The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1931, Page 4

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= The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST’ public demand for economy, but they servatives are sympathetic to the will insist that the Labor party trim | Daily Health Service the dole expenditures and other ap- alters Colactier oh as Woot |. Body Needs Plenty Water N \ “hdl ahead propriations in which the Laborites ers who have put the Manhattan jis-|| Far More Ni to Body Than Food and Loss Must oa Teen rr ee saw pieces “ogether. He. lies, for|| Far Nore Be‘Compensated to Offset in Effects Published by The Bismarck Tribune! Practically half of the British) instance, that Gerhard Dahl, the big pel Company, Bismarck, N. D. and en-|budget goes to pay interest upon boss of the subways, came from Ft. Howard, Wis. And 8 NOTE: that tend to accumulate water in the tered at the postoffice at Bsmatck as/ Great Brtiain’s national debt of $35,- subway dignitaries have old home ade soit of 2 eerles of ‘36 timely = body, the amount of fluid intake is second EEOHGE Dy. MANN |000,000,000. Chancellor Snowden hopes} dresses, such as Houghton, Mich.| ticles by Dr. Morris Fishbein on |ordinarily restricted by the physi- President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Datly by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) Srererny Daily by mail per year (in state 5. » 120 jto convert a large percentage of the national debt into lower-interest) bonds. It remains to be seen whether} {financial conditions will warrant such ja move at this time. Antics of Farm Board “Food Truths and Follies,” deal- ing with such much discussed but little known subjects as cal- ories, vitamins, minerals, diges- tion and balanced diet. * * * By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Stillwater, Minn., Hot Springs, Ark., and Little Rock. Broadway's pet blues singers, chor- ines, comics and leads; the pretty maidens of the night clubs and the so-called “society dancers”; the fel- lows who run the big hotels; the bar- tenders in speakeasies and the book- makers out at the race tracks; Tex \n. Cah the hygienic point of view the amount and nature of bacteria contained in the water are of great Formerly typhoid fever was transmitted primarily by bad water supplies. Nowadays any clv- flized community controls the bac- terial-containing water supply by the outside Bismarck)...... | President Hoover blessed the farm] Guinan and Peggy Hopkins Joyce—| youn’ Assactation, and ct |use of filtration and chlorination. , ae go0/Doard and sent it out with high hopes every symptom and symbol of the big) gi/tts” ghe Heal nouafiner or| Among the faddists there re also Sai ides “—|of combatting the operations of sup- eee Lg are settlers from] not water should be taken at meals. hess oe oo Sinthe ae a. Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00/ply and demand. It will be recalled! It New York ism’t in the United|!* Serves the Purpose of ati hd Sarniby thant wear & path from the ‘ Weekly by mail in state, three |what he said as the board started its| States; isn't representative of the| mature Gasesubh eee & nact faelliz| desk to the drinking fountain. Over YOATS ....sseeeeaee . hk 2.50/ price-pegging adventures. ‘The board! United States and @ pretty good fl-|t2ting ‘the movement of the residue | concentration on water is just as bad Neale cyan... Of North 59 |¥as to “protect the farmer from the lustration of what United Staters an! though the intestines. Water should | hablt a over-concentration on any Weekly by mail in Canada, per and demoraliaations of (Copyright, 1091, NEA Service, Inc.) |" however, be used to wash down thing else. FER decals access. q ble gluts and periodical sur- 2 SS Seve’ ne." Yumps of unchewed food that may| So many ct OA ee ee Member of Audit Bureau of Iso words to the} remain in the mouth while eating. | use liquid chlorine and calcium hy« irculatic r " “ Ice water is a common American|pochlorite for disinfection of water binciveerbncon ebtepy thine cub tory enruces ou habit, little used in foreign countries.| supplies that the process would not Member of The Associated Press | Petity between farming and other It chills the stomach, but so far as|seem to require any further defense The Associated Press is exclusively | industry would “establish for our} known is not harmful, unless taken| before the public, Only a few insti« entitled to the use for republication of |farmors an income equal to those of eo Lasting Lage ecto lh ee yer et this onthe Bp all news dispatches credited to it orjother occupat for the farmer's} pert ig sink Gaia an strange superstitions arise, hows Bei saiis, tie iseal. noms at) 22 the same comforts in Her Home| ger ale and similar modifications of|ever, which need to be contradicted; Pau nals chain pubiaed horeln. as women in cther groups; for the ordinary water are pleasant to take|for example, the assertion of a phy« All rights of republication of all other |farm boys and girls the same oppor- if one has @ taste for them. They|sician ih eats yet on Bul matter hercin are also reserved. tunities in lifé as other boys and NAVY ORDERS SHIPS bauer serve the purpose of add- ae Ms oh aE ae ieee On Aug, 20, 1917, Secretary of the| iD slkall, which is of benefit in per-|ility and a decrease 1, (Official City, State and County |” f sons who have unusual acidity. Fla-| and the assertion by other people that Newspaper) ee Navy Josephus Daniels conferred) yored waters are ordinarily harmless}chlorination of water might producs ‘ wip ed and’ probably no! with representatives of 25 ship and|if properly prepared and if eee changes a the kidneys or ulcers of » a an; engine builders for the purpose not contain so much sugar that they| the stomach. Foreign Representatives : aien ti| praviding the, United States witn|interfere with the appetite and the| ‘The actual facts of the matter aré SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS | ! more destroyers than any other] digestion. that there is not the slightest evi- & BREWER | writer | power. It should be remembered that tea,/dence to support the contention that (Incorporated) {sent into Kansas found that a bushel] “Destroyers,” he said, “are the one|Offee, milk and soup are largely wa- the amount of chlorine in the water CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON) o¢ wheat would buy @ package of| thing submarines fear.” ter and that most foods contain a|after the chlorination process is suf< oe giving the farmer five! Secretary of the Navy Daniels in-|Considerable amount of fluid as well.| ficient to be of the slightest harm Blundering Commissions Hel es 7 *| dicated the Navy Department would|In persons with disease conditions! to anyone, President Hoover has been a firm) Cents back ti paueeneet order all the destroyers the builders believer in commissions, His ad-) The la We eee onl) getting. Which is more than the In-|blame it for everything that hap-|could produce. The sum of $400,-| people can thank me for the fact ministration has been burdened down) PMI dasdale | dians did for our forefathers! pens, seem to forget that it's lads|000,000 was mentioned as necessary|that gang killings here are probably | | Glider Queen ! with sundry and divers commissions|® ' crop east serl-| al and lassies from their own home|‘? Cty out this program. A four-/a thing of the past. : s ae lous a judg-| Feeling this way, and holding no year building program was proposed. —Al Capone. and for the most part they have)" > | | brief for most of the manifestations|towns who made it what it is today.| On this date also General Petain ges plundered and fumbled, complicating |<! of the metropolis, I seldom fail to| Everything that’s here that’s worth)won a victory before Verdun, break-| we were not crooked enough to matters for him and creating targe' grow annoyed when I read such raps! talking about was introduced by the|!ng the enemy line and capturing] forecast what the crooked liquor e for excellent pclitical pot-shots on as these: “New Yorkism is more| smart youngsters from all the points German defenses on both sides of|traffic would do. : atv (ob 4h : dangerous to America than Commun-| Scross country where trains stop. And|tHe Meuse. More than 4,000 pris-|_pr. Robert E. Corradin!, executive meet oy te ooey: ism”; “New York isn’t in the United * Jey. joners were taken. sectetaxy, Alpohol tnformetidn o« The Crime Commission is again States.” "There is nothing basically that goes for everything from sky: ary, the limelight. Miss Ada Comstock, ce a bill to abolish the eataS {American about New York; Manhat-|*“TaPers to flea powder! - | clety of New York, J hte aE NGUEBA GT! might be the best so-| New York, Aug. 20—Maybe @ par-|) 0s. on iciand unto itself.” The confusing and conglomérate Quotations || »-—_—_—_———-+ ee ere ones Cre matt Little rea}| ticularly humid day has left me feel-| "Bunk and triple bunk! — nature of New York wares, its indus- é f BARBS | the defense of President Hoover with eeiaehy sate dexai|ie crotchety! And my gout always 7 tries, its tastes, its whole ‘makeup is a general denial that the Chief Ex-|°™ come from the federal |bothers me more when rain is threat- a due to that very diversification of | My political ideal ts democracy. | 6———* ecutive sought to curtail their ope a hn has become im-/ened. All of which is occasioned by anjinterest on the part of the young —Dr. Albert Einstein. Rumor says Coolidge is coming out ations or muzzle them as to recem-| Potent to cope with the agricultural] Anyway, a couple of comments on|article in the current Scribner's Mag-|men'and young women who changed * * * for beer. Maybe he's a few hops = crisis. this town of New York have started|azine, written “by my young friend|their addresses to New York city. It's| You must prepare to choose either] ahead now. mendations. Be that as it may, the) me looking around the house for a|Karl Sparling, who hails from Okla-|like some incredibly huge county fair, |living for time, or living for time plus ee * Crime Commission and other board: piace " soap box. After a while, when it;homa, and still carries a part of his|to which each farmer brought some- eternity. A Chicago woman divorced her of Hoover's creation all demonstra Perspective Necessary \ cocks off, I'll look for a good corner|accent with him. Earl reiterates what! thing different! Of course that makes|—Rev. Dr. David DeForest Burrell.| husband because he took a goat au- the futility of such bureaus. | ‘The head of the London police/and go into a nice old-fashioned ha-|we've said time after time: that New/it complex, scrambled and slightly * * # tomobile riding and wouldn't take President Wilnon also sought to|force—the famous Byng of Vimy—is|Tangue. York is a stamping ground for the|cock-eyed! One doesn't mind hot weather if/her, Sure thing, the goat wasn’t & sate aes los Hecdiie the EMU mecl Meanwhile, the heat being what it|people from every section of this na-| But it’s American! Why even thejone expects it. back-seat driver. form groups of “best minds” to solve|perturbed because the British me Tl agree to wrap the little old|tion; then he continues: “Not only|Empire State building they shout so —Mrs. Dolly Gann. eee perplexing government problems, but/tropolis hed such a disgraceful mur- jcland of Manhattan up and sell it}is New York American, but it is a/much about was put up by some lads ee * Police say the third degree isn't he found that the job, in the final/der record in 1930, Murders in Lon-|to the first Indian I meet for half|mirror in which America sees her-| from Kansas, who still refer to their] Married persons do not pet enough.| used any more. Well, no, propor- analysis, came back to him more don, in fact, incre lightly more) What the white men paid. | That's)self as she is.” Chicago mentor as “Uncle Dan!” The —Dr. David Vaughn. |tionately speaking. Aaa pap torres gery Toft ae ‘han 100 pes cont last year over the/MOW much I think of it at the mo-| Those gentlemen who are so quick/last name of “Uncle Dan” is Burn- sek ® * % # erp motorless plane aloft complicated than ever. : cio 3 | ment! to challenge this huge, though mus-|ham, in case you haven't betn intro-| I believe I can take credit for the! soft answer may turn away|{0% * minutes, Mrs, Russell Holder- t Many executives fall into the same! figures for 1929 Still and notwithstanding, it seems|cle-bound metropolis; who call it all|duced to the gent who started the|peace that now exists in the racket) wrath, but never an insurance agent. man, above, of Leroy, N. Y., establish- BY (J trap. They rely too much upon This sounds deplorable—until you! only fair to tell the Indian what he’s|the names they can think of and|skyscraper boom. And he ‘headed |game in Chicago, I believe that the " * % * ed a new American women’s record # called experts. Under learn ¢ jon ha I at the national glider meet at El- i In one Ohio town it's against the N.Y. many problems and heart-breaking! murders in 1930. This worries Lord law to get shaved on Sunday. Prob- mira, (Malate record was ; responsibilities, officials turn to Byng, because in 1929 the city had ¢ ably wouldn’t ese saree either. ? boards and commissions as a way out.| only 10. 7g b MABEL Re 4 re touring Eur- They usually misplace confidence! Just how the London commissioner $ i Fewer Americans @ ‘ing TO SAVE RUGS and compound official grief. ; will about it to tighten things up. ope this year, but they are probably enjoying every drop of it. SELLIOTT If the flooring of a house is in poor condition and a board is raised here North Dakota, under the present;we do not but for his own) ; °y ca (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) — sere. 8 ae a newspapers regime, has multiplied commissions| peace of mind egest that he pay ©1931 by Ni Pi on the floor before @ rug is j which in the end will be but -|a brief to the United States. =~ SERVIC) NTA DON'T CLIP CLOSE laid will prevent wear of the rug over \ i Bene) on) One reason some lawns turn brown|the high spots of the floor. ing and political-maneuvering bod-! Aft + examining the records in New , p ies. The idea of a board of experts to consider governmental problems and leave the executive mind free for the “great issues and‘ crises” came into prominence during the ad- ministration of Governor R. M. La Follette. That dynamo of energy Ge- veloped the Wisconsin idea, often damned and as often eulogized. For a time some good results were ob- tained but as time went on govern- ment became so expensive and in- volved that even the admirers of La Follette urged a retrenchment and a restoration of governmental! responsibility to elective officials. ‘When elective officials, often from the highest of motives, seek to farm out their jobs to this and that com- York and Chicago, where murders av- lerage one a day or better, he would | probably feel a great deal better about conditions in London. CHAPTER XLVIII might never stop. ard he so lover-like. tinged with the faintest touch sadness, making it perfect. 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. | lobster thermidor after that. | would be sacrilege.” Hard Times a Spur He folded her coat around h (New York Times) | writer in The Chattanooga | Times was recently able to report an jinterview with Mr. Thomas R. Pres- |ton, a leading banker of that city. |'The talk ran on previous depressions, |through several of which Mr. Pres- ‘ton had lived. He recalled 1893 and lowing them as they passed. ‘ae. the girl saw a face she knew. “Shane McDermid, sce you!” How nice lee wished that the music Never again would she be so young and 50 fair Her joy was She said at last: “I can’t eat and they drifted away, glances fol- In the great foyer of the hotel Im- pulsively she put out her hand, The big man in the brown suit ing of other things. Clive slipped his arm under her shoulder, “Our Celtic friend. H looked as if he'd like to eat you uw “Idiot. That's your imaginatio1 Lazily Clive inquired, “However did you meet him, Liane? You never told me.” She gave a little start. Ought she to tell him? Ought she to go back to that night a year ago when a silly, pleasure-loving young girl had paid with terror and teats for an innocent enough adventure? No, she decided she would not. The old Liane Barrett of the shabby clothes and timorous pleasures was gone forever. The woman in her place was strong and loving and wise. Shane McDermid would never tell. He knew what an ignorant of It er to was charm, too, in the chintz drap- eries, the little maple beds. No dormitory stiffness here.. It was a place any girl might like to call home. Muriel praised everything. Then she asked with interest. “How are the young marrieds? I've been west with my husband. Haven't had news of them in ages.” Cass beamed. “Hadn’t you heard? ‘They got back in April after nearly a year abroad. Last month their. little girl was born, She's a pet. You must go to see Liane. She's radiant.” Muriel was all interest. “A girl! What's she called?” “Luisa for my sister.” Muriel looked up at the bronze plaque over the door of the main drawing room. “It’s in her honor baby yourself?” fered. them.” to be understood. fed ang washed at this infant's age, at any rate.” ~ cigaret, held in such dangerous juxtaposition to her charge. good for her, madame,” the nurse said stiffly. her out, Nana. We won't contami- nate her if we can help it.” but a wonderful nurse. I don’t know whether I shall keep her or not whep I’m stronger.’ “You wouldn’t take charge of the and dry up is because the grass has been clipped too close. Close clip- ping allows the hot summer sun to get at the roots of the grass and dry them up. ‘There are 400 clocks in Windsor and Buckingham palaces, KLEBS “Never could understand Liane laughed. “They don’t need Only need to be ‘The nurse looked daggers at thé “I don’t think the air in here is Liane laughed. “Take She whispered, “She's a terror Muriel looked utterly scandalized. ‘NY SAYS: OFF. FLAPPER i ent cow atl ose ‘ “I might even do that. Why not? mission, they are usually riding for tie foliowing years, when times were|q mil a ‘Well, ve ners Mies] child she had been. He had helped| the club was founded, isn’t tt?” |r ¢nink baby tending oueht to be fall. In a multiplicity of advisers}much w than now. He also é DY DREN Ta ALE her out of a bad place, She was} The plaque read, “Luisa Emer-|made fashionable.” there usually is confusion twice con-|SPoke reminiscently and suggestively Pte pore ie hands with Shane|°teTally grateful to him for it, | son House.” low does Clive like her?" 4 founded, not to mention the high cost of the experiment. in the next budget of $600,000,000 challenges the Labor party's unsta- ble tenure of power. Although it is not responsible for the present situ- ation in toto, the Liberals and Con- servatives have been able to place upon the MacDonald government the blame for most of it. It is very disturbing to the aver- age British citizen when the. Bank of England has to go into the money markets of the world to stabilize the fiscal affairs of the nation. “Strong as the Bank of England” once was an international household term for financial security. The Labor party is facing a serious crisis and must retrench if the situ- ation is to be saved. Some of the social experiments of the MacDonald party have been expensive. Expen- ditures to maintain the dole in the face of increasing unemployment) ehave been heavy and particularly burdensome upon the taxpayers of England. Under the English system of gov- Jabout the depression of 1907, and the} jmore recent hard times in 1920-21.| \To have seen the country em cordiaily. “I haven't forgotten thi night you saved our lives.” shall soon be over the worst of our \existing troubles. There is no great |novelty about this. Many others who have gone through previous slumps \take much the same position as that ‘held by Mr. Preston. But he adds a bit of practical philosophy which is both unusual and encouraging. | Looking back over his acquaintance j with business men in years of depres- sion, he draws the moral that to |many men, within his knowledge, the time of stress and strain proved a |real opportunity. They not only de- veloped resolution ‘and resources to tide them over the troubled years, but made the distressed period a time |for planning new enterprises and | building strongly for the future. Mr.| 3 |Preston instanced case after case|2 that he knew of, when greatly ex- panded industries and the accumula- tion of large fortunes dated directly back to a time of depression and dis- jcouragement. Economies were ef- fected. More efficient methods of business were introduced. Above all, a spirit of ingenuity and determina. tion came to men in the dark hours which carried them over triumphant- ly into brighter days. This is the true American tradi- tion. The right kind of man thrives you knew what was going on. came out from town, didn’t you’ Liane interposed swiftly. | bound to arise. rival, “The lieutenant 1s much ti clever to tell us how he works,” si bit?” Clive asked. “Want to tel over.” chairs under the palms. Throu: life: Shane McDermid,” she said. at all, not at all.” but you're happy, aren't you?” She nodded. “Oh, awfully, should I mind? You've been one my best friends.” “I'm glad. Clive said, “I often wondered how | , You She know instinctively that if Shane an- swered fully Tressa’s name was She felt a generous impulse to shield her vanquished Jaughed, giving him a swift, warn- ing glance. Shane dropped his eyes. “D'you mind if I leave you for a phone the garage to send the car Lane sat down in one of the d2ep the fringe of her long lashes she looked shyly at this big man who had played so odd a part in her “I owe you a great deal, He looked uncomfortable “Not He brightened. “You don’t mind me saying this— Why So sho evaded her husband’s question. “Oh, I just met him around,” she murmured. “He is the at “He's a good fellow,” Clive said.) “Like to do something for him.” “So should I,” Liane agreed, with heartfelt emphasis. Then they both forgot Shane Mc- Dermit completely. ove oO” @ day two years later two charmingly dressd young wo- men came into a big room with a polished floor, A bevy of laughing girls stood around the tca table, presided over by a handsomé wo- man whose once-blond hair showed streaks of gray. “Please give me some tea,” the one in blue pleaded of the woman behind the big urn. Her tone made the other look up suddenly. “Muriel Ladd!” she began, half- laughing in her surprise. The girl in blue began to chatter animatedly. “I think this is the most marvelous idea,” she cried. “T've been reading about it in the papers. Mrs, Waring, one of your trustees, is a friend of mine. She asked me to come.” “I'm so glad you did,” Cass Bar- rett said warmly. She relinquished her place to one of the girls and ” 00 he le ish of. Cass’ face brightened. perfect memorial. Luisa’! never “It's a riel’s friend said lazily as they got into a taxicab and whirled away. “Refreshing to find one.” “If it won't be too much for you I'll take you to see another happy one,” Muriel announced. “Lead on.” eee ui He! maid who answered their | sh ring at the stone-fronted house| be in the east Seventies said Mrs. Cleespaugh was in, She would take the card up. Muriel surveyed the drawing room with interest. “She does her- self nicely, doesn’t she?” drawled the friend. “It's very good indeed,” said Mu- riel, noting the mellow patina on the Queen Anne chair, the subtle melting together of the colors of wall and fabric. “Mrs. Cleespaugh wishes to know if you would mind coming up,” the servant inquired sedately a moment later, “She has been lying down. This is her first day up.” They followed up the narrow staircase and into an apartment of pastel tints and fragile French fur- niture, a room which seemed the Ss st the one hi honestly I must rush. Dining early tonight.” flurry of promises and half made engagements, too long this morning. I'll go slow “He adores her. You'd think no ever had a child before.” ie consonants. Can you ‘ipeeemnioreneers i 7 be forgotten so long as there are| The languid one arose, crushing . cee th |from such business crises stronger Shane laughed boomingly. “T) cousin of a girl I used to know.| girls working in this big city.” i har incbel eo trae, “Ste, + fll in the missing letters so that the first, Great Britain's Defici |than ever, naturally inspires this ex-|@ did nothing at all. I was on G baer sig aoe i” psa ir he { second, third, fourth and filth horizontal Great Britain's threatened eu benneed observer with hope that we) duty—" She lived downstairs. “There’s a happy woman,” Mu-|I hate to break up the party, but : squares are ‘They left in a feminine It’s easy to become wrapped up in ‘a dog. ‘What can women see in that ma- ternal stuff?” mused the languid one. “It bores me.” Muriel hailed a taxi. “Dunno,” o said, thoughtfully. “There may mething in it, You never can tell.’ HE might have thought ther was a little later, if she had seen young Mr. Cleespaugh unlock his street door, take those narrow eps two at a time, and rush head- long into the room where his wife lay. proof against the embrace he gavo her nor the look of tribute he paid her fragile loveliness. No languor could have been He said in a troubled voice, “Howells told me when I called that you had a headache. I rushed ight home—” “It was nothing. I stayed up e rest of the week.” “Darling, promise me you will!” She took his head between her ie. Young girls nowa- days, most of them, don’t seem to know what they're after.” He frowned, “You're not married yet?” Her matronly air was amusing. “I’m not. I've had no luck with the ladies. The ones I meet in my business are not the marrying kind.” * perfect setting for the girl on the low couch. “How nice of you to come,” she smiled to Muriel, “I’m still having to be lazy. Doctor's orders.” They kissed after the fashion of women who have not met for # long time. The languid caller accom: panying Mrs, Desmond sat down to blow cigaret rings casually as they said, “Let me show you some of our rooms. They're lovely. I’m house mother, you know, and maybe I don’t love it. I think perhaps I'm better as a house mother than I was as an actress.” Muriel protested but the other woman pointed ruefully to the streaks of gray in her hair. “I was out of the ingenue class two slim hands, “Fussbudget!” she said. There was an interval and then she told him, “Muriel Desmond was here today. She Iked our child.” Jealously he demanded, “Why, wouldn't she? Luisa’s perfect. Like her mother.” Liane laid her cheek against her on hardship. The idea is the one ex- pressed by Emerson when he wrote: “Cast the bantling on the rock.” Proper advantage is taken of ad- versity it may prove to be a blessing. Before long the country may see rea- son to approve of Mr. Preston’s hope- ful view that the depression ought to be regarded as an opportunity. ernment, a government may fall over the issue of a national budget. Mac- Donald and Snowden must face Par- She smiled at him, “You'll find| by miles,” she sa{d, “and it's rather |talked of matters which only faint-| husband’s. “Dafling, sometimes id ‘one. You deserve one of the best.”| nice not to hear ‘You're not the|!y interested her. Zz I’m frightened, it's all so perfect. Clive camie back, They said good-| type’ from # casting office any more.|| “May I see the baby?” Murlel|Do you ‘il always feel suppose you’ this way? I should die if you ever, caring—” Stoutly he cried, “But I never der.| shall. I shall love you forever bye to the shrewd-eyed policeman in the business suit. “I’m not at all sure I liked the way he looked at you, Mrs. Cloes- _ paugh,” Clive said banteringly on paint the homeward ride. She led her guests. from. cubicle | manded. “Who?” She had forgotten all|to cubicle, The rooms were miracles | smoke about McDermid, She was think-lof neatness and ingenuity, There Liana touehed a bell rope

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