The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR ‘The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper > HE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) fa ac ne icine oA Enea Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, nD. cee a at ho postoffice at ‘Bism: econ ail mat . SGartes D. alsen: oe i ae President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ...........++ M Daily by mail, per, year, (in Bismarck). Daily by mail, per year, : ne wid wey Lege Daily by mail, outside 01 ota... : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwi: geane =e 7d E COMPANY —> ‘DETROIT + Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg. ‘ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - (Official City, State and County Newspaper) a A Merging of the First Guaranty and the Capitai Security banks is along the line of pri ‘a stabilization of banking conditions throughout the state. This matter had been pending for months fand only bec: esre it meant a strengthe: r North Dakota communities. With the closing of the} ¢ = City National bank, the uni card Si Oa i RN. such an organizatisn dues an immense good by cre- ating a public interest and a public apprehension concerning the safety of many securities. More and more the average citizen is coming to the con- clusion that his judgment is not to be trusted in mat- ters of investment and he is beginning to make use of the banking facilities of the nation as consult- ants before purchasing stocks or bonds. This is a distinctly favorable trend. The invest- ment of money is a complex business, clearly under- stood, for the most part, only by those men who have made the subject their life’s study and who have at their command immense founts of research and in- vestigation. Their experienced minds quickly sort the genuine from the spurious and save investors millions of dollars every year. Few men would 2 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to) think of operating upon themselves for appendicitis, ‘credited in this pa-| for they would lose their lives in the attempt. But per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin] with their mcney, they are quite willing to them- published herein. All rights of republication of all! selves perform the operation that may impoverish other matter herein are also reserved. them. The investor must wake up and resolve to Foreign Representatives take expert advice, so casily ailable, Who’s Crazy Now? Those croakers who maintain that married life - Fifth Ave. Bldg-! drives people crazy had better sharpen their wits to defend their argument and get their facts to- gether, for Dr. Horatio M. Pollock, the New York State Hospital commi: issue with that opinion and is prepared to prove his! ress toward] point with his carefully compiled and verified sta- tistics. statistician of. n, is taking He has just completed the tabulation of a sur- ame ready for announcement Monday. | yey, the first of its kind, just made under the super- The state banking board has urged merging where vision of William C. Hunt, chief statistician for ng of banking facilities in} the United States government on population. The data presented covers the calendar year of 1922 and | n of these two institu-} shows that 51.4 per cent of those commited to in: j,, ( f \, 1 (Re Sbittek, chutt ot tee tart manee! Mites Pe ye cuny eo tions shculd make for better service in Bismarck. | stitutions for the insane were single, 844 per cen = Along with this too, com - reorganize the Cit the Auditorium. Before any feasible plan can be placed before the bus' complete report con ning the too much delay. They have been given merely idle rumors to date. : No one knows whether irregularities were pres- zent. ‘Neither does any depositor want to make * groundless charges, but they demand the facts and ate entitled to them. No stockholder in the City Na- tional bank should escape the liability such a s + trust ‘imposes upon him. There is a great need for energetic action in the banking affairs of this and other states. Insolvent banks should be closed without delay. Mergings and reorganizations should be fostered and encour- aged by the state banking department, but not one insolvent bank in the state should be permitted te obtained in the past. There are some sad ilica- ments attending the closing of the City N: nal bank. The same is true of many state banks sponsib’ toward depositors is essential if tl banking structure is to be upheld. Their imterests always are paramount and any bank in the state permitted to receive deposits when insolvent: makes an idle mockery of bank examination. The quicker the house is cleaned, the sooner confidence will be zestored. ~ Mergings such as those arrived at in this city and honest attempts at reorganization of closed banks are ‘steps in the right direction and every busi man and depositor should cooperate to that end, Madame Sch mer, Altruist Henry Ford will recall Mme. Rosika S¢hwimmer. Mme. Schwimmer has had her picture in the pa pers again lately. Hungarian born, she will be- : ¢ome a naturalized citizen of the United States in December. She announced it recently while visit- + ing in Washington. The press, commenting on the news, referred t. * her as a “famous feminist” and as “former Hun- garian minister to Switzerland.” Mme. Schwimmer is, indeed, famous as a fem- . inist and as a diplomat, but she is far more famous * as having furnished the inspiration for Henry Ford’: _ celebrated peace expedition. In the early days of the world war a meeting of 2 women was held at The Hague to protest againsi ? the conflict. Letters were sent to leading states- ~ men in all the belligerent countries. = Mme. Schwimmer was at this meeting. The let- « ters fell into her hands. She appears to have taken them seriously—to have interpreted them as meaning that the bellig- erents would stop fighting if someone would inter- ; Yene and tell them to quit. She could find no government that considered i ¢ anything like so simple a proposition, In fact she éould find no government that would listen to ner 2 $0 she decided to “go to the country. * Mme. Schwimmer visited the United States. He: # mission was one which required financial backing. She had trouble in finding it until, finally, someone £ introduced her to Henry Ford. . _ Ford was in a frame of mind to listen. The war = shocked him. When Mme. Schwimmer said to him, * “This can be ended if somebody says the word,” he £ accepted it literall; ; , “Wil foot the bill,” he promised and Mme. Schwim- = mer went ahead and organized the expedition. Her |. plan was not quite as weird as what resulted from it. | #1 Nevertheless, to Mme. Schwimmer belongs credit | for staging one of the most extraordinary perform- ances of its kind in history, and to Ford belongs eredit for having financed it. =! At any rate, it was altruis é $ : Investment Protection . The bankers of the nation, members of the invest- ment bankers’ association, are planning what they will be the most vigorous campaign ever con- against the sale of worthless securities. i s the effort to] were married, 9 per cent were widowed, 2.1 per cent tional bank. The depositor] were divorced and 3.1 per cent were not accurately took the only possible action Saturday evening at) classified. 7m Apparently when a man and a woman are “crazy” ess interests of the city, 4] y yeh about each other to get married, that is sets of the bank! y uatly the full extent of their lunacy. The storms and responsibility of stockholders must be secured, and stress of married life apparently do not go The depositors are entitled to all the facts without nearly as far to drive persons crazy as the loneliness of being single. Measuring the Loss (St. Paul Dispatch) What is the difference between the virgin lands of the northwest that once raised 40 bushels of wheat to the acre and those of today that seem bountiful if they yield but 20? Experiments at the West Central Experiment Station farm at Morris, Minn., | this year, the results of which were announced receive a dollar of deposits. Too much leniency has4 Pye, jay, give the answer. Land that a year ago gave 14.52 bushels to the acre, this year gave 20.8 bushels, and similar re- sults were found in the comparative yields of oats and barley. This year the land was fertilized with 200 pounds to the acre of 40 per cent acid phos- phate, at a cost cf $4 an acre. The increased yield zave a 50 per cent profit on the transaction. Forty years ago the land of this region was rich in phosphate, but repeated croppings have exhausted ‘t. If we are to return to the once bonanza yields of those days, there must be put into the soil that which has been taken out of it. The land is no: the same—though it may lock as black and rich as it did when the fi plow scored it with the first black furrow. The measure of our loss is, in dollars and cents, $4 an acre to get 20 bushels and many times $4 to return—if that were possible—to the original 40 bushels. Bank Depesitors Deserve Better Protection (Kansas City Star) Making all allowances that should be made for vegional farm = depressicn and other influences against the stability of banks, the number of bank failures still reflects seriously on the banking busi- ness and the regulations governing it. While na- tional banks have been affected to some extent, the fosses to depositors have been mainly through state anks, many of them small concerns in small com- munities. While many of the insolvent banks have been small, the aj pgate loss has been great, for in Missouri alone there have been forty-three fail- ures this year. Also the gravity of financial loss is not necessarily in the amount lost. A few hun- dred dollars tu one depositor may be much more serious than the loss of thousands to another de- positor. Thuman W. Richards of the state finance depart- nent favors limiting the number of Danks, grant- ing pern ion only when the population justifies the setting up cf a bank, and requiring prospective bank officials to pass examinations in order to qual- aspire. Indorsements of this general policy have been given by W. J. Bailey, governor of the Fed- eral Reserve bank, and other bankers. Roy Bone, state bank commissioner for Kansas, holds similar views and expects to press his recommendations on the next Kansas legislature. Adequate preparation for banking as a require- | ment for official position in a bank is particularly desirable and the training may be had in paying positions of mihor character. It is not as if such training had to be taken at a school requiring tui tion and cther outlay, and no income meanwhile. The necessary education’ should be required, and it shculd be sufficient to meet banking tests. The banker who is too young, who lacks experi- ence or is without the natural qualifications for banking, fails in his judgment of men seeking loans and in his judgment of the basis on which the loans are made. He is apt to be too optimistic. He has n> financial background, even in his own communi- ty. He is not discriminating in his acceptance of collateral and the estimation of land values. When others take advantage of his shortcomings he takes advantage of the trust the depositors put in him. States have not appreciated, or they have not been governed by, the tremendous responsibility they assume when they establish banks for the de- posit of the people’s money. Kansas and Oklahoms depositors with state guarantee laws, These have not worked. They are not the real solu- What is needed most is more rigid require- in character, ability and experience to en- banking . This, enforcement ify for the responsible, positions to which they : are exceptions to the extent that they undertook to | h: “eory ——"—~. AND NOM, Winam “S\ Cua * -QonT FORcET D AWAYs * BE KINDO ALLVING | | Mra, Lane had given Faith aj mein the midst of my Satarday’s bak Minee > = ‘ thorough,. old-fashioned training in| ing. Jo; Miss Peabody a chair : a. eae ‘ | housekeeping in. all its, manifold| *omthe Mining room”, AWNVTAING UNKIND To ‘branches. Mrs, Lane’s mother and her| Miss 3 active eyes were THEM FOR any / | | grandmother before her had dedicated] darting arecdily’ over the kitehen | neh of which was cov. iT OF MONEN’ “ai Saturday to baking, silver-polishing,| table, every. i Nae oe é ? mitror-polishing, floor wating and| ered with great brown loave | from kitchen pantry to parlor should] buns. “I’m so you were not | be spick and span for Sunday. able to come to the: Parent-Teachers Faith followed the tradition slav-| meeting yesterday, Miss Lane. This ishly, though she sometimes rebelled| is my first year here, you know. I’ve at baking innumerable loaves of| been principal of the Upton school in bread for an insatiable family, when| Marlboro for fifteen years.” baker’s bread ‘actually cost less and| “Marlboro!” Faith ‘repeated, at a purchase would have given her| loss for word: is hours of freedom. “Yes, I'm a first cousin of Mr. S urday following Mr.| mour—Mr. Ralph Cluny’s son-in-law, Cluny’s ceremonious visit for the pur-| you know. I made my home with Ee of asking Cherry’ rents for}the Allbrights. Joy—what dear er hand in marriage, Faith went] child she is!—tells us*some rather— | doggedly on with the traditional Sat-| astonishing news, Miss Lane. 0: ul "3 wo ld her heart was| maybe it was yd achild’s imagina- heavy with fot ng. Every nook] tion running riot. We all know how land cranny of the shabby little Myr-|children are! Jt really isn’t lying, {tle street house was fragrant with| you know—just a vivid, creative im- the spicy odors of new-baked yeast| agination seeking expression. You bread, ham roasted with cloves and| are familiar with new child psy- cinnamon bark, “marble” cake, choc-| chology, I presum: ta? These nuls ‘ olate layer ca isin-nut cookies,| Miss Peabody ‘talking very ¢ ; mince pies and vegetable soup. fast, and vei ly; but there { WOULD PROBABLY GosT ; For the named, all- the left-] was a hard edge eal and a . US Sixty: CENTS IN / ¥ ia : over vegetables of thé week, kept| determination to have it satisfied that te J > | sweet and fresh in’ covered mason| made her voice not half so pleasant \ The S$ ORE < 5 jars in-the ice box were thrown into| in Faith’s ears as its owner imagined { y the big iron kettle, to be used as the| it. bg noe ? xc { 1 main meal for Saturday night sup-| “Do you mind telling me just what an important part of every| Joy has been ing?” Faith was luring the coming week, or as| glad of the necessity to stir the corn- Jong as it lasted. There was precious | starch ee in the double boiler, little waste in the Lane kitchen, for it gave her an opportunity to Faith was rubbing evaporated milk| t her flushing face away from pie, Just before popping it into the y—er—she says, or so the chil- oven—the film of cream to be trans-| dren told me, that , OF your formed in the baking into a rich,| sister, too, of ngaged to be crackly glaze over the entire crust of| married to Mrs. Ailbright’s father. the lordly pie—when the ‘door bell| It sounds quite ridicalous when put rang. into words, doesn't it? But I thought ji ho Foi ag oh rage i woke; it would be best to talk with her 0 her le sister, who was “licking” | mother—or you—befe the bowl in. which the marble cake! her ued craw Samaria had been mixed. : “Here, wipe your! “Joy, you may ‘take a couple of face! You've got cake batter on the, those raisin cookies and run out to tip of your nose under your left! play.” Faith. gave the red-faced, je Blegs! “Ht io canvanser, tll Frightened child her release, with him the fs of the house isn’t in,| long, level look that boded ill for and won't be. Joy's future of the next few hours, = wes ~ . The mince pie had joined its twin| then turned to face her inquisitor, some day. Judith had plodded| ! nd Faith was just turn-| “I am afraid my little. sister has through her classes, unable to con-|iM& the beautifully brown spice cake) been very indiscreet, Miss Peabody, , | jure up the needed enthusiasm to| Ut of ‘its round pan upon a folded| but I can’t let you think she was— make them interesting. ¥ ART Marae Joy pods “ag ite tat lying as whatever .the new child 2tic came ig for his share of her! Joy whispered, her sharp, little gray|" “Mr. Cluny Ras asked my sister. ry 2 ti rauslncae bse cele. ar: ene dined eyes protruding with a queer mixture] Cherry, to mar im, and has asked yy three obscure’ gerundives. He had to of horror and welt Jtbortaven: FRC) aay mother tnd Tather to sanction the WHAT HAS GONE, BEFORE Jude, that’s abominable. Of] relinquish it to Miss Reasey. “Show her in here,” Feith heat-| kixwermission’ She said te reuse Dean Timothy Brown, of the |course I cared. Only, I wasn't much| | When the bell rang, Judith cleared) fished face darkened with anney- earn eroualy discipline committce, rules Pend- | in condition just then—to know what) her desk and made ready to leave.| ance. “Mother's special custard ta| burning ‘with a nteadne teare fee leton University under strict law. pene 4 e had fallen into the college habit) in the double boiler, and I have to] but she did not see fit to.add that | Judith Martin, a new teacher, ust so,” said Judith, more grimly going hatless about the town; but watch it every minute.” As Joy| neither Cherry nor Mr. Cluny had defies the conventions by seek- ‘ je had a sweater und a bright| seemed to be. on the point of fri for ‘© moment conceded the tegert: ing as her friends, Eric Waters, ric fell back in in| cned flight out of the back door,| ance of Mr. Lane's opposition. a radical student, Will Wetherc!,, | looked gloomily ahead. _ Th of Dean Brown was in| Faith whirled upon her. “Do, as 1| “I am both immensely, sstonished frat brother, and Eve Ger-' 7 “I suppose you came back with the| Avon — place, direetly | west, across| tell you, Joy Lane! And if you'vel and immensely relieved” Mion Pee. ‘2 town widow. owd and one of the fellows piloted| town from College road. Judith left! been up’ to any devilment at achool | body. rose, the amile still beaming in , at night was a total ie campus a 00) estern | 3" y b a] astronomy | department, ‘Jitank.'"T’ tried to get you by phone| path. Leaves were coming down at! yyy shank yout, I'll bet you know Sunday with the albrights Te Mart nd disapproves of her jay, to beg your pardon, and! every gust of wind, and she found aj “Honest, I don’t!” Joy turned slow-| boro, and I shall eertainly tell them tances. when they said you'd left town, I| childish .pleasure in kicking the back toward the dining room.) of your father’s sensible stand in the hand Eric get into many | felt pretty rotten. That’s why I ran| along the path ahead of her. Ge at pot eral : scrapes and escapades, the last of |up to the city myself. This town) The winding road that led acro: And that’s! “You will of course use your own which was a moonlight hike with | didn't look so good to me, in my state| the Strathmore bridge was lined! is.” judgment, Miss Peabody, bot f wish Eve ‘s wet, from which i 4 Le PR RT carly tee you would not-mention the matter in q le paused, then spoke) autumn 5 { she .was. leading the way for ‘a 1. “Kitty” Shea, unsavory town ch petuously. “1” sweat, Judith, Til| of chaste Colonial architecture were! tue wat leading aod very taeee tee Deli en eo ae, acter. Judith had been left be ashamed of this as long as I live.| set in quiet: rows behind the elm#, ing woman of middle-age; ® soman| of his intentions in regard to Cherry hind by the party of hikers, and I wouldn't have left you out there, their green blinds carefully drawt| who looked as if she seldom smiled,| and I think the news should come to when she found Eric unconscious, | with him for a million dollars. You| and their brass knockers gleaming but those cold blue eyes were now im was forced to accept the offer of { know that, don’t you?” in the afternoon sun. beaming cordially behind thick-lensed lips set in a line the seat and) Shea to drive them both back to | “Eric,” said Judith, bluntly, “just| The dean's house’ in the side street) _ tips, set ia a lit town. what do you know about SI ud was a Tudorgcottége of dark stucco ly sou i ‘ to the Distressed hy the affair, Judith | “Enough to realize that he’s no fit! and shingles? with}two funereal little mother?’ You look “pppcecngoree ts hearts of, peankish - rope cig decides to run up to the city for | playmate for a littl 1.” He gave) fir trees in jars on the door posts. | she extended a Jarge, firm hand,| ment, Miss ‘2 the week-end. At the station she | Judith a shec “You know| The dean's wife) met Judith at the) vhich Fuith clasped after wipiiig het Minas ; meets Dean and Mrs. Timothy | it was my blamed jealousy that! door, “It was good of you to come,| Own hands free af flour pedis i e the trouble. You teased me| Miss Martin.” She led the way into| ei eae : ‘ Prien says his wife is going forall f, by flirting with that] the living room, /in which a wood ciel vieee pagina of gone cose Cherre ection: to at Sees oe ee i Wetherel. ee fire burned., Rows of books and end ceive you in here, but you've caught| ment crushes Mrs. Lane. . » Eric, pe ded i i Y injured} ity that Judith had j : clty hotel with a handsome man, | it wasn't that. It was, your injured) frugei Store i the homes of teachs| “This isn't Utopia, Women don't| A moment later, the portieres at NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) frog in every puddle.” ers. A bowl of bittersweet stood on| mind their own affairs, in-this world.| the wide door of the living room CHAPTER XVI Tar tice a tik ohh and. abithatl aalie, Please tell me the truth, When and wly, and the dean entered. E rted a The dean's wife was laughing over! samoly.. Netti . B tioned her guest to) to whom are you going to. relate our Tivhat have you done with my door her shoulder at the man. Sparkling,| Sciences ana cmiets, thea rps chair by the fire. Judith saw| meeting in Middlebu: Under-| mat?” he said to his wife. “Every- richly gowned, she was scarcely! Stedway steps. B.deen chair by the ire. aoc biuek! stand, ‘I'm making no. demands on| body ‘will tratk dust “over my bell recognizable as the little gray wo-|" “Good night,” he growled. ress, open at the throat. Her hair| You for any thing except. informa-| carpet.” righ who had left Judith in the train.] yudith went into the house and| was dressed in the extreme of sim-|tion. If you say you will tell, I en he saw Judith and his face ther she nor her companion] toynd a small boy waiting in the| plicity and her hands were ringless.| shall make my plans. If not, I'll “How do you do, Miss saw the girl watching them from the| halk He was gnawing at an all-day|” Suddenly "she. turned to. Judith.| drop the matter, and—try:to believe He was setting his um- next table. All their attention was! sucker. “Let's not begt about the bush. What| you.” A look of weariness crossed| brella.in a corner. “I trust you and’ fixed on each other. The man came " «yoy Miss Martin?” he gurgled,| are you going to do about. it, Miss| her white face, 7 Mr. Waters enjoyed your week-end back to his own chair and sat down.! shifting the sucker to one side of| Martin?” 4 trip.” Xs Judith tes see his hand stealing his mouth. “Why, I dont know what—” be- (To Be Continued.) neross the '- “When she assented, he pulled a|gan Judith. But the dean's wife i baoscocad 7 Pi ey him. ores sate ont at Bie DePket Ae weer the S ores Lisa, What tite Teawed at her curi- am she has an enemy. tm ee 1 handed {it to her: “Miss Brown told] “Yau de. kno : ously. “Perhaps Hing| next chapter she saves Myra from a Then Judith moved in hei iv = ing to do about it.” 2 and the dean’s wife caught pea gee don teanypony Pet ariWell,” replied: Judith, slowly, “I' me the truth. been afraid! horrible scandal. ‘ her. She did not break off in the|S0vog™ don't meddle in magters ‘thet do’ not to words she et, addressing . 10 fer 4 ge 2 concern me. T' hope that answers i 5 er companion, but Judith saw her face] The Horace class at two o'clock! your question ” BARBS go white. , - | shook her head again. ‘Look he: iss Martin, I'm goii id Judith’ ate her salad rapidly and| Monday marked the end of an irk Brown: nd ae Stiieycarler on ine’ fabio Te pashed Ae chair as ee ge any ae now, and it rd z By Tom Simo at the dean’s wife followed her m ou B more sympathe! with horror-struck eyes as she left toward ny dilemma Beware the ‘politicians bearing the dining room. | | ‘ : — - car eee the vg Hides rn cigars. Ths cred night train to Bendle-| < ~u ’ (3 foment. Ped i for the agar’ ant Rrnaslang Bi Madecided to aie ton pie! up returning week-enders' IT A MINUTS —nrn, mot rown is a man. e former r acres oO! long the way, until it w ly WA ia. hate him, T hate him, 1 hate him.”| land and Peed reer “the one that had’ first LA BRAIN TEASCR The words crackled in’the still room, “2 cl r this taken Judith to the universit But < ‘ She rose from her chair: and jim in pin money for this time, the clamor was a familiar walked in a long swinging a while. that embraced instead of ex- across the room and back to the er. i mantel. “You may do what you like New York night club charged $1 looked about. for Mrs.| | and think what you like, I for a glass of milk. They ought to be Brown, but did not see her on the x = him and I'm I deceived him.” able to keep the cows contented that train. Alighting on the throngedi |, ¥ _. Judith p. “Mrs. Brown, 1 latfory at Pendelton, she ran into ~ - don’t want you to tell me any more. ri ters, who had al: tepped } \ 7 You're sure having con-| Headlines th: the story: MAN from her train, bag in hand, “Bello, (6 zt 4 fa Airaid. "Tne sorty| ARRESTED. AB MIR’ GAR HITS way. Judith.” he said, reaching for her] 7 ‘ y Kine for you. You need never fear that) THAT OF TRAFFIC JUDGE. bag. She ylelded it to him gome- s 2 sour story will go irther.” — what hesitantly. _ Ne r i : ‘ wn’ Frost doesn’t hurt’ pumpkins, but “Come on,” he said to her, striding ma . it’s hard on coal bins. \ ahead. “I parkes my igen ise if % E topes” paubaa th a What yak jeder? Wall a rt c it t. 4 ti e = al ie el anyway. i el a car- Fou none. a i ea ‘ : . | Twelve year ‘ot it,” 1 had to. talk| load of ophones were derailed near yt] + 10 someone—or . + follow him through ihe crowd, "Nest| (BETWEEN A GREEN FROG SITTING F ‘a comforting hand the front of the train, they met Dean) On) A WATER LILY IN A POND IN: THE sent despets she ald. pO Brown, walk de down wi : his watch in his hand, and his face| (-SOBCULBS OF HONG KONG, ' CHINA, - ped gals Can't | &@—$$<$<$<—_——-——-_—$ sez ine bussed frown. id backed| | AND” A DOG. CHASING A CROSS-ENSD] | Fou scce up and thy te fight bee : i ‘ takcocen’ by Tinhe's fell » with grinning apologies.~The| i JACI RABBIT THROUGH A SANTACLARA a little?” ‘ 8 fooked at the two suitcases in Eric's) | VALLEY. PRUNG ORCHARD’ THAT WAS . bbing i cencares rast st veuh-wote which the dean barely acknowiedged’| i CLANTSD OY A FORTY«NINER, WHO ah yt eget ae dia aed > | helpless, ut her: In the car, Eric smoked a while) ‘(MADE THE TRIP AROUND THE’ HORN: weeping wom: | ad ea Matha plas: fo ‘wine dn sae, Judith stabbornly held ‘DURING THE CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH * mae nal slave to mortal going toward the Stedway hous: ~- : ye — - At ii Eric threw away h i , | When J have jeen the hungry occan aret. “Damn it, Judith, I logize, 5 gral er" as Pshoulde't have Grunk’ so muck on 4 f - : : : nshine| Advantage: on the’ kingdom ‘of: the prose Te ooh the gen e aa C “eawrhy “ager yee put: on And the firm soll win of the watery you a lot.” 1d ts " fe 5 " cs things and conie for a walk ‘| main, ‘ Judith’s silence was forbidding. j 1S Ge — me? she said. stop in Increasing store; with less, and “Come now, Jude, can't you for- 5 : where’ and ffins| loss with store; is volte did not sound humble > 4 , ; When 1 ha terchenge “Yeu,” she oni ~ can, de : f , , ett ve seen such int . just lool A , x ‘ state mfouniied the. mest time, Naturstiy, Sacer! pe ‘ : : ; se.” : ha seca ade J to be left out ‘in the woods with f ‘thus to rumi- with you on any opie hikes’ ae ; That Ti: “wit i “ iad ‘ " 3 Eric stovned the car and turned . 4 - As , i ‘Love away! Sod). Sore. 3 eae: ~ . > 5 pee A ry 2 Ne + } Wis no longer debonair, “Oh, ‘ »_ erin: marketing so that the whole house| Parker House rolls and fat raisin 2 Safes do ”

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