the land. The sooner the Soes off with Bowen. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXII you get home?” Mary said. Got off the gun?” “In my hotel room.” right now. better if you went alone.” Bowen muttered morosely. to be any wedding’ tomorrow.” how!” Mary flamed. first with me. cock-and-bull story—" “Why should I do that?” “To get a sensational story.” “I haven’t printed a line about you yet, have 1?” “Then, if that isn’t the reason, Dirk said you had another—” she turned several shades of pink in quick succession, but blurted it out nevertheless—“he said you were making up excuses for sticking around because—you were in love with me.” It didn’t faze Bowen. “I don’t say I’m not,” he gritted, looking straight ahead. “Oh, then—” “Every blame word I've said is the truth, and you know it!” he cried bitterly. “And I'm tired of having my word doubted! I don’t have to prove it. If you want to drop the matter, we'll drop it right here and now. It’s entirely up to you. I hate the Fly’s gizzard, but 1 can let my feelings go, You're the one most concerned.” Odd that it had never to Dirk just that way! “I'm going with you.” “Then come on.” Bowen's hotel was just around the ‘corner in a side-street, nearer Sixth than Fifth Avenue. It was ogeurred not fashionable but clean and 66W/OU shouldn’t have done that,” Bowen objected. “Now how’ll “I'm not going home just yet,” “You're going back to Shay's and get what fingerprints you can, Where are the ones you “Ill go there and wait for you. I don’t feel equal to Shay’s again, Besides, it might be “I'll get kicked out anyway,” “Look,” he said, “you better not do this, You better make it up with him while you can, or there's liable not “There isn’t going to be any- “Until 1 find out who's right. If those finger- prints tally, there won't be any, anyway, until that man’s caught, one thing at a time, and that comes If they don't—it you've just been giving me a—a ‘of us. edge and to acquire an experience: which may be beneficial to a lot Most persons past 25 can remem- ‘ber the appearance of Halley's Comet when it last came within view of the United States supreme court passes on this point the better pleased we will be in Minnesota, where the legis- Jature has sucessfully jigsawed the State's largest city into three parts and split its strength in an entirely unjust and indefensible man- ner, warm, off the lobby, form crippled forward. Bowen bought some maga- zines at the lobby stand, and guided Mary gingerly by an elbow into a small, rose and gold room opening An old woman in a soiled unl- “Hello, . Kate," Bowen greeted her. “Take good care of this for me, will you? Till I come back.” Kate's eyes took in Mary from head to toe, with cynical interest. “Shure 1 will," she promised, with enthusiasm. Kate had execut- ed commissions for newspapermen before. She would soon know what this beautiful damsel in distress had been up to. Shot her lover, perhaps. Whatever it was she'd been crying about, it thrilled Kate that she should know about it be- fore it came out in tomorrow’s pa- pers, ‘ see ARY established herself on the shabby divan with Town and Tattle and fell to reading, more to escape the old woman’s questioning than anything else. Eventually the old soul hobbled away, muttering to herself about the uppityness of some people. “When they get you in the jug, you'll talk, my fine girl,” she threat- ened through the wall. Mary read on, oblivious of having offended. It was rather fun mak- ing out who was meant by the peo- ple referred to in those small, scandalous paragraphs in the gossip magazine. No names were men- tioned, of course, but it was usually made plain enough. This, for in- stance: “Why fs it that we never appre- clate what we have until it is an- other’s? What child of great wealth a bud of three seasons ago—is making rather a fool of herself over @ childhood sweetheart whose de- votion she was wont to ridicule until he took unto himself a flan- cee? She is said to be relying heavily on the fact that the said fiancee is involved in a messy fam- ily scandal just now, which only the immense wealth and political pull of her sponsor has succeeded in squelching. A cold prickle began to creep over Mary, and she sat upright on the couch, realizing suddenly that it must be herself who was meant! Her eyes raced on: “Both aspirants to the hand of the blue-blooded and personable young lawyer come to the post well eguipped—the deb with this world’s goods, and the fiancee with more than her share of looks. But if all Dame Rumor whispers is true, and the lucky girl's elderly sponsor makes legal and binding his prom- dee to make her his heir, then the scales will tilt heavily in her favor, id she will be able to match her rival million for million, with a few extra for good measure, “A curious outcome, indeed, in view of the fact that the elderly Protector’s own wife died under mysterious circumstances recently. But Croesus will hear no ill of his Cinderella, so they say.” Mary hurled the magazine as far as she could throw it, and took a turn around the room to cool off, The impudence of it! The coward- liness! . The alert Katie tooked in, but withdrew in affright before that terrible young face. Mary was still pacing restlessly about the room, from picture to picture, staring at the ugly ofl landscapes with un- seeing eyes, spelling out artists’ names with moving lips, forgetting them as she uttered them. Bowen should take her home at once, and the matter would be put before Mr. Jupiter. He would know what to do. “Immense wealth and political pull” indeed! If that were 80, then they should be made to feel it! But as her anger cooled she knew with sickening certainty that in- stead of showing it to Mr. Jupiter, she must keep it from him. After all, was it any more than had been common talk for weeks? Everyone knew it was a scurrilous little sheet; everyone discounted its nasty little digs. She would only make matters worse if she made g row about it. eee Bee came hurrying in, his arms full of packages. In his left hand he held a whisky-bottle carefully by the neck. “Sorry to be so long,” he ex- plained, “but I had to buy some powder and some other junk... . j{ got a pretty good thumb print, 1 |think, but the rest are not so good +. . Wanta wait here a little longer till I go up and develop this? I'll hurry... .” “What's the bottle for?” asked, bewildered. “Don't touch it!” He drew it away “rom her pointing finger. “It's his—the Fly’s, He drinks a spe- cial brand. Mike sneaked it for me while Jack’s back was turned. Let me get upstairs with it, quick, be- fore something happens to it.” He was laboring under strong excite ment. “Can y’ imagine it? I been carrying this down the street like this, Afraid to wrap {it up and smear the print, Wonder I wasn’t pinched.” He started off, and Mary followed. “Oh, don’t leave me here! One more black mark,on my reputation won't hurt. I'm going up with you.” In the elevator she asked bitterly, “Did you know what was im that magazine you gave me?” When they were out of hearing of an exotic-looking couple who went up in the elevator with them she told him. Bowen did not seem impressed. “Oh, who reads that lousy little sheet anyway? A handful of nit- wits with more money than brains, who know it anyhow, and about @ Mary “Emily Ann Ruyther reads it,” Mary said worriedly. now.” “Forget it! We'll have Emily Ann begging your pardon on bended knee before we're through.” He propped the coor of his room open with a book, and laid his pur chases out on the table, the precious. bottle occupying an open space all its own. After that, they did not bother to talk. Bowen set to work and Mary watched, absorbed. The thumb print came up clearly, the others were, as he had said, too faint to be of much good. Presently he raised a flushed, per- spiring countenance and said dra- matically, “Now!” He laid on the table the sheet of paper containing the fingerprints obtained from the gun. Beside it he placed a finger- print chart and a magnifying glass. Occupying the place of honor stood the whisky-bettle, erect, its powder- blackened sides showing a variety of finger-smudges. He bent his eye to the magnify- ing glass, moving it from one to the other, back and forth. “I'm no expert,” he said, at last, “but if those thumb-prints aren’t identical, I'll eat ‘em, I'll get an expert’s opinion on it, if you want it, The boys in the identification bureau will do it for me.” “Do it, will you?” she asked eagerly. “I accept your word, but we must be absolutely certain.” “Right. Tomorrow, without fa! shut up shop for tonight.” ‘out. HMR AM . million repressed schoolteachers who won't understand it after they| Mary began to feel a peculiar un- read it, Forget it.” easiness. She had been unconven- “I suppose she’s in the midst of a pink fit by Bowen did not talk much, riot in Jersey City tonight,” he ob- served, “The hell with it.” did not talk at all. room just ahead of them, pausing in the docrway to kiss passionately. tered the siren, in a guttural voice with a marked accent. go?” self from her arms, and hurried out, grimaces at each other. doorway they gave an exaggerated imitation of that parting—all but the kiss. And howled with laugh- ter. his arm, bristling, paced the curb impatient- ly as the doorman sought a cab. Mary and Bowen, turn for a taxi, watched him in voluntarily. thing out of “La Vie Parisienne.” When the cab came up, he said HAZEL. ROSS_ HAILEY 183 BY NEL Service In “It’s only 10 o'clock,” he whis- pered in the elevator. “You'll be home and in beddy-bye in an hour. What could be sweeter? And don’t worry, your boy-friend’ll come around all right. Keep a stiff up- per lip, and remember what you've got now to knock sense into him with—that whisky bottle!” oe 8 HE didn’t want to hear bim talk about it. She was more grate- ful than she could ever say for the surety he had just given her. It made her course clear. But per- sonally, he had become faintly re- pulsive to her . . . that declara- tion of his was shocking, somehow, centered as ber emotions were in Dirk, and Dirk only. Perhaps she drew away slightly; her feelings may have shown in her face. “Listen, forget what I said a while ago, will you?” he said. “I ought not to have—but hell, you asked for it! And ‘I know it doesn’t thake any difference to you.” “Oh, I'd forgotten all about it!” she assured him, surprised at his Perception. They stepped out. into the lobby. “Hungry?” he asked. “Better have a cup of coffee before you go. You look done up. Did you eat anything at Shay’s?” “Not much,” she confessed and followed hii Imost wobbling with faintness and weariness, to the grill, which was empty except for the couple they had seen in the elevator. Mary recognized them without more than a brief glance. The odor of the woman’s oriental perfume was overpowering. The man with her was odd-looking, too —foreign, apparently. Such of their talk as drifted to her ears was in French, and his clothes sloppily worn, his hair thick and long be- low his large black felt hat. .He Wore a small waxed mustache, tional in going to that room, if any- one chose to be priggish about it. She would not have given it a sec- ond thought if it had not been for these exoticlooking people. Con- tinentals of that type always ma her rush for safety to the ideals of her Puritan ancestors. She drank hot coffee gratefully. “I was supposed to cover a Red And added complacently, After that he The couple passed out of the “Au revoir, my darling,” mut- “Must you “I must, sweet.” He tore him- Mary and Bowen made amused In the The dandified stranger, cane over small waxed mustache waiting their He was like some New York, Nov. 13—Eugene Glad- legends about New Yorkers by being born| with the lights of Broadway in his eyes, finds himself at last safe upon such Olympian heights as remain, | With the shouts of the crowds drift- ing up from below and with his own shadow obscuring all else in the con- It is not often that the word “mas- brave producer digs back through thé class- jes in search of a revival. Yet at this moment “Masterpiece” is being tossed about by the major stage crit- ics as loosely as though it were a A strange awe have overtaken even the By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Medical Association may not expose themselves. is largely a matter of tion of food as sold cooking, since thorough cooking and also the germs of botulism. ee % For Daily Health Service PREVENTIVE MEDICINE CONTROLS DISEASE BEFORE IT IS STARTED Hydrophobja Infection Halted by Quick Treatment Editor, Journal of the American The venereal diseases are giving great concern to authorities in pre- vVentive medicine, because apparently there are only two methods by which they may be brought under control: () Prompt treatment of all of those who are infected so that they may not infect others, and (2) education concerning the danger of venereal diseases so that those who are welll The prevention of feod poisoning proper inspec- and thorough foods will destroy the botulinus toxin iobia there is the Pas- Some attempt has been made to p1 vent the spread of hydrophobia vaccinating animals against the dis- ease. Unfortunately the immunity 3: not long and the method has not been considered as yet a suitable method for routine use. This should not, however, interfere with the prompt administration of Pasteur treatment to any human being who might have been bitten by a dog even suspected of rabies. It ts known that flies spread dis- ease Hence preventive medicine is concerned with the control of flies, insects and similar parasites. Preventive medicine is also con- cerned with the question of narcotic addiction and the production of dis- ease by the use of drugs of various types. Attempts to control such con- ditions are made through legal con- of teur treatment, which involves the injection into the person infected of @ vaccine made of material from the aed spinal cords of infected rab- But preventive medicine does not trol of the drugs which may cause harm. Authorities in the field of preven- tive medicine urge periodic physical examination for detecting disease in its early stages and thereby makes nary a5 his writing—this Eugenej stop with this attempt to immunize son of James}the individual. It is concerned also O'Neill, the famed actor of another! with the proper control of stray dogs’ generation, and of Ella Quinlan, who} which are bitten by rabid animals came from a midwest convent and]and which then bite human beings it possible to bring the disease under control. Many diseases are associated with occupation. Hence employers are told about the possible dangers which may exist in the industry and means are provided for prevention of @nd convey the disease to them. e feet” came over the young husband, the marriage resulted in a divorce and O'Neill was off to the wilds of Honduras on a gold hunt. . The sea, which figured so much in his earlier plays—“Anna Christy,” “He,” “Bound East for Cardiff,” “The Moon on the Carribees”—began to call to him. His father, playing with Viola Allen, tried to bring O'Neill company manager. But it wasn't for long. The young man was up and away on a Norwegian barque, headed for South America and new adven- ture .. . cattle boats to Buenos, odd jobs ashore in South Africa and South America, a British tramp ship back to New York. * OR And then, among his sailor friends. to live at “Jimmy the priest’s,” one of the waterfront dives of another era where, as O'Neill describes, “You always could go to sleep on a back table for the price of a schooner of beer.” There you have America’s greatest playwright—perhaps the greatest liv- ing playwright—just 20 years ago... son of one of the historic romantic actors .. . sleeping‘on hard benches and tables in a New York waterfront joint . . . drinking long flagons of beer with the sailor-folk of the four ‘Seas. It was from these folk that he drew his earlier characters. ‘We sat talking about all this just a few weeks before “Electra” came into town. It was on one of the up- per floors of the Theater Guild— O'Neill, slender, with iron-gray hair, marked with small. dark streaks; with a strange timidity, a quiet voice and a somewhat sad smile; with large and amazingly expressive eyes; with a slightly embarrassed attitude to- ‘ward the crowd of reporters that gradually began to hem him in be- hind the table where he sat playing upon the top with long, strong fin- gers. ‘A striking personality and an ex- traordinary one—this man of 43 whose newest work is officially la- beled with that rarest of words— back to the theater by making “cr mobiles have made motorists less about their clothes. But are still times when a man change attire. to increase business. better what will become of nobody's business? (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) disease. ——+ [BARBS 1 "Dempsey is making a comeack. Pearances) plenty grand. glorious Yes, ($232,000 for 14 ap- * oe Bandits, cornered by police, slip- ped the stolen jewels into the pocket of a bystander who was promptly ar- rested. Well, to the victim belongs the poils. * # & Gandhi is going to visit Scotland. Might teach the canny Scot some- thing about thrift in garments. ® oe Ok Clothiers are howling that auto- care- thete must ee Hotels are bettering their service Tf it gets much GRANITE CEMENT Experimenting with a combination of magnesium oxide and magnesium chloride, Dr. Howard 8. Lunkens, of the University of Pennsylvania, has Produced a cement with a. tensile Strength of 2,000 pounds per square inch. It 4s as hard as granite. DM; WHLSTBROSNWLDSWFT NGSKM. SWMSNVVDLGHT. 9 Ione letter of the alphabet is inserted 40 times among the letters above, a verse of four lines will be formed. “masterpiece!” (Copyright, 131, NEA Service, Inc.) sae lan f Quotations | ————————s o ‘We cannot live in a patchwork of patriotic sovereign states any more. We must live as world citizens or perish—H. G. Wells. ** * It is overlooked that untruthful- ness is the worst promoter of confi- dence at home or abroad.—Dr. Hjal- mar Schacht. + ee I have never had anything to say on the subject of presidential candi- dates—John J. Raskob. * * The trouble in England is that sport is playing far too big = part in the lives of its men and women.— Richard Burbidge. * ek * Our country is the envied leader of all nations because we have held un- swervingly to our ideals.—Vice Presi- dent Charles Curtis. The oldest attempt at keeping weather reports is said to have been is now Wilmington, Del. He First TRue MEN, THIS CURIOUS WORLD Well, Miss Sherlock Holmes, let’s loudly, “Can you take me, please, He removed a pile of clean shirts; from a dresser drawer, laid his ex-'knew I’d seen him somewhe! hibits carefully away in the empty! Pruce Jupiter, come home! !@rawer, locked it, and they went! cried, to Jupiter House, at the Point, Pleasant Hills? Mary clutched Bowen's arm. “! 1 It's (To Be Continued) FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: made in 1644 by a minister in what| Housewives who knead the dough dough. usually need the