The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 14, 1931, Page 4

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soo ete emer 8 ore SOBER AANA , THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1981 --- - The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper ‘THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) new pair of knickers each time. Thej/ “house” made a thousand. But he]; — had a wardrobe to pique the envy of many a golfer. He didn’t know for sure just what they were for, but he knew what he liked. Manuel and his partner walked out some job that can never be perfectly | % sioenctNt | The Hitch Hicker! We shall, in time, produce new - Shakespeares and Beethovens and Michaelangelos, and the world will be a better place than it is now. The; hardest tasks are still ahead of us. Daily Health Service Iron Needed in Blood Should Be Prepared in Steam Cooker to Keep Viet Valuable Mineral Salts Juices Which Contain into the night, The gay lights of Published by The Bismarck Tribune! ‘Company, Bismarck, N. D., and wen We should be thankful. Seeing tata Laat Began, EDITOR'S NOTE—This 4s the Prospective mother or ne hursing an tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as —— Gen to a pind fy 14th of a series of 26 timely arti- increase ‘iron intake | " i 77 oda. by 20 cent over that of the ordi- oes F uCRGE Th Cail | Where Cooperation Will Pay This was the life! cles eter der cme oy enuit, ft bei who eppromtisn Presi ” publisher. | Declining foreign trade is one of| * * # ‘Food nh the period of maturity begifs to iske ict ‘ Within a few days they were Har-| ing with such mue the factors most responsible for pro- tone latent ty. Curious ones| but little known subjects as cal- | blood and thereby requires more tron Subscription Rates Payable ta = {ioncing the business deprcssion— began to ply them with questions,| orles, vitamins, minerals, diges- ie ri Pl a hie dee anb tse ; ee sy cart Poe aie sra0| °*#C!l¥ a8 it was 8 factor in bringing through an interpreter. Someone| tion and balanced fee ee tee 7 AY CALIIOE, Det ASP Sod | i asked them how much they got? The take foods bare os \ seed Daily by mall per year dn Bis- |! on. gaa innocents confessed to $4 8 month! py DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN | jesetabies and egg yolk as well as oS epee Sa ... 220{ Few of us sufficiently understand piper a rege A RG ma ver kidneys. Daily by mail per year (in state | how vital international commerce is Hy sah the pair ars >| (Editor, Journal of the American Just, a8 calclum find phosphorus outside Bismarck)....... seseee to domestic prosperity. A decrease} ‘What—? The uplifters took them in Medical Association) i! seem to go together 1 body, 5 Daily by mail outside of North | jor a “mere” five or six per cont in tow. Mineral salts in vegetables are he er eg Cg gated Sate ow | 2 re bei vest ive of = ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00/ means all the difference between} eas. of teats ae ie pid aa ‘an| which is then tirown away, cae shed Fey si cane ast ‘wrong ath Weekly by mail in state, three | good times and bad. And a decline] Int-hour day. He thousht of his|the vegetable wi 5 cuted neati rapidly Sh al is ss 00 or pret mi mem Br ne cn fun te cee, ee St en ae eae e pekly by mail outside of ‘Nor! difference between stability and to Nairobl even as he had found|s ft fron are not as eff Dakota, per year ...... osu td : them. What, the explorer pondered,|and thereby the mineral salts. ous types 0 Lag i Ma han ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per — Pe | would” happen when they ee ‘back| The chief value of iron in the body tive as eas is be Cae in year .. ++ 200| The doctrine of economic and s0- to Centinl Atrios ‘vith “iieas oflis as an essential part of the hemo-|the orm in pills not Memb it Bureau of cial isolation may have been work- knickers, ice cream and union hours?|globin or red coloring matter of the|be as effective as when it is given er of Audi i Circulation able in 1831—but it is suicidal ia 1931. GILBERT SWAN. |blood. This substance is primarily|}in food substances which also con- No nation can, figuratively, remove (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) |Tesponsible for carrying the oxygen|tain some copper. Member of The Associated Press i tals in the blood to the cells of the body) Such substances include cabbage, The Associated Press 1s exclusively |'tself to a high peak and look down which require it for health, The body|lettuce, and liver. ‘The ~average entitled to the use for republication of /on the rest of the world, depending TODAY 1S THE of an infant at birth contains about | American diet contains from 14 to 20 z a = three times as much iron as that of| milligrams of iron a day. The hu- all news dispatches credited to it orjon itself alone for sustenance. Co: not otherwise credited in this news-/ ve iness . a grown person. The child at birth is)mah body needs 15 milligrams. A peration between businesses and in- | thon paper and also the local news of! i t ready to begin growing at an exceed-|slight excess of in the diet is spontaneous origin published herein. | “viduals has solved many of the in- ingly rapid rate. If ft continued all|therefore not likely to be harmful All rights of republication of all other) dustrial problems of the age—and its life at the rate at which it grows/and will make certain of a safe matter herein are also reserved. ;cooperation between nations, both in the first six months, it would be commerce and in diplomacy, must gigantic by the age of 10. For in- (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Page Uncle Sam! Pittsburgh coal operators are re- ported on the verge of asking the, federal government to regulate the coal industry’as a public utility. One of the operators recently re- marked that anyone who had pro- posed such a scheme three or four years ago would have been denounced solve those of an international char- acter. The reason for the decline in for- Jeign trade, divorced of argument and ‘confusing details, is simple enough— }foreign nations cannot buy from us, |unless we buy from them. We must {look beyond state and national boun- daries toward the world horizon, in} |the knowledge that foreign trade is jone of the keys to domestic pros-| jperity and industrial stimulation. Gasoline Prices ‘The average consumer will not be- ‘Meve it, but the fact is, that gaso-! jline prices now are the lowest in| years, ay tin Johnson, the explorer. \hired as valets to a couple of valu- ;able chimpanzees, |the Johnson jungle trophies. So they slept in the elephant inouse. | This kept them from being homesick. | | Harlemites. What, for instance, did{ the native lingo of the Ubangis sound To begin with, the Ubengi gents! other it became known that the cele- |were brought to New York by Mar-jbrated visiting Ubangis would posi- They were tively deliver a lecture in the native | Premier Tuan Chi-jui wished China Swahili dialect. And for the mere included among/entrance fee of four-bits per person.!members of the Parliament, aroused | The small hall was packed. The gate/at rumors of secret agreements be- receipts were nice pickings. And when it was over with, Manuel |. And then—alack aday—the urgejfound a nice crispy $1 bill in his} for culture came over some of the,hand and a pair of golf knickers./ship with enhanced prestige and And such knickers! Sweet mama! With swell black checkers on them. CHINA DECLARES WAR On Aug. 14, 1917, China declared war on Germany and Austria. Six months previous, the United States invited China to follow its ex- ample in protesting against Ger- many’s submarine campaign. The Chinese foreign office soon thereafter sent a warning to Germany, and on March 14 broke off diplomatic rela- tions. to go to war against Germany but tween Tuan’s group and Japan, held jback. The premier was later ousted. Tuan later resumed the premier- power by leading an army to Peking, ostensibly to defend the republic. stance, it doubles its weight during the first six months. If it continued doubling its weight every six months, it would weigh 2,000 pounds at four years of age, which is quite a baby. Since infants, during the first six months of life, live largely on milk, and since this is particularly rich in iron, the infant is supplied with a store of iron or ifon reserve until it gets older and begins to get iron in its blood. Nature is wonderful. As an example of the extra tron that may be required by the body, a his work as the man who is mentally at peace.”—M. J. Flanigan, manager of a railway safety bureau. * k ® “The only real vice is ignorance.” —Dr. Olga Strastny, president of the stroyed when fed various quantities of these salts. If one eats a diet in which the vege- tables have been properly selected, these needs are usually provided for. issue of The Tribune for August 11 I find this statement—“England’s high- est mountain is Ben Nevis, 4,406 fect,” Nevis slide down to England? Had National Association of Medical |the news item said Great Britain the ike? in rot ‘ivations Tuan and his supporters, now bein: { : as a vicious and subversive Bolshevik.| A survey shows that on June 1,| New York, Aug. 14—This sure is no k*?, Could certain root derivatio ee. * % : lif control vet spporters, now being! women, rere statement would have been correct. Today, however, the coal men feellthe average price in 51 Americanjtown for a couple of innocent young, yt an sounded hi; t | 7, Manuel had been looking around. through their purpose which had| « i ccaiteabe | igh-class, elegant | 7 a | ‘There's nothing in that report of A. G. BURR. differently, As the operator says: ‘cities was 1251 cents per galion—|savages from Central Africa! and refined! It was a hot night. ‘The Harlem lads In fact, it was educa-|nad come in flannel pants and yel-|Drecipltated the crisis, and formally i ny declared war on Germany. my retirement as a golfer.”—Bobby “ ‘i ” i ———— ‘They see nothing ahead of them, | plus tax. This compares with 16.78/ ‘Take Manuel and Diosaner, for in-/tional. Simple souls that they were, tow, blue, pink, lavender and white Jones. ¢ as things stand now, but the loss of/cents on the same date in 1920 phos rene ; eee and Harn Riri Suttally | sane sport shirts. What would look! ieee vee - ne ii iis iI BARBS | inabil- 25.7 cents ne 2: Vhat they'll have to tell the Up to the vast negro NOW Off. better witl checkered knickers than 1 “wha' e matter wi Ww! O: ap Sg ee hi LT |Ubangi boys when they get back, if] But not before an astute and aler*'a nice, snappy sport shirt? i Quotations || sagen tect hear Gke MaeA oes ene eae Ee anon n or of thosal qari’, Joker And the reason prople/ever!” Have they been’ stepping? |potential showman had heard about |® to °sepapey Spore Shirt? <{has not any of the customs or con-| Ieland is now said to be the most e incident gives $2 Tevealing little sidelights on the gen- eral business attitude toward gov ernment regulation. If there are Profits to be made, then government interference is crippling, inefficient, Politics-ridden and altogether damn- able, and no sane American can even! hint at it. But if the money is not coming in—if there are problems to be me which private initiative cannot solv —then Uncle Sam's activity will be welcomed, and the sooner he acts the| better. Of course, once conditions improve and everybody is making moncy again, Uncle Sam would be expected; to withdraw gracefully, and govern-) mental interference once more would be a spectre to evoke shudders and chill the blood. Regardless of this slightly illogical attitude there seems to be little doubt that the federal government will have to concern itself over the} the Greenland-Iceland route by tne down, lies the tax”| in “plus retail price and is a constant factor.| Regardless of the cost of the gaso- |same. On June 1, the average tax had e: ceeded four cents a gallon for the |first time in history. In the last 10 years the average tax has increased 3.85 cents per gallon while the aver- age price of gas has declined. Rated in percentages, the tax on |fasoline now is nearly 33 per cent | of its retail value. { Transatlantic Airmail Among the interesting topics for ‘speculation this summer is the que: jtion whether an America-to-Fu airmail line will be first established |with airplanes or with dirigibles, | The pathfinding plane sent over do not appreciate that gasoline prices! And have they learned things? Sweet mama, the tuation, for the tax is added to the lem boys gave them the runaround!| it. From one end of Harlem to an-;get one buck per appearance and al Did he leap to the occasion?’ some, 10, in all. The crowd increased, vay those Har-' Sweet man—and how! | ‘The innocent Ubangi continued to; | “Any man who goes to work to the tune of a word battle with his wife, is just three times as Hable to bungle |line to the merchant, the tax is the/ “Na A TTA BEGIN HERE TODAY LIANE BARRETT, 18'and bean- forget VA a tifal, triew in vain to * by tl 4 fs during Cass's stock at a fa: bie Long Island summer colony that _the Barretts meet her day. a letter to her mother. papers she felt sure. beén watching for this day by The bur- of this message was the same as the first. She closed her mind to the anxiety which must be felt those who loved her. She had to in order to save her very soul. That Clive had not announced disappearance to the news-| She had wae she had been working for Steinway and Lipschutz struggle up. That would never do. A ccol hand explored her wrist until she could feel the beating Be late for work. of her own pulse. This was an odd dream. Curious she couldn't fight her way out of it. She re- laxed and lay still. A voice was murmuring very low, “case of malnutrition.” She heard another voice answer. Ah! That was the one she'd wanted to remember. Whose was it. She could almost see the face of the to down, a caged, tormented man. and the physician emerged. His air was still brisk, his smile more Pleased. He deigned now to speak “Well, well, along splendidly, I’m happy to say. ment this morning, 32 during the night. Miss Bunce has her orders, Pulse is stronger, I’m glad to tell ELLIOTT 1931 SERVIC NEA “ INE WeeNOT He paced up and down, up and After aeons the lock clicked the young man at sir, length. she’s getting Sixteen ounces of nourish- solations of a pagan.”"—G. K. Ches- {terton, author. xe # “It has been proved that America does not refuse to aid just because! she maintains her independent po- licy.”"—Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, president of the D. A. R. * * * “Open up all the avenues you can, for your children, but leave them to follow them up for themselves.”—| Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. ** * “It will be a long, long time before any one suggests anything that will linger longer and produce more laughs than did the time-honored, softly oozing, snugly sticking custard pie.”"—Mack Sennett. People’s Forum Prosperous country in the world. It's & new kind of green they're flaunting now. * # * In the German financial situation Fekete pace otro gol eo ee * & % Dental requirements at Annapolis are so strict that entrants must have at least 20 serviceable teeth. But sooner or later they'll get work on the bridge. *# * The fellow who can tell you where to get off and make you like it, says the office sage, is the elevator man. * Elettric fans reported being sold in Alaska, Next they'll be im- Porting snow for winter carnivals. - * # * Action in Tennessee’ against Clar- H { a u Which offend good tas play will be writers. All le If you wish ence Darrow’s film may be taxen to mean that the state wants no more monkey business. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) you. Tam very hopeful.” coal industry sooner or later. Con-| TT#"Samerican Alrlines Corporation Clive spoke with difficulty, for nearly six weeks she was sum-|™an to whom the voice belonged. ditions are little better than chaotic,|S8°WS that the airplane is just about! sign pseudony! moned to the manager's office one| Almost, but not quite. e beneath Plans Gene. Flight : i | é “You're sure she’s out of danger Spect such requests, os , losing money. The miners are barely, route provides relatively short| beging to glanced away, as she came in.| Your mouth now, like a good girl,| “Well, you mustn't ask such conform to this policy. existing, and many thousands of|W@ter hops and is said to be fairly|) y with a |“Miss Crane,” he began stiffly,|and drink this.” Obediently| leading questions, young man. ‘ them are on strike in protest against| {ee from fog and bad weather. Reg-| | Later Liane |“We have been getting some in-| Liane did as she was told. She|She’s so very frail there doesn’t wn : Rees es caitions "ular airmail service does not seem| quiries about you from a private|felt romething that must be a/seem to be much fight there. aane i i unbearable conditions. i ce, H detective agency. We don't like| Small glass tube. The liquid| D’you see what I mean?” jade bag A ee sans poreaee ae Naea ae Mee eerie avinll 3 trickling into her parched throat enCite sam. Instantly he was tn A Lael ee lca dasa sic, raw-material industries ot e * wit e ast ‘e@ warm milk. She sipped | the depths again. * ‘ nation. Business conditions general-|28ve also demonstrated their capa- oa per white tered upeosom fe it gently. After a minute she} The doctor thumped him be- about 7:50 D, mh on tee evening. of ‘ ly cannot ever be entirely healthy as|CitY- The exploits of the Graf Zep- hand. “Now, now! I don't know | Hoked and gasped, “Tired.” nignly on the shoulder. “Musta’t a ‘neal pelo lid ‘ { long as the coal trade is sick. Uncle pelin and the building of the Akron/| 5 what you've done or why,” he Then the clear voice said, sym-| give up like that. I said she was from his car while driving a few! { Sam will have to tackle the problem| Have drawn new attention to this| | said. “But it’s bad for the morale, | Pathetically: “I know. I'll take] getting along and I mean it. Only miles west of Davenport, Iowa. His) { type of flyin hinges -Negollat {Kiang a not her child but the | Gets the girls whispering and 1|it @W6y for @ bit. Then you'll] we mustn't be too cocksure. Wait first impression that an airplane| eventually, and the sooner he gets Ying machine. Negotiations| |i daughter of her sister, Luten, and Ls pering 1 pression was iy» 8 , v1| tty again like a good girl won’t| and see. for a transatlantic dirigible service| i | Robard’s stepfather wi don’t know what. Sorry, but we'll . ap was going down in flames. Numerous! q started the better for all concerned. i os ‘ ‘vite Luisa was. The girl have to let you go.” you?’ On this cold comfort he bustied reports have been received later byj have gone forward. by this news, ome and “4 ip ek FOR : She tried to nod, but you| away. Clive hated him. mie ead s personal interview from ais . > i ne outing extras. ere was no use to say any- Y - at Our Limitless Horizons ean kind of taashine will be the Robi led in'an acei- | thing. Liane departed, light count nod when you were lying} At noon they let him come in Persons who observed it almost as far = ee put such a service on a regu- 3 in which Linne lown, for five minutes. Liane lay as one west as Sioux City, Iowa, and as far Graduation addresses are usually] 1. sopeauter renee of pailte Sine ne! ghz, 2 | headed with hunger and terror.) The owner of the clear voice| quietly asleep, her lashes resting north as Minne: Minnesota. fairly dreary affairs, Once in a ; i > ae tea aie ic pea an ouretope contelatne: two seemed to know what she meant.| lightly on cheeks which seemed These reports indicate that the me- while, though, a speaker emerges who} Fi : De hed ia the word. * ™"eY | “That's right,” the voice said.|to him terrifyingly wan. She did teor came from the southwest and; has something to say, and when that|| Editorial Comment ||: GO. O8 WITH, Sate Reena 48 the ward; “That's splendid.” not know he was there or, if she fell Gf-any portion reached the| happens the graduates he addresses| ‘ i ECHAPTER XLIL She thought, trembling, that! When next she woke there was| did, she gave no sign. Cass came [ |earth) somewhere in the vicinity of! / : pene the & a Editorials printed below show tne |||? J TANE'S days resolved them-| the unkind fate which had dogged| orange juice slipping down the after his telephone message and Redwood Falls, Minnesota, A pre- rh \ can consider themselves more than; trend of thought by other editors, a selves into a pattern. She rose| her before her marriage to Clive lass tube. Heavenly, it |] They are published without regard 8 enly, it tasted. | talked in low tones to the nurse. Asyociated Prese Photo lucky. || to whether they agree or disserec ; before seven, and dressed hur-| must be at her heels. Her un- She'd aéard of nectar and am-| Her eyes looked straincd when that the meteor should, Mrs. Juanita Burns, Los Angeles The other day Dean Thomas W., with The Tribune's policies. riedly. She stopped at a tiled| known enemies must have found| brosia. It could be no more de-| she emerged from her conference, weather, have been noticed by resi-! aviatrix, sald she Is making plans Graham of the Oberlin Graduate | lunchroom for breakfast. An| her out again. As she went to the lightful than the cool orange juice| but she patted Clive on the arm for a non-stop solo flight from Seat- School of Theology spoke before a} University Inventors = orange, a plece of toast, a cup of| rooming house she called home trickling down her throat. and tried to cheer him. tle to Tokyo. SD uidier sik damdeaien: @ututh Bers q coffee. That was 25 cents. She|her steps lagged and her heart] This time when the hand took] He kept saying over and over | group er Hy eS 2 ‘Yushed to the store. She had to| seemed to skip beats. the tube away Liane managed to| again, “I never should have let and a few of his sentences stick in) A new reagent which improves the = be there at a quarter past eight. She managed to drag herself|say three words. She wanted| this go on for so long. I was the memory and set one thinking, 9s/famous Babcock test for butterfat in|/7 There ‘she arranged her stock,| upstairs without letting the sharp-| most awfully to say them. They| afraid to break in on her too soon. Ic KLE PR, S all such speeches are supposed to do.| milk and cream has been invented by \ Bbpet open her pareattry ane syed noisy. oe pee she Basted seemed at the moment frightfully| I thought she was all right. How 6 “There are finer tools yet to bel two i A tnt | vhen the doors were opened stood | the le spirit kettle she used to| important. She said, “God is| was I to know?” ei 4 mae than any we have Sow” Sensis Unverly farm Tens ne | oa ey ome of an ary] ll water for tm Seorg haha [gongs Oe SY S88 8) Tah tat hm mot coroah VRYVSSAYSLGANC. : no een | | vorke! cted to be cvurt. e to jut the flame ‘o her surprise two te himself but he heard her, 7 asserts. “More stirring music will he) put on the market as the “Minnesota cous and efficient. @ knock sounded and the knob| rolled from under hee lds and} so absorbed Pegg his own composed, poetry of greater rhythm) Babcock test reagent.” For the first time In her life| turned softly. began softly to run down her| bitter reflections. x and profounder prose will be writ-/ The inventors spent nearly two|| Tane began to realize what sort} Liane put her hand to her checks, The ‘hand wiped them| “The doctor says it’s a case of ten, and in the realm of architec-| years of time not occupied by their Hara. Hie A cae of the world] throat. A dark mist danced be- away. The voice said, “Don’t| real starvation,” he went on prod- ture, sculpture and painting greater lak i i d *, 518 discovered that life} fore her eyes and the room began| worry about anything. You're| ding the wound. “Starvation! Did ita Pianta ikeatood [eee oan soling. she prob: “ould become a treadmill in which | to recede. She had no sensation| coming along splendidly.” Then you ever hear anything so hor- ‘ heights are ye' o . lems presented by evident errors of the only really important things| of falling. Only as in a dream, Liane drifted off again. She was| rible?” i ‘ Why should a simple statement 2 bape method. | aegis ot were a hot cup ci i ia ceod| she heard a man’s voice saying| so very tired. ‘ . “Don’t think of fact like that be so encouraging names ‘are W. E. Peterson night’s rest, peremptorily, “Catch her! She's Ace it. It does no good.” ‘Why should it set one dreaming, and ene a o. Herried. She learned to keep a box of| going, sure!” a bad the corridor of St. Blizabeth’s| Clive paced the floor. He tor- Tike fos Wish that one were joi nel ¢ iscovery is one of the great, crackers in her room and a bit of] Liane had heard that voice be-| © hospital a haggard young man|tured himself. Cass whirled to fi iaahird: With al worked out by research cheese carefully rolled in brown| fore. She was too tired just then paced up and down. When the| see the nurse at the door, er graduating from hig! , &/ workers in the universities of the Paper. Apples could be had for] to remember whom it belonged to. | doctor appeared, a brisk, plump| on lip. i ae es pomiblishies atiend?) world. . Not all are as spectacular as/lf little or nothing. Sometimes she or se doctor in his early forties, and| “She's conscious. She's asking It does those things, somehow, but’ es! cafe Me Se a i Treg ane thought of the state dinners at Aue & Jong, long while she| smiling with spurious brightness,| for her mother.” why? nection with the names of their the Wiltow Stream house, of her! 44 awoke. She was in a white|the young man approached him| Quick as lightning Cass was in Probably tt is because we like tol originators. But in nearly tard cone fen Ree Pene Pinte Les era and ae bc i bug of sun| and spoke in a low, anxious tone.| the pag at the bere The reminded that we live in a sadl; ‘. | . She thought of/ on the ceiling. zy spot of| The doctor waved him aside| girl on the pillow stirred as one aes ey et Wo Uke te feall Ee Set ee ata ics TNT | Eten parties where the table overs| enc, Ie eararedi Back cag Oren, with cool, imperious manner| waking from a long sleep, She & pukegee to be|the public without thought of edding flowed with cakes and tiny, deli-| Liane felt the coverlet tentatively | which comes naturally to the fol-| spok ‘How did you get here, that great are going thereby to their own incomes, clous sandwiches. She tortured! with her fingers. It did not tell lowers. of Aesculapius. “‘Now,| mother?” she asked in a faint, made on us. We like to be told that) “co octimes their inventors nah niall herselt with memories of tuc]in the least like the thin, gray, now, Mr. Cleespaugh, I'll talk to| perfectly natural voice. “Aren't the human race as a whole 1s elimb-| subject to patent cr copyright. When|— “/Sies she had refused. antiseptic smelling blanket at| you later,” he said. He vanished. | you playing today?” . they are, frequently the patent is|H 4, One day Liane realized with| Mrs, Kerschel’s boarding house.| The door of the secreti Cass strove for control. She y dedicated, without compensation, to| right that a man was shadowing| If she weren't so awfully tired| room closed after him. was not an actress for nothing. ‘ ; g her. He was a well-dressed man| she would open her eyes again| The young man continued to| “Silly child, it's Monday! Who In recent years another method has with tell-tale biunt toed shoes and| and see what it was like. Later, pace up and down, He had the ever heard of a matines on Mon- @ deroy hat. Since he did not perhaps she would do that. air of one distraught. Occasion-| day?” ? molest her she decided not to} There was something cise the ally he struck his palms together.| “I forgot.” The girl sighed a do anything about it. If she com-| girl wanted to clear up in her| At times he 2 Figg GO? pt be used in further research,| 2 university has several! Plained to the store manager he would think she had something to hide. She did not want to losé her job. She had no idea wire} he she might find another, The man disappeared and the girl's ‘reart lightened. One night she took the train and then the ssi to tho city whogs cho maficd all she Going where? That was struck seven. mind, something she would put her attention on when that foggy feeling left hor. Sha had what wanted to know.” ~ ° Somewhere far off @ clock Ligue. tried to} tr softly to him-| little and shifting ever so slightly self when he reached tho deserted | under the tautened turn of the corridor. “How was I to know e 0 she was starviag to death?” Cass “Dot demanded of no one at all. And “why didn’t| sit here detectives tired, I come sooner? The

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