The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 10, 1932, 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, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1932 a 5 ee e Bismarck Tribune |¢™™" c be more cheaply sdmin- ‘A Good Stunt If She Does It! pe Agr Daily Health News istered at Jamestown than at Bis- Un’ e Ss y An Independent Newspaper ‘The Daimler Motor Works at Stutt- sus, s THE STATE'S OLDEST sO > fart, Germany, were bombed by Al-!| Depilatories Containing Thalium HU NEWSPAPER Buck’s Fargo “air” ress a lied planes. Flyers reported several (Established 1873) Saath 0 thin arpURERS' DEIR aed direct hits. Dangerous to Health va Published by The Bismarck Tribune |to sway voters in this state. All of British officials announced that 39 Continued Use Likely to Result in German planes had been brought ny, » N. D., and en-|it is mere chatter. Thoughtful voters down during the first 10 days of be- \ ad at the postoffice at Bismarck 8s) 1.2 not impressed, as is evidenced Mareh, By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN ‘A nurse, 28 years of age, was be: ! EORGE D. MANN from the indignant reaction through- Editor, Journal of the American | lieved to have a tumor . president and. Publisher the state and from responsibl “Medical Association hecause she complained of blurring of is ele i ‘ i oe : F During recent years the brmesheay the vision and of severe pain in her Bubsctiption Rates Payable in | ‘itizens in Jamestown who are being called thallium has been incorporated | 7° 1. indeed, she had been ‘Advance punished for standing up for what in creams and pastes that are used avin a al ‘ual experience of see- by carrier, per year .......$7.20|is right and fair in this unfortunate to remove superfluous hair from the ec vifuls of her hair fall out Daily by mail per year (in Bis- i contest between two municipalities ©) ign do ing Dane she was shampooed, NE ict scisiscessssnns 10) pel ‘The surgical clinic of the Peter Bent | whenever, she depilatory creane Daily by mail per year Cin atate which in the past have always been ‘e Brigham hospital, Boston, now makes 4 ae tle Meet ore pratt ! Bismarck) ............ 5.00 {friendly and in accord on most vital available the records of three cases in | for 14 mon! ipally Dy ‘mail outside of North ‘state issues. Sharing is the great and imipera-| women who came to that institution | fluous hair on al The ee: ae "Dakota 6. tive need of our time. An unshared {seriously ill as a result of poisoning | thallium cream, ta pain th pean’ tl ARRAN i isl aceaeireaaacucy La life is not living. He who shares .../by thallium from a depllatory. vision improved, the pa! no her heed’ Dor ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00} Warm-Hearted Neighbors greatens his life—Rabbi Stephen 8. ee * disappeared, the Ka an Cr UH ‘Weekly by mafl in state, three Even in the throes of a campaign ‘Wise of New York. One woman, an Italian domestic, | stayed in, and no further 4 Dreiit ee oe 2.50/ against an attempted injustice which Cee panies ey \4 omics are |29,7eeS, of age, had complained of a given to the possibility of a bra: feekly mail outside its well-! ca and our econt ling vision. She also made note o! . . Daca per a ee in conflict everywhere in the world oy fact that ne hair had fallen out,| A married woman, 35 years of age, d ‘ ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per tain manner, Bismarck takes time to today.—Owen D. Young, author of|that she was very nervous, arid that | who complained of loss of vision an‘ aa year .. eeneee « 2.00/note with pleasure the strong and ‘Young plan. she had trouble in walking. weakness of the legs, had been bene i Member of Audit Bureau of = {friendly response which has come eee Tt was found that she had been ap-|ing cream to her upper lip and ehin Circulation from neighboring towns and cities Member of The Associated Press |in its hour of need. ‘The Associated Press is exclusively; Many communities which feel the ne eae china 46 ke capital removal effort is wrong in OF mot otherwise credited in this! Principle as well as unjust to the newspaper and also the local newsjtaxpayers have passed resolutions of spontaneous origin published here-| and are doing splendid work in edu- in, All rights of republication orvad_(cating the voters as to the truth of —__—__ _ — —-—-——--—-| the question involved. (Official City, State and County One could call an almost inter- Newspaper) 2. minable list and to each of them Foreign Representatives Bismarck is grateful. Two cities may SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS be used as examples. & BREWER (Incorporated) Garrison, largest town in McLean CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | county, owes Bismarck nothing. It ————-———| would be no greater loss to Garrison Falsifying Continues if the capital were moved than to ©. 8. Buck, Jamestown attorney, in} many another city. Yet the good a radio address at Fargo, Monday | townsfolk there have organized to get afternoon, added materially to the) out the vote and to see that the citi- record of falsification which prom-j zens yote NO on capital removal. It My life was spent in that school of duty, the old army, where I learned to do my duty to my country, regard: less of my own feelings. Hindenburg of Germany. xo OK The Manchuria crisis has admir- ably exposed the self-contradictory importance of the League of Nations. —Leon Trotzky, former Soviet minis- ter of war. ee & The trouble is our gold-backed dol- lar has become too valuable, too prec: ious. Our dollar buys too much; com- modities are too cheap—Senator Wal- cott, Connecticut. * # Judges march at times to pitiless conclusions under the prod of a re- morseless logic which is supposed to leave them no alternative —Justice Cardozo, U. S. Supreme Court. a oot | Barbs — plying a-thallium cream to her face, arms and legs for a year and a half in order to remove the hair. She discontinued the use of the cream, her vision improved and she ceased to have any trouble with walk- ing. for 15 months She too recovered when the use of the cream was dis- continued. ‘The dangers of this substance for the human being’are such that its use | must be especially controlled if it is to ‘be used at all. POSTCARD CLUE IN KIDNAP CASE ises to overwhelm the capital remov-| has encouraged other cities to do the alists at the polls next Tuesday. In| same thin: the course of his address, he said: | vertising “The point that we wish to make at this time is that the ‘i the rest of the people of the state of It has a community ad-!North Dakota to take cognizance of rogram and much of it ig} this unfair measure and to rebuke its being devoted to education on the| Proponents at the election March 15 capital removal issue. Could there) With @ hail of ballots marked “NO' what Paul Bunyan was to the north/in the old Pierre's cafe . . . One of woods, ... There have been several | the ritalest in town... To date, the| The Japanese war party had no George Spelvin, jr.’s, but never before/Mayfair had the Saturday night] trouble in winning Japan in the elec- has a Mrs. George Spelvin been en-|stage and screen trade, but there's} tions, but they found Shanghai a dif- countered. . , In this instance Georg- | been an under-current revolt on the|ferent story. | of the territory did not i on the constitutional amendment tojette Spelvin plays the role of a corpse | part of some of the theater's upper- ee % me have any choice in locating the |b¢ finer demonstration of the spirit) ove the state capital from Bismarck |in a murder mystery titled, “Riddle Me|crust . . . Lawrence Tibbett with his} From the claims and counter- capital at Bismarck. When the | which binds western North Dakota/to Jamestown. This!” .. . Old Man Spelvin has been | new millionaire bride, Leslie Howard, | claims in the war in China you would territory was divided and the | folks together? blamed for 90 per cent of back stage | Mary Nash and Basil Rathbone are| think the battles were being fought by states of North and South Da- In the early days, a spirit of rivalry sehen! i " era goes we eed tee on the Pierrette com-|a bunch of bar man kota established the capital for = RR IS: eorge Spelvin to blame.... Ifa ee '. S the first time became the sub- |&"eW up between Mandan and Bis-) gargantuan feat is to be performed, Alfalfa Bill Murray says he will “Ww PF marek and, sad to relate, it was not always friendly. There was a time when residents of the two communi- ties agreed on few things, if at all. On capital removal, however, they feet of a vote and Bismarck was chosen BY A SMALL MAJOR- ITy.” “George Spelvin could do in it a min- ute...” Now, it seems, there's a Mme. Spelvin ready to step into myth- 1S nee WORL Russian Boy Makes Good D WAR mite ty a dt | ANNIVERSARY “Way of the Lancer,” is the Literary 0 have a longer and happier life if he isn’t seg bl Soret Well, there are plenty wish him a long and happy life. * * * 6 ! Pai(s, police are installing radios, after the fashion of the Americans. There's no use letting the cops be bored. TODAY <3 THE We refer Mr. Buck to the legisla- tive manual issued by the state in 1919 which med iad Heed Wine are working hand in hand and the adoption of the constitution which) niri¢ which was rampant 20 years ‘placed the seat of government at Bis-|a5, weakened by years of friendli- ee aol SS A ee directing “the Repertoire theater” marck and the insane asylum at ca e Singing for Peace = BAKER IN FRANCE ness, now has vanished. It is lost New York, March 10.—From a ring- | Just @ few years back... Arriving Tt looks as though Japan may have Jamestown. Cast in favor of the|compiciely in the urge from Russia, he instructed young! On March 10, 1918, Secretary of War | to send its whole army into China to adoption of the constitution locating earn a aati ate, Tg rey it 4p ee Pe alee ei * gi_ | thespians in the tricks of the Moscow| Newton D. Baker arrived in France | protect itself from attacks by the Chi- votes, with 8,107 against it, or a MA-| being devoted whole-heartedly to the|Sauabble - . - And a “peace Song” SOF] who did much in the theater, he WaS British forces in Mesopotamia| With all the relief bills passed, the Jority of 19,000 for. Bismarck out of| campaign to get out the vote and to Pape ninibees ‘But Their’ Own” . . ,|Commissioned to direct in Hollywood stormed the town of Hit after severe |only thing needed to bring prosper- @ total vote of some 35,000. Whether! )ave the ballots marked “No” on the|Tt contains a plea for the rest of us| 2nd is now quite a fellow out there. | fighting with Turkish troops. ity back is the return of good busi- that was not ® decisive vote of the|-anital removal question. to stay out and is one of the first|New Swank Spot Many prisoners were taken and Al- ness. Which reminds me that Hendrik | lied observers claimed the Turkish ‘ (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) * people, the founders and pioneers of! The action has not been one by |58s, I hear, . ceoee Wat. .++!van Loon, the historian-blographer, | * ACE A COORDS! Though police were divided In opinion as to Its genuineness, the postcard reproduced above was the first important “clue” in the kid- naping of baby Charles Augustus Lindbergh jr. A thorough search ‘was made of the Newark, N. J. rooming-house district where it wa? mailed. our beloved state, we willingly leave} the Chamber of Commerce of Man- - maintains a most original suite in the to the voters of this generation who/dan alone. Businessmen and home| “une ohne bill which gagealey Hotel, on Washington will march to the polls next Tuesday! owners have banded together to de-| would apply the Paris-London exclu- | Syn quaint drawings . . . And since and, we earnestly scan Lessa fend a sister city. It is truly a heart-|sion methods to the American theater, | charies “Buddy” Rogers left the films their fathers did October 1, . It might be noted in passing that) across the river and Bismarck will there were only 47 votes cast in/not soon forget it. , stars now playing Broadway... Stutsman county against Bismarck) ‘The same thing may be said of He-| Practically every matinee idol of the for the capital in 1889. Burleigh pron, Glen Ullin, Killdeer, Beach,|™oment is OD ae Ling almost reached the law courts county cast only TWO votes against’ stanton, Hazelton, Linton, Ashley,/in the bright lights: Chas, Laughton, ipigghtd the Blemette is New, York's locating the insane asylum at James-| Selfridge, New Salem, Dickinson andj Herbert Marshall and Edna Best, Bas- one Z town, October 1, 1889. scores of other up-and-coming towns|i! Sydney, Philip Merivale , Leslie Mr, Buck's reputation as a lawy the Missouri Slope area. They| Banks, Leslie Howard, Adrianna, Al- | len (who soon goes to Hollywood, by gives credence to such utterances as are a unit in agreeing that the re-|the ayrcand “shalt dozen others. | he has seen fit to make over the ai ;moval movement is both unfair and! Yet it is not likely that the theater without any basis in fact. He knew) ill-advised; that capital removal would| fans and critics will take kindly to} when he uttered the above statement/be an unnecessary expense to the | Sending any * spe hae: wee that he was dealing in lies and seek-| taxpayer and that it would strike ing to deceive the people of the state.|a blow at the development of the| 4 theater bill indicates that George | Even local pride and civic loyalty, Missouri Slope country. Spelvin has a wife... . Her name cannot excuse such a display of de-| The fight is not and will not be|is Georgette Spelvin, and this is an ception. Such a statement cannot be| won until the votes are cast and Se RN oneal wecding. Te credited to ignorance on the part of | counted, but it will be won, and when] the theater than any other character. Mr. Buck. He is a lawyer and should} the result is achieved the work and]... George Spelvin, to be exact, is a know better. The fact that a man| votes of our neighbors will have sythice eisure: oes Wheneten an ac ~ yed a art in t # , |tor appears in more in one role, of his standing will rise before a mi played a leading part in the victory. the nd is invarraply credited to crophone and utter such untruths is “George Spelvin.” rs amasing. It merely indicates the Over a period of time, Spelvin has desperate straits in which the pro-| formers, has drawn sudden attention! things about the well-known. artistic with the new Ziegfeld show in Pit burgh, his argument over “star bill. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: W a George Spelvin Marries: Editorial Comment | become to the folk-lore of the stage = Hee STICKERS | eArE*/OU ‘The rest of his address is puerile.| order, intermingled with dots. If you He seeks to cite the removal of the! territorial seat of government from| fill m the dots with the proper letters you can make a nine-letter word. ed below show the ht by other editors, ished without regard hey agree or disagree The Tribune's policies. a The Capital Removal Yankton to Bismarck as an issue in (Adams County Record) this contest. This state owes a debt| Voters of North Dakota will be call- to the founders of North Dakota for|€d upon at the Presidential Primary F [election, March 15, to decide whether bringing the territorial seat of g0V-| the capital of North Dakota will re- ernment to Bismarck. Citizens of this! main in Bismarck where the pioneers city took a leading part in that con-|of the state placed it or whether it test and to have a Jamestown attor-| Shall be moved to Jamestown. rete To people living outside the sphere | ney seek to belittle that victory is ajo influence of both Bismarck and vicious attack upon his own com-j Jamestown this movement to change monwealth and the founders of the|the location of thé capital site appears state, many of whom have gone to| Wholly unfair and somewhat vicious, y ve gone 10! vith the claim seemingly untrue that | their final reward. ES? Sais But there are more “Buckisms,”|the remo | equally as false. For forty-five years the residents He said, with pious inflection in|! Bismarck. properly assuming that f North Dak 4 ibis enice: | the people of North Dakota acted in | | good faith when they designated that “When the capitol building (city as the capital site, have diligent- burned in December, 1930, a {ly worked to build up their city. Dur- movement was started, ALMOST {ing those same forty-five years the SPONTANEOUSLY and WITH- | legislators and taxpayers of the state QUT ULTERIOR MOTIVE.” have poured their money into build- ‘The Jamestown removal movement) ings and property, both private and was conceived and born in a spirit| public, much of which would be lost 3 through depreciated values should the of ulterior motive and vandalism. people of North Dakota renege on the Mr. Buck knows this and ignores it/ moral obligation they have sustained just as smoothly as he does the elec-| since the creation of the state. tion figures of October 1, 1889, when| People are people wherever they people sover may be. In every town we have our | the ote ign state of good and our bad, our greedy and our | North Dakota, by an overwhelming | liberal, our envious and our generous } vote, located the seat of government pene ‘There are Eines en aa oe Bismarck insang of these groups may band a fend the insane asylum) work for a project. ‘Thus it 1s that we find what appears to be the insinuation and in-| envious portion of the population of voters of the state| Jamestown actively seeking the re- cheaper to operate the moval of the capital from Bismarck Jamestown. Jamestown than! “Little blame or prejudice should be ‘This is more piffle.| directed against the people of the city of Jamestown as a whole for this capital removal agitation. Undoubted- ly many of the people there are this unfair amendment it as state institutions, and Mr.| much as the majority of the rest of ae f Se boa : poternes ol james! are ny better show-1 it appears to be ® question as to run-| whether’ an energetic tail shall we Fee ee tac || An ise toler, mlnded clttnas of “the largest in the state,| As the fairer minded citizens Jamestown recently failed in their en- bment standpoint, how) Yeayor to halt the activities of the ie figure that » state gov- [capital removal group it remains for Gunays rake Birds are like bakers—they both present their bills for bread. ce <— tas — _THIS CURIOUS WORLD — would be saved through } |warming demonstration of hands|#S Means of protecting our own Per=\ for the stage, he has learned a few) to the unusual number of British temperament... When he opened | BEGIN HERE TODAY Beautiful ELLEN ROSSITER, employed at Barelay’s Dei ment Store, works nights dance hall hosters her mother, MO) her elder sister, baby brother, MII STEVEN BARCLA marry him because she tt an artist the dance hall, She loves him de- apite the fact that his engage- BOWES, Larry aske Ellen lznbeth Bowes anys casually t a friend of his. Later when Ellen She overhe: ing him about hi dressing room and the friends are rude to her. ‘s offer to accompany her, El NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIV At the beginning of the long sub-| never going to seo Larry again.” way ride from Larry's studio to PAE the Brooklyn apartment Ellen was plunged in misery, The evening had been the most wretched of her | tong spell of heat had been broken She studied the brightly col-| by a welcome rain storm. Rain ored subway cards with eyes that| had fallen all day and was still fall- filled and refilled with tears. Lona|ing in the evening. As a result Clendenning had forced her to see| Dreamland was practically deserted what before she had refused to ad-|except by stray gentlemen who she was not asleep when Myra en- tered and turned on the lights. “Awake, Ellen?” she asked softly. She lives with ute and then opened them. “Why'd you run away from us?” Myra demanded. “We got there only about 10 minutes after you left. Larry seemed rather worried about you.” ‘He needn't worry any more,” El- len replied quietly. “What is it? Did something hap- pen?” When Ellen did not answer Myra went on viciously, “I bet that Clen- denning woman said something. We didn’t stay, so I barely met her, but it I ever saw a natural cat that woman is one.” Ellen turned her head away from the glare of the light. She stared at @ patch of starry sky cut out be tween tall buildings and criss- crossed with clothes-lines. “Don't let’s discuss it, Myra,” she said with a catch in her breath. “I don’t feel up to it now. But I’m jo LARRY HARRO she has met at ELIZA has bee! fa the dressing room friends of Larry's She emei Declining next night at Dreamland. The ducked in to avoid the downpour. Association with Larry had been| The rest of the meager crowd was folly from the beginning. Jate now to mend that original mis-|of dancing who could have been but mend it Ellen would.| kept away from Dreamland by noth- Larry should not be permitted to| ing short of death. ruin her life, to take all her thoughts and dreams to himself, to| the dance hall—or perhaps because take all the best that was in her|of them—Ellen had become popular and to give nothing in return.| With those habitual patrons. All of It was| made up of a few ardent devotees In spite of frequent absences from the men wanted to dance with the Nothing except casual, irresponsible, girl so difficult to obtain for a part- foolish pleasures that left her dis-| ner, the girl who was eo different contented and dissatisfied, strain-| from the others, eo standofish and ing always for something more, In her mind she framed the po- lite little note that would tell him of the unavoidable duties which pre-| she hated these men who paid 10 vented her from posing further. It} cents for a dance and expected @ was to be a cold and impersonal| flirtation as well. A sense of in- note; a final note, with nothing be-|ustice oppressed her, Twenty years $0 impersonal. She was blue and discouraged es she danced. Her heart was ‘heavy. How long the evening was! How old—and she might well have tween the lines for the cleverest to! been 50, Yes, sho was miserable. She was dancing when Larry At 11 o'clock she reached the|came in. Bllen, trembling, saw him Brooklyn apartment, Molly and Mike were long asleep, | #24 felt her heart stop when those Ellen cautiously tiptoed into her sweep the floor with his eager eyes eyes met hers. He had started across the floor bent on snatching Before undressing she| her from the arms of her partner Wrote the note to Larry. It had| when, fortunately,, the music cost her a few tears, but Larry | Sto! would never guess that. He would never know the bright fanctes and baby?” inquired her partner. dreams that she had woven about his irresponsible figure, She. sealed the envelope and| dozen steps between them by the Placed it on the bureau for morn-| time Larry reached her. ing mailing. pped. The dance was ended, “Would ‘ja like something to eat, “No, thank you,” Ellen murmured, She had managed to put half a She was in ‘bed but! “I can’t stay a minute,” he said HE was wrong. She saw him the |” Bo JON Clravion cold hands. yours this afternoon. It’s all a lot me down like that.” cony. To the left the lights of flared again. Below, like shining; wet beetles, taxicabs rushed to and fro and honked discordantly. “Under the coping,’ tea—” his eager voice hesitated a Moment “—because there's some- we'll see mother in the evening for dinner.” against her face, across her bare rms. “You're a darling.” ing mouth found her lips. Again and again they kissed in the rain, Larry exulted and then was gone. cee When she went inside her eyes loved the rain outside, the music knew what Larry meant to tell her thing—there could be only one rea- mother. times she sought the mirror to look at her bright eyes and glowing Ife be 80 long in coming, Indeed, long suffering Lorene hbe- assistant, “You'll never make a buyer if you don’t bone up on your fashion maga. sharply, "ll bet you've turned a/ the clock.” Ellen laughed guiltily, “L'il try, to do better,” she prom-! ELLEN stayed for a long time| Every word was seared in her mind, with the wind and with the rain, | He had written: Were still bright with remembered | S@8ement today is all off. I don't kisses, her heart kept up its hard| know when I'll get to see you again, and happy beat. Ob, the miracle of |My dear. Things are in such a mess, |love! What an exciting and thrili.|1 know most of it is my own fault ing and colorful thing life was. She | "Ut that docsn’t mend matters, can explain. Won' and the gatety inside. There was! ing, see ee nothing critical now about her|present. But please believe that the mood. She sparkled and shone and| ™aute it ts possible I will see you danced like one possessed. For sho| *S#!0- her handbag and t tomorrow! It could be only one| she was alone in the Sen ae could hear herself sobbin; son he wanted her to meet his|& desperate, agonized mia te te igi She peer that she could The next day was Saturday, EL out on the street with tears Jon went through her duties at the|TeuiMe down her face, She tum- store in = happy dase. A thousand Wat fer her handkerchief and sat cheeks, She looked often at the| When she rose the tears were clock as well, convinced that 12| She felt everything was gone, “Her o'clock would never again in her| P¥eparations for the afternoon were kein’ now, member the shining eyed girl who had powdered came somewhat | t Arpitated with her| spent such an endless time fixing @ zines more carefully,” Lorene pale (ge gee heine: | dozen pages without seoing a thing, | 2° tUTued to the society page she The only thing you seem to see is ie iad somehow she had ex. from Europe, quickly, reaching out to claim her|ised. “But I—I have a date and “I had that note of; I'm sort of excited.” : “If I told Steven that you'd gone Ellen kept her eyes shut a min-) nonsense. I won't let you throw! blind because you were lunching with him I’m sure he'd be flat “Maybe you'll have to,” she had tered,” Lorene observed dryly. “I begun when he pulled her, half re-| must say you're not much help as sisting, out on a rain swept bal-| an assistant.” Ellen opened her mouth but left Broadway flared and subsided and} the words unsaid. She did not cor- rect Lorene’s impression but after that she paid more attention to what she was doing. he told her, | ceeded in surprising Lorene by the ‘and you'll not get wet. I had to| sudden intelligent interest she took talk to you a minute—alone, Wel in misses’ fashions. At 11:50, how- can’t use the time fighting because | ever, she closed the magazine with- mother’s waiting in a cab down-j out a sigh, replaced the dresses she stairs. So you'll have to postpone| had taken from stock and began till tomorrow telling me what aj the delightful process of arranging black-hearted villain I’ve been. I/her perky felt hat at its most be- want you to meet mother—that’s| coming angle. Lorene snorted and why Icame up. You and I will have| left the room, She suc- thing I must tell you alone. ‘Then| H,-UEN was dressed tor the street, satisfied at last with her appear. ance, when a messenger boy knocked. “All right,” seld \Bllen faintly.|and then pushed through th She felt the cold dash of rain open door, ing sia “Sign here,” he said. Ellen signed and, wondering, He leaned forward. His arms|took the envelope from him and Were about her, his eager, search-| tore {t open. She read a few lines; a few sentences, She felt the paper “What do you think of that!” crunch in her hands and watched the walls of the room recede, Larry's letter fell to the floor. “Ellen, dear: I'm afraid our en+ “Please try to understand until I I'm afraid, is off too for the Larry.” Ellen mechanically reached for She sat there for a long time, It was hard to re and primped and She had no place to go and go She bought a news- the subway. When Elizabeth Bowes had returned (To Be Continued) bn «

Other pages from this issue: