The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 10, 1930, 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)

a a . ° che Bismarck Tribune . An Independent Newspaper is THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) _ Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- : N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck secona ciass mail matter. Aorge D. Mann ................President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance . My by carrier, per year ....... 55 $7.20 ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck) + 7.20 aly by mail, per year. | (in state, outside Bismarck) ..... 5.00 Aly by mail, outside of North Dakota . 6.00 | sekly by mail, in state, per year 1.00 | sekly by mail, in state, three years for 2.50 sekly by mail,-outside of North Dakota, per year .......... seeeee +150 zekly by mail in Canada, per year ..... 2.00 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press + | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use | * republication of all news dispatches credited to it or t otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the cal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All chts of republication of all other matter herein are io reserved. et (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS _ Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Taft and a North Dakotan On the night of January 6, 1919, Theodore Roosevelt ‘ssed out of life as he slept. He had told his personal evant to “Turn off the light,” as he prepared to enter | e slumber from which he never awoke. | Much as the man with whom his life and career were so timately associated, William Howard Taft, who had} en made and unmade president by Roosevelt, also 2d, Saturday afternoon, when he passed out in a matose state in which he had lingered several days. Whether in life or death Taft always suggested oughts of Roosevelt. The adventurous days of the! vugh Rider president from the Dakota Bad Lands were | awded with dramatic events, but the chief drama in € life of William Howard Taft was that which com- aed the friendship and feud of himself and Colonel yosevelt and centered in the one term in the chief agistry which the Ohioan served. It is true that no American except Taft ever at- ined the two highest honors in the government, the esidency and the chief justiceship, but it also is to be ited that he obtained his preferences for all but two of- ses, one the presidency, by appointment. His political reer, therefore, was not at all a stc=uous, stormy one | :e that of his sponsor for the chief post he held by ap-/} | al to the people. And the second time he appealed r the suffrages of the electorate, it rejected him almost | mpletely—but for a paltry eight electoral votes, those | Vermont and Utah. | The inference is obvious to a generation which knew | aft only as the reserved chief justice of the U. S. su-| eme court, keeping in the background as etiquette stated, while an older generation which had had per- nal touch with the politics of the nation in 1912 knew om experience, that Taft was not gifted for leadership. 2 was a jurist and originally had ambition only for the mech. Instructed to discharge some’ of the most im- tant missions growing out of the Spanish-American sr, 2s the governor-generalship of the Philippines and trip to the Vatican to arrange the delicate adjust-, ent of the Philippine friar lands question, he was a illiant success. But in the presidency he floundered. He was misled | * friends and politicians to whom he gave his trust | 1d confidence only to be betrayed in advice and acts, | on so early that Roosevelt had misgivings that he had | cked the wrong man as successor before he hirisclf 1d completed his days in the presidential chair. It will) ‘remembered that Roosevelt fairly rushed away from| ashington in that bitter blizzard which marked the | aft inauguration, and March 23, 1£98, left on his voyage | r African exploration. He even dropped hints that s old friend had given him a cold turn down on the} 1e appointment he had desired Taft to make in naming s cabinet. Instead of retaining James R. Garfield in| \e portfolio of secretary of the interior to carry on the | oosevelt conservation policies, Taft appointed Richard Ballinger, of Seattle. Some persons have a hazy impression that William H. aft’s debacle in the 1912 campaign was due to the tariff ll passed during his administration. They do not know | \eir history well. Taft's political fortunes went to pot) + @ result of this appointment of Ballinger. Had he amed Garfield, the Roosevelt conservation policies | ould have been executed by a secretary of the interior | sympathetic attitude and the old friendship and prest- | tial sponsorship would have stood intact. { By the time Roosevelt came back from Africa, in 1910,/ ‘ter consorting with King Edward, Kaiser William, King | ictor Emmanuel and other European sovereigns, receiv ig honorary degrees from the great universities of Africa ad western Europe, preaching in one of the historical aurches of Holland and quarreling with the Vatican over visit to the pope which, in consequence, had to be! inceled, the Taft administration was involved in under- | ‘ound convulsions over Alaska and conservation which von blew into open explosion. Ballinger was accused | ’ intriguing to make over to the Guggenheims the astly valuable coal deposits and forests of Alaska, A forester named Glaves and Gifford Pinchot, U. S. westry bureau chief, were leaders of the fight against ie policies of Ballinger. Taft wabbled between his sec- stary and Pinchot and finally threw out the latter and| ,ade Ballinger’s policy his own. Then came the definite | ceak between him and Roosevelt. Soon the two old) ‘iends were as far apart as the poles and Roosevelt scided to become 1 candidate for the Republican presi- | ential nomination of 1912 in opposition to Taft. | Wherever there were popular vote primaries, Roosevelt verwhelmed Taft, but in states which did not have such vimaries and where delegates to the national conven- on were the choice of precinct. ward and county cau-/ 4ses, the situation became one of contesting delegations. | o keep Roosevelt from getting the nominaticn, the con- ssts at the Chicago convention were ruthlessly decided | 1 favor of Taft under the leadership of such Republican niefs and intimates as Elihu Root and Henry Cabot cdge, Taft was jammed through. Roosevelt founded te Bull Moose party. Taft ‘vas beaten in the November tection, but Roosevelt failed also, with 88 electoral ‘The Republican split put Woodrow Wilson in the _ residency. American history was thus very much’ " jItered from what it would have been had not Taft ‘md Roosevelt auarreled over the official acts of an _ Dnderstrapper, though he was a cabinet official, for Bal- | | Enger never took high rank in his public career and #4 back into obscurity as soon as he passed out the cabinet. ‘Whe will say destiny was not at work, It required a \t to clear the way for Woodrow Wilson, and ¢ political explosion between Taft and Roosevelt @ concussion. It rent the overwhelmingly ‘Republican party and Woodrow Wilson walked the breach as the Israelites through the Red ancient day when destiny also was making for all the ages. i} i i people think “room for argument” means | It is 50 miles from the famous Roosevelt dam. | through newly constructed ditches, The Changed Indian Relations —_| The San Carlos irrigation project dam dedicated by) former President Coolidge, March 4, on the site of the| former Indian town of that name in Arizona, emphasize: | the changed relations between the whites and the red men as few events could. The dam was constructed primarly to assist the Pima tribe on the Gila river reservation to carry on their agri- culture. The dam is capable of storing sufficient water for three years use on the 100,000 acres of the project. As early as the middle of the sixteenth century, explor- ing Jesuits from New Spain found the friendly and pros- perous Pimas irrigating large areas of land in the same field they are beginning to recultivate today. In the more recent years of the American occupation they af- forded protection against the Apaches and furnished abundant supplies from their irrigated lands. The Pimas were poorly repaid however, since settlers soon began moving in on the river above them, and finally deprived them of virtually all of the normal flow of the river. The white neighbors of the Indians in the Florence-Casa Grande valley also found themselves in the same predic- ament. Governmental investigations were made, lawsuits filed, and other relief attempts instituted, but without much avail, Finally on June 7, 1924, congress approved the San Carlos act providing for the construction of Ad Coolidge dam. Now after a half-century of waiting, | relief is at hand in the form of stored water flowing The altered relations of the races were the subject of} Indian comment at the celebration marking the dedica- tion. Hugh Patton, a full-blgoded Pima and chief of the Pima Indian council, spoke for his people. What he said left no doubt that the war hatchets have been buried permanently by red men and whites and Indians now will march forward in peace and progress in step together. Chief Patton emphasized the patience with which the red man has supplanted his former impetuosity in deal- ing with the whites, while the white man has begun to assist the red brethren rather than despoil them. He expressed it in noble diction, when he said: HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1930 | “Yon Cassius Hath a Lean and Hungry Look!’ | “Today is the brightest page in the long and varied history of the Pima people. It is a day to which our | race has looked forward to for many long and weary’ | years, Difficult as it may be for many of you to under- | stand, you are witnessing today the realization of © | Gens dream of centuries.” Reviewing the prehistoric irrigation of the valley and Anniversary of LINCOLN’S DRAFT CALL jand destruction of property. {riots lasted four days and martial law /its weakest stratum.”—Mayor Charles On March 10, 1864, President Lin-| was required to restore order. the law, its enforcement in the city |restraint enough to keep from mi { of New York during July, 1863, culmi- dling with them while they do i {nated in the notorious Draft Riots |Theodore Roosevelt. || which resulted in great loss of life The “ek * | “A community is only as good as De Gollier of Bradford, Pa. the ancient collapse of its savage civilization in the mysterious long ago, he came down to the present, say- ing: “Fifty-two years ago the Great Father and his council promised relief to the Pimas—we were to get justice. ‘Be patient,’ we were told, ‘and all will be well.’ “The Pima has been patient. Year after year passed, |! but the goal seemed just as far away. My people did not complain. They asked and waited, and hoped and asked again. Always they were patient. ‘Some day,’ they said, ‘the Great White Father will make good his promise.’ “Today that promise has been more than fulfilled. top this mighty structure of steel and concrete—the Cool- idge dam—greater than the wildest dream of the man Al | coln ordered a draft for 500,000 men tion of the Civil War. Under the provisions of the Enroll- ment Act, which Congress passed the year before, the president was au- ;thorized to call into active service quotas from each state of the Union. This act contained a clause popular- ly known as “The Rich Man’s Exemp- tion,” under which any person drafted might furnish an acceptable substi- tute or pay a sum not to exceed $300/ for the procuring of such a substitute. | A person failing to comply with these regulations could be arrested as a| for three year’s service or the dura-| © | deserter. ‘day tne German embassy was turned over to me. I | In his ignorance of with the stone hoe—the Pima views with sparkling eye and happy heart the miracle of the white man and realizes in his heart that his home has been made more beautiful and entrancing because his white brother has kept faith with him. “His lands have been restored, and with them a heri- tage equally as valuable—the assurance of life-giving water. Redman and white, side by side, in love and friendship, are working toward a common goal. Together they are making of the Florence-Casa Grande valley a beauty spot of the earth. “To the Great White Father who gave us this, again let me speak for the Pima people. We are grateful to you.” The cat family can see in the dark. That explains how they discover the things they gossip about. They call it the bloom of youth, but there isn’t any- thing especialiy youthful about terra cotta. The quickest thing some people can do is sit down. | Editorial Comment | Light on the Philippines (Milwaukee Sentinel) Philippine independence is receiving much more at- tention in the United States than in the islands, accord- ing to Prof. Eugene A. Gilmore of the University of Wis- | consin, vice governor of the islands. It is a pity that Prof. Gilmore cannot conduct a class for some of our sentimental politicians who shed a tear perforce over the enchained Filipino. He could tell them, for instance, that the island native lolls happily in his isolated tropical village knowing little of the inhabitants of the neighboring villages, and caring less, shaking a tree when he wants something to eat, independent of commerce, ignorant of civilized government. If the islands were set free he would never know the difference. He is untouched by politics in the-cloisters of his jungles. The agitation for independence among native Filipinos is limited to a small, white collar class, educated abroad, who in many cases are suspected of being actuated by their desire for personal political advancement rather than by patriotism. But why, some one asks, should we not free the islands that do us no good? He is reminded that the Philippines are the only American soil where rubber will grow. His| & attention is called to a map of the Pacific so that he may | perceive the strategic importance of the only American outpost in the Far East. And he is asked in turn how long the Philippines would remain independent if the United States moved out, unless the independence was guaranteed. Such a guarantee would be quixotic and troublesome and profitless. Pajamas in Diplomacy (St. Paul Dispatch) It sometimes seems too bad that the governors of states are not required to be reasonably well up on; diplomatic affairs, especially the history of American foreign relations, Take the case, for example, of Gov- ernor Huey P. Long of Louisiana. If he had known such a simple fact of diplomatic history that the German ambassador to England once wore pajamas while receiv- ing a call from the American ambassador, a small inter- national crisis would have been averted and he, Governor Long, would have been spared the trouble of apologizing to a German naval commander. The trouble arose last Sunday when the commander of the German cruiser Emden arriving at New Orleans for the Mardi Gras, paid a visit to Governor Long. He found his host lounging in pajamas, robe and slippers, which this punctilious and no doubt immaculate Ger- man chose to regard as nothing less than “an insult to the German government.” He demanded an apology and trouble was in sight for German-American relations. It was here that a knowledge of diplomatic history would have come in handy. Under date of August 9, 1914, Walter Hines Page, then American ambassador to England, wrote Presidenh Wilson as follows: “The next went to see the German ambassador (Prince Lichnowsky) at three o'clock in the afternoon. He came down in his pajamas, a crazy man. I feared he might literally go mad. The poor man had not slept for several nights.” Now pajamas are pajamas, in London or New Orleans, and no mere World war could excuse Prince Lichnowsky any more than the Mardi Gras could Governor Long, if anything, not so much. To be sure America did later go to war with Germany, but it was not over Prince Lich- nowsky’s pa; history, Governor Long got all dressed up, went aboard the Emden and apologized. He should have done nothing of the kind. He should have cited the precedent and bade the naval gentleman go pack to Berlin with the news that America and Germany were at last all square on the subject of pajamas. As it is, Germany must still be considered one up. Such are the results of gubernatoriat ignorance. While many communities opposed | Rav ° Quotations “The British Empire's embrace is dangerous, ‘not life-giving.” —! Nehry of the India Congress. ee “I loved Alexander at first sight.”— Princess Heana of Rumania. x KR “America is a land of bad tea and wild parties.”"—Sir Charles Igglesden. x oe * “The best executive is the one who has sense enough to pick good men to| © 1930 AVINEA Service Inc.. CHAPTER XLVIII gor the big car, which looked black in the darkness, made its way along West Twelfth street. The driver peered at each house as he passed. He was hunting for a street number and this was difficult be cause part of the houses were not lighted, The ‘mousfne hesitated, and then moved forward. Before the next house the chauffeur brought the car to a halt. He swung to the pavement. ) “This 1s the place, sir,” he said, | opening the door of the tonneau. From the driver's tone it was evi- dent that he did not approve of the neighborhood. Arthur Knight stepped out on the sidewalk. “Wait until 1 come back,” he di-| rected. “I don't know how long that will be.” “Yes sir.” Knight glanced up at the build- ing, then hurried up the steps and rang the bell. A woman opened the door. “Does Daniel Cameron here?” Kight asked. “Yes sir.” “I'd like to speak to him. Knight is my name.” “I'll see if Mr. Cameron is in,” the woman sald. She stepped back, opening .ne door wider for Knight to enter. Then she turned and bur- tied up the stairway. Arthur Knight surveyed the dingy hallway with disapproval. He noted the worn floor, the ugly bou- quet of waz flowers which stood be- fore the mirror and the small elec. tric globe feebly struggling to brighten the scene. The man moved restlessly. At the noise of @ door opening and steps upon the staircase he raised his eyes, Quickly be lowered them. Young Dan Cameron came down the steps. Each man measured the other with a glance. “Mr. Knight? Dan asked for. mally. “I understand you asked for me.” He paused on the third step as he spoke. “Yea, How do you do, Mr. Cam- eror 2" Knight's voice betrayed his uneasiness, “I—well, the fact :, 1 came bere boping that you might belp me.” “In what way?” ‘The barsh edge of the words left the other plainly embarrassed. He hesitated, then said slowly: “I thought you might help me find my wife—Juditb.” “I'm sorry, Mr. Knight. She doesn’t wish to see you.” The silence which followed was poignant. “Could [would you.mind telling her I'm here?” live | Dan Cameron shook his head “Under the circumstances,” he said, “I don't think it would be at all wise.” “I'm afraid you don't under- stand,” Knight persisted. “1 must see Judith! There is something of the utmost importance for her to know! Ob, don't you under- stand—!" “No, I’m afraid I don't!” eee RTHUR KNIGHT raised his eyes in despair and as he did so a@ light came into them. Dan turned and followed his gaze. There at the top of the stairs stood Judith, But she was not,the same Judith who had left Arthur Knight's home. There were hollows under the blue eyes and her cheeks were pale. She seemed thinner. Judith’s eyes were fastened on Arthur but she did not smile, “Judith!” said the man, rushing forward. “I've got to talk to you! I—I didn’t mean what 1 said to you that afternoon. You'll sive me a chance to explain, won't you?” His voice was more eloquent than the words. ‘night had rushed part way up the stairs. “Yes,” said Judith nodding, stil! unsmiling. “You can come up.” She led the way down the hall to the rear room. Wan Cameron fol- lowed Knight sulkily. When they were in the room Knight ex claimed: svou're not well—you've been ill He was staring at the girl. “I'm much better now,” she told him. “It's nothing to worry about.” “Sit down, Judy,” Dan spoke up. He moved a chair for her. Judith tcok the chair and re- garded her husband. “You understand of course.” she said firmly, “that I intend to re main here with Dan.” “But 1 want you, Judith!” Knight's tone was moving. “Mr, Knight,” said Dan, “you can see she isn't well. I don't think you've any right to disturb her this way—" Knight turned toward him, “Do you think,” he said slowly, “that it is a disturbance to tell my wife that 1 love her better than anything in the world, that | want to spend the rest of my life trying to make up for mistakes which have hurt her, and that day and night I have grieved for her?” “Arthur!” There was protest, not joy, in Judith’s voice, Knight started as though struck. “Do YOU want me to go?” he said. Judith’s lips trembled. “But told you I intend to stay here with Dan. We need each other.” “Are a brother's claims above a busband’s?” “Then—you know!” Judith. “I know that I have been miser- able and lonely—and I know that I love you more than you could pow sibly guess from my blundering jmistakes, I know that I want you ;to come home—” 4 “But—Arthur!” murmured | | ee * | “It ought to be as easy for a man ito buy a home as an automobile.”— | Ray M. Hudson of the United States Bureau of Standards. | | FAVOR SINGLE WOMEN | London.—The old question as to whether or not married women should |work has been definitely answered ‘here. Nearly 7,000 women employed as clerks in the British service recent- ly voted on this question. The re- iturns were for the negative side by a jlarge majority. Some contended that jthe working married women kept |single women with no other means of do what he wants done, and self-| support out of a job. \ gpm Judith could not teep back the tears. Knight was on his knees beside her, his erms around her, her head pressed to. bis }shoulder. Rather incoherently he comforted her with soothing, en- dearing words. Judith sobbed jsilently. Presently she raised her} | head. ; “Arthur,” she said tensely, “you mean—nothing—makes any differ. }ence?” “Nothing {n the world makes any difference to me now that I've! found you again! Dan Cameron was quite out of the scene from then on. Judith and Artbur Knight were tn each other's arms, warm kisses on Judith’s lips and throat and forehead, her hands caressing his dear face, both pair of eyes blurred from laughter and tears at the same time. When their ecstasy had calmed, Knight drew his chair close to ; bers. “Darling,” be smiled, “there's eo much to say! I came here to talk to you, and now before I've begun I fecl that everything’s been said.” Judith shook ber head. “But {t hasn't,” she denied. “I want to hear everything. 1 want to know what you've been do- ing and how you happened to come here and why—” Here Dan was interested. He| came nearer, leaning against the table. “I'd, like to hear about some of those things myself,” he sald. “After all, I'm Judith’s brother.” “Of course,” said Knight, “I'm looking forward to knowing you a lot better, Cameron. I want to know your father too.” Judith’s eyes grew serious, “How long,” she asked, “have you known about—us?” Knight answere@ her gaze di rectly. “Since about the third evening you had dinner with me last No- vember.” . “Oh!” The little gasp was {nvol- untary. “It doesn't sound very gentleman. ly," Knight continued, “but 1 want you to know the truth. When | realized what you had suddenly come to mean to me, Judith, 1 did some investigating, I knew I couldn't live without you and in order to know the quickest way to win you I called in an—er—confi- dential investigator. 1 didn’t mean to spy, my dear—you believe that, don’t you? When be made bis re Port you were more than ever the girl I wanted.” “Told you the whole story, did he?” asked Dan. from @ little tow: QUESTIONS IN REGARD TO Br ORCCOY CAN GE ARS MC. COV MRALTN } SLEEPING TWENTY YEARS The story says that Rip Van Winkle remained asleep for 20 years which would be the longest unbroken sleep on record. However, there is nothing unusual in sleeping for twenty years, as the average person spends one- third of his life in sleep and we think nothing about it. A person of seven- ty-five will actually have spent 25 o in sleeping eight hours each ley. Even though everyone sleeps on the average of eight hours out of each 24, probably no one can tell you just what sleep is and what it accom- plished. Many of our modern psy- chologists have been spending many nights going without sleep in an en- deavor to discover what sleep is. They burn the midnight electricity measur- ing the breathing, the length and depth of sleep of those who are doing nothing more strenuous in the cause of science than sleeping obligingly in bed, where every heart action and movement, and even the amount of gas thrown off by the lungs may be recorded. This is onz of those times when every little movement has a meaning all its own, and any up-to- date sleep-measurer will tell you that people never really sleep soundly all night. Far from it. A sleeper really indulges in a series of short naps varying from five to fifteen minutes, with a restless movement of the muscles in between. There is an old saying that the greatest benefit is derived from the sleep occurring before midnight, with Jess benefit after this hour. This was undoubtedly true before the advent of electricity, when people were in the habit of retiring before 12 o'clock, but it matters very little whether you sleep at night or in the day time, pro- vided you have cultivated the habit of sleeping at a certain hour and are undisturbed. The soundest sleep oc- curs. during the first few hours. Things which might awaken you after six or seven hours of sleep may have no effect on you during the first two hours of sleeping. When the process is reversed, and one is very sleepy and hard to awaken, it is a sure indication of a very toxic system, and in this case the profound sleep seems to be as the result of a toxic poisoning of the brain cells. i Most people require at least eight | hours of sleep each night, and nerv- ous or thin people should endeavor to obtain even as much as 10 or 12 hours of sleep until their nervous DIET ADVICE N Dr Frank McCoy __, Jie fe BE ANSWERED SERNCE 105 ANCELES- CAL. does not obtain enough sleep is very’ apt to suffer an early breakdown. ‘One should awaken from sleep nat- urally. It is an unfortunate fact that Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to tim, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. in modern life there seems to be a determined conflict between sleep and pleasure. That pleasure often wins is proven by the fact that most Amer- icans depend upon alarm clocks to awaken them when they are still sleep hungry. There is no known substitute for ¢ SOtar. Sleep for restoring the nervous vitality. When one does without sleep for a long time, the sense organs fre the soonest affected, much sooner than the muscular system. The eyes and ears become very unreliable after the loss of two or three nights’ sleep. (Continued in tomorrow's article) Articles on similar subjects whick I have prepared for free distribu- tion: Insomnia or Sleeplessness——; Wakefulness——; Dreams or Night- mares——; Snoring——; Sleep a Daily Cure——; Sleeping Sickness —. Please send 2c stamp for each article you desire. This is to partially pay for pPeparation and postage. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (Catalepsy) Question: E. F. H. writes: “1 would like to ask you about the dis- ease, catalepsy. Is it inherited or does it result from a brain disorder or @ state of autointoxication? May it be treated through dietetic measures? What would be the immediate proce- a dure of administering to a person 3 seized with a cataleptic fit? In short, tell me all you can of this peculiar malady.” % Answer: Catalepsy is a nervous state accompanied by attacks of total suspension of voluntary motion and of sensibility. The muscles become rigid, the skin pale and clammy, and 4 the pulse and respiration very slow. In my estimation the disease is 2 brain disorder caused by severe tox- » emia and I would advise an orange juice fast of five or 10 days imme- diately following any indications of an attack. Warm baths followed by cold showers over the spine and ab- domen seem to be helpful. Usually KNoet had turned toward Dan. “Oh, I'm not getting much of a salary,” the youth enswered, “but there's opportunity there, all right, if 1 can make the grade.” “Of course you ca Dan blushed awkwardly. “Judith and 1,” he floundered— “you mustn’t think we're ashamed of dud! You see, just about every- thing we had was cleaned out after the bank failed. There was enough money to bring us to New York and pay for Judith’s business course. One of father’s friends—about the only one who was loyal—got me my job in the bond house. He was the one who told us not to let the story out. Judy didn’t tell you about it because she thought somehow it might hurt me.” Knight nodded. “I would expect it to be some thing like that,” he said. “But to think you've known : Il this time!” Judith exclaimed. “It —it makes me feel ridiculous.” Dan Cameron thrust his hand out. “Mr. Kalght,” he said, “I've thought some pretty harsh thirgs about you. 1 want to apologize.” Arthur wrung his hand warmly. “Forget about it," he said. “Arthur.” said the girl impul- sively, “will you take me to see my father? He's such a fine man. 1 want you to know bim the way 1 do. There's another year left be- fore he can—come to see us.” “Of course I'll take you. go next month.” For that he was rewarded by two radiant blue eyes and a squeeze of the hand. We'll eo ee 6¢QUT | haven't made my apology yet,” Knight hastened on, “and it’s the most needed.” He hest- tated, “I'm an old fool, Judith,” he went on slowly. “You ought to know it by this time. But, you see, 1 couldn't get the notion that a lovely young thing like you could really care for me. 1 thought I was doing the right thing in giving you up— to a younger man!” “on!” ag “Yes,” went on Knight humbly, “I thought—well 1 thought it was Andy Craig you cared about.” _ “How could you!” “Look into my eyes now and tell me you love me,” said Arthur Knight fervently. Judith took bis face in her hands. “I love you,s she said simply. It was on the way bome that evening in the car that Arthur Knight remembered to tell bis wife about Tony’s and ‘Andy's marriage. The young. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew “Why, yes, 1 suppose so. He told] Craig bad sailed the day before for me that you and Judith had come| France. in Missour!—| months’ honeymoon and after that There was to be a two forget the name—and that your |an indefinite post for Andy with the father had been unfortunate enough| London representative of Hunter to be railroaded into a prison sen-| Brothers. Knight said he believed tence due) to mismanagement of a|the youngsters would be happy. bank. He made it explicitly clear) “By the way,” be said, “you and that the man was the victim of un-|1 are going back to Bermuda and scrupulous superiors, Naturally 1) finish up that honeymoon. Or would couldn’t blame Judith for not car-|you rather make the trip some ing to mention all this, though 1/ where else? fail to see any reflection upon any| From beneath lowered lashes Jus of you—or your father. I believe|dith’s eyes flashed an cloquent an- you're in & rather good office here. | swer. f aren't you?” | (The End) vitality has been restored. One who ances cg these cases also have a prolapsec condition in the pelvic region and this should be corrected by exercises or manipulative treatments. (Bananas—Melba Toast) Question: Mrs. H. F. writes: “) oe have never seen bananas mentionec I in your menus. What about them? ri Also, can Melba toas: be eaten with at meat or eggs as a good combination?” Answer: Bananas are a slightly ’ . aor, starchy food and should be used as } vena such. From a health standpoint, they ee are best baked. Melba toast com- at bines' well with any other food, but re i because of its liquid absorbing prop- son. 1 erties, must be considered slightly ing wa constipating. iss 1 (Clearing Throat) ‘othe Question: T. H. asks: “What . E makes a person clear his throat so i] often? I do not breath through my mouth but I have to clear my throat For about every five minutes.” ham, Answer: Your trouble is either was, B caused from catarrh or it may have compa developed into a habit. urday (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell street. Syndicate, Inc. ma si \s } used 1 o—______________-e 3 resebu | BARBS | | bridge ° ¢ 4 wert t S . 4G afd Cr Cal Coolidge will at last attend a Cunni wet celebration. Yep, he's going tc y Miss E dedicate the Coolidge dam at Arizona. } ec ; xe OX ee You never can tell. The woman who picked up Cal Coolidge’s half- Pia3) smoked cigar may have been only col- Seven lecting cigar bands. pat) xk x S Dense Dorothy thinks the naval tables parley has something to do with 3 Ciares certain kind of oranges. Daas * Ok * You can't do a thing to the spring ons poets, They'll always show some Hee poetic license, y ‘ kok x —_ The young German.who built & model of the Cologne Cathedral out of 2,500,000 matches and came to New York to get money to finance the rest of his education apparently hopes to set the world on fire as an architect. en x The country’s prohibition’ argu- ment, while all wet on one side and extremely dry on the other, is still more or less interesting. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) WILLED A QUARTER London.—“One shilling only” is the o way Haym Marco Besso’s will read in i regard to his daughter, Rebecca Hart. Although his entire estate was valued « at more than $150,000, he cut her off with 25 cents. The daughter could give no reason for this action of her father other than “he was a miser.” ‘ FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: & € There often is class in the schoot room even when the pupils are at re- cess,

Other pages from this issue: