The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 2, 1928, Page 4

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{PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An ladependent Newspaper . THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 4 (Established 1873) Tek as second class mail matter. Jeorge D. Mann ...-... 4 Subscription Rates Payable in Ad: Maily by carrier, per year .. » daily by mail, per year, (in * Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) . any by mail, vutside of North D: Weekly by mail, in state, per year Weekly by mail, <a state, three yea! Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako a, pe year | i Member Audit Bureau of Circalation t Member of The Associated Press 1} The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | Sse for republication of all news cispatches credited | Xo it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and iso the local news of spontaneous origin published ferein. All rights of republication of all other mat- » ier herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. i (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Fate The deaths a few hours apart of Floyd Ben- | nett, famous aviator, and Frank L 2qually a famous automobile racer, ra’ | nero prefer to die from natural causes, | Bennett, or behind the wheel, like Lockhart? ~ When Bennett was flyng across the North Pole and again when he headed the relief ex- | 9edition to Greenly Island the world feared for | nis safety. His countless followers hoped he would survive his hazardous undertakings and tive to die of natural causes. Now that he is dead of pneumonia and not from an airplane crash it seems, though he died in the perform- ance of a heroic deed, his death lacked that dramatic character society has come to ex in the “last fight” of aviators. The tragic and dramatic death of Frank Lockhart, racing across the sands of Daytona! | | Published by the Bismarck Tribune C-mpany, Bis- ck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- seeees President and Publisher jof the daring racing driver. {has taken away one who was capable of still | Editorial Comment | jagainst the jury that found Mr. Sinclair not guilty. members of the | prejudice it would be against him. DETPOIT | presumed that their decision was honestly ar- Kresge Bldg. | rived at on the evidence as they understood it. like} man of great wealth w |gers at its just and unescapable responsibil- ities. He tampered with one whom the Supreme Court has declared to be a “faithless officer” of the government. tracks by the lavish use of money, personally and politically. Nothing that happened in his criminal trial at Washington can change it. ja scandal to his class; a public warning to rich ;men, tempted as he was, to avoid his example pect as they would the plague. For both him and 'ex-Secretary Fall the sentence of the intel- ligent public has been pronounced and will each at a speed of 200 miles an hour, seemed | Sinclair the inevitable and natural climax to the career | ment is greater than I can bear!” | verdict. N-ithe crime of conspiracy, but on the moral ockhart, | counts of his indictment the general judgment ise in the) has gone heavily against him. From mind the question, does the adventurer and | appeal lies, , iecaotd d here It. was the thing the public feared most, and most expected. Ever since Colonel Lindbergh reached Paris, every American has been worried by the thought that he would persist in his daring exploits until some accident would befall him. And yet any other than a hero’s death, under dramatic circumstances would seem illogical. That an aviator-adventurer should die in the air seems as natural as that a warrior should die on the field of battle. Perhaps back of all this philosophy is the regret that a preventable and curable disease greater achievements and still greater service, After the Trial (New York Times) There is neither point nor force in crying out Proof of the charge of conspiracy was difficult, and the government prosecutors were hampered by the shrewd tactics of the Sinclair lawyers. It is not to be imagined that the jury favored Sinclair because he is enormously rich. If they had any natural It is to be Acquittal in such a notorious case does not mean restoration to public confidence or re- spect. A larger jury has already brought in tis Mr. Sinclair stands legally quit of He is condemned to figure as a ho had snapped his fin- He sought to cover up his That record cannot be altered. He will remain bide. As time goes on, it will be strange if s not moved to exclaim: “My punish- Senator Charles Curtis Editor’s note: This, the 21st 4 ina series of Presidential Cam- paign Portraits written for the Tribune by Robert Tally, tells the story of Senator Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Tomorrow’s article will discuss Senator Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. eee | came and chased away. bined _imagina- @ tions of Zane Gre and Horatio more than that] a s enator arles Curtis,| (the dominant. but stem trend silent figure who; serves as Repub- liean leader in the In youth an In-| camped six miles dian boy on a government reserva-| Grandmother Jul tion, at 10 a jockey riding horses! ; a on Kansas race tracks, at 15 a news He Rene ae “butch” at railway depots, at 17 a . hack driver in Topeka, at 21 a self- educated lawyer, at 25 a beardiless | prosecutor in Shawnee county, at 32! % congressman, at 47 a senator—| } now Curtis seeks to climax his 32 years in hing- n by being elect- president. He the first can- idate to ka. he returned aga tion. fini melia Cur! need of more ery stable owner, i a fare. ight, round and solid of figure, wrinkled and baggy clothes, not try to pose as a states- and willing for people to him at his own worth. He @ Methodist and a strong pro- tionist. his office. the bar. torney. attention to it. . lation oiled, to put ‘through the measures White House desires, to line up the + votes and have them Heady when the time comes, to know | Congress. & ever since. ition, to advise the presi- ae something is hopeless will not be attempted with re- sultant failure. Senator Curtis, chosen to succeed | | the cultured and scholarly Senator | Cabot Lodge as majority of the Senate when the lat- ‘ter died in 1924, was born on an In- | dian allotment farm in Kansas and 4 part of his boyhood in the | ie A j at-great-great grandfath- ler wae Chief Pawhuskie of the if generations ago, White Plume, iu % a French ind trapper named Conville. hter, Julie Conville, go TOMORROW: o friend, were there. ity, reservation Ke Presidential Campaign Portraits—No. 21 Curtis’ Story Reads Like Fiction speak both English and Indian, young Curtis was chosen to slip from camp under cover of darkness and make his way to the military post at Topeka for aid. horses had been captured, so Cur. tis made the 60-mile trip on foot in less than two days. But Curtis did not go back. Born ‘to the saddle, he got a job “| jockey at Topeka and was r in races by the time he was # ye lold. He toured a large part of th Al-|west and on one occasion, it is re never pictured aj tated, Jesse and Frank colorful! up and robbed the box office at the | race track where he was riding. ¥ ithe winters he attended the public z with his father’s peo- Increasing weight finally forced |Curtis out of the jockey game, so The Kaws, traveling ut_of Topeka. To ed to But Grandmother Julie was she wanted child to grow up to be a not a roving Indian. suaded young Curtis to return to Topeka and try to get an educa- Worked Way Through School Back in Topeka young Curtis sold fruit and candy at the railway | station and wozked in stores while ing his schooling. with his paternal grandmother, Par-|! is, Who likewise encour- aged him to get an education. As Curtis grew ofder he felt the income. horses, he naturally applied to a liv- him a job as a hack driver. {he began the study of law, often jreading his textbooks by the om! lamps on his hack while waiting for Impressed by the youth's determination to get ahead, a veter- an Topeka attorney took him into At 21, Curtis was admitted to! When he was 25 (in 1885) | he was eleaed prosecuting at- Kansas already had a pro- hibition law, but nobody paid any Curtis, considered it his duty to enforce it: f je closed every saloon in Topeka his role to keep the |in 30 days and kept them closed, throughout his four-year term, He has been a strong prohibitionist In 1892 cts ue elected to le served seven terms The position of every senator onjthero and in 1907 he was electea jto the Senate. In 1912 he was beat- en, but he came back in 1924 and has been in the Senate continvous- ly since that time. Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana. esas IN NEW YORK + New York, May 2.—Not, perhaps that it makes a great deal of dif- ference, but buttons of the Brem- en crew are being subways and at Times Which, somchow, reminds me that it must be getting pretty close to county fair time out in county, Mich. And ajready a song about the flyers has come off Tin Pan Alley, under the name of my ‘alter O’Keefe, who more- ypt.| or-less immortalized Henry Ford’s farewell to the lizzie. . nd the Bartenders’ Union had their an- nual ball the other night and 800 ‘on| employed. Somehow they didn’t seem as sad a: satya about prohibition. salaries, in so far as New Yor! Setar saree tes | teecke'ts tee otecinest Soon: rks to the speakeasy prosper- attacked and To say nothing of the tf of the | they now get for mixing a cocl Kaws, Because he could | tai that’s fairly fit to drink... .j college, b; And a salesman came into the of- fice the other day with a little case of samples. And we sampled his samples. And he assured us that if we had a barrel sent over and let it take Nature’s own sweet course, in the course of a month or | so we'd have some grand wine. Any kind; any flavor. . And Va- riety informs me that the Hippo- |drome, which once was looked upon 5 the last word in theatrical al- , will soon dedicate itself en- to movies. Oh, well, we're geiting old! The Kaws' The cavalry Cheyenncs the . It’s really no longer necessary for poets to starve ip garrets. Down in Greenwich Village, where ‘most f yesteryear's starving poets iived omehow to write last year’s bcst selling fiction, they have learned he uptown habit of being subsid- zed or getting their meals off oungsters with money who come in from the middle west and way points. The moment an art-struck maiden appears with a dowry from ithe home folks, an amazing num- ber of muse-wooers appears with appetites for good food and very ordinary wine. For some reason or other, the newcomers. are invariably —im- pressed. To be allowed to sit at the feet of poets, cr whatever thev are, is sufficient unto itself. It's far more likely that the poor lit- tle rich kid will starve than that the »oets will. For they are fast becoming past masters at the art of sponging. They are out to col- le-t the living the world owes them; or at least that they have con- vinced themselves it owes them, In a less than modest Fourth street barracks there now lives a very youthful millionaire, who has at least one book of verses to his credit, and who has been a wind- fall to his fellows. Only a couple of weeks ago a young woman ap- peared out of New England and turned two venerable rusidence places into a little art theater and art gathering place, agreeing to underwrite and endow only those “unknowns” who had “never had a chance.” And the Village is filied with such. But, thanks to the fact that the very air is charged with litcrary ambitions, it becomes e: jer for them to partake of hi eggs. as a mes held to the Indians. west, Pappai + join tepee the her daughter's ‘hite man, So she per- He lived) Knowing The latter gave Then eee Which reminds me that the Village poets held their final soiree of the year in a basement coffee house the other night. The charge for the dinner was $1.25. Half the poets went on strike, refusing to attend and pay that impossible sum unless an advance sale of poems was guaranteed. however, And there I heard a tale of a certain poetical lad who had been subsidized by a coffee millionaire. The magnate put up $1,600 for the private printing of the youth’s verses. And, so the story goes, he got for his money two lines of quite blank verse, that went: “Who feeds the poet Serves the nation well.” _To which, without any inspira- tion, I might reply with another composition: Who grubstakes poets Serves the nation right! GILBERT SWAN. NEWS BRIEFS } Willmar, Minn.—John Koras was > e hawked in the Square. Lapeer! sentenced to an indeterminate term in state’s prison for shooting and wounding Jaeger Antonson and Mrs. J. B. Olson, his mother-in-law. New York—David K. Rubens of Minneapolis was anv as win- ner of the Prix de Rome fellowship in sculpture, awarded annually by American academy in Rome. Canby, Minn.—P. | zation of the Cool! is; Twin Cities Trail association was perfected here and officers elected. . And all of them the: it_seems might have! their i meéde a major sport at Concordia yy. athletic board. the Hon. nothin; of the Snell ge Black Hills Moorhead, Minn.—Baseball was | Spring Tonic WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCRER NEA Service Writer Washington, May 2—The rest of |Lake Pontchartrain.” the government again ts learning | who's boss in the House sentatives. That ee to be Snell's Rules Committec what measures shall go on the House calendar and so come! Hee running the whole show. 1a] Bou der Dam bills contain sions for New York. operation would be put in. hadn’t yet given up hope. while the Norris Muscle Shoals bill, which was reported from the House military affairs committee wit nor amendments after being in the Senate, remains in Mr. pocket. eit The flood control problem been with us for many years with- tackled by Con- course there’s an out being serious: gress, although end to everything. In Nile’s ter for June 22, 1816, one encoun- ters this ancient item: “NEW ORLEANS—The hope the crevasse, as stopping stated, is at an end until the fall of the river. It now admits ume of water 200 feet wide and 20 feet deep. Our latest accounts from New rings say ag re exertions are about to m: Pm starti erst So cous of te Missle: |""tfpavs the ing now. carry off of Repre-'ence to an amusing incident which no less than! que; i " ertrand Snell, a congress quest for letters of instroduction be- man from New York and c! of the House Rules Committee. At the moment Snell is holdi up consideration by the House o! the Muscle Shoals bill, sed by the Senate, and the Boul- ler Dam bill, which the Senate has theee ills believe. Snell intend ene is ve Snell intends to! i hold them up until the end Heilnisitomea har per session—or so near the end that can be done about them. which was! he asked a fellow Friends ns that the Muscle Shoals and ernment operation. Ll defy id ~~ TN ee said ee Sapo erie of Kai 4 4 sas, who superintends all adjouz that he is president and sole owner | ments, as rea came out to posted wer plant in uj ir. Snell recently ex- plained to the House that he was opposed to government ownership at Muscle Shoals and some bill with provisions for private | congressman and an WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928 into the cypres; sippi n swamp, whence it might wor! its way into In other old files, one finds refer- | matches Lindbergh's famous re- fore he flew to Paris. In 1824, the rman | States. A day outside the harbor Lorri whether lit would be possible for him to get ahack to take ‘im to a tavern. o1'The next day he found all New prepared for a jamboree-in his honor, which! ‘was reported over the country for the length of his stay. . time. buy it for me. Pies Well, Marye, Mr. Northrop ©! ‘ must think American girls rules A long-winded senator was reaa- ling a boresome speech about noth- ing in particular late one afternoon on the Senate floor. It was time for adjournment. “Can’t stay with you very long, se near It so provi- husband always did_ that. outside interests she might te | visitor. “That fellow’s all through, he doesn’t know it yet.” but | that. hoped! victor Berger, the only Socialist important He/leader in the Socialist party, has Mean-' taken considerable k since the party convention in lew York which nominated Nor Thomas for president. Berger is one of the bd! most popular congressmen and has ell’s!@ genuine sense of humor as di tinguished from the doubtful article. Another congressman suggested that the Socialists had met early to get a head start on the other two parties. “We're like that general in Alex- ander’s army,” Berger answered, “who faced an over-sized enemy with an under-sized armny “It’s going to be a hard battle, boys, but we'll have to do the best ‘we can,’ the general told his troops. ‘Just fight until you start to licked and then turn around and, run. ws Pedro as if Alan is either a or a skunk. For you can’t grown up in another country. this jazz, cocktail drinking ith mi- a foreigner think the American respectability. Tl grant ‘hat has a better opinion of you than et zo that what's in of before a vol- ‘As for myself, I’m a little bit ‘ “That’s the way with us. heard girls say things right cigaret smoking that most of young people indulge in must make BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES Marquis de Lafayette, who had {done so much for us in the Revolu- Marye, dear: “ht ‘tion, sailed to revisit the United|,, I've a little time to spare while the clothes are soaking so I'll fin- ish what I wanted to tell you last It’s so nice to have a wash- ling machine. Frank helped Father said \that a man from South America were (Deed waiting te be made love to cause they give the men they go out with so many chances for it. Down there, girls are always chap- eroned, even after they're engaged.|fever as long as the organic qui- And he said that they didn’t re-| nine is available through the use of spect husband who failed to pro-|the peeling of the grapefruit. To tect his wife because, with them, a! get this quinine from the grapefruit If he So it must look to your friend fool com- i pletely Americanize anyone who has All and you boys and girls have cut loose from all individually some|°! of you take steps no\- and then to correct the impression. No doubt you, Marye, have given your friend he'd have of most girls who would accept an inviaten from a ae Ser did not know. But you can just sure s mind isn’t flatter. | Alan is deservin ing to you or your husband either. And maybe some little remark you may make will put an end to his hesitating to make love to you. For I honestly can’t see how anyone but one of you youngsters yourselves, can really believe that you aren’t so bad as you seem. I know I’ve here OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD LISTENED “To YouR HARD LUCK sR, T NX TALE, THAT Nous WoPED WOULD EXTRACT A DIME FROM ME, AND Now, You WILL HEARKEN “To MY WOE f --“TWENTY-To NEARS AGo T LEPT CHICAGO, ON A“TRAIM FoR DETROIT, WITH MY LIFE-SAVINES OF $10,000 IS A SUITCASE! SOME KNAVE, \ MAY A’ PLAGUE FOREVER BESET HIM, STOLE UY SUITCASE !-~ MY MISSIO; “To “To INVEST “THE MONEY WITH A MECHANIC, tL DIME, UD GIVE tT To You !«<"TELL Y'WHAT<-<-TEL es Seren! PAN Mis Sie PAN “THis Si " STREET, DeTRort WAS “THEN, OBScuRE =e HENRN FORD, BY NAME fe $10,000 WouLp HAVE Bee N \ \ NN NY N S. x By Ahern A STUDY OF FEVERS How often you hear the expres- sion, “This fever must be broken up at once or it will wear you out.” What a ridiculous statement to make! How else are you going to get rid of a fever except by allow- ing it to burn out? ‘ever consumes the surplus car- bon, which is the chief cause of of disease. By this burning up of carbon, heat ated, respir- ation is increa: ind the breath comes in short pants. my is this heavy breathing necessary? Solely to obtain that surplus oxygen which es apart cette burn up ies een is clogging up and crippling a! of the functions. P Nature Tibet load this carbon or you will suc- cumb to it, and it cannot always be detected because it is all through the tissues; therefore, the body ad take in extra oxygen to burn out. Fevers only burn up the waste and poisonous material of the sys- tem and clean out the toxins of physical corruption. If these pois- ons could be taken out of the ly and burned up, it would of course, be easier on the patient. But na- ture finds it necessary to burn up the poisons where they are, that is, in the tissues of the body. Temper- ature is increased, breathing be- comes fast, and copious perspir- ation breaks out on the body. These indications are only signs of steps toward a cure. Never attempt to break a fever isons are burned up the fever will disappear. Drink plenty of water if you are thirsty, as this only assists, by furnishing the body with more liquid with which to wash out the toxins, There is no reason why lemon or orange juice cannot be put into the water you drink; in fact, it seems that these citrus fruit juices really en- courage elimination by their action in stimulating the flow of bile. | If your fever is accompanied by ja chill, it is a good plan to use artificial warmth, packing hot jwater bottles around the body and allowing only woolen bed clothing to touch the skin so that when per- spiration is produced it will be tak- en up by the wool and the bed {clothes will not become clammy, as j when cotton sheets are used. Do not take any “remedy” to cure ‘your headache, as this will only interfere with the natural elimina- tion processes going on. Do not be afraid of becoming ex- hausted, for the more relaxed your body becomes, the more you will perspire, and the quicker your fever will disappear, as the poisons are more easily thrown out through the eliminative organs when the body is relaxed. Inorganic quinine, such as given in pills, should never be used for a as soon as the skins, cut the entire grapefruit into didn’t it meant he didn’t care viet small pieces, place in a granite pan, ve. And no decent man could be like| low this mixture to stand at least and pour boiling water over it. Al- 80 minutes, and drink the tea from —always try to encourage it, and | i it. This contains organic quinine, and often assists in eliminating the toxins which produce the fever. You must always remember that Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. in case of a fever you should go to bed and not try to “fight” the fever. If pain exists in any part of the body and you feel that you are developing a fever, take your tem- perature, and if it is at all above normal, jump into bed between woolen blankets and start sweating as soon as possible. If your bowels did not move well the last day or two, take an enema before you start sweating, and allow this sweating to continue every hour of the day and night until your tem- perature has been reduced to the normal. There is very little danger of fatal termination of a fever if you will follow these simple methods. But beware of any method which will interfere with the throwing out of the toxins which were responsible in the first place for the develop- ment of the fever. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. K. H. asks: “Car a dead tooth cause neuritis or rheu- matism if the tooth shows no pus- bag in X-ray picture?” Answer: It is possible to develoy neuritis or rheumatism from ab- scessed teeth. X-rays cannot be de- pended upon as a positive diagnosis of pus-pockets at the roots of the teeth. -rays are a very valuable aid to diagnoses, however, and I advise patients to have their teeth X-rayed about every six months. Send for my special articles or rheumatism. Question: R. J. asks: “With the diet that you recommend, could I drink water from roasted barley that I use as a substitute for coffee?” Answer: The only drink I rec- ommend with meals is plain water. but the water from roasted barley would be quite harmless if you dc not use sugar and cream with it. Question: Mrs. K. S. writes: “‘ have been going by your instruc- tions for nearly a month and have been successful in reducing my weight 15 pounds. I do not know my normal weight and wish you would tell me through the columns. I am 25 years old, and my height is 5 feet, 8% inches.” Answer: A proper estimate of normal weight must depend not alone on the age and height, but upon temperament and type. You do not say whether you are a m or a woman, bet your writing a feminine look, and I would s your weight should not be uw q 120 or over 140 pounds. This is the best guess I can make without knowing more about you. Send me a snapshot of yourself in a bathing suit, and perhaps I can make a better guess of what your normal weight should be. in this house that no girl could have said twenty years ago without gi At the Movies ing a false im ion. But their) boy friends don’t seem to pay any attention to what they say, no mat- ter how shocking it is. You can’t expect a foreigner to be like that, though. And when a woman is toying with the thought love I guess the man with her going to be too dumb to know it. Not if he’s got the same thing on his own mind. Unspoken thoughts aren't so rarely read an rou might suppose. jut even you done mind. risking a scene with CAPITOL THEATRE Mystery in its most enthralling | form, compounded with tragedy and ¢ | drama combine to form one of the most startling, interest compelling dramas ever flimed, in “The Cat and the Canary,” the Universal produc- tion playing at the Capitol Theatre last time tonight. Almost from the very first foot this man you might remember that of film of this absorbing mystery- jincerest love, (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ft BARBS} ‘Senator Fess, Republican key- notes, was asked the other day} thur Edmund Carew, of more respect.| play, action commences in ever-in- creasing tempo; climax-caps climax; dramatic sequences pile up one after NEXT: Marye agrees to drop| *Mother, while the suspense is tem- pered with opportunity injected comicalities, contributed by Flora Finch, Gertrude Astor and Creigh- ton Hale, Laura La Plante, the vivacious blonde star deserves the greatest praise for her excellent portrayal of Annabelle West. A featured cast, including Ar- Forrest St: what the issues in this election| ley, George Siegmann, Tully Mar- might be. answer. He probably has been too busy working on his keynote speech to think about issues. President Cooli has been vited to take his vacation Lookout Mountain. By that time he'll know whether or not he has a lock-in = Sy ‘Well, Al Smith has milked a cow. Guess that makes the farm people. | i Well, the oil trial is over. By the » if you ever be charged wit murder - ng ave your lawyer ‘combi- picking a jury: thing, in Three grocers, one steamfitter, one repair m man, one auto salesman, two clerks, one merchant, one expressman, one broker and one railroad agent. It worked for Sinclair. | Sinclair Lewis is to marry a min- ister’s daughter. Maybe he’ sing “Onward, Christian Soldiers! Seattle, ary A four-year-old boy in Washington, has been smoking since he was a year old and now he’s healthier than the average boy of is age. Probably his father will hi ive him a gold watch if he doesn’t Bg before he's aL. A western scientist has discovered how to raise plants without soil. That isn’t so important, th you can even get a divorce wit it grounds these days. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) Cleveland—Mrs, S. M. N. Marrs of Austin, Tex., was el presi- dent of National congress of Par- ent-Teachers association. Other of- ficers in¢luded: Sixth vice presi- dent (home service) Mrs. Herbert F. Chaffee, Amenia, N. D. in- at | E him all 0. K. with] the hie Fann daughter, who | Cidents are bro The senator couldn’t| shall, Martha Mattox and Lucien give exceptionally fine eir respective roles. Littlefield, support in . ELTINGE THEATRE The beautiful blonde actress, sther Ralston, languished behind iron bars but it was only in the movies, or “Love and Learn” which is now Bring at the Eltinge for ind Thursday. Ralston, or “Nancy Blake,” 8 on the verge of divorce when she comes home from board- ing school, took that extreme meas sure to give her parents sometaing to worry about, with the hope that thought of such’ cation oat ‘sf the 101 of sucl mn out a inde of her elders. Just how she landed in jail, how- ever, was only after she had to re- sort to the shooting up of a court room, which was presided over by a Alignified young judge, played by Lane Chandler, who has political ambitions. A aries $e pred in- about followin; her stay behind the bars . Cs... Visks Over 21 Million Jars Used Yearly WATCH REPAIRING A teh, Any, watch ptebacdions of make or plus the ‘cos! A ae, of ni rial or parts Au fork Guarani Mail Orders. Given Prompt Attention asin Aree eA, vo.

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