Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ails Sonne ai 140 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Marck) ......... +» 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ..... saseees 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years . Weekly ty rth Dakota, per year ...... + 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. 2. 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 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 tatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON prt OSE OSS The Milkmaid Passes The milkmaid has been one of the Jast to bow in eulogistic resignation to the advance of the times and the irresistible march of progress. The efficiency and reliability of the ma- chine have been too much for even her highly-skilled but, at times, un- certain hands. That picturesque char- acter of so many dramas, the sub- ject of innumerable poems, the he- roine of many a romantic tale no longer is carried off by the prince in disguise, or gets a proposal of mar- | riage from the squire’s son, as she cries over spilled milk at the turn-| stile. ‘ Instead, she presses the button | which sets the milking machine in operation, while the prince figures out the homogenizer and the squire’s| son looks after the battery of cream | ripener-pasteurizers, after he has) finished adjusting the butter-print- ing and wrapping machines. For, from cow to consumer, the human hand now has naught to do but turn; the switch. Machinery does the rest. It is this mechanization that has contributed much to the success of the dairy industry, and contributed no small part to its relative stability. The past two years have proven that; .». 2.50 /dirigible and airplane. 00 }be got out of watching a big dirigi- ~|troit judge who sentenced the mur- {of the University of Chicago. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1932 _ : like. But to see a great dirigible rise| | and float effortlessly off partakes of | the miraculous. It is like watching Civilization, 1932! & hill detach itself from the earth and sail off into space. That men should be able to build something so vast and yet so light—that, somehow, is a marvel to which we cannot get used. And this, in turn, brings us a kind jof release. We are earthbound, and we know it, most of us all too well; but a ship like the Akron or the Los Angeles, floating among the clouds, seems to revive all of the old illu- \sions, to persuade us that our prison house is not quite as escape-proof as it seems. The experts can argue as they please about the relative virtues of | To most of us that makes little difference. We only know that there is a thrill to ble in the air that can be got in no other way. Society’s Revenge If it is true that a conscience can be an instrument of torture, Theo- dore Lily, sentenced to life imprison- ment, should go through an endless inquisition. Lily, who was holding| up a grocery store when a little eight-year-old boy entered, heart- lessly shot down the child. The De- derer decried the fact that his state does not have capital punishment. The only objection to conscience as an avenger of wrong is the fact that those who commit the gravest sins have been hardened, usually, by such a series of encroachments that their suffering is less keen than those whose errors are few. It is only at the beginning of wrong-doing, it would seem, that conscience makes a@ coward of a man. Certainly Lily had nothing to warn him of the moral wrongness of his act. Perhaps, dur- ing the sentence that he must serve, his conscience will awaken again. If it does, the judge need not worry be- cause he could not inflict a death sentence. There are times when death could be merciful. 1 i | ii wn Shadows Behind Spotlights A Way to End Gangs New York, May 21.—All-too-true There are many potential govern- true stories . . . Stay-at-home hus- ment, military and scientific leaders | pands usually become mythical fig- hiding behind the masks of gang|ures in a Broadway world that al- leaders, according to experiments|lows a mocking spotlight to attain{ conducted by Dr. W. H. Cowley, of {hypnotic powers. Thousands have ‘unser : been drawn to it, mistaking this im- Ohio State university. personal light for the moon... ‘Then | Dr. Cowley, psychology expert,|/there are others, already among the studied 20 criminal leaders and 20|stars, who come to look upon its glare criminal followers at the Illinois state /** an esséntial element in an adver- penitentiary Joliet, Ill.; 20 non-com- | Sine campaign... missioned officers and 20 privates} Wwell—at any rate—William Scott, from Fort Sheridan, Ill.; and 16 stu-|quiet-mannered aviation fan and son dent leaders and 16 stu of a rich Pittsburgh lumber man, has dent followers shied away from the limelight. Rarely jis he to be found “going places.” He found certain traits predomi-| whereas, his dark-haired, dark-eyed it is immune, to an extent, to any general business dullness, due to the universal consumption of the prod- uct, its constant necessity and the; almost uniform demand for it) throughout the year. Specializing in| probably the most important articles| of food, which are necessities of life, the industry's volume is influenced, more by population changes or shifts| than by any other single factor. It| has, nevertheless, been affected by; general agricultural conditions, | changes in the methods of marketing; products, new trends in retail distri-| bution, which have resulted from the| activity of large dairy combines. 1 Its magnitude places it in one of| the most important divisions of the) American agricultural industry, as/| about one-fourth, or $3,000,000,000, of | the total annual income received by American farmers for all products is; derived from the sale of dairy prod- ucts. This represents about two and) @ half times the annual value of the} cotton crop two and a half times the value of the beef and veal marketed,| more than three times the value of wheat harvested, and exceeds the to-! tal wholesale value of motor vehicles produced annually in the United! States and Canada. i To provide this vast national) wealth, there were 22,975,000 milk! cows on American farms in 1931. The average annual production per cow is! between 4,500 and 5,000 pounds; i. e., between 562 and 625 gallons. These} cOws represent an average value of | $00.05 per head. | It is a tremendous investment) which the American farmer has in} “old Bossy” and her sisters but one which has proved about as good as any he could have made, not to men- tion the pure-bred bulls which are being used to increase the amount of butterfat received from each pound of feed. A Thrill That Is Ever New One of the most striking things in modern life is the intense, wistful in- nate in leaders of all three classes |bride, Lillian Roth, being a stage and that were missing in the followers. /Sereen Personality, might net bee These traits were: self-confidence, | Ot ail the better affairs : at all the better affairs... finality of judgment, “drive” or lack} Now, so say the papers, a Mexican of inhibition and speed of decision. |divorce is imminent . . . Education, it seems, holds the an- mpncia : Swer tony bai as nae kas About a year agd Broadway viewed hy two men with the same/this marriage as one of the more qualities follow different paths—one!charming little romances. Lillian had to public fame and the other to pub-}made her way from obscurity into lic defamation. nieved, vaudeville, 1 fi ae the flaws of adverse environment. |igentified as a covtsin Herbert Sa Once the brilliant mind of a leader shinsky plays—almost always with folk of the| show world. About the time the pending divorce became public property, I happened to see her at a gay opening at Wood- manston Inn in the company of a well-known judge. The place was packed with Broadway's celebrities applauding Russ Colombo’s band. And since they were children of the spot-) light, the circumstance was not un- usual... | ee * A Broadway Sidelight | Then there was that afternoon last | week when the last of the red-hot! mammas sat in her hotel suite going; over some new torch numbers. Aj knock came at the door and there! stood two policemen, holding a mcst | bedraggied, frightened and hungry | FE TODAY “ANOHERey PARIS BOMBED On the night of May 21, 1918, Ger- man aviators made an air raid on Paris. Bombs were dropped in all parts of the city, causing 13 deaths and millions in property damage. Rail- roads north and northeast of Paris were also attacked, but the bombs dropped did slight damage. Russia was experiencing the hor- | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, s¢lf- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions, Address Dr. Wiljiam Brady, in care of this newspaper. MORE SALAD The benefits derived from the habit or custom of eating raw vegetables as well as raw fruits are not suffi- ciently known to the public, I judge from the frequent inquiries I receive Balsam Pillows — from readers. It seems that certain sam individuals feel a craving for eating ane ant ies preg hed | Barbs { such raw vegetables as potato, car- (Mra. C. K. R.) ° ————_—_. rots, turnips and the like, and about imaginary harm from indulg- ing the craving. They should not worry. They should enjoy the raw vegetable almost to their heart's con- tent. Man is the only animal that cooks his food. And it is not so long ago, measured in terms of evolution, that he acquired the habit. There is there- fore very little sound sense in the argument that man has become ac- customed to cooked food and cannot get along without cooking most of his food. I do not mean to advocate any fanatical or faddish dietary scheme. I want my meat very thoroughly cooked, indeed, and I simply can’t understand the taste which calls for underdone or rare meat. But I do wish to advocate more salad on more tables, and so assure the many mis- informed people who like raw things but are afraid to eat ’em, that they should indulge such appetite for the benefit of health. There is nothing in the way of a food which more deserves the name of health food than raw onions and taken with your favorite salad dress- ing it makes a dish fit to tempt Es- culapius or his daughter. Then there are lettuce, celery, to- mato, carrots, cucumber, parsley, wa- tercress, mint and several other things which may be advantageously eaten raw in salad combinations or alone. There is a taboo against feeding Taw vegetables or even raw fruits to children under 4 years of age, par- ticularly in the summer time. I am not prepared to overturn all the rul- ings laid down by the masters about this. I should feed my own young almost everything I have mentioned, but in only minute quantities at first and very carefully scraped or broken up and run through a coarse sieve to remove the coarser woody fiber which is not so readily handled by the di- gestion of an infant. As for feeding very young children raw fruit, this, too, is in my judgment a healthful and advisable practice, provided the fruit is thoroughly ripe and unques- tionably clean. such thing. Nations do not consti, tute a family. They comprise rit groups of business firms—Rear Ad. miral Bradley. A. Fiske, U. 5. Nav retired. ee Brady, M. D. The Smith-Raskob interests will dic: inee, Cannon, Jr., pecially to intestinal digestion which Church South. the roughage, the cellulose, the indi- gestible woody fiber in raw vegeta- bles and fruits give us. * pec Dey QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Methodist Epi * # % leader. Answer.—They’re as healthful as any other pillow. If one likes the fragrance, it may help to bring sleep. Eat Your Way to Coma Does excessive eating stagnate the function of the brain? I am 16 years old, have a ravenous appetite and am about 15 pounds overweight. Is it advisable for me to try to reduce?— (Evelyn J.) Answer.—Excessive eating tends to make one “dopey.” A regular girl of your age should have a ravenous ap- petite and satisfy it at regular meals with regular food. I should not ad- vise you to reduce, but maybe you can save on sundaes, candy and other odd sundries until your height and age catch up with your weight. Certainl, xe in the river when Hoover fishes, wi Street surplus be used. * * * Tight now is the inside. % % # ‘The federal farm board has de- it bought at 16 cents a pound. That reached. * From the progress being made at Geneva, it looks as if final instruc. tion to each delegate was “don’t sign anything.” the market has been * * ly Please give your instructions for overcoming habit of constipation— (W. B.C.) Answer.—Send a stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope for the instruction. Third Great Not long ago you gave a very in- teresting talk about the three great Plagues, cancer, tuberculosis and syphilis, but you failed to say any- thing about the last mentioned. Has syphilis any relation to leprosy? Is there danger if a person with syph- ilis visits a cottage where all have to use the same wash basin and towels? —(Mrs. S. S.). Answer.—The essential facts about syphilis are given in a general letter on the subject which I shall be glad to send you on receipt of your re- quest for it and a stamped self-ad- dressed envelope. Syphilis and lep- rosy have no relationship. There would be great likelihood of spread of the disease jin the circumstances you mention. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) we How could the Republican party STICKERS gage LT Ll See if you can move seven of the above matches and put them all in one pile. You're going to be surprised when you find out how easy it is to do this. Prohibition will be the main van tate the Democratic presidential nom Owen D. Young will be nomi, nated. The south will never support a wet candidate—Bishop James J, Now at 168 I’m just a shadow of my former self and I intend to stay that way—Paul Whiteman, orchestra At least they can’t blame Hoover for the recent stock market collapse . He hasn't: said prosperity was judy’ ground the corher for several months, If they ever run out of fish to ry might suggest that some of the Wail There are two sides to every ques- tion, but the side that Capone favors cided to sell 650,000 bales of cotton ought to prove that the bottom of (Copyright, 1932, NEA Setvice, Ty) looking man... . |rors of war. On this day cholera It seemed that they had found him|proke out in Astrakhan and in the about to leap from the new George Caspian sea region. This plague, al- Washington bridge into the Hudson | {hough stopped after a short period, . +. He had said he knew Sophie|took a large toll of lives. Tucker . “The war department received re- So there he was, incongruously ports that the first of the U. 8. field propped in an open doorway, saying:|armies had been organized and was “You remember, Miss Tucker, about/in service in France. The total six years ago I had a house in the!sirength of this army was about 200,- country about a block away from'¢o9 men. you...” | Sophie remembered. The cops came in, They all sat down and heard his/ ing their silos. The county now has story. He was up against it—desper-| a total of about 200 silos and it is ex- ate. Well, what did he want to do?! pected that this will be increased to : ++ He had always thought of hav-! a¢ jeast 250 by next fall. These farm- ing an ice route in the old neighbor- | ers have found silage-an excellent feed hood . . . Sophie bought him an ice | insurance policy. Morton county farmers are increas- wagon and he's in business at this 3 i noment .. « j Education will cure |>Tight lights. When she finally had Needy Stage Mothers identified as a certain Herbert So-| episode . . + +. One night, as she wasjfor ail save those who make it of xe * | And there was that Mother's day} Yes, Mother's day is over Fruit purchased in the market is|Point the finger of scorn at Tam- sometimes seriously contaminated by|many Hall if, at the same time, it jfilthy handlers or diseased handlers,|accepts the leadership of Vare? If and for that reason it must be care-|these forces write the plank on pro- fully washed if it is to be eaten raw.|hibition at Chicago, it will prove a Any excess or error in feeding a|death warrant for the party.—F. Scott | young child raw vegetable or raw|McBride, superintendent, Anti-Saloon/| fruit may cause an upset, but it does | League. { not cause any serious illness, . UE NR There are several reasons why we} The United States should beware should eat more raw food. From such |in building a militaristic machine. 'To sources we get the vitamins in their|do so is to combine the rest of the richest concentration. We need also|world against us immediately on the the mineral matter, the mineral salts,;ground of fear—Frederick J. Libby, which are furnished by raw foods, |secretary, National Council for Pre- iparticularly green stuff. Cooking ex-|vention of War. |tracts and wastes considerable of this ee % r mineral food. We need the: gentle} Family of nations? There is no|Having a cold in the head makes natural stimulus to digestion and es-|more misleading phrase, there is no} most people hot under the collar. is directed along the right path, 1,|@bout to go on, a message came back- |daily importance . . . But in certain is quick to acquire fame. stage to Lillian. Her fiance, stricken | prominent New York spots you might ;moral right to be on both those pay- | { with The Tribune's policies, itary affairs|iMg aviation at San Antonio, Tex. house committee on m: tT! van nae ine ate ceaeety ey were married not so long a! has asked Frank T. Hines, veterans lerward. And the theater folk won- administrator, to demand the resigna-|dered who this fellow Scott might be tion of William Wolff Smith, general}... They've had occasion to wonder counsel of the Veterans’ admini - ever since... tion. ithe Time and again, I've seen Mlle. . “|Roth in places where the spotlight Smith is listed on the rolls of the sk : suddenly, had died . . . Lillian went} have observed four typical mothers. TE A Ft on the stage and sang about “My);They sat at spinning wheels; they News sound and Proper jman, I loved him so”... darned socks in windows; they sat at ews dispatches late Tuesday con-| A ‘few months later she was out|their tatting—white-haired and gray- tained the information that the|in Hollywood. Young Scott was learn- | Baired, patterned after the portraits BEGIN HERE TODAY of old-fashioned mothers. Actor’s Equity found them... Four | jcharacter actresses, who hadn't had) | jobs for month on end;. . . All of| them veterans in mothers’ roles . . .} | i And all of them mothers in need . . . They each received $10 for their three \ days’ work. veteran's bureau as a war veteran en-|- titled to payment for complete dis- ability. He is listed on the salary roll of the same department for a healthy sum. It seems clear that the action of the house committee is just and reasonable. He can have no legal or HORIZONTAL 1 Talented. 5 Protuberance. 9 Oklahoma was formerly rolls. He should get off one or the They are published without regard | ' to whether they agree or disagree 17 Ringworm. 19 Regrets, ex- terest with which the average citizen follows the news of the flights of the great dirigibles. When the Akron fought her way through Texas storms recently, it was front page news; not that anyone really feared for the ship's safety, for the country is pretty well sold, nowa- days, on the stability of those giant eee ae ceedingly. “i benefice. Alfred E. Smith’s Speech 20 Bills. 38 Monkeys, 2 Twice, 30 Aye. {New York World-Telegram) 22 Party for men 39 Measure. 3 Minor note. 35 Obnoxious There is a jam in Washington be- only. 40 Snaky fish. 4Comes in. piant. cause political dickering stands in 23 Measure of 42 Reaches a 5 Puffed a pipe. 37 Arranges the way of making necessary govern- cloth, place. 6 Chaos, cloth. ment economies and passing an ade- 24 Butts to 44 Sun. 7 Work of skill, 38 Reluctant, quate tax bill. Leaders of both par- shoot at. 45 Long grass. 8 Gray. 39 Monk's cowl. j ties sidetrack the program by indulg- 26To make a 47 Rescues. 9 Genius of herbs, 42 Dress. ing in by-play, both sides with their Bae ray 48 Cry of anowl, _9 Genus of herbs. 43 vy oiow bugle eyes on the party conventions 8] 97 Fourth note, 49 Notions. 10 Christmas plant. month hence. 28 Sables, 51 Nominal value. carol. 44 To! classity - Tite we atuation ine pines Pe 29 Cart. 52 Lost to view. 12To put upa 46 Moist. mith, usual Iness he . 53 To grin. ker stake. 48 Fl ‘ 31 ith note. poker si . lock. throws off party considerations and 32 Boren note. 55 Blouse, 13 Twelve 50 Title of eppesis ioe. hipeaNaacaies 2 the 33 Newspaper 57 Was suc- months (Pl.). courtesy. to a ae ab Neoadant oan ms paragraph. cessful. 16 Joker 52 Pastry. eliminate waste by consolidating bu- 34 Northwest. VERTICAL 18 One of the 54 Behold, reaus—the man 10 happens to rep- 36 Employed. main indus _56 Hour; (Abbr.). resent the party he opposes and who defeated him for the presidency. “I believe,” says Mr. Smith, “it is the patriotic duty of every member of congress from now until adjourn- ment to discourage and avoid all Oklahoma Questions Answer to Previous Puzzle RIE PIUS I It IC] OM SIL IETS) TH EAT AICI ME URIAIRIE | TOIL Rie other or cise his disability payments known as the LI ,) homa is in should be scaled down. —Territory? [NIFIAMOUSEMANY| the ——? ——— - 11Who is the JOSMETIOWUITMBTIOIL IAMESIE} 20 Sells. Editorial Comment || — sevemor ct AAPL MMPI NIEIE SS) 2° The Stare Suir artes betes soon aati] Menem. py 74 centers li i 1511. Oklahoma, tries of Oklakoma, 19 Chief manu- facturing ine dustry of Okla- LIZ AMOR PIORIe MEAIT IBIUNKIBADIO SILI} E] 25 Satiates, } 28 Feudai theater. CHAPTER XXXVIII Heath drifted down the aisle the theater. turned to look at the tall girl fur. for her aunt's return. Now, so beautiful! She had a look race about her, “You like it?” “Oh, so much!” The color ca! up in her cheeks and her eyes we! BY_ MABEL. McE NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY mee curtain had risen on the first act when Susan and Ernest More than one head the regally simple wrap of brown There were one or two whis- pers as Heath was recognized. He had forgotten his original caution and desire to avoid publicity in his eagerness to take Susan about. Al- thought impatient for the marriage to take place he had agreed to wait conscious of the craned necks and the whispers, he felt only a glow of pride. The girl was Susan leaned forward absorbed in the play, and the man watched her with interest. It was not until the curtain dropped again and the lights came on that Susan drew a deep breath and returned to reality. LLIOTT of the fair-haired young man whose head was turned away from her. Try as she might, she could not take her eyes away. As though impelled by Susan’s gaze the man turned and stared at her, For the fraction of an instant something quivered between them. Then the girl inclined her head with dignity and looked swiftly away. Her pulses were racing now. This was just as she had dreamed. “Someone you know?” Heath asked curiously, noting the quality of her bow, Susan never knew how she an- swered him, She was fighting des- Perately for control, All her hard won defenses seemed shattered by this encounter. ° . MEANTIME, in the box another little drama was being enacted. The bright haired girl in black had followed the direction of Bob Dun- bar’s glance and had seen him flush, She laughed coolly. “Oh—ho, your little friend turns up again!” she said. “Who's that with-her?” Denise leaned forward, frankly staring. At the glimpse of Heath’s aristocratic profile she whistled softly. “As I live and breath,” she muttered, “she’s bagged Old Propriety himsel: She saw Bob's spine stiffen and return with zest to the attack. “Look what she’s ‘vearing,” she said, enjoying herself thoroughly now, “Sables! Mother said when she was in Ma- dame Elsa’s the other day the talk was that old Heath had a girl around town now.” Fiercely Bob interrupted her, “Don’t be a fool,” he said. “You know Susan Carey isn’t that kind.” Denise shrugged. “You know more about her than I do, Smarty.” She turned her attention to the other member of the party, a youth who looked like a professional of in of me ry ©1932 BY NEA SERVICE to treasure. But now he had gone|dream. Nevertheless he had to see = and she would not see him. . |her, That glimpse of her pearl-pale = 5 face through crowded aisles had wet had happened was this.| been tantalizing. He did not mean Denise and the Spanish youth|to speak to her. He ouly wanted had seen the play before and Bob,|to stand close enough to see the who was raging in his heart at the|downward flicker of those long conversation touching Susan, was|lashes, and perhaps to hear the quite ready to concur in their pro-|sound of her voice. It was odd posal to go on some place and|how well he remembered every- dance. He wanted overwhelmingly |thing about this girl. She had a to hurt someone. Since he could/little trick of catching her lower not hurt Susan he turned the bat- tery of his sarcastic fury upon his two companions, Denise ordered the taxi driver to stop. “Look here, if you don’t like us you know what you can do,” she said cradely. “Bobby’s in a beast of a temper,” she explained to the other man. “I stepped on his pet corn and he‘ doesn’t like it. Rico and I want to go places and have her do that. He wanted to look into her eyes again and determine whether they were gray or black, It tormented him not:to know. cee M het Play was over at last. An attendant came out and hooked the doors open and people drifted ‘out in twos and threes. Where was she? Had she, too, tired of the comedy and left before , it was over? Dunbar’s anger ae pate tpt aeg *helturned to apprehension now. He bowed absently to two or three dow- Bob bowed low to her. “That's all right with me,” he said -elabo- rately. “That's fine.” The door slammed after him. “If I didn’t Know he hadn’t had a drop I'd say he was drunk,” Denise muttered, peering after Dun- bar as he sauntered down the street. She was hot far from right. The young man was drunk with fury and despair, Passers-by turned to stare at the tall, hatless youth in evening clothes. One or two timid women scuttled anxiously in the direction of a policeman’s booth after he passed. His eyes were wild and he was talking to himeelf, Y ‘Without consciously directing his course he turned his steps toward the theater he had just left. The night was sharply.cold but he was not aware of it, As he swung along he discovered that he was carrying &n object in the curve of his arm. He examined it and found it was his opera hat. He laughed sudden- agers waiting fér their car. Where was she? He had searched for her for weeks and here she had been all the time, playing around with this older man—this man in whose employ she had been. His mouth At last he caught & glimpse of her through the crowd. In that sumptuous wrap of petal soft fur Susan looked the veriest young ° princess. He might plunge through the crowd to seize her and carry her away as a bandit prince. He might do that—but he wouldn’t. If she preferred this sort of thing she could have it. Remembering that night in the lane and her appeal for Heath’s protection, Dunbar's mind wandered along in dark Morasses, Jt was all #0 plain to him now. He had been wrong about her from the start. ‘ The girl looked cool and com. i posed as-he watched her. Heath @| handed her into the car with a de | lip in her teeth. He wanted to see 4 2 blocs, cabals, insurgencies and mug- “Don't ” tango dancer. jy and sailed the thing into the|cidedly proprietary air, “% ~ an element of drama in the affair] wump tactics by whatever name they SST, Dee Tee During the second interval Susan| middle of the street where it lay|. “Damn him!” muttered the ‘boy, i He 4hat no one could overlook. are called, which bedevil legislation, Britten ee Sil right, onty Ai} {Ree determinedly kept her eyes away|0n the car tracks. in the shadow. - “a Flying, in itself, is an old story by| iMerease the depression, unsettle bus- ie POT Os nee alee from the box, but just as the lights} As he neared the buflding his} The car began to slide away and i Children iness and endanger our credit at “They may to you but I've never | went off, quite against her will, her|steps quickened. The pavement |Dunbar woke to life, ‘The pain | stl at play ‘no longer) home and abroad.” seen one before and I think it’s| eyes flashed in that direction. The| was deserted. Perhaps the play|throbbed in his breast. He was -a! look up when an airplane soars over-| Mr. Smith attacked the cash bonus wonderful,” she confided with ®/pox was empty. They had gone.|was over and Susan had gone. Ah,|losing her again—he might never - head. Ocean flights are taken for} proposal and favored a beer tax, an * happy little laugh, The world suddenly went gray.| that, was it! He kuew now why he|see her— , f gfanted, and the men who perform] extension of the war gebt morato- & ., Susaa loosened “her. wrap and| What she had expected she scarcely |had come back. It was fora glimpse! He began to run. * i them get only a thin and unenduring| "@@, Publie works, unemployment are a ck leaned back, looking about her for|knew. Perhaps she had. hoped|of her, of the girl he had enshrined.| “Susan, Susan,” he called, y ‘them get only 8 thin and unenduring| reiet and 2 sales tax awl AEB we the first time. As by magnet her| against ‘hope: that as the well-| “Hnshrined! That's good!” he| ‘The policeman directing trame il bs ‘While we Veg with one or two aS F re gaze was drawn to a little group in| dressed throngs milled out into the|barked aloud, frightening an old|took the young man by the arm. #j ig caine Respond irae © ae cole ole rarrapmg Pardue aw wi waz the box just to the left. Irresistibly|foyer her shoulder might brush|cleaning woman who was trotting|Bob began to lsugh mirthlessly, i meme while fo (cll. bis friends shout | |§ Crees ee eeatine Lathe |e her eyes clung to the three people|against Bob's, He would look up|along homeward, He had thought|“It’s all right,” he told the officer, it afterward? — Pd apr ore Aaah P| balancing on the little gilt chaire.|and smile, Perhaps he would shake|Susan everything that was good|“It’s all right” He shook off the — ; But the dirigible, somehow, is| Cictesrmananin ‘in "Weekiagiy ahst Surely she knew that girl in black,|hands, She would.give everything|and, pure, In an age when young] detaining hand. i: something else again. rises above partisanship, Alfred with her bright hair combed de-|she owned a6 this instant to slip|men scorned ideals he had built} “Too much bad gin,” the police Smith, in his courage and candor, E Murely back from @ brow of ca-|her tingling palm ‘into the grip of|one about this girl. . man said to himself, watching the Rerhege 3 te the shoot. eine of ss | eee ehinely gifterent from the ceowd . Mmellia whiteness, Sustn's.heart|bis strong fingers. It would be| Manlike, he felt ow that he| “young swell” atride tato tho night. thing that gives it its appeal. The! (, politicians which af- . Dlunged as she realised the identity | something to remember, ‘something | hated her for having deatroyed his + (Te Be Continued) . airplane, after ail, i eesentialy bird-| Picks both: pasties and the county,