The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 28, 1929, Page 4

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e Bistaarck Tribune! "It Was Just Speculation ‘An Independent Newspaper | The demoralization in Wall Street's stock market last EWSPAPER | wee's in nowlse, it must be apparent, reflects actual jecconomic and business conditions the country over. later are safe and sound. statisticians and econ- who teel the commercial pulse of the country The stoc’’ market depression was something rt and disassociated from industry and trade. Specu- THE STATE'S OLDEST (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, B: ‘k, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismar #econd class mail matter D. Mann ........---- . President and Publisher x —— lation in securities had reached the inevitable breaking Zchscription Rates Payable in Advance | point. | by carrier, per year $7.29, 1: was ail like a poker game. Business men might din Bismarc: F20 iy such play and lose money, but the poker game | 50g | would no barometer of their busine: ‘These 6.00 might be tI ing and profitable beyond a miser’s dream of avarice. In fact, speculation depends on prosperity Bismarck) of North Dakot 3c] for its means. The country having prospered contin- ou: over several years now, it was inevitable that « 1.50) th should be playing of the stock market on a wide rplus of moncy abounding yop? has been joining in this securities invest- Member of The Associated Press ment. As Leonard Bell told the Rotarians some ti uted Press is exclusively entitled to the us| aco, in speatsing of his travels in Europe, an interview | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | Ao ALIN, MY BOY, HoP Downs) KE&F ALL RIGHT law AN” SAY, A To Td" DRUG STORE AN’ Get [EF UNCLE DAKE —~ WILL You 1 ME A DOLLAR'S WORTH OF Good HELP ME OUT WITH MY NICKEL CIGARS I~ Now LIS'EN CHRISTMAS \SANIA? CLUB 2 |} «=~ HERE'S A CHANCE FoR You 10 ww V'SEE, TM S'POSED To MAKE A DIME !~~ SEE IF You 27/ PUT IN A DOLLAR A WEEK CAN “TALK "EM WO SiviNG You So AT CHRISTMAS Time SIX CIGARS FOR A QUARTER. Ti HAVE So2 ~~ BUT ON AccouUNT OF BuYiia IN TM BEHIND \BI2 ~~ QUANTITY. we An? MAKE EM WILL You HELP ME “To a by the rheumatism or from the cause DANGERS OF RHEUMATISM eating habits of course play their part It has becn often stated by promi-|both in the cause and cure. nent medical authorities that rheu-/ Whatever will produce intest.al matism is the greatest menace to the | poisoning will develop the toxic soi! heart health of our children and adolescents. Besides this, even there is partial recovery during child- hood, there is liable to be still more trouble when the child grows up to maturity, both from the rheumatism, or heart troubles, and also from other ailments which are either produced * Jor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or ¢ conditions in Holland which he attempted therwise credited in this n r and ‘so the Seal news Of spontancous origin ied harsh, All| on a by there was turned back on him by the fin- Il available information fights of republication of all other matter hercir are ancicr, who pumpod him for reserved. he could supply the American investments, The | a = ~ | Duteh, it secms, have been investing heavily in such | stocks among others, as Anaconda Copper, Bethlehem | Stool and Utillules. This heavy demand from all over! Burope has been an influence in jumping the market ! ocks and has kept the game going merrily LEVINGS Formerly G. Logan P. CHICAGO NEW YORK ¢ Co. BOSTON Laman eaia: ; ~~ | until the point of profitable investment was passed, then | wy (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Paehuniey Ay Us P | H Hee | Pevheps the key to the slump which produced such The week may be found in the fact | don common stocks the last year substantially less than the interest charged which, if it be the correct diag- | int for the demoralization in a cesizc | 1 a wid> scale among investors. ‘The naturally is determined by their carn- idend yields, rather than on a_ purely ative demand. ‘Then, too, the market was ripe for bear manipulation, | chy the process of taking profits would be reversed tage of the group that works for depression speculation. j | On the actual business and industrial horizon there ay to account for the happenings in Wall Strect. there beon any sinister occurrence to account for net tat ef apostie of the jon, and it > stature of a nay s fervid faith in this a s and his efforts nate an effict his natal dey to be di @ jational dof prepared Sf dfficial and publicist to It is an! in the &: Dppropriate combination. {} The navy has a right to expect from the Am People the resp 1 day cot aside tts honor. It hs ing fome from its Very birth in the R . the 1. Decreased crops do not even mean the; | Paul Jones, down to De nila and the victory | loss to the farming community that volume of yield) be Schley and Sampson in tho Ic > of might seem to imply, for prices are bound to minimize ‘fleets at Santiago in the Spanis In every | that. | $onflict of the nation it has sh * tories, but whe Ss, it alwa! ‘avery and [: Who cennot mes and his v ship Bonhou wane enn Vall Street debauch of speculation | is not the pulse of business conditions, It will pass, and} then cr peculation will move with the normal pace of business again—for a while. | The Nation’s Weed Pest The; Weeds are an ever increasing bane in the nation’s tion preserves Old Ironsides because of the invincible-| arriculture. They are scattered plant pests all over the ‘hess of that cid batter of the war of 1212. Then there) jand. They cost the farmers of the United States prob- are mem: of Decaiur and Bainbridge, the heroic! apy a billion dollars loss annually, @ sommodores of their day, whether in daredevil explo! The northwest has been struggling to reduce this plant | % dgainst the pirates of the Barbary states or in victory | plague with varying success and failure. Weeds have) After victory over the mistress of the seas in 1312. And | been the cause of heavy dockage losses to the northwest B yhat a gallant memory Lawrence left in his dying plea| prain growers, and North Dakota probably has suf- ft Boston, “Don't give up the ship!" Into the crowded | fered more than its share of their damage. ‘The Greater feroll of fame on which the story of that war is recorded | North Dakota association put on a special campaign to F ‘its also the tri:mph of Perry on Lake . With his! yeguce this loss to the farmers of the state, but dock- & rreen-timbered home-made flcet of mon-of-wer and his) age due to the wild and so far useless plants persists. fe Tessege, “We have met the enoemy and they are ours.” | The tumbleweed now, as in other falls, is a femiliar f hose were the mosi glorious days in the life of the) sight everywhere, rolling in windrows and lining wire s American navy. | fences out along the railroad lines, to penalize the state B If 1312 was a period of fighting fame, later days of the | with its ill fame. e avy find their renown in the pioneering of new in-} Over in Iowa, too, weeds are a pest, closely farmed ti itruments of naval warfare. Tho first of those was the | as that portion of the corn belt is. They have been #) Mouitor—“chees2 box on a rafi"—on? of the innovations | metsing a study of the situation at Ames, seat of the Iowa which in the time of the Civil war revolutionized the | ogricultural college, and it has been discovered that davies of the world. Thi 3 the day of an-! three tidal waves of weed infection are sweeping over ® ther of the great naval figures of the world for all time.; the Hawkeye state. One migration is spreading from {cet him be remembered, too, today, when the roll of the | the south northward, another is traveling from the north | @ = sreat sea battiers is called. southward and a third is advancing from the west to| y which pioneered the the east. submarine, that terrify: of the World war, aud | Horse nettle and shoofly, a troublesome Texas weed. seve the navies of the world a new instrument of war- | are migrating northward. Canada thistle, quack grass tare, for a time its most iub‘iio and dreaded, with its | and sow thistles are pushing southward, while sunflower, tapacity to sink the larg: warships by a single blow | bufialo burr and marsh elder are traveling eastward. Mf its deadly torpedoes. | In time marsh elder is expected to be common in all Now the navy, true to precedent and tradition, is mak- | Parts of the state. ng of aircraft an adjunct of sea war methods by air-| In the Atlantic coast east, weeds are gaining ground dlane carricrs, and other navic It| everywhere. This is due to the decline of agriculture as experimented with the ram and with Zilinski’s dynamite , industry we the rural population into the manufactur- wruiser Vesuvius, both of which became obsoicte when | 1s towns. Farmers who lack the aid of labor are help- ; t was attempied to use them in the Spanish-American | less to combat the spread of the pests and they let the | war, although the principle of the ram had been em-| Weeds to their own sweet will, except as the ordinary |? sloyed with success during the Civil war. Thus the Uni-| tillage operations keep them down. Many of the Pennsyl- ed States navy has a proud distinction in the develop- | Vania small farms have sprung up with wild parsnips as @ nent of innovations introduced into the world's naval ee pes aanige cae is ay ars squipment and warfare. ‘vison ivy is beginning to trail the fences. former! ‘The navy, as an organization of the country’s el=| ee ae oe Cg hapaag ae, ee - aristic department, came into existence shortly after Rts i | he aration of colonial independence. As early as/ Page out of the northwest’s book and resort to summer- | Detober, 1775, congress authorized the construction ee paakergeeGha cerita napa Wo national cruisers and at the s: time appointed a i Z | marine committee to administer naval affairs. “phe first | eentive has been lacking, An older generation peo- | 4 ‘orce consisted of two ships of 24 guns cach, six brigs ples many of the farms and can no longer continue | sarrying 10 to 12 guns, two schooners each with eight | the arduous labor of tilling them, while the younger | suns, and four sloops, three of 10 guns and one of four. ' generation prefers to ride back and forth in its autos be- | H | Phese were purchased craft, badly d and built andj tween the industrial towns and the rural villages and Still later it was the insufficiently equipped and manned. Esc Hopkins was | "ms and make its living at regular wages in the shops. | Made commander-in-chief and John Paul Jones was| There will have to be an economic shift before eastern me of his lieutenants. In November, 1776, the grades | 28ticulture can again recover, the prestige it had up 3 admiral, vice admiral, rear admiral and commodore | ‘© bout the time when the automobile became such a | were adopted but not officially created by law until 1952, | {ctor in life. Until then these derelict farms will con- | During the Revolution 200 vessels were made prizes, | tinue to produce their crops of weeds and swell the na- | fhe colonies lost 11 vesscls of war by capture and a littte | onal loss duc to these plant pests. wuadron of gunboats on the lakes. Thirteen ships ws were destroyed to avoid capture, five were condemned| Time flies, and barbers are chirotonsors, undertakers 4 ‘nd three wrecked at sea. The country virtually was| re morticians, wiremen are electrologists and trusts ai | a it a navy between 1780 and 1785. mergers. | | | ‘The depredations of the pirates of the Barbary states { the navy, congress in 1794 ordering the construc- ; don of six frigates, four armed with 44 suns and two ord 96. The Berbers having made pcace the force was Editorial Comment _feduced to half. At first the navy was a part ofthe war dopartment, The Humble Schoolmaster “jut in 1798 the department was organized separately.) (Omaha World-Herald) its own secretary. It was at first administered | James 4 Compre 1 from humble country school- this secretary and » board of commiscioners, but it siaprdess oeutry yz is on a bureau basis, each with a head. i + “Row IN A PACK oF PAPER| 7 CATcH UP SO‘TLL BE MATCHES Wid EACH EVEN wit as Yi which originally created the rheu- LES matic condition. MMT ta exw... TAT ell js, Sad ma Seren ‘a ee a. = causes, and equally poor which treating cases. Most medical text / bowels aie books are very vague on the subject |times daily, as aoe, eest) “ Or as much as a move- mw of what causes rheumatism, and|ment to every meal eaten. One full many learned doctors suffer from {movement daily is never enough un- various rheumatic disorders, Jess one is living on only one eal meat cating is entirely respgnsi-/ Im some cases ble; others that infections, such as|two or three bowel movomente cone tensilitis, were the principal causes.|there will be a large amount of in- Ite is really ridiculous how few phy-itestinal poisoning because the colon sicians have ever gotten down to rec- | is inflamed and irritated with ognizing tke primary source of the| {rheumatic diathesis. Here is a great = @ con- known as colitis. In this con- the colon will reabsorb vast ii secret which is simple enough, but it/ quantities of toxic material b CHANCE You may be a new viewpoint to many of|must again pass throug; the wun IS HAVE wid jmy readers, including both the doc-| before it can be eliminated. If in ad- RS jtors and the layman—a great cause| dition to these causes from real = 8 UNCLE JAKE, of all rheumatic disorders will be|tion of intestinal poisonings, the pa. NS ALIAS ! {found in intestinal polsoning. This | tient eats the wrong Kind ef food, ros 8 . is the one primary cause, and must/much food or bad combinations of be considered first before the sec-/ food, or if he becomes too tired from 10-28- ondary irritating causes, such as in-|over-work or develops local infections fections of the nose and throat and/in some place in the body, then the oe genito-urinary organs. Also before|one with a tendency to the rheumat- Glico: ; es s “ ay ; spleen ty Se aati eee m. But we haven't heard anyone sures to weather, Improper | rheumatism. | [able to take his soup in A-flat. | Our Yesterdays | ai xk O* ° : i i j i i Alcohol in the trecs colcrs the ‘| the winter, and his family will ar- | Action to save the trees hes become | eaves, says a bulletin, Just another | FORTY YEARS AGO rive soon. Rae, ‘The Missourt national. But no one seems to be do- | phase of the red nose theory. Mrs. Asa Fisher is visiting in — in the Sameniate tchais ar. Bis. ing anything about the pedestrians. iediied | Jamestown on her way to Mitchell,| TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | marck last night, the earliest in many * * * A spat factory has just been estab-|§. D., to visit her daughter, Mrs. R.| Mrs, Mary L. Strauss returned to- | Years. Edison invented the light 50 years a ae repr ial There's @) w. Wheelock. day from an extended visit in Ohio, ago, but there's still a chance for | SP&t factory at Reno, too. — Railway Commissioner Frank Mil- somebody to think up a way to make! (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | mrs. Joseph Hare and children| Rev. E. C. White and family leave | hollan and Secretary J. C. Calder- a tail-light keep burning. Se ara oer ee have returned from Helena, Mont.,|this week for their new home in| ead returned yesterday from In- ee os RENE ae GAL | i ‘after visiting relatives for several | Bottineau, - — = ve they attended the Ruth Elder was the girl who asked | _,London—The law against selling | months. —_— convention of the National F asked | cigarets after 8 p. m. is strict, but a =a Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Welch returned | *8°clation of Public Utilities. the public to please forget her after | [ee chaver correspondent learned that 2 a I ” today from a several weeks visit she got married. Let's see, whom did he could buy something, equal to the John Yegwn left last night on a St. Louis. in she marry? eed: worth of the pack of cigarets, decide | business trip to St. Paul. Sid night when a company of young he didn’t want the “something” after Mrs. J. W. Foley arrived today | Women entertained at a theatre and Luncheons for visiting notables are all, and then exchange it for the| Hon. George H. Walsh of Grand | from Medore for a visit with Mr. and | 4ncing party, now being broadcast from Washing- | cigarets. Forks has rented the Davis house for | Mrs. James Foley. Sete ern girls who take everything in/|to rebound. “ one else in the world. If the other y ig in| to rebound. “And keep on rebound- man ‘wanted her she must him! Rot! Just an excuse for let- THIS HAS HAPPENED | “Entirely your own fault,” Bob{with the thing. If one could get; certain Helen did not love him semen, “Show story, MELEN PAGE feet | retorted. “I'm fed up on ultra mod: | out of love on the rebound he meant | sufficiently to p-: him before every- pace patented sdeal peor pete i {life for granted.” ing even if it hurts.” “L sce, Some girl ts responsible| Suddenly, from Shalimar: “Have | ting him down. a ‘and dialogue had not become for the great unhappiness you speak | you thought,” she asked, “that onc| “What will I do with the car?” aeon vr agnor rel of. hopeless love is as painful as|M@ asked Shallimar when they he laid out another big sum for dia- “Yes.” another? Have you considered that, |"ached_ Bramblewood. eee eee ne ee te siakis tate Smet aeeoinene “and you want me to help you | Bob?" PP pacar eeepc nga a = iggy are gp ig anc oor been searching for the girl. | forget her.” “I can't ever love anyone else 80|in we'll leave it in Pecigpnisioes) of the Edna Ferber story. agigsinye i Levers — aver ieaaete. — “Precisely.” much as I love Helen,” he an-| Nice little bus, isn't it? Helen is Thus, “Show Boat,” which comcs psplehaelin ping sy pst can her, | Sliallimar looked at him ap-|swered, and Shallimar felt that he |om lucky girl.” to the Capitol Theatre tonight, 1s Brent becomes jealous of Bob and |PTaisingly before answering. Fin-| spoke a truth in spite of the gen- nganraten really an one combination of a plots * win Helen quickly, espe- ally, in a drawl, she sald to him: |erally fatuous character of the re HEN they stopped before the 5 pans el enone gc omeere ee: sir nina i See fam “I wish 1 could afford to be serious mark. sia en ee ae well as Universal stars, are sees and from Nellin to prove Heien the | With you, Bob Ennis, “There's this, too,” she took xl “You won't kaow how much it heard in the popular song hits from heiress. Hearing that a sudden “Fail in love with me and marry |a little later; “we can’t get far with | will help you to love me unless you yg gt cso ge sane would Uthely Kill the old man, | me?” Bob asked. this thing unless Helen invites me | 4° St.” she teased. ———. Seahehe with: dia- rent alyly administers the shock. fey ‘And Bob kissed her logue, songs, was di ‘Just that, But I'm too poor for |to remain at Bramblewood. 1 don’t “Don’t be funny,” apie pee by Harry Pollard. Laura La Plante fate tind giving up the trip to Canada. puted his tace back to smother tt ff | aunia 2 be,® Fevelation in the dra- | “Marriage will never mean any-| Was going up to see my Aunt Kate, | in kisses. ‘orful songs. sssinakuetnal thing to you until you've bad a lot | but she has neuritis and doesn't} “For the Lord’s sake,” Bob Dae jof experience with life,” Bob/ really want me anyhow.” pleaded when he could get his Ls Prerca tee Miccus warned her, 5 “I believe you're clever enough to Seeeee. “WE Ae yon aang FR gla all gpocody She sighed, albeit placidly, in) manage to wiggle an invitation out | Uae ne son love thrallitg love story, are’ brought, to te ask release and surpriees wim |grecment. “I'm afraid not. And|of Helen.” Seat t oins ced: ead ths ak the Paramount for today and Tues- |so 4 think I'l accept your Jeft-} Shallimar flared @ bit at that. | before?” day by William Haines in “Speed- {handed invitation to play at love) “Do you realize that you're asking| , “Never. 1s it a common practice en ne Soe anchroniaed devoted hie tife to he |and see what comes of it.” a lot f1 Sa your “ ciher sromen are serre les | “og {ot romp me?” she -neane. Shalimar confessed reluctantly. Sanh fe et Eetienanalls ‘You started it,” Bob reminded races, picture not only tells a Meauwhlle, = school friend t | FOR a moment silence hung be “I just bad an impulse. Maybe I'm dramatic romance, but at the same Helen's, SHALLIMAR moRRis, | sie her. going to fall bard for you after all. time shows the audience all the areives for a visit and meets Bob, | tween them. Then: “Are you! “go I dig,” she was fair enough | How do you feel?” ; thrills of the actual speed classic, whe is angry over Ucien's evasion \loyal2" Bob asked her abruptly. | to admit. “Well, shall we say we're| “You haven't worked any magic even to its accidents. The famous and inck of explanation. Shalll- | She pondered on the question @| engaged? Then 1 on me so far.” Bob told her, and rivers of the big Memorial Day mine challenges him ton airtation, lye 1 Gon't know,” she sal cam tell Helea | veant to be discouraging. He was speed classic at Indianapolis also ap- and is surprised when he anys, 2 ig sald.| it would break my heart to leave”! beginning to see that he had let Pear as actors. In addition to the “I'd Nhe to fall in love with you— hy? eee himself in for something with thrills of the race an aerial sensa- to forget someone else.” “Because the girl I'd like to for- GHE was laughing at him but | Shalimar. tion and s parachute jump add to NOW GO ON WITH THE STOMY | cet is your friend,” Bob explained. Bob squirmed just the same.| “How in the world will you get ae. poral’ fgg gees CHAPTER XXXV “Of course; I knew that,” she re-|“Let’s not Ie.” he evaded. aplasia ge gd young racing mechanic, who events 6s)NOTHING,” Bob answered un- | plied serenely, “but loyalty 1s such] “But you will give yourself every Be NES EE AS ually wins his place as a racing driv- emotionally., “I'm merely | complex commodity. One owes a| chance to learn to love me, won't| “Ob, I'll hop a milk wagon et, only to sacrifice it on the altar ¥ bit of 1 be} of friendship. He gives a splendid telling you that 1 should like to fall of it to oneself, no?” you?” she pressed. “You will spend | Walk to the nearest telephone and Performance, starting as the “fresh” in love with you. It would relieve| “Then you have no scruples about |every free moment you have with | °@ll 8 taxi.” youngster and showing the gradual me of a great unhappiness, 1|!t? Not even the fact that you are| me?” tite 4 mot come inside and evolution of this character into s man basins.” gong “xen.” “And wake up everybody? pny ER yn “Well"—Shallimar's enthusiasm} “Dear boy"—she delighted in the| To keep bis promise, they stayea| “What of it? You said you didn't an aviatrix, while, Ernest ‘Torrence, began to return—“can't you do It?| Use of these words that made her | until the dancing was over for the|°#fe- Besides, we ought to send Karl Dane and John Miljan are Other men have.” appear so much more sophisticated | night at the club house, and drove| Boos’ “sanse "ot “iment, AE Se mane Members at the cae. “1 mean to try,” Bob told ber,|/40d knowing than the young man| home through the morning mist| about the car caused “after I've made you utiderstand | She addressed them to—“I shall do| that hung over the banks of the|Shallimar suggested. email wor Prices Rocket that ft won't meap a thing to you|#0tbing underhand. That, I think, | river like a cloud. And a girl upstairs, in 9 soft Wet Raids unless...” covers the ethics in the case.” “I wonder if 1 can get in with. | 7ellow erlprogtred ensemble, heard oy “Please go on. This is most in-| “Then let's dance,” Bob requested. ous eating Se baat” eens enter octet ct Oba Set ee Oe Boe triguing.” Shallimar rose slowly to her feet. | upon the small clock in the car. the indistinct reply of her com- price of “moonshine” has risen 25 “Unless you should happen to| Their eyes met, and she understood| “Don't try,” Bob said shortly, | banion. ‘W] |per cent during the last week, and a fall in love with me,” Bob finished |that he was acknowledging her| “Ob, 80 you want Helen to know| She did not wonder what time it corresponding increase in the cost of att i what time I get in?” was. Having been awake all night imported wet goods is also said to calmly. rength. In his arms, she did not she could ie a Bob was ashamed at once of bis have guessed close to the have taken Shallimar laughed. “I’m halt in| disappoint bim. He willingly gave! pectiness, Driving in Helen's car|bour. A clock somewhere in the Renewed raids in East Grand Jove with you already.” she de-|reins to his imagination and tried | had wakened bitter feelings in him. | house struck the hour of five, Could Forks, and a raid in the vicinity of clared. “And ['ll do all in my |to become aroused to a tender feel-| “1 really don't think she ought er Gd ge [yore a edgeclgnarr y hg cds wer to make you care twice as|ing for ber. Bi to be disturbed again tonight,| | Helen went halt-opened ee ee cere ts ake Tes core bag ut there was 80) © iimar remarked carelessly.” door and listened. ‘There were no factors in causing the price in- m me, provided that the ef the grand passion. “Again?” Bob questioned. distinguishing sounds. She stepped crease. same reservation goes for you in| Beautiful she was, and a satie| «Something happened before din-| Ut into the hall, leaned over the Ad conditions in East Gran that case as you're putting up to| fying dance partnei banister. She had ordered the door are indicated by the fect that me if 1 fall in love with you.” admit that he could not plunge {nto | tell me what it was. A telephone | left unlocked for Shalimar, think- eral ee = “You mean I'm not to take your |even an infatuation for her. “But|Ctll. For a while she was deeply | INE that she would come in before | |i0, Toocrted as uomewhat less than love seriously, . suppose.” It might come,” he persisted in| 2e1isted, them she seemed to put it tle teuct at [bone dry at times, liquor was found " " out of her mind and when your|%P for her @ reasonable tensth of in Precisely; just as 1 am not to|thinking. And all the while not! sister arrived she was as gay as(time. should go to bed. Cay oe oe oe expect anything of yours.” believing himself. ever, Helen isnt’ exactly exuber-| Just then, while she was medl- psd these Pron pred allow time “I don't think {'d want to warry| Shallimar did her best. Bob was| Att, y" know.” ive. | Stalnmee ted Bob nce, Sbomtets, Tl |between raids for Prospective ar- you, however much 1 might be in | gallant enough to bide from her bis| egy, Pa gecoel ytd PE gg library into the hall, walking arm Testes to carn their 4 ire SER 7e0y Bob confessed. real feeling, which was fast becom-| heard from the man she had prom- |! arm—and Shalimar was lean Many authorities say that an alll- ‘Well, that's 9 nasty crack,” | Ing one of mild revulsion. He was| ised to marry. But no matter what | aMectionately against him. gator does not reach ite full adult Shallimar complaised. doggedly determined to go through | had passed between them he was; ~ (To Be Continued) ER s3 * --—2- oo oe

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