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eé Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | Published by the Bismarck ‘Tribune Company. Bis ok, N. 1D.. and entered at the postoftice at Bismares ig Second class mail matter G D. Mann . President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ly by carrier, per year . by mail, per year (ip Bismarck by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) vey y by mail, outside of North D. eekly by mail, in es leekly by mail, in state, three years for eekly by mail outs‘*- of North Dakota, Per year : vies lanes MOU! Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 5.00 1.00 e, per year Member of The Associated Pre: ciated Pi is exclusively entitled to the use ation of all news dispatches credited to tt or nd clso the shed herein, Ail matter hereir are pontancous origin pub ts of republication of all other reserved, Forcign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Incorporated) Formerly G_ Logan Payne Co, CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ac North Dakota Is 40 North Dakota today shares with Was! Fand South Dakots forticth birthday of ton, Montant heir admis- thi sion into the union. Forty yeu n be specially mean- fingful. Dr. Osler created t onic jest that at 9 man had so far outlived his usefulness that he should! ¢ of state sit happens to ice and usefulness are just at <i ®be chlorotormed. In tl in this instance, ext ¢ beginning. however, rather than at the outset of the riod of decay. The commonwealths of November, 1889, have not yet mun to realize their future development and destiny, ey lack the population of older states, and while they Mhave vast resources, these have just been touched, ‘They re in their youth, in the formative stage of character Hust as much as young people are in their teens. A ture for which nature has endowed th with the material gifts that n lead them to pr ress and empire, lies before them. Compa lyeays of Iceland, North Dat and its sister 5 2889 are in virtual childhood. But adolescence in’ states can be sociated with: prodigies. te phenomenon of switt development of Political structure has in this age of democracy and Hinvention been its most striking charac! ic, = The Mour states admitted to the union in 1889 in particular Hhave demonstrated this marvel. He ) agricultural empire has been laid on brosd and enduring foundations. Mn South Dakota the industrial advance from the cast 5 crossed its borders. In Montana m farming fand livestock focus attention, In the coast common- alth of Washington a future metropolis ef the Pacific st that compares creditably wiih the Atlantic big citics been developed, with a cluster of rivals striving for the same heno Since 1889, Fargo, Bismarck, Grand Forks eat Falls Billings, Helena, Missoula, Spc ind Tacoma have prop din a growth which es es them as fixed of population, industry and merce the map of the Northwest future etropolitan expressions cf the genius of the West Population is sterdily crowding in, there is a general Npansion of the rich and pu ef Benjamin Harrison im tehood. d with 1,000 es ot Minot, Butte, nd as story that tl en in the ster commonwealths of 1889. Out of a wilder most, with the n, the buffalo, the trappe eighter, the frontier army post, the cow 7 Bthe catilomen as a back domain of civilization comprised $ neighboring northwest. It is somet nething to be looked back upon with satis is a good time also to look forward into that future aged for certain if the people of D ota will continue intel ly to develop and administer: heir great heritage of 40 years have w Federal Land Cession Not Popular Tt seems queer policy to spurn a gif President pover's proposal to transfer to the states the eserved public domain is meeting that ef a recep- ition. Some of the states do not regard the Hoover nder as a transfer, in fact. They look on ut as a step 9 dump undesirable land on them. So the nation has the unnatural spects of a gift Mg spurned. When the public land commission 9 is authorized to look into the conse nd coal and into other problems which onnection with iis main duty—-comes to de Sugar-coat the transfer of the remnants of public | PYands to the states, it is plain i is ¢ athe | culties in developing a plan to work out sident’s » To begin with, the proposal takes on ¢ er problem at the outset. Overgraz which | d back “i the wear of yea heavy volume, the su watet over th i ¢' floods and wreak damage on farming areas and on Ptowns in their pach. This condition presents the n: ssity of Kk has been heavy at some points, and in the Mizpah- pkin Creek country south of Miles City, Montana. Utah the foresters have been gathering as much 2 RYASS Seed as possible each season and sowing ii on ithe patches of open range, in efforts to bring back these | es. In a dual sense this has proved patchwork. + Ym the Montana experiment to solve the problem, lands ban d by homesteaders. federal lands, state lands holdings of the Northern Pacific railroad have bee! atively combined in‘o & restricted grazing reserva- to be administered much as the forest grazing areas the forestry service. A bill put through the pre- § coucress by the united efforts of the Montana and elegations in the house and sonate granted p2r- don for the proper authorities of the federal gov- to pool such government land with the other Ranchers who were using the N. P. land on leases using the government range were formed > m cooperative reservation committee to administer + 9st tn coe @ idea was periec: on paper. our its oackers are | p 0D practical operation to say what value it} In this case there might be no objec- | fo accepting the tender of the federal acreage. Iv ‘states which have the overgrazing problem, th:! \ saa into a workable ce ‘expenditere involved in carrecting con- | the usefulness, the value or the Lys Fethedhatiate dint gre would rather have the Re aS 6.00 | perity, pro- | un- | ; war’ to tell .heir grievances to mena jand the ensincer's office. federal government retain the areas and improve th: out of the federal treasury. Some members of congress from the west tear tha federal abandonment of the public domain might lead to abandonment also of the federal road aid policy They say that thus there are two reasons for not want ing the land: its unproductiveness and the menace to road aid | If, however, the president were to toss in with the ‘laads their mineral rights, say these critics, that would + be a different casc. The president does not propose j this complete gift, however. He has embarked on 4 ‘course of conservation with regard to the oil, the cos! and other mineral deposits. A Democratic member of the senate, Bratton, New | Mexico, has indorsed the Hoover proposal. He says | that state possession means passing the lands to private ownership and a private owner will have a natural to protect and preserve his estate and make it But the nub of his opinion ts that h- thinks the mineral rights should go with the lands if they ‘are ceded to the states Like so many other things, the land cession proposal thus is found to have a catch to it. And it as the catch that has aroused hostility to the president's plan, The Hurrie:.ne Analyzed of the debacle in the stock market—in fact | 3 the last one worse than the first—was vosday, when 25 billions of valuation had been ied Out of the quoted worth of those securities which re the merchandise of Wall street onc day and its iblers’ chips the next. This was the day of the big! hed T | bur ¢ in speculation, when the fury of the selling ni depression to th- ends and the corners of the coun- try, It was the day when the rich men felt the blow. T ad wen. dovn with the bad. id before, the cyclone in Wall sire , Wise a symptom of a commercial ailment. j not al. Industry was net str | about, then? as in no- Business was | What was it all ‘The New York Times is > ood financial authority and | ascribes the far-reaching decline mainly to a general | loss of confidence in the market, just then, and the in- j ability of any man or group to stem such a torrent of | selling, which came from all parts of the world, Euro- | forming a very material percentage of the | tocks forced on the market. | of ramific: | which served to add their quota of pressure, among i| these, in the analysis of the Times, being: e Belated liquidation from Thursday's crash, when the But there were thousands market did not rally prompily from the decline. war started | The cleaning out of several stale pools, whose holdings, 1 Man in some cases large, went into the market for what they) Goat tac tane ‘ : : Jane Cowl says the t | Would bring its last legs. here secm of the gent i ral public, already badly hit in the smash of | day. | Bear selling for the dectine on an adroit and unspee- | pine nb tacular fashion. tor the | ‘The mob psychology which impels holders of stocks in| more grateful than t all parts of the country to try to sell them all at ouce | | when the market shows signs of givifig w | Margin calls which went out of Wall Street by the Rk. ions to the market and many factors, too, ! ¢ The immediate drying up of buying power on the part | Plenty of ‘em anyway. fof everyone to becom THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1929 [OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Aherr. ~~ YES, MISTAH MASAH = YO" 1S GAZI” AT NONE OTHER THAN ON «AN EATIN® A LA CARTS ! | ~~ ME AN’ THREE OTHER Boys re WE iS y «UHIGH RIDING BANTO ~~ BARBS What Russia and Ch: * * * xe * John J. Raskob says 1 kob himself has ZJASON ON PARADE fae THROWIAS” NOTHIN” BUT SEVENS FUM Nov! HAS GIT TOGETHER A QUARTET ON “TH” RADIO AW” WE IS Gain’ OVAH LAK A ZEP tae Fil’ —~\ MEMPHIS MOANERS ut I SING FENCE ENGR, | 5 ANT AM A- HARD PLAYER! WELL, WELL, JASON ~~ I Am GREATLY PLEASED “fo HEAR OF YOUR SUCCESS ~~ EGAD ~AH « HARR-R-UME ~ WON'T You BoyS NEED A MANAGER “TO “TAKE CARE OF YOUR BOOKINGS AND AFFAIRS 2 FoR TWELVE NEARS I WAS MANAGER FoR A SCORE GF OPERA SINGERS AND CONCERTS CHEWING GUM The original chewing gum industry jing gum factories, where the blocks is said to have begun on a capital of | are ground up into meal. It is re- ships and brought to American chew- $55.00. Now, every month in the United States, more than $7,000,000 is spent for chewing gum alone. In 1927 we exported over $1,500,000 worth of gum to foreign counties. This is one of the unlooked-for results of war, since the American doughboy spread that habit to other soldiers, who took it home with them and thus, in a roundabout way, caused the | duced to syrup, refined and sterilized modern ehewing gum manufacturer | and is then ready for sweetening and to have his labels printed in eighteen | flavoring. Many flavors, such as mint different languages. doublemint, peppermint, grape, lico- The first chewing gum was spruce! rice, ete., are added. It is sometimes gum. After that came the paraffin | medicated as a laxative. wax, and then the chicle gum which| After being flavored the gum is is now chewed from Greenland’s icy | rolled into large sheets and then cut mountains to India’s coral strand. into stick size and sold to little Chicle is the sap drawn from‘the | Johnny's mama, who would rather bark of the sapodilla tree. Mexico and j buy him gum than allow him to eat Central America are the chief source. | too much candy. The trees are tapped during the} The moderate use of chewing gum {rainy season by slashing the bark in | stimulates secretion of the saliva and great criss-cross patterns. After once | also tends to cleanse the teeth. It is being tapped the tree does-not yield |also used to relieve nervous tension, again for five years. If the tapping is | and sometimes as an aid to giving up continued up into the branches the! chewing tobacco. In small amounts it jtree will be destroyed. is an aid to stimulating the digestive When the milky juice runs down | juices, especially after a meal, and is \ the criss-cross channels it is gathered | used by ball players and men who jinto a canvas sack hung at the bot-! work in steel foundries over red-hot | tom. The bag is taken to camp, where | metals as a” preventive of excessive ,the milky juice is boiled down until | thirst. the milkiness disappears. What is left} I sometimes allow fasting patients is a brownish cream-colored mass,|to chew a small amount, as this re- jand this is molded into the large | lieves their sense of hunger and makes | brown blocks of chicle used commer- their breaths more pleasant. About ‘ cially. one package daily, taken in small In this crude form it is loaded into | bits, is effective for this purpose. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune, Enclose @ stamped addressed envelope for reply. ORE POoWER-UBE You ,SASON ! TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Turner and daughter Vivian have returned from their trip to St. Louis. If * || Our Yesterdays | ~ 2 is William Wen has returned from a ee _ForTY YEARS AGO | five weeks cruise down the Yellow- le “ie states of North and South Da- | stone and Missouri rivers from Glen- | oper were admitted to the Union to- | dive. e iY. “We cannct settle it (prohibition) by trying to standardize human ccon- duct.”— Governor Ritchie of Mary- land, (Outlook and Independent.) sk * “This myth of prosperity, if be- lieved, will lead to inevitable catas- trophe. America’s prosperity is for oniy 24 per cent of the people, and this per cent owns all the wealth of the country."—Mrs. Daisy Worthing- ton Worcester, University of Cali- fornia lecturer. eee “It is rapidly becoming more and George E. Reed and George Wal er of Williamsport are visitors in Bis- marck this week. Mr. and Mrs. Parker (Nellie Brady) i at eee arrived from the east today for a vis- Colonel Norville, special land agent it with friends here. this district. has returned to Bis- | K after a trip about the state. | F. B. Allen went to Steele on busi- | ness today. WILLIAMS TO MEETING Washington. Nov. 2—()—Carl Wil- ne leit for the west liam: member of the federal farm 1 about 50 Bismarck la- board. plans to attend the annual 1 be employed on the | meeting of land grant colleges at ‘anch of the N. P. Chicago Nov. 12 to 14. thousands and which mainly were answered by orders io | sell at the market. | The catching of stop-los$ orders, many of them put months ago. A Popular Topic (Albany Knickerbocker Press) { More persons are interesied in reading about religion ; than is commonly supposed. judging by the statist: | publishing trade. Figur sciation show that of the 8. Volumes on religious subjec! the list. Their number was exceeded only by voted to fiction. Books on the s bject of religion rarely figure in the sell and literature of this type iN ‘s its appeal only to readers of a special The fact that religious publications bulk so large reading output will surprise most persons. | of fiction last year reached a total of 1.135. while 768 wore classified as religious. Biography claimed 640 | titles, and 634 were children’s books. Drama and poetry | Were almost as popular as biography, with 595 titles, while | sciences, travel, economics and education found places low | on the list . i Perhaps the biographies have been more talked about than any other group, unless it b> the mystery tales which seem to be enjoying greater vogue th: now Readers of religious books apparent sbout the volumes that interest them, but interest is active there seems no doubt. that their Prefer Man as Boss | «Chicago News) } 's nature will limit her actuevements in the world, said a notably successful business woman cling the National Retail Dry Goods Association in | Chicago recently. i “There is something unexplainable about women that makes them want to be bossed by men, makes them makes them t to go to men for advice in certain matters rather to other women,” said Miss Ruth P. Chapin, ont store personnel manager of Buffalo, N. Y.. and nan of the board of directors of the personnel up of the national association. | “It is true that women have made wonderful progress | in the past few . but there are certain sitions fro! ‘hich women will never be oust the men,” Miss Chapin continued. “Women y be able to direct certain businesses from behind Using some man as a front. but they do not seem to coms in contact with the feminine purchasing ! public as ‘actorily as men. “Imagine woman floorwatkers or woman consultants when some woman comes in with a srie’ ! It simply ad not work. A woman it tively feels that she respect the judgment of a man more. is certainly true that women will go v much | ‘han they have already in invading man’s busi- but there is something about a woman's in- something that cannot be eradicated. which her demand contact with men in certain of the more responsible business positions Offers Boys Sea Training ‘Long Beach Press-Telegram) | Are there any Richard Henry Danas in Southern Cali. fornia ready to spend, not “Two Years Before the Mast." | ut (hres years in the engine rooms and chart houses of | he modern merchant marine? If so, they may have | ovporiunity to prepare for mariners’ licenses. thus fit- | tint them for the captain's bridge. the navigator's cabin | | On» company operating ships between New York and | tho Baltic announess a course of training for young men | wh) desis to follow the sea and to fit themselves for | officers of the merchant firet. | that other Americin maritime firms will do likewise. for _ commeres is crowing and there will be problems in find- | ing suitable evecutive material unless a goodly number of | the youth of the land is encouraged to choose a naviga- | tion as a career. a set af modern text books as a means for strengthenins | ‘is edveationa! and cultural backeround. This proeram is in charee of en ex-nerval officer who will work along the nes followed by the Naval Acad-my. Aiter thres vears cadets will be eligible for licenses as eneineers. | bensfitine frem ecean mail contraeta are required to! exrry evdets on the €--& and in the ensire room. and inva Or corehilty, pickive reume Ste bas mts men of training them to rum their ships. | THIS MAS HAPPENED NELEN PAGE f. in love with NARD BRENT. ‘The fatter plans for ber future meeting a dying besgar. CUNMIAGIIOM. to the lonely o! reo without ques searching f child for years. Among Hclea's new feic! VA ENMS and her quickly, especially after find- ing another loeket like the one be had taken from Neilin to prove Ueten the heiress. Hearing dem shock weald kill faz ced appeal to bee tozaity, Breet wine Helen's promise to marry him. Later, che and Hob discover eh ather, but ergaged. Helen dire threa e dares to marry Bes E resents Helen's treat- ment of Bob. which driven ws with SHALLIMAN and he Hictem ts Brent bas Leen making love to ber. Bob gorse to tell Helen the kind of cad she is eugaged a while be fs there Am urgent call comes from his mother. 23OW GO ON WITH THE sToRY CHAPTER XL N ran to the telephe nis would not ial matter, she know. Tt mast ceiver, What is it. Mrs. Ean The voice that came back to her in answer was fraught with fear | “Is Bob there?” it asked. “Yes, yes.” Helen ssid. “Do you! Want to talk with him?” for whatever wanted to shut out the vision of Brent's evilly handsome face. Why jbada’t she broken with him alto! As E gether when she discovered what a through the doorway she became! short of a complete lack of self con- promiseuo} fainter. dim. i ~w ~ ra ‘erisis earlier—he migut have done Wat ts itt” be ached hoarsely. comething that would have caused j ber to speak of him to Eva, to re- Deated the question over the wire. | veal him to the girl in his true tight before this. So ran her thoughts— Reten did rot answer and he re “What's wrong, mother?” “Oh. come home son. at once.” | thoughts that were hard to bear to] Mists “ connection with possible harm toj ™\. - the bouse. Bob's arm was about she entreated him. “I don’t know Ne Poss! i ag ‘We must have s doctor.” Bob! Helen She | d against him and what's the matter with Eva. She! is. . she is...” | “Vil be there right away.” Bob: put the receiver back om the hook. | from upstairs. “Well take my car; it's faste } Pes Helen said, hastening alons beside BUF? ey ' utedee eer: doen to them. nnocent ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. foot of the read ie confidence. green. in Bob's was the was desperate. sweet exterior cor knew, a temperamental in her music. id and said that did not touch . - it's too ter- ollapses ee id mot say all that was ia : did not tell the to her that they should ded their broken a result of Eva's disil- her hands to her face and there until his home was net bear the thought | been partly to biame happened. sort he was? His life ‘had been filled with women. “Please.” The voice was growing; tad known it, and yet believed that the could remain true in love. | “It is your mother.” Helen looked | aut Peer Bacteria gaa up at Bob, who had followed close ne tobaved when he thought bim- upon her exit from the breakfast | seit engeged to ber—that day she| Ditifully. room, and her expression frightencd should hare cut with bim finally./ ltt might have brought matters to a the emergency. forcing aside the) ghey had much to but neither could They hurried into the house— | Bob had his key ready for the lock the imstant they reached the door— jumped up, uct stopping even fo lana were greeted at once by a call “Is that you Bob? It was his mother, frantic aaa! As she spoke she was working clme’s at the docr." Bob re-' {0% 20m Feasom unable to come! tike mad over the unconzcious girl, Mother sald and then added su C Ecb teek the staira th ata ‘So is mine. 1 was going to drive , time. forgetful of Helen. Sie more uncommon for any but collesc men to be chosen for the highest po- sitions in American industry, busi- Mess and finance."—B. C. Forbes. (Forbes Magazine.) x OR OF “There seems to be something about prairie Fundamentalism that tends to produce chorus men.”—Elsie McCor- mick, Ch for NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE ON FORECLOSURE fingertips! Present'y, when even she was . them, un- | about to dspair of bringing Eva to in of un es, she heard a fluttering pass her lips, saw her eye er and her lips move. ara, Eva dear,” she cried, but before Eva opened her eyes she stepped away and Ict Eva's glance fall upon her mother. For a moment Eva lay in tor ilence, her eyes moving questioningly, over wora countenance, ' “Oh, mama, mama,” she cried at er. Bob drew last, reaching up her arms to be th the full force to her mother’s tosom. When ere was a crack- she lay enfolded there she was too yielding of the ‘exhauste’, too beaten, to weep. } Her eyelids drooped as do those rv the buttlog a tired child. She whimpered time and her mother latd a cheek to her F s aare awa THe gh the 4, . tered opening he t an Ne Soa Cima i “What {fs ft, baby?” she said ned the ker Ja thelock ;foftly, coasingly. “My poor little q Chickadee. my little wee one.” Helen ard Bob stole quietly out of the room. “Forgive me, ama darling,” Eva whispered, loudar now. “I couldn't stand it...I lovel him with all my heart.” Notice is hereby given, that where- as default has occurred in the con- ditions of that certain chattel gage, m cuted and di by Otto ck as Mortgagor. 8 _ Mortgagee, th, A. D, in’ the offi port. d filed for reco Register of deeds in and for Burleigh cou North Dako’ on the 19th l failure of the said Mortgagor to pay the debt secured thereby, or any part thereof, and that there is now due on said secured debt, and unpaid, the } sum of One hundred eighty-five dol- ety-two cents ($1 id debt, together with all costs and expense ‘of this sale, and statu- tory attorney fees, will’ be sold at | Public Auction to the highest bidder for cash, on the premises described in said Mortgage as the South-east quarter (SE%) of Section twelve (12) {in ‘Township » (137) in| Range seventy-five in Burleigh county, North Da- . on Tuesday, the 12th day of D. 1929, at the hour of of said day. The property described ‘in said Mortgage, and which will be sold as aforesaid to satisfy the same is as follows: One grey gelding eight years old. wt. 1000 pounds. Name, Cap. One black gelding seven ‘years el wt, 1400 pounds. Name, Char- 44 would $ t whom Helen hai lied to ber fect, pushed in behind bim. There had not been a sound from Eva until then. They saw her. | ing drawn up in a keap on her bed, ker hair disordered and her eyes staring &t them in fixed terror. One arm was flung up against her Sorebead and in ber hand was a smal! bottle. H= mother held her tighter, pressing her cheek in @ caress- ye One grey gelding nine years old, wt. 1400 pounds. Name, Frank. One bay gelding ten years old, wt. 1400 pounds, Name, Mike. One grey gelding six years old, wt. 1100 pounds. Name, Prince. One black mare seven years old, weight 1400 pounds. ne, Fanny. One bay mare ten yeurs old, wt. 1209 pounds. Name, Babe. One red milch cow five years Bina ing movement against the silky She shrieked as they ram toward | pong hair, saying nothing. ‘ing ape aa atemmes to put the bot: for the confidence she'd prayed her ee giiseg the few remaining wis) sould Site her. siepe and anaiched it away, from ES se ae Pelee 2 er. Her mother sank down*upon *€ 4 ° the sas of the bed moaning: “Eva, with her slender fingers. “I want. old, Gne black milch cow three years old, esis him and... and he isn't for me. Hons Jolin Deere gang plow. One love _. |He was never for me. I know it. "One Monitor ariity One harrow, ‘A 237 the bottle fy trom Bob's | Bob <27s he fs going to marry Helen One MEConmick mower, One Me- a | —Helen, my dearest friend—oh I'll of opend gad: Semece’ 16 Cae hate her—I can't help it. I can't grabbed her and she turned upon/belp anything. 1 can't stand it, 1 bim like a wild animal at bay. | C#8t! 1 camt! I can't!” Cormick ra One John Deore wide tive wag on complete with box One harrow Ure Wagon com: plete with box Bes | “She was growing hysterical. | One MeCormiek header, Two re ‘4 "Sause ae agit “Hush, hush dcar.” Mrs. Ennis 1 SAP omaeie te Nene Calad: toy te recht aka Mihing’ | Dleaded. “You have frightened me full, ro removing the wane from x nearly to death. Please, dear, don't Helen slipped forward and picked | max, more.” up the bottle. Eva iad not noticed i popes she was ap- her until then. Helen rushed out of | peating to her sympathy, knowing, the room to empty the contents of rule the bottle in the bathroom. $e i she, sates ere Eva saw her disappear! Mort. She fice ad- a. KOO. dress, Steele, No, 's mounting emotion subsided limp in Bob's arms. Her She escaped in @ Jong. convulsive sigh. She fay still—like a broken toy— erself. | a doll with the sawdust poured out. bad Bob was shaking like a leaf as he cried, mother making Jet her dows upon her pillows. oe =e “Sbg's fainted, mom,” he saidiing no word te distract her Mrs, Ennis roused herself to meet é | Weakness of fright that had over- come her. Helen had presence of mind enough to fetqp a glass of water back with her. With this they laved | ing Eva's marble-white face and cold! o¢ cried frantically as she failed to/tost herself in the wonder of their respond to their treatment. “Ob try a little harder.” Helen besged. “She couldn't bear any {to them. ;more interference. Here, put the, swollen but there were signs of t! {pillow under her feet. There, let calm that follows @ storm in Ob, burry! ber head down flat. Rub her bands, | half-smile and j bard.” They felt reassured. “Eva wants you, ‘ pushing Bob aside and taking ase. | SER “Oh, vow will Baty her, won't | mand ip consequence of being.the | 30u?™ (To Bo Continwed) s °