The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1930 E ; tariff commission would be able to revise duties scientifi- Ring, Grandfather, Ring! The Bismarck Tribure An independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mai) matter. George D. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ... Daily by mail, per year (in Bi Daily by mail, per year cally and remove any inequalities that might, in the haste of congress, have crept in. That being the case, it might be the part of wisdom to reorganize the tariff commission without delay, so that we could get the benefit of this redeeming feature. Oth- erwise, people may be mean enough to suspect that this new commission isn't going to work any better than the old one did. >be «President and Publisher to have a bitter flavor. How- id THE VALUABLE GRAPEFRUIT foun taple Ste tke ks During the coming year we are/ever, it is not facing. the problem of a scarcity of Brundidge’s Good Work This man Harry T. Brundidge, reporter for the St. 23 8s entire diet for a day or two. jt wholesome when (in state, outside Bismarck) . 6.00 | Louis Star, seems to be one of the country's most useful oranges. In‘many cases the prices| Grapefruit is mos Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot: 6.00 | citizens just new. may be robibitive » to the — eaten without sugar, and varieties are 4 i ‘ person. On hand, ‘ Weekly by mail, in state, per year......- 1,.00| It was Brundidge who revealed that Lingle was not the fruit may become more reasonable in Dr. McCoy will gladly answer j | Weekly by mail, in state, three years for 2.50 | only grafting seporter in Chicago, Brundidge who focused price, as there are several thousand || personal questions on health and ‘ } 1 Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, 180 attention on the unsavory mess that lay back of the kill- ‘new acres coming into bearing this)! qiet addressed to him, care of Per year .....-.+++ - ing, Brundidge—as much as any one man—who coin- Mans . ‘The Tribune. Weekly by mail in Canada, per yea! bn pelled Chicage to realize that Lingle’s murder was merely All undoubtedly are familia: with Enclose a stamped addressed which is closely related to Audit Bureau of Circulation Member Au envelope for reply. | @ symptom of a malignant underlying disease. All in all, the man has done a pretty fine job of work. If the record of Lingle has brought shame to the hearts of honest newspapermen everywhere, Brundidge’s work makes it possible for them to take a new pride in their profession, A good reporter, in short, is an extremely valuable citt- zen. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) being grown with enough natural that no other sugar need be added to make them palatable. 80 goon as you become accustomed to the natural flavor of the grapefruit ind | you will enjoy them every day of the Moy «by If you use the grapefruit properly, ° 8 of grapefruit may be at y neon Scot human Oy towe | Am ae hat ou yt eet tpbetetelind iG An Old Law Is Repealed Rae will ogo or Prisons er zest at your meals and reap the ype SMALL, tty The town council of Lowestoft, England, discovered the bitfousness. When used in this way,|benefit of healthful minerals and Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. other day that their town had a law forbidding any male the grapefruit acts as a fine liver vitamins. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | at a public bathing beach from coming within 100 yards cleanser and at the same time MAY) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS SSS | Of any female bather. be regarded ms eh good tonic, be} s “and Oily Hair e Farce of Sanity Experts This law had been passed in 1854, in response to some bier or nn. body. Question: K. G. asks: “What kind vitamins necessary of shampoos would you recommend for very olly hair?” Answer: Washing the hair daily with a tincture of green soap for acidity need not fear to use the citrus about a week usually will correct this assis wiring |trouble. I also have some special ar- ruts, os ney od reperiy; = (ticles on the care of the hair which 1 bit of carly-Victorian prudery. After enjoying a good laugh, the city fathers repealed it, and co-educational bathing parties at Lowestoft are now just as legal as they are anywhere else. All of this, of course, is very amusing; but suppose that Mention has already been made of that murder trial im Ohio where six very eminent psychiatrists blew them- selves to opposing opinions concerning the sanity, or oth- erwise, of a young wife-murderer who was on trial. As it happened, the jury either decided to believe the alienists for the state and to disbelieve the alienists for the defense, or it put the whole expert-testimony racket out of its mind and went ahead to use its common sense; at all events, the prisoner has been convicted of first degree murder and has been sentenced to the electric chair. law had been discovered on the statute books of some American town. Would the city dads have had the cour- age to repeal it? Or would they have decided that to do so might conceivably offend some organized minority of the easily-shocked? Isn't it quite possible that they would simply have let the law remain a law, tipping off {ticles on socialism for propaganda|tion. And the curious thing about magazines. it is that we have neither. Grapefruit always is helpful to one acute fever. In fact, the illness often is overcome quickly if no other food is used for several days, and only the juice of one or two grapefruit taken who is suffering from a cold or an will be glad to send you if you will send me a self addressed envelope and four cents in stamps for postage. Causes of Headache Question: G. H. writes: “Please tell me what might cause @ constant “2 * A crack train has been named at intervals of every two hours dur- ing the day. If used in this way it can be called a medicinial fruit, as its effect is very beneficial. To obtain the greatest value from this fruit it should not be eaten at the same time headache. Sometimes I have a head- ache for a whole week without re- Hef.” Answer: There are many causes of . Here are some of them: Auto-intoxication, constipation pro- lapsed organs, uterine congestion, eye-strain, nerve depletion, and toxic from some chronic disease. Only a diagnosis will tell you which fe these causes produces your head- e, ——— | Today Is the | *. Shaw's plays, ever satiric, are con- Anniversary of | |.idered clever, ‘witty and’ pregnant with ideas. One of them, “Candida,”|““The Bullet.” Probably because it's is said by critics to be the best com-|the custom being taken for a BERNARD SHAW’S BIRTH edy since Sheridan. Also among his Tide. On July 26, George Bernard Shaw, ines: plays are “Arms and the aan" | (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) noted British critic, dramatist andjang “Man and Superman.” Tn 1926 socialist, was born in Dublin, Ireland,|Shaw was awarded the Nobel prize | PEER eicsyerneeemi toma where he spent the first 20 years of for literature, Quotations | his life. —— —____——— His formal education over in his “Liberty is like wealth in that it Setore Feditniy. 15th year, Shaw got his first job ag|/ BARBS {| sacaubaetie -warebatiy teed 42°16 38. 60) aa — i eet ae clerk in @ land agent's office. He|@—————° | ruil! its purpose."—-Premier Ramsay| grapefruit juice and place it near soon tired of this, however, and de-| New york the| MacDonald of Great Britain. Reoient ded to go to London to devote: hi Drobebly called the your bed so you can drink it as cided to go to London to deve trirat ($21,916 it spent cleaning up after the! ses as you are awake in the motning. Wenture into print occurred there |5¥74 Teveption » tidy sum. lauaeacy aeretlowe.' Galvin Goal [Taken in this way the julce pastes hen he wrote " letter to a newspaper int Pagal Ne sir as = "| though your stomach quickly, and you criticizing ~a lecture given by two In at there are 10 times as idge. eee recenpohredy greatest tonic and medi- .;many bicycles as autos. The same) « cin fect. Amerlean evangelists. This was Per¢|proportion might exist here if wel or ‘econ? dae Perber; novelist, | The bitter principal in the skin is satire against certain social conven-|#/80 had an opportunity to handle ose produced by an create Sp tions, educational institutions eiya “Overcrowded prison conditions, | "@ingin, Sieaay eee ee ee cas Eiaceegerear was A West Virginia “Hill Billy,” tinea | With inability Yo separate oes etbie| of bile and is therefore helpful In and general unrest in| ver complaints: everybody, meanwhile, that no one needed to pay any attention to it? At any rate, that's the way we do with most of our out-moded laws. However, the taste of this thing lingers. It is such a typical example of the fumbling, incompetent way in which our courts strive to do justice in murder trials that it is worth extended examination. This case was right in the accepted pattern. The murderer's lawyers called three psychiatrists, all of them very eminent and reputable men. They agreed that the young man was woefully incompetent mentally; he was, they said, half way between a moron and an out- right imbecile. Then the state's attorneys called three other psychia- trists,.all of them quite as eminent and reputable as the i three the defense had called. They agreed that the stad |. man was quite normal mentally, fully able of weighing | hard to find the the consequences of his acts and distinguishing between | quick and eager Sones, oy i peli reaarierdis : right and wrong. certainly not hard, but anxious, the face of a man per- Petually confronted by a problem a little too big for him. q Now we haven't the faintest notion whether this par- oO ‘ ‘gainer’ me thing may be said—the face has Ne’ ticular killer was, in fact, a lunatic or a normal hu written all over it. It seems to me at pail at being. But it does strike us that this method of getting at|T detect. some shade of the Indian strain of ancestry the truth is about as poorly devised as anything one could | which ‘biographers generally pass . Coolidge himself frankly Sie over, but which Mr. Editorial Comment Tt is best to use the gtapefruit either as a meal by itself, or one hour Mr. Coolidge’s Face Pinworms Question: Mrs. F. writes: ‘Kindly give me a good remedy to get rid of Pinworms. Also, please explain the ‘ ' 4 cause of them.” Answer: Any druggist can supply | you with a worm remedy. The cause | of pinworms is an unhealthy condi- | tion of the colon. A course of enemas | for a week or two will usually bring about complete elimination of these ‘worms, (Gamalie Bradford in Atlantic Monthly) . I have long studied the Photographic ‘trayals Coolidge’s face, though I have never sal gtd eg Even with the utmost sympathy of contemplation, it is * ee As hack-worker and writer of un- Mineral Water ‘ | nine ting a still, declared he never Question: Mrs. G.D. asks: “Do imagine. vas ta ate The truth is, there | successful novels, Shaw lived for |for operat for rioting "A good medicinial drink can be 't it be ‘ange affinity in some respects between th 1y|years in poverty. But his fortunes |heard of- the prohibition law before. institutions.”—Dr. John R. Oli- Be you consider radium’ spring water ry ti nas of pire eres roadie trig, [Puritans snd thelr Indian neighbors. ‘There was the|began to poverty when’ he began, to {He's not to be blamed as much as his|"er of Johns Hopkins. made by cutting up the entire grape-| more beneficial to health than water better to hold the Sanity hearing in advance of the trlal, | same silence, the same stoicism, the same grim and bare| write criticisms on art, musical and|fellow countrymen who won't hear . ®* 2 fruit, skin and all, and pouring Over) som the faucet?” | with qualified alienists hired, not to testify for one side | acceptance of hard reality. dramatic subjects for London news-|of it. “a‘ really fascinating crime is one|!t one quart of bolling water. Use a) answer: Distilled water is the only or the other, but simply to render the truth as they saw| Indian or not, there is no question but that Mr. Cool-|Papers. As a critic he championed 7+ * committed by @ pillar of the church |°n#me! or granite pan, as the acid of/ pure water, but the water provided y qi Mr. Cool: the grapefruit attacks the metal of an it? If they reported the prisoner insane he could be idge sums up in himself these marked qualities of New|Unpopular but finally victorious) Lord Derby told folks back in Eng-|or # spinster noted for her charities.” opting pe Permit the mixture to by any city water supply should he as 4 > locked up; if they found him sane, he could be put on England inheritance, And it seems a strange thing that,|causes. An ardent. socialist from |Iand that peahihition and not money|—S, 8. Van Dine, mystery story au-|°60 toe anity minutes. It is ready | 85 the water from any special rial and’ the case could be decided on its merits. Jand, tt has token t to laughing at itor forgetting if aun rr ua eras imcciietelencoirs <i (-t gay seemraibeGl va daa then to drink, “The ligula will bel PG osnignt, 1990, by ‘The Bell “The present system leads only to confusion. It offers | expected turn of fortune should have made not only a son Syndicate, Inc.) the hardened, intelligent killer a chance to escape the pat repaesr pect 7 a incarnation of New punishment he deserves, and it also makes it possible for " piitkrokeemmae a ite a * t the state to electrocute some poor nitwit who ought to be , " zs KFYR in a hospital. The one thing it does not do is offer a Remedy _ “~ acta Situation 4 loorhe! News) SUNDAY, JULY 27 chance for dealing out exact justice. Wheat consumption in the United Btates before the B50 Kilocycies--546.1. Meters i ‘There is a good deal of talk nowadays about respect- | war was about five and a half bushels\per year per per- a i ing the courts. How is it possible to respect a system |son. Now it is less than four and a half. 7. 10;30—chureh service: First Presby- thet undertakes to get at the truth in a roundabout, in- Pine bes wrassvhole eat rye and other dark breads and HEATH HOSKEN Bide SOrateeeant. efficient manner like this? ; in fact they were almost unheard HOUS! i gical sit { = oni sees cadens of wheat, during the war, COPYRIGHT _1950__4Y CHELSEA E. MONDAY, JULY 25 + Pre + were educat eat dark breads. Drives were put N HERE TODAY oe ey Me Ambitious cities like Chicago, Detroit and Los Angeles, ing it fit protiieg PRP n cena ADT Arama One pico siiaae: ian mein’ She fold jeer to tears now—/|tien. At their door he pressed her | ing it. : which at times have fondly dipped into the future and} mat cam tears of furious indignation at be-|hand. It had not occurred to her] gn j jpaign has had lasting results, a§ attested b CHUMMY MORLEY, a lovely girt “ 5 e continued to see Gideon sur- pictured themselves, respectively, as the metropolis of | the comparison of per capita eaatie Now, when hese dlc AAiRbes 0? Sinn coy arty all cde leases] ee Ze peti In fact,/rounded by people who deferred to ? » ‘America, must have got a distinct shock out of the census | there is a surplus of wheat, resulting in prices to the since ALAN STEYS2, her lover, |" °¥ anges Judy had quite vanished from her/him. She saw him with his cross- figures for New York. pila below the cost of production, why not reverse disappeared seven years ge coming with us,”;mind. owes ee mouth .set in a tight line, ie process’ Steyne returns, Chummy a and all the world offering gifts to York, it develops, has be it head it as ; visi ‘ebay sath el ae aie en . aap Be oe Aan Just as nal s for the consumption of white seongahne Sim, ae oe —_ i! He also was beside himself, but | Aeieye dara than a fortnight later, |propitiate him. There were two or | ae a es ee bread could be invented as were originated to encourage Ch white and spring had suddenly burst |three men he now and then allowed 3 Clara Morris. under 7,000,000. Its “metropolitan district” contains no| the eating of dark breads. There is no question but what | deep upon the earth in a great flood of |to have meals with him when Judy Ee wen thar danuhene eraanae: less than 11,000,000 people—more than there are in the Ee permis Po Lpavectiaing campaign properly car-| foot. color and scent. was present, oe they always —Voice of the Wheat Pool next seven largest cities in America put together. ou farm board or some other reputble “I'm not, then! I'm not!” Judy had lived in a kind of /#eemed to be tring to cajole him Pom emerkate: High eer, ane | So, while Chicago continues to grow, and Detroit comes | “esmusation would greatly increase the use of high grade | ‘That finished it, The two men| Whirl since her first visit to the |!mto @ good temper. 118“Earin notes. | forward to step on the heels of Philadelphia, and Los] If per capita consumption could be brought back to the misggired, glances, and-he 70ungm | Humite esa wes ere hy ae ee are a sea oeud ok weather, and st, Pau itv tock. ‘ | é knew himself beaten. many hours of solid, hard work—ajhave been, figuratively speaking, 2:00—Miusical ‘matin Bt ew vont retains 3, pee aie hs laa United States would be put on practically domestic Judy and Gideon went out to his|“Tesular grind,” she called it; but |more consistently on his knees. te eereeaee eee \ / as ctrovolig ad it probably wil hold that distinction | PAHs Providing production was not increased. ‘The proper waiting car. Clarissa, crimson with | 4¢", Whole heart was in it, and it/ Never once had he treated her in 00—Musien See cep eopolls, and it propaply Ww) ction | campaign would no doubt raise per capita consumption shame, burried out into the lobby. |came easily to her. Then there had/any way differently trom the eeccerneks ana tee i 0! . e Uni ates, would | mused, wa after her, a i a all of this is merely a matter of academic interest. Nev- | ™ake the wheat tariff éffective and put the price in this | NOW GO-ON WITH THE STORY Ps Beste ot: tha. caDe, Bak saene by Gidece. |attempted tomake,love to her. He OO—Tine signals older muste hour my ertheless, it is about time that we put our biggest cities country on a domestic basis rather than a world market CHAPTER XIX LARA was in wondertul spirits 1 hes ald: so bie counted ier pala epee amas all-absorb- 7:00—Baseball scores. ‘ P | ; i that night. She h : r 30-4 ogi \aeabad ahiee to see just what they signify. Does ——_—_———_ | a pe her head slightly |. red her nee ealie pean > Punch” that fortnight. She had| One afternoon, when Judy ai | T0—hmerican Leaion promracy ir bigness, in itself, make for a better life for their in- The Taft-Hoover Parallel | y as ps smiled at Gideon, who gagement on the stage, to play in a |ceased to count them. She had rived at Vincent Stornaway's, s | 8:30—Music, 4 Dabiianis? Does the New Yorker, who has €,000,000 near (Minneapolis Journal) | veeene her side, his smile turning (Guologue with a famous comedian |‘tifted—that was how it was. Luz.) was shown into the studio, and the | “BIDS WANTED neighbors, have a better time than the man from Akron,| Speculating on President Hoover's chances of renom- ee rown as he - her compan- at an uptown theater, . Her. part |UT7 Was having its inevitable effect |servant informed her that his mas- a ao who has 250,000? Is it possible for a city to become too |ination and reelection in 1932, the Chicago Tribunc | ae was that of a drunken bit geod. (°2 Rer Motor cars and good food |ter had a visitor with him. He did ff | quests bids for plastering OG repass big? i chooses to parallel his case with’ that of President Taft, [f(s Grant {s coming with us," Ihearted landlady, and she was g0- Hi ee ea at te | ing schoo! house. Bor detalle see. oF ; ‘ Mr. Taft, it says, Fahy + qu elligsrent. 1 she was beginning St vrite clerk. to be opened Tues- Tt would take a great deal of study and a great many |“ tet attt!5 ne wrong people in his party for | fp “We have arranged a little gather: |'™E (2 revel im tt these things were life, that Jat, coveted. pete them ane Bp [selscd aaah Mt: Senet Bouse, & volumes of facts to answer these questions properly.| His closest association... There was a make- | & !n8 for her.” litle way anced, om Were Just 8) She had seen very little of|thing in the world. It was the skin fF | ,,D°8F4 Feterves the right to reject Meanwhile, however, there are surface indications that over in progress in the party, and Mr, Taft Judy laughed nervously, and, al-|” “Qh, Alan, was it necessary to be |Cummy. who was also hard atjot a very large polar bear, which “"By°order of the School Board. re significant. "| chose to oppose it. biost against her will, walked be-| quite so cross with poor Judy?” the | Work: Steyne had gone up to Maine |lay on the studio floor, in front of ‘ae WILHELM ROSVOLD, } ‘Traffic congestion in New York is, today, almost un- Reign see onse, because newspapers side the young man toward the|girl asked. ar again for a week or two. He had|the open fireplace where, summer | RR On ... eee ‘ie endurable. In Chicago the situation is only slightly less | with him in temporarily smashing up the Republican | ae oak, pe ee i ove mOueht. | os arene, Sea fee eee retbc butcak ion debt eautlful old array Pg elegy ea os | pee In mageey erent, Los Angeles and Cleveland it ee ea ae. SSR Peane itself, marched in| face livid with rage. . TT ate me feel uncomfortable, |moment Chummy had decided not) Judy simply loved it. re i pardon Doar denied Sauer aos x. Cae yale Han bed enough. ‘What was this ae of the Rooseveltians that Mr. “I am under the impression that} After all, Judy can take care of |'° &° there. all beauty and all luxury to her. by George and Thor- | ving conditions, for enormous numbers of the in-|-raft chose to oppose, with such dire political con- | Miss Grant is coming to have a|herself, and Mr. Gideon had asked| It had been a riotous night. Judy /She had made up her mind that if vik, both of St. Paul, serving life ‘ habitants of these big cities, are unspeakable. If any-| sequences to himself? What were the things desired little supper with me,” he said. her first.” had vetoed Gideen’s presence with |she ever became a grett dancer, the terms in the state penitentiary for a thing is certain it is that the lawless gangs of our great | by these right people, as distinguished trom the “wrong “1 think not,” Alan replied, “He's not a fit man for her to be|® Deremptoriness that he had not/first thing she would buy would be : |robbing the Almelund, Minn., bank in cities are bred by the congested, unhealthful circum- people” whom, the Tribune now says, Mr. Taft so un- | They had reached Chummy and | With,” said Alan curtly. combated. He didn’t dance, and he/a counterpart of it. She loved to 1921, I stances under which thousands of children grow to wisely picked as his allies? Clara Jenks, who looked at them in| All three boarded a bus and made | Weuld spoil her fun, she told him; |kneel down on it and to byry her i bead , srow to man-/ ‘There were the direct primary, the initiative and ref- surprise. Chummy, a moment later, |thetr way to the Cafe Ture. 20 he had not seen the featherlight, |little hands in its snowy tur. She ea: 5 erendum, the popular election of senators and the re- shrank back as she became aware abi | black ‘Columbine, with silver leaves | loved its silky seftness and the FLAPPER. FANNY SAYS: i Politically, these super-cities are grotesquely unwieldy. | call of judges and even of the decisions of judges by of the passions let loose. That first, |J)AN'S Meht, cay voice was not |tound er head, and all the world’s /resilience with whieh it started 33 a t ‘The average New. Yorker is conpletely at the mercy of Dopnite rove: Teme Papal all Tau in a headst: Pro- original quarrel of manhood hurt heard that night, singing the{!#ushter in her pansy eyes and om |away from her ouch. Tammany Hall. The average Chicagoan is at the mercy | fused to ope lowsrd ‘Taft, in his calm wisdom, cher—the quarrel of two men about rete alan ae The hg ee Fcaged red peal eo a down on it now in the ef an even less admirable machine. In each case the] Does the C! > Tribu @ woman. Of course, she did not rved his guests, with the t rm . w ost content, laying her bright A sheer size ef the city gives the machine ample opportun- | direct gaan ate all ie pon fMeind Pe aa ueans ty i ay ie be See Rtrored Bois a setae pens eee 4 Te lanine sot Hanky port’ Ls a oa ha “a ri ity to maintain its on government. scandals, all its mud slinging, al) its incentive to abuse | » BBE thal leon Bight head e anime! Those are only syed instances aa big population Of the congrenmanal Bansien Series S04 of pesonee a = He Dee Poa hea gone to Italy, he in- ee een aa it was = pall mr a ee fe wer, , udy, al QA : i figures mean. It is almost time for the American people an te apie otter? pee wren et ead acer sceitnmaat eas WRAL and formed his customers, to bring back over and he walked home, contem-/this particular afternoon, some of ¥ am ¢ to look into the matter thoroughly and find out if the city | trary? controllably. the body of his mother, Where he |plated suicide under the cold, un-|the curtains having been drawn ' whose population is almost stationary is not, perhaps,| Does the zribane think the Doited aire has a better “Oh, what a fuss!” she managed got aghast i aaah aes 4 friendly stars. . over ine big voit Biyeg a senate today, popular election of senators, then ex- 4 a was @ mystery sun shone brill! . Just at the Re acy oe eee one whose population: is doubling | isteq twenty-five Bhugts ago, when Capitol Hill was a ainoen a tee eas feieA toe ad 3 se eae ghayg el ye tein Pon pk Ape Longer prea decades. forum for genuine giants? ‘“ ft Z very! missed Dan. As the|~ was p! ith her. Not thatja |, many-fole screen of old" There can be such a thing as a city that is too large| Does the Tribune actually think the country would be ‘Come, Clarissa!” sald Alan |General said, without him and Miss {he aid much, but every now and|Spanish leather, which entirely for any earthly use. Now and then one can wonder if | better off today with the recall of United States judges, sternly. Jude-e-o he might as well put up|then she saw a gleam come into his |shut off that part of the enormous i New York and Chicago, at least, have not reached that and of their decisions? with the average judge guided His face indicated what he ex-|his shutters. eyes, and he fouldcall her “my |room. ‘ point. not by law, but by his fear of mass emotion? with the pected her to do. Still at sea, she| Steyne could not disguise the fact |bird” in Polish. She could not pro-}] Judy heard voices presently— ‘ constitution overridden by the short lived whims of vot- linked her arm in her friend’s. that he was on wires, Bastien Du-|nounce it, but he had told her what | first a murmur from the adjoining ers stampeded by demagogues? “Come along, Judy dear! We're |mont came and joined them. In the |{t meant, and never used Jt unless}room; then they came nearer, and Why All the Delay? Taft wpponed Shane, Yio, panacete. id the Chi- going to the cafe.” absence of Judy, the young man |she did something well. she recognized Bruce Gideon's soft It develops from Washington that ree cao, tne nt solve “ roe roar Fa he be -“No, really!” laughed Judy. “Oh,|made himself agreeable to Clara—| She deliberately refused to think/tones mingling with Stornaway's. gn a ln at Feckpasieniion, of | raed.” 2 phaciaes ed Bade Bale Bs prio Mf you do make such a fuss about|too agreeable, it is to be feared, |of Alan Steyne. So he was she.artist’s guest! That commission will be delayed until fall. The oo pot h pry epee mie things! I'm going out to supper|for her snub face Nt up, her lips| That was one reason why she saw| probably meant that he had lunched white house, it is said, felt that the senate should not be But there is, indeed, « parallel ea wast tha’ Sack (ot with Mr, Gideon, He asked me long |smiled without the usual twist, and |s#0 much of Bruce Gideon. She en-|here. He would go now, and Storn- fr ’ burdened by having to consider the nomination of new| mr. Taft and the case of Mr. Hoover. Because he in- ago.” her round, gray-blue eyes rested on |couraged the rich man’s attentions |away would settle down to several s° y) © commissioners at this time. sisted on exercising his own sound judz-nent, instead of “Perhaps Miss Grant might be al-|his handsome features without bé- |because she felt that she must per-|hours’ work. She sighed, for she ‘This may be excellent ; yet we seem to recall | thrusting up a wet finger to determine the momentary | lowed to decide ‘for herself,” sug-|ing able to disguise their admira- suade Steyne that his part in life | was very tired, and she had rather ; reasoning; n of the wind t cheerfully to the pil- Gested Gideon with elephantine sar- | tion. was to marry Chummy and make jhoped for a short sitting. direction , Taft went ly Pi thet the one great, outstanding virtue of the new tariff law was that it contained a flexible scale by which a President Hoover, similarly situated, would be lory. rather likely to take a similar course, casm, When they broke up that night, her happy. (To Be Continued)

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