The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Aa Indeperdent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1927 HEALTHDIET ADVICE & Dr Frank Mc > ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE his cyes unbandaged, an unwavering smile \ playing over his face, he stood and took it. There was no cringing. There were no hys terics and sobbing about it. In the films he} All Set For Big Presidential Pageant an accusing world can be unkinder. guile. It would be equally: fair to} about Uncle George Norris, who soulfieal dnddaiey: Well Gul ” a + There seems to be the shacow of a doubt|When he chooses to be taciturn he is taciturn,|suegest that his fellow progressives) says that the more or less progres- sheeted cet cectlitied hee pil eat lat ne ee Sapa geet about his guilt for this deed. His trial, they|asking no man’s consent. possibility that t through their efforts a See eel ‘But But they shall sit, every man bear as high as ten tons of fruit to) ing able. I hope by the time you say, was not all it should have been. He was| An occasion in point was the white house|Borah might possibly be nominated, | the possibility of a progressive flop| under his vine and under his fig| “Tic rodern method of ing | aad this answer you have already (chosen as a “goat,” he says, because of pre-| breakfast given to members of the Republican} It is also true, however, that|toward the Democratic party does |tree—Micah 4:4, the apples with paper and packing tpeqallet whe “anderelsaa rose vious violations of the law of which he had|national committee. Whatever they may have Baral hed ren oe ae Bereh af no one Papen amore aes eee Ee ey the Infinite.| tem, in boxes has proved superior |treai stomach ulcers Sy ur ike en foun pau: And “burried into prison. a sag Seppger ells clap pe age roosting companions. His failure|ocrat, against Vare, the Republican, |—William Ellery Channing. : ies rela eager Rint aon nee The old. jailer at clairvaus: says he knows oy political attuation snd outlook. uacealets a Quien is innocent. He knows men, he says,|ly they hoped he would add a vocal postscript, =r and is sure Quien could not have done this. In|so to speak, to the written note of last August OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ang ER justice ae Lg the man an AY @ new about aa choosing tornD again !> eR. ‘i = Anne Aus trial, and be given every opportunity to prove supplementary deliverance was looked for E ie: we ’ om, his contention. between the fruit course and the oatmeal, but NES SIR WALTER,« FoRTY- FIVE SAAN fu VE Nove ONLY Before they had circled the large| smodering eyes did not laugh at | Even if he should prove it, would the world| there was nothing doing. Ditto between oat- NEXT TUESDAY, ~~ AND SOUND FYorwV-FIVE, IM A BOV living room, gracious and colorful hep They drew her urgently, until believe? usa) nd the bacon, eggs and toast that Ge LIME A NUT ~ AS A NUT, I MEAN SCOUT! ~—_ STEPPING On and dim, almost eathedral-lke with 8 te gat haraait aeere in their ————_ lowed. Ditto again between this course ani “To SAV, w- HM M+ KA¥-F- KAFE-F- i’ HEELS OF SIXTY M'SELT in eos: Ate watied calls) ae ; ie and rich Inut furnit d th a great effort she ‘hed | pe. Hemy Bunton Foudice, who has made|aage’and coffer” Dito the third time after] 2 peat A GREM WAR AL MA HEADES) guy Voutae, A Uae i | nara Ah fit i ate eae eraings » Dr. . fe pe ' i EGAD!~T WAS EXAMINED FoR HEAD of Me s/s never really danced before. The be se ra mo- ite a name for himself in this country as a|cigars were distributed, and ditto all the time BACK OR Al : magnetism of Bruce Patton flowed| mentof faintness. “Because I loved acher, said. the other day that on any fine| the smoke was curling up to the lofty ceiling. Av IPTV. THOUSAND DOLLAR INSURANCE ]| WHY SES’ A COUPLA from his trim, smart body into hers,| him,’ she answered his spoken ques- e the majority was sure to be wrong. He| Others had the hardihood to say something POLICV-TODAY, AND PASSED WITH WEEKS AGO AT-TH’ OWL's a ey Soresse iby Sat Teas ace Binaratbe?., Chan ho. rgent o> essed the opinion that the majority in| about politics and the public pulse in their re- FLNING COLORS ¢~ AN EXCELLENT CLUB, YoU WAS EXPLAINIA de Sahn ee he Be | ead hee San cag lous!” be preferred jazz to Chopin. spective bailiwicks. Mr, Coolidge listened, but EXAMPLE OF PHYSICAL PERFECTION! She felt Cherry’s eyes upon her,| ™uroured huskily, drawing her - r : 10! A BALD SPoT ON Yo}s i Pers) cea a “ lumerous ‘events have tended to bear out|said nothing. The flow of conversation ceased ate UG- GUMF~ Ki; as her sister danced dispiritedly, . Sd aan, ‘And how little your Fosdick’s statement about majorities, but|now and then so that the host might ta’e the : AYE-FF-F HEAD, —- SAID IT gulkily, with George Pruitt. | She| husbind understands the ‘magnifi- s just possible for a majority occasionally |lead. He took it now and again, hut not in COWF-¥-F- COWF-F- WORN OFF WHEN Vous Ra poy Sat Lager Te ire ot You” e ‘won! » right. For instance, the Edison company |the direction of politics. There were the UM . DRAT -THis TiGHT WAS A KID, FROM ing out mute, powerful waves of| “Pkase, you mustn't!” Faith just made public the result of a vote of | twelve momentous words floating in «he mental = e. BUMPIN’ AN’ RUBBIN’ protest. But she could not subduc| £@8Péi.. “I’ve had so. Jittle exper- DO people on radio music. Beethoven led all| vision of the sixteen guests, seeming like an \ : this rare brilliance that had come| lence in the technique of flirting w rest in favor as a composer. The over-|unfinished story. Eager ears awaited. A ‘Ton “TH" ROOF OF upon her, could not force herself| that jou have an unfair advantage f e ‘to Wagner's Tannheuser was found to be| dozen other ae aie won tsee gratified to breonig awkward and, broatplone| ef fod Leah to Ai: Gime, Mseee—* . / ie ince mI best-liked composition. Thirty-five re-|them, but they never came, and the guests ba has ae compli-| to an.abrupt stop at that moment, ived for “more jazz,” while | finally went away wondering if Calvin Coolidge ments upon her dancing, his voice| @nd Bruce Patton's arm dropped leclared they wanted none of it. could be persuaded to accept a draft next June. ° | soft, insinuating caress, and she| slowly from her waist, his fingers / low and then a majority stumbles upon| President Coolidge may or may not have] had been parrying them with | fraility the length of her forearm * { ‘ probably would have thrust out his chest, and, lOWDEN A D Coy ; ; Rica aie with a sneer playing over his face, have de- De Sast . 2» Ile eee a oe a Tee osuftice ak | Manded that the dogs fire and have this over s sth 3ismarck as second class mai} matter. ‘ with. QUESTIONS IN REGARD TO HEALTH € DIET Witt BE Jeorge D. Mann.... President and Publisher| [t didn’t even seem to be drama to those wrearecn CAN BE IN CARE OF PAPER Sul a3 tion Rates Pa able In ‘Kathie 'who watched. It was just a man, paying the ENCLOSE STAMPED AODRESSEO ENVELOPE FOR REPLY | Dally ee calor md oaks i | fiddler in a man’s way, and there was an air @ B26 ME. COY MEALI SERIICE 205 ANGELES: CAL. ere ia. ain a f cold business about it that impressed all who ‘ Daily b: 1, per year, (in Bi jos CoN pe we 4 sprain $ i Base hy atl por yours saw it, Military law is dreadfully efficient, qhore tah comancn. tendency. jolie contact "Sith we oleae (in state outside Bismarck) . . It makes shooting a man down secm no more cling to .ld ways and methods. This whole barrel often becoming spoiled Daily by mail, outside of North 00! important a transaction than buying a cigar. o not qpecate men hate progress, after a month. Ms ene at 2 ae |. General Quijano was a soldier and he died ut rather because they do not want t costs more to Produce good ap- voek nail, in state, year J i Aaah tol , ‘al a ig ecnly ty mail iW Mate; three years to like one, Mexico lost a brave man when those Sede sie ie eee mild | ples, so the consumer must be con Weekly by side of North Dakota, per rifles spat. thoughts. Every good :ning hi i year sre 1.50 been condemned in its day and gi Dr. McCoy will gladly answer ¢ udit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the The Dean Is Kidding Again “Hardly anyone now believes that democ- racy is the final phase of governmental prog- eration by those who did not wish to make the eftcrt to understan! its meaning. When railroads were first intro- personal questions on health and diet, addres~ed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed i for republication of all news dispatches credited to} ress, and it hardly will last out the century. duced, many sail envelope for reply, it or not otherwise credited in this Peer ane also rd Abraham Lincoln’s famous ‘government of the b would sie the Pom an SEPLT tocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. people, by the people and for the people’ is the farmers because tent to pay a higher price for this rights of republication of all other matter hercin are mere claptrap of the demagogue.” the demand for fruit than he formally did when the also reserved, Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY For this we are indebted to the Very Rever- end Dean Inge of London, sometimes called “the Gloomy Dean.” Well, it’s gloo.ny enough. horses would be Killed. - Today. everyone will ad-} mit that the rail-| roads have bene- apples were sold merely as a prod- uct of diversified farming. Many people complain that apples do not now have as good a flavor CHICAGO DETROIT Perhaps the dean has just stepped. off his fited humanity fivated but cine nee we ates Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | base a trifle. Men who become great in a spe- im measurably,|tage in the developed apple having NE, BURNS & SMITH NEW yor’ SYNE BURNS & SM rifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Mr. Carroll Is Paroled Earl Carroll has been paroled from prison, and Broadway once again is to be regaled by productions guided by the master hand of one of the stage’s leading technicians. There was once a time when Mr. Carroll’s technical ability did him no good, but that is now a thing of the past. He will be more careful hereafter. The terms of Mr. Carroll’s parole must; grieve him- tremendously. He may not fre- quent saloons and must not drink any intoxi- cating liquors. He must avoid “violating the law.” All of which should be rather irksome, especially to a man of Carroll's caliber. It is to be presumed from the fact that the department of justice saw fit to liberate Car- roll that it believes he has “learned his lesson” from his sojourn at Atlanta. Whether he did or not is questionable. On the face of it, it ‘would seem that it is about as reasonable to expect Carroll to change his habits after he is freed from parole as it is for a leopard to dis- card his spots. The only good thing that has come from Car- roll’s penitentiary sentence is a warning to his fellow producers not to carry their craze for publicity too far. Carroll had an idea that he could get newspaper front page space and at the same time, if he ever came to court. lie him- cial line sometimes make the greatest of asses when they make pronouncements in a field not their own. In the words of the telephone operator, “Ex- cuse it, please.” Editorial Comment Columbus Day (Minneapolis Journal) Four hundred and thirty-five years ago the lookout on the Santa Maria sighted land, dimly discernible ih the west, where Christopher Co- lumbus himself, late on the previous night, had noted a distant light. It was two months and nine days since the} little company of eighty-eight men, in three tiny caravels of less than a hundred tons each, two of them mere open boats without decks, had boldly sailed out from the Canary Islands into | the uncharted Atlantic, a sea which all of them save their leader had always believed stretched limitlessly to the west, without end and with- out farther shore. Faith alone, faith in himself, faith in the ac- curacy of his own conclusions, held Columbus to his westward course. And that faith was justified a thousand times over. For the suc- cess of Columbus not only revealed the exist- ence of a new world, not only led voyagers to the settlement of what was destined to be, cen- turies later, this Wonderful country in which WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington.—The organization of the western progressive group of senators to influence both legisla- tion in the seventieth congress and | fe the selection of the next Republican presidential nominee is one of the first important political events in a big political year. Within that year we shall see to cooperate aggressively with other progressives often inspired their ire and sarcasm. Some of them regard- ed him with ever more bitterness than the Republican regulars did, felt themselves victims of breaking desertion by their whereas to the regulars Borah’s defection was old stuff. The popular impression that Borah was a progressive leader also in the Pennsylvania senatorial fight of 1926, But he did not endorse La Follette in 1924. The other G.O.P. progressives have consistently Re- publican records and it is doubtful if the party nominee next year will be sufficiently reactionary to incur their open hostility, — —_——_—_—_—— ~ BARBS + The women have taken over the aviation business, it seems. No wonder, with all the men in the cellars, + Fifty years ago, because it was Dr. McCoy hard to take & bath, many lazy authorities claimed | it was unhealthy—that one would) catch a cold through too much bathing. The daily bath is now rec-) ognized as one of our best health) habits. f When the first cold-storage meat was shipped from Brazil to France 75 years ago the French would not let it land, claiming that the meat would be \unwholesome. It was, finally landéd in England, “nd this no doubt contributed very greatly to the present good habit of the Englishman in eating so much roast beef. The arguments against meat eating that you hear-today are rem- nants of the same reascning used at that time—that flesh food spoiled soon after it was killed and became poisonous if kept too long. Those who have dared to investigate have found that properly killed steer meat is made more wholesome if refrigerated for se.eral months. Some people still believe that acids and milk make a bad combina- tion. I recently read an article by one health “expert” who said that he had proved there was nothing to good or bad fdod combinations be- cause he found patients could drink milk and eat fruit at the same time wi:'.out any bad consequences, He did not know it, but he was simply stating a discovery made by prac- tical dietitians many years ago that milk combined perfectly with acids, being more easily digested in this a higher food value, and 1 am sure everyone can find some type of ap- ple to suit his taste, as there are over a thousand varieties to choose from. Apples contain from 10 to 15 per cent fruit-sugar, a small amount of protein, and are especiallly rich in potassium, sodium, magnesium, and iron salts which contribute to the building of bone and blood. The malic acid of the apple is in a neg- jligible quantity, so apples may be considered ig the sub-acid class. The best way to use apples is to eat them as a meal either by them- selves or in combination with cheese, auts, milk, or some of the non- starchy vegetables. I do not con- sider it a good plan to use them with an ordinary meal or as a des- sert afterwards unless they aro baked or made into apple sauce. Apple sauce may be made without the addition of any sugar if it is jroperly cooked without water and h a thick aluminum pan. The flavor is more delicious when pre- fared in this manner, and by thus keeping the sugar content to the ninimum, it makes an excellent des- srt to be used either wtk a protein tpal or with breakfast. Baked ap- ris should be likewise cooked in tte aluminum pan, and no sugar 0 water added. df apples are used in the ways I hive described, they will be found hihly beneficial, but as with all fruits, if improperly combined with other foods, both the value of the apple is lost and the digestion of self out and administer a coat of whitewash.|we Americans now dwell and prosper, but it|what promises in many ways to be|b die during the last con-| Perhaps the women aviators arc|Cmbination than if used alone. He|th other foods, interfered with. He did not, and other producers are likely to|also aroused an old world out of the stagnation|®" Fes dre ak Meriter ented Sioa mass canal more so successful because they can take|2PParently did not ° ow that if Questions and Answer take his case as an example and profit thereby. On the other hand, there are regrettable angles to the case. It seems unfortunate that the department of justice should have released Carroll instead of holding him for his full term. More unfortunate it is that he could not have been given a longer sentence. The longer Car- roll could have been kept off Broadway the _better it would have been for Broadway and for the average theatregoer. The Man in Clairvaux Prison The world’s most miserable wretch sits in the prison at Clairvaux, France, waiting for the end of a 20-year jail sentence. For him it’s not much to wait for. For the end of that term is likely to spell merely the beginning of his suffering. He is the man convicted of be- traying Edith Cavell, the heroic British nurse, into the hands of the Germans. Fate has played upon this man, if he be in- nocent, a despicable trick. In all the category of human crime, the name traitor stands our among the blackest. And the man who would betray a woman to her death wears the stamp of the devil upon his brow. Suppose, as he says, that he is innocent, and it was his double who turned over Miss Caveil and torpor of medievalism. Modern history begaa with the voyage of Columbus. Europe needed a tonic, and sorely. Discovery of the new world was the tonic. It came contemporaneously with invention of printing. It proved to the common run of men that the scientists of the fifteenth century hac not been mere dreamers, like the necromancers, astrologers, alchemists and cloistered philoso- phers that préceded them. Europe began to think. For Europe suddenly found something to think about at the same time that a means for the interchange of thought—printing and paper—came to Eu- rope’s hand. In the same era that civilized man found himself possessed of a desire to see his civiliza- tion expand, civilized man, thanks to Colum- bus, found that there was plenty of room in the world in which that civilization might! expand. Columbus Day is generally observed not solely because of what America owes to Colum- bus, but also because of what the whole worl owes to Columbus. Again the Silent Mr. Coolidge (Minneapolis Tribune) tional conventions, a hot election campaign—(probably) and the elec- tion of the next president of the United States. The new “progressive bloc,” head- ed by Norris and Borah, is sure to be a powerful factor during the next congress because of the nearly even strength &. Republicans and Demo- crats in, fle senate. These progres- sives will be Republicans, but if any reactionary legislation is passed over their prostrate forms it will be only with much help from the Dem- ocratic side of the aisle. - To a lesser extent, the progres- sives, if they hold together, may be expected to influence the Republi- can presidential nomination. Every- one knows that Uncle George Nor- ris —their nominal candidate — will not be named, but it is likely that their united front will at least pre- vent nomination of such men as Coolidge and Hughes, whom they regard as reactionaries. Borah’s apparent enthusiastic agreement to accept a gencralship in the little progressive army is one of the most interesting political de- velopments to date. -It is regarded as extremely significant by those who will tell you that Borah’s whole life in recent years has been guided the old war-horse. now assumed joint leadership with Norris in the west- ern senatorial group and may be- come the dominant foree, for Nor- ris is not a jealous man, soe In so far as Borah’s presidential hopes are concerned, the point is that the prospective consolidation of | the progressives gives him about one chance in ten thousand of nom- ination. Before this he has had no chance whatever. It might conceiv- ably happen that a healthy little group of Norris delegates would be in a keystone position at the conven- tion, assuming terrible deadlocks and all sorts of even more unlikely possibilities, which would enable it to obtain the ngmination of a pro- gressive like Borah. Obviously, Borah’s present “chance” is only to be distinguished microscopically from the utter hope- lessness of his position a few weeks ago, but one finds weisenheimers here who insist that Borah had it in mind when he dusted off and donned his old uniform. ‘ Some of the leading candidates are bound to cast a longing eye to- ward the progressive group, hoping for eventual aid at the convention. on more different airs 3 than plain males, the Women flyers should have one advantage, anyhow. They shouldn’t run out of gas as soon as most men. A football season is the time of year when radio announcers are supposed to broadcast their life stories to the people. Assistant Secretary Lowman says. his arm gets tired some days sign- ing dismissals for prohibition agents. Also, he relates, the country is get- ting dryer and dryer all the time. More power to your good right arm, Mr. Lowman! Eskimo men leave their wives five months out # the year to hunt seals, says a news story. And in this country some of the men have to Jeave their wives to pay for them. r Old Masters ———$—$_$__$_$_$_———————————— nh > Out of the dusk a shadow, Then, a spark; Out of the cloud a silence, Then, a lark; Out of the heart a rapture, bread is added to this otherwise good mixture excessive fermen- tation is set up, often producing very serious consequences. Even today many physicians teach that athletes die young because of taking too much violent exercise. The truth is that their deaths are caused by not.continuing to exercise, and hastened by overeating. Some doctors are still advising weak patients to go to bed and eat plentv of nourishing food. The new idea is to encourage the weak pa- tient to exercise to gain strength and at the same time reduce the quan- tity of food used and' select food of a better quality. Breathing night air was only a short time ago considered very dan- gerous. We know now that this is the purest air and everyone is ad- vised to sleep out of doors winter and summer. Study your health problems care- fully and be ready to, accept a new viewpoint if it seems reasonable to | s: you. Above all, do not be unwill- ing to use some effort in under- standing the needs of your body. We starve not for lack of food, but for lack of understanding. - Apples a Healthful Food This is the harvest season for the apple orchardist who is now either Question: Q. writes: “Should a pe'son suffering from ane: drink a pint of pure beef blood dai so, where could it be obtained?” Answer: This treatment has been trid many times but I have never heard of a case receiving any bene- fit Anemia can only be cured by geting rid of the systemic toxi- casis which produces it, Stuffing wth any kind of food is never help- ful and always makes the patient worse. Question: Housekeeper asks: “Why should not acid fruits be used wth a_ meal containing starchy fopd? I know there are others who wuld like to have this explained, so please answer through your col- umn.” Answer: To explain briefly in this short space: first, ‘he digestion of starches begins in the mouth, heice the necessity for masticating allstarchy foods well so as to thor- aepbly. mix with the saliva. The salva is normally alkaline, in which stae it is necessary to th digestion of ‘starches. Now as to the fruit intrference—the acid not only comteracts this normally alkaline sali'a of the mouth, but also stim- ulabs the flow of gastric juice which is not neec. d for the diges- tion of starch but for protein and “ ies pa is r e as e e h having his apples squeezed into ci-|othe: food contents, the di i to be shot. Can he ever escape the shadow of| Calvin Coolidge is still the perfect master’ of|by a consuming ambition to attain| There is reason to believe that none| Then, a pain; ie au oiioas $ contents, the digestion that evil mark lodged against his name? Wher-| himself as the silent man, The ordered disci-| the presidency. of them will wilfully antagonize th®|Qut of ‘the dead, cold ashes, Se EEUU dbhie Hoek of pnleh Heeios da the. stomach: ever he goes, will he not be pointed out as the man who went to jail as a traitor? The bars of the Clairvaux prison are unkind to him, but t is good and likes it. Knowing How to Die Itisa art, knowing how to die, whether git be with your boots on or in bed. For Gen- pline of his speaking organism is one of his He is thrifty of He speaks when he thinks it is well that he should be heard. most marked characteristics. words in all his utterances. something to say in his coming message to con- gress that will clear away every doubt that has arisen about his announcement last August. If he refers to the subject either directly or by It is hardly fair to assume, how- ever, that Borah’s reasons for aban- doning his splendid isolation to join the other boys--were tinged with western senators during the months that separate us from the Republi- can convention. You never can tell, of course, Life again. —John B, Tabb: Evolution, f AThought 1 —_——— r It is only during the past quarter of a century that the raisin, of ap- ples has really become a valuable sudden new expertness that amaz- ed even as it exhilarated her. But when he said, holding her suddenly more closely, so that the natural attitude of the dance became a s. R. E. Y. writes: “My little boy-is quite sick with ulcers of the stomach.. He is thir- ve years old. Should he ¢o on a liet *” to herwrist. Dazed, a little uncer- tain o her equilibrium, she turned half-bIndly toward the couch where Bob sit. She was just in time to see Clerry fling herself into Bob's ; Fy A H “ lap, he face ghastly white under her ‘ implication, it will only be because of a convic- Peliberete embrace, “Garsenuy Sh bi H “eral Rueda Quijano, it was with his boots on,|tion that a general public good would be served Pe it uetey tatd Jan Were | tae a *- before a rifle squad of federal Mexican troops.|thereby. Otherwise the subject would be one “[’m tired,” she murmured, mak-|, “Thi seems to be a game of of too great delicacy. He cannot fail to be ing her contralto voice plaintive, | ‘chang: your partners,’ » dare Rueda Quijano had rebelled against the - . “His He was stood up the wall. The soldiers took their of women Then, hware of the widespread popular wish in fa- vor of his standing for reelection, but that is a matter for others rather than himself to take public cognizance of. Apparently he does not even discuss it privately with his political inti- mates. Certain it is that he did not take the Republican organization leaders into his inner confidence at the ‘white house breakfast. Then it may be added that thrift of words is one of the outstanding virtues of the president, is » “Dance with Gherry now, Mr. Pat- ton.” ,, “You're afraid of me!” he exulted. “Dance with Cl I'm going to dance with you all evening, and I shall fight a duel with anyone who tries fe oe in on us, Your aes 1, ‘way, seems to a master of plain and fancy glower- ing. Fearful habit to get into, real- ly. How did you ever happep to marry a Nordic?” A teasing note crept into his ardent voice, but his \ ‘ ling!” her high voice out in the svidenly still Mane “Come on! It’s show these amateurs what ral love-making is! He thinks you're :old, but Cherry knows bet- ter! Kss me—like you used to!” NEM: Faith takes stock after the cygone, 5 (Copyrkht, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.): cag mag ig Lae

Other pages from this issue: