The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 3, 1932, Page 4

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i } ng fever. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1932 Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER, (Extablished 1873) { Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- jtered at the postoffice at Bismarck as Btoqnd class mail matter. ‘ « GEORGE D. MANN i President and Publisher. { Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by.mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00} Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mafl in state, three years .. . by Dakota, per year . ‘Weekly by mail in Member of Audit * 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 newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published here- in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County } Newspaper) ~~ Foreign Representatives | SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS i & BREWER ‘ (ncorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON The Lindbergh Baby ‘News that Charles Augustus Lind- bergh, Jr., has been snatched from his cradle will shock everyone in America, particularly every father and mother. ‘The remark ts frequently heard that the loss of their child under such ter- rifying and mysterious circumstances is no harder on the Lindberghs than on less famous folk, and this is true. Nevertheless, the prominence of the great birdman and his wife bring home to us the malicious cruelty of Kidnaping more completely than| ‘would be the case with almost any other baby in the land. Some may say that this is the price ‘which the Lindberghs must pay for fame and wealth. If so, it is too high for any parent to accept in return for ‘wealth and comfort. The case brings home to us all the utter heartlessness of all kidnap- ers and particularly those who kidnap children. To snatch from his ordinary pursuits and hold for ransom ‘an adult is bad enough but the pros- pect of an innocent baby in the hands of monsters is sickening. The sympathy of the nation will go ut to the Lindberghs and there may de & better than average chance that/ the perpetrators of the crime will be| captured and brought to justice. If so, the very prominence which may have caused the kidnapers to select the Lindbergh baby as their victim may be responsible. No detective of fiction rivals the American public if its interest is roused. Everywhere throughout the Jand folks will be on the lookout for) suspicious-appearing persons with a tousle-headed baby. Thousands of clues will be unearthed by an inter- ested citizenry. Thousands will be found to be false, but at last one may | appear which will lead to recovery of the infant and punishment of his snatchers. But this is little comfort to Lindy, nd Anne in their hour of torment, for always in the back of their minds will be the fact that many babies) nave been kidnaped and have never béen heard of again. Some Sense To It During the winter fair and potato show now being held at Park River in ‘Walsh county, two contests are being staged which prove that American en- tertainment is not entirely dedicated to artistic or useless things. ‘The first competition is that to as- certain whether married or unmarried ‘women make the best potato peelers. A standard of potato peeling on which @ scoring may be made has been adopted and picked groups of married and single women will enter the con- test. On first thought one might choose the married women to win because of their longer experience, but against this factor must be weighed the agil- ity and nimbleness of younger hands. The arguments over the contest are | reported to be heated and only an unbiased decision by the judges will tell the result. The married and unmarried men vill compete in a potato-cutting con- test, an important business in an area where the potato crop leads in agri- cultural production. It all came about ‘when @ committee of married men is- syed s challenge to a group of un- married swains in the community, mentioning them by name. As for the = ypeelers, the rules have been e standardised by potato-cut- experts and it-is a fair field with contests have some sense to be ‘They recall the old-time plow- § competitions where the man who most of them in # given community. is a lets but the change is one for the feemers of North Dakota are ‘whether or not they should hogs, Jet thent get their Mhe Bismarck Tribune —— answer from the following, which is @ government equation of hog prices: “log X= —0.00443 log X + 0.15888 log X —0.21986 log X 0.23675 log X —0.07250 log X 42.3777 log X 40.04750 log Xx +0.22659 log X 0.03036 X+ 1.63009 log X —K.” tors affecting hog prices should en- |“blindly and at the wrong time.” solution, which it describes as “mak- _|ing a highly accurate forecast of hog prices on a mathematical basis.” It may all be very true, but the average farmer, unless he is much smarter than the average newspaper- man, will get no more light from it than from the mud in his pigsty. Federal Economy Needed The proposed reorganization of federal government departments in the int ts of economy and ef- ficiency, now under debate in con- gress, is not a new thing. It goes all the way back to the Taft adminis- tration, when a commission was set. up to survey the field and see just where consolidations could enable Uncle Sam to conduct his business with less lost motion. Thus the project has been up for consideration for more than 20 fears; and by this time it ought to be fairly apparent to the politicians at Washington just what should be done. Some sort of drastic reorgan- ization is greatly needed. Uncle Sam could very easily slash his payroll and get his work done much better than it is being done now. Congress will be doing the country a bad turn if it fails to take some definite’ ac- tion. 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. Britain—A Scrap of Paper (New York World-Telegram) In 1914 a British Foreign Secretary plunged his country into war on the Plea that a treaty signed by Great Britain guaranteeing the independ- ence and integrity of a weak nation had been violated by an aggressor. In 1932 a British Foreign Secretary will not join the United States in declar- ing Japan a viclator of the treaty Great Britain singed guaranteeing the independence and integrity of China. In 1914 a British Foreign Secretary declared that war s the only an- swer to a nation which made a treaty British Foreign Secretary warns the House of Commons that “disturbances to peace do trade no good, and we do not seek to get trade through a boy- cott of other pecple.” deemed it an insult to England that German officials expected’ England to ignore her treaty responsibility. In 1932 the British ‘Tory press supports {the Tory-controlled British govern- ment in ignoring its treaty responsi- bility and is unfriendly to American efforts to preserve those treaties. In 1914 (August 28) the London Times said “The Imperial German Chancellor Seems to have experienced gen- uine astonishment that we should face the sacrifice of war for the sake of our plighted faith. We were ally going to war ‘just for a w ‘neutrality,’ for ‘a word which in war time has so often been di just a scrap of paper.’ “It was ‘unthinkable. wildering to find statesmen . insulting and so of our whole habit of f thought. They real supposed that we that right and tr mere catchwords ir tions, and that for s for them, | fraud and force are supreme. In 1932 the London Times fails to refusal to co-operate with American and honor.” In 1914 (August 28) the London Morning Post reaffirmed the declara- death for the honor of Great Britain that she should keep her sclemn en- gagement. . . . That solemn compact simply has to be kept, or what con- fidence can any one have in engage- ments given by Great Britain in the future?” In 1932 the London Morning Post supports its government in winking at the destruction of Great Britain's “sol- emn compact.” In 1914 (August 29) the London Daily Telegraph said:—“As precise and binding an obligation was then created as was ever set up between nations in the world—that treaty, that ‘scrap of paper.’ In 1932 (February 25) the London Daily Telegraph says that it is “im- possible for Britain to subscribe with- out careful qualification to Mr. Stim- son's statement” charging Japan with treaty violation and outlawing the fruits of Japanese conquest. In 1914 the British government and press successfully appealed to the British nation to go to war over a “gerap of paper.” In 1932 America— through Secretary of State Stimson— in effect appeals to the British na- tion to stay out of war and to help prevent eventual world war by @ moral united front against Japanese destruction of all peace agreements. In 1932 America repeats the ques- tion which Great Britain asked in 1914:— “That solemn compact simply has to be kept, or what confidence can any one. have in. engagements given by Great Britain in the future?” If’8 A SMALL ‘WORLD alo, N. Y.—Back in 1902 Albert G. Northrup carved his initials on @ new nickel and passed the coin into Circulation. Just the other day his granddaughter, Zsther Northrup, 13 years old, went to the store and re- ceived the same nickel as part of the change she got from the clerk. In connection with this a govern- ment publication on “factors affecting the price of hogs,” asserts that fuller comprehension of what are the fac- able farmers to make a more rational control of their production instead of changing, as so many of them do, The bulletin then offers the above only “a scrap of paper.” In 1932 ay In 1914 the British Tory press} charge Japan with treaty violation, | and supports the British government's; action in support of what the London | Times in 1914 called “right and aa tion of the British Ambassador to! Berlin that “it was a matter of life and | Manhattan’s Millionaires New York, March 3.—During a stroll that takes no more than 20 minutes it’s possible to pass through the richest district in the world. Not even those hardy prospecting oil booms could dig up as much mon- ey as might be found in a relatively small area bounded by 60th to 85th streets and Fifth avenue to the East river in Manhattan. Just start to walk in any direction through New York's millionaire zone, and at almost any given point you can look up at the house that plenty of jack built. * * * King’s Mansions There's the famous Frick mansion, with its museum and tiny, alluring square of green garden space; there's the mansion of Thomas Lamont and of John D. Rockefeller, j the home of the George Bakers and most of the other kings of the financial world. But in this walk, particularly if you wander in a liesurely fashion, don't be surprised if suspicious-eyed plain clothesmen stroll not far away, for more than a hundred very special detectives can be found in this zone. * oe OR Dining Room Yodels Remember those good old lunch counter and dining room yodels: “Adam and Eve on a raft”... “Two steaks ina marathon”... “Four pairs, sunny side up and two in the dark ae All those cryptic-sounding, mirth- Producing shouts that echoed through the kitchens. Well, if you can stand it, messieurs and mesdames, they're being crooned in the larger New York spots today. , | You heard me—they're being crooned and only the ears of the waitresses can get them. Recently, for instance, the New Yorker Hotel put in a microphone system, a la broadcast fashion, so STICKERS Above are the jumbled up letters of a, 12etter word. Can you arrange them. 80 as to spell the word? | wil THe A¢ “GRUNTS,” WERE gents of the gold rush days and the | that the chef can mute his voice and in Valleesque tones inform the wait- resses outside — “Ready on Irish turkey ... take ‘em away ... two on the double hots up... take ‘em away... . So goes the chant in trem- uloso. * * * A Challange to the Palace the Palace Theater—the theatrical Everest that vaudevillians seek to climb—is being challenged and it's one of the tid-bits of chatter about the big street. The palace, as all theatrical folk know, has been the traditional ace Spot of the variety world. But vaude- ville threatened to slip, even in New York, and the moguls called for Help. Masters of ceremony came run- ning up with crews of headliners. Then, one week, a certain Lou Holtz came up dragging behind him a fea- ture bill that ran and ran and ran and broke all records. Now it’s Mons. Holtz, quite assured of his prowess as a variety producer, who steps out with his own play- house—the Hollywood, which was, ' st: until recently, @ movie house. And now they're all waiting to see what! happens. ek * Sophie Tucker's Real Name Shorter Notes—Lilyan Tashman’s | first hubby, Al Lee, once teamed in vaudeville with Eddie Cantor and now is manager for George White, the movie revue gent. « Sophie | Tucker's real name was Sonia Abuza. . +» Her first husband was a gent named Tuck and hence the “Tucker Her father, newly arrived from Po- land, ran a little restaurant in Hart- FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Many a girl who wins 2 match would prefer to make one. ANCIENT CHIGETAINS HELPED IN WE FILMING, AND 1,300 SIGNS, ICTOMPANYING Stage people came there... . And that’s how Spohie got (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) THE § R /ERSARY Pt, ay RUSSO-GERMAN PEACE SIGNED On March 3, 1918, heavy German’! assaults on the French lines in the| Champagne sector of the western front were beaten off after several | If a slap on the wrist by the! 'League of Nations can make Japan| It was one of the heaviest engage-/ hesitate, just think what a kick in Allied observers the pants would do. For the first time in many a year,! hours of sharp combat. ments of the year. believed that German divisions re-j the Russian! Now they tell us that the word front were used in the attack. attack on the Ital- |instrument. | in the Frenzela valley was|mean, this depression is still a pain} an italian barrage. ck. ij severall (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) | German. planes 3, Loe bombs on Petrograd, killing three 2. five. Candling the Eggs! eee ea ior aa between 80- Ee RSS Prete cs ac aerate ey pk aay viet Russia and Germany Trotzky, re ft ne terms of J be . (copyright, 1982, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘There never has been a clearer case of international aggression and vio- lation of the covenants (than at Shanghai)—Dr. W. W. Yen, Chi- nese delegate to Genoa conference. xe * ere is little need for me to com- lee in appreciation of the 11 years of sé@rvice you (Mellon) have given to your country. I know of no more magnificent tribute that has come to |a public servant than the universal expressions of the press . . . to- ‘ward you during the past few years. —President — a either in time of peace or war, by sacrifice and endeavor or by arms, and bear any hardship imposed, no matter how severe, whenever danger jassails the republic.—Congressman B. M. Chipperfield of Illinois. t #8 I do not subscribe to a press-cut- ting agency because a guinea is too much for @ hundred insults —Dean Inge, St. Paul's, London. * ek * ordinary decency, humane emotion- there any reason why @ thoroughly {established criminal should be turned loose to prey upon society. — Charles Francis Coe, crime expert and author. eH OK ‘We'll wipe out this bandit menace if we have to follow them to Lon- don.—Major General Miyake, Japan- lese staff officer ol — * People talk of the next war. Well, the next war is here—Dr. John |Haynes Holmes, New York ered Barbs | [epee ented |" ‘rhe only thing that remains for \the Japanese to claim at Shanghai an orderly ejection. * * * agile fence-sitter that he disagrees |with nobody. | ke se @ ‘gigolo used to mean a small musical | Whatever it used to lin the ne ‘SUooeveneraee BEGIN HERE TODAY e hall hostess at Dreai MOLLY ROSSITER, CHYRA, and her yo STEV ST and Ele len's employer, lo he In in love wi ROWGATE, an heart to him in spite of the fact | depths of the Black Forest. that he is engaged to ELIZA- BETH BOWES, a debutante. Etien ts unwilling Barclay but when scandal loses her determines to see him However, Molly Rossiter, naxious for Ellen to marry a Molly borrows mot apartment att mi Mi; and BERT ARM: Myra’s | flance, entertain the guest clay gives slike a bicycle, boy is delighted bi : “4 "The. ‘aineer | that the room was stiflingly bot. | TI party gets off to a bad NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | returned to harass her. What was CHAPTER XVIIL THE dinner, off to such a bad| money s0 painfully scraped together start, was soon a jolly, friendly The food was excellent and| was all very well but where was the not, as Ellen had feared in the be-| rent to come from? ginning, too elaborate. She had omitted the pate and had firmy ve-| debris in the dining room to the toed Molly's suggestion that the) *tUfy living room, she moved to lobster be served in the shell. They | noisy street. Children were playing began the meal with lobster cock-| and screamng there while mothers tail, cool and delicious and served| 40d fathers sat wearily on the with one of Ellen’s famous sauces,|*t°DS, fanning themselves with Then there was the roast duck, cun- ningly and accurately seasoned. The | distinguish Mike from the distance vegetables, green corn with peppers} but she could hear his boastful and peas and broccoli, were served| voice. She felt an inward pang. with cream sauces. Ellen had managed everything so! who had no playground but the that the dinner seemed a great deal | street? simpler than it was. Bert, firmly prevented from dis-i breathed Molly's voice in her ear.| cussing baseball, was encouraged to| 1 was hoping we'd have a storm.4 talk of his really amazing knowl-| edge of literature. invariable controversialists, soon gaily wrangling with him over the rightful place of some of his Where would Sinclair ” Lewis be in 100 years?’ A bistorian| 'Shtning. of his age or completely forgotten? How about Hemingway? They argued while Molly, a proud | “S8r- smile in her eyes, looked at Bar- a clay as if to demand whether her| Wit naive haste. “I'd love it but daughters were not the cleverest in| !'¥¢ Promised to drop in on a Steven, silent at first| 2¢!shbor for a few mainutes, Mrs. and not quite understanding how/ Clancy downstairs.” the game was played, entered one oF two suggestions only to see them| the couch, had lapsed into somno- torn to bits and flung back at him| lence but when Bteven spoke he altered almost beyond recognition. | Toused. He learned quickly; warmed to their youthful vigor. Myra and Ellen, Soon he was| 20unced, yawning. defending his position as valiantly|@em in @ Hmousine and £ don't as they defended theirs. He caught| Wut to miss the chance,” Myra’s and Elle ig he mentioned his acquaintance with | GOMEWHAT to his own surprise several of the authors under dis- They demanded more and| and Steven on the drive, He did tention when as it had 300 years before. He re |zaars and spun tales of adventur- {pictures he drew. Oh, it would be | terruption. It was the colored maid again. |nounced mournfully. “I want my | $5.. I got to go home.” | They all jaughed and straggled | from the table. Ellen became aware | Troubles which had been put away to happen to them? The insurance had been spent for an evening’s pleasure. The coast of Normandy When they wandered from the window and stared down at newspapers they would later toss into the gutters, Ellen could not What was to become of him, a child | This whole nation will respond By no standard of common sense, | alism, or tumultuous tenderness, is} By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association Men in minor office jobs as well a8 high-powered executives are likely to be worrying in these times of bus- a ion. is SPrmite- collar” man worrles for fear that he will lose his job; the executive for fear that income will be insufficient to continue the siness. wiper deadly. There was a time when it was listed as @ contributing cause to high blood pressure, fe ening of the arteries, indigestion, ant many other conditions. Today these ‘are fecognized as having other defi- nite causes, but undoubtedly worry does play a large part in the causa- tion of all types of disease because of its interference with proper func- tioning of the dark . Wo roduces fatigue much more quietly than is likely from physical effort alone. The lines in the face, associated with constant worty can be recognized even by amateur ob- servers. It is silly, of course, to tell a man who is worrying that he should not worry. All that one can tell him is that the worry will certainly produce : Daily Health News ; : Don’t Be Downhearted i TH’ , WORRY IS DEADLY FOE OF HEALTH’. ting Cause for Many Human I Given a5 Contr Pottice Problems Are to Be Conquered likely to do him harm 4 paneal ‘The man who begins ‘ soon as he goes to bed, and who-is therefore unable to sleep, ought to have competent advice amd assist- ance. He is taking part in what scientists call a vicious circle. The more worries the less he sleeps; the less he sleeps the more inefficient he be- comes, and therefore the more reason he has for worry. ane Sometmes insomnia is due to physical conditions, but in many in- stances it is due to mental disturb- ances. On the other hand, falling asleep is # habit and if one estab- lishes a routine of going to sleep easily at a regular hour, he is likely to have less trouble falling asleep than if he suddenly varies the time, the place and the environment of his sleeping performance. It is generally well known that poper ventilation, proper warmth, and the same bed are important fac- tors in falling asleep. A_ warm bath al A abi eink previous to going 8 great help, and it makes no difference whether the drink is plain milk, malted milk, or some fancy named ‘substance that costs five or six times z no suitable result and that it is more as much. NAVY, LIEUTENANT, AWAITS TRIAL lis that they sent troops in to insure | In modern politics, the ideal can-| didate is the man who is such an; jcreated the color of glittering benjas the heavy car swished up Pine jers, princesses, statesmen and/ Heights. Steven had fallen silent She _—— he had known. cant eee a | FLLLEN forgot her resentment of i“ the man under the spell of the} seen that the ride had been de-! | | | | fun to travel, to see the gray spires | | painted trees. hy Eve) waited and swaited,” she )8-| 16 ighta; ‘Thea limbus wae |i {parked and the chauffeur wan- dered away. Reflected in the star-| was coming. She. checked a wild spangled harbor, lower Manhattan | impulse to leap from the car, to with its tall bufldings and lighted |run away and hide in the night, an Windows became unreal as a/impulse of pure panic. Instead |dream. A beautiful, fanciful pano-/she sat quietly, her cold slim rama massed like the towering| hands in his. | cities in the clouds so that at any |She had been foolishly, almost jhysterically reluctant to go out “Wher, it’s simply scorching!” But you look cool enough.” “I don’t believe it will ever rain again. There’s not even heat “Why don’t we all go driving?” suggested Steven, laying aside his “You and Ellen 80,” Molly said Bert, stretched at full length on “Myra and I'll go along,” he an- @ never rid- Bert did not accompany Ellen not understand entirely how it Before he knew it, he-was talk-|bappemed that instead he took ing of places he had been and peo- is to a neighborhood movie sple he had met. He sketched Monte) theater. Carlo for them and told of Ittle|him. As usual, French towns where life moved just | aged. Ellen could have told Molly had man. |she so ardently desired should go | Were her fears of the ultimate der- Ellen turned from the window. | were! “1'm not cool,” she said listlessly, ‘The girl's cheeks we: Associated Press Photo Lieut. Thomas H. Massie, U. S. N. (right), of Winchester, Ky., I> shown with his wife, Mrs, Thi liberately arranged by Molly. dusty trees stood motionless as| Si They drove on to Brooklyn moment one might expect the|1 whole to float away. The odors though were close | ¢; and real. The good sharp smell of water and grass; the friendly smell of Steven's cigar; the intan-| she asked in a trembling voice, sible, mysterious smell of the night itself. whistles and the gentle lapping of benches. Gradually there stole over Ellen & sense of luxury and well being. alone with Steven, apprehensive lest he should say to her what| 9 ungaid. Now those vague, troubled fears and apprehensions were tination of her family. It was enough to sink back among soft cushions and to drink in the magic beauty of the evening. “It’s not true, is it?” he asked across the water, lothing could be s0 lovely and still be true,” “That's rather a hard philoso- phy, don’t you think “Oh, I don’t know. in the darkness was uncertgin. She had been entirely at ease. herself when she was with him. It was hard to forget tha was Steven Barclay, owner of Bar- clay’s Department Store, hard to ly,” forget thi er. How presumptuous Molly had been; how presumptuous she her-| fused to ki seit had been to imagine that he| was saying. Hi oid was sentimentally interested in| would be if only she could say the one word! Her mother and Mike and Myra—what things she could ‘@ read Bar-| do for them as Mrs. Steven Rar- Aay's thoughts she would have| clay. | known that she was wrong, He, too, was self-conscious, It was! all to pursue a will-o’-the-wisp}. burning | only that age had taught him to; her, He was Steven Barclay! eee Bt if she could hide his feelings. He had always strect and turned toward the|taken what he wanted from the world. Indeed what he wanted and she wondered in a fever of| had come so easily that he had nervousness what he was thinking | grown a little contemptuous of the of all this. Certainly he must have| world and the ease of conquering it. Now as his mood of self-con- sciousness increased hi There was a curious Jight in| of real fear that the desire which jof Paris and to wander in the cool ‘the world, more elusive than|had obsessed him when he first 0 | moonlight and yet like moonlight. The little group ignored the pas-|Gray buildings seemed to come| hi sage of time as they proceeded fur-| alive with the still, odd light. It Samer | ter and further into the fescnat-lay slong the areet im pools. Not ing explor of one ancther’s|a breath of wind sti mere. | minds. Finally there came an in- irae caught sight of the young girl at fulfillment. the|was entirely unprepared when plunging desperately because his There were the|/on. “Perhaps it would have been mournful sounds of steamboat | better to wait but I cannot—I can- not! Let me give you th i water. There were the low voices| things of life, my oh ie of lovers whispering on bidden| prove to you that some of them may be true! was speaking, that she might mis- understand him. So he said btunt- ly, “I want you to marry me.” your answer until you hear many things you should hear. You must st a8) first see the drawbacks and they are many. For one thing I’m years older than you. I’ve done all the things you have never done and probably long to do, and, I've found many of them tiresome and boring. For another—t " Steven dreamily as she stared out Ratetunats aiseie apae sthat begged. ing on? You mean that the: Her laugh | someone else?” io ight, but angui Now she wondered if he were and he eres Boyes thinking her childish and imms-| ic ture. She was never quite sure of make 1 jnriner eee ee Whose very existence he had been he| unaware two weeks before, he was s great deal] engaged to o wiser than she—a great deal old- mee rata it that's what Massie, aboard the U. S. 8, Alton at Pearl harbor, Honolulu, He is awaiting trial for the murder of Joseph Kahahawai, cne of five men accused of having attacked Mrs. Massie. It a pang is side would, in the end, fail of They were silent again. Ellen teven leaned forward and took er hands. “Look at me, Ellen,” he bade er in a strange, breathless voice. As she obeyed she knew what “I suppose you've guessed what mean to say,” Barclay began, refully rehearsed phrases had ‘hy should I have guessed?” “I intended to wait,” he went It occurred to him, even as he Ellen tried to speak but he topped her. “Don’t answer. I don’t want “Don't go on please,” she “You mean there is no use go- He attempted to make his tone He bad not him suffer, a young girl of fo, I don’t mean that exact- Ellen said Jerkily. “I'm not At the moment she was too con- hat she How easy everything Had she the right to fail them (To Re Continued) ¥ ee \ v

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