De a seâ€" er at the the clubs and merâ€" mount of 1 preparâ€" it Christâ€" . 26, 1929 her part did their =:| | NorthShore RadioShOP || | Ceneral H mss .ï¬ | .: HolBBBsâ€"sss3 o ariccs.. o64 Cantent â€"Awonue~â€"â€"â€"{Iâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€".â€"â€"=_â€"â€"â€"â€"sâ€"=â€"â€" e t Me es it happy eful that ring that beautiful arge tree & games, ndwiches, was â€" the nâ€"to â€"the ; a we llbme.g med that Jarty had r Christ w â€" much ny n every. on the was, of . of the _ ~group, ich they <~did the the chilâ€" Monday ake the res had â€"at the a home girls so ded out toâ€" the enjoyed n were Marion their party ociety terian They child €0o have with tful { ~ Turn to Birds ts ( After the Wm children were .. born, Judy, a police puppy, came to _ _the home. Its death from :lktempu' was one of the earliest griefs of Calâ€" vin, junior. The iï¬nfly then turned (urusmy n troupind, i Feilew Pito Snd thrush, a troupial, a yello a nightingale, the latter a household favorite. It ~had to be abandoned keep a nightingale in the District of Columbia, â€" wÂ¥ ~. i Two kittens were among the first pets at the White House. ~One was a The first Coolidge pet was Bounder, a sprighty Vermont cat, ‘which enâ€" joyed playing in the water and shootâ€" ing the chutes down the back stairs in a clothes basket.. He died of fright from Fourth of July fireworks. Two cats ‘succeeded Bounder. â€" One pined away and died when Coolidge left to serve in the General Court of Massaâ€" chusetts and the other died from abâ€" cess of the ear after Coolidge had personally â€"performed â€"an â€" operation upon it. Atie o. Although Calvin and Mrs. Coolidge were so fond of pets that they felt they never could be without one or more, misfortune _ followed many of them, Mrs. Coolidge declares in her zing. Misfortune Many "ock Mre t dage in Maka"" WITH PETS POOR ‘nmnh’. Atwater Kent Sparton â€" â€"Howard Zenith â€" Dec. 26, 1929 zine Article Service CALL for miles, as the average distance travâ€" eled by all cars owned, no matter whether they were all in actual serâ€" vice or not.. _ * t es 1920. â€"This does not mean, however, that freight cars in actual use last year traveled but 31.3 miles per day. miles per day. What it does mean is that if the total number of miles traveled by all freight cars in 1928 be divided by the total number of cars owned by the railroads and this reâ€" Speed of Freight Cars Increased in Last Year wanderer and was finally lost permaâ€" nently after marines had found him time after time. ‘The other, an inâ€" vetérsate hunter, had to be imprisoned during the nesting season of birds on the White House grounds. Peter Pan was the first White House dog.> His fate was exile after he had nipped the heels of workers about the Mansion. Paul Pry, an Airedale, nearly ruined Roy, Coolidge‘s constant companion, had a fondness for sampling sandâ€" wiches laid out for tea. Beans, a Bosâ€" ton . bull . terrier, â€"startedâ€"a>feud â€"with Rob Roy which caused his banishment. ~â€"â€" Dogs Die : Prudence Prim, Mrs. Colidge‘s faâ€" vorite collie,; and Rob Roy ‘both died shortly after the Black Hills vacation, Rob ‘being buried in the hills, Mrs. Coolidge tells of making a little hat for Prudence, which she wore proudly at garden fetes. : The average freight car moved 31.3 miles per day in 1928, which was a gain of 6.2 miles over the average for T H E use traveled, on an average, more than 300 milesâ€"per day of 24 mours. The railroads established a new recâ€" ord for speed of freight trains in 1928. ~The average speed of all trains opouto’;l was ©12.9 miles pcrhl;our Multiply this speed per hour by 24 nndltwillbefoundï¬ï¬‚n'nmge train covered a distance of more than 309 miles each day.â€" . â€"= _ The facts are that those cars in Central Hardware Store HOWARD UDELL CAFETERIA We‘appreciate your patronage of the past and qssufe you that we shall do all in our power to merit it during the years to come. the future, we wish happineu and prosperity during the coming years. To the many friends we have made in SWEETLAND‘S LAGQ 1J We Wish You â€" a Ham New Year ~ ~together with _ Health and Prosperity 3 s es to you and yours SEASON‘S GREETINGSâ€" PHARMACY Here is a suggestion : If more fiexâ€" ibility is desired in the tariff bill now before Congress why not add a rubâ€" ber schedule?© > ># =#s=>: > ' First Aid to Botany "I have just read your fine article one.ncti."wc'rlfluarudc‘b'Wfl‘- an‘s Home Companion. . "You: should hanunonrhvnhA;gâ€"'mtd witheroci." €53 >A + 16