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Ps Pj I Sta Dak ih sem the eat r met ris Mo and Ad hav the aiff Ko and Jibe whi far eac play five and inte to hoy bY the yea pre for 1 hee the L to the ( to 31 c L. . PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, Publishers BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. __ - - - Foreign Representative G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - a - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. se 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. All rights of republication of special dispatches are also reserved. herein MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRC SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVAD Daily by carrier, per year.... Seyi aiheehey ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck). . ' ily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota......... THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) GUARDING BABIES FROM GERMS The train doesn’t leave the track to hit the auto. The auto goes to the track, gets in the \ of the train. This principle applies to safeguarding babies from disease germs. Nature never intended babies to be what the medical pro- fession calls “wandering unit To the contrary, she in- tended them to be “stationary units” —living in one spot until strong enough to creep and later walk away. The infant in his cradle does not go out and “catch” germs. No! The germs are brought to the baby hy out- * — siders—or else the baby is taken to the germs. A baby’s “zone of safety” is a distance six feet from where he lies. Baby is apt to catch germs if any diseased person ventures inside this safety zone—particularly com- tion colds, tuberculosis and other infections communicable by the breath. No one with such a disease should ever pick up a baby. Anyone with, say, a cold should wear a mask when approaching. % Baby in the cradle has not developed powers of resist- ance against disease germs, though from mother’s milk he : gets a certain amount of what are known as “immunes.” Baby needs fresh air and sunshine. He can get these on a porch or in a well ventilated and sunlighted room. When baby is wheeled out on the streets in its carriage, he begins to breathe dust, floating germs, poison gas from autos, etc. As civilization grows more congested and infec- tions more common, it becomes increasingly dangerous to expose baby to streets. The best place to raise a baby is on the second floor of a house, or even higher up if possible. Why? Because there are less dust, germs and poison auto exhaust than on the sidewalk or first floor of a house. This is especially true of poisdn exhaust from autos—for this gas clings near the ground, being heavy. A baby specialist, who charges $100 for the advise con- tained in this editorial, says it is unsafe to wheel a baby along city streets until baby is about eight months old. Old-timers may scoff and comment that such precautions were not taken years ago. No, and the baby death rate was much higher then. Also, the air was purer. . Above all, keep people with chronic coughs away from babies. The most pronounced symptom of tuberculosis is the optimism and its victims. They usually believe they are going to get well, right up to their death. They further rarely believe it is “gatching.” OIL Nature sometimes gets on the consumer's side, but not for long. Big gushers of the southern California oil pools glutted the market and smashed the price of gasoline. But an oil pool is like a quart of whisky — holds just so much. Production of the southern California fields has dropped two- fifths from its peak. 5 It’s about time for another big oil pool to be discovered. That’s the way the system works. Meantime, there still is _ more oil than needed. Scarcity is a long way distant, if at all, Reading in a street car or on a train shortens life, claims Dr. Monaghan, New York’s health commissioner. Every time the car lurches, tiny muscles are kept busy adjusting | the eyes to the reading matter. Also, the lighting is “poor,” + Doc cautions. The strain impairs eyesight. And eyes out of order, cause many nervous complications, including loss of = vitality, in effect, shortening life. People riding home from work, tired out after the day’s toil, should relax the mind and nerves as well as the body. FATTY Tom Ton, of-Los Angeles, weighs 745 pounds. Hearing which, the circus people didn’t wait to see him. They wired an offer and told him to come ahead as a sideshow attraction. Lewis and Clark displayed no more courage going west FA over a century ago than Tom Ton traveling east. You can imagine him in a Pullman corridor. -Reaching New York. they couldn’t get him into a taxi, so they loaded him on a truck, ‘At the hotel, he had to use the freight elevator. How kindly nature is, in standardizing the size of hu- " _ manity with so few exceptions. MOVING Buffalo may take the place of Minneapolis as the nation’s leading flour milling center. Mills are being moved closer to the eastern and export markets to save money on freight rates. The wheat has to be shipped from the west, of course. But to take flour down the lakes to Buffalo costs 28 cents a 100 pounds, compared. with five cents a bushel for wheat. ' — By locating at Buffalo, millers are in the “direct line of flow” of Canadian wheat, and can more readily compete with Cana- = ~3diait millers for export trade. CRIMES : Hundreds of crimes were created last year, reports a committee of the lawyers’ association. This means that “hundreds of offenses, formerly countenanced as all right, have been legally branded as crimes. For instance, Connec- ticut has a new law making it a punishable offense to display ‘a clock showing any except standard time. " 2s: The taboo list is growing. Liquor is not the’only kind ’ .of'prohibition. Of course, if all old laws were enforced, most ‘¥& _of us would spend tonight in jail. i ae ao, Why say capdidates burl their hats into the ring when i in so gently? * they slip thgn gently ne Twenty, years ago today we were all wondering how long ang befote spring. PES ws 0 sop cer al cit) 1 ” “Touts” Is it going to try to turn out Set some cotton and stuff me? You with them sane finance and political S€¢ I'm only half a parrot! | EDITORIAL REVIEW ——SSS ee apo hearth and im this column may or no! ons the opinion of The Tribune. Winey are pmsented here in order that our readers may have both sides of importa issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. re WHAT KIND OF PROGRE VE? Senator Walsh of Montana, whose general clear-headed sagacity | and penetration in the investigation | of the naval oil lea but re- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE vealed to the country qualities known to his colleagues and attentive read- | ers, of the Congressional Record, is} naturally cloudier when he tries to] look into the seeds of time, He thinks | that “the people will bi that | the ountry “is not the hs of the Republi If that | it would seem that the to the Demo for safety, Evidently, howeve: sh is not willing to trust to oil revelations.” The Democrats will win, he says, if they | nominate “the right candidate.” That | ute must be “the right sort of he the must inevitably turn eral at least six Northwes and the election of a Presi-| have to he made hy the curious colncidence, Mr. friends in the Northwest are to form sh-for-President | cold water on He feels that “such ef- eager clubs. their fort while the present Investigation” is going on should be disi Selfish motives might be attributed to him. He desires only to be re- elected to the te. Still, the oil investigation will not go on forever.| He may be unable to restrain the en- thusiasm of his friends. He repeats his compliments to Mr. McAdoo, who will have a pretty buneh of del to “throw” to some kind of re. ” But what is “the right sort of progressive If the four electoral votes of Montana are the great prize for which the Democratic must contend, Senator Wheel- er, an investigator and a “progres- sive” of a very different sort from My. Walsh, shouldn't be forgotten. There is just one “progressive,” Mr. LaFollette, who would have any chance of carrying certain North- western States as a third-party can- But he keeps in the Repub- n fold, His purpose seems to be} to collect Congressmen who strengthen his group, continue, opportunity to make mischief. have the Democrats in Congress got] by their flirtations with him? He duped them in the House, He will dupe them in the Senate, if he can. Will the Democratic Party allow it- self to be atilt-further fooled by muk- ing cqneessigns in platform or can-! didate to radical ideas? In effect, that party is proposing to “turn the eeals” mostly invisible— ‘out.” economy, cater to Bryanism, La Fol- ness again, |The right sort of a progressive! We had suppgsed that the Democra- tie National Convention expected to nominate the right sort of Demo- crat, If the country really doesn’t feel safe in the hands of Republicans, would it feel safe in the hands of Democrats’ tainted with populism, toying with radicalism, looking like the patriots of the Northwest whom ; Senator Walsh wants to captivate to | the weakening of the Supreme Court, the nationalization of railroads and what not, a whole congeries of un- sound, un-Democratic, dangerous pol- icies? A prayerful study of the table of electoral votes is recommended to Democrats who put more stress on “progressive” than on “Democrat.” will touched something. if| cried. possible, his balance of power and! needle in you. What der you'v letteism? That way lies the wilder- » there is “How Far Did You Say It Was, John?” ~~ | Published by arrangement Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. i Copyright 1928 by Gertrude Atherton LVI (Continued) “Is he still in love with her? Are you sure he didn’t come here to ask ber to marry him?” “If he did he had his journey for bis pains—although I can see that it would be a highly desirable com- | bination from his point of view. But he’s not tn love with her. I'll stake all 1 know of men on that.” “You are sure?” “As sure as that I'm alive.” “Well, I'll take the morning train for New York.” —“Lee,” said Mr. Dinwiddie im- ‘Dressively, “take the advice of an old man, who has seen a good deal of mep ang women in his day, and stay where you are until you hear trom Mary. Some sort of crisis has arisen, no use blinking the fact, but if you burst in on her now, while she fs Madame Zat- tlany, encased in a new set of triple-plated armor, you may ruin sll your chances of happiness. Whatever it is let her work it out -~ahd off—by herself. 1 made her promise she would not leave the country without seeing you again —for I didn’t know what might be in the wind—and when she had given her word she added that she had not the least intention of not seeing you again, and that it was quite possible ghe would return to the camp. If you go down you'll spoil everything.” “I suppose I can trust you, Din, but I've seen plainly that you don’t made my face and feet; and my tail. “But no sooner had she finished than I felt this sharp pain inside.” “Let me look at you,” said Nancy and picking the cat up she felt him all over, Suddenly her fingers “Ouch!” ‘she “Why, you have a great long Here it is!’ No won- had a pain.” “Oh, thank you,” exclaimed the cat. “I feel a million times better. What a relief!” H No sooner had he gone than the called down — cautiously minute, will you? “Is that! what the cat, said? -Is that the y stuff people with cotton? answered Nancy. “Why?” “You've got a needle. Could you| whiskers and After that the parrot \flew ‘every ere and became very friendly. “That avas all talk!’ said the Doo- funnies. “The parrot is a reall fine bird. What ever made ug th there was anything wrong, . w him.” (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) (To Be Continued) h MANDAN NEWS With the Missguri river flowing freely and swiftly although at @ high stage, the Heart river which flows through the lower part of Mandan, is not expected this year to cause any damage by floods. The fact that; po snow on the prairies to There will be the usual shindy at the melt on its upper reaches, 150 miles New York Convention, But it is to to the west, und that the ice in the be presumed—or hoped—that the Stteams had largely melted gradually Democrats have taken sufficient les- sons in the art of losing from Mr. an, and will take no more from jhim or his disciples and successors. —New York Times. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON One of the oddest people in Doo- funny Land was the green felt par- | rot--mostly green, but also yello blue and red—a gorgeous person, in- deed, with a handsome head. It is Whispered that he had no feet and absolutely no insides, and that all the owned in the world were his felt feathers. It was also said that his mission in life was to sit on the handle of a hot teapot in order to keep people from burning their hands. | But no one could be sure of that because he now sat on a tree in Doofunny Land, day in and day out. One day he was sitting there thinkirig this way to himself. “Oh, dear! I do get tired of sitting her No variety in life. It isn’t like the good old days when I used to sit on a handsome sideboard and be carried | to the table to sit beside the teapot three times a day! “Nobody thought it a disgrace | then for me not to have my stuffing. |Indeed, my mistress made me so on purpose, with just two flaps for sideg. “But everybody here in Doofunny Land looks so fat and healthy. Here comes the stocking cat now looking like a pillow.” Nancy and Nick’ came along, too, just then and met the stocking cat right under the limb where the tea Pot parrot sat. |..““Miew! Miew!” cried the cat, sit- ting down and wrapping his braided tail around him. “I have such a pain I can't move.” “That's too bad, Thomas,” said ick sympathetically. “What's wrong? Eaten too many tin-mice?” “No, that's the funny ‘part of it!” mewed Thomas. “I haven't had a , thing to eat. ‘I've had this pain off |and on ever made. The irl who made me took | tied the corners for my ears, then she stuffed me with cotton and |wing was left s\ B, | the funeral of his year old baby boy. | He was convicted for stealing a gov- ince the day I wase old stocking and cut off the top|* If. She sewed the top across and | sewed me across underneath; Jing adequate facilities to care for during the past three weeks, has pré-| cluded any possibility of a high wa-' ter stage. i The river is flowing swiftly over the site of the park dam where one; nding. PLENTY TROUBLE Misfortune is plentiful for John Plenty. This Indian, convicted me time since and sentenced to} six months in. the county jail and who has been serving time in thet Morton jail, Sioux county not hav- prisoners, has been taken back to! Fort Yates, his home, twice, first to attend the funeral of his father, then! | ernment bond from the Indian, agency offices at Fort Yates. HOME FROM CALIFORNIA Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Tavis returned Sunday from Los Angeles, Califor- nia where they thad been since the! first of January. a Tom Sims Says_ | °. o Nine coaches ran wild in Indiana, just like a baseball team. Bergdoll would like to return to face the music if he could be sure it would be a brass band reception. Hoover reports the Fijis have too many bananas. Is this a feeble at- tempt on Herbert's part to revive the old “Yes, no banana” gag? Even though he hasn't made much business for them yet, forty Argen- tine doctors urge Firpo to stay in the ring. A bigamist is a man who took his divorce for granted. Summer resorts may be a place where they resort to high prices. Never worry too much about> how late it is because it never is as late as it will be a little later. * A THOUGHT i As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten.—Rev. ). It is the beautiful necessity of onr |, then i {took a needle and yarn-thread and gerraid, ” (v Something Douglas j ed. | signed following a vote. TO SIMS NEW ''S PAPER Poe GUESS IT IS ON POLITICS THAT'S ALL THERE IS TO TALK ABOUT In Kentucky, the entire « ‘ounty police department ha ayétte resign- Over in France, the cabinet re- In Germany the man of the hour lasts only a day. Every nation, if you will pardon the pnp, seems to be a resignation. And don’t forget; even if you could, the Washington — Denby, Daugherty, who's next?—affair. All this. i: so good, but just the same it isn’t so bad. It proves the people are not resigned. CLEAN NEWS After scrubbing the front porch put out a “Smallpox” sign so people won't track it up. BEAUTY SECRETS A bride’s beauty is greatly en- hanced by choosing ugly bridemaids. POLITICS Nice thing about spring is you are too lazy to worry about politics. GARDEN HINTS While plowing ‘ground for horse- radish always use a horse. SPORTS Prize fighting does more good than is generally admitted. After seeing » good fight many a man feels 30! feeble and puny he quits smoking a few hours ‘or goes to bed early one night. DIVORCE A-simple way for a man to get a divorce is make her mad either by "| EDITORIAL No matter how bad things are in| the United States, they always are worse in some other country. In Persia, laughing’ is considered effe- minate. Little boys'‘and girls are tattocd in Haiti, And’ Germany has 24 political parties. BROTHER TOM'S KITCHEN A new salad may be invented by turning the ice box upside down and shaking until contents are well mix- ed. HOW TO MARRY Take him to see some of: your young married friends, warning them ahead of time to be happy. TO STAY SINGLE Get a job as a lighthouse keeper and never go ashore. Very lonely, but also very practical. SCHOOL NEWS These are the days every question mark in a boy's reagiig lesson looks more like a fishhook to him, i . FASHIONS | Hats and bags to match are véry stylish, and you usually can tell what is/in one by looking into the other. ADVERTISING WANTED: The address of the op- timist who writes. summer resort folders. He is needed in Washington ; to find the good points of the scan- dals, : | HEALTH HINTS { Failing to pay your grocery bill staying away too much or staying: will keep you from eating too heavily home too much, BEDTIME STORY “There isn’t any pin sticking him so he must have the coli Ge UNCOVERED ian ‘WAGON-~s Just a four-wheeled’ apparatus that is built of steel and wood; yet it means a lot to mother and to me. And it occupies a place within our hearts, just as it should, for a reason that aft parents ought to see. Little sonny and his sister use this steel and wood affair; it has brought them hours of happiness galore. It has taken them out riding in the healthy open air for a year or so and, too, it’s done much more. Why, when mother goes to market for her vegetables and such, she is saved a heap of trouble through this thing. ’Cause ‘twill always carry MacDonald Ready To Step Down When British Desire London, April 8.—England probab- ly never had a prime minister who appealed so ‘universally to the in- stinets of humanity or-who so nearly met. the popular conception of “a man of the people” as Ramsay Mac- Donald. ‘Reared in humblest cireum- stances, the man who now directs the destinies of a great empire, has’ in- sisted, even’in his present exalted position, on following rigidly the simple life and excluding all social or official ostentation. American correspondents who were privileged to have an hour's, talk with the premier recently, found him delightfully democratic, affable, and outspoken, ; - Sitting at a small flat top desk in“ the foreign office, the premier, with his finely shaped head, strongly: delineated. face, kindly eyes, and ‘grést wealth of hair, presented a picture reminiscent, of those of Lin-. cain in the Civil War days. He was attired in ‘the conventional home- fopyn cack suit, the trousers of which COMPQUND:.fon, coughs, colgs: and | j during the hot summer months. ETIQUETTE = Custom makes anything proper, so snoring in a Pullman must be polite. ' little, or if need be, carry much; it will hold a sack of flour or anything. And, when sonny or his sister wish to pass the time away, they don’t have to bother mother—not at all, ‘cause their four-wheeled apparatus gladly takes them out to play; it is‘ waiting, always, at their beck and call, Would that’I could have ja confab with this wood and steel affair.. Ah, what thrilling little stories I would hear, ’Cause it knows my little youngsters with a knowing’ that is rare, does this wagon that they’ve| , had just o'er a year. ; (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) did not mate. the coat, woolen sox knitted by shjs daughter, and spaci- ous well-worn brogues. “It seems to me all wrong,” the premier drawled in his “ broadest Scotch, “for a man to expect a large ; selary and other emoluments and privileges upon entering public office. 5 : | “L would be perfectly happy to resume my former private life, on an income of 400 or 500 pounds a year. My idea of a man who served his country well, is one who leaves office poorer then when he entered it. . “It is a great mistake to make public service an avenue for an ex- travagant mode of life. “Whenever the spirit of the Brit- | ish people indicates I am no longer | wented as prime minister, I am quite ready. to go back to my porridge, potatoes, and plainness as simple citizen.” ' CUT THIS OUT-IT 18 WORTH Send thie ad and ten cents to Foley & Co;, 29835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, NL, writing, your name and address clearly. You. will receive a ten Sent bottle of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR, t 4, ‘ ‘ ; : want me ¢o-marry her,” “That is true enough. 1 want nothing less—for your gake; and Hohenhauer would be a far more suitable match for her. But I don’t believe you even question my faith——"" “No. I don't. You're a brick, Din. But I'm unspeakably worried almost terrified. I have never felt that I really knew her. She ‘may have only !magined—but that is impossible! How in God’s name am I to sit around here for three days and twiddle my thumbs?” “Don't. Take one of the men and go off on a three days’ tramp. Climb Mount Moose. That will give you no chance'to think. All your thinking will be in your mus- cles.” . ‘*“And suppose she should. return ‘or telegraph me to go to her?” “If she returns and finds you gone it'll serve her right. And she won't telegraph before Thursday— if she’s going to Washington. Now take my advice and don’t be .a £001.” : : Clavering shrugged ‘his shoul- ders,-but he. set his lips. “Very Well. I won't follow her. Nor will I forgive her in a hurry, efther,” “That's healthy. Give her a Plece of: your mind, have a “good Tow, and then make {t up. © But let me tell you, my dear boy, that she was.horrified atthe thought of that man coming up here, and she only refrained from -telling you of. the summons, so to speak, becanse she wanted to spare you any anxiety. ‘There’s no doubt in my mind that she’s ag much in love with you as you are with her. . . You have none, I suppose?” “None. Particularly lately. 1 hadn't told you, but I had intended, in a day or two, to ask you if you would let me have the camp for a few weeks. We intended to marry in Huntersville the day the rest of you went out.” Mr. Dinwiddie whistled. “No wonder she was furious at having her preliminary honeymoon dis- turbed. But if that fs the case of course she'll return. You're more than welcome to the camp, and I'll send you whatever you need from time to time. You've only to com- mand me. . . It makes it all the more comprehensible. What- ever it was that man sald to her, she wanted to get over it by her- self before. coming ‘back to the place whiere she had forgotten that Hohenhauers and ‘politics existed. 1 could see how it was with her here. She looked exactly as she used to in the old days, and I don’t doubt she felt, like it, too. No wonder she resented being forced back into the role of Madame Zat- tlany, or Grafin—countess—as he calls her. You must let her thresh ft out by herself.” “You believe :she will come ck?” ~ . “It that was ybur pi T assured- ly do. There {sn’t. a‘ spark of hu- man affection between ,those. two, and’ Mary. never placed herself in any man’s power. I'am more and more inelined to believe that he appealed -to her for.help in his mission here, whatever it is—and it’s not so diffealt. to guess—and that against her -ifcHnation and out'of her love for Austria, she’con- sented.” es : “Well, it's no use to speculate. There's the supper bell. I'll de- cide in the morning whether I go off for a tramp, or, not.” vin slept when he first went to’bed, for he was healthily ttred, but he awoke suddenly at midnight with body refreshed and with Associated First National night, and he put on his trousers and coat over his pyjamas, thrust his feet into bedroom slippers and went out into the living room. There he put a log on the fire and paced up and down, not unlike a tiger round its cage. He felt as if black bats were flying about his) brain, each charged with a different portent jof disaster. Once more the unreality of the whole affair overwhelmed him.” How could he have been so fatuous as to believe that he had really won such a woman? He remem- bered his first impression: that she was on a plane above, apart. They hadn't an interest In comr’ mon, not even a memory that ante. dated their meeting a few short weeks ago. She had lived a life of which he knew nothing outside of European novels and memoirs, She had known nothing of any other world until, he had intro- duced her to his friends, and he made no doubt that her interest in them was about as permanent as a highly original comedy on the stage would inspire. There was nothing, literally, between them but a mutual irresistible attraction, and that bond recognized so un- erringly by both. ie That bond. , Would it hold? Had this man offered her some- thing that would make love seem insignificant and trivial? She, who had had a surfeit of love long since? Whose eyes had looked a thousand years old until he aad given ber mind back its youth ‘as the great Vienna biologist had re- juvenated her body. He was entirely indifferent to her Old love affair with Hohen- bauer. It was those years of politt- cal association and mutual interde; pendence in Vienna that he feared. He had, when he first met her, ap- praised her as a woman to whom power was the breath of life. Am- dition—in the grand manner—in- carnate, She had all the appear. ance and the air of a woman to whom the wielding of power, how- ever subtly, was an old story. Hi recalled that that terrifying sug- gestion of concealed’ ruthless forces behind those charming man- ners, those feminine wiles, had almost made him Ive to “avoid her like the plagu And then he had fallen madly in love with her and forgotten everything but the woman. He had divined even before thesa last miraculous days that she had looked upon lové with: abhorrence for almost half as many years as he had lived, an abhorrence rooted” in a profound revulsion of body and mind and spirit. For nearly twenty years that revulsion had _Jendured and eaten into the very depths of her being. . -. He hada sudden blaze of. enlighten. ment. She had frequently alluded to that Lodge of hers in the Dolo. mites and thelr sojourn there to. gether, but elways in the terms of romapcea She had never given. him a elance of understand. ing. And she had put off the wedding unv'l the last possible moment. ¥ she had really. been as eager as himealf she would have left her power of attorney with Trent and started for Austria six weeks ago. Or the papers could have been sent to %er to sign, if her signature was impera- tive. . . . And in spite of the fact that everybody had taken the engagement for granted, she had, with wholly insufficient, reasons— as he saw, now that was re moved from the inftuence of her plausible and dominating self—re- fused to announce it. Could it b that in the depths of her mind—un admitted by her. consclousness— she had never intended to marry htm? Was that old revulsion par mount? . . . Sixteen years? .. . A long time, and nothing fg life fs more corroding than habit, Perhaps—as long as they were! down there in New York. But not up here. That he would be williug to swear. There-had been another revolution, involuntary ‘perhaps, but the stronger for that; and ey- ery shackle that memory. and :habit can forge had dropped from her. She had been youth. incar. nate. The proof was fn her joyful consent to marry him immediately and remain in the mountains . .. and then her complete surrender) -- of the future into his hands. . . . She had during those three brief days loved him wholly, and with- out a shadow ifn her soul. But now? Whatever had hap- pened, she was not Mary Ogden tonight, hastening to New York, nor would she be when in her own house on the morrow. She might hate Hohenhauer, but his mer presence would have made the past! live again. She must have Known when she went down that mountain that even with her strong will and powers of. self-delusion, things could not be quite the same again. Not even if she had re- turned with Dinwiddie.. Why in heaven's name had she been s0 mad as to go? She could.have sent Hohenhauer a peremptory: refusal to see him’and then gone off on a camping trip that could have last- ed until he gave up the game. Sh¢ mind-abnormally clear. He knew ‘that he, ‘would’ asleep no more that ple PILLS, a diuretic ste lant. for the kidneys, and FOLEY CATHARTIC TABLETS for Constipa- tion and Billiousness. These won- dgrfal remedies have helped millions of, people. Try them! i Adv. buck on taffeta’ frocks. BUSTLE’ There is 2 tendency on the Pat of scme jParisian designers to revive the bustle, and large Bows of taffeta #re used below the waistline in the