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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1982 The Bismarck Tribune aa Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Comany, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as ‘second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Dally by carrier, per year......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail outsid Dakota ‘Weekly by mail in sti ‘Weekly by mail in FORTE ics ssassassonsosseseress ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............ 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year Member of Audit Bureau Circulation 5.00 6.00 per year $1.00 » three 2.50 of Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news- paper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON New American Epoch In the news that more aliens left the United States than entered it during the first nine months of 1931 here is an indication that a turning point in American history has been reached. For more than a century Uncle Sam’s domain was a magnet for the people beyond the seas. They came in tremendous floods, setting into mo- tion one of the greatest migrations in the story of mankjnd. And now, evidently, the migration is over and a slight backwash has begun. According to estimates made re- cently, the number of aliens who went back to the old country in the past year was around 25,000 greater than the number of aliens who came and stayed. Severe immigration re- strictions, widespread deportation Proceedings, and—above all—the bus- iness depression are probably respon- sible. But what a change it all is from a few years ago! From 1914, for in- stance, when fully a million Euro- peans found admittance to the coun- try; from the post-war years, when the United States looked like an earthly paradise to innnumerable war-stricken men and women beyond the sea. An epoch is over. The land of op- portunity has found that it has all the inhabitants it needs for a while. And some of the newcomers, on the other hand, have found that life can: be just as hard on this side of the ocean as on the other. Uncle Sam has grown up, and his Coastline no! longer gleams beyond the western horizon as a land of illimitable Promise. 3 From now on the pace will be slower. Never again, probably, will we receive immigrants as we used to. Probably it is a very good thing, al-| though it is hard not to feel a seni- mental twinge of regret over our ar- Tival at national maturity. Yet we shall feel the effects of this lost era for many years—perhaps for- ever. For every man and woman who came here felt, dimly but firm- ly, that life was somehow going to be better over here; that there would be more freedom, more opportunity, more happiness. That vision is still with us. It was born partly on Bun- ker’ Hill and partly in the steerage, and as long as we keep it our path will lead upward. Pepping Up Congressional | Record Congressman John J. Boylan of New York believes that the Con- gressional Record is too dull and fails to present a fair and complete! picture of the doings of the naflonal| legislature. So, in a resolution in- troduced the other day, he asks con-) gress to decide if pictures, cartoons and the like couldn't be printed in the government's august magazine. That the Record is dull is perfectly | true. But thete is a much quicker and easier way of reducing some of} the dullness, and that is to do away with the extension-of-remarks busi- ness which now clutters it up. Any congressman can have a long, windy and excessively uninteresting speech inserted in the Record without ever going to the ‘trouble of delivering it. He can even insert such parenthetical comments as (laughter) and (ap- plause) wherever he chooses. If the Record could be confined strictly to things actually said on the floors of the two houses it would be vastly improved. Let Mr. Boylan give it a thought before a photo-en- gtaving outfit is got ready. | terms of money saved the president down to the Lusitania, brought to the, surface again, and forwarded back to their senders, To transmit a letter on this unique circuit will cost each sender one dollar. Probably it would be thrilling to) own a stamp that had been to the bottom of the.sea and back. But to anyone but a confirmed stamp col- lector, this stunt must look more than {a lttle silly. A more supremely use- hard to imagine. An Important Anniversary Generally speaking, little attention will be paid to the anniversary of the birth of Benjamin Franklin, which will be celebrated January 17. The part which he played in the Revolu- tion which freed the American colo- nies is lost sight of in the average school history and, at best, it was not of such spectacular character as to command wide attention. Nevertheless, many competent his- torlans are of the opinion that Frank- lin’s presence on that scene was one of the strange coalition of fortuitous circumstances which brought the United States into being. Any study of Franklin's biography convinces the reader that here was one of the greatest geniuses this na- tion ever produced. As a scientist he ranks with Edison. As a statesman he is without a peer in the annals of the nation, As a patriot he ranks with Washington, Jefferson and others of that brave band who fought the coun- try’s battles, even though there is no record of Franklin ever having par- ticipated in battle. Any competent biography of Benja- min Franklin will make excellent reading these cold winter evenings. A knowledge of this man’s life will give any American new courage, ‘inspire him with new hope and new pride. Mrs. Pinchot in Politics Mrs. Gifford Pinchot’s announce- ment that she will run for congress next year against Representative Louis T. McFadden insures Pennsyl- vania of at least one contest that will be packed with interest. By any standard, the wife of Pen- nsylvania’s governor is one -of the most interesting women in the coun- try. Furthermore, she is a good cam- paigner—she ran against McFadden three years ago and came within 2,000 votes of retiring him to private life. The race will be well worth watching. Senator Borah offers a bili to cut salaries of senators and congressmen and Senator Couzens tells the solons if they cut any salaries they should start with their own. ‘We'll bet those fellows are not so popular now among the members of the ‘most exclusive club in the world.’ Why the very idea, cutting a hard- working congressman's salary of @ mere $10,000 per annum. Don't worry about the weather. There may be more. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of tho: by other editors. A Hint Worth Heeding (Minneapolis Tribune) If congress really wants to economi- ize, it can thank no one else but Mr. Hoover for some extremely practical ideas on how to go about it. At a press conference held this week, the president told the assembled news~ federal departments and the elimin: tion of overlapping activities consti- tute an urgent governmental need, and that congressional action in this direction would comprise a major ac- complishment of the present session. Getting down to details, Mr. Hoover offered a concrete program of pro- cedure. He declared himself in favor of consolidating all government con- struction activities, with an admin- istrator of public works serving all departments. Furthermore he would combine all merchant marine activ- \ities within the department of com- merce, take all the scattered agencies |having to do with federal education and place them under a single head, concentrate all conservation activities in a single bureau, and bring the va- rious public health services together into one department. What these shifts would mean to the taxpayer in does not pretend to say, but as an example of what economies can be effected through wise consolidation of federal agencies, he cites the case of veterans’ activities, which were grouped under a single head earlier ant reduction of expenditures of be- tween $19,000,000 and $15,000,000 an- nually. At the present time, 10 different federal agencies are undertaking building projects of one sort or an- other, and this is but one glaring example of the manner in which responsibilities are being scattered in Washington, and efforts duplicated with a heavy loss of time, money and efficiency. Mr. Hoover's program of consolidation is by no means a new idea; virtually the same changés in the administrative structure of the them. The reason for this reluctance ig fairly obvious. Consolidation means the cutting down of personnel, the elimination of hundreds of lucrative less bit of human endeavor would be papermen that the consolidation of , in his administration with a result-| | Thar The Gosn! 1 Hope ISNT GOING TO SPOIL OUR SLEDDING / Japanese Sandman! . - I -—Benator Arthur R. Robe |” s Insea of a é Health Service Ladnthed creping tea eee: || Children Have Blood Pressure = ss suts one-—George Bernard Shaw. . |. Problems as Much as fi Genuine, silty ts the only thing Heart Action and Width of Vessels Fix Circ counts how. Bancroft, movie player. “By DR, MORRIS FISHBEIN | more likely to reach the normal sv Journal of the American | blood pressure because they ana BARBS ‘Whereas the average adult is much |a greater lung capacity o about his blood pressure, | who do not mature early. hhe seldom gives thought to the fact | Tt must be remembered, that tee Chicago gangsters are offering 1n- | thas. qhildren may on oocasion have | determination of the blood Pesst as ducements in the scramble for Al Ca- ot low blood pressures’ of sig-| today involves two readings, tet ae eer In order‘ to} 5 i known as the sxstolle, Pra ana Sell their stutf they'd probably agree ‘ inate’ is the i prei to take thelr customers for e ride, | «,A,surrey Teeently made of s con | the other ts tiey force back of, the ait cates that up tothe eighth or ninth | circulation is the motor action of the Indie is going on with its civil dis- year gradual in blood pres- | heart. The second most im| obedience campaign Just where Gan- | Sure seam to be due simply to the | factor is the width of the blood Ghi left off. Just where, and what, tact that the child 1s growing older. | sels through which the blood passes eee ee After that time, however, other forces | and the amount of elastic recoil in ogeetye __| become active in changing the level | the walls of those blood vessels. Te ‘Twenty-three tons of fresh air can! of the \blood pressure. forces | systolic blood pressure is the tens! be forced Into Chicago stadium, scene’! may include changing ratesof growth, |of the blood in the arteries at tie, of the 1932 Republican National con- | in, development, or glandular | height of the heart beat. ‘That is € yention, avery minute, How many | factors of importance. higher of the two blood pressure fig- parked eect at st atid The average blood of chil-| ures, ‘The diastolic pressure 1s the . +e * she! ‘increases with age, but the pres- | tension of the blood in the arteries An electric device has been invent- to decrease after | during the period when the heart is New York, 9—One Santa Claus in this world looks. like Santa all the year around. His name is Eugene (Gene) ‘Todd; he is the only Santa who grows his own silken white hair and beard; he appears to be about 70 and as hale, hearty and merry as the mythical Christmas patron who is blessed of all. children and not infrequently cussed about by tired parents. The news reel cameramen have spread his pictures over the globe and he is something of @ minor celebrity. But Christmas is over and Santa has vanished for another season. So ‘what, you may well ask, does the most, famous St. Nick do for a living be- tween Yuletides? * eK Well, sir, take it or leave it, lode- stones are still sold in New York. And Eugene Todd is “king of the lodestone” industry. For 30 years he has sold lodestones right here in the heart of the most hard-boiled. town in the “States.” He sells them in office buildings and in stores; he sells them to serttimental stenographers and to amused busi- ness giants; he sells them to high school kids and to young scientists in laboratories. And lodestones, in case your mem- ory has slipped, are almost a3 legen- dary as Santa Claus himself. Their alleged magical properties were lauded way back when time was much younger and more innocent. Early medicine men used this mag- netized rock as a cure-all. Anything from toothache to insomnia. Because it had magnetic properties, it was supposed to “draw out the pain.” * eK “Well, I happened to get hold of a couple of pieces about as big as your finger nail,” recites “Santa Claus” Todd, “and I started out to sell them. go around to offices and I take a lew needles and some assorted sam- Ples of lodestone and some flakes of metal. And I put on my show. I show thei that there's a positive and @ negative lodestone; that sometimes one attracts and another repels. And I've got a story to go with it—about marriage and divorce. I tell them how one sort of thing draws objects together and another separates them. “Yes, sir, and I can tell sex with them. Sometimes I carry eggs and tell whether they're male or. female. If it’s a romantic girl I'm dealing with, then I tell her to put it under her pillow and all her dreams will come true. Some folks carry them around in their pockets as lucky Pieces. The least I get is $1 and sometimes, for a big piece, I get $10 and up.” | Jan. And this, if you please, in sophis- ticated New York. * ee Todd became Santa Claus by acci- dent. His sister was taken ill, eight years ago. He was hi up. He had to nurse her for 45 months. In that time a fine white beard start- ed growing. He couldn’t afford a shave. When he appeared in the streets, children called him Santa Claus. Wearing his long hair and beard he went back to lodestone sell- ing and wound up with the job of Santa at Macy's store in Manhattan. He works at that job from Thanks- giving until Christmas. Then he rests | » for a couple of weeks, for sometimes he has to handle several thousand eager children in a few hours—and he finds this tiring. After a while, he prepares his beard and goes forth again as the lodestone king of the land. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) BE TODAY ANGRIEMARY, 0 FINLAND'S INDEPENDENCE, On Jan. 9, 1918, the Russian Soviet government officially recognized the independence of Finland. Finland had proclaimed its inde- pendence Dec. 7, 1917, ending @ union with Russia that had started in 1809. Sweden was the first country to recognize the new republic. France, FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: When a boy calls a girl a “good num- ber,” it’s her figure that counts. THIS CURIOUS WORLD | it | ly accepted the recognition of Fin- Norway, Denmark and Germany fol- lowed. u On Jan. 9 the Central Executive. Committee of the Soviets unanimous- land’s independence. The crimson banner with the yellow nine white roses became the national flag of this full-fledged, internationally rec- ognized state. Dire predictions were Made for the future of Finland as an independent state. : | Quotations {I ——+ ‘Those who will not be interested in me after my marriage will be insig- nificant in number.—Rudy Vallee. e oe ® Gold is the most useless thing in the Se We forget that. we cannot cancel foreign debts really, for it would pass on to American taxpayers ‘the full cost of the war.—Goyernor Albert Ritchie of Lee font * * I told the president that if the election were held tomorrow he would BEGIN HERE TODAY 4 ANNE, CECILY and MARY» FRANCES FENWICK live ‘with grandparents are known resj tively “ROSALIE” Anne, 28, and Cecily, 22, do sec- retaria} work and Mary-Frances, 15, ta. still in school. When story opets Anne has jbeen gaged to PHILIP Ecrotp, young lawyer, for eight years, They can mot marry because Anne knows her sisters and grandparents de- pend om her to manage their home, Cecily has a new admirer, Barry MKEEL, with whom fe falling to MINTRUDE HILL, strike up an acquaintance with EARL DE AR- MOUNT, stock company actor. To am intensely She meets him romantic figure, secretly and promises to see him again. Next morning Phil comes te, take Anne to her office in his c: He begs her to set date. When eclly's friend, MARTA, her Barry McKeel ts a heart- breaker and not to be trusted, When Cecily mer together t! fs moedily ual NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY = CHAPTER XX puer had left the red-and-yellow sunset on the other side, and here was a hight-blue sky, with a few early stars and a clear white quarter of moon. They climbed the tustic steps, and followed the cranky stumbling path, and came to the car parked beneath some fir trees on the byroad. Cecily looked up at the fir trees and the moon, and boldly and with- out-warning Barry kissed her. The universe reeled over her head, and under her own two feet“she could feel the roll of the world, and she forgot Bea and Constance and her chauffeur; she forgot Cecily Fen- wick; she forgot Barry, almost, un- til his arms drew her closer and he sald, “Now you. kiss me.” ; After that he said, “I love you,” three ‘times, rapidly, and stopped. “Bay it again, Berry. Just say * ft again” “You say it.” ~ She said it, and added a “dear,” for good. measure, as generous wo- men are prone to do. “You'll marry me,” he stated. “I ™mean—when? I mean, darling, you ‘will, won't you?” No, he did not do ed to open locks. Now if soméone: will only invent something to open Scotch Lanes © Love laughs at locksmiths. But you se need this device to pick golden-| giris, the difference increasing with * xk oe A New York university profeasor says bridge weakens reality. to adulter-ate life. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | lotte, and sons, Ray and Harold. Clear Lake By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN 10 to 13 years, the presstires of boys exceed those ‘Children who mature early are Olson and daughter, Char- ©) Mr. and. Mrs. Albert Christensen { [had as their guests New Year's day ne J. EB. Sharp and George Chap- Pel 8. L, Bryant played basketball with the Driscoll team Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson and chil- | #8sinst Dawson. dren spent Wednesday evening at the L. B. Olsen home. My. and Mrs, Henry Olson and fam- ily called on Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gibson were call- | Olson Saturday. ee at the J. W. Beyer home recent- Mr. and Mrs. Jens Hanson and fam- of Kidder county, Mr. and Mrs. iy. ily Mrs. Ingeborg Rasmussen is visit-| Ohris Schoon family, Mr. and ing with Mrs. George Haugen. soot of ‘Mrs. Ernest Schoon and son, Mr. and Mr. dnd Mrs. Mike Brenden and | Mrs, Ole Newland and family were family were supper guests at the| entertained New Year's day by Mr. Clarence Severson home, south of! and Mrs. Adolph Hanson. Driscoll New Year's eve. Several from this locality attended the New Year's party at the Ed Gib- son home. Mrs, Anton Pederson and family visited -New Year's day with Mrs. Marie Olausen. Mrs, Selden Bryant and daughter, Betty, spent Saturday afternoon and evening with Mrs. Nels Meland and Mrs, William Van Vleet of Driscoll. A dance was given in the town hall Saturday evening by Miss Lillian Hall Paul Paslay attended services at the | @nd the Nels Dronen young people. Zion Lutheran church, New Year's eve, ‘Thé, Misses Nora and Charlotte Ol- ‘son Called on Mrs. S. L. Bryant| day. ‘Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Christensen entertained Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Smith and George Chappell to dinner Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson enter- Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schoon enter-/ tained Sunday visitors. THREE KINDS: BY KAY CLEAVER | STRAHAN ~ so well with that. Rumor has that men seldom de. “Let's don’t worry about mare “At least, not Mage,” she sald. now—not yet for a while.” “Let's you and I not ever worry about it,” he said, and laughed his delight, “Let’s you and I just say, ‘Certainly. Tomorrow morning yery early,’ and change the subject, Fou like.” t “Oaly—" she caid—"I thought you didn’t approve much of mar riage.” His happiness ear’y.” “But on the porch at Marta’s, that first evening, you said—" ‘ There was nothing to do but stop th; with another kiss, she said. —I love your name, a habit I've formed. I did have down on marriage, because dad and mother mat mess of theirs, wish I hadn’t told you—at least, Rot until later. Does it make difference, Cecily? Their being ‘- vorced, I mean?” eee 66QARRY! @ difference?” “But . something,” /Or is it— Well, is it that you ju don’t wish to marry me?” “No, dear. But—” “We're engaged!” He caught her hands and did some crazy dance steps and called to the trees and the moon, “We're engaged. We'll be married in the morning. sounds like a song. It is a song. Let’s both sing it. We'll be. married in the morning. We'll be mar We'll be married in the morn—ing. To that we both agree. Why don’t you sing, rled in the morning. darling?” “T can't,” she said “Well, then, why don’t you clap?” She was glad that Barry had such & splendid singing voice. She was ‘glad that he was so happy and silly; but she could not understand why he was. Her own happiness made her feel quiet and grave and almost! ‘Her hand, fragrantly cool, had solemn, “I know,” ho said. “You think Tam making a joke out of the most the Tm stupendously serious: thing in world. It isn’t that, Cecily. not sure what it is. It seems to that I’ve gone mad—dronk?—iny becilic, maybe, with happiness. underneath I’m. wholly and serious, I love you, could not encom: pass her gravity. “I don’t. I stud bornly disappro;~ of all marriages exep‘ yours and mine, which is to take place tomorrow morning very said he, and went on, “I was a fool that evening, Cecily An ignorant, opinionated fool. The less I know, the longer and louder I talk, It's How can you be 80 absurd? How could that make he insisted, “seems to be making a difference, No. I do wish to. why, Hy deeply |why. He had wished tained at a New Year's eve party for] Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beyer and daugh- Mr. and Mrs. Martin Olson, Mr. and | ter, Caroline, visited with Mr. and Mrs. R. Elsenbitze and daughter of | Mra. J, W. Beyer Sunday. Driscoll, Mr. antMrs. Ernest Schoon,} Miss Myrtle Christensen returned ae and Mrs, Adolph Hansen and|to her school duties near Sykston family. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Van Vleet vis- ited New Year's day with Mr. and/|tensen. Mrs, Allen Van Vieet. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Klucksdal and | dan family spent New Year's day with the} father, L. B. Olson, relatives and H. A. and Ray Smith families. Mr, and Mrs. Harry Olson had as} Mrs, their dinner guests New Year's day | called on L. B; Olson and daughter, Miss Nora, !Sunday evening. Her sons, Billy and 8 after a brief visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Chris- ‘Miss Nora. Olson returned to Man- after a visit with her friends over the holidays. Hargrave of Bismarck . and Mrs. S. L. Beyer | fillin, ‘and getting ready to beat again “Feoutse the diastolic pressure represents a minimum and because the blood vessels are not likely to show any changes of importance dur- ing youth, the diastolic pressure is usually disregarded until the age of 20 is reached. Buddy, returned home with her af- ter spending their vacation here. Lisbon Attorney Is Found Dead in Home Lisbon, N. D., Jan. 9—()—The body ‘of Gratton Rourke, 34, former Lisbon attorney, was found in the bathroom lof his home here Thursday night Apparently*he had taken his own life, officials said His throat was slashed with a safety-razor blade. It is believed he had been dead about two days. Funeral services, with the Amerie; Legion in charge, will be held bh’. Monday. : Rourke is survived by his widow and two children, living at Detroit, Mich. STICKERS ROROKS) © © 9) this group of letters add the same five times and you can form a 12+ English word. it)I want you to marry me, I'll wait, it you-make me, I'll wait a week. even two, But I don’t want to wait. Do you? -No, sir, you.can’t, Why need we? Come, let’s sit in the car. You're tired, standing there, Now, then. You don’t want to wait a long long time to marry me, do you? Do you? Do you?” She settled back into the cushions and refused with one flash to think of Ann and Grand and Rosalie, of the house, and the Very-Fancy Educational Fund, and said hon- estly, “But, Barry, I hadn't thought of marriage. One has to think about it, you know. A girl does, anyway—and a man should.” “I have,” he declared. “I'll ad- mit that my speeches this evening have had an unfortunate extempora- neous quality—that's your fault. You go to my head. The minute I met you I was afraid I was going to ask you to marry me. I was afraid all that night. The next day, when we had luncheon to- gether, and ever since then, I've been afraid I'd never get up enough courage to ask you. So, with this and that, marriage hasn’t been out of my mind for more than a few seconds since I met you—and looked at you and loved you. You won't think I’m critical, will you, darling, 1) if I say it seems sort of queer that you hadn’t given it one thought?” eee S¢]'VE thought a lot about love,” she confessed. “But I hadn't gone further than that—not into marriage.” “Cecily,” he said, and his horror was but faintly exaggerated, “you aren’t the sort of girl who goes and gets marriage all mized up with monograms and guest towels and table napkins—are you?” “No” she denied. “But marriage does bring lots of other—well, prac tical considerations, Let's don't, for a while. Let’s just be happy, it in a st about marriage, Practical? He nabbed it grimly, So that was the trouble? He had forgotten to be practical. She was like that? Well—women, all wo- men were, he supposed. “It is this way, dear,” he said. “I’m not in debt, and I have a few hundred dol- lars saved—I'd have had more but for the doctors—so.on. I have a Job fairly good because of its per- manency. It doesn't pay a lot, but T'm sure we could live on it for a fre. Other puonlellve on mseh a ve ao tive on much less, qt gone up over his lips. “No, Tt fon’t that, as Really it tent” He had wished ie spor and Hig he believed in it, perp ery ington, the New York editor an@ critic—who, marvelously, wag ‘also bis friend—believed in it and to tell her that were to fol- tell her again how a other books, LOVE low this one, He had wished to plan and dream about them and about how she was to help him, So, though he kissed her fingers be- fore he took them away, hi said) “Very well,” with an appealing imt- tation of indifference, He thinks that I am greedy and / calculating.” perately. no! things of the sort. I don’t care a bit about any of that, It is only— that I can’t marry.” “Cecily! You aren't married now, are you?” No of course not. But—” His sudden relief brought resent» ment with it. “suppose we take a shot sensible for @ moment or stop talking like charac O'Neill play. pls ried, and if you care for me as you Seemed to not so long ago, there is ‘Ro reason on earth why we can't be married, nd soon.” eee syns,” she sald, “there are ever {t she were making chatty convere sation with a stran; was, above ail things, Seki wholly sensible, Pen to be one of the head: household. If you were masviaa now, and had a family, desert them all and once,” “Cecily, darling, ter? 1 married.” at it 1s much th and I often have said fou see, ea. and I love each other more sure, And we've sha: erythi including sett He clothes, and hi and in love, and not go worrying | fun, ” ince—well, died,” ‘aren't going sentiment ms fcltsacridetat and ail that Stocer and the that the tamil; Bape pte & place to live, cation, I've gone Aun makes $25 9 Tt takes every cent of if ‘But, darling” he inj ‘never mind about that, va you, in whom I'm Interested. and added irre} rush off and levantly, Saged for eight He simulated shudder, Going to wait months, nor eight weeks for ifs, (To Be Continued): 7 To vowel Netter 1931, by ubleday, Doran and Co. Cecily thought, “He thinks that is because he isn't a rich man, She ‘denied it des “No! Barry, dearest— It isn’t money nor jobs nor What are you saying? “Then,” he said, at being two and If you aren't mar. So many reasons,” She & small, conventional om voice, as '@ stickler for the “You see, I hap. married you couldn’ marry me at. what fs the mat. not married. You aren't m b'/ many married people do, I am Tesponsibilities and ‘opes, and wor! and money, and ey, riba, since mother and father sweet” he objected, “you is sentimental to pay the bute! and see ances has an edue already, years ago, Week. I make $30, It fs you, § fe, d» you?” It {s entirely ditterent,” she ‘sald, “ann didn't Phil minute asked her, They rete Deen ene r) Derson, I'm not eight years hor eight you.".4 » YOU Woman sw