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POTASH AND PERLMUTTER T ¥ ¥ EAN ‘After Discussing the Conference at Washington the Celebrated Partners Reach the Conclu- sion That Perhaps Generals and Admirals Have Something to Do With Warfare. BS, Mawruss, Ave Potash! ment Conference is to end war and sald the day after France ve- | substitute self-defense,” Abe said, ‘so tiled tose Hee UOREREG OF) SS Sonny ealtcnatensebetine submarines, “an ex-bank robber could) aint sayingythat when this here selt- always claim that he is keeping hi8/ defense breaks out good and proper, burglary tools in case some day he|there won't be a whole lot of people should want to build a playhouse for | Complaining: the children or something, but no| “‘ ‘If this pation could throw the bluff that it {8 fitting out a couple of hundred sub- marines for hourly trips to the fishing funks next summer, tickets 7 Gncluding bait and tackle.” “Maybe not,’’ Morris Perlmutter Rareed, “but neither would it fool anybody if a nation which is prepared fo manufacture poison gas on a large scale, also launched an advertising campaign with the slogan: COOK WITH POISON GAS THE CLEAN WAY. In fact, Abe, so long as this Disarmament Conference don't pro- hibit polson gas, Zeppelins, Big Ber- thas and all them other dirty tricks which the Germans first put over, | y'understand, why do them disarma- went delegates take it so particular knock the use of submarines?” 3 “It ain't the use of submarines tha fhem delegates object to, Mawruss,"’ | Abe said, for e ee is self-defense, give me war.’ “Then you think it's just as bad for ® nation to get ready for self-defense as for war?'' Morris observed. cents | “Worser even,” Abe said, “because bere | “it's the expénse, And as them Zeppelins, Big Berthas and poison gas being dirty tricks, Mi tuss, that's a back number view to of them. Dirty tricks depends who pulls them, Mawrt For instance, when a competitor tries a take By wayman which carries a set of brass of murderers like you" knuckles, a blackjack or a slung-| sitio consequences is that the other shot, claims that he’s got them in| nations say case of self-defense, Mawruss,"’ Abe So! said, “because carrying such articles) "And is a crime, Mawruss, and in self-de- | BN fense the highwayman must a | WHAT COULD THE PEOPLE CO idl eesti Asada ys a ABOUT IT? claim that he's using them for self- | ,, ; : bs How much tonger is the people defense. ne to tet themselive ot footed by “Well, of course, he could also conferences whieh don't mike “FOR THAT MATTER EVERY HIGHWAYMAN WHICH CARRIES A} SET OF BRASS KNUCKLES, A BLACKJACK OR A SLUNGSHOT, CLAIMS THAT HE'S GOT THEM IN CASE OF SELF-DEFENSE. claim that at the time the policeman. peace and armament conferences arrested him for wearing a black-| Which don't ‘diearm?"" Storris 1 jack, @ slungshot and brass knuckles, | What could’ pee ne tek ke was on his way to a masquerade | misfortune that when It fall dressed as Jesse James or Monk | « of war, y’imderstand, Gov Eastman or somebody," Morris gb- could step in and make you story? | soodby to the wife and children, “The same people which believes| whether you want to or not, y'under- fiat. France needs all them sulmu | stand, you've to go lo the place fines for self-defense," Abe replied the war and help out, un gin fact, Mawruss, nations which is| derstand me, but when it comes to 9 well prepared to defend them-| peace and cisermarment, the Govern- lves wre generatly such good mind | tint don't to you eaders that they slart in defending | M rimutter, you themselves long before the other na- | No Hft List for service fions bus even begun to think aboutfit the Disarmament Conference, and tacking, y'understand, so if France up to you to pa physical ex fingland, Japan and the United|umination for throat trouble, and Htateg ure all prepared to defend}then co down to Wa eton and Fhenisely it's only a question of lgive that Disarmament Conference an me when some one of them nations |arcument pi ast a rush elt-defense to the) Wow To GET DISARMAMENT. * “and after that, I suppose we'll] “Why, if the Government ve another w * Morris s draft a iwmy of Disarmament x the same as the last war ates three hundred thousand “Well, the idea of this Disarma-!alt of vated against t new wrinkle to put a crimp in jour MuaIneps, ‘then that’s ar dirty’ tries. wien a nadun geew Kandy for war Jt vunderstand, but when we try tne) ypact wily tells the other nation ame thing or even something wor Look out for me. Tm a mur- to put a erimp into our competitor's | Here!” vusinegs, then that is what is known | Kaye nh Nhe Other ations could: then sas" upeto-date metehandising.” We wouldn't argue with vo ‘Well, we've got to do such things | and let it go at that, ytunderstand fn ‘self-defense, Abe,’ Morris pro-| “But when a nation gets ready tor | self-dete it practically tells the sted. | : . | other nations: THERE MAY BE TOO MUCH “'T hate to go to all this expense SELF-DEFENSE. | fittings out submarines and manufac- y. for that matter every high- | %™ poison but what can I do when T find myself among a bunch | tis, hoarseness and stuttering, and have them drilled and trained to holler for real Disarmament, y'understand, when that Conference got through with its work, the proportion of capt- |tal ships would be 0-0-0, and the use of poison gas would be limited to So- cieties for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for putting away stray dogs and cats,"’ Abe continued. “But seemingly Open Covenants of | \ MONTAGUE GLASS, CREATOR OF POTASH AND PERLMUTTER, WHOSE OBSERVATIONS ON FEATURE OF THE EVENING WORLD. | Peace Openly Arrived At are just as |imposs ble as Open Covenants of Di |armament Openly Arrived At, and leven if you was to volunteer to go to | Washington, paying all your own penses for hotels, railroad fares ¢ throat specialists, Mawruss. wouldn't do any good, you might butt into the Convention Hail and you even |might have a speech all prepared in which you said that your name was | Mawruss Perlmutter and you had sons | who would in a few years be of mili- |tery age, y'understand, but just so EVENTS BECOME A REGULAR! On Ending Wars and Starting Something in Self-Defense By Montague Glass HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1922. HE WOOING AND WINNING: @ OF A PRINCESS soon as you sald: , “My name is Mawruss Perlmut- ter,’ y’understand, there would be cries of ‘Throw him out!’ in French, Japanese, English and Italian, bui Principally in Japanese and French, and ten minutes later you would be in the same shape as if you'd been In an automobile wreck, except that you wouldn't be able to find a clause in your accident insurance policy, to cover it.” A PARALLEL CASE TO THE CON- FERENCE. “But why should private citizens be troubled to go to that Disarmament Conference?" Morris asked, ‘The regular delegates ts also people, ain't it?” “They're politicians, Generals’ and Admirals,’ Abe replied, ‘‘and putting disarmament in the hands of politi- cians, Generals and Admirals is like giving over Prohibition enforcement to bartenders, waiters and saloon- keepers, Mawruss, which the saloon- keeper's idea of Prohibition is a sort of local option with a few dry terri- torles where nobody never drank much to speak of anyway, while to Generals and Admirals disarmament means self-defence and plenty of sol- diers and submarines to do it with. Otherwise, Mawruss, Generals, Ad-' mirals, politicians and saloonkeepers are the same like you and me. They've spent a lifetime learning a business and they want to see it still carried on at the old stand." “Ain't it kind of hard on Generals and Admirals to compare them with saloonkeepers, Abe?" Morris said “Well, of course, I've got a whole lot of respect for Generals and Ad- mirals, Mawruss, but at the same time, y'understand, you've go to ad- mit that they resemble saloonkeepers on one respect, Mawruss, which is that when business is good in their particular line it’s awful bad bust- ness for you, me and the rest of the "" Abe insisted, In war times Admirals and come in mighty handy, Morris protested. “ie it Generals Abe,” wouldn't be for our Generals and Ad~- mirals, Abe, what would the Ameri- can people be doing to-day?" “IT don't know,"’ Abe sald. ‘'Dis- arming, maybe. Copyright, ‘The Bell Syndicate, Inc.. 19 FROM PRIZE RING | By aH R. HARVARD 2] (“Kid”) Wedge Westminster Abbey Is to Be Opened Next Tuesday for the First Time in More Than Six Hundred Years for the Marriage of a Child of a Reigning British Monarch. bridesmaids are; Princess Maud, younger daughter of the Princess were married,” will “And so they he last chapter of this be written as t royal; Lady Mary Thynne, young- fact-story next Tuesday when Prins] est Gaughter of the Marquis of cess Mary and Viscount bg, te Bath; Lady Victoria Mary Cam- will be wed in Westminster Abbey. tite ae he fanaa was Dora 7 a : > de.|auls of Cambridge; iy s The cables will bring all the de-| Corton-rennox, youngest daughter tails of the grand ceremonial in the Abbey and the processions through the streets, and all that world that loves a lover will wish the principal actors in the pageant long life and happiness. W land and Viscount Lascelles are married in Westminster Abbey next Tuesday it will be the first timo in 653 years that a child) of the reigning monarch has been wedded in that historic pile. The last) Previous ceremony of this kind oc- curred when Edmund Crouchback, second son of Edward the Third.| married Aveline, Countess of Lancas- | ter, in 1269, | As Princess Mary is being married | to one not of royal blood, it may well | be id here that her course is not | without precedent, even in our own} times, Queen Victoria's fourth daughter, the Princess Louise, was married to the Marquis of Lorne, af- terward Duke of Argy At a later date the eldest daughter of the Prince of the Earl of March; Lady Eliza- beth Bowes-Lyon, youngest daugh- ter of the Earl of Strathmore, and Lady May Cambridge, only daugh- ter of the Earl of Athlone. Lord Lascelles's best man will be his brother, Major Edward Lascelles, to whom will be intrusted not only the wedding ring but the special I- nse from the Archbishop of Canter- Y, which Is necessary for royal The ring with which they PART SIX. | HEN Princess Mary of Eng- bu weddings, Will be married is a narrow band of gold washed from a Welsh river of Wales who in time became Ed- ward VII, was given in marriage to the Earl of Fife, Scottish noble, subsequently elevated to a Dukedom: But as far back as 1515 Mary Tudor, youngest daughter of King Menry the Seventh, became the wife of| Charles, Duke of Suffolk, and be-| queathed a romance to both novelist and playwright of a later day. ‘The wedding will bring together notable gathering of Kings, Que Princes and Princesses from the rei ing houses of atives of practically all the nations tn the world. And present, whom a'! ! a ns, | y jurope and repr nt- in spirit, will be one to these not so long | THE CHURCH DIGNITARIES should she lve until the Prince of larger cities of England, Sdgtland ‘Wales ascends the throne she will that}and Wales, and in the dordfntons day become the Princess Royal, alover the seas, In this way <thou- title she cannot escape. Gossip has it} sands of pounds were ral but that the King intends to elevate Lord! Princess Mary asked that the greater Lascelles to a Dukedom. part by far of these popular collec+ The dowry the Princess will receive| tions should be devoted to chaz will be @ comparatively modest one,| purposes. As sixty-eight in Uevery for King George is said to be much|100 women in England are poorer than many imagine. It is un-| Mary, ot one of its forms, a for derstood that the Princess will upon] contributions from the Marys \o her marriage relinquish her annual allowance of $30,000 from the Nation- al Exchequer, as was done when the Princess Royal was married to the Duke of Fife. Lord Laseelles’s for- tune is certainly enough for two. Although the Itinerary of a bride and groom Is usually a matter privy to themselves, it {s sald that the first don was set up for small donations, and this realized thousands, The popularity of the Prin and her fiance brought a dozen “little Marys from the Battersea ict to Buckingham with a handkétchief sachet of pale blue satin dedorated with rows of pearl buttons, They: were accompanied by a dozen little Marrys part of the Princess's honeymoon| from the same neighborhoods who will be spent at Weston Park, home| brought a cigar box ornamented with of the Earl and Countess of Brad-| 4 picture of the bridal pair InR de- sign in cigar bands, Before, ptesent~ ing their gifts they stood outside the ford and then, after a visit to Paris, will extend to the Villa Mediecl, near Florence, which has been offered by | Palace and sang in high, shrill ¢bices: Lady Sybil Scott, cousin of the bride- “Ob, what a pal is Mary? groom “Oh, what a pal is shel Within a short time after the be- There are many jewels, many, ale ae corded a homage far greater than|WHO WILL OFFICIATE AT THE waa evar bald 10, 0 the ty.| WEDDING OF PRINCESS MARY CHAPTER XiIl. ors, which was the Impression Twas | 00 Oy hor, the deathtoww | NEXT TUESDAY. t # to make. T encouraged theny hos s i , , . WEDGE LEARNS HOW TO DEAL oe it WAR andente thee Heats cor litanantiel tho.Abbey horth of Dolgetles. Teas the gift ot i ecu Bh Pritehand in, Who discovered | WITH GROWN-UP cow Ist seamed to. coment [REPRESENTATIVES OF ROYAL ra Monn, ne dincnserra i ee a R A aes Fiore Beret ines cholvenuitas (Horas FAMILIES. Fi. HOURS ALREO EGR Ness yCaTTT y Frederick R. (**Kid'’) Wedge. | sired; namely, knocking out the new . pony es Ba eel nash FU HULLAC Ane HERD Meee Romer ancokin Among the royalties to be present, KING TO STAND AT THE ALTAR. brings “Kid Wedge, lumberjack | They were good, game, young]! uddition to those of the bons RAIL. Aniter: toda hon ports, howe: and took their Windsor, will be the vulors of Spuva \ " stately choirs will be yi a ity he : carats “8 Jsons in fine spirit. We became] and of Norway, of Roumanta and of DT m Puckumatisin| 4 ce to a tuate studen he tells some- riends, « a ‘0 ic iF i i ebancel for " oval nyo ea AEE a thant friends, and T have found that the] sj oium, the Crown Prince of Dom eek RSE ey lost priceless gifts in the long list thing of the seerct of his success | best way to teach a boy is to first elaine ele f Af those :sentite Frinceses Maly tone us a Miah school Principal and |tmake him your friend. representin i ey a aA TT a a ae Kings and courts and countrymen, mukes sume observations on the a ed i HEI SPREE Yl “mer , ‘ his daughter personally HE Bigree of Lewoom but tiers could be no token mare waliesos vor aNd Wie neoeasty | ‘The year as Principal of Benson| There will be seats for 2,000 Speer eT and tewide, Mer at. the significant of the affection 19 whieh . , Union High School as a wonderful |tors placed upon slightly raised plat rail anti! he has performed ver people hold her than the hal | Jor proper incentives to accom: | exoerience, but f felt’ that £ ought to|, PEA CATH pratee FY Sica Tb LENGE aitiée teothal of the Princess was announc- | timorous, half daring visit of those | mlishment. He believes that there | x und continue my education, [re ee ane ang ave ncaa route to be taken by the wed= th subscriptions to provide her with twelve Battersea children to frowme is in this country, to be seized The man who has been my ideal for /OStrueted view of the ¢ purty, as now announced, wil) Wedding gifts were started in all the ing Huckingham Palace. upon by the humblest man in it, |Many years was “Teddy Roosevelt, |Workmen have beon busily engaged jn from livekimzham Lataee down the : a Harvard man. Perhaps that was!for months preparing the Abbey for) Mall, through the Admiralty Areh OQ the opportunity for the training |“ » th A Ne k N . : l ! Pe ee ae Jone reason why I decided to go to the great event, and one of their tasks | from Charing Cros to, Whitehall, ew Yor ers ew erings and education that will broaden |iyat institution. At home we have Vem | the cleaning of the tomba, (thence by Parliament Street to the ki i | any man's life. Pacing three |the greatest monument to Roosevelt | lax been the clean of the t¢ wort door of the Abbey. During this Fi D T 0 th S | years as a Harvard graduate stu. \in the world, It is the great Roose-| with their two recumbent: eMfg journey, Princess Mary will ride in a ora ay or wo n e creen aan working for a Ph, D, de- [eat duty whicn waren i Le Edmund Crouchback and Aveline, bis cl ed gurriage with her father the Ne alin fi briac, It seems rather unfortunate | Kin the Queen a we Queen Blita ALTO ove'x Boomerang,” an | gree, he is quatified to speak \tyrough which the irrigating ditches |" is : w of the |DoWaxer, Alexandra, and the others By Roger Batohaliter. ' Tate nee ie a | from experience jrun from the dam blossoms like a| that these will be in plain view ef the [ioe t Oita route will be. THE VISITING HOUSEWIFE'S |' a n Clay althorp's | — ls ten and thousands of Arizonians|I'rincess when she is married lined with troops. and a detaehment COOK BOOK. novel “Perpetui with Ann MOrrest | . have beautiful ranches love to to the limited seating ca-)of Life Guards will accompany the! ‘The third of this series of recipes, | and David Powell in the leading-poles, | IIE subjcet of discipline Dre sented) praise the name of the great Eastern pacity of the Abbey, only fifty chairs) carriage containing the King and bis. written especially for "New Yorkers! will be presented It is a atéry of n interesting study. Of course |er who understood the West have been ied to the members of | danghter Among the troops, the. For a Day or Tw by New York's! circus life. Charlie Chapt - had studied the theory in see the House of Lords, and lots were) Grenadier Guards, the Viscount's old famous chefs, ls fried chicken, Souths mae a ape Ihe Ceee iwational courses at the I have no envy for the rich man's |drawn tor the The Americans at- | comrades in arms, will be prominently ern atyle, For Sunday dinner itean, | 2” and the Rialto Magazbie wilt but theory and practice are] son who has plenty of money to spend | tending the ceremony are Likely to be] placed. ‘The guard of honor outside jot be excelled, according to its au-|CoMplete the film programme.cVer- — , nes fir apart, Personally T do} at college, because the yery hardships |only the few who have official position | the At will be furnished by the! thor, Chef Paul Cassenet of the Wood. |S “Sicilian Vespers" will (8B the jnet beleve in corporal punishment.[and sacrifices that beset a man who|in England and the ladies who are] Royal Seots, tu © infantry regt- ck and former chef for the late |uverture : |My experience with a step-father's|is dependent upon his own resources |the wives of Britisi guests, Amons| mont of the line, of which the Princess |) Derpont Mterwan, mi : Joruel beating are T was eight years | strengthen his will power and de-| the Cabinet Ministers, past and pry is a Colonel | “Gee a three-pound: chicken)” RIVOLI--Wallace Reid will be seen eld led me to believe that brutality in] velop determination that is really|ent, who have American wives who] Princess Ma wedding gown 48] vie, Cassenet tells us “When {in “The World's Champion," « ver punishment produces brutality insthe}an asset for future success. jwill accompany them to the Abbey} made of cloth of iver, given to the! cleaned, cut in pieces \ | sion of the play, “The Champtog’* in p punished, Yet T knew that some] When I return to the scene of my|}are Lord Curzon and Lord toe. Lady} Queen by an tndian Prince when she CN sal ovenuaane, sot tiv Anie j Which Grant Mitehell appe dc One these big husky Arizona cow-|} old lumberjack battles Iam often in-| Astor is likely to attend among was in’ Ind The beautiful sitke place in a large fry pan tn which | of the scenes shows Reid in stbout punchers would probably Ury the out-| vited to be the guest of the millionaire | representatives of Marliamer court train, th real silver, wit fresh lard has heen heated, Fry | 'tth Kid MeCoy. There will Wako be act before the school year was out. | lumberman for whom I used to work The influenza epidemie in’ London | woven In Er ok ena hand) nut cooked through and a trifl 1 Larry Semon comedy called “Phe | At the end ef my first day as Prin-| He knows Iam not interested in his|caused the Lord Chamberlain, who 1s|loom by a former soldier from cocoons | brown. Remove the chicken to a | Sawmill," “The Dancing Doll’ and ‘{cipal T announced that all the boys) money, for I never asked him for alin charge of the finetion, to order| brought ty ! The train’ Is! ciutter, pour of most at the lard [the Rivall. Pletorial Thoms Wile jWould meet me on the school grounds | dollar during all those tong, hard years| “morning dress with hats’? fur the} riehly brocaded with the rose, sham and add two ounces of butter fred’s color organ is to be retained for athletics. I mado two rows of! of my educational battle women who attend, Conct dress n | rock, thistle and emblems of other) roviously melted. Dredge in a |for a second weck. The overthté will | them vutting t | vr fellows: " v s | cossitate % arm: “os lders varts © wee She ill ea we ' 4 a a ating Dey Taree, aU RNa 1 am certain he would have isted | itates bu t 1 sl 1 parts of tt ne will wear small quantity of flour, stir until | be Frang von Suppe's “Pique Dame."* ae " x 1 me, especially in my senior this w med too flimsy for} the veil rH mot! Over] Sie Maur hos iniokenee, thietnad, | Mistirind Keighee wiisaae » |front row of honor. ‘Then after some| college when he knew 1 was £ the Abbey her w he the trip toy snough milk to make suficient - P winy exercises, which I had learned] craduate For three hours after the ceremony | and 1 Ny} Prince Mary f cok MURMED Sa ten oe , al Grant, | dalbs. 1 th : He tells his chauffeur to drive M bella of the Abbey will be rung | will ‘wr Russian ermine | Oe Bd yi i an hie ee ornate would put the woxing gloves with , a - 1 ” jas onor to th ‘rine t a- | fined wit 1 ffon ba 6 m coves enters: the t raat the school Neilge and: mo around tie old home) as:am/honor to the Trtr i f 5 as | (Monday—Five —Invatuar Table} second week d features are ome of these fellows rode the| OW My old-time lumberjack friends | mous ng hs DrOURNt) BIGHT BRIDESMAIOS—ALL ENG-|yints, by Oxcar, maitre @hotet uf the |The Upper Nile” and Huatoe’Kea, Very stunner and a tew had |femark when they see u The lucky | t ' Irpose LISH Iieeatagne) Sant ah i SP jbeen in the bucking bronehe contest Bd But ey te ey ot i . 4 vated abe . Aftor the tual and the re. | Vow ind Martha Graham give an of the years of hard we 1 ostudy | or or ) t | lof the Southwest. Lite in the open feof hard ¥ d Woes quired ob ning |NOW WE'RE COFFEE TIPPLERS, , #9! ance lapis ‘ breaking range {04 self-denial that always t ue- | bridal the A t pitate hors vthem | nl end his ANID * o peste The failures of life ur ways | I Hospital Pe Shr ur oming NI Ta : naive w nt blaming everybody ar verything | ¢ } be ' AeCOrT wn in t lies," a othe fore was a new rth ; A ie wcher Bs taking on all comers themsel ve for t ture i ams. t ! tay by ; f J son und -Anita Hie wilted. chalk’ Whdl weak. diaposldons the aystem \ which| nearly $100,000 for seats last Cor-| Hay ' suleseniin vs. 1 a ack, oeaaten an y work Keeps them down. It's not} onation Day he ee : Among othe the cast are 4 the syste he t that the | My . onthe Ke Harlan, wwaert and |THE COW PUNCHERS TRY TO oad Ge ey fone Yl EIGHT BRIDESMAIDS — ALL}"* be fi 7: ea Pastel ges —s ergies i couple th ‘ markets ( . BEAT THE NEW PRINCIPAL. | fiult and grumbling ENGLISH | Piccadilly, 1 1 “We have “Taking t) Sawmill and To make it more interesting at the | Instead of working to get M ‘ n thence up fn annual produc e Strand ew. The mugia pro~ L chose a st r pur in life Int her dridesmaida. | pataee, teri 00 to 30,000,000, S™4mine opens with the “Tannhauser® J hina do all ing ar Pity no man who work 1 as t “© original rew | ple are in the | Overture |btows, ‘ {t0 cnc really happy man is ¢ pe ! e| Ng 400 « | on liy this time they were] Works and works ha nt nine years. Drin- | men CAPITOL irand Larceny.” | n ready to box, They were orth having eithe ts th tl t he isin, 1 “t 1 “ basis of | f ay by Albert Payson ‘Terhune jteou use of the t the brow or the effort of v.| Pwo of the y worn F Bie ts pounds per capita Toledo sup. | dea with the eternal triangle, will , ne to As I have sald by nt arti} t est r Lady t t uirements of about | be Chiet feature Windsor, } gave them a to ar cles, there is no ex f poor: | Ka ‘ ! t enn 600 Americans. Billiott Dexter and Lowell Shermi fore that day's at 4 est man in America emain with: | of " nD whom] Whateve to bet by ee ¢ in tho cust: In addition to #hs Somehow ' 1} out a college 1 joesn't| ru 1 1 \ Princess M mar ehestral and vocal music there wilt Jinissed in my f F a| need to be a eal larags Ludy liv tater teckte FPARTHEST FROM HOME, “oppella” pallet i “tT t try to] an extraordir 1 needs} Diana Hr eldest has expres willing Th New r For a Day or | b v or} 1 to 4 ttle | is an average by pilus Aineri I fi ‘ hess to be | ux thie Vigs-|Two'? who ts farthest from home to-| CAMBO—trene Castle in *Ryench on tt Tivy | can stiek-toutaver ind he can win| tween the a ‘ " uuntess | we any|day is David Green, who is at the Me-| Heels” will continue to hold the ¢ gradually got the idew that} the battle | wrote bork litle whieh 7 vd upon her] Ati His home town, & hai, is 8 ), With this feature are a pews > boxers they were good cow-pun..h- THE END. Jtrate? tt herself The rau hushand. fut for sty, about 10,000 miles from Broadway. + neert numbers é 4