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Dakota ... - 600| Everyone who drives an automo- With Lil's spangled gowns tucked or ‘Lightner his | co ’ ~|bile and many persons who do not plain ‘Gane hee aio ny Jeeta ben tibupe nal ee forth. He trouped | c ' eekly by mail tn stare, per year $1.00/may well take heed of the amazing ment’ she is penning a vaudeville act | With and was a close personal friend eed d safety record established by Ameri- which Harry Richman may use when|f Houdini and Thurston, the ma-| Weekly by mail outside of North can railroads in 1931. bai two-a-day vaudeville back] 8! eee | a Dakota, per year ...........65 1.50] Fy 1 vailabl way. ing, . . i (Weekly by mail in Canada, per lth eae nee Beli 9 chk It will be, one hears, something of| Immediately upon ae ps | ut of the above eight letters, see if bcp *F 4.00 {that only four passengers lost their ® dramatization of herself with the )¢ins prowling about | | you can form two four-letter words that, HES aided : lives in railroad accidents during the birth and reappearance of Diamond | 2nd the side-show aera sing | ‘When spelled backwards, will make two j Member of Audit Bureau of year. This was one to each 150,093,- Lil as part of the theme, Hol aire aie ser Wak. He| | other four-letter words, 4 Circulation !000 passengers. Incidentally, the av- When in Ne age ok ‘Miss ‘West hides Ether all eet of people and scenes, | i 3) jerage distance traveled was 36.72 ihe ta Ket and regales the home town folks) —— Member of The Associated Press | away either in a Park Avenue apart- vate show. The Associated Press is exclusively | Miles. ment or a hotel suite on the fringe | months after with a puivile sare or-| FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: atitled to the use for republication| On the North Coast Limited, crack of Broadway. She is rarely seen in] And he's secretary 0! "AEG. U. §, PAT.OFF. | } iS the anization, “the Amalgamated Order p bof all news dispatches credited to it/train of one of the railroads serving her want ke a chara ey in ¥ eae of Defunct City Fathers,” started by f 1 :. vapaper ay also the local cavnot [this city, not a passenger has been dives, yet insists she's never been in ‘Will Rogers after his politican career ' spontaneous origin published herein, | Killed in more than 30 years of oper- one. On one of the few occasions I| 88 mayor of Beverley Hills, Cal. All rights of republication of all other |ation. have seen her mingling with the city ee tuat Aba matter herein are also reserved. It may be unfair to compare auto- Seth bans Chetad booed pat friatht ne aproatwny tele se es errr mobiles with railroads in point of Taking Miss West at her word—she | that Paul Whiteman having reduced, 4 ce Wena CoN |eatety but there is cio denying that is a retiring person; it bothers her to|no longer hides the bands that feed ne -|the same factors which contribute to be pointed out as a celebrity; she has | him. ; Foreign Representatives safety on railroads could also make coeur pol vitae Smee 4 = % Baer rninrocrete soe jhighway travel much safer than it found time for macnn: etree ey pied TODAY . ™ oHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON |‘: These rules are easy to follow. neighbors have difficulty associating 1S THE -~ X } e ¢ \Everyone agrees that every normally a with ee sean She plays; is RLD 3 /AR he jintelligent person should follow them always wor! on @ new play, though t § War Songs ' frequently never finishes them; has a } § Seta every Pucliancapentdng | a matter of course and this makes faultless score for success: sincerely AN IVE ARY Hi } coldier in the World War knew about |‘M® mounting toll of highway acci- believes the public wants sex on the . } ction’ |dents a more scathing indictment stage and wants it to be frank; likes / . * Mademoiselle from Armentieres. | = 4 he Bismarck Tribune an dent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune , Bismarck, N. D., and en- ered at the postoffice at Bismarck as cond class mail matter. line; and presently, as the smoke cloud lifted, the Germans saw before them the high tripod masts of the 28 battleships of the British grand fleet. Another panorama! Then, late at night, the third; the Germans running home, darkness on the water, the only lights the winking flashes from the guns, extending all » GEORGE D. MANN President and Publishe along the horizon, as two of the (greatest fleets ever built struck at = Or ditties eee jone another in the dark. Dally by carrier, per year ......$7.20| Three great spectacles—and Von daily nd mail per year (in Bis- ao | Hpper Played a leading role in all marc! Daily by mail per year (in state e — outside Bismarck) 5.00 | Daily by mail outside of North | _ Safety on the Railroads every year. eee Seow tier, thet ts 8 Ry, th)” wet ace these thoture? _fHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1932 Headwork! WITHOUT THE DIAMONDS New York, June 13—Ne scarlet- tinted boudoir frames that gem-drip- Ping, hard-boiled jade, “Diamond Lil.” Instead, you'll find Mae West, who wrote, acted, fought and served time for her trollopy types, hard at work in a neat Long Island country place. to garden—and does; has been on the Stage since the age of six! with the name some time passed before of its authorship was solved. ‘When in the creative throes, rises at 4:30 in the morning, respects to the sun, wakes up Wi cup of black coffee—sel begins his wae oe PILGRIMAGE Once a year, Od 2000 souls, goes down en masse to the “Barry Vail,” and, fighting on the whole was unfavorable the mystery! for them. American marines repelled a dese hejperate accack on Bouresches by the pays his;crack German Fifth Guard division, ith aj inflicting heavy losses. lf made—and | third such attack which had been re+ pulsed in less than a week. It was the HOMES OF STEEL esse, of| More than 50 different methods of ety | utilizing steel in home-building were home town depot to see its pin-sized descrikyd by Fred T. Llewellyn of the off for New| U. S. Steei Corporation at a recers mayor, Joseph Lightner, "hhe| meeting of the Small-House Forum. York. “And I pay my own fare, hurriedly adds, with a glance at New ast Seany pert sua mayo! r nearly twen' ed "Ths “pligeimage is _& hang-over | from @ youth spent in the show busi- | ness. After going out with a tent) FRENCE. FORCED BACK the |New methods of wall and floor con- ‘He's been struction were forecast. STICKERS On June 13, 1918, German shock di- visions operating near Noyon in the Marne salient resumed their hammer- ing at French lines and forced a with- drawal south of that city. song. For the most famous of all! 4 “war songs, beyond a doubt, was that 3. highly improper ballad which had All of which is a far cry from “Dia- wi th t in 10 or 15 sheets of eKouper a mond Lil.” newspaper and cover with a heavy towel or small blanket. Let stand on wooden surface over night. In the morning the cereal will be well cooked and still warm. (Mrs. F. F.) Answer—Thank you. Good sense and good economy. (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) Use the Want Ads The answer is, first of all, recogni- tion of the fact that danger always is lying i vary. - BW catoh-line, “Hinky-dinky parter- ying in wait for the unwary. Sec. ond, observance o: s yous,” which told of the adventures | 0°" f the rules of the | In at least 90 per cent of the cases, |highway fatalities are an indictment Of someone's common sense. xe OK ad NO GARRET FOR HIM Speaking of writers and such, the name of John Barry Ryan pops into the prints again in connection with the law suit of a Fifth Avenue jeweler. America has no richer poet. Heir to the $29,000,000 of Thomas Fortune Ryan, the son brought out a book of PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- 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. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Boy f{ . of this fabled damsel from Armen- + -ieres. Mademoiselle herself remained. 2‘ shrouded in mystery, until just the German official bulletins again claimed that the French troops had been “crushed” and claimed more than 30,000 prisoners in the previous week's fighting. French —_counter-attacks gained| The retiring girl is not neccessar- sther day; and then an American Rew ansic eure we verses about a year ago. He signed it ground in some sections, but the day's ily shy. : mg a | AQ 4 KC Rr—X——————_—_—:?}-.... agus Fe pompover, who is in France making @| “one of the oldest jokes in America| HONEST FOLKS SWEAT BUT NO-|clans who perpetrate a diagnosis of : study of World War songs, announced lea Te HE H a in America BODY EVER PERSPIRES “ptomain poisoning” from time to » that he had found out some things|*S the one that tells how the poor Why don't you. write a book and| time, which serves as well as a “heavy yjcandidate for Congress has to go fi eee ey and cae a a rea his district kissing the babies| title it “No Such Thing”? a corre- enero 0, Dellig: fea a |spondent inquires. Such a book by j There was a cafe at Armentieres,/°f his prospective constituents. And| you would make cntertaining reading. it seems, and mademoiselle worked|!t has always been taken for granted/ And honestly I don’t know whether there. She was a very proper young that this was very hard on the candi-|the correspondent is serious or just i i x date. | sarcastic. a ee es Cetera GUERIN | Aue otter ate ; It does seem as tho I am forever ing familiarities with her, got his! ne other side of the picture asserting there is no such thing as a face roundly slapped; and at a regi-|°#Me to light the other day, in a lit-|cold, rheumatism, nervous breakdown, : mental sing a few nights later some | #e dispatch from a North Carolina| indigestion, etc., etc., but if so, I be- jtown, There, it ve lieve it is necessary, for we must re- inspired songster introduced a ditty) OVD. There, it seems, several babies| ober that the most prevalent ail- dealing with the incident. have come down with such afflic- | And that, it seems, was the start of #0ns as chicken pox and plain old- cold” does to soothe the anxiety of the public until the real nature of the ill- ness becomes evident. I did not include acidosis in the list because acidosis can happen in the course of certain illnesses, tho only @s a consequence of diseases and never as the cause of it. Unquestionably a large number of People who complacently feel they know something about these health or medical matters would debate one or another of these questions with me or any other doctor or expert who might agree with me. Proverbially it is only BEGIN HERE TODAY CHERRY DIXO! tells her mother a ment in this country is Billings com- Plaint—people knowing so many 1! Cherry goes wi ih hi it; and the anecdote leads one ioped itech—and their Parents things about health and pathology ! tho ignorant who despise education. = eikaen aan muse about soldiers’ songs, and to|lame it on the politicians, saying that | Which ain't so. This applies with special force to} Aeadyuavions: The correspondent was prompted to ake the suggestion when he read an article in which I said that no one ever perspires. Of course, I meant takes her to a doc- He ts* her arm, D: tor's office trying to e: pened when Dixon is very angry and dishes a newspi Cherry's pleture popular ignorance of physiology and| hygiene. It is chiefly because of uni-j versal popular ignorance of human i, | anatomy and ysiology that belief it that no one breathes thru the skin. | Sbsorption ele hk to | wonder how they. originate, and what the children were all right until they | m: it takes to set fighting men chanting |8°t Kissed by campaigning candidates, * the same chorus. All of which gives one pause. The} n " " 2 js | bAby-kissing custom is a bit hard eee mena ae enalistcn uae but aia Sometimes a charlatan finds it con-| esc" ' ditty about the girl from Armentieres. | 4 Q 3 edly; but did! venient or necessary to have his dupes \ But what did other soldiers in other |¥0U ¢ver stop to think what a tough |imagine the skin breathes, as this UESTIONS AND ANSW! i wars sing? They sang sonzs from/|Dreak it is for the babies? ends color to his explanation of ill-| QUESTIONS AN! — | Ptiein, halls, ot oe ae t they: had| — ness or the way his method of treat- Fishskin | 5 d f ut y a Sa ment “purifies the system” or some| A cream or ointment you recom- | their own special songs, too, and |such hocus-pocus. But physiologists | mended for one of our girls has com-! those songs never got in the anthol- have never discovered any evidence | pletely relieved her of “fishskin.” I/ ogies, and they have been forgotten. ree ete below show the | |that the skin can absorb ae es oe tH too, and I ie 2 aa sf “ “4 5 tr tl ht bi; hi ditors. i it ii ay 1 " had a ribald song about a girl named|| t Whether they agree or disagree || ‘ Lalage, who doubtless was a prototype A lady whose credulity is amazing, jin view of her evident general intelli- | beefsteak, calling it “fishskin” when of this Armentieres charmer; and it | would be worth a good deal to know gence, cited a number of proofs that I might have called it ichthyosis and the skin absorbs things, among them | charged $10 for the prescription. Many how the song went, and what its tune (New York Times) was. Mr. John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s letter a notorious nostrum which she in-|young women have the rough scaly formed me has been used for many /|sallow dry patches of skin especially ‘ Men who march off to fight must | to President Butler approving his res- sing. They will sing everything and} ution for submitting to conventions le orders Dan Days pass in mo word from which Cherry Dan. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VI i entered the room breath- lessly and shut the door behind her. Her round eyes foretold ex- citement. : The girl on the chaise longue did not turn. Her peach colored negli- gee pulled about the slender figure molded it gracefully. On her feet were small gold strapped sandals, “What is it, Sarah?” “Sh, darling! Wait till I tell Editorial Comment Answer—That's where I made my| i with The Tribune's policies, Mr. Rockefeller for Repeal j years as a salve applied on the surface | over the elbows and knees. The less for the cure of whatever the victim|soap and water the better for such | might happen to have. The lady|trouble. Only oil for cleansing the | otic pieces which the stay-at-homes| Eighteenth Amendment has a deep |for many years as a cure for rheu-/|Lanolin .. .2 drams somebody'll pay for it! Out and like; and usually they evolve their cen iipenper aan is likely to have a mote ia as POG See es oe sie Leran out falsifyin’ and there's blacker + Powerful influence. Mr. Rockefeller’s shoul writ @ book ent nzoinated lard, enough to make one o t saa ors, ae See [ood life and works, his sincerity, his | “No Such Thing” I should include in] ounce. f worst could use, It's not right ae © Gie—at Ypres, or Chick-| modesty, his devotion to and constant | it a chapter enumerating things which | If the benzoinated lard is fresh and at all. | amauga, or Waterloo, or Saratoga, or jaid of all good causes have placed him {do not account for illness, and among |a good grade of lanolin is used, the “What isn’t right at all? What's | |! wherever it may be; and all we get is | beyond suspicion and above envy. Pro-| these things I shall include over- | druggist will turn out a fine cream. happened?” ’ *a tantalizing reminder that some-| hibition long appeared to him a good} work, run down condition, nervous- | It is most economically dispensed in a . Some flesh-and-blood figure like this ‘(mysterious girl from Armentieres, i anything, except the pompous patri- of the people in the several States a Proposal for the repeal of the cause. He hoped that it would ad- vance temperance and be sustained by public opinion. Both he and his father were contributors to the Anti- | Saloon League before the passage of | ; ’ | the amendment, though in reasonable The avon Hipper’s Part Vou. | amounts, far from the fantastic math- | 3 ati gend. Hipper died in Germany the other | "His ones ene | where back of each song there was were disappointed, as) |dark meat, ptomains, verdigris, rust, might as logically say that a horse|skin. This recipe is beneficial: chestnut in the pocket has been used | Salicylic acid +++ 10 grams ness, indigestion, biliousness, night air, dampness, drafts, change of weather, climate, season, your age, tomatoes, acid fruits, wrong combinations of foods (whatever they may be), teeth- ng, open winter, hard water, red or collapsible tube. Apply to the affected patches of skin a pea-size quantity of the cream once a day. Save Your Fuel and Enjoy Your Cereal Maybe this suggestion will help to save fuel. We learned this in the hard times we had in Germany. Put your cereal on with less water or milk than green apples, cucumbers, proximity to putrefying animal or vegetable mat- you. It’s not right, it isn't, and Again old Sarah put a warning finger to her lips. “Not so loud,” she cautioned, lowering her tone. Cherry was sitting bold upright now. Impatiently she caught the woman’s hands. “But tell me what’s happened!” sho begged. “You're so sweet, Cherry,” Dan whispered. blame him?” she asked. “Young the sewing room and if anyone in- “Then you mean it wasn’t because day failed to get more than a para- | those of millions of others have been. ter, autointoxication, vague “impuri- | usual. Let it boil 5 or 10 minutes but Sarah sat down beside the girl.| fellows don’t like to be put off.|quired for Cherry to say the girl|you didn’t want to see me? You graph or two in most American news-|He has watched the workings of pro- Lee eee in the system” and high pie Sores. on tua a a ti ona “Well, then,” she said, plunging | They were that way in my day and | was asleep in her bedroom. weren’t just stalling?” papers. And that, in a way, was | hibition for twelve years. The aboli- | blood pressure. , |e he pot. Any small pot w into her narrative, “I was looking |! guess there's not much difference! Tho plan proved flawless. Within| “No, Dan, of course not. How rather odd; for Admiral Von Eppes |ueuson ena a bees There are still extant a few physi-!a tight fitting cover will do. Then for Martha to ask if the package|It’s too bad, honey, but we can't /five minutes Cherry had reached|could you think that! Oh, I've So ‘was a leading actor in some of the | arisen, “evils which unless promptly few really spectacular, panoramic |Checked are likely to lead to condi- seenes that the World War afforded, |tions unspeakably worse than those | [eee | which prevailed befor wasn't long on! “Drinking generally has increased; | Pictorial effects. Its battles were the speakeasy has replaced the saloon, THIS CURIOUS WORLD had come from Wendells’ and just as I stepped in the hall I heard Martha talkin’ on the library tele- phone, So I waited until she fin- ished. ‘No sir,’ Martha says, ‘Miss Cherry ain't at. home and I don’t help it.” Suddenly Cherry had sprung to her feet. “I will help it!” she exclaimed. “They can’t do this to me—they can’t!” She stamped one of the the highway and was out of sight of the house, She walked the three blocks to the tiny drug store that exclusive Sherwood Heights not only tolerated but found invaluable, There she made two telephone been so miserable, so unhappy—" eee i hay words were lost in a sob. Cherry had turned her face away. “You mustn't,” Phillips said too big, its operations too extended; | not only unit for unit, but probabl; know when she will be, She's gone | small gold heels. “They've no right calls. One was to Dan Phillips at/ gently. “You mustn't feel Ih 4 ig, perati extended pees ia if i eaeae cena: = t ol to. New York.’ That's what she/to tell lies and keep messages from |the News office. The other was to any loi Pi ead { one man could seldom see more than | ‘old, if not ee-fold; a vast army , . prides , 4 y longer, lease, Cherry—look lia deta = A | of lawbreakers has been recruited and | says—it’s God’s truth! ‘She's gone|me. I’m not a child any longer. |a taxicab company. at me!” | | detail of the whole; such tremend- | financed on a colossal scale: many of to New York.’ So when she put|I’m 19—!” Half an hour later the cab halted! ‘There was a long pause and then 4 i ‘ous fights as the Somme or Verdun our best citizens, piqued at what they were too vast for any panorama. | regarded as an infringement of their But there were a few great spec-! Private rights, have openly and un- tacles, and this Von Hipper had his | bashed disregarded the Eighteenth Amendment; as an inevitable result Part in one of the greatest—the bat- respect for all law has been greatly tle of Jutland. lessened; crime has increased to an down the telephone I said, ‘Martha, who is it you're tellin’ such un- truths to and ain't you ashamed of yourself?’ “Martha came back at me and said she guessed it was her duty to Sarah’s protests were useless. They fell on deaf ears, Repeatedly she warned the girl that revolt was futile. Defiance of Walter J. Dix- on’s orders was heresy. It was sheer madness! The words might as well at a downtown street intersection, Cherry’s face appeared, peering through tho glass, and a tall young man clad in a gray suit strode out from the curb. He entered the cab. “Ob, Dan, I was so afraid I'd slowly, hesitantly, the girl turned her head. “Dan!” “You darling!” She was in his arms, the velvet softness of her warm cheek pressed do what Mrs. Di: miss you!” The girl's face was "1 _ _ This took place on May 31, 1916. unisecedenie’ Ce esinwig anal business ol catae clas as pee bere sa riey ye glowing, her eyes star-bright. Tidhet tain Senate nA ae || The German high seas fleet had ven- paliieate ote oe bation Se tae terferin’? Well, a few words passed |all at once a whirlwind, She flew|, <Ullips did not smile. “Well,”| “you're so sweet, Cherry,” he Vs tured out into the North Sea, and yielded his original convictions to the Hipper, commanding the evidence. The experiment which he west was the British grand fleet, pre- ceded by th battle cruiser squadron wished so well has failed. He has no pride of opinion. This simple, honest manly letter mirrors his intellectual and moral integrity. Here is a witness for repeal who cannot be discredited. between us and do you know what I found out? It was that young newspaper fellow, Phillips—” “Dan!” Cherry’s eyes were flash- ing. “Then he did call!” “Yes, and not just this one time neither. After I'd learned that about the rvom, pulling garments from hangers—a dress over her head, stocking, slippers. Sarah fol- lowed patiently, helping with fast- eners, “But what are you going to do?” he said evenly, “this is quite a sur- Prise. I couldn't understand over the phone exactly what it was you were saying, Wasn't sure whether you said Fifth or Sixth street—” “Aren't you glad to see me?” The words burst from Cherry’s lips un- whispered, catching her close again. “Then—you do care?” “But didn’t you know? You must have! Oh, Cherry, these last three days have been rotten! I’ve been worried about you. Kept telephon- f rst fro1 ing but I couldn't get any satistac- | under Admiral Beatty. It was Beatty | He is a hereditary and a lifelong tee- much Martha warmed up and ad- ee gue again. “Where are you bidden, ‘Didn't you want me tol|tion. After a while 1 began to \ ' and Von Hipper who collided first, |totaler. He is great philanthropic mitted he’s been telephonin’ the come? think maybe you didn’t want to a ‘The battle that followed furnished, and religious leader. His turning away house every day. Your motiier|, Cherry pulled the brown felt over| “why, yes, Of course. Only it's|talk to me. Couldn't really blame from prohibition to temperance is likely to have a far-reaching effect upon the churches that have been in Teally, three “pictures.” ‘The first came when Von Hipper, wouldn't let Martha say anything about it and this morning she said it he called again Martha was to “Now , “I’m going to find Dan. I'm going to tell him I quite a surprise because I under stood you'd gone east. New York or some place,” you—but after the things your father sald—”" It was at that moment that the turning south, tried to lure Beatty| the main Front pe eee Fig. tottering tell him you’d gone to New York.” | haven't gone away and all the other! «put that's why I came, Dan! |taxi driver decided he had endured, i | Back into the jaws of the high seas| “fee of prohibition, “Oh, but Sarah—1” things they told him were untfue./cney didn't tell me you'd called, 1|enough. For several minutes ine i fleet. A running fight ensued—and| ons of earnest, consecrated people” T know, darlin’. It's a biack |Now here's how you're to help waited and waited expecting toleab had been held up by trafho alg. { | then, his fragile battle cruisers racing| who. worked to put the Bighteenth ene bond id alle i ss aie sans SE, hear from you and there weren't ne Now the red light was glow- mander | Amendment Constitution wiil 8 you'd be findin’ any letters and you didn’t tele i a ee now “support practical mensues for anywhere, too. It’s your father ‘THE conspiracy was planned phone! It was just this afternoon| “Say,” he said in a tone not to be } [} suddenly saw smoke on the horizon | 1° tion of genitine ¢ q that’s behind it, Still in a temper| + ‘quickly. Sarab, her white face|I found out they hadn't been.giving |{gnored, “where do you people want \ fr to the south, and made out, pres-| ance.” His letter was properly ad- ebout what happened the other/an open revelation, made a-recon-|me your messages, Sarah—she’s|to go?” & ‘ jently, the 22 dreadnaughts of the | dressed to Dr. Butler, that elder sol- afternoon. in qe, | BOltering expedition to the first|the mald—found out they'd’ told p “Anywhere.” Dan told big. i German fleet steaming straight to- | dier who stood up so long and valiant- ‘But, Sarab, {f Dan think’s I've |foor. She returned to report that|you I’d gone away, Oh, it was|"Drive—er, drive out through Jet- ‘ward him, Here, surely, was one of |!¥ for genuine temperance while the gone to New York he won't call| Mrs, Dixon was busy with callers.| wicked of them! And I was so|ferson Park.” the great p ER, aa of the politicians of both parties were lick- any more! Maybe he'll think {| Martha was on duty in the front of afraid you'd think 1 didn’t want to| The cab moved forward, Cherry’s i War yy [mms_ the boots of the Anti-Saloon didn’t want to see him—mayhe he'll | the house but Cherry could escape | talk to you! You didn’t think that,|head nestled comfortably against i) ‘The second was Bal Beatty League; but it makes “mighty inter- blame me—!” unnoticed, by descending the rear|did you, Dan? You couldn't!” Dan’s shoulder. His arm was about } Row fled north, with thie entire Ger- |estin’ readin’” for President Hoover. HERES: bet seg, Oe ssalragen ane soing ats Haroun the en, I've called » dozen times! ae Neither realized how time was ‘man fleet in pursuit. There was vi- A woman n agree | door that led to the jen. 8 | Every day—" passing. olent fighting at the head of the |in renee, pare 4 48 whitened ing soberly, “Amd what's to|furtfer part was to busy herself in! “They didn’t tell me!” (To Be Continued)