The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 18, 1932, Page 4

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i = The Bismarck Tribune : an paper Independent News: THE STATE'S OLDEST __ NEWSPAPER ‘Established 1873) |, Published by The Bismarck Tribune cS , Bismarck, N. D., and en- | }Mared at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in “ Advance 3p Daily carrier, per year ......87. Daily marck) 7.20 y Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ++ 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Dakota, per year ............5 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . wees 2.00 - Member of Audit Bureau of _ . Circulation F 7m | 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 herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives | §8MALL, SPENCER, BREWER { (Incorporated) (CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Benefits of Advertising | In the People’s Forum column of| this issue of The Tribune, reserved | | 'for the “editorials of the people”) |A Producer gives his views on cur- ‘rent questions and, incidentally, | blames the high cost of living on “our being victims of constant advertis- ing.” | The People’s Forum column of The ‘Tribune belongs to A Producer andj { the hundreds of others who write! letters to this newspaper. But, even though we respect his opinion and | grant hir: the right to hold it if he) whooses, we also reserve the right to disagree with it. Economists everywhere have long since come to the conclusion that ad- ‘vertising lowers rather than increases the cost of any given article. By widening the consumption of break- fast food, mouse-traps or what have you, it permits an increase in the wolume of business. This, in turn, results in economy of production anc operation. It is safe to say that ‘business could not exist in the volume that we know it, even in these troubled times, were it not for the ability of advertising to create a wide market. Take breakfast food as an illustra-| tion. A Producer mentions it andj it serves as well as any other article. Ex-President Coolidge often eats a breakfast food which he makes at} home. It consists of whole-wheat grains cooked with steam and is said to be both palatable and nutritious. | (Also it is very inexpensive. For 50 cents or so a man may buy himself a bushel of this breakfast’ food which will last a large family, ‘e long time. But, if he grows tired of his home- made cereal, the advertising he has tread has acquainted him with the merits of many prepared kinds and he can choose that which suits him| best. The cereal manufacturer knows that he will not choose one of which he never has heard—and so he ad- wvertises. As to the relative prices of grains ‘and prepared cereals there is an an- swer to that, too, even though it has Seemed open to challenge at times. It is that the cost of processing and packaging are much heavier than the ost of the grain used, so that grain price fluctuations do not have as much effect on them as might be supposed, However, it is significant that there are many bargains to be thad in prepared cereals now. Prices! hhave come down. { It would appear, then, that the main value of advertising is to ac- quaint prospective purchasers with ‘the merits of a product and with mew products, and to inform them where these products may be pur- ister ramifications that it is impos- sible to trace them all. It was this man who, after an- nouncing that he had made contact with the kidnapers, brought back well.” ‘What hopes that must have raised in the hearts of a distraught father and mother, and how bitter must they be now that the truth comes to light? Can one blame the Lindberghs if they are suspicious of everyone, af- ter the world has been so cruel to them and after even a representative {of respectable society has been proved a sham? It is for the psychologists, of course, jto analyze this cruel deception and determine, if they can, just what it ‘Weekly by mail in state, three 250| Was that made this erstwhile re- ‘Weekly by ail outside of North |SPectable man sink to such depths. 50/The most reasonable explanation is that he was the victim of his own {lust for notoriety; that he was swayed by a mad desire to win a place in the limelight of this heartrending case; cial fortunes on the misery and heartache of a fine young couple. No censure seems too severe, and yet, lest we be too censorious, let us remember that many of us, probably. | have battled with the same weakness in some form or other at different times. | There is the man who loves to re- count his roamings. If we keep ac- curate check of the places he has been and the time he spent in each we may find he has spent the lifetime of a Methuselah making Post and Gatty’s trip around the world feel semble a terrapin race. Another example is the man whe is an expert in all occupations. List the experience which he claims to have had in each of many crafts and you may find that he too has turned months into years by some strange manipulation of the mind. The child who loves to play games. of make-believe and who tells tall tales in order to give his imagination full range is merely evidencing the same trait to which all flesh is heir. But most of us learn to be honest in important affairs and the great moment. Curtis seems not to have done so. effects. ‘ human nature. Ready for Fire A schedule showing the yearly sales since 1924 of one of our largest manufacturers of high grade, stand- ard fire apparatus is of general in- terest. In 1931, 19.5 per cent of apparatus 10,000. Over an eight-year period, these smaller towns bought an an- nual average of 54.9 per cent of the apparatus sold, The most apparent deduction to be} drawn from this is that the small larger amount of fire apparatus. But, and rural residents know. Not until every village, town and small city has access to a first-class, will fire protection become a reality. When fire prevention fails—the fire department steps in. If it is an in- efficient, ill-equipped department, | fire may destroy an entire town. If it is well equipped and well trained, damage may be negligible. Good fire apparatus is one of the cheapest things the community can buy. 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. Looking for Easy Money (Duluth Herald) The spectacle of more than two thousand persons engaged in a sordid Scramble to prove a remote relation- ship to a rich woman none of them knew and few of them ever heard of until she died, in order to get some of the money she left, is a depressing picture of greed in action. ‘chased. It also insures the quality About a year ago a Miss Ella Wen-} word that the child was “alive and’ that he wanted to recoup his finan- | majority outgrow the temptations to/has undertaken the pose and pretend in matters of real!lplanting its etiquette to a world of “deesers” and “dosers.” was sold in cities of more than 500,000}a comb and a mirror, and 49 per cent in towns of less than |!owed by a photo of Clark Gable or Clark Gable? EATEN O° ORAS SC STE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY; MAY 18, 1932 Bye, Baby Bunting, Da ddy’s Gone a-Hunting! New York, May 18.—Park Avenue! task of trans- Thousands of messenger boys of the! In this case he has revealed a start-|New York streets are taking quick | ling juvenility which has had tragic|courses in manners, deportment and! grooming. At best it is a sad commentary on/Mrs. Katherine Bleecker Meigs, of the Social Register, hops in her lim-| ousine to address a class of assorted young Postal lads who may or may not resemble the winged Mercury, in all save approach and appearance. Almost every morning As an interested observer the other morning, I noted that the first les- sons are a bit primitive but not with- out psychological effect. Each lad is first handed a nail file, This is fol- some other male movie star looking his slickest. It is explained that the particular film favorite gives great attention to his appearance. Do the messenger boys want to be And how! ee * After clean necks, hands and face towns of the country are so great injhave been achieved, the course be- number that collectively they buy the|Comes more involved. What to say to a lady at a Fifth Avenue address? How to ti actually, their protection against fire] How ee phy ari ee Greed is very limited, as most small town|ished for being late? And no stopping at a movie to see how Gable acts! Nor time out to watch ballplayers in an empty lot. When it's all over, one is asked to modernly equipped fire department, |believe, Horatio Alger's lads could do no more. * e Black and White Magic s John Mulholland, editor of the Ma- gician’s Magazine and a conjuror of great ability, explains that in these times he does the disappearing bird cage trick with a dummy bird . . “Because bird seed runs into 68 cents a month.” * Oe OK Mulholland, who recently turned out a book on magic, was performing a few stunts the other day at a party given for Phil Stong’s Literary Guild Selection, “State Fair.” Stong, a reporter most of his life, was seem- jingly embarrassed by the rush of cel- ebrities all about him. “Apparently there's one trick I can- not do,” observed Mulholland, “I can- not turn a newspaper man into a lion.” ee * Magicians, I am told, are warring more bitterly than ever on unscrup- ulous fortune tellers who have been cropping up in large numbers of late. Worried people have been rushing to seers with their troubles. The American Society of Magicians believes in the black arts for amuse- of the goods advertised, for there is|del, the last member of an eccentric /ment alone. No surer way to kill the sale of a poor | 1 to advertise it. 1 \hundred million dollars. More than/racket has reached article than advertise in the}. hundred years ago John Gottliebjand badger stage. ame manner, purchase of an article | *something just as good” for an ad-/| fvertised product. Advertising has, also, another val- ue. It is the stimulation of desire for new or better things. Persons reading about new devices, inven- tions or products are spurred with may like better. Hughes Curtis had confessed to A Sad Commentary {some of the money. aanouncement Tuesday that John|was brought into court for probate a New York family, died and left a Wendell bought and held all the New and when he died his son John took over the management of a large estate. Fearing that the property would get out of the family’s hands he forbade his six sisters to marry, and one after the other all died in; the old home on Fifth avenue built | seventy years ago. All lived mean, secluded lives without modern con- veniences, but their real estate hold- ings continued to grow until now the estate includes some of the city’s most valuable properties. But Ella Wendel was the last of the family and, having no near relatives, left all her wealth to charitable, re- ligious and educational institutions in ‘New York, the city whose growth made the fortune possible. Then ‘came the second, third and even sev- enth cousins from all over the United States and parts of Europe to get When the will few days ago the two thousand claimants were represented by two In New York, the fortune telling the blackmail A wife or husband innocently vis- with an established trade name gives! york city real estate he could get.liting a racketeering prophet, is ad- ‘assurance of quality, hence the oft-|His business maxim, “buy but never |vised “to come to the private rooms repeated warning against taking/| Sell,” was passed on to his family | for a very personal reading.” The vic- tim betrays family or external in- volyments—perhaps “another woman” is mentioned or guessed at. A secre- tary behind a screen takes down the statements, Within a few days comes a letter demanding a certain sum of money—“or else!” ee * Mulholland tells me of an amusing case recently tracked down by the magicians’ club: a school teacher had gone in for planet reading in a large way. “It's no use,” she told one lad. “You might as well go home. Study will do you no good. You were born on No- vember umptieth—and are fate to be dumb!’ alice Octopi cannot walk or live out of water longer than about three hours, RRNAMEITTO From the above letters, see if you can form one 10-letter word, the first four let- ters of which will spell a word, the next two a ward, the next two a word, and the transcend the selfish claims of re- last two a word. mote relations whose cay sonal 5 | James Cagney, movie star in contract Fro traat ANNIVERSARY o OIL TANKERS SUNK On May 18, 1918, fighting on the western front was confined to raid- ing activities by both sides, with none of the raids being made in such force jas to allow the attacking troops to hold such positions as they seized. The American oil tanker William Rockefeller was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine, with the loss of three lives. The Manchester Guardian an- nounced that the treaty between Eng- land, France, Russia and Italy, by which Italy had entered the war on the side of the Allies, had been abro- gated and replaced by a new treaty. Text of the treaty had been pub- lished in Moscow. Reports from Russia said that Ger- man troops were continuing their ad- vance into the Ukraine, despite pro- tests by the Soviet government. We cannot restore economic sta- bility in the nation by continuing to siphon so large a part of private ef- fort into the coffers of the govern-; ment—President Herbert Hoover. | * * * | The result in Massachusetts ought} to put a chock under the band ‘wagon | and stop people from jumping on it! on the theory that there is nowhere | else to go.—Alfred E. Smith. | OK OK | There is nothing so ruinous to the trade of a country, internally and ex- ternally, as violent inflation of the} currency—Eugene Meyer, governor of! the Federal Reserve Board. ** * I'm ready to trade my make-up box for an M. D. degree right now—| Tow. i * e % \ ‘We have had the test forced on us to determine if employees drawing large sums of money weekly are, in fact, employes or can do as they please.—B. P. Schulberg, movie mag- nate. ee % The purpose of the senate investi- gation is to see whether the Ameri- can buyer and seller has a fair mar- ket or whether it is rigged up against him, and whether or not there is a general movement on the part of bear raiders to destroy property values through the stock exchange.—Senator Peter Norbeck of South Dakota. ° Barbs | —_—+ All bridge winnings should be turned over to charity, a writer sug- gests. Just another way of giving the habitual loser his money back. x % * France is changing its laws to make divorce harder. The thing that makes divorce so hard in the United States is alimony. * * * If the proposed tax on horse race FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. bets is passed, it'll be cheaper for the boys to play the stock market again. The most original idea of the week. isn’t the one to pay bridge winners with rubber checks. * * Gene Tunney is being “urged to run” for Congress in Connecticut. If he’s elected, he'll think that bout at Chicago was just a preliminary. % ee In the United States, at least, the queens were the only ones crowned on May Day. x 4% # Despite all his spectacular efforts, Huey Long isn’t making much of an impression in Washington. But that’s what always happens when an ama- teur in ,publicity methods goes up against the experts. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) PLAYMAKERS GIVE PLAY Wishek, N. D., May 18—Junior Playmakers of Wishek high school presented “The Whole Town's Talk- ing,” a play, here. In the cast were Lloyd Rigler, Roberta Gillis, Helen Jung, Elbert Timm, Ann Alexander, Gideon Krein, Alvin Krein, Harriet Rott and Amanda Klein, Doris Boehm, Phyllis Herr, George Grant and Leila Rott. MARRIED AT LINTON Linton, N. D., May 18.—Miss Flor- ence E. Wylie, Fessenden, and Julius Dockter, Linton, were married here by} County Judge Adam Thomas. BEGIN HERE TODAY SUSAN CAREY is in love with BOR DUNBAR, DENISE A malt CKROYD. id shoot wounding him s tly. Then turns the gun on himself, CHAPTER XXXV taining. He could see the triangl Susan, Denise, the spoiled child of fortune; each hoped to win. He was determined, however, cold air he said lazily to the gi “When shall I see you again?” know. Never, probably, the way feel now. That champagne Lau: fed us must have been poison. feel wretched.” the ice cream.” insisted sol and I'll stick to it.” asked the man, laughifig. ~ her regally. Arlen. want?” He was very grave. jonaire’s son. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY IEN Jack Waring took Denise Ackroyd away from the Gled- dings’ party on New Year's eve he had formulated no exact plan. He was by nature a meddler and his quick, prying mind had seized on the little drama as something enter- the poor working girl; and young Robert Dunbar, whom The visit to Tony’s proved rather dull. There had been too much noise and the overheated place had made them both ill-tempered with- out quite knowing why. The man had learned little more of the story. know the rest. Driving back in the The pale, petulant face stared straight ahead. The childish, fret- ful voice answered sleepily. “Don’t “That,” countered Jack Waring easily, “was the lobster you in- Sisted on having at Tony’s. And “It was the champagne,” Denise . “That's my story “You're a little mule, aren’t you?” Denise drew her wrap around “We Ackroyds have ‘wills of our own,” she said so pomp- ously that Waring could scarcely | nothin she had been reading Michael “And do you always get what you enclosed, USE YOUR DIAPHRAGM AND SAVE YOUR ARTERIES This is the third and let us-hope the last act of a little drama about high blood pressure. I promised to give a simple, harmless and fairly helpful remedy for it, to faithful fol- lowers who stick it through to the end of the show. In case you happen to have any blood pressure on your mind and have just happened in, you should look up the two acts we have already given—“Low breathing and High Blood Pressure” and “Exercise and High Blood Pressure,” but I am unable to say at this writing just ‘aad the dates of publication may In Act one, we enunciated a physi- ological principle, namely, that in most cases of high blood pressure or “hypertension,” as doctors love to call it, we find on careful observation that the patients have a low breathing habit, that is, they breathe more slow- ly than normal persons do and their breathing is more shallow than that of normal persons, We are speaking only of uncomplicated hypertension— high blood. pressure without associ- ated organic disease. Where the medical examination elicits signs of say, enlargement (hypertrophy, of the heart, or chronic nephritis (Bright's disease) or arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) the pa- tient had better forget all about high blood pressure and follow his doc- tor's advice just as if high blood pres- sure had never been invented. But when there is no evidence of under- lying organic disease, then the poor gink with the h. b. p. may well digest what we enunciated in the first act, and then give his undivided attention to act two, in which we explain how exercise always tends to lower high blood pressure, just as walking tends to relieve the distension of varicose veins in the legs although prolonged standing or sitting, particularly in slouched or slumped position, aggra- vates such trouble. You see, exercise serves to pump blood from the sys- temic circulation into the great veins near the heart. ‘Well, we're getting along now. From now on you will get little practical help out of this if you have not conned the two preceding talks. We are about to take a daring step for- ward—in short urge the victim of high blood pressure to use his diaphragm. I know this isn’t done in the best regulated households, but just the same, I can almost promise you that by means of only a few minutes use of almost any old diaphragm every day the blood pressure may be brought down an average of 30 per cent of the excess and kept down indefinitely. Here we must beg the indulgence of the editors for a paragraph which will certainly sound weird if not comical if we can't say belly when we mean belly. The belly is the anterior abdominal wall. Practically, the diaphragm is one masole, the belly is another. When the diaphragm contracts it presses down upon the liver, stomach, spleen and other appurtenances of the abdo- !men and causes the belly to bulge; when the diaphragm relaxes this pres- sure is released and the belly again retracts or falls. Naturally. breathing is mainly dia-| PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to petfonal health and hygiene, to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady yen phragm and belly; they get into habit of slacking the breathing busi- ness; they take only fourteen or fif- teen breaths a minute, at best, instead of 18 or more, as a healthy adult vg 3; and their breathing is shallow, (Cuss it, we'll have to add another act, after all.) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Styes I would like to know if a stye signi- fies weak eyes. (Miss D. M.) Answer—! tion eyelash grows is called stye, and this seems to occur most frequently in children or young adults who are in Poor general health or who have some uncorrected error of refraction—faulty eyesight. If you are subject to styes, send a stamped, self-addressed envel- Ope for advice about the management of this trouble. Raisins Please be so kind as to inform me what food value there is in raisins, both cooked and uncooked. And may q DUCK HUNTERS ba “Yes, we do.” She eyed him sus- piciously. “Why do you want to know?” “Ob, I was just wondering.” He steered the talk into other channels. It was a week later that he met Bob Dunbar in the drawing room of the Ackroyds’ apartment in town. High above the outer drive it was, with great windows over- looking the lake. Denise was en- tertaining. The room was filled with beautifully dressed girls and bored looking young men. “You know Bobby, don’t you?” Denise said. “Yes, of course.” The two men shook hands. Waring thought the boy looked thinner and older than when he had last seen him. eee ENISE said, “I’m warning you! Don’t climb into a corner and talk business, because I won't have it. You’ve got to circulate. We have too many females.” She drifted on to another group, a slim, exotic figure in a black frock that molded every line of her figure. “She looks lovely today, doesn’t she?” Waring asked, “Who? Oh, yes, Denise.” The boy roused himself from some abstrac- tion to reply. Waring appraised him shrewdly. That he was not in love with this girl was plain to the dullest on- looker. s “It's my job to find out just how the land lies,” Waring observed to himself. Skillfully he led the talk around to the office. The house at Half-Day was. working out inter- estingly, wasn’t it? He had some new plans sketched for the stables. He would like Bob to stop by the office some day and see them. Keenly he watched the boy's eyes. Some new emotion darkened them for the instant, s Yes, Bob said. He'd do that. Waring was shrewdly silent. “By the way,” blurted Bob. “I don't suppose Miss Carey is still with you. She was married, wasn’t she?” Waring did not need to assume astonishment. “Married? No, of course not. What put that into your head?” “I was given to understand,” Bob said slowly. “Wait a minute—let me think this out. I was certainly told she was going to be married to that orchestra fellow and go to California.” Waring shrugged. “I've heard bout it,” he said, “and I don’t believe there's a word of truth le: to rl, I ra I ‘manage to maintain his gravity. More than ever now he was certain | in it since she’s not the sort of girl to leave without giving notice, Who told you?” he pursued again. “Honestly, I don’t know,” Bob said, but involuntarily his gaze the MAN HUNTERS BY MABEL McELLIOTT strayed to the little group of which Denise was the center. She was be- ing very gay this afternoon. She was in her element. A pasty-faced youth who had earlier advertised Some vague connection with the theater was telling a story and Denise's shrill laughter was the noisiest of all. “Let's clear out of this,” Bob muttered. “We'll never be missed and I know a way we can slip out through the service entrance with- out being caught.” Waring agreed, smiling to himself over the success of his first shot. They swung along Michigan ave- nue side by side. The winter wind seemed good after the-scented, hot- house atmosphere they had just left. Bob squared his shoulders and Waring, glancing sidewise at the fine profile, applauded Susan's taste, - “Do you mind if I stop in tomor- or. serning to look at those ings?” Bob asked him at q “About 112” soa “Not at all. That will be splen- did,” Waring told him heartily. As he went back to the hotel where he lived he felt a glow of conscious righteousness, “I was a Boy Scout before,” he reflected. “Now it looks as though I am going to be a bl Cupid.” oomnine, Bt Bob Dunbar did not come to the office the next day. He tele- phoned to say that the doctor had diagnosed his sore throat as quinsy, and he would not be allowed to go out for several days at least. Did Waring have Miss Carey’s home ad- dress? Waring said that he did and supplied it. The young man seemed grateful, Waring did not mention the fact that Susan was no longer at the office. He had learned it himself only that morning. Heath had ex- Plained rather stiffly that Miss Carey's aunt was ill and she would not return for some time, if at all. “The old man’s keeping some- thing back,” Waring said to him- self. After he had given Susan's address to Dunbar he felt better. The boy would go to see her and everything would be made right. “T've spiked that young lady’s guns all right,” he think- ing of Denise, ife looked with dis- taste at the girl who had come from the to fill Susan's Place. She was tall and thin with & pink nose and pale blue eyes which Jooked as if she might have been crying. “T'll miss that kid,” Waring told Pierson confidentially a few min- utes later. Bob Dunbar, at home, tossed about like a caged lion. of) wi THIS CURIOUS WORLD health,” she was fond of saying, throwing back her bright, little head arrogantly. at the memory. What was! Why hadn’t he seen through her before? ATTER several days that had the young man might go out, Feel- ing excited and shaken, Bob climbed into a taxi and gave the driver Susan’s address. The house, when he reached it, was quite dark. There was no sign of anyone about.” Hopelessly, he rang the bell once or twice. anyone, he slipped his card with a scrawled message on it into the mail box. Would Susan let him know when it would bp convenient for him to come and call? next, and the next, but always dark- ness and silence rewarded his effort. He began to be genuinely alarmed. Telephoning the office, he was informed by Miss Smith, the new secretary, that Miss Carey was not there and would not be any more. Some sickness in the family, she thought. That night Dunbar made another try and when there’ was no answer rang the bell of the next neighbor. A thin man in car. pet slippers answered the ring. know when they'll be back,” the man said sourly, Since he did not know that Susan came over from the Miltons every day to see the fire he could not give Bob that ray of hope. accompanied by Mrs, Milton, the older woman said idly, “Don’t you want to look in the letter box, honey?” open the front door, “The postman never uses it,” she, explained. known what behind raged and|iron flap, ed Pans ae I tell you that I have improved won- derfully in health since I have fol- lowed your advice to walk more? (W. EB) Answer—Raisins have about the same food value, by the ounce, as oats, rice, wheat or candy—say 100 calories to the ounce. I wish you the best of shoe leather. Saleratus , I have been using bicarbonate of Soda to relieve sourness of the stom- ach. Is there any danger in its daily use? (J. M. S.> Answer—No danger, though I should not advise constant use of the soda. (Copyright, John F, Dille Cai. SHEER TO RUN AGAIN Fessenden, N. D., May 18.—Herman C. Scheer, Hamberg, three times a member of the house of representa- tives will replace A. F. Belcher as a candidate for the state senate from the 33rd legislative district on the I. Vv. A. ticket. R. C. Montgomery, Harvey, and Paul Seidel, Germantown, are the I. V. A. indorsees for the house from this distri ict. FORMER N. D. WOMAN DIES New England, N. D., May 18.—Mrs. C. J. Hertstein and Elvin Lovitt left for Couer D'Alene, Idaho, to attend William Lovitt, who died there May 7. Mrs, Lovitt formerly lived in North funeral services for their mother, Mrs. Dakota. SUPERINTENDENT INJURED Selfridge, N. D., May 18.—Struck in the head by a javelin thrown by a youngster, E. Helen Iorns, Sioux coun- ty superintendent of schools, was se- verely injured during the county play day activities here. SS BAFFIN-BAY CARSET PRODUCER, oF ICEBERGS/ ‘ae homas “EDISON'S work WAS $ 15,000.000 000 ‘TOTHE BUSNESS WORLD. INDUSTRIES BASED ON, OF STIMULATED BY HIS INVENTIONS. © @/932 BY NEA SERVICE INC. course he could telephone Susan or write her a letter but he did not want to do either of these things, There had _been misunderstandings enough between them. Bob felt he just see her face to face. What an idiot he had been all along! He must see Susan face to face and then there would be no more of this nonsense, ‘When Denise telephoned Bob told the Chinese boy to say he was too ill to speak. She must not come over because the, sore throat was highly contagious. Bob knew that would stop Denise; she hated any sort of illness, “We Ackroyds have marvelous Bob's lips curled fraud she eee seemed endless the doctor said Then, failing to raise He came the next night, and the “They're gone away and I don’t When Susan arrived the next day Susan pointed to the heap of mail hich was revealed as she pushed It she had only (To Be Continued) 4 : ra is os . 2 a = bs r ad oR "

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