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“PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune 1 the problem with their brains, rather than with "THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE see owe. awe Sete Aare: _ An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST (Established 187: second class mail matter, Bismarck, ag M Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per year. . Daily by mail, per year (in (in state outside Bismarck) Dally by mafl, outside of North Dakota. pmber Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Assoclated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the IL news dispatches credited | lited in this paper, and also | use for republication of to it or not otherwise ¢ the local nes in, All righ herein are a Dus origin published here Forelgn Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT. G. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE, NEW YORK : (Official City, BURNS AND SMITH State and County Newspaper) 1 and The 4 Boat a sunk mile time 5 euy s occurring in the humble in two of nit the tates military learned to forget wa » of deat stalking th 1 defens Tho effect of t comparable { to the horror of wa The civilian mind, hoean visualize only ins feeble way the spectre of war, is given a more graph- | ie presentation of tragedy by two successive mili- tary disasters, arly seven years after the Arm istice, two great disasters come, bringing $ q h turns us back to 1918, to the memory the 200,000 men whose hones Jie mouldering on the fields of France, and for the moment, the pitter ness and cynicism of the post war period make place for a return of that chastened, unsullied spirit of sacrifice which pervaded the nation in the clos: | ings days of the great conflict The nation pauses before it It is a solemn mes ouge. - Kellegg and Saklatvala Kellogg may be “correct” in refusing pn to the Communist member of Parliament. apurji Saklatvala, who is a British delegate to the Interparliamentary Union, in Washington We have la exclusion of such persons, even and Mr, Saklat vala doubtiess comes under those laws But farseeing American opinion will hdd Senator Borah “right” in objecting to “correct action. There is a difference This is not an American It is an international one as it must on the te Secretary admiss meetin the visitors, 9 permitting as tempor: doubtless this hering. meeting on our soil, rritory of gome nation, Who represents Britain in it ought to be Britain's business, not ours. of Great Britain coming as one of If the conservative government toa representatives, does not British object Communis the why should we? Probably they do not like him, or approve of him, But the British long ago learned the lesson that free speech does less harm any more than we do. than the repression of it. And the test of our own loyalty to free speech is our conduct toward the man who says thing: which we do not want him to » and which we regard as wicked and dangerous. Unless we will defend the right of that man to say the things to which we object, we do not be lieve in free speech. Mere Trifle for Birds An annual flight from the north or south pole to the equator—a distance of more than 6,000 miles— is a mere trifle for many species of birds. This is one of the amazing discoveries made by the Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museym of Natural History. Under the leadership of Rollo H. Beck, veteran naturalist, an intensive study of the islands of the tropic Be fic is being made. k and his associates have found birds in these islands whose nesting places are in the arctic tun dras. Yet other birds whose home is in the an tarctic region and who fly toward the equator as the long night settles upon the south pole have been discovered in the ands The expedition seeks accurate and scientific data concerning the islands and particu- arly the bird life. So far, many species of birds never before caught or shot, have been collected by the expedition. This is the first time that a comprehensive survey of these islands has ever been undertaken from a scientific point of view. Many scientists feel that the survey was under taken just in time. For the arrival of the white man and civilization has upset the delicate balance of natural life upon these islands. They feel that in another 25 years it may be too late to seek traces of the natural life which had previously endured upon these islands for centuries. to obtain Big Problem The president asks us to have confidence in the debt commission, and to accept whatever settlement it reaches with the French representation as pre- spmably the best that can be had, under all the com- Plicated circumstances. Tt is good advice. But it will be a miracle if it is followed. ‘Between those who will criticize any settlement because they think it is wrong and the larger num- ther who will oppose it bacause they think they can gain political capital thereby, smooth sailing ig not to be expected. To secure the approval of the people will test President Coolidge's. powers of public educational > leadership, and to get the assent of Congress may test even his‘powers as a boss. 1 ~ Let it chiefly be hoped that the people will study Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | Bismarck, N. D., and erltered at the postoffice at! psident and Publisher 5.00 | 6.00 | ation of all other matter | Kresge Bldg. fth Ava, Bldg. v is appalled | | We Should Worry! their feelings and prejudices. Plutocrat billion dollar country,” said Speaker “Tom” Reed, after the first billion budget for the biennium We have long passed the day of such small things Mere billions no longer stagger us. But it fs at his is a 7,29 | least interesting to learn that there will be a billion! 7.20 | dollar increase in biilding this year over even the | | five billion dollar budget of last This is a six billion dollar | increase in housing and bus That all money saved, and added to the permanent capital of the people. When we add as much more spent on automobiles, worn out in carrying us about, for business and pleasure, we begin to realize that the greatest pluto erat the world ever knew is the American democ-| | racy Gambling The Better Business Bureau estimates that at least a billion dollars of fake securities will be foisted on the American public this year. All of them will be sold to people who are try- ing to gét rich done. And 1 of them could be lowing one simple rule | ASK YOUR BANKER! faster and easier than it can be/ prevented by fol | Your banker knows, or has means of finding out. | Or, if you won't take your banker's advice, and | | absolutely must gamble on the dther fellow's game | borrow the price of a third-class steamboat ticket and go to Monte Carlo. There you will at least | know what you are up against, | Coliseums | America is to have a coliseum larger than the | famous structure of Rome. | an Antonio, Tex., has found an abandoned rock | ¥ which will make an ideal coli he | smoothed over and seats ar -um after n oof the pit is chiseled in the rocks. It will be another great monument to the Amer- ican desire for great sport events and mammoth spectacles Ancient Rome boasted of one coliseum, devoted | to spectacles of cru and barbarism. This coun s of stadiums rivaling the col’ seum in size, but devoted to wholesome sport and community service. try now has scor Old Ironsides | ment to the project to restore the Constitution, the ship of war which figured so prominently in the early history of the United ‘States. The executive | will lend active support to the campaign to raise $2,490 in North Dakota for preservation of the his- toric frigate. Congress should have appropriated fundg to save | “Old Ironsides” from destruction. Failing in that, it remains for the nation to act at once for the pres- ervation of this relic of national defense. No urg- ing is neces: The money will be raised. The state is ona with Governor Sorlie in this project. | sary. Strategic Move Withdrawal of Roy P. Wilcox from the Wisconsin al race is due to the fact that Edward F. developed unexpected strength. Republi- that state interested in upholding party of government selected him as the best possible oppo- cans nent of the La Follette dynasty. H While the chance of defeating the Crown Pri | is slight, Republicans of Wisconsin will exert every | effort to regain party control. oe With a million of tons of good lignite at its very! doors, North Dakota is not worrying over the an- thracite coal strike. This state can keep the whole Northwest warm during the winter season. Now is the golden opportunity to exploit the use of lignite. The operators never had a better opportunity since the war, A 31,000,000 fire wiped out some of the booze dens of Tia Juana, Mexico, because the water supply failed. Water is the least of Tia Juana's problems. | Editorial Comment | Consider the Source (Duluth Herald) indignant North Dakota newspaper com- ment on Bruno Lessing indicates that people out there fail to recognize the voice of authority. If they did they might more meekly or at least philo sophically accept Bruno's recent declaration that North Dakota had “failed to make the slightest contribution to art or any other of the activities of the human mind which beautify and improve life.” For twenty years or more Bruno has edited Hearst's comic supplement. If that long and intimate con- tact with art wouldn't fit anybody to decree what. doesn't “beautify and improve life," what could? Some The American Invasion (Toronto Star) A motorist driving west along the Hamilton high- way on Tuesday evening counted 127 American motor cars bound for Toronto between Sunnyside and Port Credit. From all parts of the country come reports of a tourist invasion eclipsing previ- ous years. Estimates ‘based on the number of cars entering Canada in 1924 and on the length of time which these remained in the Dominion have placed the country’s revenue from tourist traffic at $143,000.- 000. If that waa the visitors’ expenditure in 1924, it has been even greater in 1925. Canadian sum- mer resorts are proving increasingiy attractive. Good roads have made every part of the province accessible. Of cars entering Canada, half the num- ber enter via Ontario, and Ontario is visited by many of, those which enter via Quebec. If $75,000,000 is being spent by American tourists in Ontario alone this year, the multitude of Amer- ican bifls in circulation in the province is readily understood. And the importance of such an ex: penditure must be obvious. In the “tourist, indus- try” the foreign market comes to the goods, instead of the goods having to be sent to the foreign mai ket. And with a “turnover” of $76,000,000, the in- dustry ranks among the province's larg ars | Governor Sorlie hag given his unqualified endorse: | deed. what it means. numbers pump, it means something very ex- tra. Grubby’s daddy had paid him that very morning, and how wa: the fastest gasoline I have,” Nick. ing to himself, “I'll give him the gas- oline, but I'll fix his car so he can't go so very fast. ing something else, but I'll turn the timer back.” the timer i regulates its speed, so that a car cannot go fa Grubby’s car, or rather his father's car, he did something to the timer, and away started Grubby. little woodchuek boy. going any faster wagon! of the hood and looked in at engine. | { i The Tangle Start Something LIE PRESCOTT HE LITTLE MARQU CARE OF THE CRE DRAWER—CO) the nurse continued, Mrs, said: ““T'm going to | going to stay bo. I'm not naughty you. with such a down suddenly, He wobbed little on his uncertain legs, Jack started forward to hold him up. In doing so he ran against him, and the baby fell, hitting his head against the rocker there. It bled a and then, of course, broke loose. “Jack was so frightened commenced to scream, and to pick the baby up. The baby, sens- ing that something terrible had hap- pened, tried to push Jack away, and as this was the first time that the baby had not welcomed his brother with open arms, Jack grew more and more frightened. “Mrs. Prescott Senior, seeing what terrible havoc she had stirred up, pandemonium that he stopped ‘I cannot stand this noise,’ andj left the room. “L wiped the few drops of blood, from the baby's forehead—he really was only scratched, Mrs. Prescott— and had succeeded in calming Jack down a little when you came in, and he began to be frightened of you. That is the whole story.’ I don't think I was ever so angry in my life, Little Marquise. Before I thought, I said: “Nurse, you must réfuse to receive “Rising abruptly, she put Buady | about | mother. and | best we can. little, ? {this matter is a very important one | office. ;cott was busy. wife who is as Madame Prescott in the nur: again, unless I am present.” “Thank you, Mrs, Prescott,” she ered. “I had determined, if you t let me do this, to give in my notice, although 1 va been with Ty ever | you so many yars, and I adore the children; but T cannot get along with that old woman.” ‘Hush, Hannah, you must not speak that way of Mr. Prescott's We will just have to do the She is old and rather elfish, you know, and has no sy hy with modern methods of br ing up children,” “Will you please Prescott about thi Mr. Prescott? I am quite sure that Mrs. Prescott will tell her son, and he will think that I am to blame.” “Yes, I will call him now to make sure he will be home tonight. I think speak to Mrs. I went to the phone and called his A young girl's voice an- swered. “Is Mr. Prescott there?” I “He is busy now. Who is ing?” ’ “It is Mrs. Prescott speaking. Will you tell him I wish to talk with him?” “I told you, Madam, that Mr. Pres- I will tell him as soon as he has finished.” ‘Did you understand that it is his ing for him?” “I know you said so, but you might, be some other dame. I will not ask for him until he finishes his confer- ence. Leave your number.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ked. speak- ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | THE BAD GAZOOKUMS MAKES TROUBLE The next time Grubby Woodehuck came to the filling station where the Twins sold gasoline, Grubby said, “I want some good fast gasoline, Mister Nick, the fastest high powered gasoline you have—about 70-75!" Which, my dears, is very high in- Only I. haven't the least idea But if you ever see like that on a gasoline ick hadn't forgotten the visit that] yorried he about his son’s speeding. “All right, Grubby, [I'll give you said But all the time he was say- I'll pretend I'm fix- If you don't know, I'll tell you that the thing on a car that It be fixed t at all. So when Nick filled up the tank on “For the land’s sake!” cried the “This car isn't than a gar! What can be the matter? He got out and lifted up the lds e He examined it carefully all over. But not a thing could he sce that was wrong. i “Let me look at it,” said a voice just then. And didn’t a bad little gazookums step up right beside Grubby’s auto- mobile and start to pound at it and shake it and do everything to it a gazookums can possibly do. A gazookums, since you are asking, } never stood still long enough for anyone to take his picture or even get a good enough look to draw him. But. he’s a rascally little goblin who likes to get people into mischief, and always keeps out of trouble himself. Suddenly the gazookums said, “I know what's wrong! It’s your timer. Give’ me your cork-screw, I mean your screw-driver, and your monkey- veh and your hammer, and I'll ix it.” So Grubby got into his- tool box and handed out the things to the grzookums, and the gazookums start- ed to work. And soon he had that timer fixed so fast that greased lightning couldn’t be mentioned in the same breath. And Grubby thanked him and started off. “Hooray!” he shouted. “This is the most fun I've had ye! is where the good. kind, friendly little rabbit boy did Grubb a good turn. If it hadn't been for him thre is no doubt that Grubby would sooner or later have broken his neck. saw and heard He saw the ga- Cuties Cottontail the whole business, zookums fix the little automobile so that it would go fast, and he knew how worried Grubby's parents were. So he went off under the blackberry bushes and thought and thought. Finally he said to himself, MONDAY, Wey KEMNNY DONT Do iT - HE MGAT GeT MAP nd it might not work, just the same. I've got a pretty gocd idea if T can just carry it out and get all my friends to help I owe the woodchucks something anyway, for they have always been kind to me. So I'll try and save. Grubby's neck and the new blue au- tomobile and everything.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925 ervice, Inc.) Vil go around and spread the! RTOM SIMS Don't marry if this stuff fails to amuse you. New Jersey man broke his jaw laughing at a friend’s joke. Kellogg has barred Saklatvala from America, But he might slip in disguised as a radio station. Pullman porters say they don't want to be called George. We find they don’t want to be called at all. man is kicking about he is usually kicking him- When a something self about. “itl Another evil of prohi ion is it keeps the weather from being the world’s most discussed subject. Storm blew a Hammonton (N. J.) girl out of bed. Many mothers would enjoy such a storm every morning. Isn't it a wonder reformers don’t get disgusted and let the world go where they think it will? Hurry through life takes up entire- ly too much time. ice at the radio We impatiently await they will broadcast fried They fried eggs world’s fair. the. da chicken, Environment isn’t everything: Lots of people who take a bath every Sat- urday night can’t 1. Tinsmith % St. two floors in Louis. Was fixing the gutter on @ house. Might call him an eaves- dropper. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) » (BOT THAT WAS IN THE ! SEE !— Look AT BY CONDO ALL THE BALD HEADS HERG TONIGHT ! OVER THERE'S AN EXTRA FING, SPECIMEN | WHENGVER T Sée A BALD HEAD IT MAKES Me THINK OF SS Sey (LARBLES AND GENTLEMEN: _ WHENEVER A HAM COMEDIAN FEAICS To. MAKS A HIT WITH HIS BUM HUMOR AND TRIES TO RAIsSe A LAUGH BY GUYING PEOPLE IN THe AUDIENCS IT MAKES ME CRAZY To GO ON THe STAGE, Too !!! ; investigation “Constitution Week” is a_ fing thing—provided it is the constitution that you celebrate, It may help revive loyalty to our | institutions and familiarity with the; document in which they were first embodied. If it could also arouse us to face our problems with the courage, fore- sight and resourceful open-minded- ness which the fathers of the con- stitution showed in meeting theirs it would be well worth a week's hol day for the whole population, every year. But cherish no illusions. This may be what “constitution week should be for, but it is by no means what some of its most vocifer- ous agitators want to use it for. They want ‘to “re-establish the constitution in the minds and hearts of the people,” not as a great mile- stone of human progress, but as & hitching-post, to prevent further Progress. To this end, they seek first to make an emotional cult of the text of the constitution, and then to use this emotion as atmonphers for their propaganda against the direct pri mary, direct legislation, public own- ership and labor unions. They put out popular commen- taries, in simplified lawyerese, on the legalistic rather than the institu- tional and historic aspects of the constitution. They are interested, not so much in what is in the constitution as in the fact that certain things are not if it—not in the great steps of pop- ular government and individual lib- erty which it took forward, but in the other steps which its ‘framers wisely refrained from including in the first effort. Not the constitution's trust in the people, but the limits beyond which it was not willing to risk the first trial of that trust, must be our guide. The most sacred dogma is that nothing which the fathers were not yet ready to venture in 1789 shall ever be ventured thereafter. Eighteenth-century poli and nineteenth-century economics shall forever be the last word in human progress, and the constitution shall be their’ barricade. It shall be the Aristoteles and the Talmud of scholastic text-fetichism; nothing which it omits shall be per- missible even to think. By making doubt of the i fath- ers, especially ions, wickedly unpatriotic, we set our con- sciences to guard the portals of the intellect against {the intrusion of ideas. If this is to be the spirit of con- stitution week—and there are very’ busy agitators trying to make it so-— then the sooner we make it a real constitution week, to study the con- stitution as a living institution rath- er than as a Byzantine parchment, the better it will be, fot the consti- tution, for the country, and for us. The appointment of the special air service investigating committee will serve, among other things, the im- portant purpose of separating the i of General Mitchell from the investigation of aviation. From the military s‘ndpoint, it was necessary to demote him in the first place, and it may be necessary to accommodate him now with the martyrdom which he is so osten- tatiously seeking. But, if so, the re- sult must not be, or even seem to be, the hushing up of what may be serious questions in regard to avia-t tion itself, A separate board, conspicuously competent, and at the same time in- dependent, will not only find out the; truth—an army or navy board might do that—but will close the mouths of any who would impeach the good faith of any less disinterested body. Now we shall have the truth— and know we have it. ——_—________- i Newsof Our | | Neighbors | ——_—-—______—_-_-e McKENZIE Mrs. Roscoe Boven and Mrs. P. P. Bliss represented th ity re cently at a meeting held at Bi marck under the auspices of the Parent-Teachers’ association held at that place. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hendershott are the parents of a baby boy. Mrs. Hendershott. was formerly Miss Es- ther Gagner. School opened Sept. 7th with the following teachers charge: . H. Marmonagle, principal; Miss Dora Ackerman, seventh and eighth rs. ; M. Mertholf, fourth, fifth and sixth; Miss Angeline Schiegs, first, second and third. The high school housed this year in the main ‘building, while the seventh and eighth grades occupy the old school building that was used last year by the high school. : The friends of Miss Norma Leath- ers pleasantly surprised her in hon- or of her birthday. J. B. Swanick, who has been in business here for the past twenty years, has left for Carrington, N. where he has gone into a sit ine. He ‘expects to move his family to the new location in the near future. Mr. and Mrs, R, E. Meyers, Misses || recovery. Lillian Watson, Beula and Dorothy Boven, Wayne Warren, Lloyd’ and Warren Clizbe picnicked at Wild- wood Sunday. B. W. Graham and family and Miss Esther Cedarstrom of Wing ‘spent Sunday with Mrs. C. E. Crum. A. I. Inwood of Portland, Oregon, spent a few days there transacting business matte! The local nimrods started out in the “wee sma” hours of Wednesday morning, September 16th, and in spite ofthe heavy fog succeeded in ‘bagging nearly their limit of game. Threshing is nearing completion in this vicinity. Some fields yielded ®, good number of bushels per acre, while other fields barely paid ex- Penses, R. J. Fairchild of the local bank, who was taken to Bismarck and treated for a blood clot_on the brain, is reported improving and will be able to leave the hospital some time this week. Donald Bertholf. left Friday for Fargo and Glyndon, Minn., to spend Sunday with A. L. Bertholf and fam- ily. The fore part of this week he entered Jamestown ‘college Jamestown to begin work as a fres' ly of Jamestown spent a lays last, week visiting at the George Manly home. Mrs. L. E. Heaton returned from Shakopee, Minnesota, where she has been taking treatment, She is ‘some- what improved and her many friends are hoping for a speedy and absolut Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ludeman of Menoken spent Sunday at the home of L. E. Heaton. | SEPTEMBER 28, 1925 left town and who will leave short- ly, are: Miss Norma Long, primary teacher, to Underwood; Donald Ber- tholf, Jamestown College; Rodger Bertholf, Byrdia Leathers, Arrah Thompson, Bismarck High schoo Marion Clizbe, Coldwater, Michigan, High school. Howard Griffith will go to @ vocational school in Minneapo- lis and M Lilliam Watson will en- ter the Teachers’ Céllege at Valley City. Miss Willa Dush, an instructor in the Teachers’ College at Valley City, is visiting here with her cousin, Mrs. L. E. Heaton. E, W, Anderson is entertaining his brother, Russell, of Minneapolis this week, M. H. Johnson and family visited at the Pillsbury home at Moffit Sun- A Macmonagle atended the high school principals’ meeting of Burleigh county in Bismarck Satur- jay. Mrs. C. Smythe is sepnding a few days visiting relatives in Bismarck. Sam Coons, formerly of this place, ‘but now of Detroit, Michigan, is here visiting friends and relatives. Miss Pauline Envik has gone to Sterling, where she expects to stay for some time. Bruce Belk of the Copelin Motor Co. is demonstrating a new Ford touring car. Every Ford owner is in- terested. W. L, Watson went to Mandan on business Saturday. C.N. Stevens is back from his trip to Mott and is busy cutting the last of this year’s growth of weeds about his house. Rodger Bertholf, who is attending Bismarck high school, had the mis- fortune to break a bone in the fore arm during a practice football game Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wildfang have gone to Minneapolis for a few day Mr. and Mrs. Andy Ducett rf turned from a few days’ visit to the James River Valley. They report a heavy rainfall there and heavy roads all the way up from Jamestown. Henry Long, who has been spend- ing a year in New York, is visiting with his brother, Fred Long, before returning to his home at Ontario, California. Mis? Dorothy Boven, who will be- come the bride of Warren Clizbe of McKenzie this fall, was the honor guest at a miscellancous shower giv- en Wednesday by Mrs. W. L. Watson and Miss Lillian Watson. About twenty-five guests enjoyed the aft- ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hughes, Sr., have returned from Duluth, where they spent the summer. They report a very nice time and are very much improved in health and spirits. Lillian Coons and Martin Sedivic were married in Bismarck Saturday. V. P. Heaton of Wing spent a few days in town, Mrs. Frank Lambert of Arena spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, L. FE. Heaton. Word has been received that Han- nah Jessell, one of the pioneers here of the early '80’s, is dead at her home in Glendive, Montana. Details were not given. Mrs. Jessell was one of those early settlers that could endure hardships with grim determination and brav- ery. If the ‘history of her pioneer days could be written it would com- pare favorably with some other pi- oneers who have made up this coun- try’s history. Some of the settlers here remember instances of her de- | she ed a” one of which was that she led a cow from Jamestown to McKenzie, the trip costing her twen- ty-five cents, and another time when had the opportunity to make a it to her old home in England she vi [packed a cowhide into a bundle and pe it with her. New York, Sept. 28.—The matter of elegant clothes at first nights in the theaters has long puzzled me. Certainly the most stylishly dressed women are to be seen on such occa- sions, but I notice that women whose names are high in society and in art circles usually "are. very” plainly garbed. The women in rich garments and decorated with fine jewelry usually are unknowns. Kelcey Allen, who is the oldest first nighter in point of service in town, explained that to me the other night. “The women with the finest clothes,” said Kelcey, “usually are Fifth Avenue modistes. Sometimes they are accompanied by their pret- tiest model. They dress to attract attention, also to create envy among other women in the audience. “Young ladies in the audience point out these elegantly gowned ladies to their husbands or to their sugar papas with the gentle hint that the dress would make anyone beautiful. And they know just where that certain dress can. be bought. The modistes never wear the same dress twice, Each first night offers a new opportunity for direct adver- tising. “And another peculiar feature is that the society women who really ‘put on the dog’ at the opera leave their jewels and finery at home when they go to the theater.” Went to the radio exposition the other night and observed that de- monstrators in the various booths were pretty generally at a disad- vantage when trying to explain their wares to the patrons, The fellows who went to the radio show to see generally knew more about sets and chargers than the fellows who built jem. She was a g $18 a week when she won a Beauty Contest. Her pictures were in the papers. She was offered flattering contracts to go in- to the movies. She finally accepted a position in the chorus at $50 3 week. But she couldn’t.wear clothes. And now she’s a Little Shop . Girl again, earing $18 a week, —JAMES W. DEAN. RADIO 1S THE one THING WITH wHien ~~ WAVE To TUNE Swe ow we