The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 29, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981 nN REID MARU ARNE EERE 8 =e MRAM ESS TE The Bismarck Tribune {- Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST .NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune , Bismarck, N. D., and en- fered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as ‘second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN » President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance yaiiy by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck)............. 5.01 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Years .........065 seevescsseees 250 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............. 150 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 2. eae Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news- paper 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) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Romance on the Wing lize the Hoover administration as There is something inspiring about) notning else will, regardless of | the nonchalance with which Col. nether the president serves one| Charles A. Lindbergh and his young) term or two, ‘The chief executive's| wife leave their child behind and be- gin a trip which, until a few years ‘ago was regarded as almost impos- sible and even now is considered hazardous. | ‘Were Lindbergh to travel alone the! feat would not be considered extra-) ordinary. Our own Carl Ben Elelson) flew in the region which the Lind- berghs will cross and gave his life in! humanitarian service. Post and Gatty recently crossed the area in their record-breaking world hop. i} But the fact that Mrs. Lindbergh oes along lends romance to the af-| fair. She is not the first woman to dare hazards of air and sea by air-| plane, but she is the first to do so by the side of her husband. ‘The! ‘Anne Morrow that was and the Mrs. Lindbergh that is evidently has! taken the guiding star of her wife-| hood the age-old rule, “whither thou goest I will go.” | It is the same sort of spirit which) guided women into the wilderness) and onto the prairies of this nation! to face hardships, bear children and do their full share toward wresting| an empire from the wilderness. | In this day and age, when this sort| of spirit often seems all too lacking,| it is refreshing to see it so proudly; displayed by a person of such prom-} inence. Its presence lends romance to this flight to Asia. Romance none! the less interesting or laudable be-| fause the participants happen to be | young married folks, emblematic of) modern America. Minus the Feathers ‘The South Dakota farmer who, ‘turned his turkeys loose to fight grasshoppers and asserted that they| returned in the evening minus some} of their feathers, probably was draw-! ing a long bow. One assumes that North Dakota's! ®rasshoppers are just as vigorous and| just as voracious as those of our sis-| iter state and that her turkeys are no| Jess active than ours. Certainly no| self-respecting North Dakota turkey| would part with a single bit of plum-| @ge to any grasshopper. i The fact remains, however, that) Brasshoppers have done considerable} damage in our own section of North Dakota and that they are multiply- ing. Gardens have been damaged and all sorts of crops have found| ithem an added menace. A recent story from Nebraska,| fwhere the effects of the plague have| been felt keenly, said some farmers had noted that a certain sort of microbe was eating into the vitals of the ‘hoppers and causing them to die. We hope so, for it would be no more than poetic justice meted out fto these insects which are affecting our own comfort and prosperity. It Seems just another proof of the truth of the old couplet which goes some- thing like this: ‘hese small fleas have smaller fleas Upon their backs to bite ‘em; ‘And these fleas have still smaller fleas, And so ad infinitum. Tugging at the Bootstraps ‘Times like these always produce a/ host of nostrums for the ills which beset us, so it is not surprising that @ cry is going up for a moratorium on farm debts. Impetus was lent to the movement, by_ the board of directors of the Farmers Union at a meeting in Minot ‘where the idea was advanced in order to feel out public sentiment. 6° de- by carrier, per year........$7.20/Senerally stressed the thought that 00 Straps to win general support. hind it, but Mr. Hoover hardly could) jter and it did much to aid in stabil-| jability to withstand the vagaries of {if the figures reported by a third of qty. tive now. Business would be in such @ ferment as this country has not seen since the days when merchants kept a book listing the banks whose Paper money was good and those/ Whose issue was worthless. Credit of all kinds would be shat- tered and business would come to al standstill as a result. Practically, leveryone would be driven to accept! jcharity—with no one to dole out alms.| Those persons who have advanced the moratorium idea in this state have jit should be extended to farmers. It is doubtful if such a scheme would benefit those for whom the scheme was allegedly designed. Farmers in jhard circumstances need credit if | they are to live. A moratorium would [eliminate all possible chance of them| |gotting it. i | The whole idea savors too strongly of pulling one’s self up by his boot- i * * *& The word “Moratorium” seems to have struck the popular fancy and} we doubtless will see much of it in| the months to come. It is a perfect- ly good word which had not been widely used until President Hoover dragged it from obscurity among the ‘M's in the dictionary to large type on the front pages of the newspapers. | Applied to the individual, it seems to} have the implication of something} for nothing, and this idea has been| popular from time immemorial. Barnum epitomized the result of such schemes when he uttered the oft- }quoted phrase, “There's one born| every minute.” | The word probably will character- The Hitch-Hiking Season! ~ SAYINA DONT. =|“mile marker” by NEED A FEW PASSENGERS BALL. Jaction in su ing a moratorium) for Germany had the force of com-; mon sense and self-preservation be-| be expected to foresee that he was| creating a fetish for his fellow coun-| trymen. | Back in the Herding administra-) Normaley.” The Ohtfoan New York, July 29.—Odds and ends, |tion the catch-word was “Back to/but chiefly odds. . brought | tty cafe on East 30th street, the Tur- |re ilbert Swan fie + . In an old-coun- | 4 “Normaley” from disuse to new lus-( ish gents play backgammon accord-| izing the minds of Americans. torium” will have quite the same ef-| fect in these pressing times. how, it is not quite so reassuring. Nevertheless, while a general moratorium seems out of the ques-| years @go. jarop in for dinner comment on “the It is doubtful, however, if “Mora-!up-to-dateness And a place Some-/ trimmings has jits specialty.... | ‘There's a swinging door spot on the East Side where three old-fashioned! of these people.” ... that effects Algerian corned-beef hash |brew-masters still turn out “musty” jale.... Which, if you haven't been ading your old English tales in late lyears, means that it is slightly sour- jed.. hang original programs of Harrigan ‘and Hart's “Mulligan Guards.” ... +. On the walls of this place Keen's chop house has one of the |largest collections of clay pipes to be und on this side of the Atlantic. Old-timers have pipes reserved for them and make regular visits for a puff at the good old long-stemmed clay variety. x *k x | 9 The longest barefisted fight in his- ing to a recipe taught some 2,000 sya eee ae And the moderns who Haledon staged in a saloon on Cherry the And George Washington once had a dwelling in the same strasse. . . +8 did John Hancock, who is frequently, hard to find the one-time habitats of jrecalled by persons signing ‘some; such persons as Lafayette, Captain! document. ... Union Square is credited with being: Twain, Aaron Burr, Theodore Roose- “Of course, that’s when boys were really tough.” ... + 80 the cradle of the movies, starting in ® penny arcade... . named Zukor taking tickets... . And the most colorful old bookstores in this land are parked on Fourth ave- nue in the Union Square neighbor- hood. ... Those expensive studios in Washington Mews and MacDougal Alley were all stables of the rich | Washington Square folk in th> early jdays.... There are people in Grove street who seem to know that Thomas Paine lived and died there... . | And there’s at least one farmhouse jin the big town... . It's the historic Dykeman place and dates back to the 'Revolution.... It’s ~ museum now. If it makes any difference to you | Where -famous folk once lived, it isn’t |Kidd, Washington Irving, Mark tion, there will be plenty of private! moratoriums this year. People of! good character who owe debts and| are unable to pay will not need a general moratorium to assist them in making adjustment of their af- fairs. They will follow the good old American custom of talking things| over with their creditors and in most casés the results of these dis-| cussions will be mutually satisfactory. Taken for Granted The world isn’t even excited by the present flight of the Graf Zeppelin to the Arctic regions. Its plan is to cruise around above the Arctic circle with much the same nonchalance that a Bismarck householder would stroll about his backyard. i The voyage will have its thrilling} ases, of course, but on the whole, there will be no more excitement about it than in any other journey by air. It is unusual. That is all. | The Graf Zeppelin and her com-| mander have demonstrated their wind and weather in the past. For the purposes to which it is best adapted, this form of acrial trans-| portation has proved itself. The Graf could make a non-stop| flight half-way around the world if Commander Eckener wished. The craft is capable of it and the public has come to accept the fact. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree || with The Tribune's policies. || Down Go the Taxes (Duluth Herald) The state-wide demand that local jtaxes must be reduced seems to be having its effect, and from all parts |of Minnesota come reports that the county boards are leading the way. the counties are a criterion of what the others will do, Minnesota is go- ing to spend about two million dol- jlars less for county administration |mext year than it will this year. Unofficial reports from 29 of the state's 87 counties show that levies for 1932 have been cut nearly 700,000 dollars below last year. They range from 29 per cent in Dakota county to 1 per cent in Waseca county. Sev- eral Northern Minnesota counties, including Itasca, Altkin and Red Lake, have joined the procession, and probably there are cthers, from which! figures are not yet available. The road and bridge funds have borne most of the burden of de- creased levies and indications are that in many sections county roads will not receive much attention next year, 80 far as new construction is concerned. About $650,000 have al- ready been cut from those funds. St. Louis county has not yet fixed its rate, but the various departments are busy compiling their budgets and will soon reach the commissioners. They will receive closer scrutiny than ever this year, for the board has an- nounced its determination to hold down levies to the lowest point con- sistent with the welfare of the coun- designed especially to reveal operations of rum runners. The gun is so power- | ; ful poy when pus to ae 3 can be heard a sway an that it can also discharge STU UTTMTM L U BEGIN HERE TODAY LIANE BARRETT fs fascinated by VAN ROBARD, man of the world, who has made casual to her, When his engagement is announced to MURIEL LADD, debutante, Liane tries to forget him. Her mother, CASS, an actress, is on tour with a traveling co! pany when she ts taken fll. Li leaves MRS, CLEESPAUGH? on Long Island to nurse her back to health, Cans frets against accept hospitality of the rich Mrs, Clees= paugh tnd during her convales- cence Liane ncecpts the proposal ot CLIVE, her patron’s eon, It is to be a marringe of conventence. In Cass’ delirium, she has bab- bled of some mystery concerning the girl's birth, TRESSA LOND, house guest at the Cleespaughs, dislikes 1 and tries to come between her Clive. Liane ts threatened with blackmail. SHANE MeDERMID, police officer who once befriended Linne, frightens the binckmallers f. At a ball the victim of ‘ki MeDermid and CHi ter one of her eaptors, fall her head. ‘The men leave her in charge of a_wi Meantime Cli cor pick up t Ligne's pearls, where she han dropp em, stenling out of the sinister house. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIX S7R0NG arms carried Liane. They seemed curiously gentle arms. The man bore her as lightly as though she were a bit of this- tledowa, “Whoever he is, he’s better than those I left,” thought the girl drowsily. She was not fully conscious even yet. She remem- bered escaping from that horrible house and she remembered a voice calling “Whoa, there!” A man’s voice, Then she had stumbled and unconsciousness had over- taken her, The man moved swiftly. Liane kept her eyes shut very tightly. She feared if she opened them the safety that now surrounded her might vanish and she might discover herself back in that grim prison with the fat woman guarding her. Then she heard shouts, voices. The man swore once, softly and efficiea:ly. Liane felt a dazzle of light on her eyelids and opened them with a start. The headlights of a car shone full on her face. She felt herself lowered gently. laughed. Liane inquired feebly, “Where am 1?) Why—that’s Clive’s car! I know the headlights. They're special. He must be around some- where,” “So?” Shane McDermid’s voice was quizzical. “Boys, go back to the house and take a look around. Something may have broken since you left the rear.” But there was no need for this. A white-faced Clive broke through the brush, “Liane!” safe. “I don’t know what it’s all about,” she said between laughter and tears, “but if you knew how good you look to me—at this minute!—" eee HE put one hand to her band- aged head. Clive thought he had never seen her look so ut- terly adorable. Like a child who “You're has. been ill and who rejoices in the promise of an outing. He fell on his knees beside her. “I've been frantic—” broke. His voice was moved. “I’m 50 she said. “It’s been dread- ful for you. What does it all mean?” “The girl back at the house has told us,” Clive explained. “It was a blackmailing scheme. Her Sweetieart was one of the men who kidnaped you. She was ter- ribly jealous. The woman at the house slipped out and called her up when the man was alone in the room with you. She came to see what was going on. We met her and McHugh suspected she was mixed up in it somehow.” Liane looked up at Shane. “How on earth did you happen to know about it?” she marveled. He glanced ubliquely at Clive. “I'd been warned there was funny business going on,” he said. Clive asked “What?” sharply. Shane evaded him. “Whenever one of these ‘millionaire baby’ en- gagements is plastered in all the Dapers,” he said, “we get lots of trouble. Lists of presents and so forth stir the mobs up.” “Oh, I forgot to give them to you,” Clive said, diverted. He held out his hand and the girl saw that he had the pearls, “Well now, you'd better be get- ting along home, hadn’t you?” Shane put in, “And a lucky girl ‘Warm robes were bundled round her. “You!” she cried astonished to Shane McDermid who bent over her. “The kid himself,” McDermid said. His smile was grim. A little group of men closed in around them. The police leu- tenant was giving orders in a sharp, fierce voice, ‘This car belong to them?” he asked. A tall man in a great coat said, “I think so. We've got both birds trussed up in the garage. ‘They expected to make a getaway you are, too.” Liane smiled at his bluster. She saw beneath that and knew he had been watching, guarding her, ever since she had first told him about the threat at the night club. “Thanks for everything,” she said when she had been lifted into the seat and bundled in fur robes. “Nothing at all. Just my job,” Shane blustered. He was watch- ing with the tail of his eye as the men marshaled Mary Powjeski and the two men into a police car. Officer McHugh was busy bossing them. He was having the time of but found they had a flat and were| his life. tinkering with it when we got here. The old woman won't talk. They want to kill her for falling asleep on them.” The man a Cr em > by: MABEL __ Liane’s eyes were dancing, “You don’t hold with women?” The big man stared at her, squaring that formidable Irish jaw of his. “They’re all right. In their place.” eee claves foot found the starter. He was racing the engine now. He leaned out, said to Shane above the roar, “Can't thank you, to hac McDermid! It you hadn't been on | ™! the job—" He choked on the words. “I want to come to see you to- morrow,” he added. “Any time. You'll want to pre- fer charges, maybe. But we have these fellows.on other counts, anyhow. Dope peddlers, they are.” The Meutenant waved to them. Liane could hear him blustering, as they drove away. “Well, well, that’s a good night's work.” Clive drove as if the demons were after him. “You didn’t let mother know about all this?” Liane exclaimed above the wind and the motor. Clive shook his head. The girl glanced at the dashboard clock. “Only three!” she marveled. It seemed impossible that two short hours before she had been danc- ing at the Hunt Club, fresh and carefree in a rose pink gown. So much had happened since. She reached for the vanity mirror in the car’s pocket and gazed at her- self in horror. A bedraggled bandage decorated her brow. It was stained with blood. Clive turned to her, asking, “Head ache?” “A little.” “We'll stop in the village and rout out Doctor McNeil. I want to be sure no infection sets in.” ‘The old doctor, roused from his slumbers, dressed and rebandaged the wound. It was a brief cut, far up under the scar will mar your looks,” man assured her gravely. As he worked Liane could hear Clive’s voice, speaking over the telephone in reassuring accents. “Quite all right. Really, she is, We'll be home in 15 minutes.” “That was mother,” he said, re- turning. “She was on her ear but I soothed her down. Thought you must surely be dead.” The old doctor looked at them with shrewd, bright eyes. “Bit of an accident, that was,” he told them. “Didn't know you Wera one pf these one-arm drivers, Mr. Cleespaugh.” “I’m not.” Clive laughed short- ly. «He said, “Some thugs tried to ai carry off Miss Barrett here. You may read of it in the papers al- though I hope we can manage to keep it out.” / “Ab!” The physician shook his head, “There're a lot of rogues about these days ready to do harm in ly. “They muddled that,” Shane said absently. “Comes from hav- ing too many women in these rackets!” With a gent retired early, unaware of the tur- moil around her. Mrs, Cleespaugh, still in her ball gown, met them in the hall. old lady was capable of such emo- tion. “My dear, my dear!” she kept saying, mopping at her eyes with a cobwebby handkerchief. sound!” The servants clustered around, big-eyed and exclaiming, Clive de- manded peremptorily that Liane should be packed off to bed at once and all hastened to obey, with offers of hot water bags, spirits of ammonia, and what not. “She's had a severe shock, the Poor child,” Mrs. Cleespaugh said, when she and Clive were alone in the study 20 minutes later. asked Nora to sleep on the couch might wake and be frightened, What a dreadful experience!” Clive was pacing up and down like a caged animal. “And all the time I was thrash- about doing nothing— out after a minute, head. “Didn't know what to do or where to turn. for that fellow McDermid!” His mother shuddered. “Don’t think of what might have happened,” she cried. frightful. They've got the men, you say?” “They have,” Clive told Ler grim- limit of the law.” They sat silent for a few min- utes. Then the old woman spoke again. Her voice held a new qual- ity, “The marriage must take place soon,” she said firmly. gerous letting things go along this way. Why knows what might hap- Den to the poor child with all these cranks about? That is what they must be, I feel sure of it!” “McDermid seemed to think Liane has enemies,” he said ‘with some re- luctance, lady, “Utter poppycock. I hope he didn’t say that to her. never do. No, she needs your name, your protection.” short laugh was bitter. been velt, William Cullen Bryant, Peter Cooper, John Jacob Astor and Poe. The Bowern still has an old-time! the city hall was ig Although but 50 feet wide, the Bush Terminal, building rises almost 500 feet above the street and is credited with taking up less room than any other structure of its size... . And it was none other than the elder Willie Vanderbilt who made the famous Cleopatra’s needle tourist attraction in Manhattan. ... It cost him $100,000 to get it here crom Egypt, but that was ir 1881. . day they'd probably fly it over... . It’s still against the rules to carry @ camera in Central Park, which never fails to astonish newcomers. ++. And is ridiculous... . ’ A lot of people who seem to be visiting the famous Grant tomb on Riverside drive are actually getting a tree which ws near it, and which is the only: C:ngko you're likely to see in these p iat the “gingko” GILBER‘’ (Copyright, 1931, NEA TODAY IS THE-Z RY ‘T SWAN. URANSING’S SPEECH On July 29, 1917, Robert Lansing, secretary of state, gave an important address on America’s war aims at the officers’ Harbor, N, Y. “Let us understand once for all,” no war to establish an abstract prin- ciple of right. It is a war in which the future of the United States is at stake. If any one among you has the idea that we are fighting each other's battles and not our own, the sooner he gets away from that idea the bet- ter it will be for him, the better it will be for all of us. “The American nation’ arrayed it- self with the other great democracies of the earth against the genus of evil hich broods over the destinies of central Europe. No thought of mate- [rial gain and no thought of material |loss impelled this action. . . . | “If enthusiasm and ardor can make success sure, then we, Americans, have no cause for anxiety, no reason jto doubt the outcome of the conflict. |But enthusiasm and ardor are not all; they must be founded on a pro- found conviction of the righteousness | Of your cause and on an implicit faith that the God of Battles will streng- then the arm of him who fights for jthe right.” A court stenographer frequently records 50,000 words a day, which is more dictation than some stenogra- Phers take in a month, her in diluted form and she had Liane d not supposed the self-contained “It's a racle we have you safe and the female contingent “I've her room on the chance she ” he burst “1 lost my To- Service, Inc.) training camp at Sacket Secretary Lansing said, “that this is ee Daily Health Service Abdominal Pains Often Sound Warning of é Heart Breakdown EDITOR'S NOTE—This is the third of a series of five articles by Dr. Morris Fishbein on “The Falling Heart of Middle Life.” ** # BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN (Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association) , The symptoms of disturbances of the heart are such that they can be by any intelligent indivi- dual. A person who has’ previously been well, who is somewhere between 50 and 55 years old, begins to ex- Perlence shortness of breath on the slightest exertion. He is likely to at- tribute the shortness of breath to overweight, lack of exercise and es- indigestion. He thinks it is due to indigestion because he feels distended after eating. Sometimes, in addition to the slight shortness of bréath, the individual will cough re- Peatedly, but the cough will be out of all proportion to any changes that can be found in the lungs. There is loss of appetite and nausea, and even tention of the physician is likely to be centered on the stomach and the intestines. It will be found, however, that these organs are normal and that the chief reason for the dif- ficulty lies in the beginning weakness of the heart. Among the most’ serious symptoms of this disease, from the point of view of the patient, is the development of Severe pain in the region of the heart called angina pectoris. There are eae eis | Quotations | It 4s inevitable that the entire banking system must be socialized in the public interest—Professor Col- Ston Warne, * eH Honesty brings terrific isolation in life—Rev. F. A, Fadden. : * oe * I would as lief poison people as \tell untruths about them.—Bishop Woodcock of Kentucky. x ee The chief danger to religion lies in pectable-—Professor John Dewey. * * * | Slide-rule civilization has given us| varlous forms of wealth—Ray Lyman Wilbur, secretary of interior. * * OK ‘The depression was caused primar- ily by poor judgment as to conditions and prospects—Julius Klein, assist- some cases in which the pain 1s hot referred directly to the heart, but over to the gallbladder region or to the middle of the abdomen, so that the patient and his physician fear gallbladder inflammation, gallstones, or even appendicitis, wherea: the disturbance is primarily a beginning failure and breakdown of the heart. Newspapers report repeatediy the sudden death of some business man or captain of industry from acute m- digestion. Dr. David Riesman class- ifles such cases as cases of oppres- sive type of heart disease. The pa- tient on walking feels ere a of oppression against the upper par! of the chest or in the middle of the abdomen; if he stops walking and rests, the condition passes off some- times with the belching of gas. The trouble appears to be mild, and the person is likely to pay not the slight- est attention to it. however, the condition called angina pectoris but without the pain. such cases, an examination would Probably have indicated a beginning vomiting, so that most of the at-idisturbance of the heart months be- fore, but the patient likely passes these attacks as being due to tem- porary Points out that @ catastrophe might have been foreseen or suspected if the patient had been asked repeated- ly as to the pains and the symptoms, and if the most delicate means of examination, including the use of the electrocardiograph, had, been used before the patient had“been given a clean bill of health. Sersyuossumrmnsemumesrcenmremecmmmememrenes ee CE {adroit handling of Miss Davies’ last talkie, “The Bachelor Father.” Leon- ¢ [ard was placed at the head of a list of the six outstanding directors by a leading film trade publication, having Screened “The Divorcee” and “Let Us Be Gay” with Norma Shearer. It resembles, In indigestion. Dr. Riesman / PARAMOUNT THEATRE Robert Montgomery began his fa- |mous role in “The Big House” by go- ing into prison. He reverses the order in his new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture, “The Man in Possession,” how at the Paramount Theatre today and Thursday. For in this picture the fact that it has become so res-! Montgomery emerges from jail in the opening scene. It is his shocked family’s attempts to get him out of the country that organization and distribution of our) starts the complications of the plot, which finally ead in a number of hilarious situations, when Montgom- ery poses as a butler in the home of the attractive but penniless widow who is trying to marry his brother for money. ant secretary of commerce. xe * Qualities which assist in amassing wealth are often anti-social and un- intelligent—Barbara Blackburn. ee ene ee rae BARBS | *The hope of the world powers is that everything soon will be Teuton right. * ‘The Paris to ‘Tokio “plane is called the Hyphen because, perhaps, it is just the thing in which to make a dash. x Rk Lenz and Culbertson, bridge ex- perts, wrangling as to the merits of their systems, plan to settle it out in @ game. They'll lay their cards on the table, as it were. 3 * * % When Eugene O'Neill returned from Europe he made a very drama- tic arrival. Six of his trunks were STICKLERS The above citcle represents a plot of , found and the four black dots are cot. § tages. Can you divide the land into four / equal parts, each part with a cottage 4 nit? ye filled with the manuscript of one play. * * * The office sagé wonders what they are calling the cake eaters in the de- pression. «ek * “For crying out loud,” as the cops said, tossing a tear bomb in the riot- ing mob. kee AES RR | AT THE MOVIES ‘ CAPITOL THEATRE Marion Davies is starred in “It’s a Wise Child,” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s Picturization of the Laurence E. Johnson stage hit. The talkie will open tonight at the Capitol Theatre. This hilarious farce is of particular interest because it follows closely the style of role in which the star scored so sparkling @ comedy characteriza- tion in her last offering, “The Bach- elor Father.” If it hadn’t been “It's too “They'll be punished to the “It’s dan- Clive brooded over the fire, “Nonsense,” declared the old She might t fanciful about it and that would “Thanks!” The young man’s His mother ignored this. “The Prince telephoned just before you came in,” she sald. car was mired in some swamp out near Babylon. They “He said his re following car they thought answered the scription and discovered there were two young policemen in it. He was very much chagrined.” “No more than I,” Clive admitted. “Although even if McDermid hadn't come in time perhaps I should have been able to save Liane.” ‘The thought rankled that he had too late to be her rescuer. The film was screened from John- son’s adaptation of the play which was produced in 1929 at the Belasco Theatre in New York. The play won wide attention because of its novel theme. Robert Leonard, who directed the new picture, was acclaimed for his FLAPPER. FANNY SAYS: "REG. U. 5. PAT. OFF. Many an appealing girl becomes a Peeling housewife. THI IOUS WORLD. q 2 r 5

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