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PAGE TWO CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. « NEW YORK MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS L 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. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein t are also reserved. PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, aoe N. D., as Second Class latter, © BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY PAYNE, B URNS AND SMITH - Publishers DETROIT Kresge Bldg. - Fifth Ave. Bldg. 1 MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION d _ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE \ Daily by carrier, per year.......... 5 carne $7.20 q Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... . S ee 7.20 t Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . 5.09 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Bieisieve’s ols ae. (OLOU) THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) i MR. HAMOD EDITORIAL REVIEW ———e Comments reprodacea column may or ma the opjnion of The are presented her: our rr of importa: being the, da} * DEAD MEN'S TAL! Of all the wild tales of all the dead men who have been testifyi by proxy in the senatoriai investi- gations, no tale has been sol will tale of what the once wild | and now dead Jake Hamon .told the | once wild and now reformed Al] Jennings, who used to be a train| robber and is now a politielan and | evangelist. wennings, it se mon at the Republ in 1920; and on the day before | Harding was nominated, Hamon told Jennings that. the Ohio gen-| ator: would be nominated next day | as a result of a payment of $1,000 | 000 by Hamon—$250,000 going to| Senator Boise Penrose of Pennsyl- | vania, $25,000 to Harry Daugherty, | 25,000 to Will H. Hays, $25,000 to! was with Ha- | in convention ; an Ohioan whose name was some- | thing like “Manning,” and the rest being paid out here and there, | Now comes Will Hays and denies ; the story in toto. Now comes the | secretary of the late Senator Pen- rose v0'nts out that for nfonths Al Jennings, who once made his living robbing trains, before. énrin ufter thought no doubt that he had a just grievance against penton Penr Fp el ridd soviet) lie appears to still have lit regard for society. | secretary t Hamon was He added to the list of “dead men’s tales” in Washington, | not « persons who and if he didn’t “rock the country” a+ he said he would he dune Gt es ae oe Ge i ast entertained i P i 2 he Salata ,iduring that period. And now at le asl entertained it. _ In all serio s he related OW: eameetcoiimonsaonkeland! asks why Jake Hamon, Republican nations! comm‘tteeman from lit should be necessary for Hamon Oklahoma, informed him of “buying” the Republican nom. |to y 990 th Aus si ination for Warren G. Harding for a million dollars. Jen- | Dang a ie Ne, a nings disple a surprising lack of, regard for the political | ing npiign manager and was Si oi the middle west and of o! time leaders in the |working feverishly to nominate Republican y which was brought Into play to win the him. ountry work leaie: of fuss is what happened at Chicago. an impass and elected easil. While Jennings —and Jennings sv tion for Warren G, Harding. re the convention, and Hard! in the middle wi For observer lently while othe and in the end they brought home the bacon. > these leaders—and their nu of the noted people of the count G. Harding—got into action. Their campaign began nomination caused tid in some parts these keen political | making a great deal i That the balloting reached er included many who believed in Warren Harding y nominated st though had seen Ss wer When Mr. aid that Hamon related the story to him ullowed it—another wi ness yi sterday in Washington said that Hamon “boasted” of electing Hard- | ing. Quite natural! Who has not heard of a local political | Jennings says he s leader returning from a convention and announcing that he had won the victory—and how few have ever returned and admitted defeat? “Jake” Hamon may have spent = torg,apparently are ver + may have thought he wz ticians often do. the hands of the master publican nomination for Warren G. Harding. their mind to nominate Mr. Harding if they could long be- fore “Jake” Hamon left the boundaries of Oklahoma, be- Harding was their kind of man. ness who yesterday characterized Hamon’s state- “boasting” no doubt came closer to the truth than ouus The w nionts Jennings. have charge of This school has the —paying its own way. Antioch’s latest addition to it providing work for needy students, will be This factor: the campus. way through college. ‘Also the factory will be a practical university of business. j; Student-workers will learn production, manship. factory. As counts most is is made. free with their dollars. s doing something—small fry poli- But “Jake” Hamon would be like putty in, political minds that won the Re- Antioch College at Yellow Springs, Ohio. purpose of making itself self-supporting NO “TAG DAYS” FOR THEM : When colleges need money, they usually call lustily for contributions from outsiders. a lot of money—oil opera- Hamon They made up A remarkable genius must system, of | a shoe factory on! co-operative 'y will enable students to work their management, sales- | bition of the average institution of high- to be to have as many monumental build- Much outside aid naturally is required. ter to s teaching in wooden barracks like the After ther production systems, the thing that product rather than the place where it’ nd the money on the students’ all, a college is a knowledge The Athenians developed “pure intellectualism” to a higher degree th an ever before or since. Socrates and his satellites ‘and brother-planets exchanged ideas and educated the young. They did it outdoors, in public — didn’t they needed a million-dollar building. think We are not opposed to fine college and university build- | ings. in spare time. Decidedly, not. when the ambitious poor student course unless he goes in debt or w But the ‘tem is out of balance, | cannot afford a college on table or sells books The millions that are theoretically contri- buted to help him reach him only feebly and indirectly. | are awakening to the need of pro- Colleges, fortunately, viding wor! expenses. The goal of every college should be sufficient fine build- ot have been given for students who haven’t enough money to pay ings for instruction and a comprehensive system of factories or farms for helping the worthy That’s all thos his way. : help themselves. one of the authors. ket. Eo method. Art has no mono : A flock of pla = near Burlington, = What killed them? Bey L mesiAesiemnitacse-P Saat erase TIPPERARY The song, “It’s a Long, Long Way to Tipperary,” went begging from one publisher to ~another for a long time. Finally it found a producer willing to take a chance. This | is revealed in connection with the recent death of Williams. The same is true of nearly every invention or improved poly on difficulty of finding a mar- The obvious moral is that, if you are sure you have a good thing, keep plugging and never lose hope. MYSTERY birds was flying over the Lippincott farm . J. Suddenly hundreds af them tumbled to the ground, dead. This interested a chemist. formed autopsies, found no traces of poison. One suggestion is radio waves or some form of static. Electricity is the second greatest mys- tery. Life is first. The two have some definite connection. Chieago medium swap = can’t decide if she is a "cate ened medium or a medium of student earn enough to pay udents want—the opportunity to He per- triangular fight in North Dakota with a fair chance that Coolidge may carry off the. electoral vote ‘of the State in November. It is true that there are not many Democrats left in the State. But if the points of: the triangle ithere is small doubt th: Hamon, as we all know, rch man: but it takes a very rich an indeed to srafe together £60,000 i:: osh.)| Sémehow we Hamon did that. of what Hamon » entirely true, how- When, for eximple, he says amon vowed that he would mony millions and would © himself President, we are i clined to believe that Hamon that. It sounds like Hamon, he Oklahoma oil man and_ politician w loubt that Jennin that how th ed_at his Yes, said what . It sounds ike Hamon. ‘He would have made good a writer of nickel novels. ~Chicago Journal of Commerce. AS YOU LIKE results in vary in al pre-| Thet Interpretation of the the North Dakota primar accordance with the pol dilections of the interpreter. verdict reached by those who call themselves Republicans in North Dakota seems to be one of the sort that can be made to yield support to almost any political thesi Since Coolidge won the decision! and the delegation goes to him, the President's supporters _ profess. themselves content. Since LaFollette ran second, de- spite his withdrawal of his name und the necessity for resorting to “stickers” his followers proclaim as demonstrating his great sth as nominee of a “third Since LaFollette and Johnson to- gether polled some seventeen thou- sand more votes than did the Pres-| ident, the Hiram Johnson men.de- clare they have demonstrated that North Dakota is an anti-Coolidge State. Of course, it cannot be said | that the Johnson managers are sat- | ed— from it. But they pro- | tess to derive gome satisfaction | from analysis of the figures However, Mr. Coolidge appears to be the choice of a good majority | of the real Republicans of North ; Dakota. It seems fair to say ‘that many of those who voted for Sen- ator LaFollette are no more entit- led to be accounted Republicans than is the Senator himself. They are as un-Republican as_ their Nonpartisan League comrades in Minnesota, though unlike the Min- nesotans they elect to remain nominally within the party. Moreover, if Senator LaFollette decides to run as the candidate of ; a third party, there will be another should happen to be Coolidge, Mc- Adoo and LaFollette, for example, McAdoo | receive considerable sup- port, especially from r&ilroad and other organized labor men. At any rate Coolidge would have a good fighting chance for a State in which two months ago he would ‘the slightest show ‘by the political wiseacres. If there is no third party spl North Dakota will, of course, 0.to Coolidge in 'November.—Minneap- olis Journal. 4 would ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | Did y see Judy and the baby?” asked Mister Punch. Mister Punch looked very funny, dressed in a sort of red and yellow gown, and a high peaked ‘hat with tassels on the side. Did you see Judy and the baby?” he repeated. “I thought that after I'd thrown them out the window they might come to Doofunny Lund. Such queer people come here to live, and Judy was certainly « queer Nancy and Nick looked at Mixter Punch and then at Mister Fusw Wuzz, and then ut Mister Punch again, They didn’t know a word he was talking about. “If you do find Judy,” ssid Mister a@ charm for $1000 and we iceretnanene Fuzz Wuzz, “what do you intend to do with her?” | | | | | “Oh! "cried Mister Punch, the tears starting to his eyes, “1 intend | waianclsvechr ne feseusnoemnetgine ss cer orgs THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE You AND 1 ARE ke GeT_ALONG Ge HER. Fine | In the Spring a Young Man’s Fancy— | Ma a RN ise i NR a cca to give her my stick and let her be- me for a while. I’m sorry I treated her so. I never meant to, but after Toby bit me on the’nose I kind of got mixed up in my head and didn’t know what I was doing. Do you want me to tell you about it?” ‘Oh, ly. “Please do, Mister Punch, sounds just fine.” labor t troubles always ter Punch with a “But sit down and I'll be- grimace. gin at the beginning. ‘One iine day I got ready to take Judy and the baby for a walk, Judy was my wife and the baby wa our only hild, : ell, I waited and waited; and aited, and every time I called to her to hurry up, she would cailiback, “Just a minute, Mister Punchy, just one more minute. g “I was looking out of the Window vhile I was waiting, and a showman passed with his dog Toby. , Toby saw me and jumping up my~stairs, he bit me right on my nose. “Well, that made me awfully, mad so I hit him and threw him out of the window. “Up came the showman, and ‘he yelled, ‘Why do you throw my dog Toby out of the window?” and with that he gave me a good beating with a stick—this very stick I have in my hand, “Well, F grabbed the stick and hit4 him and then threw him out of the window. st then Judy came in with the baby and I guess I had gotten the habit, for I grabbed the baby and threw it out of the window, and next I beat poor Judy and threw her out, too! Oh, I was a terrible fellow! “After that I ran out, and knocked down everybody I met—a doctor and two policemen, and a whole lot of people, and they put me, into jail; but I got out and I’ve been hunting for Judy ever since. I want to tell her that I'm sorry And I do hope the poor baby isn’t hurt. It isn’t good for babies to throw them out of the window.” “Well, I should like to help you, my dear Mister Punch,” said Mi Fuzz Wuzz kindly, “but so far Mr fudy has not come to Doofun: Land. I'll tsk the rag-doll, ter Hinky Dinky nd everybody, word if I hear of send nything.” | Thank you,” said Mister Punch, | marching stiffly on his Tittle | wooden legs. 4 you—thank | you.” And away he went, tassels, cap, long stick and all. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Ing.) Se Tom Sims Says | % » Dutch have broken off nego- tiations with Russia, showing the Russians have gotten in Dutch — The auto market, the insurance market, and the bootleg market never | seem to reach the saturation point. Fighting in Mexico has slacked up 4 little, but Americans didn’t have time to worry over it, anyway. 4 —_— ‘Too many investigatio: ns spoil the results. +4 . A censor for radio is suggested, If he will eliminate the cat fights we approve heartily. i One sign of spring is motorists de- touring marble games, Happiness isn’t xearce. It isn’t being used much, Another sure sign of spring is when you wonder if you hear a saw mill or @ mosquito. just Honesty pays in the Jong run while dishonesty usually pdys in a short run and a swift one. It's. a greut life if yeu don’t get spring fever, or if you do. Too many bunk cashiers are es- caping after spring cleaning. A group of senators plan a& fae cried both Twins eager- | i | NEWS TOM@SIMS PAPER ALPHABET § HONDURAN VICTORY NOT PRO- NOUNCED Here’s terrible news from far away Hondaras today. Colonel Somebody took a city named Sigaatepeque. And | jthen, perhaps because he couldh’t ‘pronounce what he had captured, he moved on to the next town. This xt town is called Tegucigalpa. He ‘didn’t capture Tegucigalpa, and we |don’t know why, unless he saw in |time ‘he couldn't pronounce it either land so withdrew. And the moral of this horrible war story, kind readers, is that your lot jcould be worse. Suppose you were ja mail clerk in Honduras? CLEAN NEWS A nail driven into the wall about :4s high as your head is a fine place {to hang the baby while you spring j clean, RADIO NEWS Mars is calling us, says a Columbia professor. It doesn’t matter, we are too busy to answer. EDITORIAL People get mad if the drug store doesn’t sell stamps and yet they wouldn't think of raising cain at the postoffice if the stamp window re- j fused to sell them some drugs, DIVORCE Refusing to listen, while your wife discusses the neighbors, is a quick way to get 4 divorce, but very cruel. HOW TO MARRY Invite him to dinner, Feed him so _when the ‘preacher arrives, much he will be unable to protest |, AVES CITIES SOCIETY From the far north comes a story lage awake nearly all hight. This may not seem so very terrible to j you, but up there the nights are six months long. SPORTS In training. for the season, a fan should learn thé price paid for every ball player so he will know exactly how much to cuss when a man makes an error, throwing the game away. POLITICS Al Jennings, ,extrain robber, is mixing in politfes. This will be a blow to many people who thought Al had reformed. ANIMAL NEWS The noise around the capital must be too much. Coolidge’s pet cat ran away from home. : AUTO HELPS Wear a large hat instead of a cap. A hat protects yoursears as you go through the windshield. MUSIC NOTES. This song, “Oh, Promise Me,” is good if sung to promissary notes. ADVERTISING FOR SALE—One complete set of “colder” predictions. Have been used only a few months, Owner starting new line, Apply Weather Bureus FARM NEWS » The, French government has stup- ped the export of -butter, so now French cows can rest a little. GARDEN HINTS Care for your radishes tenderly or they may become tough ~. PROG My little son once da cart 1 built for him myself, ‘wus made of odds and ends that I had laid upon a shelf, I painted it and oiled it up, und let him take a ride, And, to my satisfaction, he seemed very sat- : And then the boy next dodr to us eame scootin’ down the street, with fone knee in a wagon that was really quite a treat. “My daddy bought mo id he, “and juat see how she And very shortly my boy, boasting one of those, For just about a! week he rede around in his express and then hisy actions indicated signals of distress. I found him riding something else; HAL COCHRAN’S DAILY POEM. RESS He a playmate! " to’ine, “it’s all constantly explain made out of steel.” Of course I fella, daddy’s pride-— ‘cause fathers sort of like, to have their sons be up to date—I bought my boy a bike. And he was tickled, sure enough. He rides it all day long. I know he'd sell his home- made cart and wagon for a song. He’s satisfied just now, I- gucss, but that’s all tommyrot. For shortly he will want what any other kid has got. And all this makes me wonder when my boy has reached sixteen, will he discard all his presents and demand a limousine? (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) through our national forests, and you can’t blame them for taking to the tall and uncut. Lots of people go around hunting temptations to avoid. If pieces of modern art are dug up 3000 years from now, posterity will think we wore no clothes. ra THOUGHT 3 . To do justice and judgment is more acceptable to the Lord than sacritice. —Prov. 21:3. ' Justice satisfies everybody, and justice alone,—Emerson. HAT BUCKLES Buckles are the very latest thing for ‘hat trimmings. They may be of cut steel, bronze, crystal or of bril: liants. » \ JERSEY DRESSES Jersey dresses for the first warm days when coats are no longer neces- sary come in desirable colors bound with robbon or a contrasting color of Jersey. j ‘ i i ‘ ! | NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLO- 4 SURE SALE Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage executed and deliv- ered by Clarence J. Hallum and Bir- die Hallum, husband and wife, mort- gagors to First State Bank of Regan, a corporation, of Regan, N. D. mort- gagee, dated the 30th day of March, 1921, ‘and filed for record in the of- fice of the Register of Deeds of the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota on the 1st day of April, 1921, and ‘recorded in book 162 of mortgages .at page 544, will be, fore- closed by a sale of the premises. in such. mortgage and hereinafter des- cribed, ‘at the front door of the court house in the county $f Burleigh and |- state of North Dakota at the hour of ten o'clock a. m..on the 3rd day of May, 1924, to satisfy the amount due on such: mortgage on the day of sale: The premises described in such mort- gage and which will be sold to sat- isfy the same are described as fol- lows: The Northeast Quarter (NE%) West Half (W%) of Southeast Quar- ter (SE%), East Half (E%) of West Half (W%) and Lots One (1), Two (2), Three (3) and Four (4) of Sec- tion Thirty (S. 30) in Township One Hundred Forty-four (144) north of Range Seventy-eight (78) west of the 5th P. M., all in the county of Bur- leigh and state of ‘North Dakota. ‘here will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of ‘about a crazy man keeping a vil-! ty GERTRUDE ATHERTON Pictures, Inc. tiv As they left the boathouse an ; sour later and walked up the steep {path to the camp, once more that ;sense of coming disaster drove ihto jher mind and banished the memory {of the past hour, when she had for- gotten it, What did it mean? She recalled that she had had dark pre- sentiments before inher life, and ithey had always come in the form jot this sudden mental invasion, as if some malignant homeless spirit exulted in being the first to hint at the misfortune to come. But the camp was silent, Every jone, apparently, had gone to bed, and slept the sleep of valiant souls and weary bodies. One lamp burned {n the living-room, and Clavering turned it out and they parted lin- igeringly, and she went up to her ;toom, She had barely taken off her coat and scarf when she heard a tap on her door, She stared for a moment {im panic, then crossed the room swiftly and opened it. Mr. Dinwid- die, wrapped against the cold in a radded dressing-gown and with eless slippers on his feet, en- ed and closed the door behind him. “What has happened?” she de- “Something. I “Don't look so frightened, my ‘dear. I have no bad news for you. | Only it’s rather annoying, and I {knew I shouldn't get a word alone ‘with you in the morning.” | “What {s it? What is it?” “I had this telegram an hour ago jfrom Trent.” He took a sheet of | paper from the pocket of his dress- ling-gown, covered with handwrit- ing. “Of course those bumpkins jdown in Huntersville took their time about telephoning it up. Luckily the telephone is over in Larsing’s room——” Mary had snatehed the paper from his hand and was reading it aloud. “Hohenhauer took morning train for Huntersville stop will spend night there and go to camp in morning stop must see M. Z. stop don’t let anything prevent stop very important stop he will not ask you to put him up stop thought best.to warn you.as you might be Planing expedition. Trent.” “Hohenhauer!” exclaimed Mary, and now, oddly enough, she felt enly astonishment and annoyance. “Why should he come all this way to see me? He could have written if he had anythjng to say.” And “Mr. Dinwiddie, wrapped in a padded dressing gown... entered.” then she added passfonately, “I won't have him here!" “I thought perhaps you'd rather go down to Huntersville ‘to see him,” said Mr. Dinwiddie, looking out of the window. “Besides, he *would make thirteen at.table. 1 can take you down inthe morning and telephone him to wait for us at the same time I order the motor to be sent up.” F “I don't know that J'lj see him at all” “But you must realize that if you don’t go down he'll come here. I don't fancy he's the sort of man to take! that long and be put off with a rebuff. From what I know of hiff he not only would drive up here, but, if-you had gone off for the day, walt:until you re- turned. I don't avoid him.” cd “No, you are right. I shall have to see him—but what‘excuse can I give-Lee? He mu ue rat hi areas ae ‘T've thought of that. I'l) tell him that ‘Trent is sendit up some One Thousand Four Hundred Fifty- two and 38-100 ($1452.88) Dollars. Dated this 21st day of March, 1924, FIRST STATE BANK, OF REGAN, @ ‘corporation, Mortgagee. THEODORE KOFFEL, Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota, 5 i 3;26—4-2-9-16-23-30 Published by arrangement with Associated First National Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. Copyright 1923 by Gertrude Atherton important papers for you to sign, and as some one is obliged to go to Huntersville to check up the provi- sions that will arrive on the train tomorrow morning, I’ve told Trent's clerk to wait there, as I prefer to see to the other matter myself. I —I—hate deceiving Lee——” “So do I, but it cannot be helped. Did he bring me up here to get me away from Hohenhauer?” Mr. Dinwiddie's complexion sud- denly looked darker in the light of the solitary candle, “Well—you ‘ see——" . “I suspected it for a moment and then forgot it. No doubt it is the truth. So much the more reason why he should know nothing about that man's following me. Why should he be made uneasy—per- > haps unhappy? But what excuse to go off without him?” “They have a Ford down there, T'll tell them to send that. With the provisions there'll be no room for four people.” “That will answer. And I'll give Hohenhauer a piece of my mind.” “But, Mary, you don't suppose that one of the most important men in Europe, with limited time at his disposal, would take that journey unless he had something very important indeed to say to you? Not even for your beaux yeux, I should think, or he'd have asked Trent to get him an invita- tion to spend several days at the " camp. I must say I'm devoured with curlosity——" Mary shrugged her shoulders. “I'm too sleepy for curiosity. What time must we start?” “About nine, if the car gets here on time. It takes two hours to come*up the mountain, and they'll hardly be induced to start before seven. I'll tell Larsing to tele- phone at six.” “It's now eleven. We have eight hours for sleep. Good night, and believe that I am immensely grate- ful. You've arranged it all wonder- fully.” She stamped her foot as Mr, Din- widdie silently closed the door. “Moritz! What does he want? Why has he ‘followed me here? But he has no power whatever over my life, so why should I care what he wants? . . .. But that this— this—should be interrupted!” She undressed without clin did slept ill, ° ast Lv 2 » The flight next morning proved simpler of accomplishment than she had anticipated. The men were going to a neighboring lake to. fish, Larsing having excited them with the prospect of abun- dant trout; and why fish in your own lake when you may take @ tramp of several miles throcg’s tho Woods to another? They begged Clavering to go’with them, ang.as man cannot exist for long in the rarefied atmosphere of the empy- rean without growing restive, he was feeling rather let down, and cherished a sneaking desire for a long day alone with men, But he told Mary that he did not want to go out of their woods and down to that hideous village for any such purpose as to watch her sign papers, and he stood én the tanding waving his hat as she and Mr. Dinwiddie crossed the lake in the motor boat to the waiting Ford, For once his intuitions fafled him, and he tramped off with the other , men, his heart as light as the mountain air, and his head empty of woman. Mary ‘ooked back once at the solden-brown lake, set like a jewel in its casket of fragrant trees, and wondered if she. would see it again with the same eyes. She was both resentful and uneasy, although she still was ynable to guess what harm could come of this interview. If Hohenhguer wanted her to go to Washington she could refuse, and he had long since lost his old mag- netic power‘over her, But as the Ford bumped down the steep road between the woods she felt less like Mary Ogden ev: ery moment . . . those mists of ‘ilusion to withdraw from her prac- tical brain... returning to the heights where they belonged’. . . she wondered how she could have dared to be so unthinkingly happy the sport.of the cynica! gods? . . . sentimental folly that she had called exaltation? After all! After. all! Could she recapture’ that mood when , she ‘returned? Certainly, whatever this man wanted of hon {t would be hard facts, not ily’ sions, he would invite her to dea! with. Even when he had been they most passionate of lovers, his brain - had always seemed to stand aloof, luminous and factual. He had not an illusion. He saw life as it w and although his manners wer suave and polished, and his voice the’ most beautiful she had ever heard, he could be brutally direct when {t suited his purpose. For a moment she hated him as ardently a she had fur a time after he left er, * ‘ (To Be Continued) POCKETS Pockets on this. season’s frocks are frequently put above the waist- line instead of below in the Popyen. i tional ‘fashion, a READ TRIBUNE WANT: ANS, } 3 i I