The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 7, 1924, Page 4

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Ger Natic sehen tive } tribut nul contr, tirem thea ive PAGE FOUR ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUN Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. Ds, as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Deine a Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPAN Publishers CHICAGO - - - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. i All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.... $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Be . 71.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) 5.09 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota...... . 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ‘ (Established 1873) TREND IN NEWSPAPE Fargo finds supporting two newspapers operating separ- ate plants an unprofitable venture even in a city of more than 21,000 with a sister city across the river nearly halt that size to draw from. The purchase of the Fargo morning daily by Norman Black probably means ultimately publication from the Forum plant giving Fargo a morning and evening: edition under one general editorial and mechanical control which should make for better service and more economical operation. Newspapermen of the state generally will wish Mr. Black success in his new venture and the purchase should clarify -the situation in the Fargo newspaper field making possible a profitable venture out of what meant a continued liability. Despite the fact that some costs of production are going EDITORIAL REVIEW =e Comments reproduced in this column may or may not expr the opjnion of The twented here in order t have both sides of important {ssues which are being discussed in the press of the day. THE WISCONSIN MIND Senator La¥ollette's — telegra withdrawing lis name fron {in the Republican prima him W gation of Progressive F consin will send a strong dele- publicans to the National Convention fight for fundamental principles.” This | n it certain that he will not! head a third party until after he has bolted the Republican nomin: tion. But we know that in y. past Mr. LaFollette hag been bétter at sulking than at bolting. The other implication in the telegram is yet more He will not run in the} Dakota primary because it} has always been his rule not to k his friends to fight for him| yhen [ am unable to do my share of the fighting.” He refus to permit his name to stand in a cam- n where he cannot personal gue the issues before the peop ww, if this is a ““fundamental ciple” with Senator LaFollette, North down, the newspaper business faces as high costs as domi- inated during the war,-both from a labor and material stand- point. Cities the size of Fargo and smaller cities face prob- lems in publishing daily newspapers little understood by the laymen. Probably no institution gives as generously in free space to-every public venture as a newspaper. That is part of the service it gives willingly to a promotion of the best interests |; of the city in which it publishes. It enjoys no exemption or special privileges by reason of the publicity given every conceivable undertaking for the betterment of the community. Sometimes these demands draw heavily upon equipment and materials, but! response is none the less prompt as it should be for news- papers have their obligations to a community by reason of the quasi public nature of the business in which publishers are engaged. Merchants of Fargo doubtless will welcome the consoli- dation of newspaper interests for it doubtless will result in giving them a lower group rate for morning and evening advertising and by cutting overhead, their message will reach | + the public at a lessened cost but at a greater efficiency of distribution. bt at cities like Chicago with its millions find three morn-| ing ncwsnapers a problem for most*expert financing. The Cr ) Tribune probably is one of the most profitable news- pa ventures in the nation but its morning competitors, the Horald-Exzminer and Journal of Commerce, have never been ranked in the very profitable class of newspaper pro- perties. ; field in the last few years merely pointing to the fact that a community is best served by fewer papers whose patronage is adequate enough to give service in the dissemination of news and advertising. = COST OF RUNNING A CHEAP AUTO It costs five and a third cents a mile to own and operate a popular-priced auto. This is shown by an extensive check- up of three of the cheaper makes of cars, according to the Wall Street Journal. Five and a third cents a mile is the average figure. Some cost more, others less. Depends a lot on the driver and the} care devoted to the car. z How does the record of your own bus:tally with this aver- : age? In making comparisons, you'll note that to drive even * a cheap éar costs about twice as much as a trip by railroad. Street cars give much cheaper service. But the auto driver has the satisfaction of ownership, privacy and the pleasure of Boing wherever he desires instead of following steel tracks. saney sees The average family drives a car 5000 miles a year or about 14 miles a*day, the investigators decided. It’s es mated that $266 a year ($5.11 a week) operates the family | bus and provides money for its replacement by a new car at the end of seven years. The investigators figured gasoline at 20 cents a gallon, 20 miles to a gallon, or $50 a year. Oil at 20 cents a quart, 250 miles to a quart, $4 a year. Tires $60 a set for 15,000 miles, or $20 a year. Repairs, striking a seven-year average, $50 a year. Insurance against fire and theft, $15 a year. Depreciation is estimated as being one-seventh of the original cost, each year, or $55. , ; Garage rent is entered at $72 a year. This is the largest single item of costs of operation and ownership. The “cost per mile” is dropping each year, the Wall Street Journal claims.’ It quotes auto engineers as predicting that before long all cheap cars will be stored “in the open” and a large part of the item of garage rent eliminated. Five dollars or $0 a week for running a car doesn’t seem much in these days when a dollar is worth only 60 cents in buying power compared with what it bought before the war. But if any one had predicted such an expenditure 20 years or more ago, tlre average person would have gazed reflectively in the direction of the poorhouse. an cet atts ARG ORR ote inaees ORD HE ate a WEALTHY i . An obscure barber in Harrison, N. J., gets word he is heir: . i toa fortune of.75 million dollars. This money has been held ; cverything that was’ going on, but i in trust by the French government for more than a century.: The history of the case involves old-time sailors, a kidnap- ' ing and other highlights of adventure. It appeals to the imagination.' But, according to Chris-| tian Science Monitor, there are more than 200 personal for- | * tunes in the United States estimated at over 50 million dol-| lars apiece. This certainly is a land of opportunity—though, often, only for a few. Me ct a ‘ Eskimos 0s are said to be very happy. Well, they don’t argue about the weather. They know it will be cold. who bob their hair-are not crazy,” says a special- nSieuliste wil say anythlog. ice x have Newspaper consolidations in New York have limited the ‘ | “Patevlond Fiddle, please quickly | from their hiding place and tugged iat the big strings, wit ‘ Lander. . p it will pretty. surely debar m from making a campaign this year for the third party or any other. It is known that he is not physi of North Dakota has set the W: ington quidnuncs wondering wh he intends to do. Various oracul gentlemen who profess to he “ miliar with the mind” of the Wig onsin Senator declare that his jon foreshadows a determi to lead a third party. But it is dangerous to be sure that you have found bottom in exploring _ the | depths of that mighty mind. Still. | two things seem to be pretty well established by the language of Sen- ator LaFollette’s telegram. He is under no illusion about what is going to happen\at the Cleveland Convention. He already, detects the approach of the steam-roller which has twice flattened him, ind which he fully expects to run over | again, despite the fact that vce REP - Jimme’s Cog BoucaT HIM A DANI $75 AND } WANG One JusT Like IT — KIN IDADDY—- HUH 2 4 \ “ Oa DapDY— Bee eae rz AY Made Outfit: | Th Home- | e Tragedy of the uslen— waY DONT You maKe YouR OWN RADIO? You'lL HAVE LOISA FUN AND YOULL GET ARADIO AT A FRACTION OF Taal CosT —_; ; HeRe's 2 Bucks To START YOU OFF y i ; \GoTa Have 2 MORE Gime 7 B8cKs Fora 0 ON Tae Wee tie ur WHATCHACALLIT ANP « Swe. CHACALLIT 15 more FoRA | \DINGBAT \Golfa Weve 17 DOLLARS FoR A Parl For THE DINGBAT. 4a “ OnRP- Ginme 34 Bucks For A DOODAD and 19 MORE FoR A ParRI TS Go ON THE HICKEY ANo IT'LL BE ALL DoOwe | a Al nother. “Amazing!” cried a i "nodded = an- “Most mysteriou: ally up to that work which he al-| ways makes so arduous. If he! were to it, a break-down would almost inevitably be the re- It. Hence the strong probability ; is that he will continue at Wash-! ington to make as much trouble as he can, and later in the Summer to go off to recuperate rather than | to bolt. ; It has not been overlooked that Senator LaFollette’s chief lieuten- | ant in.thesddouse, Representative Frear, was full of threats of revolt steps homeward and take thee good | until the final test came, when, amid the jeers and groans of the Democrats with whom he had been | acBing, he meekly voted with the at- the fair and started down the) regular Republicans. This was a most instructive hint ag to the ‘pro-| per way to read the Wisconsin Re-| publican mind.—New York Times. THE POWER AT HOME When a man gets to be 90 years old, depend on it,*there is some- body to blame. When he reaches that stage with his shoulders thrown bi his legs straight and strong, his wind good and _ his pulse normal, it ought to be made 1 subject of investigation. If the truth is ever to be arrived at the investigators must apply} that but useful French) maxim, erchez la famme.” ‘ When friends and neighbors cf| Chauncey M. Depew _ recently seryed a summons on him to ap- pear at a great birthday party and show cause why he shouldn't be congratulated: upon arriving at 99 years he just about let the cat out of the bag. He said he did not think it likely the “power at home which has ruled my life so well that I am in this magnifiicent co dition today” would consent to hi going out to dinner on the evening before his birthday. He asked for a continuance of his case at a later date. mer ¥ ae Instead of fritterintg away thi time on the effect of intoxicants]. and tobacco the inquisitors might Jearn something: to their advantage and ours by prying’ fiite “the pow- er at home.” All honor to Mr. De- pew for making public an un- ashamed acknowledgement of his complete surrender to its gentle tyranny.—Omaha World-Herald. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | “Turpence aniece!” seried the jolly fiddler at the fair. ‘Turpencé apiece, or three for a fipenny bit, to get in ang hear the Fiddling Fiddle from Fairyland.” And alk the Beanstalk people fol lowed him in ‘wonder, carefully counting out their pennies that they mignt hear the wonderful fiddle that could play by itself. “It's like all the other strange thing that have happened in Bean- stalk Land lately,” said an old lady | Gaize, Wis with a wag of her head. “Like the) boots that walked alone, and the queer way Johnny Stout's mother's clock acted.” And she~ passed in with all the others, for the. ticket- man said the fiddler was welcome to| his tent. i When the tent was as full of Bean- stalk people as it could hold (and the fiddlers pockets as full of money as they could hold), it was time to| begin, Nancy and Nick, away down inside of the hollow fjddle, could hear théy kept well out of sight, you may be sure. obey, And show the good people how well “you can play,’ jat the home of Mrs. Roy Young, other, “The only other one, “i culiar tune! “Oh!” exclaimed a most pe- the jolly fiddler. ' “That's because it is Fairyland music and much too fine for us to appre- ciate!” And so it, went. And soon there wasn't a man in Beanstalk Land as rich as the poor fiddler. “And now I am_ rich enough!” thought he, “so shall turn + my fairy children back’ to the place I found them.” : He bade goodby to the good folk road, playing a merry tune with his bow. . Pretty ‘soon they met a beggar. “I have so inuch and he has se little, I'll divide,” said the jolly fid- dler. So he gave the beggar all the tuppence pieces in one pocket. Then he went on. By and by they met a cripple. “I have so much, and he has so little, I'll divide again,” said the jolly fiddler. So he gave him all in the other pocket. Next he met a_ chimney-sweep, “Poor soul, he looks so poor,” said the fiddler. “I'll divide.” And he gave him all he had left, Then he set the Twins gently on the ground and said goodby. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | MANDAN NEWS ARM BROKEN IN GYM John Knoll, pupil of the St. Jo- seph’s school, was entered\for further treatment at the Deaconess hospital. He suffered a broken arm a few days ago in a basketball game in the high school gymnasium. ; ANSWER QUESTIONS Secretary E. A. Ketter of the Man- dan Commercial club urged that members of the club and others to whom questionnaires were mailed re- cently, fill out the same and mail suggestions as to program of com- munity endeavor which they favor in the coming year,’ It is the plan of the secretary and the board of direc- tors to compile these questionna‘res and present them at the annual meet- ing called for Thursday evening, March 13 LEG BROKEN John Gangl, Jr., of St. Anthony was brought to the city and entered at the Deaconess hospital with a fractured leg. A horse ke was riding slipped and he was pinned beneath the animal causing a bad double fiac- ture, 1 ENROUTE TO WIS. Mr. and Mrs. D, E. Starks and chil- dren have been guests for a few days sis- ter of Mr. Starks, They Zire enroute Wm. Schwartz, well known local barber announced today the purchase of the barber shop in the forner State Bank building from Phil Sch- losser. Mr. Schwartz states that the place will be completely renovated added immediately. CUT THIS OUT— IT 18 WORTH MONEY Send this ad and ten cents to Foley & Co. clearly. COMPOUND for coughs, colds and cried the jolly fiddler, laying the bow on the table and putting the fiddle to his chin. | ‘ Instantly the Twins reached in Such a noise! But in spite of the fact that. th tune wasn't anything to boast of, it seemed as though the fiddle was be- |hoarseness, also free sample pack julant for the kidneys, and | CATHARTIC TABLETS for Const | tion and Biliousnegs. ‘pa- \people. Try them! i Ss Whistling. is forbidden itched. Marvelous!" naid one Bednstaif = coal mines in Latcestershire, Eng- impending disaster. 4 NOW WE Golf HIRE THE THING WORK — id still an-| * | the two. and redecorated with new equipment | 35 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, | lit, writing your name and address | You will receive a ten’ cent bottle of FOLEY/S HONEY AND TAR These won ere He wa: Iped millions of iis ‘very profane things Sbout the ind. Wokers consider it a sign of house, Jack made N EXPER] 70 MAKE DAD = See okie a Uo Ree BAD DOINGS DAILY’ CRISIS DOWN, THERE WORSE Yucatan farmers have offered to loan Huerta, revolutionary leader of Mexico, hemp valued at a million dol-| Obregon might say, “This is ‘giving the calf too much rope.” But | then, Obregon might favor it if the revolutionists would hang themselves. News from a different section says Mexieo may let the United States |contro} her entire tobacco output. This looks like sly work to us. Are s going to sell us this |hemp for cigars to give away during the -presidential campaign? SPORTS A Chicago golf champ who lost in fornia says it was because she misplaced hen lucky glove. With wo- men entering all branches of sport the men’s alibis will soon sound amateurish. GARDEN NOTES Buffalo (N, Y.) man has been wear- ing the same derby 35 years. If it ever gets old he cam use it for a flow- er pot. . BEDTIME STORY Lives there a man with soul so dead who never wants to stay in bed? FINANCIAL PAGE Counterfeiters of $1000 bills have been caught. It serves them right. We never heard of such ignorance. What they should have done was lease a couple of, mints from some; office holder. * FARM NEWS Department of Agriculture will not make a report of cofton planters’ in- tentions this spring, This may be because they are afraid the plans ‘will fall into the hands of the boll wee- vils. ‘is withdrawn, JAIL NEWS Chicago drank tried to hire a po- lice patrol for a taxi, so it took him to a new home, TO BEATRICE GRIMSHAW, CONTINUED qe I really felt sorry for her, ‘Bee, as I am more than ever convinced that it is her baby and Sydney Carton, Jack's friend, is the child's father. I-do not want to know this for sure, j however, because I would always have a feeling it was my duty to try to bring about a wedding between i In some way I do not think ‘Sydney Carton is. suited to Paula Perier at all. As charming as she is, I have a feeling Sydney Carton, with yall the virtues which go to" make up real personal righteousness, is too from Vancouver, Wash, to Eau good for her. te make their future| You don't know how disappointed home. - 4. I was when I first had a feeling that a Svdney was the father of little Jack. BUYS SHOP Thad thought better of him. I think perhaps I have respected’ him more than any man I have ever known, more even than Jack. He seemed so stable that I did not want to think he would in any way wrong any girl, More tpan all, I did not \ want! togthink he would let me adopt (this baby without telling me of its | parentage. é Evidently he has told, this to Jack because I am,sure Jack) knows all about it. By the way, Jack was very. angry when I told him Miss | Perier was coming here, and at first | positively forbade the visit. Of ‘course, that made me'much keener to have her come than before. I did not tell him,“however that Dick Summers with coming with her. I ages of FOLEY PILLS a diuretic stim- | wanted to let him think we were FOLEY | going to have a little visit all by ourselv very nervous and said jie movie profession, their press IN MEXICO ANNOUNCEMENT Dan Dobb's reward for Tom Siths Mr. Sims has claimed the reward in person. He took his paper, but was kind enough to let us keep our hounds, flivver and shirt. Tom will resume charge at once, s0 Dan Dobb's Daily becomes Tom Sims Newspaper in its next issue, thank heaven. D. Dobb. SOCIETY Perhaps the big onion crop last sunfmer explains why we are not hav- ing more marriages. All magicians are not on the stage; a woman can drag a beautiful complexion out of a sloppy vanity case. WEDDINGS Platinum wedding-rings are taking the place of gold wedding rings, but don’t seem to last as long or hold as well. This is true even though they don’t see as much dishwater as the gold rings did. MUSIC NOTES ‘Huerta, rebel chief of Mexico, is said toshave a fine tevior voice and may quit fighting to become a’ singer on the American stage. If he thirks singing is less dangerous, he is mak- ing a mistake. ‘ HOME HELPS The safest side for a man to take in an argument between two neigh- bors is the outside. HEALTH HINTS During leap year Cupid has orders to shoot on sight. * EDITORIAL Ten Washington (Ore.) college girls have adopted a baby boy. When this little fellow grows up he will know’ everything. He will know how to make, hair curly; how. to,, remove freckles, how to remove a few chins overnight, and maybe hew to lie to his wife. MARKETS One thing congressmen are taking no stock in now is oil. lio Tangle. LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT , he was ‘waiting.at the corner drug- store until she would leave. He came in with an air of ficti- tious gayety -which did not fool me in the least. “Miss Perier has just gone,” I said, “You should have come a little sooner.” “I did not want to see her,” he growled. ‘I don’t see why all y because she is in pittures. There town before. they did then. curious.” Ls They are I never knew Paula Périer. think she is 8 vety "sweet woman.” Tack, out, at least acknowledge it. did you talk’ about?” (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) ees ee ae * A THOUGHT | @— —- ~~~. —Matt. 10:24, * From the king, To study to please one, agents and~ everything connected her: Yeaving the ig appearance, |s0 promptly that I had a suspicion’ ’ in_ the! with them. Promptly upon. . governtient stat , i t € ¢ * Published by arrangement Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen vi Lloyd with Corinne Griffith ae Counte: with Associated First National ion produced by Frank Zattiany. ¢ Copyright 1923 by Gertrude Atherton XXXVI (Continued) At all events the fashion she became, and it was quite as pat- ent that she took it as a matter of course. The radiant happiness ‘that possessed her, refusing as she did to look info the future with its menace to those high duties of her former dedication —clear, sharp, ruthless children of her brain—not jonly enhanced both her beauty and magnetism, but enabled her to en- dure this social ordeal she had dreaded, without ennul, She was too happy to be bored. She even lunged {nto it with youthfuf rel- ish. For the first time in her life she, was at peace with herself. She was not at peace when Clavering made love to her, far from it; but she enjoyed with all the zest of a woman with her first lover, and something of the timidity, this tan- talizing preliminary to fruition. How could she ever have believed that her mind was old? She turned her imagination away from. that lodge in the Dolomites, and be- Neved it was because the present with its happiness and its excite- ments sufficed her. Moreover, site was having one novel experience that afforded her much diversion, The newspapers were full of her. It took exactly five days after Mrs. Oglethorpe's luncheon for the story she had told there to filter down to Park Row, and although she would not consent to be interviewed, there were double-page stories in .the Sunday issues, embellished ‘with snapshots and a photograph of the Mary Ogden of the eighties; +a pho- tographer who had had the honor Clavering asked her ons @ay when the sensation was about a month old and was beginning to had journalistically for want of fresh fuel. (Not a woman in New York could be induced to’admit that she was taking the treatment.) “You ere the mos: famous women in America aud the pioneer of a revo- lution that may have lasting and momentous consequences on which we can only speculate vaguely to- day. I don’t believe yon are as un- nioved a8 you ldok, It’s not in wo- man’s nature—in human nature. .~ Publicity goes to the head and then descends to the marrow of the bones.” “I'm not unmoved. .fve -been tremendously interested and ex- cited. I find that newspaper noto- riety {s the author of a distinctly new sensation.” \And then she felt a disposition -to.play with fire. Clavering was in ome of his rare detached moods,-and had evidently come for an hour of agreeable com- panionship. “I am beginning to get a little bored and tired. ’ If it were not for this Vienna Fund— end to ‘the-newspapers for their assistance I am eternally grateful —I believe I'd suggest that we leave for Augtria tomorrow.” * “And I ‘wouldn't go.” Clavering stood on the hearthrug smiling down at her With humorous def- ance. “You switched mé on to that play, and there I stick unttfi it is finished. No,chance,for ft in.a honeymoon, and no chance for un- diluted happiness with that crash- ing-rqund inside my head.” Sbe shrank and ‘turned cold, but recovered: herself sharply and dis- missed the pang. It‘was her first experience, in her exhaustive knowledge of men, of the writing temperament; and after all it was part of the novelty of the man who had obliterated every other from ‘her mind. Nor haa she any inten- “‘Do you Imagine that when we return to: New York I’m going te let Society take possession of you again?’” to “take” her was still in existence and exhumed the plates, Doctors, biologists, endocrinolo- gists, were interviewed. .Civil.war threatened: the medical fraternity, upheld by a few doubting Thomas- 8 among the more abstfact follow: ers of the science, dn oné! ade of the field, by far the greater® nunt- ber of those who peer into’ the ‘hu-' man mechanism with mere ‘clen- tific acumen on the other. ‘Doctots, notoriously as conservative as kings and as jealous as opera sing- ers, found themselves threatened with the loss of elderly patients whose steady degeneration, was, a source of respectable: income. When it was discovered that New York actually -held a practicing physician who had studied- with the great endocrinologists of Vien- na, the street in front of his house looked as if some ambitious host- ess were holding a continual re- women are running after her just are women.who are on,the list of patronesses today who would have , bepn insulted had they been intro- duced to her when she was in this They hated her then because she -was beautiful and they! don't love her. now sny more than just *You'can't say that of me, Jack,” !nterest. I said kindly, “for you must know| She left here before-we were married. From what I have seen of: her today, I “Oh, she’s that. all right,” said ‘but you seem to be. the first woman I have ever known to find it What The disciple .is not above his mas- ter, nor the servant above his lord. To the beggar, by gsadation, all arc | sérvants; { And you must grant, the slavery is less fi / than many. —Mastinger. ception, Finally Madame Zattiany con- sented to give a brief statement to the press through her lawyers. It ‘was as impersonal. as..water,. but technical. enough to.satisfy the Médical Journal. At the, theatre and opera people: waited. in solid phalanxes to ‘see her pi Her utter immobility ‘on ‘these occa- sions but, heightened the feverish ‘Women of thirty, drdaming of becoming flappers overnight, and formidable rivals, with the subtlety vf experience behind the mask of seventeen, were desolated to learn that they must. submit to the claws and teeth of time yntil they had reached the last mill maturity. Beauty doctors gnashed their ‘teeth, and plastic ‘surgeons, jlooked forward to the:day when @ they must play upop some other form of human ‘credulity. As 4 Bubject for the press it rivaled trikes, prohibitién, German’ repa- rations, Lenin, fights, censor ip and scandalous divorce: in high life. A “Why; isn’t;.your head) turned?” 1. CHANDELIERS ¥ poonful of soda tion of letting him see that he could hurt her. She Amiled sweet ly and asked: “How is it.coming on? Are you satisfied -with it?” . : “Yegznt- am, And so is Gora Dwight. I've-finished two acts and I read them to her last night.” iy “Ah? Your Egeria?” “Not a bit of it. Butshe’s & wise cold-blooded critic. You can’t blame me for not even talking about it to you. I s Uttle of you that I’ve no {ntention of wast: ing any of the precious time.” “But you might let me read it.” ‘I'd rather wait until it's fim ished and as polished and perfect as I can make it. I always want you to know me at my best.” “Oh, my dear! You forget that we are to be made‘one and remain twain. Do you really believe that we shall either of us always be it our best?” e “Well, to fell you the truth, 1 don’t care a hang whether we are or not, I'll have you, and all to myself, And I won't say ‘for a while, at least’ Do you ffhagine that when we return to New York I'm going to let Society take pos. session of you again? Not only shall I work harder than I've ever worked before, but. fd see little more of you than I,do now. And that I'll never submit to again. 1 Tl write my next play inside this house, and' you'll be here when 3 want you, not gadding about.” She felt a. suddpn pang of dis- may, apprehension. New York? She realized that not for a moment had she given up her original pur. pose. But why distur the seren- ity of the present? _Whea she had him-in'the Dolomites . . . She answered him in the same light tone, : “I'm having my last fling at New York Society. When’ we return we'll’ give our spare time to the Sophisticates, ~ far less ot them now than I like. f Gilt chandeliers may be ee pe Before School by rubbing with @ cut lemon fol-! lowed by:a aponging with tepid! pores jy. 1,800,000 persons stds and white baking soda‘ih the die each year in the United States, ‘proportion’ of a’ teag; as figure. | -.to'a pint of water... Fortify Your Child vES, SCoTT's (2S) EMULSION |

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