The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1931, Page 4

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j ag Rs senna ncen ab THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 198 Th ismarc i which will look back upon this period ype a a as a real Gethsemane. \ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER GEstablished 1873) No Holdup Permitted Organization by the extension serv-| ice of the state agricultural college of) Published by The Se paren @ purchasing department to buy hay} Company, Bismarck, N. D. and eN-|anq feed for farmers in the drouth-| tered at the postoffice at Bamarck 85/1146 portion of the slate is not! second er. ORORGE D craton only good sense but sound economy. | If such farmers as care to pur- President and Publisher. chase feed were to enter the market} Subscription Rates Payable in [ang pid against each other, the in-| iy ty pai car vaie g720|@vitable result would be to increase Dail: mail ear (in Bis- |the price to everyone. meng soees ea Wenig os 7.20| N. D. Gorman, county agent lead-| Daily by mail per year (in state ler for the college, sums the whole; outside Bismarck).. +++ §.00| situation up when he says: | ee “The fact that 18 counties in the| Dakota, |drouth area are creating a revolving! ‘Weekly by mail in state, per yt fund for the purchase of hay and| Weekly by mail in state, three aso| {et at cost for farmers, does not VEATE ..csercereesecsrerseseers mean that a large amount of hay ts Weekly by mail outside of North | eoing to be bought at high prices. Dakota, WP YORT seccsccccceee éveeris by’ mill in Canada, per {There will be a demand for a good! {quality of hay at prices reasonable| 50 YOOT seceseseccecseceeeeeeeeees 200 Member of Audit Bureau of enough to provide a fair return on| the cost of putting it up, but any at-/ Circulation Member of The Associated Presa |t™Pt to hold up prices will only The Associated Press is exclusively |Serve to force farmers needing hay entitled to the use for republication of |to dispose of that part of their stock) all news dispatches credited to it or) {or which the feed is needed.” | not otherwise credited in this newS-) Another phase of the situation] eae as te ubished ‘herein.| Which might merit similar expert at- ‘All rights of republication of allother) tention, according to information reaching here, is the sale of dis-| matter herein are also reserved. tressed livestock from the same arca.| One Bismarck resident, who visited the territory, said he had been in- formed that pitifully low prices were being offered for livestock because of the pressure exerted upon the farm-| ers to sell. There should be no holdup per- —— (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON All income from concessions goes' [vor there is a train service con- | necting with local busses. F.00KS LiKE 1. YOUVE GoT A PRIZE-. FWINNER THERE, mitted on this end of the situation Edison Is Better either. Information that Thomas A. Edi- son, probably the most widely ac- Oats and the Barber claimed man of the last three gen-| A litile incident that happened inj erations, is in no immediate danger Tiffin, O., the other day furnished] of death will be cheering to every-/ tevedling sidelight on the plight of| the farmer. one. penefits!_ 4 farmer living near Tiffin wanted) To recount the host of benefits), shave and a haircut. A barber in| and problems which Edison has con-' the town happened to want some oats ferred upon our times would be im- for his chickens. possible but it is clear to all that|barber the farmer and take his pay no other man of the modern era has|in oats. so intimately touched the life of| But it took the farmer four bushels everyone as has the Wizard of East) of the grain to pay for his shave and Orange. ‘There are few persons in the civil-|three cents in cash to make it come | fzed world whose mode of living has|Ut right not been altered, if not revolution-| When the price of grain is down dzed, as the result of Edison's work.|£° low that it takes four bushels |p ia wih Gilbert Swan! New York, Aug. 5.—New York is levarded with green and lovely park- So he agreed to) discovering this summer that it has,! ways. Why not,|®! |turn them into a vast public play- ground and operate it in a spick-and- |span stately manner? So it happens that in these days ; when millions pack seashores where rivate enterprise has built bath- houses and Coney Islandesque at- tractions, the state of New York runs huge, handsome and unique resort |that is attracting civic leaders from all parts of the globe. For miles on end it has been bou- None of the raucous features: within easy distance, one of the few/f the usual resorts are allowed. It es ia ie . is neat and well policed. A small state-owned beaches in the world | army Gf state ypilioe patrol tien en} and the largest! jtions given over to the parking of Jones beach is its name, and it's' private cars. haircut—and even then he had to add!one of the innovations of Al Smith|autos have been blocked off on hot when he was governor. Tens of thousands of ind busy Sundays. Yet there is no confusion and no difficulty in getting jhe thought, take the many miles of/ away. All cars are so arranged that|small town is a mile or so away.jous and leagued guardians of the state land along the ocean shore, | they can drive off without interter-| Busses make connections from New| world.” ence or delay. Each state policeman is given a definite block and responsible for it. finding where one’s car was left. Another group of special police pa- trol the beach and a small army Ofjthe day of this victory which we are cleaners go about spearing papers|both fighting for may turn out to be On the most crowded!the most important date in our his- ° immaculate.|tory, or perhaps in all history. There are regulations concerning the i. rf distance from the surf where one can!cleared the alr as no other event in umbrella and there are | modern times has cleared it; and but shotlder/for the millions of brave lives it has and refuse. day, Jones beach is Place an other regulations about straps and sun bathing. ‘The state finds that there are thou-|richly repay all that the war will cost. sands of college students willing become special officers for a beach-|world to us not as conquerors, but vacation job. With the result that) as preservers of its peace. the patrollers are a particularly in- telligent and good-looking crew. No beach houses are nearby. Tt was he who paved the way for|to ect a farmer through a barber| high-geared production methods|Shop, it is rather obvious that the which have given the world its/ farmer is in a tough spot. present poverty of plenty. Edison and his followers did for commerce Editorial Comment and industry what McCormick and his proselytes did for agriculture. | The fact that the social phases of} our development have not quite kept pace with them can hardly be called their fault. | In estimating the worth or great-| ness of anyone there always is a temptation to use superlatives. As a! result, we often hear this or that! holder of public office referred to as| “great” or even “greatest.” ‘These| ‘words come easily to the tongues of! persons who may be seeking favors. Since they occupy different spheres it may not be altogether appropo to} compare the achievements of Edison| with those of a president, But if the} question were asked as to the rela- tive effect on the development of America as caused by Edison and any president since Lincoln, the answer would have to be in favor of the in-)mean a big room with a platform at ventor. one end and a lot of uncomfortable At 84 he stands as a symbol of the|seats. It may mean a park pavilion mechanical, commercial and electrical! With a roof and open sides, or a large} development which have made this|CPf@ house, or a room over the pub-| jlic market where the Elks and Ma- nation outstanding. We may not like|sons hold their public functions. Or the problems which are presented as|it may mean the comfortable build corollaries of this development but|/ing where the high school gives it. we certainly like the manifest bene-| Plays, the firemen hold their annual ‘ch 4 all, the visiting road show has its fits which it has conferred. And so one-night stand, the Memoria we are glad that the man who, more orator holds forth, the wom ub| 2 than any other, is responsible for|has its lectures, and the governor} them, is improved in health, is notified of his renomination. : You can't tell by the looks of a frog! p iow far he is going to jump, nor b’ Interesting Data iedalat soni aae tie ey Even though it is considerably more| torium it is going to build. Lakeland, than a year old, data obtained in|Fla., with less than 20,000 people, has} the census of April, 1930, relating to|@ million-dollar auditorium, built in| geil ; 1928. Atlantic City has the biggest the unemployment situation in this) vinicipal auditorium in the world. country are of interest now because tt cost $15,000,000 and will seat 41,- of the facts and trends which they|000 people. It is designed for viv ting disclose. Elks and Moose and Shriners and At that time the unemployed in|™members of the National Electric ( Light association and similar species this country totaled 3,187,647 of|in whom the herd instinct 1s strong. whom 2,429,062 were men and 758,585|The taxpayers grumble just a bit, were women. but they would be silenced if Mayor ‘The census bureau listed two class- qechacaeh could hook a national es of unemployment, the first consist- |COnVention next year. If the Demo- ing of those who were able to work epee EBD Lee winc, Why shouldn't the Republicans bask in the At- and looking for jobs and the second lantic? It would make 2 nice cli- consisting of persons who had jobs/matological issue, and they wouldn't but were on lay-off without pay. The|have to pick a vice president again inference in the latter case is that|JUSt to escape the heat, as they did in Chicago not so long ago. they expected to return to their pre-| The auditoriums don’t all make vious jobs as soon as work became}money. Here and there a city re- qvailable there. In either case, how- ee ag ganas pa aeneret turn- a lance of sf last year. ys, tne ettect was larpily the same.| coin 3. (population 6.000), The division into these classifica-| eased’ its hall to a theatre company tions showed 2,058,738 men in the/at 9 fee of $8,000 a year, enough to first class and 627,407 in the second|cover the upkeep of the ‘hall itself while 370,324 women were in the first|and the municipal building, of which class and 131,178 in the second, _—|it is @ part, and recoup the entire investment in eight years. The city Another study showed that @ ma-lcouncil has proudly reserved three Jority of the men, but only @ rela-|days a year on which the theatre tively small proportion of the wom-|company relinquishes its rights for en, were breadwinners or heads of| Various public purposes, “should they arise.” Fargo, N. D., is a trifle more families, In class A the male Per-|civic in its ratio. Its hall is leased to a private company with a reserva- tion of fifty days a year fOr public functions. But these are the glow- exceptions. Most of their sister Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are hed without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. “White Man’s Long House” (New York Times) In the last few decades branched out into activities never dreamed of by the fat Municipal auditoriums are an example. Since the war they have sprung up all over the country. A book has been writ- ten about them. Publication Number | 21 of the Municipal Administration Service. It is to be commended to} those charged with the management! of these sometimes just a little whit-| ish civic elephants and to the larger| circle of men and women who be leve that under proper control th can be made to pull a hea‘ munity load. They vary gre the author of the pamphie out, “municipal auditoriun ties have BEGIN F LIANE BARRETT, 18 and bean titul, tries in vain to forget VAN ROBARD, wealthy polo player, when his engagement {sane nounced to MURIEL LADD, popu- Jar debutante. Liane’s. mother, CASS BARRETT, is an actress and it ts during Cass’ engage- ment in stock at a fashionable & Isinnd summer colony that he Barretts meet MRS, CLEES- PAUGH, wealthy widow. When Cass goes on tone in the fall Liane pe the widow's only to marry him, Cl her to break the en- nt, but Lizne refuses. LORD and her alster. MBERTON, come to visit he Cleespaughs and Tressa, to marry Clive, begins make trouble for Liane, She con- nives with a gang of binckmallcrs but a friendly police Heutenant, SHANE MecDERMID, interferes. At a fashionable hunt ball Liane ix kidnaped to be held for ran- som. She is recued by McDermid and Clive. The wedding Christmas day t before Li foes to the ¢ 'Trensa brings: her 1 note from Robard begging her to clope with him, Liane re- and the wedding taken ‘The couple depart for a ‘moon in the south. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXV N the drawing room compartment to take Clive put a pile of magazines ie and newspapers in Liane's lap. “D'you mind it I leave you for a moment? ger platform to smoke.” She sat turning the pages {dly. A headline in one of the papers caught her eye. “Heiress, Weds Newspaperman as Mother Weeps.” Liane read: “Miss Muriel Ladd, debutante daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Fenton Ladd of Newport and Willow Stream, Long Island, was married by special license to Mr. Charles Desmond, for the Evening Sphere, at Green- wich yesterday. Friends of the couple said the romance was one of long standing. Mrs. Ladd was said to be in a state of collapse and could not see reporters, “I have cried my eyes out ever since I heard the news,” she is reported to have said to friends directly following receipt of news of the ceremony, Miss Ladd’s engagement to Mr. Van Robard, it is said, was broken a week ago.” A picture of Muriel in riding clothes with a crop over her knee heeded this column. When Clive returned Liane was still staring at the picture. She had not really believed what Van had said in the note Tressa had handed to her yesterday. Clive looked over her shoulder. “She's taken the step at last,” he remerked, Liane tried desperately to be matter of fact. “I never thought she would,” “Although last sum- mer she gave évery evidence of be- she told him. ing mad about him.” “This may be the making of that girl it she sticks to him,” Clive “That fellow has brains, He'll make her step round. Just naid. what shé needs.” Cootly he ignored the glaring fact that Van now was free, Not that it matters to me,” Liane reflected. “He's no more to me now than it She shut her he'd never existed.” eyes. I’m going out on the ob-| powering. feature writer “Tired?” Clive’s tone was solicit- ous. “No, I'm loving all this. It's the first time I've ever traveled so elegantly.” “Poor kid, you've had a hard time. No more of that.” They rode for a while in silence. Clive interrupted abruptly, “You'll want to buy loads of thin things in Palm Beach, The shops will be fun for you. That’s why I didn’t bother to arrange about it before- hand.” He put a check book into her hands. “This is yours.” The deposit he named took her breath away. “Nonsense.” His voice sounded annoyed. “I’m coming into my in- heritance, thanks to you. Mother can’t run me anymore. I'd like to go out to Surabaya in the spring to look over that rubber plantation I'd spoken of. You'll want to be in funds, then. When we come back we'll have to hunt around and find a house. Mother wants us to stay with her for a while but I'd regher not if you don’t mind. I want us to have our own hut di- rectly, I'm better friends with ; Mother,” he grinned wryly, “if we don’t live under the same roof. You may have noticed that.” Lx smiled in sympathy, “She's sweet but she is rather over- I'm a pig to say such a thing after all she's done for me.” “No, you're not. Do you know she never had a companion who stayed more than two weeks before you came? She's a_ steam roller, Mother is. Grand if you like ‘em, but lots of people don’t.” They laughed together. Suddenly Liane voiced a thought that had occurred to her in the last few minutes. “Would you like it if I came along? To Surabaya or wherever that place is?” He flushed, looking pleased. “Ot course. But I thought you'd hate the ide: “Why? “Oh, I don’t know. We didn’t agree to the whither-thou-goest-I- will-go idea, you remember.” She laced her fingers nervously. “Just the same, I think I ought to go with you.” Underneath sho thought, troubled, that she would be a good wife to this man if only in form. She would follow him faithfully. “We'll talk about that later.” Clive picked up a book and she sat staring at the landscape. They were traveling through farm coun- try now with little lights pricking through the darkness, fences blurred in the quickly falling snow. Liane looked troubled, young and defenseless. Her hands lay idle in her lap. Surely, she thought, it was a strange bridal trip. They talked of money, of business affairs, but never of each other. Her mind trembled away from reflection of what this day might have been like if she had given her pledge to Van yestérday instead of to this boy. She shut her eyes to banish the recollection of his stormy glgnce, bis‘eyes devouring hers, blue eyes upon her. He withdrew his gaze instantly but she had the sensation of having looked into a room where the curtains had not yet been drawn. His eyes had been saying something to her . . . some- thing . . . what was it? There was a message there but she could not translate it. eee rpRoupian, she sought escape in words. She babbled to him of other journeys she had made, trips with her mother’s company in one night stands. She made him laugh with anecdotes of that crazy-quilt life of hers, They were in a gale of merriment when the porter, knocking on the door, announced dinner. “D’you mind?” Clive asked when the man had taken the order and departed. “I'll have to bunk on the couch here tonight. There wasn’t a lower berth to be had on the train although I tried. It'll be awkward.” “Why should I mind?” She looked at him, composed as a child. “Indeed, I should be nervous if you didn’t stay. I’ve never trav- eled alone.” He made an eloquent little ges- ture. “Look here, Clive,” she cried rather sharply. “We can’t make a melodrama of all this or we'll hate each other. We've got to be sen- sible about it.” “You're quite right. Thanks for reminding me.” She had sense enough for two, he decided. What a self-possessed little thing she was. She pretended to be asleep when he came in, She snuggled down be- tween the coarse Pullman sheets. Through her lashes she could see him, stepping softly so as not to waken her. Ah, she did like his looks. She wondered why she had uever appreciated them before, ‘The light in Clive's corner burned long that night as he turned the pages of a book. His smile was a little grim. He was remem- bering the conductor’s significant nudge and smile. “Newlyweds,” the man had whispered to his assist- ant. For a long time Liane lay wide awake staring into the dimness, She kept seeing pictures, pictures she could not quite dismiss, Her- self meeting Van Robard the first time. That night at Mrs. Clees- paugh’s when he had reminded her they had so much to say to each other. Why was her mother so opposed to him always? What on earth did she know about him? She had never thought of love as a malady, something to be cured. Now she knew it was like that. Some kinds of love at least. There was no health in this feeling she had for Van Robard. Her throat felt dry, her gatety withered when he was near, Her hands grew fevered and her head cold. Well, it was lucky that Clive had snatched her away from the city where ho lived and had his Maybe if she didn’t see him any more she would forget about him. Oh, she would try. She would do her best! eee, 1 No, she would not think of him now! All that was behind her. She glanced up to find’ Clivi EL'S letter trailed them south on the fifth day. “Dar- ing,” she wrote, “weren't you “ Through a check- ing system, there’s little trouble in rm la Ne MCELLIOTT CL Ge 7p =|to the state and contributes toward the support of this family play- ground. And there's no handsomer stretch of ocean front on the eastern seaboard. see Some years ago, one of the best known vaudeville figures was a black- face artist, Billy B. Van, who dub- bed himself, “the minstrel man.” Billy had a summer country place in New Hampshire, and when the road season had ended he would re- tire to the hills. A couple of years ago, the notion came to him to apply -|the aroma of the pines and firs on his place to soap. He tried some home-made samples and liked them. Then he called in some experts. Today Van numbers among the four biggest soap men in the coun- try and is @ millionaire. And he prides himself that he’s one of the extremely few theatrical people to become successful in a big industrial way. He comes to New York fre- quently to go about with his old cron- ies; he drops in on shows, but he’s through with the stage. And it always amuses him to com- ment on the fact that a veteran black-facer should make his fortune in soap. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) PAGE'S ADDRESS On Aug. 5, 1917, Walter Hines Page, the United States ambassador to Great Britain, delivered an address at Plymouth, England, on the allied cause in the World war. “He said in part: is “The war has swept away inci- dental differences between us as a harrow smoothes a field.... There is coming the greatest victory for free government that was ever won, and “And the necessity to win it has cost, this clearing of the air would to|It has revealed the future of the “This empire and the great repub- lic must then be the mmn guardians Aljof civilization hereafter, the consci- ¢byiMABEL thrilled to death and didn’t 1 tell you I wouldn't let you beat me to it? Chuck says to give you his best but don’t take that too seriously. You have a perfectly good husband of your own and I’m not allowing any vamping, mind you. I was a grade-A vamp in my own right and I know the signs. If Chuck ever gets away from me it will be over my dead body. S “Have you heard about Van? He has been appointed to some diplo- matic post in the Balkans. Can’t imagine why but he will love swanking around among the tall hats, won't he? Some of those princesses may snag him while we aren’t looking. He was a lamb and sent me a silver urn, an old one, for a present. I think he goes about the middle of next month. “Mother is still being—I believe they call it adamant, Keeps look- ing through her lorgnon at Chuck’s family tree. We get a shriek out of that. We have a tiny apartment over near Turtle Bay and I have & wow of a part-time mai who washes the dishes when she re- members to and sweeps the dust EDITOR'S NOTE—This is the sixth of a series of 26 timely arti- cles by Dr. Morris Fishbein on “Food Truths and Follies,” deal- ing with such much discussed but little known subjects a5 calories, vitamins, minerals, dl- gestion and ee a diet. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN (Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association) The proteins are a group of close- ly related substances composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen’ and sulphur. Some of them contain’ phosphorus and iron also. The basic proteins are amino acids. Whereas it- was originally thought many of the proteins were alike, it is now realized that they differ. Some of them are made out of essential elements in the body; others cannot be made in the body but must be taken in the form of various foods. It would hardly interest the aver- age person without a scientific knowl- edge of chemistry to explain to him teins vary chemically. Their tech- nical names, such as alanine, glycine, and histidine, have meaning for chemists. Some food substances are called complete proteins because they contain all of the amino acids essen- tial for growth and for tissue repair. The best examples of protein foods of this character are milk, lean meat and eggs. Others contain some es- sential substances but need additional proteins to make growth and main- tenance possible. These are called partially complete proteins. The best examples of this type are cereals and Such substances as peas and beans. Flour contains as its protein gliadin of wheat, but this protein requires the addition-of another protein call- ed lysine in order to insure growth. In arranging a diet these facts must be considered so that the diet will in- ————— Daily Health Service Cheaper Meat Cuts as Good as Expensive in “a Giving Protein clude some of all of the essential protein substances. Milk furnishes the best type of protein for both maintenance and growth. Eggs -omo next, and then various meat prod- ucts. Beans, peas, corn and various cereals require additions in the -~:1 of milk, meat, or eggs, to satisfy pro- tein needs, When the proteins get into the body they are digested rart- ly in the stomach by hydrochloric acid, water and pepsin, and to some extent in the intestines by /:!ces secreted by the pancreas and by the intestinal wall. A protein diet is essentially an acid-forming one. When burned in the body, meat, cereals and prunes furnish acids in predominance. Gela- tin is @ protein, but it is an incom- plete protein because it does not provide some of the important con- stituents. Everyone has to have 100 to 120 grams of protein in the daily diet. An ordinary glass of milk has only seven grams of protein. The white of the egg consists chiefly of water, proteins and mineral . salts. An average egg weighs about two ounces; about one-sixth of this is the ways in which the different pro- protein. There are dietary faddists, who in- veigh against proteins, claiming that they putrefy in the intestines and that a@ safe diet is low in protein. Such an argument is utterly with- out basis in scientific fact. Proteins are found in fish, cheese, in vege- tables and in. most natural foods. The cheaper cuts of meat are as good as the more expensive ones in sup- plying protein. For palatability, meat protein is in general superior to vegetable protein. An adequate diet contains about two ounces of actual protein each day. When it is considered that only one-sixth of the egg is protein, that less than five per cent of milk is protein, it will be real- ized that a considerable quantity of food may be necessary to supply the protein needs, provided this need is not kept in mind. BARBS In Cuba women are being employed as motormen in place of men. cause, perhaps, of their well-known propensity to run things. * eR Many Scotchmen and their fam- ilies are spending vacations in France, says a news item. What do you mean, “spending”? ee # © | The manufacture and sale of toy balloons is a $3,000,000 business, ac- cording to an industrial statistic. It's the sort of a business that is hard to keep down. * % % ‘Two new claimants have arisen for the Spanish throne. But in the event a king is called for it is expected, they will say, “You first, Alfonso.” xe * x The King of Siam is said to have been very congenial when he was escorted to a New York speakeasy recently. If he had acted that way escorted FROM the speakeasy, that would have been news. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) ———__________——_-¢ | Quotations | hee emer < There has been an abundance of competition but there does not seem to be a commensurate amount of life in trade—Thomas L. Chadbourne. x # Don't let anyone step on your neck and call the farmer an underdog.— Alexander Legge. * % % When a reader thinks of a book as a classic and reads it because it is a classic, it is already dead to him and he to it.—Lewis Gannett. ** * I am just the hired girl, empress of the barnyard.—Belle Livingstone. Aged Minneapolis Resident Succumbs Minneapolis, Aug. 5.—(?)—John Wilson Beattie, 76, one of the found- ers of Mitchell, S. D., and a resident of Minneapolis 30 years, died Mon- day while enroute by automobile to Sherwood, N. D., with his » We under the beds. It is fun and I like it. Come to see us when you get back or I'll never speak to you again, My love to Clive.” ~ Liane put the letter down and looked out across the cobalt water. The shrieks of some children in charge of a starched English nurze- maid on the beach broke into her reverie, A girl in a blue bathing suit, brief and casual as a boy's, rode an aquaplane with the grace of a humming bird. She re-read the words, “He has been appointed to some diplomatic post in the Balkans.” Then what she had been praying for was to come to pass. She would never see him again. She would put him out of her life as if he had never ex- isted. i But at the thought her heart gave a sickening plunge, She did want to see him just once more, to hear his voice, to touch his hand. Was that too much to ask? She would treasure those memories. She would keep them in her heart until she was old. Clive came up behind her, very cool and splendid in his white flan- nels. “Mail from home?” She;gave bim the letter and he read it unsmiling. “Muriel sounds .happy, she?” “On the crest.” Something in his tone touched Liane profoundly. He was staring moodily out to sea. She sprang up, the skirt of her perfect yellow sports frock blowing in the breeze, She had a white hat crushed down on her bronze hair. In the shadow her eyes looked dark, mischievous, “Let's go places.” “All right. How about the yacht?” “Y'd rather drive, Let's have tea at that Spanish place we saw yes terday.” “Right. I'll order the gar around.” Old ladies watch=d y swung through the beautiful courtyard. ° ‘The’ girl, so young and fresh and utterly charming, the man 80 deb. onair, “Lucky, lucky youngsters,’ moaned the old ladies, thinking of doesn’t Van Beattie. His death occurred just west of Minot, N. D. Beattie was employed as elevator superintendent in North Dakota for the Atlantic Elevator company of Be-| li more if a request of officials and em- Ployes of the state hospital is acted upon favorably by the Jamestown city council. A request that the state institution be included within the city mits was presented at the council meeting last night. Juvenile offenders against the law are steadily decreasing in number. Experts say that many of the “crimes” of stealing sweets from shops are due to youngsters not receiving suffici- ent sugar at home. STICKLEBRS Minneapolis. He leaves his widow, a daughter and two sons. WANT CITY SERVICE Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 5.—(®)— Jamestown will take its place among cities with populations of 10,000 or 2 THIS CURIOUS-WO ' - There are 16 lettered squares in the * large square shown above. Start at one ° { square and draw a line from square to { sauue, in any direction, vertical, hori-$ zontal or diagonal. If you start right and + follow the right course the letters will spell the words of a familiar sign. g

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