The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 23, 1932, Page 4

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% H i H t i quished are dim in our ears as we hear the conquering roar of the vic- tors. Consider these evidences of history and then, in addition, consider the fact that America today is the rich- test, most envied and most hated na- tion in the world. Without adequate defense it would be like @ child with !candy in a neighborhood filled with —Ibullies. The result would be just as certain. It is axiomatic that one peaceful |man cannot keep the peace alone. Neither can one nation. And the na- ‘ The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ny, Bismarck, N. D., and en- 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) ........ aoe os. 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ Daily by mail outside of North i Dakota ttstssessees+ 6.00 | peaceful its acts or intentions. ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00} It is not an alarmist statement to ‘Weekly by mail in state, three | assert that, if this nation were utterly peeuig is adall eaksias of Noval 2.50 | defenseless, it would be only a matter |of months before we should have an enemy knocking at our gates, subject- O jing our land to all the savagery which has been the lot of conquered | | peoples since the dawn of history. Dakota, per year .. Weekly by mail in Cana year lember of Audit Bureau of Circulation | ee Ta rT aE The Associated Press is exclusively] _ Prizefights on the Radio entitled to the use for republication} Listeners on the radio Tuesday of all news dispatches credited to it/ night gasped in unison when the de- | or not otherwise credited in this) oo. | Z | cision in the Schmeling-Sharkey bout Iso the local news of q newspaper and also is eas MR SGee: | spontaneous origin published herein. i All rights of republication of all other; For 12 rounds they listened to a recital of a clever sparring match matter herein are also reserved. “(Official City, State and County | with apparently little to choose be- Newspaper) tween the two men. For the last Sai eae ~ |three they were told how the German was closing the Boston gob’s eye and, {at the same time, giving him a neat Shellacking. As the blow-by-blow description ended, most listeners Disarming Human Nature probably said to themselves, “Well, I The dawn of history found man /guess Schmeling won that one.” with a club in his hand. | Then came a sort of anti-climax in It was a weapon used both for de- the announcement of Sharkey’s vic- fense and for obtaining the rude fare j tory. to eke out an existence. He swung} Sports writers were almost unani- it with equal vigor upon the animals | ™ous in agreeing that Schmeling was} he sought to kill for food and those|robbed of his title and the whole/ other semi-savage humans who pe-j business bodes no good for the box- riodically attacked his cave, killed or)!ng game. America, which claims to captured his children and dragged | be the home of fairness, square-deal- his women into captivity. ing and good sportsmanship, will Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON 5.00 | tion which lays itself open to attack | imay expect attack, no matter how| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1932 The Machine Age! ‘a “Cn Gosn! 1 WISA I ww A STEAM ROLLER, f "]|ing double solitaire to kill time. was vastly unprofitable. again. Broadway vacationers are! small ot em ‘This/status quo ante is preserved in the bridge world. Now the summer European excur- sions are on, Liners are well packed * * traveling with fair-sized rolls in their is responsible for the present state of wallets. * e & And a new set of sharpers is re- ported. Many are said to be gradu- ates of those upstairs game rooms that flourished through the winter in connection with swanky speakeas- jes. Scores of these “speaks” have been “touched off” and dismantled within the past few months. The gamesters have scattered and taken to sea, So there they are a polished, suave and mannered tribe! Keep an eye out for them if you’re going abroad! + % # NON-SKID BATH The perils of the slippery bathroom floor, which I for one have encount- ered, are being lessened. From the Master Plumbers’ convention word leaks that skidless tiling is on its way and that there will be a nice rubber hand rail around bathtubs. Only the old Mack Sennett comedies have the stock market. That's the first in- dication we've had in some time that the small man was — any profit. * # While Congress was looking about for something new to tax, its mem- bers would have done well to consid- er the wishes of future voters by plac- ing a prohibitive tariff on castor oil. ee If Germany calls a Hohenzollern back to the throne, they might as well throw away the old saying that a “purnt child dreads the fire.” * * * ‘There are plenty of mystery thrill- ers on the market, but we have yet to see one £0 difficult of solution as the question, “What are the Boston Braves doing up there?” (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) staged scenes funnier than those in which a soapy handed individual ~ PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to discase diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- Essentially he was a fighter. He had to be to live, and those who were unskillful or unlucky did not survive. The result was to give those succeed- | ing generations of human beings, who in time were to call themselves civi- lized, a background of blood and bat- tle from which it is hard for us to escape now. The trickeries and deceits of the| enemies which abounded for everyone bred new deceits and new trickeries together with universal distrusts. We see this phase of human nature at work in the pitiable failure of various disarmament conferences to achieve} worthwhile results. Only in the Man of Galilee do we find an instance where nations have been conquered other than by the sword. There have been peaceful in- vasions of other countries but the; | | If one needs illustration of the Sort |gives we the guiltiest feeling—as thol records show few of them and, in the main, they were not peaceful for long. | The-baser elements of human nature |look with jaundiced eye upon Shar- key's tainted title. But the margin for Schmeling, granting that one| 2 \judge and the referee erred, was|MEDICAL LATIN IS BECOMING hardly as wide as it was pictured on OLD FASHIONED . i Out of the daily bag of mail I esti- the radio. It would seem that the! mate we get half a peck of letters reporting of this alleged sporting] quoting what the doctor said and ask- event was not all that might have|ing for interpretations of the doctor's been asked. occult language. On the ground that } ‘As to the official decision, mani this is a health service we usually re- a » MANY cret our inability to undertake the jfans will wonder if boxing is not/| interpretation, tho no narrow dictates {headed toward the same disrepute|of medical ethics can deter me from |which killed the wrestling game for|€XPosing sheer hokum when that ts ‘many years. In many minds there obvious. For instance, if a patient | area eiaiadoacegs jgoes to the doctor complaining of jwil remain the suspicion that|heart trouble and the doctor feels his | Schmeling was “jobbed” out of a title | pulse and tells him it is a cardiac dis- worth half a million dollars or more. turbance, I'd just as soon inform the |patient that he has been had. But That feeling on the part of the cus- | such cases are not so common nowa- | tomers will do boxing no good, either days as they were a few years ago. I ‘in New York or elsewhere. do not doubt a carnation by any other name would smell as bad; not that I have anything against carnations, but somehow their ghastly aroma always Too Late ‘of bungling which has afflicted the!I should have tried some other treat- government of this country, Secretary | Ment. 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. !doctors’ diagnosis. Plenty of women | enjoy life in spite of just such condi- jtions. Whether surgical repair or treatment is necessary depends on the degree of trouble in the individual case, the patient’s.age and genera! ‘Status. Nowadays, with more and more lay- |men becoming more and more en- pathology, the doctor who still perpe- trates imposing medical terms with- jout particular reason and without translating his funny Latin or Greek jinto the parlance of the patient, mere- |ly makes himself ridiculous and im- |presses nobody. The day of bombast is over. The doctor who knows his business speaks in the language of | the present day. The greater the doc- ‘tor the simpler his language. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | We Cannot Quote Prices Will you kindly recommend for. me | good specialist in this line... onz lightened about health matters and| ie too close to the surface for us all|#%4¢ offered it in connection with to abandon the protection of our |e appeal for help in fighting the | “Cystocele, | who will give me good care at a mod- | » (RB. 8.) | “This is what our family doctor found,” writes one correspondent— crate price . THEY'RE IN AGAIN New York, June 23.—Sea-going card} | Sharpers have reappeared on the At- lantic, quite as suddenly as they dis- appeared. Equipped with their own signals, cards and systems, they now ensnare |the contract fans, Broadway figures, {with reputations for knowing their x # & | Repeated warnings plus the depres- sion were thought to have combined; in running the “sharks” from the sea lanes. Last winters trans-Atlantic grasped desperately at a tub side, only to have it elude him like a greased ig. . * e % As a fellow who never could fig- ure out how to smoke while bathing, I welcome a portable device resembling a tea wagon. In one compartment are books for those who insist on reading in a bathtub. To this is at- tached a ‘waterproof gadget to hold the cigaret or stogie. I might even learn to do a little bathtub -reading myself if I could but devise a means of turning over the pages without saturating them. xe # THE FISH-BATH And if you care to be reminded of the oceanside; to half shut your eyes and join the pearl divers of the South Seas—well, there’s a combination aquarium and bathtub. The outer sides of the tub are lined with glass sardines. Or, if you prefer, goldfish. My own bathtub will be equipped for trout. The daily half-dozen will begin with fly casting from the bed- room into the bath room. After a time, to make the game more diffi- cult, I can stand on a nearby roof and try casting a fly through the window. Once the trout has risen to the lure, he may be tossed through the bath- room transom into the kitchen frying pan, Doubtless the trout will be ready for breakfast when the bath is ended. ee ‘You think that’s funny, do you? —well in Allentown, Pa., it appears, there actually is the first of the fish- lined bathtubs. = saa | ‘The bridge team known as the Four Horsemen announced that they had dropped Oswald Jacoby. And Mr. Ja- coby comes back with the statement | Passenger travel fell off so heavily that the slickers were reported play- that he had already quit, so he couldn’t be dropped. And thus the| aN ‘We spend 10,000,000 pounds a year on education and 600,000,000 pounds on drink and gambling. Wasteful ex- Penditure in this (England) and other countries is one of the causes of our troubles today—The Rt. Rev. John Kempthorne, Bishop of Lichfield, England. ee * The district around Nice, France, has become an entrenched camp. New roads and railroads have been constructed, linking the valleys with ports. This year alone France is spending $20,000,000 on the Italian frontier.—Senator Domenico Nuvol- oni of Italy. * % % The government and the people of England wish well toward the Irish eve the prosperity of the Free State is bound up with the prosperity of Great Britain and that it is in the best interests of both countries that * Now they are saying that it’s the profit-taker, not the bear, who Bosses Ritchie Camp Associated Press Photo Robert B. Ennis (above) of Bal. timore, campaign manager for Gov. Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, opened the Ritchie headquarters In Chicago for the democratic na. tional convention. — ficient and economical basis, the con- solidation of railroads should be ad- vanced with all possible speed.—Reso- |. lution adopted by U. S. Chamber of Commerce, FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: they should remain linked together within the British commonwealth— J. H, Thomas, British Dominions Sec- retary. * # & In order that railroad transporta- tion may be placed on the most ef- STICKERS HUSHED IS THE STILL AND e @ VOICE; PRICKED EARS ARE KEEN TO e id, appear to have been the first and easiest victims. Losses have Barbs MEN WHO ranged up to $3,000, say reports. ee NOBLE CHOICE; LE GoLD Will GLISTEN, The six dots, in four different places in pa eal ao letters. Con you fill them in? re The woman who sues for breach oi promise can’t believe that even a jury has twelve good men and true. Bees Rectocele, Endocervictis, homes and lives by dismissing our po- lice force or by casting aside our de- fenses as a nation. Throughout all history the defenseless have been slaughtered. Begin anywhere you choose and the human story is one of carnage and conquerors. The Old Testament abounds with stories of conflict be- tween the Hebrews and the Philistines | | grasshoppers. Fibronyomata. What do these terms Eight northwest states eed hep | ean, Ee eis vanes Decocenans § ‘i ad fallen, and an operation wou! and need it badly. In many sections probably be necessary to give any per- fine crops are growing but will be se-| manent relief. Patient had a major tiously damaged, if not entirely|operation 10 years ago and does not ituined, by the prospective ,| Want to undergo another....” | That this is so fie ee Plague The correspondent asks whether I | Bases as been apparent tO/ think an operation is advisable in the even those not well acquainted with|case described, and whether it would agricultural problems. Little grass-|be a dangerous operation. These are hoppers without wings grow into big | questions woe a cant anstet: aang - i = can I or any physician form an opin- grasshoppers with wings as surely 88!ion of the nature or extent of the Answer—I cannot give any informa- tion concerning costs, prices or fees in any case. How to Grow I am 19 years old, and weigh only 123 strippel, 62 inches tall. Is it pos- sible to increase my height by eating any particular kind of food or taking any medigine? At the age of 14 years | I had to go to work to help support | the family and my first job kept me at it 12 hours a day six days a week | and I have been working steadily ever |since, altho on easier jobs. Would that account for my stunted growth? and others of their neighbors. The} doctrines there expounded are un- lovely, when viewed in the light of present-day peace propaganda, but we have modern counterparts for them and they still are applied in times of crisis. Turn a few pages of history in other lands and you see Alexander conquering the world. With the torch of justice and brotherly love? Not at all. He used a sword red to the hilt with the blood of the conquered. Rome rises to the zenith and we have the Punic wars and the sack of Carthage. Did Scipio recognize any- night follows day, is done about it. Weeks ago, when there was a chance to meet this menace on an economical and businesslike basis, Secretary Hyde opposed aiding in the “hopper” war or, at the very best, was indifferent to it. Later he sent word to the lower house of congress that it was too late to do anything about it. Then, after repeated pleading that he withdraw his objection, he sent word to the house that he thought an appropriation would be O. K. But by that time the damage had been thing other than lust for destruction | done, the house was unwilling to re- and the right of might? {verse itself and the grasshopper ap- We have Egypt subdued and the! propriation was killed again, unless something | trouble or the advisability of an oper- ation without having examined the patient? have interfered with growth. If you I doubt that it would help the suf- | find any food or medicine which in- ferer if I were to define the medical creases stature, let me know, I'd like terms the doctor perpetrated. Even | to add a cubit or two myself. Read | the dumbest of us or the healthiest | yesterday's article about the boy who! will worry a little bit if he finds, say | wants to be a soldier. } by having an X-ray examination be- Water in the Ear cause it is bargain day for such ex-| I do much swimming and diving. I| aminations, that his stomach or kid-|wear ear stoppers but nevertheless; ney is sagging or falling or loose. It water gets into my ears and makes! is better for one’s peace of mind and them sore at times, it seems to settic | health to be vague about such every- | in the tube leading from the ear to the } day troubles. Doesn't improve the|throat. Is this likely to cause ser- function of the sagging organ to keep ious trouble? (R. O.) | your conscious mind focused on it.) Answer—It is. Try wearing loose Far better to know that your stom- | packings of lamb’s wool in the ears to ach is not as firmly anchored as it is| keep out water. The greatest danger !in most persons, without measuring | is in swimming in pools patronized by (G. H. B) | Answer—I think the hard work may breadths it has fallen. Anyway, a! water cut of the nose, too. Some ex- good many of us have such fallen or- | perienced swimmers prefer to wear & just how many centimeters or finger- j many persons. It is advisable to keep |, | BEGIN HERE TODAY CHERRY DIXON, 19 and pretty, fala tn love with DAN FAILLIPS, . on a rival news- and anconsciously tells it Teseal NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XV you'd be asleep.” The only light in the room cam from the lamp on the table, castin; LEAP YEAR BRID (©1032 8 Mea Soe ig was almost midnight when Dan came. “Hello,” he sald as he paused on the threshold. “Thought conqueror conquered by another lust which is as old as the human race also. In time the Visigoths swept down on a Rome weakened by her vices and excesses, and the conquerors were conquered. A few more pages and we see the Saracens charging up from the south to impose a new civilization upon parts of southern Europe and, had it not been for the preparedness and ability of the defenders we might to- day be living under an Asiatic con- cept of civilization. Pass on to the Mongol invasion of Europe when the Khans subdued de- fenseless peoples and might have con- quered the entire continent but for the difficulties imposed by a length- ening line of communication. These are all ancient examples but there are others, many of them mod- ern. Had the Indian been prepared to defend himself, the country in which ‘we live would not now be under white control. Was this land which we now claim as ours conquered by the arts @f peace? Look up the record, Few more hor- rible pages exist ir history than those which relate the white man’s domina- tion of the Indian and occasionally his butehery of women and children. Do we need a more up-to-date ex- quering invader, The business still is going on and the wails of the van- id never know it. One gets the impression that, at | SADE ae aa eerie Beds haahe \ There is nothing very serious in the ing, Hy¢ ought of a/ several conditions enumerated in the |fine crop in the northwest only as{ | spring clip to keep the nostrils closed, | breathing only thru the mouth. | Copyright John F. Dille Co.) |something to still further add to the jSurpluses held by the farm board. Later he appreciated that it would j be the politically expedient thing to yield. The result has been uncer- | tainty and inaction. Is it any wonder that the body politic feels a retching of its “in- nards” when it thinks of that kind of public administration? 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, Back to Farm Bunk (Steele Ozone) How easy it is for city men and swivel-chair politicians to urge a back-to-the-farm movement to re- ly two men for every job on the farms, and thousands of small farm- US WORLD Wa peop Wore to , “Oh, I'm so glad you've come! everything all right? you'd never get here. worried, Dan!” It did not come. meet Dan’s. She saw that he looke: tired and rather pale, manded. He drew away. “Nothing,” he sal thing was a flop. Mac and | hun; Tow morning came in. Lord! flopped on me this week. swore the tip was authentic. didn’t get here!” . Phillips flung himself into “Aren't you going to kiss me’ see me?” “Of cours: 1 am.” sat down again. It was the first time be had ev been remiss in the attentions of he came back to ber! white light in a circle of a dozen feet and leaving the rest in dark- ness. Cherry sat in the big chair, half obscured by shadows. Sh sprang up. I thought I've been so She slipped her arms about him, clung for an instant and then raised her lips for the kiss she expected. Cherry’s startled eyes rose to “Is anything wrong?” she, de indifferently, “except that the whole around that damned station until every westbound train until tomor- Not a sign of Toscallil. Not unless he knows bow to make himself invisible. That’s the sixth story that’s Bates Just talked to him over the phone and he still insists it was. Seems to blame me because the big bozo chair. The girl looked down at him. asked quietly. “Aren't you—glad to He arose, kissed her cheeks absently and then “What a day!” Dan sighed. “Boy, { wish tomorrow was my day off!” sweetheart. Cherry was burt. Dan scarcely seemed to realize ahe was in the room. After worrying all ‘evening about bim this was the way She sank to the floor in front of him, settled herself comfortably and rested one arm on his knees. Cher- ry was determined to win him from this mood. Smiling, she looked up. “Maybe | shouldn't be,” she said, “but I'm glad that terrible man didn’t get here.” “Why?” “Because I was so afraid for you! Think what it would mean to me if anything should happen to you, Dan. 1 couldn't stand it, I just. couldn't. That's why I was so frightened" oe F put a hand on her shoulder, patted it reassuringly and told her that she had been a foolish child. That was better. Much better. He was her Dan again and he was smiling. Suddenly Cherry remem- bered her own conscience was not clear. Not exactly. She said hes!- tantly: “There’s something I think I should tell you. It’s—something I'm afraid I shouldn't have done” | Dan-was amused. “Confession?” g| “Well, something like that.” “What could you have done that is so terrible?” 4 “I don't believe you'll like it—" e| ‘But what is it?” Cherry found it harder to explain Jg| 2bout her conversation with Garth * | Hendricks than she had thought it would be, She told Dan about go ing to dinner at the Maple Leaf tea room and seeing Hendricks there. “Then I really don’t know how it happened, but he told me he was on the Sentinel and we began talk- ing: about newspaper work end about its being exciting and—well, I said that if you weren't a news paper man you'd have been with me instead of with Tony Toscalll.” “Cherry! You didn’t!” id) yy, And then he asked some questions and 1 explained you 8) weren't really with Tony, but you were waiting for him.” “Did you tell him where?” ."I-l guess so. Ob, Dan, 1 didn't know you wouldn't want me to tell. 1 didn’t know it was wrong!” “Wrong! My God, Cherry, so that’s what happened! That's why Toscalli didn’t come. If the Sen- tinel thought they could spoil our story—if they had any way to get to him—! Oh, you little {dfot, don’t | You see what you've done?” He was on his feet, staring at her half in anger, half in amazement. “Dani” Apparently he did not even hear her. “If Bates knew about this be’d fire me in a minute. Yes he would! Kicked Brown out siz weeks ago for less. Do you want me to be fired? Do you? Lord, 1 don't see how you could do such a thing! To give ‘a | Sway the biggest story I've had in months—and to a Sentinel report- er, of all people~” “But 1 didn't mean to, Dan, please—ob, please don’t you see?” “1 don't see anything except that you've ruined a great story and nearly lost my job for me! I was & fool to have told you anything. Well, I've learned one thing—1 won't do it again. To think Mac and I waited around for four hours after you deliberately gave the story to the Sentinel!” eee T= angry words continued. Phil- Ups was tired and exasperated. He forgot that to Cherry the world of news was a completely foreign place. He forgot he was speaking to the girl whom a few days before he had promised to love and cher- ish. forever. The utter stupidity of what she bad done was unthinkable to him. It was more than stupid- ity; it was disloyalty. “But I didn't know it was wrong!” she protested tearfully. “I wouldn’t have done it for the world it I'¢ known!” “Well, from now on please re- member fhat anything you hear about the office is under your hat. It’s not to be mentioned to anyone! Do you understand?” “Y-yes.” Cherry had been weeping for several minutes. For the first time Dan seemed to become aware of it. His tone softened. “All right then,” be sald. “We won't say any more about this. Maybe it’s not as bad as I thought. Maybe it was something elso that stopped Toscalli.” She did not answer. Cherry had turned’ away and her face was hid- den in her hands. Her shoulders move.’ slightly and though there Ro sound he knew she was sob- Dan watched uncertainly a mo- ment, then moved toward her. “Don’t ery, Cherry,” he said. “It’s going to be all right.” Since she did not speak he came Bearer and slipped an arm about the girl. “Don't.” he said again, “I can't stand it to see you unhappy, Cherry. Look at me. Please, dear!” Still she kept ber face averted. From the muffled depths of Dan's tweed shoulder Cherry said half- audibly. “You—called me an idiot!” “You know I didn’t mean it. [ was just—well, I just meant you didn’t think—” : “Anc you sald I wanted to have you fired!” “Ob, now please, darling! forget about it.” “But 1 can’t forget! 1 didn’t dream you'd ever speak to me that way. You wouldn't jf you loved me. And {f you don’t love me 1 don’t want to live! Ob, I’m so miser- able! I—I just don’t care what bap- Dens!” The tears renewed more violent- ly. Dan stroked the dark silken bead. He cupped one hand unde the girl's chin, raised the tear. stained face, “Bweetbeart,” be whispered. “You know’! love you. 1 was brute to say those things and ‘burt your feel: ings. Forgive me, won't you?” Let's call Tenderly he kissed her forehead, her cheeks, the lowered eyelids, Cherry was unresponsive, Then the fringed lashes quivered and her eyes met his. She said brokenly: “You mean—tt’s not true? You mean you don’t hate me?” “Hate you? know I’m crazy about you! dry those tears now and tell me I’m forgiven, It was my fault, Cherry, every bit of it, but I'll never be such gained the day before and ignored the attractive advertisements of buildings in Eastwood, exploring neighborhoods closer to the down- town section. There were plenty of vacant apartments in the east 40's and 50's, but none of them ap- proached Cherry’s ideal of the big studio with sunny windows and a fireplace. Most of them were over shops with noisy street cars clang: ing past. Where there were win- dows they looked out on dark courts or neighboring buildings that shut off the sunlight. Frayed furniture, ugly walls and floors— and for such quarters the astound. ingly high rental of $50 and $60 a month! Cherry tried not to be discour aged. Last night’s erpertence had made her humble. She must show Dan that she could shoulder her share of the load, that she could play a wife’s part. At five o'clock she conceded de- feat for the day. to meet Dan at the entrance of the public library at 5:30 and there was just about time to keep the appoint- ment, She arrived exactly on time, but Dan was not there. At last she caught sight of his gray hat in the crowd crossing the street. He was walking with his head slightly for- ward, hands in his pockets. Cherry went to meet him and f The young man ioe sp. bai ‘new instantly that somef wrong. Something had happened! “Sorry to be late,” Dan began. “The Boss éalled me {n.” “Oh, Dan—?” Her eyes darkened with the unspoken question. Phil Ups nodded, . “Yes,” he said harshly, guessed it!” Why, darling, you Let's an imbecile again. I swear I won't! Now then—is that better?” In five minutes the storm was over. In five minutes Cherry was bright-eyed and smiling and re- counting her experiences of the morning. Dan, pulling off his tie before the mirror, turned and caught the girl’s two hands. “Everything o, k. now, isn’t it?” he asked. Cherry nodded. But everything was not o. k. Cherry and Dan had had their first quarrel and, though each might deny it, the memory had left ite scar, The perfection of their happiness together had been marred, eee (CaBner took up her search for an apartment again next morn- ing. She acted on knowledge She had agreed led brightly, “Hello.” “You've (To Be Continaed)

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