The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 22, 1932, Page 6

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aaa ‘ . 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 a: second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bis. $7.20 marck) nes 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North POMOC CMs ic te cs ncda sins, 6.00 Weekly by mail in s Weekly by mail in years .... Weekly by ms ave, per year $1.00 three issteas a le of North 01 Dakota, per yen - ae 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Pre: entitled to the use for of all news dispatches c or not otherwise credit newspaper and also the spontaneous origin publi All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER ated) y YORK BOSTON 0. B. Conso' as been said th: $ just as much in belie one’s country in a depression : Few will fighting for it in a wa dispute this statement, difficult though it be to give it practical plication; for it is in some r harder to overcome a de many of whose elements are invisi- ion, ble, intangible and incalculable, than | to overthrow the armed forces of a visible foe, whose numbers and re- sources are known. A depression has its casualties no less than w like war, it enta’ sac rifice and suffering, from which no, class is exempt. In fact, a depres-| sion is @ kind of war in which we \ are all enlisted “for the duration,”|| whether we will or not. It is up to|! morale. | us to play our part and do our d as good soldiers One of the first essentials i A spirit of defeatism at this time is as dangerous as it would have been in 1917-18. To give way to panic or; despair would be the surest means of precipitating the very disaster we are trying to avoid. Nor is there just ground for such an attitude. When | { we remember the optimism that was rampant only a few 30, when confidence in a never-ending pros- Perity was unbounded, and when we realize—as we now do—how u ranted such a state of mind was, does not this suggest at least the pos- Sibility that the opposite state of mind may be equally unwarranted? True, we have lost much, but Wwe | mis have much more left, and what we'tion or repeal.” have left is far more important than what we have lost. We have sut fered no catastrophe of nature; we) amendment. That is a party pl issues whi evasion of a national issue thwarts representative governme: have not been stricken by earthquak famine or pestilence. Our mines, railroads and factories are still intact. Indeed, so far as our| ing in help for ay end of the white h |strive toward better things, we will! make better progress if we keep our ifeet on the ground. Safety on the Fourth | The approach of the Fourth of! July is a reminder that the old cam-{ paign for a “safe and sane Fourth," | [inaugurated years ago to check the| irising toll of fireworks casualties, | needs to be emphasized this year just | as much as ever. | To be sure, the, toll taken by the | fire and the other explosives | has been vastly reduced in recent} years. But people seem to have got areful in that respect only to get more @areless in other ways | forem< utomobile. It is just as] ce at July 4 will bring a long | list of traffic fatalities as it is that] the day r July 4 will be July 6.] The holiday will jam the highw and a lot of peopie will be killed. — | » holiday will also send a lot of to the water, and there will nings. There icnts in connection wilh nie bonfir of course, do many dr be ace | il be—but | old cam ds much as it ever did go on T y on the F \ Forward Step The giant dirigible Akron and her the Macon, now under y be the mo spec- the lighter-than-air ition field has to offer; but there is being established now at} Akron, O., a thing which mi ¢ infinitely r | i transy yet | Valuable to the | use. i Institute. It is being or-| Ke a scientific study of r flying, and in a it will have all the es nd worth le theor lished fa |About dirigible flying tabulated and || available for study. | In the long run this wili be a great! in. Something of the Its day blishament should speed the | when travel by dirigible is as| common as travel by. airplane is now. | the ditors, ard Editorial Comment | | The Republican Plank school. (New York World: the Republi: cn prohibition. Their plat- ank is @ meaningless evasior dictated by Herbert Hoover. Telegram) foc for: I of the coun! wanted a majo r ‘used 154 de! and the sinceri They were re! inet offi taries, who of their party. i ant. But the cab-j the old loyalty pre: the Pr re. is only one major question of prohibition. The Hoover plank| evades it. “We do not favor a sub-| Which must be ion limited to the issue of reten- If the Republican party had cour: e it would have def nd declared for or " n divide the voters. Party | The American voter respects con-| That is the Guggenheim Airship]. diagnosi; addres: ort has been badly needed for years. || beautifully. ns have pussy- | He is ju | y of the delegates, like a/| the But Mr. Hoover re-| and at in Washington at a|the fir po mane Bovey She anope of increasing his stature tes bury their convictions | 829 easing h aati now?—(Signed by the boy's mother). | I don’t know whether it would be and the Hoover secre- | Posi an relay at the Chicago | Milita | meal time. show any intelligent child or adult ver | how to take his own insulin, A course | be rope rageied ulin injections will ‘definitely shine vitamin D, also vitamin A.! Probably we didn’t know then that/ eight individual, and it doesn’t | Jots of sunshine on baby’s naked skin | mattcr at all whether the individual | Prevents rickets and bowing of legs} {has or has not diabetes, so the old | and retardation of growth, too, These | fossil practitioner can’t laugh this off Some striking benefits ave been obtained by this use of inst the 18th }f ins sed nto ase the weight of almost any on! under jon that score. production facilities are concerned, Viciions, even though they disagree | we are embarrassed not by too littie| With his own. A wet cousl respect | ; Mr. Hoover and the Republican part but by too much. This does not mean for’ a sincere declaration in favor of | that everybody's wants have been) the 18th amendment. But voters will THE BISMARCK TRI BUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1932 ie J just Another ‘Quiet’ Day Along the Potomac! GO Se PiewsS ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. 7 nat aunt “ a] | treatment: at issue. That is retention or repeal | trea ‘ : 1, Two doses feet 72 t born of twins. ved only two days. ‘y regulations prescribe. of diabetes, ago I wrote you von- ‘cerning a precious 6-months-old boy, le It all turned out as y Today the boy is try- jing to get into the Military Academy Jat West Point. ‘and won the first alternate appoint- jment when he graduated from high But he is much perturb lest he fail on account of his stature. is j 5 feet 3 inches tall. inches tall and I) child, m 5 feet 6 inches tall. The military; icademy authorities seem shocked at boy's low stature. jot grown? insulin for the specific purpose of | y{improving nutrition in various condi- | {tions aside from them si PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- d envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in i from mental disturbance, and marked loss of weight from tuberculosis. 2. A course of ductless gland hor- should be thyroid or pituitary or ad- , renal gland hormone or a combina- did straighten out! tion of two or three of these is a question which the boy’s own physi- i cian can best determine if any such He is 17 years old! treatment is to be tried at all. Cer- |tainly this type of treatment has {brought about marked growth in ediheight in a number of instances | Where growth was much retarded in and this boy is still a ah jfor any purpose that might benefit In case these suggestions prove ap- we hope Mother ait 16 years to tell us about| it, for probably there are many other Why has he Parently helpful He weighed 4 pounds’ a few ounces at birth—he was| ds Won't ws of the highest standard, thanks to cur health department, particularly |Dr. ———— and Dr. ————. Twen- ty-five per cent of the raw milk |supply exceeds the requirements for ‘certified milk, and the other 75 per cent has an average butter fat con- |tent as high as pasteurized milk and \2 bacteria count as low as pasteur- jized milk. So by endorsing raw milk |you are helping to keep the small in- {dependent dairy man in business— (Ss. P.) | Answer—I advise the use of raw jmilk ONLY when your local health jdepartment approves the milk. In England the liberal use of ordinary raw milk has been found to prevent decay of the teeth in childhood. Human Material Being in my right mind, if not in bodily health, a college graduate and student of science, I have eagerly read your articles urging that felons should be made available for scien- tific experimentation. I am not a felon but would gladly offer my body mankind. Please inform me how to make good this possibility—(E. S.) Answer—Would you join our Le- gion? Remember, we called for 1,000 ma) 1 | volunteers to enter an inclosure with| Broadway with a large percentage of | them and when success came they |@ pack of rabid dogs. We want to |find out whether Proper first aid treatment to prevent tetanus (lock- jaw) will not prevent alleged human rabies. Pending response from the other 999 members of the Legion we are filing your application. I do not know how you may go about serving as experimentation material legally. lustard M Is mustard in mayonnaise harmful to the stoméch or kidneys? Have!reality. The effect is achieved Ben Told it is harmful to eat whole wheat bread all the time, that you should rotate with white bread part casionally is not harmful, but much mustard habitually or frequently is irritating to the stomach and sets up gastritis. It is healthful to eat whole wheat exclusively, if you prefer it to white bread. . (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) a TODAY AN NeeSARy VIENNA BREAD RIOTS On June 22, 1918, bread riots broke out in Vienna after the Vienna City Council had passed a resolution pro- testing against the reduction of the bread ration. The same day nine} strikers were killed and 36 wounded in Budapest in a conflict between po- lice and railroad workers. je Bulgaria, under the directorship of A. Malinoff, formed a new cabinet. Italian warships cooperated with troops and enlarged the Piave bridge- head at Cavazuccherina, making it easier for the ships to get within striking distance of the Austrian lines. Vienna at this time reported a to- tal of 40,000 Austro-Hungarian troops taken. through the use ‘of paint. In crea- tion of this illusion lies the skill which costumers would like audiences of the time.—(E. R. R.) to recognize. Getting an effect of ta Answer—A wee bit of mustard oc-|glamor is far easier. 5 its stage apparel, is ae a ties went to a lease store. “costume slay- a. ee eae Whatever tales there may be to Alfred Lunt, who is one of Mme./the contrary, male stage stars are Pons’ loyal clients, used for but a/much harder to please than women moment in “Reunion in Vienna” alin matters of costume. Mme. Pons coat which revealed a torn lining. |spent years trying to figure out what Making such a rent visible when the |might be the male player's notion of coat was casually removed was @ de- |sex appeal in apparel. Many of them tail requiring days of study. are padded and stuffed beyond he- Such garments are rarely torn in jlief. * *e * mart IVA ° Norman Bel Geddes, so Mme. Pons informs me, demands that costumes] The American male is a poor fish be delivered at least a week before |in the presence of his women folk.— Gress rehearsals begin. He insists|Shaw Desmond, British writer, who that they have the appearance of having been worn by the characters. recently visited the United States. “Night Over Taos” was laid in old : ae Bod New Mexico. The desert sun was) Mankind, in spite of plentiful evi- presumed to be parching the off-stage |dences to the contrary, is endowed countryside. To give new costumes| with reasoning powers. There are an old appearance, they were run}hopeful signs that he is using the through wringers again and again,|powers to build cooperatively amid dipped in water and again run|the present chaos.—Feliz Morley, through wringers. On the opening | economist. night a properly wrinkled effect had * * * been achieved. So long as people are allowed to * # & think what they like they are bound Howe to think something so hard that they may phbked prego ag ie “ae will be eager to kill anyone who starts out by being a fresh, new cre-|thinks something else.—G. K. Ches- ation. After that it is “murdered.” |terton, essayist. Temperamental actors often , protest sores cae against such defacement of costumes) The anvil chorus can always get that “look well.” complete harmony when declaring And, adds Mme. Pons, one of the! “There are too darn many laws now.” daily problems of those who work|But let these same critics run up behind the scenes is suiting both against a situation that is not clearly player and producer, while remem-|COVered in existing statutes, then bering the stage lights and the char- hear the shout “There ought to be a acter which the costume is presumed !1@W!”—Grant Hinkle, secretary of to fit. It is essential to begin by de- |State, state of Washington. signing for the character, as described by the playwright, and worrying about the actor afterward. * x * MALE VANITY Typical of the Broadway merry-go- round, by the way, are the Ponses. Pons, a Frenchman with a Russian! FLAPPER, FANNY SA‘ : ee RAGS AND ROYAL RAIMENT New York, June 22—Theater audi- ences frequently applaud the appear- ance of bespangled and begemmed chorus ensembles, but never does s0 much as a ripple go up for some “masterpiece” of tatters and rags. This is one of the minor heart- breaks in the life of an artist-cos- tumer, Little does the fellow out front realize that the “true artistic touch” has gone into some torn and faded uniform. Hours of experiment and more hours of getting just the right effect. ee OK In “the trade,” this is known as “murdering a costume.” Helene Pons, who with her husband furnishes *|their modest apartment. Someone background, arrived in America with | the original Chauve Souris and the Moscow Arts. Theater groups. His wife, a Russian, was along. He couldn’t afford to pay her fare on tours and went on his own in New ‘York, Their first studio was one room in told them that, by way of fixtures, they should have a tea-wagon, a decorative floor lamp and a screen, Buying these took all but $5 of their savings. They never used any of STICKERS HSRMANSIOA | | | | ( the letters above spn ee five-letter gir’s name. Can you discover date > To some people, the kind of golf clubs they belong to is more impor- tant than the kind they carry. 22 His twin | YOUng persons who would give al- Is there ™OSt anything to add a wee bit to} their stature if that is to be con-| | Seer years ago we didn’t know— b) F i inch the| well, I forget just what we didn't Se ee ee eee at the | Know then, but ised we ene : |boy’s physician will take an interest | know enough to tell that mother to Opened lin the attempt it would at least be | feed her baby ‘a good plain cod liver nt!” That did the trick, | Worth while trying to make the grade. | Oil ration daily from the age of one x a | I would suggest these two lines of Month to the end of the first year, | beginning with 10 drops or so, mixed insulin daily, With.a little orange or tomato juice | administed hypoder- | 0n the spoon, twice daily, and gradu- |mically shortly before the regular ally increasing the daily ration till at | Any good physician can | four or six months the baby takes a teaspoonful two or three times a day. It supplies the sun- That is enough. things won't hurt any young person who aspires to grow more. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Makes Best Teeth I am in a position to know that the nple underweight, emaciation|raw milk sold in among today is i satisfied, and a surplus left over. It|/not respect the sincerity of a party means that the basis of exchange by, Which tries to trick both drys and which normally the markets. are| ets With a double-dealing declara- | ” x “| tion. cleared of goods has been disrupted,) Mr. Hoover and his henchmen j with a resultant stoppage in the cus-|know the effect of their muddled tomary flow of goods into consump-| MOdification ruse. It means more years of delay. It prevents a clear- lion. The immediate and Pressing | Gut vote. Pl i need is to establish right conditions} But it does much worse than that. for the resumption of the interrupted! It pitches the country into an end- flow. awaiting a perfect M Ati ata = If we wait to discover | ‘any of the adjustments necessary | one we shall never get rid of na-j to bring this about have been or are | tional prohibition. being made; many yet remain to be} We have tried prohibition long and made, Just when the point marking | fairly. It has failed. We must repeal | the turn will be reached nobody | t and Pen aloha: evolve, seme, ott | knows. Probably no one will recog-|" all of the modificationist talk about | nize it when it appears but only after (the necessity of protecting dry states | a certain perspective has been gained. |i5 subterfuge. If prohibition is re- The Bea hes adually |Pealed the dry states will be pro- Pp 2 er, 18 gradually | tected without any additional amend- becoming more clearly defined, and | ment. with clearer definition is coming a! With repeal of prohibition the fed- better understanding of the measures |¢¥l government will continue, under | ' i the Webb-Kenyon law, to protect, dry | ieee iieaee: «This 1s not a time {orl states trom liquor from. wet states | shallow optimism, for sitting back in! just as the federal government pro- | the complacent belief that “every-j tected them before national prohi- ; thing will be all right,” but for calm | bition. | No constitutional amendment is 5h and reasoned confidence in the fu jMeeded to give the federal govern- | ture of our country made effective! ment power “to protect those states by a combination of faith and works ; where prohibition may exist"—as re- | —a combination which has won for |Quested by the Republican platform. | us in the past and will do so again, ;|Th¢ Republican proposal is for an ¢ amendment which would , allow the | This country has never lost a war| federal government to “safeguard our and will not lose this one. | citizens everywhere from the return of the saloon and attendant abuses.” ! Guest Editorials But under outright repeal no state | ; j would legalize the saloon unless the | The “American Legion, striving to| \oooie of that slate voted it back. do its bit to restore normalcy in the} in which case they have a right to} country and intensely interested in| vote it back. maintaining the spirit of true Amer-| The Republican declaration for a | modification amendment which would Pees Seng our people, has asked |/1.4in in’ the federal government| @ number of leading citizens to ex-| power to preserve the gains already press their views on existing condi-| made a dealing with evils inherent tions as they affect tl fare of the | in the liquor traffic” is meaningless, a Bere The Wickersham commission dis- | covered that drinking conditions and | ‘The Ust includes financiers, labor | crime were worse rather than bet- leaders and others who have attained vee ical Eaciaaae ie eminence in their chosen field. ational prol nm has not given us “gains in dealing with the liquor These expressions, which are writ-| trarric.” It has set us back. It has in editorial form, have been of-| made us a lawless nation of hypo- to the newspapers of America! crites. It has increased drunkenness the suggestion | and bane et Loe year, It ‘i has corru ..3 robbed Printed as “Guest Edl-| 11, "or revenue needed to relieve the * | taxpayer and to employ and feed the od palaces] fie Bovuiticans haw ot. ae icans we cast bed im pe zy die. The way is open for the Demo- feels that the move-| crats to meet the issue capsid win. | iy gtyi i E EEF a the It good HORIZONTAL 1 Uncouth, 6 Earthy deposit 10 To contend. 14 Nettle rash. 15 Chill. 16 Grand- parental, 17 Devoured. 15 Tennis fences, 19 Mysterious, 26 Two-handed animal. 30 Toothed on the edge. 35 To build. 36 Legume. 37 Center of an amphitheater. 38 Principal masses of teeth. 40 Stable. 41 Grain, 42 Lion 43 Meager 46 Lodger, Eight Blacks Answer to Previous Puzzle 50 Wild duck. 51 Employer 53 Chemical substance, 55 Fountain, 56 Law 57 To combine. Solely. 59 Snaky fish 60 Allotted. VERTICAL 1 Owed. 2 Verbal 3 Plexus. 4 Notion dhl 1932, the debt 29 To perforta. 30 Call for help, 34 Twenty-four each political party chooses its presidential candidate at a 39 Creative force. 42 Learnings. 8 Wagon track. 47 Completed. 49 Routine as of 10 Mohammedan 11 Egg-shaped HERE TODAY CHERRY U ft love mewnpaper ‘y defies her to leave. oI Cherry retu: to the store. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIV AN’S voice came to her over the wire. “Hello, Cherry. Say, 1 don’t know when I'm going to be able to get away from here. You'd better go out for dinner without waiting on me. Thought I'd better tell you—” “Oh, Dan!” Cherry’s disappoint. ment was obvious, “I'm sorry, dear. Make tt just as soon as | can. What kind of a day did you have? Any luck with those apartments? Did you find anything you liked?” , Dan's tone was cheerful, casual. Cherry, after her wearying, disap pointing day was suddenly swept by Joneliness. She must see Dan. If he couldn't come to her she would go to him. “Where are you?” she asked eagerly. “I don’t mind about din- ner. I'm not hungry but it’s lonely bere, Let me come and stay with you until you finish your work.” “But you can’t, Cherry!” “Please!” “I'm sorry, but {t's impossible. It’s simply—well, it’s just out of the question. I'll get there as soon as I can, but don't wait forme 1 may be tied up for three or four hours yet.” The whole day had gone wrong for Cherry. She was weary and be wildered and frightened by what she had learned of the way living costs can gobble money. Now for Dan to disappoint her was the last straw! Suddenly she was like a burt and petulant child. “Why can’t 1 come?” she demand: ed. “Why won't you let me? And | don't see any reason why you should have to keep on working. It’s al- most siz o’clock—” “Cherry! Don’t you understand? f'm tied up on a story. A big one. 1 can't tell-you about it now, honey, but this is going to be real news when it breaks. I've got to keep on the Job—” * “But where are you?” “Down at the union station.” LEAD YEAR BRIDE size place a long way off! Listen, 1 ing!” “Now, Cherry! Please—will you if It does you wouldn't be safe. You'll have to wait until 1 get there. (Hi tell you all about it then.” “How could anything happen at licemen, lots of them. And so many people. I'm not afraid. I’m com- ing and we can have dinner there.” cee AN’S voice rose dramatically. “You're not to come!” he insist- ed. “I can't stand here talking any longer, but you're not to come. Do you understand?” He hesitated, then went on with a sort of bushed breathlessness. “Here's what we're expecting. Bates got an absolutely straight tip this afternoon that Tony Toscalli—you know, the big New York gang leader—is getting into Wellington tonight. He's com- ing op a train. If he does McAl- lister’s going to arrest bim on a suspicious person charge. I'm here with Mac now. We don’t know what train Toscalli's on 60 we have to wait. He'll have a bunch of goril- las with him of course, The s' part 1s the tip is absolutely exclu. sive. I've got a photographer and the minute that train gets in we'll mop up the whole thing. Splasb it all over an extra! Boy, what a story!” Cherry’s petulance was gone. “But, Dan,” she cried, “I'm afraid for you. If anything should hap ben—!” He scoffed at the idea. “There's gothing to worry about!” he as. sured her. “Not in the least. I'm keeping close to my personal body guard, safe as a bug in a rug. Now bromise me, honey, that you'll do as t want you to. Be a good girl and go out and have dinner. See @ movie maybe. It’s the 8:15 we're watching especially, but ‘he may come later and anyhow I'll be tied up at the office for a while. Well, will you promise?” “Y-yes. But I'll be worried every minute!” ‘ Dan's laugh rang in Cherry's ears as she put down the telephone. The girl was not smiling. So this was what {t meant to be a aewspaper man’s wife. To know your busband might be tn the path of a. guoman's bullet and be powerless to inter. fere, To wait helpless while the one you loved most in ali the world was risking unknown dangers, Ob, how could she bear it! “1 mustn't go on this way!” the girl told herself. “Of course he'll be all right. 1 only have to wait an hour or so and then Dan will be here. He told me he'd be safe. 1 murtn’t let myself imagine so _Imuch. Pll do as Dav ssid—go out “Why, Dan, why couldn't 1 come|and have dinner and maybe he'll)ment Cherry did not recognize him, down there? I supposed it was some | be here when [ get back.” don’t care what you say, I'm com- T° put this resolution into prac-|younger society crowd whom she let me explain? You can’t come |#d snapped on the dressing table|at Guild tea and once when she down bere. Something may happen |light. It was almost 6:30. The|had been driving with Gretchen Al- —well, | mean we think it will and) face that looked back at her from |den they had given him a lift, the mirror was pale and the dark| “Why, hello,” Cherry said. “You eyes were shadowed by circles, |SUtPrised me, I wasn’t expecting to Cherry was wearing the dress she | 8°¢ 82yone I knew.” tho station? Why, there are po had put on that morning, It was| Hendricks smiled. “Mind if 1 sit Leas fn. (O52 or na sone ac. Then she saw that it was Garth eo ee Hendricks, a member of Wellingto! knew as well as she knew any of the others. She had met Hendricks tice Cherry crossed the room rumpled and altogether she was|down here?” ho asked. “I loathe anything but the picture of a happy | eating alone.” As soon as she had bride, indicated that he was welcome Hen- “Dan mustn't see me like this,” |dricks hurried on, “I want to offer Cherry thought. “1 can't go out|my best wishes for your marriage looking such a fright! 4nd al) that sort of thing. You She drew cold water and bathed | know I’ve met your husband. Fine her eyes. Then she took a quick | fellow.” shower, finishing with the water] “Do you know Dan?” coming down like Icy needle pricks.| “Yes, I'm working on the Sen- Wrapped in a rose dressing gown|tinel. Met him over at headquar- she sat before the mirror and ap-| ters.” plied fragrant face cream and pow-| Hendricks explained that for two der that left her skin like warm | months ho had been serving his ap- ivory. A touch of lipstick, the dark | Drenticeship as a cub reporter. He curls brushed and tucked into place,|.8aid some day he hoped to be a and then she was ready for her | columnist, frock. She was. preoccupied and} “Don’t you think it's a great chose the green one she bad worn| game?” he asked. “Don’t you get a the night before. kick out of newspaper life?” No matter how often she reas “Ob, 1 don’t know. 1 did for a sured herself, no matter how she while, but there are so many dan- tried to put her mind on other gers. I wish 1 could persuade Dan nes, Many, was worrled. to do something else.” en she was ready to go she 5 stopped long enough to write a not Mics eS iad nothing dam for Dan in case he should arrive|”.,, while she was away. It read: “Gone| ,“! don’t see how you can say that, to the Maple 'm nearly crazy right this minute back a ite ae pets ‘aia: worrying about Dan, It, he didn’t She propped this against the pin | VoTk on a newspaper he'd be here cushion on the dressing table, Then with me instead of risking his life she went downstairs and into the| With that terrible Tony Toscalll.” street. “What makes you think he’s with The Maple Leaf tea room was two | Tony Toscalli?” blocks away. Cherry had noticed it} “He told me himself. 1 don't several times as she passed. . it| know if he’s actually with him, but looked attractive and for some rea-|! know he expects to be. He's down son ghe did not want to go alone to| at the union station waiting for the restaurant where she and Dan | Toscalli’s train to get in. They're usually dined. . going to try to arrest Tony and if There were several vacant tables|they do there'll be shooting and at the Maple Leaf. Cherry selected | 80meone will be hurt. 1 don’t see one at the side: of the room with| how I'm going to stand it! I'm al- places laid for two. She glanced at | most wild—!” the menu and told the waitress to} Hendricks interrupted to ask bring the 75-cent special dinner. It} Questions. Smoothly he tried to re would be all right and would prob | assure ber. Of course she was ex- ably be served more quickly than | aggerating the affair. There was no anything else. She could eat and | likelihood that even Tony Toscalli hurry back to wait for Dan. would start a shooting fray in the A picture of Tony Toscalli seen} union station. She was imagining in @ newspaper photogravure seo | things that could not happen. tion flashed foto Cherry's mind. Cherry listened eagerly. it was “Maybe he's not really eo wicked,” | encouraging to hear someone else she argued with herself. “And| say the things she had tried to con- maybe he won't come!” vince herself were true. She was The last was @ really cheering | disappointed when, a few minutes thought. On the strength of it/ later, Hendricks said blandly: Cherry attacked the rather taste| “I'm sorry, but I've got to rush less, mildly warm croquette that|away. Just remembered 1 was to had been set before ber. She sam: | meet a man at the Wellington. Nice Bled the creamed peas @nd found to have seen you again, Mra, Phil- them more appetizing. lips. Goodby.” “How do you do!” It was after he was gone that cee Cherry realized what she had done, wits genuine surprise Cherry | She bad told Dan's big story to a glanced up. The words seemed | Sentinel reporter. Did Hendricks to be addressed to her and yet she|feally mean that he was going to was sure she must be mistaken. | Meet someone or was ho at this very The young man who had spoken was | Minute talking to bis city editor? Mot a dozen yards away. Fors mo (To Be Continned)

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