The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 20, 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)

P| Daily by mail outside of North a 3 i i ; ot, Bismarck, N. D., and en- ‘at the postoffice at Bismarck as Daily by mail per year (in state 4 | Weekly by mail in state, * Weekly by mail in Cai year | CHICAGO { which is the hope of the world. | ber of distinguished persons to ad- _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1982 e Bisma reck Tribune ident Né THE Charts OLDESe NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) “Published by The Bismarck ‘Tribune ‘@econd class mail matter. GEORG! Outside Bismarck) ..... seseses 5.00 i ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 three 2 years ... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . ». 150 eae 8 2.00 1 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively * entitled to the use for republication; of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in ite newspaper and also the local news 0: ppentanecus 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, BREWER (ncorporated) NEW YORK BOSTON The Hope of the World This city has new cause to con- @ratulate itself today in the opening of the ennual convention of the | North Dakota Luther League and , Choral Union, for this event brings | to Bismarck a large number of young | people typical of the new generation ‘The convention brings, also, a num- dress it but they, as well as we, will realize that the really important per- son at this gathering is the average boy or girl who is sufficiently inter- ested in his church and in the ac- tivities of his choral society to come here and seek a wider horizon, new experiences. Upon the impression which Bis- marck makes upon them may depend their opinions of the Capital City in the future, so every resident of the city should make it a personal obli- gation to extend friendly greetings to these folk. In every way open to us ‘we should strive to make them feel the friendliness and personal inter- est which is an integral part of the Bismarck spirit. We want them to enjoy themselves now and to come again many times. It should not be overlooked, either, that this group offers us a real ex- perience in the way of music. Their choral presentation, set for next Sun- day afternoon in the World War Me- morial building, will be distinctly a thing worth while and anyone will do himself a favor by attending. It is not often that we have oppor-} tunity to hear so many voices, prop-| erly trained and directed, lifted in the songs that all of us know and which we all love. ‘These choral unions are, perhaps, , 8 great a cultural influence as we have in the state. They direct the thoughts and ideas of the young along constructive, though pleasant, lines at a time when youth not only feels the need of companionship and experiences the creative urge, but a time when habits of mind are being ‘If these societies help us to produce @ singing nation, we will be much better off than if this country is rela- tively a stranger to the lightening in- fluences of music, ° thing holds true for so this medical authority y a pound may be n just as easily as dieting. is that the exercise is open air and that it Play every muscle ig the forming a “beneficial form recreation.” If the fellow h:.dn’t used that word “recreation” we probably would have more aympathy with his idea. It’s all in the viewpoint, of course, but any man who had to weed a garden as a if Fs aE Ettas ee | eed a arranged special hotel rates. they will meet you at the train, too. the charming ladies of Hollywood, good time. For those who are not content with merely meeting these people, it is announced that teas and bridge par- ties have been arranged for North “the more prominent film actresses.” The next press release probably will announce the giving away of one or more of those Los Angeles subdivi- sion lots which were so costly a few years ago and which may be had s0 cheaply now. But in all seriousness, California is making a real bid for interest this year and will do itself proud, as al- ways. It has a real attraction to offer and the spirit of real enterprise to put it over. In Time of Peace The old saying, “In time of peace prepare for war,” holds just as true when it comes to fighting grasshop- pers as in combatting foreign in- vaders. It is with something of a heavy heart, therefore, that North Dakotans heard, late Monday, that all chances of obtaining a special federal aid bill at this session of congress have gone glimmering. However, all is not yet lost. Nature may take care of the grass- hoppers again this year, just as she often has done in the past, and, even if she doesn’t, the industry and en- ergy of our farmers may find a suit- able substitute. The county agent's office is offer- ing assistance in the prospective fight and the federal department of agri- tachments whereby the work of dis- tributing poison bran may be done swiftly and economically by an end- gate seeder or a sower for lime and small grains. Indications are that we will have good crops in this area, but the hopes of the present will come to nothing if grasshoppers swarm upon us and devastate the country. The answer is to make preparations now to combat them at the proper time. 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. The Lumber Tariff Grab (Minneapolis Journal) Of the four tariff grabs forced into the Revenue Bill by skilled log rollers, by far the most unconscionable is the Proposed duty of three dollars a thou- sand feet on lumber imports. This lumber tariff, if left in the law, will imperil the St. Lawrence Seaway, will further cut American pay rolls and will trebly damage American ag- riculture. The farmer will suffer under need- lessly higher lumber prices. The farm- er will suffer through delay or aband- onment of the Seaway project. The farmer will suffer through the further narrowing of the domestic market for the foodstuffs he produces. With tariff barriers already erected, and rightly, against cheap Canadian farm products, Canada is left with lumber as the principal exportable commodity with which she can pay for goods purchased in the United States. If we now bar out her lumber, we Shall force the further movement of American factories across the Detroit River. Already there have been in- vested in the Windsor area some hun- dred and fifty millions of American dollars, with a proportionate creation of Canadian pay rolls at the cost of abandoned American pay rolls. To the American farmer it makes mighty little difference whether work- ,|ers employed in these factories are Canadians or transplanted Americans. The fact remains that, dwelling out- side the United States and making goods for Canadians inside the Cane adian industrial tariff wall and out~- side the American agricultural tariff wall, they eat Canadian flour, butter, meat, cheese, milk and vegetables. They wear Canadian or other British textiles. The paint on the walls of their homes is mixed in Canadian lin- seed oil. Their needs affect the Amer- ican farmer's market little more than would be the case if they lived and worked in Australia. So much for one rather certain re- sult of a three dollar American lum- ber tariff—Canadian retaliation in the form of industrial rates that would force still more factories across the line. Another rather certain Canadian re- prisal against the proposed high lum- ber tariff would be reluctance, and quite possibly flat refusal, to join with the United States in the development of the St. Lawrence Seaway. to build the Seaway would directly af- price of every bushel of grain in Northwest, for the lower In case you have a weakness for ;you will have opportunity to meet them by the dozen, for one or more stars have been assigned to each state | headquarters to assist in ‘seeing that everyone gets acquainted and has a Dakotans in the homes of some of serve as hostesses to the folk from this state while their men folks will do the honors for the male visitors. ‘The press announcements state that the transplanted home folks have Just let them know when to expect you and culture has devised methods and at-|q Really i} | The Clock-Watcher! | Exclusive Place New York, May 20.—New York's! “diamond grotto,” until recently a picturesque sidewalk mart remi-; niscent of the old Curb market, now hides in a barricaded room, highly melodramatic in its appointments. When $25,000 worth of baubles flash casually about in the course of a morning, the hint of menace might be expected to penetrate the very walls .». And does! At regular intervals, about a foot apart, buttons protrude. Were a careless member of the diamond ex- change to lean against the wall, a blast of sirens would be set off suffi- cient to awaken even a policeman. And the doorman, who peeps through the heavy metal barrier, is! more particular than even the “look- | see” men of the $1-per-drink speak- easies. * * * “The Trade” Talks Once the metal clamps have clanged behind, the room becomes a clubby sort of place. Tables scatter about, and lunch is served. A cafeteria counter is available. The 300 men who set the diamond prices for “the trade” seem far from} dazzled by their profession. There is| little of the high-toning to be found, | for instance, in a Fifth Avenue gem | shop clerk. | Listening in at a ringside table, 1 ascertained: that diamonds might just as well be back in Kimberly so far as prices and demand are con- cerned; that $250 to $350 now buys a sparkler that once cost $500; that gem smuggling is practically out of style, thanks to duty reductions; that just about all the royal diamonds likely to reach the United States are already here; that the Soviet govern- ment is hanging on to all remaining Crarist gems; that the De Beers mines, greatest diamond source, are shutting down because production costs are greater than diamond val- ues; finally, that no matter what happens to anything else diamonds ‘cannot drop much lower! * * * Despite the new headquarters, offi- | cially designated as the Diamond Club, much diamond trading is still done in John Street at Nassau, for years the outdoor jewel sector. One of Manhattan’s off-the-beaten track spectacles, this market stages many an amusing scene in bargaining since many of the traders are foreigners— jand excitable. * Let's Be Chatty And by way of a little intimate chat: George Burns, of Burns and Allen, the radio act, was born Birn- baum and took his name from the Burns and Burns coal wagons on which he once hopped rides over on the East Side... * # % Whereas Paul Muni, best of the younger character actors, was Muny Wiesenfrund and just added Paul to his first name ... Sam Harris no- ticed him in an East Side theater and brought him up town several years ago. * # % Julia Peterkin, who turns out those fine negro stories, advises me that she might never have written had her music teacher not told Julia one day that she told stories better than she played the piano... Up to that moment Mrs. Peterkin had intended to, be a musician, Re TODAY # aneiEeAby NEW DRAFT BILL On May 20, 1918, a new selective draft bill was signed by President Wilson. The bill was designed to bring 744,865 additional men by Junc 15. The bill provided that all young men who had reached the age of 21 HORIZONTAL 1 Spain is now a 3 7 Who is its president? 12 Small bodies of land. 13 Minute skin opening. 14 Preposition. 15, Seventh note. 17 To devour. 18 Bed on a ship. 19 Stir. 20 War flyer. 22 Uncommon. 23 To slide. 24 Tax, 26 Ulcer. 27 Composition for one voice, 28 Scandalous. 30 Sundry, 32 Bone. 33 Tipster. 34 Weight. 35 Southeast. 36 Gong. 41 Weight allow- ‘ance., 42 Place where money is made. 43 Shoe bottom, 45 Epoch. 46 To question. 47 Black haw, 48 Self. 50 Street. 51 Neuter pro- noun. 52 To slip’ side- 7 What moun- tains separate Spain from France? . 89 Weathercock, 40 To rub. ways in an auto. 53 Clever. 55 Largest city in Spain. 56 What dynasty Puzzler on Spain Answer to Previous Puzzle statues. ‘18 Barricades. ~ 19 Partner. 21 Sprite. 22 Disorganized flight. 23 Sounding. 25 Dormant. 26 Spirit. 27 Auction. 29 Pigmentary naevus, 30 Greater in quantity. 31 States again. 34 Symbol. last ruled 35 Prophets. Spain? (Pl.) 36 Savings in- VERTICAL stitution. 37 Heap. 38 Before. 39 View 40 Forest. 42To mutilate. 43 Went out quietly. 44 Seaweed. 47 Type of snow shoe, 48 Bird. 49 Eye, 52 Senior (Abbr.) 53 Therefore. 54 Toward. 1 Revolution. 23.1416. 3 Custom 4To utter raucously. 5To permit, 6 Exists, 7Torrid ——? 8 Chest. 9 Myself, 10 Modern music box. 110n top of. 18 Chaste. 16 Portrait 1 | | i | | laince June 5, 1917, should register for diagnosis, or treat HAVE A PLACE IN THE SUN the sunlight and contrive to exclude that nobody “knows that all health, Mfe and energy come from the sun. In recent years it has been the popu- lar habit to provide something pur- Porting to be a sun room when plan- ning a new home, but this sun room too often amounts to a fraud so far as admitting sunlight is concerned, for the ingenious housewife seldom rests content until she has pretty ef- fectively covered all the windows with hangings or shades of one kind or an- other and converted the discouraged sun room into a dowdy place which would attract a gypsy, perhaps, but is certainly not @ sun room. Every home should have all the sunlight there is to be had, and every room should be planned with this object in view. It ig a bad habit, nothing more, exclud- ing the question of sunlight from the Plans and then when the house is finished, sticking on a kind of enclos- ed potch as an afterthought and mak- ing the silly coop serve as a sad ex- cuse for & sun room. This combina- tion coop and sun room horror was probably some shrewd landlord’s con- trivance to convert @ veranda into an additional room in the first place, and the evil has grown until in some communities it amounts to a veritable Pestilence, every house that goes up having its fake sun room stuck on somewhere. ‘There are at least three reasons, all of them poor reasons, why people avoid the sunlight too much. First, it fades household furnishings and so many householders think more of their furnishings than they do of-their health. Second, there is a fear of sunstroke. Sunstroke may sometimes actually happen—I do not deny that such a thing is possible, but it is at least as rare as human rabies, and very few people would exclude all dogs from the community to prevent rabies. Third, there is a wide-spread belief that exposure to direct sunlight is bad for the complexion. This belief was formerly confined to the feminine sex, but many of our dainty young sheiks now devote earnest study to the beautifying and protection of their complexions and they dodge the sun light as much as possible. As @ matter of fact the habit of sun bathing is very beneficial to the com- plexion, Sun bathing means simply draft. France was highly successful on a two-mile front near Mont Kemmel. Massing a strong army, ttoops ad- vanced on the German lines and took 400 prisoners before the Germans re- treated. Vengeance was the motive for this fierce French attack. Early in the morning and late the previous night German planes had massed four squadrons over French and British lines, and over a British hospital, and hundreds were killed and wounded. THIS WILL HAPPEN Houston, Tex.—City Secretary Fred Turner had for a long time been using a silver cigarct lighter he re-|e: the poor old skin, as much ceived from his wife. The fuel ranjof it as the law rear) the poke] sunlight. It must y a out recently and Fred reverted to portion of the skin and for only a few matches until he got the lighter! minutes at a time in the beginning, filled. A few days ago he got in his|and very gradually increasing dura- car, thrust a cigaret in his mouth,|tion and extent of exposure from day Fulled out the lighter—lit the cig-|to day, in order to prevent sunburn. aret—and threw the lighter away. He|'The effect of this sun bathing upon was in the habit of discarding used|the skin is invariably the same, it matches and forgot he had his lighter gives the skin a finer texture and |He couldn't find it after he had stop-| makes it smoother and softer to the jped his car and looked for it. touch and clears away many minor blemishes. Of course kept up for a sufficient length of it also tans the skin more or less in time. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Movie Lore ‘Will olive oil make the Vitamin D, frequently referred to as the “sunshnie” vitamin, is now being put into milk by feeding cows a special ration, part of which has been irradi- ated. It is said that one quart of this milk is equal in protective value to three teaspoonfuls of cod liver oil. BEGIN HERE TODAY promised herself she would take v care of Aunt Jessic always. She tried to talk to Rose about jt but there was not much help from this quarter since she did not dare to speak of Bob Dunbar. After all, what was there to tell? She and Bob had shared a few glorious moments of perfect mutual compre- hension. Once in a life time, fools and wise men say, one meets his mate. Whether this be true or not, Susan thought she had found hers in this tall, fair, sunburned young man whose world was so different from hers, But how could she ex- plain all that to Rose? Practical Rose would ask, “Did he ever say anything? I mean did he ask you to marry him?” And Rose would be sure to shake her head sadly over the admission that he had not. Rose approved of Ernest Heath. She said and thought that Susan was a lucky girl, . nll uss fuses him. several weeks not love him. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXVII FTER wavering in the balance for several days Ben Lampman’s condition suddenly improved, The doctor announced that Ben would recover. Susan did not make an- other trip to the hospital. From Ernest Heath she heard the details of Ben’s convalescence. As soon as the young man was strong enough to travel he would go to California where a job in an orchestra await- ed him. ‘ Poor Ben! There was something pitiful about him, even about his magnificently foolish behavior. Su- san was delighted to know that his fecovery was certain but the ia- evitable reaction had set in. She was annoyed with Ben for having made her conspicuous, She felt he had placed her in a false and . 8° the days slippéd by and nearer - came the date set for the wed- ding. Aunt Jessie wrote glowing Jetters from Florida. She was feel- ing ever so much better, she sald. She would be home soon. One afternoon when Susan went over to the little house to see if all was well there she met Mr, Schultz, the next door neighbor. “Young feller’s been around ask- ing about you,” he told her. Susan’s heart gave a wild 1 It was preposterous, of course, suppose Bob should have been look- ing for her! She forced herself to speak casually. “What was he like?” she asked. f Mr. Schultz was, as he would ridiculous position. It wasn’t as if she had ever encouraged him. She hedn’t. And she had him to thank for opening anew the whole prob- Jem of her marriage. Before the shooting her course had seemed so simple and eo plain. Tt had seemed both generous and wise of her to accept Ernest} Heath’s name and protection. Now sho saw that love was never wise but always irrational, wild and pas sionate, It was Ben who had made that clear to her. She knew he had Rot meant to do it but he bad ac complished it just the same, the de have put it, “no great hand at de scription.” He fumbled for words. “Ob, @ sort of medium sised— well maybe he was tallish, young feller,” he said slowly. “He wore & gray overcoat and no hat like oe college boys selling ‘maga- ines.” Her disappointment was keen. “I guess maybe he was one of those,” Mr, Schults said, feeling be had fall her but not quite knowing why. : “IT #0," Basan answered. When she went into the house she heard the telephone bell ringing and sped for it bat just before she reached the dining room the bell gave a final gasp and san picked up the receiver with fingers that trembled. The ope- rator’s matter-of-fact voice droned, “Number please”? “You called this number,” Susan told her fiercely. “Sorry but there's no one on the wire now.” She procrastinated, She let mre hag Briones bercrggetin dE claton, She even wore, ey on the third fager of her left band ‘@ ring with & single, shining stone, | She would plan each night how to " tell Ernest Heath on the morrow of her change of heart but atways at the last minute ber courage would. fail. Then, too, she had to think of Aunt Jessie. She had it from their dwellings it would seem. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease aa ‘tment, btn eA art rd Dr. addressed envel is enclosed. tters should iy ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. ||), Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. From the way most scopic avold|tiful lashes? (C. EB.) the rest which each life d @ ral a ly if stamped, self- eRe brief and written in bothered with a long a church ceremon: head, movie actress. hich is claimed to grow beau- you Barbs Sur] produced a huge green dressmaker’s Answet—Ho hum, my child, shouldn't take the movie magazines] » so seriously. Nothing you can apply will affect the growth of your eye- lashes. Grease or gum of one kind or another may make the eyelashes appear heavier or longer in a makeup or @ picture, but we haven’t even found anything that will make hair grow long and think yet, much less the eyelashes. Modern Education suits will worn for at least anot +e % One writer says the is to increase of consumers, while another says remedy is to to smoke a cigaret about once a day? I am 12 years old. (P. A. B.) — +e & ee ae bi Been A midwestern lawyer sang Does the motion of rocking a child |f0r & Jury, which promptly found while feeding at the breast affect its) client gull respiratory organs? (Miss K.L.M.) | 80 free. Answer—No, but it is certainly tough on the baby’s digestion. Doesn't he get seasick? 4 Rubber Soles Are rubber soled shoes injurious for ®@ person who has rheumatism or so- called pains in the legs and loss of control of the legs? A relative of mine claims they are not injurious to wear. (C.J. M.) Answer—They are not injurious to wear, Raw Potatoes Please tell if eating raw potatoes after meals is harmful Why should one crave raw potatoes after meals? ny rig likely to affect the stomach? Answer—It is rather a healthful Practice to eat some raw potato or other raw vegetables every day. It is all right to eat them after meals if you wish. I cannot tell you why one should crave such things, unless it is ® natural demand. Raw Oatmeal Is it harmful to the stomach in any way, to eat raw oatmeal with a pinch of salt? I have a hankering for it. (. D. W.) Answer—The oatmeal is all right, but better not eat too much salt. en *® stocks must pay four cents tax to mail a letter. “ * to Sharkey and Schmeling. P-R-C&-T- P=R&~kK=-T Four vowels and one consonant are Scieas word is indeed bythe va.” Can you fill in, to complete the words? We will not defeat communism by denouncing it. We will defeat com- munism only by surmounting it with ® similar devotfon to our own social ideals of economic justice and public service —Rev. Dr. Harry Emerson Fos- dick, Riverside Baptist Church, New York. ee # ea: | Anyone who stops learning is old,/! whether this happens at 20 or at 80./ Anyone who keeps on learning not! only remains young, but becomes con- stantly more valuable regardless of physical since Paget Ford, 4 rm é The fear of currency tinkering is to- day retarding the restoration of con- fidence in this country.—Eugene Mey- er, governor, Federal Reserve Board. * * * VY ©/932 BY AMA SERVICE sic. - The girl could have wept at the words. Someone had been trying to reach her, All her immediate friends knew she was staying at Rose's. It might have been—it might have been the one person she longed to hear from! For the hundredth time Susan chided herself for her folly. How could she go on hoping in the face of so many disappointments? If ‘she had known that at that instant Bob Dunbar was disconsolately quitting a pay station in the loop, her heart would have leapt for joy. But Susan had no way of knowing that. Evergone seemed to push her toward this marriage—Heath—who wished to give her so much, Mrs. Milton whose sound common sense and innate worldiiness rejoiced in @ good match, Aunt Jessie who was 80 helpless. “It's too late to back out now,” the girl told herself recklessly, “I must go through with it.” bens 4 was taking her to dinner and to the theater that eve- ning, Listlessly the girl rubbed and arrayed herself, How different it was, she thought, to be going out with one man and with the only man! She took no pleasure tonight in her appearanct although her mirror gave back the image of @ slim, glowing girl in a simple white frock, She knew she looked well but she didn’t care. It didn't seem to matter, The thought of that telephone call remained pe sistently in the back of her mind. Of course {t might have been no one. It might have been @ wrong number but there was always the chance— ‘Mrs. Milton appeared at the door of ‘the bedroom, beaming at her. “My, but you do look fine,”. she said. “Guess what I've got for you!” x Susan widened her eyes, “I never and folded back the tissue, “My great glory!” muttered Mrs. Milton, almost reverently, “Lift it out, child.” She was frankly im- Patient. Susan obeyed, draping over her arm the soft, rich coat of leaf brown fur. “It doesn’t look like mink,” mut- tered Mrs. Milton. “I don’t know She gazed at the girl with awe. eee gusan stammered, “I can’t take it from him.” So this was what Heath had meant the night before when he spoke of a surprise, “Can't take it? I'd like to know why,” demanded Mrs, Milton round- ly. “Aren’t you going to be mar- tied in two weeks? It’s perfectly Proper, Anyhow you'll have to wear it tonight or he'll be dis- appointed. Men,” concluded Mrs. Milton sagely, “don’t like to be dis- appointed.” Half fearfully Susan slipped into the sumptuous wrap. Above the fur her face rose clear and pale and proud, It changed her, subtly al- tered her whole aspect. “You look stunning,” Mrs. Milton whispered. She ran her hands over the velvet-soft surface of the fur and Susan did likewise. The girl thought she knew now why women were enthralled by the promise of riches, There was something in- sidious about such @ coat. When Heath arrived a few mo- ments later his eyes shone with pleasure at the sight of ‘her. “It's much too fine for me,” Su- san told him sbyly. “My dear,” said the man with some emotion, “nothing is.” He drew her to him. Susan rested her palms against the silk lapels of his dinner coat. She hated herself for the thought but she hoped he wasn't going to kiss her. could. Did you bake a devil's food| Almost as if he divined her caket” » |thoughts, the man looked at her Mrs, Milton snorted, “Listen te| shrewdly, smiled, and let her go. the girl)” she implored the celling.| “There, we shall be late if we “No, it’s nothing lke that, Can’t|don’t hurry.” You think of something better?” Simon smiled at her as he helped isan said she could not. She was|her into the car. Was this all true, brushing her bair, pressing it into| Susan wondered, or was she dream- sleek waves around her face. Mrs.|ing? Was she soon to be mistress Milton with the bir of a cénjurer|of so much grandeur? They rode through shabby streets where children pelted each other ‘with snow balls and tired workmen plodded home through the dark. Susan shivered, pulling the fur’ closer around her throat, Why was she here when her heart belonged somewhere else? (To Re Continaed) box, “There must be 2 mistake,” Su- san said, “It must be something for Rone. £ didn’t buy a thing.” “Your nate is on it, large as lite,” Mrs, Milton told her trium- phantly, Exeitedly the two cut the strings | demands of time. Long be somewhat determined upon dore B. ‘Abed, secretary of health tor be ol for Pennsylvania. decrease the number of producers. Why not go all the way Can you tell me if it is bad for me} ca nave lota of consumers and no producers. @ song ity. But they let the lawyer FLAPPER, FANNY ‘SAYS:! eyelashes | Many people seem to be on a diet thick and long, or is it better to use The only safe rule to follow is to get; when it comes to food for thought. the MAN HUNTE BY MABEL McELLIOTT needs each night; and this, irrespec- tive of the other fellow's habits or of the so-called When I get ready to marry, I won't ent or y.—Tallulah Bank- - | ‘That Paris item saying that bathi be smaller this year settled one question. Bathing suits will be ther season. way to end the the number the his Congress is certainly looking out for the little fellow. Persons buying for each $100 worth, while the little fel- low has to pay only 50 per cent more China and Japan finally signed a truce. Somebody ought to show that (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) STICKERS y ” ry * | : | | | | |

Other pages from this issue: