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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1921)
v& DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD It Yi x J 3 v l1 . il M H i V. - i ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine .A Warning 1 Unless you sco the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-ono years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neural gin", Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Biyer Tablets of As pirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of Snltcyencld,- Advertisement. News Sense. "Tills pnper says It'll rain today." "Well, why don't you buy some oth er paper." Life. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS is greatly relieved by constitutional treat ment HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE la a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness la caused by an inflamed con dltion of tho mucous lining of the Eusta chian Tube. When this tube la Inflamed you have u rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when ft Is entirely closed Deafness is tho result. Unless tho In flammation can be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the tlood on tho mucous surfaces of tho sys tem, thus reducing tho inflammation and assisting Nature In restoring normal con ditions. Circulars free. All Druggists. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Ad vertlBement. Canada a Good Customer. Cunudn is the second best customer of the United States. This Is proved by trade statistics recently issued by the Canadian government covering the ilscal year ended March 31. Great Britain is the largest buyer. Canada's Imports from tho great republic last year averaged $100 per capita of Can ada's population. Its total Imports amounted to 51,240,125,050. This was tin Increase of 175,000,000 over Imports of the previous year, due, ac cording to authorities, to heavy buy ing in the United States. The grand tota' of trade done by Canada during the last year was $2,450,553,175. When a Man's Married. Flubb "They say a mnn Is incom plete until he murries." Dubb "Ye3; that usually finishes him 1" c A win stands before a mirror while dressing so that she can see what Is going on. Night shirts should wear longer than dross shirts because they are never worn out. THE TRIALS OF A HOUSEWIFE How They Have Been Endured and How Overcome by Lydia E. Pintail's Vegetable Compound Experience of a Providence Woman tite. At times I could hardly do my housework. I got medicine from the doctor but it did not help me. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound advertised in a newspaper and took it with good results, and am now able to do my housework. 1 recommend your medicine to my friends and you may publish my testimonial." Mrs. Chester A. Ball, R. 15, Fayette, Ohio. An Illinois woman relates her experience: Bloomington, 111. "I was never very strong and female trouble kept m so weak I had no interest in my housework, i had such a backache I could not cook a meal or sweep a room without raging with pain. . Rubbing my back with alcohol sometimes eased the pain for a few hours, but did not stop it. I heard of Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound, and six bottles of ft have made me as strong and healthy as any woman ; and I give my thanks to it for my health." Mrs. J. A.McQuiTTY, 610 W. Walnut St., Bloomington, III. The conditions described by Mrs. Cassen, Mrs. Ball, and Mrs. McQuittywill appeal to many women who strugglo on with their daily tasks in just suclj con ditlons in fact, it is said that the tragedy in the lives of some women is almost beyord belief. Dayin and dayout they slave in their homes for their families and beside the daily routine of housework, often make clothes for them selves and for their children, or work in their gardens, all tho while suffering from those awful bearing-down pains, backache, headaches, nervousno j, tha blues, and troublej which sap the very foundation of life until there comes a time when nature gives out and an operation seems inevitable. If such women would only profit by the experience of these three women, and remem ber that Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound is the natural restorative for such conditions it may save them years of Buffering and unhappiness. There is hardly a neighborhood inany town or hamlet in the United States wherein some woman does not reside who has been restored to health by this famous medicine. Therefore ask your neighbor, end you will find in a great many cases that at Bome time or other she, too, has been benefited by taking it, and will recommend it to you. For more than forty years this old-fashioned root and herb medicine hasbeen restoring suffering women to het-Uh and strength. lij-diaE. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Pecu liar to Women" will bo sent .to you f re upea request, "Write to The Ijydia E. Plnkham Medicine Co., Lyna, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information. ., ., Why That Bad Back? Is backache keeping you miserable? Are you "all played out," without strength or vigor for your work? Then find what is causing the troublo and correct it. Likely, it's your kidneys ( You have probably been working too hard and neglecting rest and exercise. Your kidneys have slowed up and poi sons have accumulated. That, then, is the cause of the backache, headaches, dizziness and bladder irregularities. Ubc Doan's Kidney Pdls. Doan's have helped thousands and should help you. Atk your neighbor! A South Dakota Case "VV. H. Caldwoll, farmer, Routo No. 0, Wagner. S. D., says: "I caught cold In my kidneys and had back ache. 1 had such pains through my kidneys and across my loins, I could hard ly get out of bed. I had stitches in my, back and often had to crawl on my hands ana Knees to thci houso. The kidney so-1 -rotlons passed often. One box of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me." Get Dotn't at Any Store, COc a Bos DOAN'S "iSES? FOSTER.MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. BETTER DEAD Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take C0LDMEDAL HrlriHW-J The National Remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it is an enemy of all pains re sulting from kidney, liver and uric acid troubles. All druggists, three sizes. ., Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation C HEALTHY PEOPLE Have Rich, Red Blood Weak, wornout blood is respon sible for a host of ills. If you would attain ruddy health, a ro bust body and muscular strength, you must first havo rich, red blood. Thousands have enriched their blood "with S. S. S., tho rec ognized standard blood building tonic. For Special Booklet oriorindi' vldualadvioo, without charge, vrtitm Chief Medical Adriaor, S.S.S. Co., Dep't436, Atlanta, Ga. Get S. S. S. at your dtugiiat. S.S.S. For Rich, Red Blood rni.UM.co 8ftBBajjaStei Providence, R. I. "I took Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound for a female trouble and backache. It began justafter my baby was born, and I did the best I could about get ting my work done, but I had awful bearing-down pains so I could not stand on my feet. I read in the papers about Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound and the good it was doing other women, and I havo got dandy results from it and will always rec ommend it You can use these facts as a testimonial if you wish." Mrs. Herbert L. Cassen, 18 Meni Court, Providence, R. I. Ohio woman for three years could hardly keep about and do her housework she was so ill Made well by I-ydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound : Fayette, O. "For about threeyears I was very nervous and had backache, sideache, dragging-down pains, could not sleep at night, and had no appe mm ShIM lr& ISM -MpffiMa i a MARKETING ALFALFA PRESENTS SEVERAL DIFFICULT PROBLEMS A Healthy Looklno Pork (Prepared by the United States Depart ment ot Agriculture.) Tho Irrigated areas of the south western United States can produce n high market grade of nlfnlfn hay, but there are several dllUcult problems Hint must be solved In order profita bly to market the liny, say specialists of the burenu of mnrkets and crop es timates, United Stntcs Department of Agriculture. Method of Baling. The first step which has a direct bearing upon tho marketing of alfal fa Is bnllng. Tho rainfall In the South west Is exceedingly light during the hay-making senson, and for this rea son much of the hay is baled out of the windrow or cock. When hay Is baled from tho wind row In sufllclcntly green stnte to save all the leaves, it cannot bo pressed tightly because of the danger, of heating, and shippers therefore fre quently experience considerable tlllll culty In loading cars with the mini mum weight for which they pay charges. Hay which has been stacked and allowed to dry enn ba baled more compact, but In baling stack hay many of the leaves shutter because of the dryness. According to the application by mnny Inspectors of tho present grade rules, this liny is of a lower grade than when the leaves cling to the stems, notwithstanding the fact that the leaves may be contained In the bale. Sources of Trouble. Blenched hay, together with weeds, causes considerable trouble In mar keting alfalfa. It Is well known thnt alfalfa hay bleaches quickly when ex posed to bright sunlight, but there Is a wide difference of opinion as to just the amount of nutrient that Is lost In blenching. Commercial grade rules, however, are based in pnrt upon this factor. Producers and shippers in these sec tions contend thnt too much weight Is given the color fnctor In the present commercial grndes for nlfnlfn nnd not sufficient weight to Its feeding vulue. From investigations recently made by the bureau of markets nnd crop estlmntes, It appears that when the present grading rules nre rigidly and technically applied, ns Is frequently the case on declining niaikets, It Is Impossible under the most Ideal condi tions to produce "choice" grade alfal fa. The presence of n weed, a blade of grass or of a bleached stem will pre vent a bale from grading "choice," nnd It Is practically Impossible to obtain hay which Is entirely clear of any of these things. Considerable hay Is bought and sold on this grade, how ever, but tho use of It, nnd sometimes FIX FARM INCOME BY VOLUME OF BUSINESS Must Be Margin Above Annual Maintenance Charge. Size of Business Is Most Important Factor to Be Considered in Select ing a Place Three Things to Remember. (Prepared by tlio United States Depart ment of .Agriculture.) It requires n farm business of nt least fair size to provide an Income that will merely cover ninlnteiiiinto charges and these cliuiges me relatively higher for small farms than for lurge ones, sny special ists of the United States Department of Agriculture. A farm may be of such sie ns to furnish most living needs of tho farmer, such as vege tables and fruits, ns well ns enough ln coino to pay the taxes and running expenses, but unless there Is u niur gin nhovo this anuunl malntcuunce charge no progress can be made to wnrd accumulating n surplus. This point Is often overlooked, and thousands of men full to understand why they do not get nhend faster, when, as a mutter of fact, tho size of their business Is such thnt there Is only n slight pos slblllty of nny margin being left nfter obtaining a Hue living and paying absolutely necessary running ex penses. Often the Income Is Insuffi cient even to do this, and the farmer nnd his family hnve tq go without some of tho comforts of life. Thus It Is that the size of the farm business Is one of tho most Impor tant, If not the most Important, factor to be considered In selecting a farm. In determining the value of a faun In this legnrd It Is essential, special ists say, to make sure of three things: That you havo an opportunity; that Is, mnke sure thnt the desired Ttluain Family in an Alfalfa Field. also of the grade No. 1 causes the ship per a heavy loss. The specialists hellec that cummer clul grndes for any kind of hay should be niutle so that the physical limita tions fn production and preparation will be properly recognized, nnd thnt such grades should bo uniformly ap piled, nnd not Influenced whatever by the stnte of the market. Causes of Wide Margins Most shippers In the irrigated sec tions seem willing to handle liny tit a gross profit of $1 per ton If tho chance of losses on account of rejections could he climlunted. Tho rejections are almost always based upon the claim that the liny Is not up to grade, but occur almost entirely upon a de clining inntket. With only the mengor protection ngnlnst this practice and resultant loss, furnished by Inspection services ninlntulned by the trade or ganizations of the various markets, ho Is compelled to raise his margin of gross profit to $2 or ?!5 per ton. When the producer notes tho wide dlfferenqe between (he price which ho hns received for his liny nnd the price quoted nt the ndjnccnt mnrkct, ho feels that the shipper or dealer Is tak ing advantage of him nnd Is ninklng too largo n piofit. The producer's de sire to share In this supposedly largo profit Is one of the principal causes of the co-operative wave that is now agitating southwestern nlfulfn grow ers. When this desire Is stlnnilnted by nn entliuslnstlc, prospective mnnnger It seems to bo not a very difficult mat ter to f oi in nn orgnnlzntlon of pro ducers to ship nnd mnrkct liny. Co-operative Marketing Assoclatl an. Co-operative market associations can no doubt mnrkct their own liny ns advantageously as the Individual ship per, provided their mnnnger Is ns well trained and possesses equal experience and business ability, but they are sure to meet the name mnikuting difficul ties, nnd will hnve just ns ninny rejec tions nnd losses which must be de ducted from the proceeds of their sales. Many of the Irrigated sections of the Southwest do not ship more thnn fioin 2,000 to 3,000 cars of hny ench enr and this business Is In some In stances divided between two or three shippers, who nlso conduct other busi nesses In connection, thus greatly re duglng overhead expenses. Co-operative shipping associations nre being or ganized In several of these projects. The cure for the present marketing difficulties In the nlfnlfu sections of the Southwest would seem to be along the line of better standards nnd their Impartial applications, sny the market ing specialists. of business Is nt lenst potentlnlly present, us evidenced by tlllnble Innd or by' markets for Intensive crops on small nreas. Thnt the volume of business can bo achieved by economlcnl methods. That the volume of business thnt enn bo conducted on the faun Is such thnt It will yield an Income largo enough to urovlde n comfortable innt' gln, nfter paying the absolutely nee esnry expenses of operation and pro viding tin adequate living for the farmer and his family, for saving or future demands. DAIRY COWS LIKE VARIETY Few Speckled Apples, Beets, Carrots and Other Worthless Foodstuffs Are Delicacies. A dairy cow appreciates variety In her ration almost as much as does n human being, liny, grain and stluge me good nnd ceitnlnly should consti tute the iiuilti pint of the ration. Hut a few speckled apples, beets, cm rots, small potatoes, and other worthless foodstuffs all me delicacies to the cow. The dalrjnuin who thinks of his cows in this way, not only keeps them in flourishing condition, hut Is lepnld Immediately by an Increase In milk "yield. t STAR BOARDERS NOT WANTED If Milk Flow Is to Be Kept Up Cow Must Be Persistent Other- wise Dlccard Her. The cow that milks heavily for a short time or for four or five or six mouths mid then drops olT, perhaps entirely drying up, Is never to bo seri ously considered when annual records are being computed. Naturally If one Is to keep up the milk flow he must have a cow persistent In her makeup.- If she proves otherwise, It Is probable Unit she belongs to the class of Htnr bourders that havo no place ou any dairy farm vvhora bual nww method) are practiced, CONDENSED CLASSICS i THE FOUR X HORSEMEN OF THE t APOCALYPSE X v J X By BLASCO IBANEZ .. jjj Condensation by j X Alice G. Hlgqlns, Boston Athc- .j. v, naeum. v iM-XKHXfcj5i Vicente lllnsco lhnncB -.Tfia horn In Vnlrnclii, Spain, In Jiiniinry, 1807, (lie nun of n pro prietor of n dry RoodN nliop. Ho attended the tTnl Acrnllj' of Vnlcn oln nnd rcocUrd 11 dcRrec In Inn. lie nrn ngnlnrit i li c mtnbllnlird order from IiIn college dnj-i. Ah n rcmilt he re ceived (he first of n KerlcN of Iniprln- otimrntn when Ve irnn elRhteen .for n nonnet nunlniit (he Kfli eminent. lie Iiiin junincd periods of exile nt Parln nnd In Knly, nKernndnK with ntnyn In prUan. One of hln pro teats vraa ORnlnat the utcaatircH pnraned by the government In NupurrnnlnK (he Cnbnn Insurrection, lie founded n re publican nerrapnper, of rrhlch he uim editor, reporter nnd rfvieirer. lie catnhllnhed n publishing houae to In troduce to Spnln the urcnt vrorkn of Kuropenn literature n( popnlnr prices this irni bnt one of the nt(emp(H he hna mnde, sometime nt (he risk of hla life, to bring hln country Into (he cur rent ot modern thought, lie niM elect ed to (he Corten, nud beennte the lender of hla party, lie devotes hln time nt present entirely (o literature. In hts novels he begnn In the nsnnl Spanish Tfny with pictures of local provincial lire with the types nnd the picture, of which he wns fnnilltnr. Hut he deals not merely with pictures his stories nil hnve nn object In which their strenuous nnthor Is grendy In terested. He inckn restraint, his pns slon for independence Is without hounds, he carries his admiration for the realism of Zoln to limits which shock our more restrained habit of lufud, bnt despite the opposition which he has encountered nt home nnd nil roil (I, (he author of "The Four Horse men of (he Apocalypse" Is rapidly be coming' one of the most widely rend of living writers. IN 1870 Mnrcelo Desnoycrs was a lonely lad of nineteen years living In Marseilles. A populnr manifes tation In favor of peace, tit the first news of war with Prussia, Influ enced him to leave the country and lie made nn unforgettable trip to South America, where after mnny fnllures and n Jnborlous existence, he became an employee of Madarhiga, tho ccn tutir. Don Mndarlnga's fortune was enor mous. Ho had gained his first money ns n fearless trader, and with his enrnlngs had bought vast tracts of land, devoting them to thq raising of cattle. Though he hnd a cnprlclous and despotic character ho nevertheless felt n certain fondness for his new French overseer. One morning Des noycrs saved his life. "Thanks, Fronchy," said the ranch man, much touched. "You nro nn nll round man nnd I am going to reward you. From this day I shall spenk to you ns I do to my family." Desnoyers soon married Luisa, Ma dariaga's elder daughter, while n young German, Karl Hartrott, u recent arrival nt the ranch, married Hlenn, her younger sister. Seated under tho awning on summer nights the ranch man surveyed his family around him with a sort of patriarchal ecstasy. "Just think of it, Frenchy," ho said. "I am Spanish, you French, Karl Ger man, my daughters Argentinians, the cook Russian, his assistant Greek, the stable boy English, the kitchen serv ants natives, Gallclans, or Italians, and. among tho peons nre many castes nnd Inws . . . And yet nil llvo In peace. In Europe, wo would hnvo probably been In n grand fight by this time, but here we nre nil friends." Julio, tho son of Desnoycrs, wns tho favorite grandchild of, Mntlarluga. "Ah, tho fine cowboy I Whut a pretty fellow you are 1" he would say. "Havo a good time, for grandpa is nlvvnys here with his money." One evening tho patron's horso enmo slowly homo without Its rltlr, Tho old mnn hnd fallen on the highway, nnd when tlioy found him ho was dead. The Hartrotts moved to Berlin at onco nnd tho Desnoyers went to Paris, each household In possession of an enormous fortune. Hcsldes esUibllsh Ing his family In nn ostentatious houso In Paris, Desnoyers bought a ensile, VIHobluncho-sur-Miirno, u mixture of pnluce and fortress, where ho could put his rapidly accumulating pur chases of paintings, furniture, statues nil those things which he carried nwny from tho mictions which it hud now become his liuhlt to frequent. The only disappointment In Desnoy ers' new life enmo from hlH children Ills dnugliter Chichi because of her In dependence and Julio because of his nlmk'ss existence. Julio hns hud to mnke n trip to South America In order to renllzc on a bequest from his grand father so that ho might mnrry the fas clnuting and frivolous Mnrgucrlto Luu rler, with whom ho had become In fatunted. Suddenly tho cloud of war enst Its shadow over this family. Tho self sufficient Dr. Julius von Hartrott snld to his cousin: "War will bo declared tomorrow or tho day nfter. Nothing can prevent it now. It Is necessary for the welfare of liumnnlty." Gn tho eve of mobilization Tchcmoff, a frtenrt. it JrJIo'e, hnd a. vfwlon In which ho saw tho Apocnlyittlc Ucnst rising out of the sea. Four tcrrlblo horsemen preceded tho nppcarnncc of the monster, nnd these scourges of tho earth, Conquest, War, Famine nnd Death, were beginning their mad, des olating courso over tho heads of terri fied liumnnlty. Julio, being nn Argentinian, was ex empt from military Hcrvlco nnd had hoped to continue his life ns, though nothing wore happening. His innmo rnta, however, from n woman Infatu ated wltli dress, was gradually trans formed by her desire to Befvc. The war hnd made her ponder much on the values of life, nnd her senso of duty to the husbnud whom sho so greatly wronged sent her bnck td his side when she heard that he had been severely wounded. To Julio she said, "You must leave mo . . . Life Is not what we have thought IL Hnd It not been for tho wnr wo might, perhaps, havo realized our dream, but now! . . . For the remainder of my life I shall carry tho heaviest burden, and yet nt the snme time, It will be sweet, slnco tho more It weighs mo down tho great er will my atonement be." Tho vanquished lover said good-by to Lovo nnd riapplness, but UiIh re pulse gave him n now Impetus to fill the vacuum of his empty existence. When Paris wns threatened nntl refugees told of tho wholcsalo sackings of their homes, Don Mnrcelo began to fear for his cnstle, nnd went to Vllle blnnche, nrriving in tlmo to witness tho discouraged exhaustion of the French nrmy's retreat. Closely follow ing wcro tho Invading Germans about lug joyously, "Nnch Paris 1" Vlllcblanche beenmo tho cnmplng ground for a regiment nnd Its bewil dered proprietor wns subjected to In numerable Indlgnltlos, saw his most cholco possessions looted nnd was tho powerless witness to tho murder of prominent civilians of tho vlllnge. A young officer arrived who Introduced himself ns Cnptnln Otto von Hartrott. no explained with tmo German cal lousness tho ruin and plunder of his uncle's cnstle by saying to him, "It Is wnr . . . Wo havo to bo very ruth- less thnt It mny not last long. Truo kindness consists In being cruel, be causo thenafho terror-stricken enemy gives In sooner, and so tho world suf fers less." For four dnys Don Mnrcelo lived through n period ot stupcfnctlon slushed by tho most horrible vIbIoiih. Tho vlllngo was reduced to n. mass of ruins before his eyes, and his house hold Buffered unspeakably from tho bestiality of the carousing officers. A wnr hospital wns cstnhllBhcd on tho estate, but moved on uifder tho stress of battle, though tho banner of tho Itctl Cross remained to deceive tho French nbout tho nrtlllory which was Installed In tho park. When u French nlrplnno discovered Oils plcco ot treachery Don Marcefo found himself In the henrt of n furious battle. Tho cannonading of the Gennnns nnd tho bursting of French shells terrified him until nt Inst ho saw at tho foot of tho highway near his castle several of tho attacking columns which hnd crossed tho Marne. They rushed forward un moved by tho deadly flro of the Gcr mnns, nnd he realized his beloved French wcro driving back tho Teuton horde. Only ruins of his onco beautiful es-1 tnto wcro now left to him and ho snld fnrewcll to Vlllcblancho. After his return to Paris a young soldier of the Infantry called to sco him. It was his son Julio, never so distinguished look ing us In this rough, reatly-mndo uni form. Their reconciliation -was com plete. With his son on the battlefield Don Marcclo lived through months of anx ious suspense. Through the influence of u friend ho wns nhlo to sco tho young hero. It was u tortuous Journey through tho zigzags and curves of tho trenches, whllo bullets buzzed like horseflies through the air, nnd on through dark gullcrles nnd subtorra nenn fortifications until ho reached tho outer Intrcnchment lne. Desnoycrs hurdly recognized his son on account of his changed appearance, but In spite of his hard life Julio hud found content In comradeships such as ho hnd never known. For the first time In his life he was tu&tlng tho delight of knowing thnt ho wns a useful being. As hts father left him, hopo sang In his enrs. "No ono will kill him. My henrt which never deceives me tells mo so." Julio becumo a sergennt, then a sub lieutenant nnd for his exceptional bravery received tho Croix do Guerre, the mllltnry medal, and flnnlly wns among thoso proposed for tho Legion d' nonnour. Ono nfternoon during tho Cluinipiigno offensive, Desnoyers, still cherishing tho fond Illusions of hope, returned to his homo In gny spirits to find tho dreadful news awaiting him. Julio, bin Bon, lay dond on tho field of honor. When ho went to tho burial fields to find his son's lust resting place ho re called Tchcrnoff, tho dreamer, nnd tlio four tcrrlblo horsemen riding ruthless ly over his fellow crenturcs whom ho saw In his vision, and tho prophecy which ho then intide : "Nt), tho Henst docs not die. It Is the eternal companion of man. Tt hides, spouting tho blood forty . . . sixty . . . u hundred years, but, eventually It re appears. All that wo enn hopo Is that Its wound may bo long nnd deep, that It may remain hidden so long thnt tho generation that now remembers It mny never see It again." Copyright, 1319. by the Toot Publishing Co. The UoHton PobO. Copyrlcht fn tha United Kingdom, tho Dominions, Its Col ontcH und dependencies, under tho copy right net, by tlio Foat Publishing Co.. rtoston, Mobs., U. H. A. All rights ro Hcrvod. Printed by permission of, nnd arrangement with, E. P. Dutton & Co, New York, authorized publlaUoru. Copy, rleht, IBIS. I