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I IW 'Ma I *1- 111 j? I it !$ 111 1.1 'V :l:: i'i i» CT°^/ -iV FOUR GRAND FORKS r- ]. '••Hi"- .-ii •bato toua •r Braitat Hetaid^ TW, In advance..... months in advance sths In utvuM ....... month In ulnm and Sunday Herald— Kb Mo »er Tear 1 MOpTPAT BVBNTNG, OCTOBER not I ::i •o J*tart, w- the carbon content itself for the purpose of generat ing electricity for distribution throughout the coun try territory have made it unique. There was added to the unusual length of the period between frosts un usual heat in the early part of the summer, ai^d this, while unfavorable for certain kinds of vegetation, was decidedly favorable for others. Grain crops generally suffered from the long-continued heat, and as the principal revenues of the state are derived from its grain crops, this was unfortunate. One ex ception is to be noted in the case of corn. The corn plant loves heat—hot days and hot nights. In this district it was given more hot days and more hot bearing perhaps two weeks earlier than usual, but this advantage was offset by the fact that its ing season closed just about that much earlier. Not usually regarded as a melon section, North Dakota has come to the front this year in a remarkable tnaimer as a producer of watermelons and musk mdpna, immense quantities of both being ripened, and the quality being as a rule far superior to that of die imported sorts. Those who like toniatncs— and most people do—have reveled in that excellent fruit A tear ripe tomatoes were produced about TnJy 1, a full month earlier than usual, and ten days later the production of ripe fruit was general. Since thm there has been a continual outpouring of ripe tomatoes, and the production has continued, with airost, until into October. tothe I ERALD «,,,«• Hn h,nn th«.h»» nf the nr.c* at wh,rh Nations must do business on the basis of the price at which he can replace his product. If he has carried a stock over from boom times he will suffer loss. That is unfortunate for him, but not more unfortunate for him than other losses are unfortunate for all those around him. In many lines of business the losses have been written off and a new start has been made on the basis of actual replacement costs. There are some who lag, and this lagging must im pede the return to normal conditions. The sooner the whole country makes up its mind to write off its losses and start afresh the better it will be for every industry. COAL AND FERTILIZER. Usually we do not think of fuel and fertilizer in connection with each other. It is true that we often speak of the waste of fertilizer in the straw fires in the prairie states just after the threshing season. J. But while these straw fires develop great heat, we E., iiavc yet learned to look upon straw as fuel. Some interesting figures, however, on the ferti- &Vtn}lUtarLBi RUSI ate committee hearing cm the chemical schedule of the 'tariff bill. Mr. Rust says that fertilizers with a crop producing value of more than 800,000,000 bush els of wheat are annually being wasted as a result of the practice of burning raw bituminous coal in stead of coking it. I his f,s an 5,!^ of land fertilized with 100 pounds of ammonium sul- phate will show an average increased yield of seven bushels an. acre. It is estimated that a four foot seam of coal contains enough ammonium sulphate to fertilize the land above it for 500 years, and by burning the coal ra\rt all this material is wasted. Most of it could be salved, together with many other valuable elements, For the geaenl -cereal crops a little heat in mid desirable, and the conditions of this year nOt likely t» be repeated soon. As a very satis (MTjr substitute for this extra heat the grower of Reader annuals can make it a point to get an which is always possible through the use hotMi, or, where that is not practicable, the fcfoeftea window. Nobbdjy knows what de eflfttbtercfcn be grown in North Dakota, and —11— quantities# mrtil he tries it out. st th. o»»d —J sponsible for a good many remarkable findings, has ... «ja«i natter postsBie* jMt made a ruling involving the use of gasoline *jhwS£S i-Tffi suSSS'S.rwine Mo"a*y IUii g7| *^*thln "dv*DC*1 ?°SS by means of that pump *ornlnK,,r^^l,nr1•id'sunday Heriii^ local dealer can always get another pump from an iEt S?SSffli- SfVfl^nLiI other company if he wants one, it does not appear months in adranc*J j| that he is greatly oppressed by this rule., Neverthe to North 'fM^ui'iirataiia. less, the commission has ruled that this practice is llimMi In all other states the price* an: tonttng er Svenlnc Herald— Mentha S Month* M-M 8. 1»»X REPLACEMENT PRICES. The emergency program of the conference on unemployment contains this passage: i'-r I During the period of drastic economic readjustment through which we are pass ing the continued efforts of anyone to profit beyond the requi&ments of safe business practice or economic consistency should be condemned. One of the important ob stacles to a resumption of normal business activity will be removed as prices reach re placement values in terms of efficient pro ducing and distributing cost plus reason able profit. The war disorganized, demoralized, confused It distorted industrial and commercial relations and ^erce.' in some cases permitted and in others forced prices gress of the nations activities. Prices advanced without rhyme or reason, and they tumbled indis criminately. The time has come when the individual who has anything to sell, whether the nature of service or commodities, he must forget what it cost. He and permanent pro- to levels utterly unrelated to any permanent pro- 1 ,, .. Enthusiasts have labored for along time for the Itzing material lost in the ordinary burning of coal development of Esperanto as a secondary language. o£.Fltt^bu,rgh,mJa,Sen N°t annnalp»®ductioa ofthe £85,883,000 tons, Mr. Rust estimate that the an-l^g^ nual loss of ammoruum sulphate, due to present rocmory ^^3f^LpnceSivel°P fey coking the coal. These facte with many others,' given to all manner of subpects bearing on the mar pomt to the time when coal will not be shipped keting of grain, and there will be special interest in its raw state from the mine, but will be treated there. the discussions of the various plans for co-operative iqr the severation of many valuable elements which marketing which have been proposed of late, and ate now wasted, and possibly the consumption of it mxj be said that the purveyors of te*e no friends. Of course thn dpes not local agent, who is usually ajjoodfei regyded by his customers. But as tof fluid the agent distributes, is pretty much of one mind, especially the public .which buys gasoline—and itwk \Hcaee a court decision or pcwel by SOme A LONG GROWING SEASON The summer of 1921 has been an unusually long growing season, and certain of its conditions in this expressed may be stated about as follows: The nights than usual, and the result is a remarkable "tempting to create their own marketing agencies matured field corn. farmers are sacrificing business agencies of proven The more tender garden plants found the sum-j value for impracticable and mischevious schemes met just to their liking. Sweet corn came into which can never be of value except to their promot-! J*™'* p*wty. era. bear »*W "k 4^«H\ -the decision of any official body which is cbntrary to the wishes of a "great oil company is quite apt to be a popular decision, no matter what its nature. The Federal Trade commission, which is re pumps. It appears that these pumps, with which jwe are all familiar, are supplied, at least in many .cases, by one or other of the oil companies, and a J-ff nominal rental is charged for their use. A condi- io charged S.H tion is made, however, that only the gasoline sold T*jby the company furnishing the pump may be dis Inasmuch as a I unfair competition, and the supreme court will be called on to say whether it is or not. A SECOND LANGUAGE. It miy be that the organization of the League cf Nations will result, among other things, in the ac complishment of a linguistic feat which all other agencies have failed to bring about, namely, the adoption of one language as a means of international communication, that language to be studied as a "second" language by a very considerable part of the world's population. The difficulties which differences in language create, to serve as obstacles in the way of common effort, are set forth in the graphic story of the tower of Babel. And these obstacles have stood in the way of concreted effort all through the history of the na tions. Latin, French, English, German and Spanish have all figured largely in the field of international communication, the former two chiefly for diplo matic purposes, and the others fon purposes of com- ,ack nations 1 But there has been no common language, fly kni o{ me has been increasin-iy {clt as the have become more closely knii nations haye become more dose, knU together I rices advanced through their various activities and by the develop- ... ment of means of access. Naturally the need for a common language in creases with the number of nations represented at a c0nferencc and the lack of such a ls£ ddedl noticeable at the gatherings with its dc countries, speaking at least a dozen differ ent languages. A committee of the League assembly has proposed a resolution setting forth the desirability of a common'language the use of which will facilitate the exchange of ideas, and expressing the hope that the artificial language,' Esperanto, may be taught in the schools of the sev eral countries as a secoad language, so that in time there may be one language which will be in very common use for international purposes. A list of the countries represented in the pres entation of this resolution is interesting. The coun tries are: South.Africa, Rumania, Persia, Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, Colombia," China, Finland, Al bania, Japan, Venezuela, India, and Poland. It is easy to imagine the difficulty that representatives of those thirteen countries would have in understand ing each other, and the addition of the other countries would increase the difficulty in almost that proportion. much progress seems to have been made. of them were adopted woold not be long before Iocal $354,037,560, or enough to fertilize 118,0K,000 acres, dialects, and in time distinct languages. But it may Agpcultural^perts estimate that an acre be of which are under way. It is practically cer- tain that the discussions will be marked by some of the asperity which has characterized the treat ment of this subject for some time past, because the comment which has already appeared is decidedly peppery in spots. The two extreme views which are quite often tire business of handling the grain of the country after it leaves the farmers' hands is conducted under an elaborately organized conspiracy the object of which is to roD the farmer at one end of the line and the consumer at the other by the needless multipli cation of costs and the piling up of speculative profits for the enrichment of individuals who con tribute nothing and perform no real service for the benefit of the public. That is one view. The op posing view is that the grain trade is a sacred thing which must- not be meddled with, and that in at The raising, handling and marketing of grain and its products are industrial and commercial op- erations over none of whose methods the mantle of sanctity can be thrown. There are no "right" and "wrongf' methods, save as methods of one sort work well and those of another kind do not. The farmer has a right to raise his crops in the way that suits him best, and to market them when, where and how he pleases. Equally an individual has a right to en gage on the buying and selling of grain, by himself or in association with others. There are no laws, statutory or moral, which prohibit the individual from engaging in any of these enterprises, or in all of them. ,The ..purpose of any of these activities is the same, the making of a living, and as much more than a living as the circumstances will permit. It is as idle for the farmer to declaim against the grain trade as it Is for the grain dealer to denounce the farmer. They are following occupations equally honorable and equally^ susceptible of abuse. The methods pursued by eithef will persist only as they shall be proved ultimately to have value. The test of experience must be applied to both. Those who are engaged in the promotion of co operative marketing jjlans will do more toward their own succesis by putting forth every energy to de velop their plates along sound business lines than by continually charring other persons and organiza ttoos witn fraud7 And if the marketing of grain through professional dealers is to be retained^, that end will be rendered certain much earlier by the per fection fits methods, the elimination of waste, and the placing of all it* operations on a basis of fairness and integrity than by picking holes in the plans pro- 9K£ „e is dew o{ t£e of \^tes from the part of the general public there has been a ten dency to ridicule the idea of a ready-made language. It may be that the thing will work. Until conditions change more than we can conceive there is likely to be no such thing as a universal language for ordin- use. If all the old languages were abolished and separate 37 were Obliterated, and a .single throughout the world, it local conditions would de- variations which would create diverse possibk to keep a manufactured language, taught for a particular purpose, free from such variations, and to maintain it in a single form. That, at any rate, is the hope of a number of quite eminent men who most have devoted some study to the subject. DECIDE ON THE MERITS. There is to be a meeting of grain dealers in Chicago this week. At the meeting attention will be 6 V&AV GRAND FORKS HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1921. I en Bringing Up Fattier TK»-a new CtKjy JMO ewjT HAD A LONC, V/ITH HIM *S.riO I HC.LL. the surprise of every one. Sir Ralph Carlton returns unexpectedly from India, bringlnc with him a lovely young bride to grace his ancestral home in the vlllace of Upper Scotney. Hoping to relieve his young wife from the te dium of household duties, for which she had no ltkliur, Sir Ralph asks his broth ers daughter to remain In her self-ap pointed post of housekeeper. Thereafter, all goes happily enough, despite a few disagreements between the newly mar ried pair, until a certain Captain Vlbart comes from India to visit them. Sir Ralph objects to the man's Somewhat too pointed attentions to hts wife and the visit terminates very suddenly. That night the young wife Is found murdered In the sammer-house. On her bopom la aa ominous crimson stain of Mood. CHATTER V.—Oontinned. 'Then if She is to He here," he said, at length assenting. "I shall sit here beside her. You do not wish to or der me away, I suppose?" he de manded of the constable. "Certainly not, Sir Ralph," the man answered. "I prayed uncle that he would let me share his watch with him, but this he would not consent to. I was so shivering with cold and misery that I hardly knew what ithat 1 I gTatefcu.1 to i-ve hiped PER COLL.CC.TOR HADN'T COl-UKCTEO AJNX THINC, a'VjT N y— HERE COME*, NOW have only to do my duty." he added, a shade less pom pously. I suppose Unole Ralph had sat in the chair at the bench of magistrates a score of times and had ordered Larncombe to do his bidding, and it Is' possible that the policeman may have felt a little secret pleasure in something like a reversal of the roles. did and HOW tOU ^NOW1 I iho was doctor when he said that he would take me back to the house. He told uncle that he would bring him, on his return Journey, an overcoat and other wrapa We talked as we walked together the two hundred or aa yard! to the house, of several notable point* which the man who "knew his duty" had omitted to take note of. In the first plaee. it was morally certain that rob bery oould not have been the motive of the fell deed, for my Aunt Enid's many rings were on her fingers Still and a row of valuable pearls which she always wore, was around her neck. "And Iiiresny tells die," said the doctor, "though that ass Larncombe never thought of Inquiring into that fairly obvious point, that though he looked in and around the Summer house, as well as he could by the light of hia bull's-eys, he could see nothing of any knife or dagger' with which the wound might Have been made." "If there were to find that and identify it, of course it would bring them very near the murderer," I «ild. "IsLrncombe has made ^ip mind it is Jim Heasden who did it, and »,, WHO «his n, anti we'i 'blackguard enough for anything. Still, unless he did it for robbery one hardly sees the mo- *—•».«— —i— v. tive. Did Lady Carlton ever have any wrtfriH witH him anv yrorAa him at any timer Once she caught him trespassing and gave, it to him for It, I know. Probably he was setting anares for rabbits then. But that would hardly account for soch a deed as this." "Until we find the knife," said the doctor "I agree that we are bound, to be In the dark." and with that we arrived at the house. Grainger was at the door ready to admit us, and from the sound of cer tain shutting of distant doors in the house, I gathered that the domestic staiT had been1 thoroughly awakened and was prepared to use all its ears to gather any news that it could pick up. The doctor supplemented the warm clothing which he took out to uncle with a largo flask of brandy, and left me, bidding me go to bed and to sleep. I could not help thinking it an ironical suggestion. Sleep in my vio lently perturbed state of mind ap pealed an absolute Impostfbmty. I had a special cauec of perturbation, of which I had told no one. When uncle was betrwr OOsstloned by larn combe in thci Summer- house he had dispnotly stated (hat he had not gone outside the doors of Scotney House that night after the Autters were shut, until he want at the summons of Liveaay. Now it so happened that Just as I had pot omt my light. aJtsr rsading for awhile in bed, I had looksdKont of the window, attracted tar the bril liance of tit* moonlight, and therf I had seen, ag.it seemed to..'m ootte distinctly sad unmistakably, TTncle Ralph aotaig across the graveled •weep before the home. ss«M not be mr», bat It esmed to iner Jost as if ths THE MYSTERY «ffc SUMMER HOUSE A FASCINATING DETECTIVE STORY By HORACE HUTCHINSON I was certain, at all events, varnished into the shade of the big trees in that direction. And yet, in the face of that, he had told the constable most directly, and without hesitation, that, he had not quitted the house. It was beyond ev erything mysterious. Then I tried to put this fact together with the sin gular condfiou of full dreaa in which Grainger, the butler, had appeared at midnight to answer the house door bell, but could see no Unk of connec Uon between the two. With my mind in such agitation it appeared to me, as I got into bed, almost useless to attempt to sleep, but nature knew-a great deal better, and from the moment that I put my wearied head on the piUow until broad daylight on the following morn ing 1 slept the sleep of the Just and the untroubled. CHAPTER. VI. Now, up to this pointthe trairedv'i. impossible, and therefore I will oak ~By G.orje McManus WELL I MR A.L CC'AnTOR THI*S MO«.NlNC» tho reader to understand, when 1 station, two miles from write of something which it is obvious ?our*e,? that I could not know In this personal rfn^rV? ^vantage of Larncombe's and first-hand manner, that I am do- 1 ing my best to reproduce events and conversation from what I learned I from this person or the other. tamcombe, the constable, must have spent a considerable portion of the night, after leaving tha Summer- house, in telephonic communication fc'-v WEUL OlO "OU C.tT HIM TJPM HI'S ailA"* ESTC.MJBE. HE ^ALO wout-o ee. a. couo D«x 1M dA.MUARV HF O PK- /TWMIWBS. T- 'I I that he assuredly they were the most unwink ing pair of optics that I ever saw. They were quite small eyes and light in eolor, the irises of a peculiarly light gray, but once I had become conscious of their peculiarity they affected me more than the most bold-1 ly staring or fiercely frowning eyes of it at first-hand, have been retail- 2?? introduced himself, ing what I saw or heard directly. The £h« Z. 7°/ greater part of what has to follow! constantly that he al I believe I shall be able to tell In the' of tiff £f!e same way, of mjr personal experience. But in part I know''that this will be that the brain, the intellect only, moved, so far as it did move, thi3 curlouBly mechanical little frame, but it was not so. The little man could feel. Really, au fond, he was quite astonishingly human. So Sergeant Crisp, somewhat as I ar rived and introduced himself, and 80 I have been a.ble to tell it as I learned ®?SC£!be Crisp, somewhat ?°"v.eF8^i. ?n him (i .ff lo !»«••!!. with higher police authorlUes. was said in the village that he wa» Problem had been solved, so talking all night with Scotland Yard. solution waa needed In However that may be. It is certain all London, a compound of M. Dupln, 'alr one of the moat famous detetlves in I Heasden, well known to the police of r"-» uld »JU!'huXS''b& s: tSZGZfZS&S* It was not until 1 saw him thai I realised how very rarely, or ever never, we do stand, In the fuH sense "still." But Sergeant Crisp did so stand, with an immobility which al most suggested oatalespsy and made me feel ridiculously as if I should like to shake him Into movement. Even when he had occasion to move he was very economical about It, making only Just that amount of muscular adjustment which was neo •SSM7 for his purpose. In sitting he was, If posrffcle, yet mors rigid. I jzpeot it was for the reason that he hardly ever moved la them that his pepper and salt clothes appeared to ftt him a»r» oiosety and more creas lessly than any suit I ever saw EVENING EDITION* who ™eet on upGiit. i*v down on his bfi* he cam© in he change gelnr^isp'^m'ts^^0*•«•» SSf tS it wU him that of he Seotney people ar" drtve inform him on the to inform him Points of the case which he had come down to investigate. lie learned that in Larncombe's opinion gratified though the teclive, the ta&k to wmcn ne had dressed. 804 one wuuuHiaiv-""" been sot was one enUrelv linvnrihviu. v~. n-o' his geptus. poin,. 80 that the early train on the following! Larncombe himself. There was no atturday morning brought to Scotney! Possibility UPP*T Sergeant Cuff, M. Leooq, Sherlock! Joseph Larncombe—as a poaching Holmes and all the famous detectives I Blackguard, of gipsy ancestry on*1 the of fiction. He, too, was a sergeant maternal side. "And the evidence?'' *id a»T. geant Crisp interrogatively. evidence," Larnoomhe replied. There it is. We know in —Sergeant Crisp I thought when I first saw him that I had never in my whole life seen a man in all ways so little re markable. He was dressed in a pep T,eI\"-ni «lt colored suit which, seem-, r*"' into environments and to never wouldn't settle to beinvfadble like the "protective color- Never cou'd get him to attend to hi. ing" of certain animals. Then he was booke-the school tea«hei4 couldn^ v«j small, with sloping shoulders, a There he ls-now *T h?s clean-shaven face, with unnoticeable growed—Just the same wouldn't ^2^ V77. Um*- of far aa simple, by the perspicuity of 0f a little person, who was said to be I ,beei1 committed by one doubt that the murder Scotney—that la to say Scotney what he has been. since a boy he has been the same no work. Ue to nothing. Always .T^uble was said in very quiet been in the village, alwa™ hwrini 5? *PPeared extraordinarily around doing odd Joba or not d^ i^r1hine-after them. Poaching he?s bSen And then, a time, when you caught two or thr» °een had been with him a little while, you times morq there's been DoaSH^y began to find that there was some- work done9 as hi becThUd to thing impressive about this yery quiet- though not clearly proved so ness itself. It was more than the muristriLt«i vn»i/i Mgtiar immobility. Crisp am before onTr"*.^,rISer-said *y of an ordinary man the form of his question bv *M""|geant I When you say of an ordinary man at he was 'Standing sUU," you prob-, word. ably do not mean this to preclude such movements as turning his head a Uttle now and then, making mov ment# with his hands, shifting hi-j weight from one leg to the other—the innumerable constant small motions which you do not notice Just because they are so constant. But what be ean to be noticeable about Sergeant Crisp ,when you had been with him only very short while, was the ab sence of these constant aad normal Summer-house movements which everybody makes. that he was "stoMjding still," you prob-, word. 4 Dy nowheres Larnoombe continuing to obedlenoe to orders plsessi OB 1st the Ml down orer hts syas in thmi ws call a itak, k«t movemsnt wUek 'mMk ^ngle "Well, the evidence," Larncomb* answered, "there it is. P®11*—««• him cora after""!^. the Summer-house^^ °f,her "»y«hiP lying dead^ ^^Comlty from the ftimmer-house! ^Wm do thstr Mr. liresay seed him, to be ex,. the u. elsei»*11rJ^bf0nrepliedt' Sff .^S?rconfMeno#- 1 Of watcher beslds the any other man. Bat ths muscles wMoh. above all, he was remarkable in not exercising, wars those which most psopls uso eonUnually to close their eyes. I ppose that this IttUs man did pearance of his uiufcam^ metlmes sleep and did sometimes unferustted hair hit •tote Of hto aspSSr ts asaatsacs lmpofib.e th«t he SMXw hln, «.» SunS"hR"pii'"'«P«"ri to and th« body of its vlcUm. Consequently nhappenedthatbe fore I had been long at my W no a ad Summer-house was opened by l^rn combe ushering in the extreme^ commonplace figure of the Uttle de iective. Already, though It was rtil]i the Summer-house and its vidnlty were under police supervision, ton stablea had been gathered from «ie market town and from two other vil lages. One had been posted at the angle where the short Summer-house itself joined the mala shrubbery path, one was in_ the "W tion on that path near the how* and another at the village end. Thj precaution was very reasonable an« necessary, for by this time ,?5 the tragedy, probably exaggeration, was cure to bei f,Jrl'l» about the neighborhood, and the vu people and olhers would J* flocking, with the morbid curiosity which is so very human, to see all that was to be seen, even if it were only the very ordinary background and scenery of the wretched drama. "This is Sergeant Crisp, miss, of the London detective force," s«la Larncombe, in his big, booming voice, by way of introduction. I said, "How d'you do?" Sergeant Crisp said nothing, but bowed and stood wit|» uncanny stillness of body and prob»" ably, had I been able to perceive it, an uncanny activity of mind. The daylight made the scene if possible more dreadful than before. It revealed al! the deathly pallor of the face, and hinted at the rigidity of the muscles of the poor body stretched on the bare boards. The pearls on the neck and the rings on the fingers looked terribly out of the picture. The stain on the left breast, which had seemed crimson in the blend of the light given by the moon and by the lantern In the night, had now, by day, and perhaps some what by its own real change of color, taken on a dark brown look which made it more dreadful than ever. Oontinnod Tomorrow Evening. I have ever encountered. I Really he was in some ways quite1 a terrible little man he was so utter Inhuman. And yet, though I began by despising him and went on to be ing quite in terror of him, I enJeal with becoming really attached to him. 81de by side on the busy floor, I grew to learn that somewhere, deep- Each with ribbons and ilks to' sell ly bidden, he had a quite unexpected But one of them rose while the other heart. His appearance g^ve no prom- fell ise of it. One would h&vo thought One moved up while all year long TSdSardGuesL TWO fiF.igRKa Two there were in the self-same store The other was merely a part of ths throng. Here's the story, so oft retold In the busy shops where life's wares are sold— One sold silk from a crowded shelf. And quite forgot he must sell him. self One was cheerful and liked his work* The other gloomy and just a clerk. The one with his ready cheerful smile Had people flock to his crowded aisle* They'd ask for him, and thus a&ml Use That he was patient and also wise For this was his plan, to the lonir day's end, To make a sale and to make a friend. 8 AS STAFSSS* entirely unworthy I He heard it In long_ ere the chief found oat about bat poorly too Am, «h. ,n ^... .FT And he learned it from which never fails. a'" t.\ James1! something growing sum of the young man's Go to "it bravelv "«ii%hr^wn'iTi. Oh. boy. whatever your Job may b« Go to bravely and cheerfully veerfully, cou,nter and from the shelf Kemember always to sell yourself For"iwU.r bc^ 1111 lon« Don't Buy a "Bain't Presume from higher Plaices, to act in capacity -Ti?* philosopher aad Mend Crisp, conducted him in ths stance to Sootney HoosethitK.iS present himself aadwi^LrJ to Undo Ralph, «*4«ntials As soon as I test that morning I "weBt°Sut Sommer-house aad succeeded tett a wash, a rest aad' .w* found him looked terribly wan and Wlltl tMf —-J*- ivx ends For that is the secret of making friends. r,-1" "Jua!1fylng for the engagement ring many a young man has found it necewtary to select the pawnbroker as his Umekeeper.—Boston Transcript until we examine the old one_f«. •k,nM modest rh-rw pt *ervlc*. row radiator doee pwpsr circulation ot^U-andd^' LTZ with a special m- •l%,1 the & 'S Radiator Shop mm