The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1931, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1931 one = yy ° A pare {Th Tri un people. European nations owe this I always understand them.—Mayor e Bismarck bune country some ten or eleven billions The Real Edison Record! ‘Walker. Daily Health Service | | ME CRATES OLDEST |! War debts. 2f this amount were Mid CARE OF CHILD’S FEETSHOULD + | THE STATE'S OLDEST If we want polygamy, let's have it, i diminished, it means fresh tax bur- but let's not c: flage it , EGIN WITH THE RI RE or Ate dens for American citizens. CH BR Te B GHT SHOES 1s Established 1873) Neither should the issue of German ee # Stockings Also Play Important Role in Maintaining * published by ‘The Bismarck Tribune|Teparations affect the debt payments woe Cina for etal Ge Health and Tone of Average Feet ¢ ormor lant—the machine. Now ieee at ia pomattioe ak ‘Blsnartk us a va Tine vi a Mires we must learn to control it—Assist- By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Intimately associated with proper St the nostoftice ae at Versailles ery emp! ant Secretary Jahncke of the Navy. | Editer, Journal of the American |COmfort of the feet is the question ‘Becond serene D. MANN that the United States sought no ee Medical Association of suitable socks, stockings, or ho- | (ate ape Publishes material gain in indemnity“or terri- To buy today is a patriotic duty, One of the parts of the human siery, Mothers like to see their young ——— | tory from the winning of the world not unlike that of the days when we B children with white stockings. How- | Subscription Rates Payable in | war, It was the only nation sitting ‘bought Liberty bonds and won a war.| body most subject to wear and tear/ever, white stockings soil quickly, { ‘Advance t th table which did not —Alvan MacAuley. is the feet, Experts associate pain in; must be washed frequently, and tend Daily by carrier, per year. Te eee bie ade the back and even disturbances of|to shrink even when they are dried Daily by mail per year Gn cure some substantial indemnifica- add to seats down oe the Re Gee eo forms. Marck) ......-5s shat .. 7.20| tion from the enemy. jarches. The feet now carry the en- inn cause the * tire weight of the body whereas the to turn in, the toenails to be- ay | i AT ed dn state 00 ba ay pried hata ‘ioe feet of animals that walk on all fours] Come ingrowing toenails, and in other \ eae see Nowit ee os carry the weight much better dis-| Ways interfere with the proper circu- aes) Daily by mail outside of Nort is any tampering at this time with \Dakota .. “ 4 Lede a |the foreign debt-funding agreements. lation of blood in the foot. tributed. Overeating and overweight z While high arched feet are pre- tend to increase the burden still fur- ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ‘Weekly by mail in per year ......6- seeeeee +» 2,00 Member of Audit Bureau of 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. Ail rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives + §8MALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER (incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Thomas Alva Edison History probably records no man who had more of the creative fac- ulty than Thomas Alva Edison, What better memorial can be written of him now that he is dead than the encomium which honored him while living: “He illuminated the path of progress by his inventions.” A most fruitful, busy life has come to an end. He truly sought out many inventions, but he was withal a great citizen, keenly interested in the gen- eral progress of the nation. His lab- oratory was no hermit’s retreat, for he walked and talked with men. Edi- son was intensely practical and for President Hoover, when the morato- rium was suggested months ago, de- clared that there was no suggestion of any debt cancellation and neither was this a move in the interest of reducing the war obligations of Eur- ope to this government. There is a general feeling that money spent for great military arma- ments in Europe might be reduced and substantial payments made on the war debt to this nation. Funded interest on the debt is now more than $1,700,000,000.. The net cost of the war to the United States was in excess of 35 billion, so that that 10 to 11 billion owed us on war loans is a small part of what this nation freely gave. Laval’s visit will be successful if some plan to reduce military expen- ditures can be devised. That will mean a very material step toward placing European financial affairs in better shape. There is a general feeling, too, thay France could begin substantial pay- ments on her war. debts to the Unit- ed States. Recently, in an interview with the Associated Press, M. Jus- serand, for many years the French| ambassador to the United States, in speaking of Hoover's work on the/@: Belgian Relief Commission, said: «e * © he saw those same French, on the brink of the worst economic calamity, face the danger, ask and receive no help, and extricate them- selves to the extent of being eco- nomically on the same level today as the American republic. When you are on the same level it is easy to EEE SERENE Quotations | —_ ‘The foundation of the rellef of dis-|Ver's Tellef agency. tress, arising out of unemployment, must be complete, effective and en- ergetic, local ‘voluntary organizations coordinating with local authorities.— Walter 8. Gifford, director of Hoo-| Rowland. eee It must be wonderful! i= sweet and satisfying ‘sensation. to remarry your ex-husband. — Helen * * ‘When I'm talking to the real peo- It must be|ple of England who are doing things NP Jick Gilbert Swan New York, Oct. 19.—Onte of the pet cliches of writers describing New York is “the milling throng.” Some change this slightly and refer to the “milling millions,” or the “turbulent stream of humanity,” or the “end- less river of humant ie Yet they all remain anonymous. Instead, we who write columns about New York are prone to tell of the folk whose names flash in bright lights. The other night I got a refreshing, lesson: It was at a first night per- formance of an important play. Dur- ing the intermission of this premierc, a half hundred assorted young folk, with note books and programs in their hands, rushed about spotting the celebrities and begging for an autograph. Most of them were girls, aged from 18 to 25. ‘They had waited in the street dur- ing an entire act, fearing that. they might miss the opportunity to get certain signatures. This bit of writ- ing on a scrap of paper, for some reason or other, meant a lot to young- sters who took their pen scratching home and showed them to friends ana families. And got a big kick out of this second-hand contact. * # * One young lady mistook me for at least two other people, so I stopped to question her. We fell to talking. “Say,” she questioned, “what do you think makes up Broadway any- way? Well, it’s me and Sadie Jones ther. than walking. Many people can walk miles without tiring or swelling of the feet, but suffer greatly if they are compelled to stand in one place 20 or 30 minutes. The feet are built like arches. The arches are supported to a consider- able extent by properly made shoes. However, gymnasium shoes, shoes for dancing, and house slippers are scl- dom built with a properly supported arch. Such shoes should be worn only for the specific use for which they are planned. In some cases when there is a tendency to break- ing down of the arch, felt pads should be inserted into the gymnasium shoes, the ballet slippers, or house slippers to provide proper support. It has been suggested by Dr. Philip Lewin that the flat foot associated with obesity arises from two causes: (1) The strain of an excessive load. (2) The glandular disturbances which are commonly associated with obesity. Standing causes more strain| sumed to be exceptional for their beauty, such feet are usually weak unless they are especially trained. Investigation of the occurrence of the high-arched foot indicates that it is likely to appear in families as an hereditary characteristic. Obviously the most important method of treating minor disturb- ances of the feet includes the use of Proper shoes with straight inner bor- der line, a round toe, correct width of the shank, a rigid or semi-rigid shank, a heel of moderate height, and ® snugly fitting top. The tone of the feet may fre- quently be helped by suitable exer- cise, by massage or rubbing, and by bathing for 10 or 15 minutes in al- ternate hot and cold water. After bathing the feet they should be thor- oughly dried and powdered. In cases in which the feet are sub- Ject to serious disturbances, it is de- sirable to consult a competent ortho- Pedic specialist. and our boy friend and other girls and other boy friends. Do you think the bi you know keep the street, going? ... Yeah... ? Do you think we can pay first night prices? Don't be silly! “We go to a movie and then dron in at a chop suey place. And that’s what keeps Broadway going. It’s the boys and girls going to movies and to sandwich counters. Do any of your high-hat folks go there? Say, what do you think is going on out in the street when the rest of you are walk- ing in on passes or paying your way? Well, the rest of us are out in the street—and we're spending a quarter here and a dime there—and it’s this small change that mounts up. When you write about Broadway, big boy, don’t forget that it couldn’t last one night without me and Sadie Jones| and Sammy: Smith and the rest cf us.” families. Those not killed were se- riously injured. ‘The raiding Zeppelins were chased all across France by airplane squad- rons, aided by anti-aircraft guns. All the crew of one of the Zeppe- lins perished; another Zeppelin was believed to have drifted out over the sea during the night. ANOTHER AIR RECORD New York.— Passenger traffic on American lines broke all previous monthly records in July of this year, the Aeronautical Chamber of Com- merce reports. During that month 55,782 passengers were carried, which is an increase of about 10,000 over the previous monthly peak set in August, 1930. It was larger than the total for the whole year of 1928. Mediterranean and fallen into the fan inventor was less of s dreamer) shake hands.” 2 Nor could it! BURGE N ent ae atibe than most. More than one thousand France has always insisted that What’ a i ee _|the largest and fastest commercial | patents registered in his name attest|German reparation payments to her can the Bathe) pmiths pi ern wind tunnel for testing model air- to that. should affect the payment of French who get the real thrill out of some- craft has been set up here. It is an ‘What progress has been made in| War obligations to this nation. Such thing going on. They're stenogra- bat poecn ipod thet a | Jectricity in the span of time meas-|@ policy this country to date has re~ s phers and clerks and phone girls, it E 5 5 5 al y time except how lovely she was, ady. fe f hve tHKG driving a three-bladed propeller. -Ac: iments of Benjamin| fused to accept. The United States ' ready for any free show that may ding to ebea ny thie experi - MARY HARKNESS, dancing with and that she was his, be staged. When there's a first nighi|COrding to engineers, the wind is sent Franklin and the man who madz|has taken the sound ground of con- M si i Aas alenta toa peteiey a y arrives bait Coat ae through the tunnel at a speed as high the great force the servant of all!|sidering each war debt as a scvarate Dirk Ruyther’s arm about her, some minutes before he was cwarg ff {and take tup their stand near the|®® 26 miles an hour. Experts decry Franklin a8 an ama-|entity and not to be considered gen- thought that she had never been so Mie oe, re ee phesne ae ay are theater marquee. They look for the | teur in the field of invention, but/erally as one great European war ob- happy in her life. Not even that of it He drew a deep breath and movie stars they know; they joint | had not politics turned him aside/ligation, This nation has refused to fight tn the garden a short while resumed his bantering tone. to their heroes and they spot famti- STIC K =& . from science who'can tell what might|unite in one negotiation on debts ago when she and Dirk had first caval ae do as much for me or Speier na spcre rade sp 4: have happened. Franklin had many] owed her by the Allies in the World known théy loved one another. Not sometime?” he asked lightly. anything and everything. of the same characteristics which| War, but reserves the right to treat tonight at dinner with all her “Of course,” Mary laughed, wag- When cops arrive and mounted po-| |ONCE MADE LAW,A marked the career of Edison. ®Both| with each nation separately. Lloyd friends grouped about the flower- gling the finger that held her en- lice ride up, they stand for shoving REFORM BECOMES: sought eagerly after inventions. When| George and Clemenceau tried to get banked table. Mr. Jupiter propos- gagement ring under bis nose. Fence poseable ete late ce Franklin flew his famous kite and| President Wilson to enter an allied’ ing a toast, Everyone's eyes upon Hea ited band Shetamieith es oh traiseat We ae aa A POWER. proved Hghtning an electrical foroe,, conference on war debts which had| @ them, merry and mocking, and try- ie aeaily, Wrecicucady, acinon eo they are the “milling throng’ and ‘There is an easter state hidden in the heories of elec-| for objective their reduction if p it’s their carnival. ey get more] |~ P he changed many tl for its obj tl A ing to appear surprised. “inca hich, Muite dan iL teen it's thei nival. = Thi above sentence. Can you find it? : tricity. Edison, too, exploded many not their cancellation. This, Wilson Not 2ven yesterday when she had you loose in the dime store and you : prea skeet eles pecs iets fi fallacies in science. Both men had| stoutly opposed, knowing that such tried on before the pier-glass in her can go the limit, my girl!” Z |taxicab than the others do out of, = much in common; both were indefa-/an arrangement would be more un- room the first Paris dress she had Just then Mary caught sight ot & jthe party this movie lady tosses later FLAPPER FANNY SAYs: tigable workers; both “illuminated Popular in America than his “four- ever owned. All these were rungs Spence’s silver thatch in the hall &/in the evening. They are not bored, P50. U.S. PAT. OFF. the paths of progress.” teen points” proved to bbe later. in the ladder of bh eapeL doorway; his eyes roved the room and they seem never to be tired. -| Now France ts rr oh mer presen linaepl: anxiously. Mary slipped out of. They're the people that seem to History doubtless will place Fadi as prosperous, if hess, sBneimusa/SOui werk aaicene in have ihe ti jeohten tte oe son's contributions to the science of/not more so, than the United States.| 6° niselylanell dlotically slleesaicaaa ii o) seatlet : Baad (, for one. ance ee. ys electricity as among the greatest of| Of all nations, she has little unem- abs waa t thi had Pinan peeing eth en a (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | his achievements. Edison once said ployment and her economit condi- al is moment, you had to al er about something. et H : - do something about it, and this was ter go over. Poor Spence, how he 2 that his inventions in that field were| tion is bright compared to that ot hates a mob like this!” = what she wanted to do—just dance, : z + impprtant of his carecr.|her neighbors. As Jusserand said in 5 2 . the most impprtant dance on forever with Dirk's ari Dirk recaptured her hand. “Oh, a7 The invention of the incandescent|/Commenting upon the Laval visit, ime let him stew.” He was amiable but light bulb, in the public mind at|“Wwhen you are on the same level it about her, bis dark lean face close firm, “Some chap’s probably given Jeast, will always be given firsc|is easy to shake hands.” to hers, his lips at her ear murmur- him a laundy check for a bid. He'll place. His skill and ingenuity of con-| The proposed visit, doubtless will) !& tender banter, while the slow get over it. Serve him right for | trivance were matchless, Exveri-)@ld in cementing the great friend-| & ‘hythm of the tango carried them Rai Tiassd eho Ro snee nak * E ments in his laboratory blazed the| ship existing between the two na- dreamily down the length of the to be a prizefighter in London? AIR RAID ON ENGLAND trail for most workers in electricity.) tions, but President Hoover is in no) great ballroom on its sensuous tide. Fact.” On Oct. 19, 1917, 13 Zeppelins raided He did most of the pioneering and,| Position to offer debt reduction or A Paris dress! And tive years “When did you and Spence get Suat cant ern ane Maewaiie Matera bose ; like all inventors, secured in mone-|cancellation, France, on the other! § ago she couldn't have bought one sochupnnyy ties of England, killing 34 persor tary compensation little compared to| hand, is in an excellent position to on Fifth Avenue, not even at a “Waiting for you, my love.” oo Raper ing ns their intrinsic worth. An official of| make some long-delayed offers which marked-down sale. That dress, like Prana by ine time had caught The Zeppelins were attacked on the New York Edison company is ve-| may mean betterment of economic everything else good that had come ey, 8 pions by violent: sperelie their return voyage by French air- ported as saying that the value of| Conditions in the United States. to her in the years since her father Gael nacone men. | Houns atealise mare, ceriraved the enterprises originating in the had died, a suicide, and her mother Mary sighed. “I mana go sce eres cerat intact, the first one genius of Edison was five times more Editorial Comment soon after, had been the Jupiters’ what he wants.” It was hard to to be thus captured in the war. than all the money in circulation. gift. She owed them everything— come down to earth and ber One Zeppelin aerial torpedo,| ‘That visualizes the material side of|| Pditorlals printed below show the tren Dirk, ina way. If the younger that forall her Cinderella trappings, |Jaunched in London, killed eight his contribution in a graphic man-|| They are published without regard member of Ruyther and Ruyther, she was still a paid employe with children of one family. Altogether, to whether they agree or disagree Mr. Jupiter's personal attorneys, _ duties to attend to. it destroyed three houses, with a loss| It isn’t always a°wise move to make ner. ae ss with The Tribune's policiet had not had to make so many visits THE GEMS OF PERIL Dirk carhiried has. amas cowart of 14 lives, wiping out two whole a play for a man. There are other more import- ant evaluations of Edison's great ca- That’s Better tee pane fee eae ‘UST now, when It seemed that] pain. Miss i; malted; | Mare reer. He typified the best in Ameri- (Duluth Herald) Fheumatism kept him indoors ehe|© heF happiness bad reached its) “Don’t!” she said. Mrs, Jupiter’s| > dance with Cornelia, why don't citizenship, Modest and retir-| In St. Paul Saturday, Dr. Daniel and Dirk might never have met. crest, an inexplicable feeling of fear! manner of dress might be showy CSc nelia, why ; rea 4 i A. Poling, one of the leaders of the ‘There had been an interval that| came over her. The world had|even to the point of vulgarity, but |Our ,Sne'd tore tt.’ and laughes ing, he dedicated his whole life tol A. Poling, one, tities ccieed! Hl was painful for both the Herkeess| topped from beneath her fect|Mary's loyalty would not let her| Wickedly at~bis grimance of dis- science, and toil to him was really) s*out the A oe eee, oober children to remember. Mary, a|0mce; it might again. Staring into| admit it, even to Dirk. aa the joy of living. “He was stricken} sal of a prohibition referendum, hopeless novice and bungler at typ-| the past with tragic, nnseeing eyes.| «1 know you're fond of the old| The butler bent to her ear. i P hand to ber th ‘It’s Mr. Eddie, Miss Mary, Hi at his work. Edison had left the| But he talked about it in » spirit ing, pitting her superior “advan.| She put her hand to her throat. !soui» Dirk answered reasonably,| 9. the telephone” eee rs field in which he excelled some tims|very different from that shown by tages” against the experierce cf| Which ached with pentup tears. |«put honestly, where does she get |" the telephone.” before his death. He plunged into|#nother eminent dry leader. other girls and losing out often.| Dirk tightened his ar:n about her, | all the doo-dads? And why wear| “Eddie? You mean my brother, the mysteries of synthetic chemistry | He deplored the verdict of the Le-| | Eddie tramping about after office sensing her mood. them all at the same time?” Eddie?” [t came into her mitd, gareeiee Of Av Chemistr¥| gion, and expressed his bellet that it! | toys’ jobs and plainly retieved| “Don't cry, little girl,” he gibed, i , | SOLANA BELT, HAE Se was -afiet. mid, . D ‘ys L4 8 Mary caught a glimpse of her em, seeking to produce much-needed raw|is unsound. But he did not question when he did not get them. “you don’t have to marry me, | ployer’s cojffure with its glittering night. Why should Eddie call her materials to cheapen production of|the right of the Legion to record its At last, of course, there was the|can always jump off a bridge—or|bandeau of diamonds, between the| ®t Sucb an hour? essential commodities. This he did iagment, and he did resent the friend of a friend of a frien¢ who| marry Grete Garbo.” heads of the dancers, and she could| Dirk Moved off obediently. She ta without desire for great weplth. ‘Tri-| Cheree 0 B iptscde ty Len veep peri knew of the children’s plight end] That wasn't a tactful thing to| imagine the gem-hung expanse be |S&W his dark head threading. its umph over the potent forces of na-|Sno resented © deelsion that was knew also the Jupiters and thelr} say, he realized in dismay even as|low. It was really too bad; people| ¥a¥ among the throng, saw Cor ture was more to him than great|contrary to his dogmatic conviction. peculiar needs. Someone vho be-|he said it—that about jumping off|talked about it, and poked fun at| Melia leave the man she was talk- : riches. He cared f of their| Dr. Poling’s statement is far more longed in that world *o which Mrs.| a bridge. How had her father done| her. But Mary, who knew why she| ing to and move off with him, look- ches. He for none e! deat, The Gees ase aaa Jupiter was a crass ncweomer was! it? Poison, he thought. But Mary | did it, felt a twinge of shame that! ing terribly pleased. Swift, unrea- allurements. theretare micah sae aed ieee ber whe she, needea in a secre-|laughed—her mood vanished as| other people could not sce it, also. souls Jenlcnsy, smote ber need he ‘When President Coolidge presente) effective, than the jai yale which, ry. iter, when Mary had hed| quickly as it came. Greta Garbo| It was not because she was vain or | have taken her quite so literally at Edison with a special congressional] by inference, he rebuked. " to give up the small apartment she| was their name for the girl who| fond of show. her word? gold medal, he reduced to a few and her brother shared because. had never quite given Nirk up—| “She doesn’t do it because she’s] She mustn’t stand here, being words a fitting estimate of the =. Re o> scruples interfered with nis “lite,”| Cornelia Tabor, of the sil mills| silly, or doesn’t know any better,”| jealous where everybody could see My Leona BARBS | she had felt that life could only be| Tabors, who bad everything money | Mary defended hotly. “She does it} her. What was it she had come ‘Noble, kindly servant of the United unutterably dreary even in such| could buy except Dirk, and didn’t|to please Dad. He gave them to|over here for? Then she remem- States and benefactor of mankind.” luxurious surroundings as the Jupi-| like it in the least. her, you know. Those rubies—has|bered. Putting those two out of Capone looked over his jurymen ter home, separated from the “kid” “It’s a grand party,” Mary re- she got them on?—are simply price-| her mind, she went toward the tele Oppose Debt Cancellation 824 sa! he didn’t like thetr type. brother she had always looked after! marked with a deep sigh of con-|!¢8s. They're heavy to wear and an| phone, a strange uneasiness clutch- On the eve of Premier Laval'’s visit! Probably weren't hand set. and loved. But Eddie did cot liké}tontment, “The grandest party in|@Wful responsibility. She has to| ing at her heart. to the United States, the cancella- ee & ’ to live where ber money aid the fact that anybody 1 know has ever | Keep @ constant look-out for thieves. ae DESC oar dsbis bashes = vel ‘ And Gov. “Alfalfa Bill” Murray rent; it gave ber the right to say had. Mrs. Jupiter must be Santa But J. J. is so proud that he’s rich} She turned away from the tele- tok ly | stood on his head just to show news- what he might and might not do. Claus, to have done all this for me.” | 20ush to give them to her, and all] phone with deep’ misgivings. The ‘ issue again. The influential leaders] paper men he could do it, ‘but Well, he had been “on his own” Dirk smiled, the diamonds and other things, that|few frightened, jerky -sentences in Congress are almost unanimously|Wouldn’t give photographers a for a year now and he seemed to irk smiled, but he was not too/ ne wouldn't leave them off for any-|her brother had gasped out filled @pposed to debt cancellation, Asi tumble. be making it. He had no job, but| Pleased: he was in that stage of/ thing in the world.” her with alarm that grew deeper Co Dees aut ay * # % thera was a fair living to be picked | !¥¢ in which he was jealous even! pir was absorbed in watching| the more she thought about it. gress y any such step, An adventurer has forsaken Arctic up at the race-tracts. he told her,|°f her gratitude. If people were tu| mary as she talked; earnestness,) Something must be very wrong it is hardly likely that debt cancella-| exploring and elephant hunting to and in other ways he did not eluci-| 1° things for her, he was the one/ and tho unusual animation. of the| indeed to have upset her brother's tion will form a very importent part/enter the stock exchange. Evidently date. There was nothing she could | °° Ge se Nice of the old lady,! moment, became her. His amused cool self-possession in any euch of the discussion between the French| doesn’t know when he's safe, fo abemt I exetpt worry a little Rees Se) Crom now on Mery: ROR estimate of tho Jupiters went down | manner, I¢ there was anything Mr. ‘premier and President Hoover. There 4 ’ ind make him promise to come to under the force of her admiration, | Edward Harkness Junior had prid- has been considerable agitation in It's @ safe bet that a gal who takes her first if ever he were in need.| “Yes,” he agreed, after observing| which was both sincere and deep.| cd himself on since his prep school bee tee : a aud Jn eee is likely to make She had not seen him of late, but| his hostess judicially from a dis- adel OI days, it was his nonchalance. “A iid cancellation and, failing| a force ni ap as: she had been too happy and en-|tance. “She looks rather like a OOKING down into the flushed, | man of the world”—that was Eddie, that, a drastic cut in the debts, Tagiae jalsthe Gos Sas ts aii ike grossed in her love-affair to think | Christmas tree from here.” serious face of the girl he|always. What could have agitated Such action at this time would only] . a ret is to Ger oar wer ot tec. about it auch. Mary squeezed his hand in quick | loved, he forgpt everything for a} him so? ‘add to the burden of the American (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.)

Other pages from this issue: