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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1910)
P O W E R OF T H E IM A G IN A T IO N . SK YSC R APER S FOB ENGLAND. Í W 7" S h i p Nnveil b y D a n c i n g . The battleship Douiinlon was cau tiously feeling her way toward Quebec on the night of August lti, U>t»6, when the navigating ottteer, misled by a bush lire on land, took the wrong bearings and suddenly struck on a hidden reef with such force that the huge ship was shaken from stem to stern. Orders were at once given for the whole crew, officers as well as men, to assemble on desk with their kits in their hands, and all the 850 men were told to dance so as to keep the ship "alive," and so prevent th e.D o minion’s keel from settling down on the ledge. At first the bluejackets whistled an accompaniment to keep the men In step till the captain or dered the ship's band to play lively se lections. The men danced with a will, stamping their feet and swaying their bodies, and doing all they could to rock the ship. In the end they suc ceeded, for finally, with the engines working full speed astern, the Domin ion slowly gave way and backed again Into deep water. The dancing had saved the ship. r o w c rln w F l a t , to Be Erected L o n d o n '. A n c ie n t K e.ort. H istory G im t , The following is a pleasant little game to play with your friends or with the grown folks. T ry It with the lat- E X QUEEN OF H A W A I I ’S G IF T . Illiio k u lfin l I'ro v lrie * the O rphan s of the In W ill fo r I s I iiim I s . By the terms of a deed of trust Just [ecuted Former Queen Llliu o k alan l’of le Hawniian Islands has provided for e endowment, after death, of orphan sylutns for children of Hawaiian or art H aw aiian blood. The entire e*. Je Is valued at $200.000. The trustee- ilp of the large portion which will 3 devoted to this humanitarian ob- ict rests In W. O. Smith, A. S. Cleg- orn and C. P. Iaukea. Though 71 years old, the former neen is said to be in excellent health, tys an exchange. W . O. Smith, oddly tough. In view of his selection as a ustee, was a leader in the movement i bring about Lilluokalani's dethrone- ent. Iaukea, formerly a sheriff in onolulu, represented the Hawaiian tvernnient at the coronation of Cznr leholas and the Jubilee of Queen Vle- iria. He was Lilluokalani's manager ntll her return from Washington last -ar, where she had gone to urge her aims against the United States gov -nment. T h e trust deed stipulates that cer- itn annuities are to be paid to a few inner retainers and that relatives are i have the use of the real property, ho Spreckels mortgage of $70,000 is leo to be paid. The entire residue f the estate, of wihch she is to enjoy le benefit while she lives, will go to >rward the asylum project. Llliuokalanl is the great grandniece f the celebrated Kaplolanl, one of the rst converts to Christianity at the me the American missionaries from oston visited H awaii, in 1820. The x-queen was herself a communicant i the Episcopal church. Reports putting her character In one too favorable a light gained wide Irculatlon a few years ago. H er re- itiona with Marshal Wilson, a Tahi- lan half-breed who enjoyed many of er royal favors, to his own enrich- tent, became notorious. Queen Llliuokalanl made the latest f many visits to Washington last anuary as a claimant for $250.000 'hlch represented. It was held, the aloe of lands passed to the United tat<«. During her reign the queen lalntalned the area of the crown lands ras about 1,000.000 acres, and their allies in excess vif $12.000.000. A life interest In the crown lands eeame vested In each monarch as u r n — or to the trust, and It was a rlvate Income to be used as the men roh saw fit. The income from this aurce. when the government was verthrown, she placed at $65,000 a •ar In addition to this the privy urse. am ounting to *20.000 a year. In red to the occupant of the throne hese Items formed the basis of her I aim It was har hope, after ineffect al appeals to Congress, that the con ■lence of the Am erican people could s aroused. H er claim has had promi ent supporters In this country, among ham Senator Hoar of Massachusetts In Possibly no spot equally close to London has maintained Its old-world exclusiveness to such an extent as ; Richmond, but there are signs that It, : in Its turn, is giving way to the march of modernity. A group of American I capitalists is having prepared plans for the erection of a towering pile of ter, and see If they remember as much flats |n ^ g,ngle edlfll.e on , he 8um. of their American history as they of the hn, the Boston Transcript should. The initials, or first letters of the he ( ^ Be]e<>ted whl(,h ha8 been in words correspond with those of the , market tor some years, Is that of characters name. When you have | An(,aster Hou8e, a Georgian mansion used this list, make a new one. of considerable interest and an old- Perilous Rider. time hunting box of the duke of An Great Warrior. caster, situated opposite the Star and A lways Loyal. Garter hotel and adjoining the park Worthy Peacemaker. gates. The crown, on enfranchising H arbor Hunter. the estate from copyhold, stipulated Exceptional Ally. that buildings over a certain height Considered Crazy. should be set back fifty feet from the Before Foreigners. park, but outside that distance there Religious Wanderer. is no height limit, and the proposed Sailed Confidently. structure, nearly 400 feet in length of Unusually Successful General. the park frontage, would enjoy un Marching Suitor. paralleled views both over that do The answers in this case would be: main and the world-famed Richmond Paul Revere. hill scenery. George Washington. The general Idea Is that the archi Abraham Lincoln. tecture shall approximate to and fol W illiam Penn. low the leading features of well known Henrik Hudson. lofty edifices in New York, and be Ethan Allen. fitted with appliances for luxury and Christopher Columbus. domestic economy quite novel to this Benjamin Franklin. country. There is nothing of this Roger William s. _ character at present in England, and Sebastian Cabot. the promoters say that should the Ulysses S. Grant. scheme be carried out Richmond will Miles Standish. at all events benefit, as its vast nat ural beauties have not sufficed to save T h e A m e r ic a n C a tta il. The cattail of the American swamps it from a lack of material prosperity is almost exactly the same plant as which has been creeping over it for the Egyptian bulrush. It is no longer some years past. Lovers of natural used lor making paper, as It once was, beauty, however, may have something hut from Its root is prepared en astrin to say. gent medicine, while its stems, when I Ancaster House was given to Sir prepared dry, are excellent for the 1 Lionel Darell by George III., who used manufacture of mats, chair bottoms to make a stay there every week. More recently it was the residence of Sir and the like. Francis Burdett. U/VI-W IC M L D S S O lil Clean and sweet rrom head to feet Is Jerry, but not his twin. “N o w for the other!" says merry moth er. And quickly dips him in. Jin) and Jerry, with lips of cherry. And eyes of the selfsame blue; Tw ins to a speckle, yes, even a freckle— W h at can a mother do? They wink and wriggle and laugh and giggle— A Joke on mother Is nice! "W e played a Joke"— 'twas Jimmie who spoke— “And you’ve washed the same boy tw ice!" 1 1 1 , . . ( r a t e d tu M r . B l l l l o p a h r H l« E xperience w ith a T h e r m o m e t e r . H u ll fr o g . For playing this merry game one child Is seated on the ground with his legs under him while the other players form a ring around him. They then pull him about and give him lit tle pushes, and he must try to catch one without rising from the floor. The child who Is caught takes the middle, while the frog joins the circle. K n o w led ge That Is Pow er. "I don't know when I've been so put out by a little thing," said Mr. Hill tops, according to the New York Sun. "as I was by the discovery that my thermometer was four degrees wrong, It gave me a real hard little jolt for one thing, and then it made me real- j ize that for two years I had been mak ing myself uncomfortable over noth- 'HE ipEKI^ "ISTORI (Û 1 mg. "Out of doors I can stand the cold as well as anybody; but indoors I like to bo warm ; 72 is about what suits Teacher— How many make a mil me in the house. lion, Johnny? Johnny— Not many. "Tw o years ago I bought a new ther "E ver had appendicitis?" No; mometer, which ................. ................... 1 hung up in my room There ain't never been a time when i and j haven't been w arm there in win- could afford it.”— Detroit Free Press. ^ g(nce Stella— Two Is company and three lg------ Bella— Divorce.— The Sun. Other parts of the house seemed 1623 Charter granted to tu.j all right; in the parlor and in the din- | chusetts Bay colony, ing room they got it up to 72 appar- , 1681— Charter granted by CiuJ Ru W illiam Penn. ently without any trouble, but In m y 1 do room It never seemed to get above S3. 1774— John Hancock deliver« » nual oration in Boston, I didn’t shiver, but I never could get memoratlon of the Boitot really warm, and one day I said to ere. Mrs. Bllltops: 1776— Dorchester Heights, j “ ‘Elizabeth, why can’t we get the | ing Boston, occupied at heat up In my room? W hy should my - the Americans. room be the only cold room in the 177#— Americans surprised ant house?' ed by the British at Bri "Mrs. Bllltops comes in and stands Ga. Mother (looking over her boy's around a minute and then she says: 1780— Tw o men were branded shoulder)— Your spelling is perfectly " 'Why, Ezra, it’s just as warm here letter “M " for murder li| terrible. Little Son— This ain’t a spell as it is anywhere else.’ . . . . Pennsylvania Assembi in' lesson. It's a composition. ‘‘ ‘Nonsense!’ I says to her. ‘Look ed a bill for the gradual Politician— Congratulations, Sarah, at that thermometer! It's only 68 of slavery. I’ve been elected. Sarah (with de- here and It’s 72 this minute in the 1789— First Congress of thejH ligh t)— Honestly? Politician— What pa r ior.’ States under the constibB difference does that make?— St. Louis | - g u , Mrs Bllltops insisted that It sembled In N e w York. 1 Times. [ was as warm in my room as it was 1799— A patent was Issued trtei W hiting of MassachuieiB The Father— Did mamma punish ' anywhere else, and she said that prob- method of extracting oil t B you to-day, Tommie? The Boy— Yes, | ably the trouble was with my ther- tonseed. B I sir. “W hat did she do?” “Made me j mometer; that my thermometer didn’t stay in the house while she was tak- ! mark correctly, and I said it did, and 1811— British defeated the f B Barrosa, In Spain. ing her singing lesson!" I ’d show her conclusively that the "They are going to lock Jones up for ! thermometer was all right, I d prove 1826— N ew England Society B Promotion of ManufactoH the good of the community.” “What's to ber that tny room was cold. I d the Mechanic A rts chattB he done?” "H e ’s talking of setting : Put my thermometer right alongside Independence of T e iu ^ L Browning's poems to Ricnard Strauss' the one the parlor and she d see It 1837— nlzed by the United Sti * be music.”— Cleveland Leader. : 6 ° 11P *n no 4° 72. 1» CO The first express start "So we put it out there, but It didn't 1838— The Man— No, I don't suppose that F. Harnden. between N'_____ budge— that is, upward— but it did go I shall ever marry. I ’m too shy, don't and Boston. down one degree. Standing side by of thi you know, and "faint heart ne'er won side with the parlor thermometer 1845— President Tyler author) fair lady.” The Girl (helping him on) annexation of Texas. marking 72, mine went down to 67; — But I'm not fair; I ’m dark. 1847— Gov. Alpheus Felch, of they were 5 degrees apart. "W h y ,” asked a Missouri newspaper, resigned to take his soj "The temperature in the parlor, ac Senate. "does our State stand at the head in tually one degree colder than In my raising mules?" “Because," said an own room ba(j been entirely agreeable 1848— Louis Philippe escar® France to England. Iowa paper, "that is the only safe j i 0 m6i while In my room, though It place to stand.’’— Jack O’Lantern. | was actually warmer, I had, misled by 1854— United States Congress# the homestead bill to Teacher— If you wear one pair of my thermometer, never been able to on t settlement on public landaj shoes three months, how long will iwo get thoroughly and comfortably warm- York, Newfoundland and pairs last? Jimmie— A year. Teach ed up. Another illustration of the Telegraph Company orgti er— Oh, no; how do you get that? power of imagination. Cyrus Field. Jimmie— I don’t wear any in the sum “Now I've got a correct thermom 1861— Flag of the Confederacy mer. eter and I don't have any more trouble played in Georgia “Yes, I do most of my work at night over the heat.” Lincoln Inaugurated Pn the United States. now.” “What's the reason?" “ Why, I’m a WileyIte and cook my food four 1863— Rev. Thomas Hill inn ..ours, and being a Fletcherite it takes president of H arvard Colli me three hours to eat."— Cleveland 1868— Impeachment court co Plain Dealer. try President Andrew Jol >870— Thomas Scott shot atFi W ifey— Do you think there is a man by order of the rebel l«a# that could conscientiously say to his Riel. wife, “You are the only woman I ever 1871— The House of Commonn loved?" Hubby— Only one that I can One voluntarily becoming a passen wa adopted resolution« think of. "Who? You, dearest?” “Oh, ger on a street car so crowded that the admission of Brltiab no, Adam.”— Spare Moments. he is compelled to ride In the vesti Into the Dominion. A woman went to a bank. She no bule, with knowledge of a rule that 1879— Rev. A rthur Sweatnis-i ticed that there was a new face be persons riding on platforms do so at Bishop of Toronto___ Uni» hind the window. "H as the cashier their own risk Is held in Tompkins geological survey created! gone away to take a rest?” she en vs. Boston Elev. R. Co. 201 Mass. 114, 1887— United States CongrenJ quired. "N o,” replied the new man; 87 N E 488, 20 L R. A. (N . S.) 1063, | the fisheries retaliation "he has gone away to avoid It.” Henry W a rd Beecher stri to assunme the risk of injury from apoplexy. "H ow do you extract women's teeth | being compelled temporarily to alight Barber— Have anything on your face when I get through, sir? Victim Some skin and a nose, 1 hope.— Boston Transcript. George— Do you think that I’m good enough for you, darling? D arling— No, George; but you’re too good for any other girl. "The chicken stew has two prices in the bill of fare. How is that, wait er?" "W ith chicken in it, it is 3d cents, without It, 10." j The world Is full of people who know a great deal but cannot use their knowledge. They are weighted down with unavailable facts and theories, says Orison Swett Marsden In Suc cess Magazine. You have often met people who seem to know much, who are so encyclopedic in their greedy ab sorption of facts, that their general C oin U n d e r th e M ast. knowledge is like an enormous pack One of the old customs which have on a soldier's back, which exhausts never been changed In the launching his vitality and Impedes hli march. of a new ship is that of placing a gold It makes them heavy of foot and clum coin under the mainmast. This coin, sy in everything they do. They Im which is not of any certain denomi press you as not being large enough nation. always bears the date of the to swing their loads and carry them launching of the boat, and Is claimed with ease. They are like children to bring good luck to the vessel and tugging away at great pieces of furni her crew. ture which they can scarcely lift. It is not the ability, the education, who interested himself in her behalf the knowledge that one has that makes the difference between men. The mere without success. The ex-queen is a woman of culture possession of knowledge Is not always and marked personal charm. She has the possession of power; knowledge found refuge since her dethronement which has not been digested and as- in reading. In the study of languages slmilated and become a part of your- self, knowledge which cannot swing and in music. into line In an emergency, is of little C IT Y CO M FO RTS IN C R E A S IN G . use. and will not save you at a critical moment. S tfitlntl«** R ela tive to Iln thln ir To be effective, a man's education IU‘ uc lieM, Z o o s , a n d P l a y G r o u n d * . . . . ................. . must become a part of himself, as he It is shown In the United States aIong A „ of ,t mugt be worke(1 Census Bureau s special annual report ,nt0 A Rule practical edu- without their screaming? You don't j to enable other passengers to leave the I 1891— United States Congreei for 1907, now in press, relative to the caUon , hat haa become , part of one'9 give gas." ‘‘But my office Is opposite car. the International cepyrl !!-a.! .! t_1C*_0t_ r‘ ,e8.t,-C! t1. ? ? lC,h being and Is always available will ac- a millinery display. When the worn | That no question as to the title of 1898— Canada received from having over 30,000 illation in 1907, Indemnity of $40,000 In I complish more in the world than en get absorbed in looking at the hats the Insured can be considered by ref- that from 1905 to 1907 the number of of the Behring Sea cl oblivious to knowledge far more extensive that they're *" Pa in.” Kansas erees appointed in accordance with a bathing benches reported increased City Times. cannot be utilized. clause In a standard insurance policy l902- Tjhe census o return 0,,!l1 from 44 to 53; swim m ing pools, from . . . * " I IQ rvH oVinnro/$ nnniilaflM land showed populatl Young Lady (on first visit to West- which provides that, upon failure of 56 to 61; and all the year baths, from JiiN t a U t i l e n u lilo iiM . 249. ern ran ch)— For what purpose do you the parties to agree as to the amount 15 to 78. The total bathing attend Uncle Solon Winslow had secured a use that coil oi line on your saddle? j of loss, it should be referred to arbi- (905— The R t Rev. Samuel PI ance increased from 19,158.562 In 1905 Matheson chosen archbl4 __ ..... . . i succession of four admirable wives, all Cowpuncher— That line, as you call trators, the award of a majority of metropolitan of Rupert'i to 29.204.838 in 1907 an increase of of whom had been removed from the It, lady, we use for catching cattle | whom should be conclusive as to the 52.4 per cent. More than half of this S(.ene of thelp earthIy a(,tlvitle8 bv one 1907— L. J. Tweedle appoint« and horses. Young Lady— I dare Say. amount of loss and damage, is held attendance was reported from New ,.ailsp or another wtthln a porlod of ant governor of New 8 Now, may I ask what do you use fj.- in Dunton vs. Westchester F. Ins. Co York City, those ranking next in order twenty years 1908— One hundred and sixty balt- (M e.) 71 AG. 1037, 20 L. R. A. (N . S.) being Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago In school house fire at C< Uncle Solon's weddings had grown The new housemaid had just opened 1°>8. and Milwaukee. Ohio. . , . to be so much a matter of course that New York has the largest acreage when after a year of widowerhood. he the door in response to Wigglesby's 1 Under a statute requiring compen- 1909— W illiam H. Taft It ring. "Is Miss Darborough in?" asked satlon to be made for all damage cans- (278.5) devoted to zoological parks, , announced announced his nnnmnrhine fifth President of the United S| his approaching fifth mar. mar- President Roosevelt ap| followed in order by Washington ( rlage> one of h,8 nelghbor, ^ ..W e„ ; Wigglesby. "Yes, sorr, she's in sorr, ed by the taking of land or~by the commission to investigate] the maid, change or discontinuance of a private (166.;>) and Atlanta (140). In the g 0|ont j s'pose they seem pretty nat* but she s engaged,” said conditions. Yes, 1 know,” smiled Wigglesby. "I'm way or by the taking of an easement, number of mammals and birds that ura, t0 you by thl, tim e-weddings, what she s engaged to."— Harper's It is held, in Davis vs. New England such parks contain, New York ranks mean. ... ..... •• first and Cincinnati second, while R. Co. 199 Mass. 292, 85 N. E. 475. "This one won’t," said the prospect- Weekly- ' Then you don't think I practice 20 ^ R- A. (N . S .) 1061, that recovery Washington ranks third In number of ,ve 'b ‘r idegroom™‘for old Par¡on Frost's mammals and Philadelphia third In off on hl8 thre(1 months- ,eave you what I preach, eh?” queried the min- (a nnot be had by an abutting owner number of birds. know, and he’s never failed to tie the ister in talking with one of the de.i- ' because of Interference with the light, Playgrounds are maintained In 76 knot for me cons. "No, sir. I don't,” replied the alr or prospect of his property through of the 158 cities Included in the re- ‘‘I said to Susan that I didn't know deacon. “You've been preachin' on the an elevation of railroad tracks in the port, and the city appropriations for aa •tn-ou),) hardly seem like a wedding subject of resignation for two years absence of any taking of his land or The Boot and Shoe workenl $66,629 in sick benefits in thef playgrounds Increased from $516.177 t0 me without him. and she said to me an' ye haven’t resigned yet.”— Ladies' I destruction of his easements. year. In 1906 to $ 1 41,912 In 190 1 . More than ( bai -twaa ber turn to choose this time, Home Journal. I The charter of a corporation showed San Francisco, Cal., union« one-third of the amount was approprl- and she intended to start out with Tubb— Old boy, I want to congratu- (bat a large part of Us capital stock ated by New York, the cities next In voung Parson Corner over to the Cen- late you on your speech at the banquet had been actually paid in cash, when are starting a movement U H order being Milwaukee. Washington teri and tf he dld we)1 8he gues8ed last night. O'Sudds (after waiting a in fact it had been paid by assign- sanitary stables. In the Hood River count*! and Pittsburg. Private contributions 8bp-(i stick to him. moment)— I know you do, pard, and ment of patents applied for, but not gon, where some of the for playgrounds was greatest In Wash- ..sh(1 d)dn-t explain what she meant,’ you're awfully sorry you can’t do It thpn BraiUe<U Another person, relying the world Is raised, the Ington. The total acreage devoted to add(.,i v nrie s 0lon. thoughtfully, "but truthfully. I appreciate the effort, on the rerltatlons in the charter, loan- formed unions for mutual playgrounds was greatest In Indian It sounded kind of ominous to me." and also to aid each other just the same. Nasty weather, isn't ed money t0 the corporation, for which apolis. followed by New York. Boston later he sued. In McKee vs. Rudd. up prices. It?— Chicago Tribune. A IlrlKht lilfH. and Baltimore. In New York most Portland (O re .) barbers’ k Mrs. A.— I do love lobster but I 121 ff u,hwestern Reporter. 312. this of the a r e » devoted to playgrounds Yeast— It Is said that the baya biro squarely presented* • Can lnK for the indorsement em at home, because ‘t dups' ' ™ wa8 8tluarely presented: Can Vtlll nn , „ n , l _ . n_ x t h e Intol was connected with public schools. of India spends his spare time catch- ^ “ P° n 3,atp',1Pnts made 80 that a barb« while in the other cities named most Ing fireflies, which he fastens to the seems so inhuman to kill them bv put- fn ui boiling oouing wa- o " b * _____ ^ L °r .. “ . — snau *hai , always a ,w a y . De be a member- i of the playground area was In city sides of his nest with moist clay. On ling them in a kettie of I never kill „» , , . p r a lon' nnd '’P °n proof Cals Indorse the proposition j parks. a dark night a bava's nest glows like ter. Mrs. B.— Gracious! them that way. It would be too ' n 1 trq S lTiCt ,l y , 'lprpnf be permitted will have an electric street lamp. U hor- UUl rPPOVPf Hie nneHaa — 1 __! . to national , .. to .. . cal> .. a * m U t n n n n ' i P o i n t o f V iew , rible; I always put them on in cold aP ’n3t thP ,pRrUps slo:nln8 the ^endum vote on the matter. Crimsonbeak— Say. there's a bright . articles, in an « “'(Ion for fraud and ; Boston Metal Trades you Husband— W hat! Three hundred Idea for decorating that keyhole in my water and let them come to a boll. deceit. The Missouri Supreme Court ! voted in favor of the bul» I f and fifty dollars for that gown? My 'ront «door — Yonkers Statesman. ’. ' r-' ,I-UU b !,iat we cannot decided that the representation relied department of the A. F. dear, how extravagant you are! 5 h J- * i d ,he maKazine on‘ whether false or true, were m!Ule the day when all the W ife— No more than you Didn't E a sily S h ock ril. still editor, handing back the manuscript, to the Secretary of State to oroenre the coun,ry will strike f»r you spend $75 for your last suit?— In an oyster house a man ordered U s astonishing how mnrh reSUy sood a ve.iiflcate or corporation, a n d ......... ! '«h m en t of are of corporation, and not to “ " nmpnt ‘ he ei«h t-h o «rj New York Press. two deviled .Tab*. Du you want them literature we are compelled to decline. — The council names May *•1 hot or cold?" asked the waiter. "Hot, "It's more astonishing, though," said the plaintiff to secure credit. I in in h n r. latest time for such actios j ^ Farm er Grayneek— S pose you are oours'‘ Tlie waiter went to a rear the disgruntled author of the story, A Su btle F o r c e I T b e smallest average goln’ to git the automobile fever, Ezry counter and roared: "One piste of hot "that you never let any of it get ln'o “W hat do you understand by ‘mag mPmbership of the U ; y devils!” and a clerical looking gentie- » i ™ 1 ~~ — 1 5 Workers of Am erica sine« like everybody else? your magazine."— Chicago Tribune. netism’ as so often ^ t0 an zatlon In 1890 was in Farmer Hornbeak— Nope! I've been man no* ten feet away from him near Little Nelly told little Anita what actorg personality?” number was 9,(17. vaccinated In the pocketbook and It ,y fp|' ou* bis chair, she termed a “little flu." Anita__A “Magnetism the force thf, V ,h* o f the 12.000 saleswoC'*.!, D*Ar took.— Puck. flb Is the same as a story, and a story " lg A conceited young man will proba A New York dressmaker duns deltn bly get over it In time: experience i. the M m . a , a lie. Nelly— N o i l t ’i the box office " - W a s h i n g t o n ' X " *° ^ wives department and mothers, the not. Anita— Yes, It is. because my fa. ----------------- --------- these having taken position* quent customers by sending thain it out of him. Rut there Isn't ‘ her saifi so . n.t — I I f there are party guests at a house, -her said so, and my father is a pro marriage. bunches of forget-me-nots much hope for the conceited old man. fessor at the university. Nelly__I the man of the house Isn't the host:' Typographical Union •‘*1 Tames How a woman does engoy M in g Don t be crazy to do a lot of thing* don't care If he is. My father Is s He Is only the husband of the hostess Newark, N. J., is the I ton can t do real estate man. and he knows more tired, if it la from shopping! abolleh all overtime In 6«*»| The more talk it takes to _ _ . . . n things job #jnces. N o member about lying than your father. I the slower they move harowfter. to accumulate a* j j M