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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1909)
SAVING TAINT MONET. It Cannot II Done hy t'slnar CkH Matrrlnl anil Chrnp rnlntera. In arranging for pnlntlng, a good Tritiny property-owners try to mve mon ey Ity employing tho painter who offers to tro tlic Job cheapest or try to save money by Insist!;)? on a low-priced Paint. Rut no property-owner would run m il risks If lie realized whnt must be taken into consideration in order to get a Job that will wear ntid give thorough Satisfaction. No houseowner will go wrong on the Painting question If ho writes Nntlonul Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Iiulldiiig, New York, for their Housoow tier's Pnlntlng Outfit No 4!), which Is sent free. It Is n complete guide to paint ing. It Includes n book of color schemes for either exterior or Interior painting, a book of specifications, nnd an Instru ment for detecting adulteration In paint materials. Nearly every dealer has National Lead Company's pure whit lead (Dutch Iioy Painter trademark). If yours has not notify National Lead Co., and arrangements will be mad for you to get it Candid and Canonical. The following anecdote of Uncle Joe Cannon Is told by a. E. Thomas In Success Magazine: In some ways he's an engaging old despot. Is Uncle Joe, and occasionally "( tils victims have to laugh, even while wej agonize Deneam nis yoae. un ne occasion an unusually large num ber of Republicans happened to get hungry about the same time, while for some unknown reason the Democratic appetite did not require attention. Catching the Speaker napping, the Democratic floor leader, perceiving that he had a majority, called up a bill and pushed it to a vote. The Speaker strung out the voting In all of the various ways that are known to him, but at the end of the second roll-call the Democratic votes were till In the majority. Though the rules of the House expressly forbade such a thing, a third roll-call was ordered by the Speaker, a proceeding which called out a red-hot protest from one of the Democratic leaders, who demanded to know the reason for the Speaker's ex traordinary action. The SpealJer gen ially advised the protesting Democrat. "The chair will Inform the gentle man, said he. "The chair Is hoping that a few more Republicans will come In." A gale of strictly non-partisan laugh ter swept over the House, and before it had entirely sutisided enough Re publicans had been rounded up by the hurrying scouts to fulfill the Speaker's wish so candidly expressed. Don Thla Mean Yon? Indigestion, sour stomach, constipa tion then headache, backache and a general miserable feeling. ' Do you know that the pleasant herb tea, Lane's Family Medicine, will remove all these troubles almost Immediately? If you do not know it, get a package to-day at any druggist's or dealer's (25c) uud you will be glad we told you. Couldn't Fool Johnny. Widow Jones How would my little Johnny like a new papa? Johnny (aged 5) Oh, you needn't hove the responsibility on to me, ma! It Isn't a new papa for nie, but a new husband for yourself, that you are thinking of. Roston Transcript. It Yonp Eyes Bother Yon k fct a box of PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, old reliable, most successful eye remedy made. All druggists or Howard Bros., buffalo. N. Y. I'nele Jerry. "As a general thine." observed Uncla Jerry Peebles, "I believe in lettin' wom en have whatever tbey want; but when I see one of 'em goin' around with a Spring hat on her head that looke liks an old-fnshioned beehive that's been tarred and feathered and then struck by lightning, I begin to wonder, by (leorge, If it vroukl be s.ife to trt.st her with the ballot!" Chicnen Tribune. Vn. Wlnalow'a Soothing Byrap for child ren teething, softens the gum, reduces In flniuiiitinn. allays palu. cures wind colic. 15c bottle. In the Hands of the Law. An impecunious young lawyer recent ly received the following letter from a tailor to whom he was indebted: "Dear Sir Kindly advise me by re turn mail when I may expect a remit tance from you in settlement of my ac count. Tours truly, I "J. SNIPPEM." The follower of Blaekstone immedi ately replied : "Dear Sir I have your request for advice of a recent date, and beg leave to say that not having received any re tainer from you I cannot act in the premises. Upon receipt of your check for $2"0 I shall be very glad to look the matter up for you and to acquaint you with the results of my Investiga tions. I am, sir, with great respect, jour most obedient servant. "BARCLAY 13. COKE." Success Magazl""" a This Trade-mark Eliminates All i?nt-:n.. in tlii" purchase of p.iilit mutcri.ds. it i an aliMilute 'mm giuraute.: ot pi.r- UJ j .'tY"i ' "r yur o n i;'-A protection, see 6 v "fi j luai ll isoil llir side- oi V' '' evi-rv l:i-g oi whitr lead you buy. MATICMAl 1(10 COMP.M 110 J Tnailr lulX'nf. In ft FASHION AND SOCIETY AT THE PYRAMIDS t ' k' i "....'. ' -V GLIMPSE OP AN HE horde of tourists who spend the winter season in Egypt is increasing each year greatly to the delight of the pleasure seek ers themselves, who are, as .a class, ardent believers in tho saying, "the more the mer rier." Hut to students and dreamers who are sworn foes to modernity this phase of T mm life in the land of the Pharaohs is something to be deplored and lamented. Among those visionaries whose constant cry is that the charm and mystery of Egypt are being ruined and obscured, there is no more ardent hater of the tourist class than the famous French lieutenant and writer, Pierre Lotl. Ruskln fought no more fiercely against our utilitarian age than does this Frenchman. English rule In Egypt, England's treatment of the Nile waters, the building of the Assouan dam, all these matters draw Lotl's anger; but most of all It Is the tourists. He never names American tourists specifically, yet we can SATISFACTION. He never climbed the mountain heights ; Ho never hag attained success : nis name has never yet appeared Within the columns of the press. And yet he proudly goes his way, Content in .borrowed light to dwell ; Of one who wins he'll always sny : "I know a man who knows him well." Great things himself he never does, Afcd I am sure he never tries; His greatest joy is to attract A crowd that he can patronize. And then, in a superior wny, To them he'll condescend to tell How close he is to So and So, He knows a friend who knows him well. The proudest man on earth is not The one who i on top and knows it ; Nor 'he who has succeeded well And feels above us all and shows it ; P.ut he who, when some great man's name Is mentioned, lets his cranium swell ! Oh, spare us from this bore of bores. Who knows a friend who knows huu well. Detroit Free rres. : All in Half an Hour "Half-Dast eight. Gordon," said Mrs. MacLean. "and I want you to leave two notes on your way to kindergar ten. This in your right band is for Aunt Margaret and the one in your left hand is for the grocer. Don't give the left-hand note to anyone but Mr. Jeffrey himself that boy of his is so careless!" Gordon's chubby fingers closed over the notes. His mother, standing on the doorway to watch the little coat and cap out of sight, felt her eyes suddenly blurred. "So like his dtad father!" she mur mured, as she turned back into the empty home. A few minutes later she glanced from a window toward tho moss green house at the foot of the hill and said to herself, "I believe I'll go and call." Over at Aunt Margaret Crane's a vi sion of red cheeks and brown eyes flashed in and out of the dining room, leaving a note on the table. The wind had given Gordon a chase for his cap on the way there and at one stage in the skirmish both notes had found themselves clutched in one hand, but Gordon knew perfectly well that the right-hand note had been on top all the time. "What's this?" said Aunt Margaret, picking up the note. Already Gordon was trotting down the road. " 'Please send immediately one dozen eggs, one bottle vanilla, one pound ' This was meant for the grocer. I'll telephone i down to Jeffrey's for her." Mrs. Jeffrey, who happened that morning to bo filling the place of a suddenly departed cashier In her hus band's store, had hardly finished tak ing a telephone order to be sent to Mrs. MacLean's when Gordon Mac Lean, breathless from running; bound ed into the store. "Oh! Isn't Mr. Jeffrey here?" ho asked, lightening his hold on the note. "Mother told iue not to give this to anyone but .T!r. JefTrey." "lint Tin Mrs. Jeffrey, dear. It's Just the stun-' if yon give it to me." This was perfectly true when she raid It. Two minutes later there was 'io truth In It. Mrfc. Jeffrey, standing behind the alli di sk, opened the note and read, ns-lc-tid of an order for groceries, this tne.isaiie: "l;,r:" I'm afraid I should not ask you to come ai.'iiln after your l:ing heie yiMtrrday. but cr.uld J'ou? I shall !'e ;;!o:i all tb" morning. 'A word to tl:i vi.,c.' Don't come tills aTternoon. I'll cplii:i why laf-. DOLLY." I'n. Je'irey's ii:ihel.vlng es went back to the to;i of the pao ami read the words ara'.n. The foundations of her world v.e.'rf slipping. 1 1 ' -1 " . J. -'A 7 UNUSUALLY INTERESTING PHASE not immune ourselves from his anger; ho has simply lumped us with the English, the donilnuit rare among the visitors there. The desert of the Sphinx, he tells us, is now threat ened on every side by modernism, and is becoming a meeting place for the idlers of the 'whole world. Ho says: "It Is true that so far nobody has dared to pro fane the Sphinx by building in Immediate proximity to its grandeur, the fixed disdain of which may still be potent. Yet, scarcely half a league away Is the ter minus of a road where, cabs and tramways gather, and where motor cars of expensive makes emit their duck llke quacks; and yonder, behind the Pyramid of Cheops, looms a vast hotel, swarming with fashionables feath ered as insanely as redskins for the scalp dame." To the "fashionables" M. Lotl appears only as a man out of tune with the times and his walls of protest seem only to increase the growing popularity of "touriat ridden Egypt" a a winter resort. Suddenly she remembered one thlny clearly. It was her husband's voice saying, "Must be mighty lonesome for Al MacLean's little idow, up there in the old place. She was saying when she was in the store yesterday that she hardly knows a soul in town yet. She just came out here to the suburbs be cause she wanted to be near her aunt, Mrs. Crane, and because she likes to be in the place where Al grew up." That had been three months ago. Mrs. Jeffrey had meant to call, but oth er, things had interfered. Tom had spoken of her going several times, but not lately. A bright spot had begun to burn In each of her cheeks as she read the note once more. She had never dreamed, when hearing about inen'j growing tired of their wives She snatched a sheet of paper and dashed off these words: "This note from Mrs. MacLean to you will explain why Teddy and I are taking the 10 o'clock train for Chicago. I'm going to mother's." Having Inclosed the two messages in an envelope, which she sealed and ad dressed, leaving it on the desk for her husband, Ms. Jeffrey told the boy In the rear room that he would have to come and 8tay n the store until Mr. Jeffrey returned. Then she walked swiftly down the street to her home, the moss-green house at the foot of the hill. Tnere upon her own porch, she found herself face to face with Mrs. MacLean! "Oh, here you are!" said the little widow. "Please forgive my unconven tionally in coming this way, Mrs. Jef frey, but your husband said you really wanted to call on me, and I'm so lone some that I've just acted on Impulse and run down to ask you if you wouldn't come and have a cup of tea with me this afternoon?" She cast an appealing smile up to Mrs. Jeffrey and fell back. "How dare you?" said Mrs. Jeffrey, compressing into three words a volume of scorn. As she spoke Jeffrey came rapidly up the walk. "What In the name " he began. "I beg your pardon!" as his astonished eyes took In the little widow. "How dare you?" Mrs. Jeffrey re peated, with rising excitement, as she snatched the wretched note from her husband's hand and held it out to Mrs. MacLean. "After writing my husband that how dare you come to my home?" Mrs. Maclean, shocked and white, wns leaning against a pillar for sup port. Then her eyes fell on the note and the color Hooded back to her face. "That was for my Aunt Margaret!" she cried. "Did Gordon leave it at the store? And you thought Oh!" fc-'he dropped on the porch settee and burled her face in her hands. Jeffrey shifted his feet and cleared hl:i throat. Mrs. Jeffrey stood rooted to the floor, unable to keep pace with the develop ments. The little widow Hobbed and sobbed. At Inst, however, she lifted her face ! and looked at Mrs. Jeffrey. "I under j stand it now," t-he said, "and the strangest part Is that it all happened ! because I wanted you for my friend. From the first minute I saw you in I church I wanted to know you, but it iwas the beautiful way your husband "I'M. tiO HACK TO TUB STORE." OF MODERN LIKE. spoke about you the other day thai made me dare, this morning, when ( was so lonely, to ask " Her volcq broke. , Mrs. JefTrey, with a lump in hei throat, took one step nnd sat down on the porch settee. "Tom," she said, as she put both arms around the little widow, "go hack to the store." And the clock struck 0. Chicago Dally News. yir ) ' r ssniV Jimsmmmni-, TubeVrnluals fit the Joints. It is customary to regard tubercu losis as a disease affecting the lungs only, but ns a matter of fact It may attack any of tho organs or tissues of the body. When the bones or joints are affect ed, the disease Is called surgical tuber culosis, because It is then amenable to mechanical treatment, or may even be extirpated by the surgeon's Knife. The Joints most frequently attacked are the spine, the hip and the knee, although no joint Is exempt. Tuber culosis seldom originates in the Joint, but is usually preceded by trouble In a neighboring bone, in the lungs, glands of the neck, or other more or less remote part. The symptoms of tuberculous ar thritis, or tuberculosis of tho joints, vary somewhat according to the joint Involved, but as a type one may take tuberculosis of the knee, formerly called "white swelling." The first frank symptoms of inflam mation are often preceded by a feel ing of .weakness in the Joint. The child for it is the young who chiefly suffer from these troubles walks a little stiilly or with a slight limp, and "favors" the knee. When questioned why he does not run about as former ly, he will usually say he does not know and he does not, for there Is no pain at this time, and at most, if he Is pressed, he will say his leg Is "tired." Soon pain appears, usually indefinite in location, and often referred to some part other than the diseased Joint. Then, as the disease declares Itself, the knee will be seen to be swollen, and pain is now caused by motion, so that the little patient keeps the leg slightly bent and rigid. There Is often night-crying; the child cries out sharp ly in his sleep, but may not waken; or he may wake and whimper for a time and then fall off to Bleep again, and again in a few minutes or a few hours give another scream. Tuberculosis of the knee may as sume one of three forms. That seen most frequently in adults is dropsy, the Joint being distended with fluid. The most common form is the so-called "white swelling." in this the Joint is distended with a soft, spongy, fungus-like growth, the skin over it be ing stretched and white. The third form is suppurative arthritis, com monly following the second form. Tho treatment Is usually by rendering tho Joint immovable; sometimes by clean ing out the contents, If pus forms; and rarely by cutting out I lie dlstased part. Life in the open air day nnd night, specially by the seaside, does as much good for joint tuberculosis as open-air life farther inland or In the moun tains does for consumption of the lune. "Diwul ii a llrrrl nif ." Until the day of aquariums It was a somewhat dlfileult matter to obsprve a live herring. It Is a fish that dies instantly on being taken from Its na tlve element. Among fishermen first arose the epi tbxlon, "Dead as a her ring." V II 1 jr& 1 iWS ti Opinions of 9 WORKING CI3LS AS WIVS3. OLI.KGK education seems ff 1 lion if provvi'.y union;; eoll.e-hred fathers A . 9 mo nmll.eir.. Not two-thlvdn of the men a n ..... , n.i.. ... Klatiiiates c ue euouieo. ,i.m r ' . of the gill r;iiliiMte ever wed. Those who become wives seldom or never bring larg.' families of children Into the world. In this dilemma President Miry II. Woollcy, head of Mount llolyoke College, n Maw I'.iiscUh Institution, ac knowledged to be one of the leading girls' colleci'S of the F.iigllshspeitking world, conies to the rescue with the admission that working girl make belter wives than college graduates r girls reared in idleness. The working rIi'I appreciate the difference between housework at her own convenience and toll for a fixed numlHr of hours six days a week In store, ottice or fac tory under orders from home one else. Tho college grad uate or the girl reared In Idleness condemns her hus band to life In apartment hotels and hoarding houses becauR she tlilnks housework a burden. The working girl wife Is seldom seen In the divorce court. She does not taunt her husband with his Inade quate Income or moan bcenuse she has fewer dresses than her father used to provide. She leaves recrimina tion and divorce to wives who read novels nnd primped while their mothers did the housework. Tho business girl makes housekeeping n business and her home Is a success. She Is a helpmeet nnd not a drawback, and the man who weds her inny well consider himself In luck. Such Is Miss Woolley's high opinion of the large class of young women to whom we must look for the mothers of the next gem-ration. Chicago Journal. THE MAN "ON THE W1DL-AWAKK and y I who takes a 'ively Interest In politics op 3 I popes the plan of direct nominations upon I .....I- ..... If .t n..nl I!.. grCllllUI lllin Die r.i,m,ii, it ,,"v i. says he prefers government by "the few who stay on the Job and know their busi ness. That is to say, ne womu miner trust the experienced ioUtlclans than Ihe amateur who wake np occasionally and go in for political reform. He says the substitution of direct nominations for tho ef fective control of a few persons experienced In govern ment Is a long step toward Socialism, lie wants n po litical revival, with the Vnders the first to approach the mourner's bench. And he believes that desired reforms can be more quickly brought about by converting tho leaders lhan by putting affairs In the hands of the fnex perlenced and the Incompetent.' The plan of direct nominations Is yet In Its experi mental stage. Much has been hoped from It In some elections It appears to have given a reasonable degree of satisfaction, while In others It has resulted In much disappointment. Tills, of course. Is to be expiKted of all reforms, but It should teach us not to dwell too fond It was at a dinner given by tin members of a certain English circuit hi honor of an eminent Judge. The legal element predominated, and th conversation from tbe first ran In a legal channel. Those among the com pany who did not happen to be bar risters oi solicitors sat silent, llsteu lilt with vacuous smiles to tho ex change of learned opinion which was being cnrrlwl on round them. One only among this dtnnb minority, says II. Q. Brown in the "Conclusions of an Everyday Woman," scorned impatient and ill at ease. He wns a big, Jolly, loosely-made man, wearing clothes which somehow did not seern to set naturally on him, the conventional dress tuit appearing less appropriate to his handsome figure than would have been, say, the loose abort and riding breeches of a cowboy or colonial squatter. Ills cheeks were bronzed and his bright, clear glance epoke eloquently of an outdoor life. As the dinner advanced and the con versation plunged deeper and dooier still Into the profundities of legal erudition, ho became more and more restless nnd perturhed. At last, how ever, one of those lulls occurred which may happen occasionally at even a pro fessional dinner, and It was then thnt resounding voice vibrated through the room, causing the learned brethren assembled there to forget for an ln Rt ii tit their professional Imperturbabil ity. 'Now I am going to toll yon all," boomed tbe voice, "how we skin steers down In Texas!" All eyes were turned In the direction of the perpetrator of this amnr.lng an nouncement, our friend, of course, of the bright eyes and bronzed cheeks who, nothing daunted by their ley tares, proceeded to enlarge njmn the technique of bis business, that of cattle breeding, and continued his uninter rupted monologue until the dinner was entirely at an end. These lngal "Johnnies" might know something about the law, but what ho did not know about cattle was not worth knowing. When the diners had arrived at that comfortable, Informal icr!od where chairs are pushed hack, tho eminent Judge who was the guest of the even ing turned to his neighbor nnd bald; "I want you to Introduce to me that young fellow who has Imparled to us so much useful Information upon the subject of cattle raising. I should like to congratulate him upon the reproof he lias so tactfully administered to us all. "In future, at legal banquets, I shall certainly do all in my power to keep the t.U!e from talking 'shop,' which Is dull in all conscience when only law yers are present; and wheu there are outsiders who cannot Join In the dis cussion, it shows a lack of good taste, besides." So the man with the biiuht eyes and bron.cil cheeks became the hero of the vci:lng. EVICTION IN NEW YORK. I5r,n Un Murolnil Wns Muvril Wlin lit llliarrd lb llnbbl. Thirty llltle children sat on cheap wooden benches In the second-story room at II Suffolk street the other day. Erery oue of them was rugged. Most Great Papers on Important Subjects. ly upon the idea that the direct nomination Is a panacea for all political l'ls. In all other departments of hnninn endeavor experl-eni-e and skill Hre accounted valuable assets. Trained engineers are set to the task of building the Panama canal. A learned lawyer must le had to try a compli cated lawsuit. A skilled financier must conduct the busi ness of a bank, If It Is to be successful. Is the science of government less complicated? In a country where party government prevails, politics In some sort becomes a science. There must be wise political direction or good government Is Impossible. To convert the po'.lticnl leaders to righteousness may be a hopeless task, but obviously not more so than to convert the masses of tho people. Under any system, experience and knowledge and skill must in the end pre vail over inexperience and Ignorance. The man con stantly "on the Job" will always have an advantage. Minneapolis Jonrnul. to Insure red lie- v.., -.ii r peace cruls, gullied The people are proud of Its achievement, and anxious to Veep It up to the highest standard of ef fectiveness. In order that It may be ready for any emer gency. It is a pity, therefore, that the directing nilnda of the ships the men upon whom all the responsibility would fall in case of war are prevented from' reaching coimnaud rank until they have almost reached the age of retirement. It is an extravagant system, because It fails to utl'lze to the best advantage the ripened phys ical and mental powers of the oliUers who have been trained for a lifetime to handle the nation's sea power. Washington Pest. JOB." energetic clergyman THE vidual as to make us say for the moment that thero Is an "American." The American wonian.lt perhaps even a little more undeveloped, to our thinking, than Is the Amcrlcnu man. We admire or tremble be fore women of o certain air or quality; but this very mien and quality of her do not seem permanent, flxfdj and tho woman we class as "American" to-day may be altogether different from tho imperious creature we crowned yesterday. Perhaps It is with regard to the woman as it is with respect to the past. It takes the tone of distance, space, to bring out the glory antTthe distinction to orb her. Columbia (S. C.) 8tate. NEW IDEAS looked as though they had not bad enough to eat. Hut they were bright eyed and alert and not for a moment did their attention stray from the white-bearded old rabbi who was teaching them Jewish prayers, although the smeary little pictures on tho walls and the myriad of noises of the roaring East Bide street must have been a constant temptation. And then the door opened aud City Marshal Laza rus stepped in, dispossess warrant in hand, says the New York correspond ent of tho Cincinnati Times-Star. Tho struggling little congregation of the synagogue hadn't beeu able to pay the rent. Their few ieiinles were needed to keep their own roof trees and give their little ones a meager fare. The old teacher stood silent, with bowed ueau, as mo poor furnishings were ripped from the place and stacked In the street below. Tears trickled down his beuM. I he children carried the tidings through the squalid neighbor hood and In a moment the street was choked with shrieking, gesticulating, weeping men and women. They liegged the marshal's men for mercy. As each bit of the poor furnishings appeared they redoubled their outcries. The rabbi, no longer erect and venerable, but a poor, old, grief -stricken man, his eyes red with tears, Ids hands shaking, moved among them, trying to repress their emotion. Marshal Iaznrus was moved ny tno agony or this, jierhaps tho most poverty-stricken cougrega lion In all New York. He went to the old rabbi and hatidcd him a little mon ey. "That's to kee0 yon going for a few days," he said kindly. The old man accepted It, "Hut It is for my peoplo," Ik said proudly. "My self, I can starve. Hut who will watch tuy little children beret" r ffii fen f m r III I r 1 1111 t. w- J AGE PENALTY QUESTIONED. 1IH Ilnttivl HIbIm now hm hrarnil In ttmn 8 I of wnr that Its meu are valiant, 1U fyns I effective and tta ship efficient. In time of me neet nas periornieu a wonaerrui demonstrating that the nary bat In efficiency with its Increased !. AMERICAN WOMAN. K Americans are not vet aulte able to dls- Al tlnguish a type, either of man of woman, W W I that has developed out of our very complex B .. . i. . , , i ...ii,, Ttr ,1.1.1. . ciunoKrnpiiii; voijufciiuu. rv v iuihk, uunr and then, that we can see certain Qualities or characteristics so grouped In an Indi IN MLLLINEiiY. Cosmopolitan Cbleuajo. I pay my fare aud reach the cold. unsympathetic pavement, and board a car going lu the opposite direction, says C. II. White In Harper's Iaga zluc Now we are passing through a city canon echoing with the roat of traffic. A horde of people rushes pant In the ghxmiy shadow cast by great walls of granite, groaning under tous of bastard ornament This must be one of the principal thoroughfares, and! I ask my neighbors where we are. "Non aplseo, Slgnore," Is his polite reply. I bow my thanks aud turn to my left. "Could you tell me what street this is?" Ilitte, lch bin iiur lleute bier ange konimen." He smiles and makes some primitive sign with his hands and arms. I re ply by motions more Involved, occa sionally moving my scalp. We ara (unking little headway, wheu I spy a likely fellow sitting lieslde my new ac quaintance. With suppressed agita tion I put my question to him. "Pardon, vat for you demandef He Is anxious to help me. I repeat slowly, "The name of the street we are on." "Tiens! for sure vee go on " ho. replies reassuringly ; "mals lentetnent. Allez ! Norn de Dleu, on vu plus vita cez nous!" Then I remember that Chicago U cosmopolitan. Agree with people more. It is a good, way to get rid of an argument. Be sides, the people you agree with will always like you better. There la one thing about au auto mobile we greatly admire: U doesn't shed hair lu the spring ' 'i!i;