The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 20, 1936, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 20, 1936 4 o3 ? . | fame. He was a story-teller. He wanted people to read | —————————————|= " IH" e Dally Alaska Empu‘e rns stories when he had written a good one. That was H APPY . ] L ]\ d Leam | PROFESSIONAL l Fraternal Soniatics L all. e il Q0K an B it Bl OF — 2 I SOBERS RS i s TNAECT | That they will continue to read them long after BIRTHDAY HOfOSCOPe ;l;—— = Castinomi: Chanviel.- | 5 b’ v av excépt Sunday by the|the names of his contemporaries are forgotten is the . | i By A. C. Gordon | Helene W. L. Albrecht pa 'l EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main | hest tribute than can be paid him 'l “The stars 7acline | CHERIOTREAY: s but do not compel” June ? o The Empire extends congratulg- ved In the Post Office in Junes tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follo:s- ing: | | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics | 207 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, 216 1. What is the-real meaning of the word “Bible”? 2. Who was the twentieth Pres- ident of the U. S.? s~cond Class B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 P, M. Visiting brothers wel. come M. E. MONAGLE, THE REPUBLIC DILEMMA TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1936 Benefic aspects rule strongly to- “SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrfer In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25| James A. Farley, Chairman of the Democratic Na- postage paid ot the following ra‘es: | tional Committee, in a recent speech described that JANUARY 20 day, according to astrology. It is| 3. What does El Dorado (Span- Exalted Ruler. M. - ”m;:n«h T months, in advance, | worthy animal and symbol of the Republican party— Mrs. Etta Bringdale a time for going ahead under full|ish) mean? i SIDES, Secretary. = will confer a_favor if they will promptly | the elephant—as a beast with a tail at each end. Henry J. O'Neill, energy. Women are well directed. 4. What is the correct possessive form of “somebody else”? DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER notify the Busincas Office of any failure or irregularity | uopn one end we have the Fletcher organization of o KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS xt‘fnua Scottish Rite Temple, in the delivery of their papers 9 e > day th 5 W he two Great Lakes DENTISTS n ‘ehwmms News Office, 602; Business COffice, standpatters, clamoring for the return of the Hoover This is a lucky m(.idmz, da}( th:r. .xv ‘Which of lt)w il e | Blomged Blildie Seghers Council No. - b 5 ‘ . seems to presage rising fortunes|are connected by the Niagara riv | 1760, Meetd AN MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. stem, with the American Lobbyist (Liberty) League as well as lasting love. Many mar- | er? | PHONE 56 760. eetings second 5 , . A eation ot Al T e s eaditad 1o | signing checks with the same lavishness its members Sk | riages will take place this winter Hours 9 a.m- to 3 pm. ;"ado lasth O%dfl}l’ at e fE-Srrmot biheleige s d in this paper and also the | displayed for lobbying through the Smoot-Hawley g L4 land demand for new homes will ANSWERS ~ —_— n‘mmg{_s v edat?: H":Rz;/f cal news published h N d i = vataitabelili Sl 2 £ tariff in the last Republican Congress and furnishing 20 \7L[%RS AGO encourage higher rentals 1. *The Book ] tend. Cou:cil Cha:n— A R R ey TR BBl T AT ok \"CER | the two million dollar slush fund in the futile effort ! Florida and other southern states| 2. Garfield. I Dr. C. P. Jenne bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULL 4 9 o 8t it M = - A i % o 5 vi o hrough severe weath-| 3. An imaginary place abound-) ! . . 4 e . " LL®EN, — to defeat the bill to control the greedy holding com-=| & o o asaal L will btn;\“ !” ot M Sake | DENTIST G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretarv. panies in the recent session,” he said. “On the other JANUARY 20, 1916. ‘::J :1:‘[;“_ :‘l:m,“:‘,b\[ 4. “Somebody else’s.” | ! Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine SO e — end we have the Hearst newspapers, which month In | juneqy experienced a cold wave! There is a sign said to encour-| 5. Lake Erie and Lake Ontario.! | Building 3 “‘;l.“mu LODGE No. 14 |and month out have been demanding that the govern- | with minimum temperature offic-|age betting. Horse-racing willf ! ' | Telephone 176 d’:mfi Bnd}flourch Mon- ment start the printing presses issuing money with|'lally at eleven and one half degrees' draw crowds in C: where | feeeeereeeeeoe O —— ] Y each month in nothing behind it, and which now appear as the|below zero. Few people were on sensational events & foreshad- & et A St e e beginning at 7:30 | guardians of the conservative interests and boosting | the streets and the stores were|owed Dally Lessons Dr. Richard Williams MARTIN 8. JORGEN. first one and then another colorless figure.” practically deserted with the excep-' Hotels will now reap harvests for ! % # SEN, Worshipful Mflsl‘er' JAMES tion of the clerks. The schools were not in session. Only about one- there will be much travel and long sojourns in many *ities. Cocktail DENTIST | OJFICE AND RESIDENCE But Mr. Farley should not be too severe on the il] Enqlish W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ? s | Republican high command, floundering in its sea + + y R 5 — : 3 third of the students braved the|bars are to be the cause of se By W. L. Gordon i Gastineau Buildin, € | of uncertainty, for it has two especially difficult tasks | weather, and those who did were tional reports in New York and| L Ehicirs 481 & DOCGT “§ f‘(‘)‘ E | before it. It must first build up some lay figure into | excused for the day. The United | Washington : (e AERIE éfi; "i/éé the stature of a statesman, so, as the Democratic | States District Court held no ses- Women will attain success (m:u‘ Words Often Misused: Do no 17, F. 9. E. 255w | S Ee AR ) sion, and in all Federal and Ter- ritorial offices there were many absentees, since persons found it! impossible or impractical to venture forth from their homes. Water pipes were hard hit during the night and many a man went trudg- year along new lines of work, it is|say, “I shall place this table where prophesied. To those who are at-|it will be handy to your chair.”| ive will come the best oppor-|Say, “where it will be convenient.” ! tunities, the seers warn. | Often Mispronounced: Jesuit. | | Novel vocations, the result of re-| Pronounce jez-u-it, e as in met,| cent inventions, will offer careersju as in unite, i as in it, accent first | to young men and young women'syllable. | ing to the neighbors for water to|who have broad education. Often Misspelled: Syllable. Ob- boil breakfast coffee. Horses| Political movements led by young serve the 1. ploughed through the streets haul- | Republicans and young Democrats nonyms: ing loads of coal and the icicles encounter obstacles that 1 times and it chairman says, “the country will not be shocked by the appearance of an unknown as the Republican hero next June,” and, secondly, break down the great popular esteem in which President Roosevelt is held. Both are big jobs and therein lies the Republican dilemma. The latter task probably will be the more difticult. Publicity can build a public figure, but the man must have something himself to hold a sustained appeal. | Few, indeed, there are in public life who can retain the Meets first and third Mondays 8 p.m., Eagles' Hall, Douglas. *"isiting “Yrothers welcome. J. B. Martin, W, P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. M e (R e Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST A GREAT STORY-TELLER PASSES Hours 9 arm. to 6 p.m. | SEWARD PUILDING Otfice Pone 469 A great story-teller is dead. Kipling, the man whose verse and prose has stirred and entertained the world, has come to the end of the trail, but his works live How few have been able to accomplish that goal. Rudyard Kipling’s artistry, his genius for setting | i on. “Use is yours.” word three | Let us| TELEPHONE 543 | Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 off characters in sharp contrast yet in harmonious i 7 & forming on their lips were broken |bring disappointment to Messrs. increase our vocabulary by master- ood 3 0] ikt nklin Roos 1t. 2 3 | . i relation to each other and the skill with which he |® sl b, peonle JIXS Fomrkli Rooeevelk, Bomslioriy! Shon they came in contact|Fletcher and Farley, astrologers inz one word each day. Today's | Dr. W. A Rystrom R <o | OF his policies may be frowned upon, but his personal | with the tongues of the sleds. Two | o1l ‘word: Vigillant: watehful: wi limned his colorful types, was born in him. Devotion mF Al sl 1 2 . TWo | forete jword: Vigilant; watchful; w | DENTIST G ek Sasiiage | popularity in the face of terrific criticism apparently | large show windows in Goldstein’s | Persons whose birthdate it is have alert. “Sirs, take your places and|| Over First National Bank art was a h ge. |is a lasting thing. Emporium were blown out and the |the augury of a year of success be vigilant."—Shakespe: 11 X-RAY Born in Bombay in 1865, Kipling's literary career articles on display there were float- ' and began at Lahore in 1882 on the Civil and Military Ga- happiness. Love affairs are Ignorance of the law is no excuse, the courts|ing somewhere between Juneau and | foreseen for the young. 3 P COSSE ISR ——al f5 : zette. A grim and dyspeptic managing editor called htm‘ rule. Of course, anyone should be able to remem-| T2ku. The coldest corner was| Childiren born on this day prob- [— - 2 e a “clever pup” and found space in the paper 0r BA&Y | per the two million or more laws which we are|A3round Front and Franklin, oppo-|ably will be of cheerful, sanguine Nlodern Robert Smlpsou verses signed “R. K.” written in off hours and which, | quonoceq o obey. si_ge the Gastineau Hotel ,where the | nature, lovers of adventure in any P t ~ D * week by week, took the place of stereotyped “filler” in S ERE ONe Ne e wind gets a powerful sweep down| field that interests them. ltth uette i d Upe. D. the blank spaces of scanty news columns. Readers llked | The bigot is the other man who will not swear| "2DKUR avenue and, reinforced by, General John C. Fremont, explor- i | Graduate Los Angeles Col- 9 gested they be put in book form. Moy o e 3 ; a counter wind along Front, makes | er and soldier was born on this 2y Roberta Lee | lege of Optumetry and PRECEDENCE them, suggested they be put m' ook forn g ; | that our creed is true. navigation something fierce. In|day 1813. Others who have cele- 2 4 | Opthalmo’sgy { A regular volume was beyond the young man’s B | many establishments the employ-|brated it as a birthday include ‘seeeeeee - -3 | | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | [ Certain things come, with the means. So he employed one of the paper’s native Jobber Is Still Here ees took different shifts off and | Thomas Jonathan (Stonewall) | A X LR ekl years, to be an expécted part riritérs o work out of otirs, ot the verses up I galley Eaihaig perched themselves on the radiai-|Jackson, Conferedate general, lg24;' @ What o uic proper way to DR ——" % | of every occasion. Within our proofs and bound them in an oblong, wire-stitched (Seattle Journal of Commerce) ors to let the heat oooze through|Francis E. Spinner, financier, 1802 ;T]‘;::, ik ot DR. H. VANC profession, this regard for the docket made in imitation of an official government| In spite of all attempts that have been made to read | their systems. (Copyright, 1936) A. The principal thing to re-. | OSTEOPATH e traditional must be combined brown paper envelope even to the address “to all heads |the jobber out of the merchandising picture, he con-| The storm cut down attendance B 1 fémber igithat the TRMEEHD givenl | Comiie with new steps toward perfec- » tinues to remain a very live and important part of it. [3t the theatres. At the Moose| SHOP IN JUNEAU! gt o | o mioh wn e toabion i i of departments and government officials.” The whole | tinues remain a very live a P P ob | % s § § A INLAU! over the phone must be just as Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5: tion. Their successful combin- He is having his troubles, of course, but who isn't? |Hall there was a small crowd, but - s : 4 ation at all times is but one was tied with a piece of red tape and the collection was titled “Departmental Ditties.” correct and gracious as the written ! invitation. Im Q. At a fashionable ball, where ; ! to §.30 and by appoiniment. Office Grand Apts., .ear Gas- The recent announcement of Marshall Field & Co. | the Quarter Hundred Club braved the elements and there was a good | | ) of the standards marking a concerning their withdrawal from the jobbing business SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! 4 service by us. Reply post-cards, containing announcement of the | LT te R CE e @ one more straw showing | ebresentation. PRt L tineau Hotcl. Phone 177 adlS “book” on one section and an order blank on the other | wich way the wind is blowing. But, after the ac- | Perhaps the chief feature of the b ® " SBhE T B suitable hour? e P LA I T S ) were mailed up and down British Asia from Aden 10| tion taken by this great merchandising institution can | Storm news as gathered by the Em- oug . A Orighiat 4 thirt B - ” v ; ignifi . o |pire staff was the fact that A. H o e e e e *FENZRAL MOTORS ' sSingapore and from Quetta to Colombo. It was a case |hardly be regarded as significant to any except the | Pire staf No matter how many medicines a. m. i q of “cash with the order” and as the edition was sold out | manufacturers it represented in the distribution field, | lumphries wore a hat for the first|yoy have tried for your cough, chest Q. If a man has a title, such as AYIAC b ons ! The Charles W. in & few weeks, the rupees that poured in by mail went|and the merchants whom it supplies. Field's with its | time in three years. People tack:ng|cold or bronchial irritation, you can goctor or professor, does his wife | b . . . |great manufacturing facilities, was obviously in 2 |dOWn the wind-swept thoroughfares @t Telief now with Creomulsion. g o o i Carter Mortuar diret. nto the pocket of ihe author. Recaling the £80 manuiheluri facliles, whs oomowly 1 2 o, L onderment, and | GeHou oubls may be browing ami share 117 ‘| W.P.JOHNSON | i profits in after years, Kipling said that recollection of | {He! he was busy answering telephons | Yath aniting des tok areiance | A No als st PHONE 136-2 them “has since prevented me from m]urm? m_vrhe:\ltln It is true that large retailers will continue to buy | :nll}s u;m what made him go back M‘onihwh:ch g?“tngmdm t{xe set:b : | —~ - by sympathizing with publishers who talk of their| girect whenever they can do so to advantage. It is also | t0_headgear. 1 o e trouble to aid nature to TS ; ST, 2 5 ST A risks and the cost of their advertisements.” | true that chains and voluntary chains provide theiz | In Douglas, since almost everyone | yoothe and {;,"e“‘g‘e‘;';‘,.‘_‘}gg;',‘f‘},,‘,‘;:g‘,,; ] Tl:‘e "l'lm :?u ";f‘“n dry | Jones-Stevens Shop | |i = = “Departmental Ditties” in revised edition soon came [own jobbing facilities, in warehousing, delivery ar kept in by bad weather. thera, i5 loosened and expelled. HEOE el ot o R et B A out in regular book form similar services. But as long as the independent mer- | Was time to exchange stories of| "Even if other remedies have ' | il ey bl LADIES' — MISSES’ (! e o 1 oll 8 ' (R i . | other bad weather. Guy E. Smith | failed, don’t be discouraged, your PHONE 358 )| READY-" ‘i1 and a fank for Crude Oil save Five years passed thus and then Kipling transferred | chant remains as important as he is at present, then 3 y E. heel L , Y | | DY-TO-WEAR Vit [ RY0 SRR peione, v o : the jobber will continue to be an indispensable factor |S3d: “This is about like my first) rugglst Is authorized to guarantee f-— | | Seward Street Near Third | , | Dpnar Swbie, to the Allahabad Pioneer. He kept up his combination # hrovidiag oottt with niok |winter in Alaska, but then we had ml::;;‘lfls ygu ‘:}e a sr:u‘slged %’:{l{ & e - my PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | of newspaper work and authorship, producing in quick about two months of it straight.” | results from the very first bottle. | 2| . || RELIABLE TRANSFER It is an interesting fact, too, that some of the | ) 2 Lo greatest problems of today have arisen because of | Old-timers say this is the nastiest failure of manufacturers to maintain distribution and & | Packet of weather the weather loyal following among independent retail merchants. | Man has handed this locality for a One of the big houses in the food products field has [§00d many years. succession “Plain Tales From The Hills, ‘Soldlersi Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv) | Three,” “The Gadsbys,” “In Black and White,” “Under | The Deodars,” “The Phantom Rickshaw” and “Wee ‘Willie Winkle.” WINTER COATS AT HALF PRICE R T R TR | STRATTON & BEERS | | | Juneau Frock Shoppe Commercial Adju - “hill torrent” fled the citified glamor of and Africa for a few weeks.—Jacksonville Times-Union. SILL DOUGLAS In 1890, restive after two years on the ‘Ploneer,” he (slipped badly in the past few years, partly because of | MeUOWDIE fires, strengthened by | | - MUNICKPAL ENGINEERS | | | “Exclusive But Not Expensive . : 4 o : ; | growing competition, and partly because its distribution | gh winds, kept the pollce de- | = 52 ment & Bating Bureau sold the copyright to six of his stories for $1,250, and | | partment busy with R. P. Nel : ’ s for England via |8 tended to become more and more concentrated sy with R. P. Nelson’s | | 2 | Couperating with White Serv- with boundless enthusiasm shipped for Englan VI8 in chain stores. The latter are important, but after all | Bookstore, Stocker's Billiard Hall,| | » VALENTINE BLDG. W Frige e B ommr g, ice Bureau L Yokohama and San Francisco. | they serve only a part of the market. The independent |2Pd @ Tesidence on East Street.| | Telephone 502 | H. S. GRAVES 1 ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. | ' The New World! It danced before his eyes as it had | dealer is needed to complete the job. | f\ll were extinguished without great/ e s | “The Clothing Man* ) | We have 5,000 local ratings on file { danced before the eyes of gold-hungry men in the days g i PN AR A | loss. 5 all 1! ! of '49. But a swift disillusionment greeted him. He Alaska Picture g | WHEN IN A HURRY | Home of Hart Sehaffner and | | —_———— g already was famous in India, but San Francisco had TR ;mi:ivrg:tmherl-fi b];fi:‘mum 5. shgreil | JALL COLE FOR OIL! | é Marx ~'~thing || § never heard of him. Legend tells that when he tried to (Arthur Brisbane in Hearst papers) | " - i % pl:xsnoo.:mz i gravqlgicl;-any i =l HUTEL ZYNDA | eDOT! If you are not inclined to hunt gold in Alaska where | e5 ) 3 | get a job as a reporter on the old San Francisco Call, 3 A 8 e / e e Here’s one of the best—TRY the editor took one look at the shy, stumbling, near- l':l‘]:;t“m"’f’g-‘g‘éfl ‘(;‘:‘":r ‘:‘; f°’f“:l"'35 to bel;n:t;l:‘,‘ Tou SPECIALIZING | COLE TRANSFER | lI U Il BowLiNg: ELEVATOR SERVICE b ! 3 o of those sma Phone 3441 or Nigh i D sighted youth and sent him in headlong flight. BEBRtn or noms other falands’ oft” (e st BB LAt l e or Night 1803 .lf $5.00 per month i BRUNSWICK 8. ZYNDA, Prop. 9 Dark months followed. His shining enthusiasm raising silver foxes and caracul sheep. fi Prokich i \ ; . dimmed under the buffetings of book publishers and| Americans up there are doing that now. They raise B AR L A l J. B. Burford & Co. ||| BOWLING ALLEYS |‘————— , * newspaper editors from San Francisco to New York | the foxes for their valuable furs, raise the caracul sheep | and I | |1 vOur doorstep s worn by | || geinlander and Alt Heidelberg || fi and in “The Light That Failed” he told of those bitter | from Persia to get meat to feed their foxes. The cara- e | IDEAL PAINT SHOP |! watisfied customers’ | BEER ON TAP | 7 g cul sheep fur also is valuable. One band of silver foxes an | I It's Paint We Have It! R e McCAUL MOTOR Utterly disheartened, he went on to England in g’;fl‘c’ze;:“;:h L*;fl“d-l :\13:3 c?mcul sheep, ::other band o; Dinners | FR';I;ICV)“ WENDT { COMPANY oL : er v e 1891, toiled in a garret until he sold three stories for | nre "sara ol Sh:fip Bmigh?x:\fpg:r La:of a:u;rsl::;r::-‘:- |‘ NE 549 \ S B IN, S JUNE AU-YOUNG Dodge and Plymouth Dealers $15, and then, on the slim strength of that TECOERItON, | yp1y ' with gold mining as a side line. Think also of the Gastineau Cafe 1 11 Hardware Company | ! : persuaded MacMillan and Company to publish animagnificent scenery, fresh air and NEW COUNTRY. “THE REXALL 5fORk" i R PAINTS—OIL—GLASS - L edition of “Plain Tales.” Short Orders at All Hours | Trorything tn Faeiohinge | Shel and Heavy Hardware | 4 Overnight he became a sensation, and with a trunk | Doubts About Radio ! b | Gunsand Ammunition | FORD AGENCY 1 4 buiging with dog-eared manuscripts ready to feed the| - :L P ! 3 avid presses, he rapidly became the most widely known | (New York Times) % .;__‘. (Authorized Dealers) v | N i H—— i Siagmgeniabil | Coming back to Roosevelt and the radio, who has | GARLAND BOGGAN i FAINTS — OILS GARBAGE HAULED GREASES | An unsolved enigma of Kipling's long career was,'?lly dfm"‘?“m‘fd that if you can speak to millions Hardwood Floors i Builders’ and Shelf 1 Reasonable Moma.y Rates GAS—OILS i It embodied a strange legend which some saW 85| Americans were supposed to be clay in the ha:ds of | Sandin | " | 'I'l‘!laE!"BON‘E 584 l JUNEAU MOTORS i tragedy-tinged, but if it had that effect upon the au- i pather Coughlin because the good priest spoke to | PHBONE Thomas Hardware Co. | Phone 4753 | Foot of Main Street thor, no word to that effect ever came from him. |countless millions of people every week; incidentally s | . . For two score years, commentators ascribed Kip-|who even counted the countless millions? Father | v ling’s failure to achieve the highest honor that may be | Coughlin today looms much smaller either as Power or awarded an English bard to his having “insulted” Menace. 8 Queen Victoria in one of his “Barrack Room Ballads."| We o B*;‘n“;‘;czl:lgl:“:fiz‘a: ;::iofli“c‘:;;;‘td ¢ k o | T gentlems - - The reputedly ill-fated poem describes “the Widow & - s at Windsor” as sending her soldiers to *“barbarious ]L:; :;Enlfh:;::n;ai:c;& ?:nti]em]::t !;:‘:de.;.‘; quov.ee‘l,\:’% wars” and buying 'alf o’ creation” with English blood. | Fletcher's favorite statistics, the Roosevelt popularity | Th B M B h l CLEAN It ran, in part: has slippetl from an original 66 percent of the people to | e b b e ren( s DRY mc “Then 'ere’s to the Widow at Windsor, |about 40 percent of the people. Yet all this time And ‘ere’s to the stores an' the guns, | Mr. Roosevelt has had access to the radio, and has | Bank ® T!g mMcn nn"the ‘orses whz'; makes up the forces |made free use of it, and has qualified as our best radio | " Missis Victorier’s sons! speaker. Why, then, all these passionate Republican be; ! Victorier's sons!) e (Poor beggars! Victorier's sol tears? Junea\l, Alaska snft 2 S e oo Wdow s IV ncRoc “What Is Taking Place in China?" asks an| % Water ~ ‘We 'ave bought ‘er the same with the sword an' the ‘ editorial headline. We don’t know what, but we g annng THE BEST flame, | know who.—(Macon Telegraph.) COMMERCIAL An’ we've salted it down with our bones. | | TAP B An:iFoordbeggnr:'rvwxrrsd :g:gew;t;l our ev(;?k:siz)x;; poel( Peace plans in themselves are pretty harmless. | an d S AVINGS . 4 as decade ssed, It's getting somebody to agree to them that gives laureate after another dying and a successor chosen— all the trouble.—(Beston Transcript.) | m ‘Towul but not Kipling—the legend grew that even though | B i O Y our o the original target of offense, Queen Victoria, had This is flrie :Lismeh of );5:; whden the winter golfer goes i Resources Over Two and One died in 1901, yet court circles irrevocably were closed South and finds the climate doesn't make any differ- . ALASKA ] 5 e . ence—New York sun. Half Million Dollars Vit ooy e £ m never liked fame. He wa.sn;shy 30N, :(I He wouldn't let a mere cold keep him in the house, | LA UNDRY A i ‘Yorkshire Muix:’: the &lect of x: Tegion eX- |, it kept him in & box.—Akron Beacon-Journal, U , the origin of pecul name—“kip” meaning or Store r ‘and “ling” a torrent or waterfall. | Teacher—We’ll leave off studying the map of China PHONE 15 . qu N

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