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sige SS ee eta serene ts ( sR Reem ope eran ee '~“Subseription Rates Payable in with the other. flag. something constructive. most definitely drawn the line be-/ tween bombast and substance, of them know that government costs have risen to staggering figures and| there is yet in high places a callous! disregard of the taxpayer's rights. It seems in whole edifice public servants realize that budgets; must be slashed and cut. meager beginning has been made in} Washington or fry are benefiting ve TH 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. Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Marck) .......- see ceeeeneseees 7.2 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year $1. s Weekly by mail in state, three | YOATS ..cseseeeeeeeee eossccsces 2.00 Weekly ty mail outside of North Dakota, per year ......-. Weekly by mail in Canada, pe year . Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively rising market for fat cattle, and the wheat growers are expecting better things because of their reduced acre- age and the poor crop of winter wheat. The ruinous surpluses of the last two years are rapidly diminish- ing and a short crop this year is ex- pected to leave the country without a surplus for the first time in a num- 'ber of years. That means profit for the growers. Bright are the prospects down on the farm. Only a slight additional |gain and the farmers will again be} | filtering through from the barns and| lacres, Where there was only dark-| 2.00 | est pessimism a few weeks ago one} | | | | | \ putting money in the bank and buy- ing new automobiles. And rectly or indirectly? Perhaps the good news is already; cannot fail to notice sparks of op- timism at this hour. Here and there | one hears of business picking up. Aj month from now it may be picking entitled to the use for republication | UP all along the line. of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in newspaper and also the local news of spontancous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. “(Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | still have the} Voters this year are looking for They have Most some quarters that the must crumble before Only a: in cities of our land. the states andj Bureaus still flourish which serve no other end than the insatiable desire of political| machines for jobs and plunder, It! is conservatively estimated by stu- dents of government in this nation that an average cut of more than 25 per cent can be made in governmen- tal expenditures in every political subdivision of the land without any/| impairment of necessary governmen- tal functions. | Under the urge of expansion and| inflation of values during the recent orgy of speculation and manipula- | tion, politicians seized on the general | hysteria to increase the tax load in unprecedented degrees. Now the cas- ues in the air have crumbled and with that debacle must come a dras-{ { | tic cut in public expenditures. All parties can well devote their energies to this necessary work and not seek new slogans and new ways to deceive and dupe the tax-burdened and weary electorate. The blatant prosperity promises of the Hoover administration have done more to destroy confidence in the! Republican party than any other single thing. Unsuspecting persons, and they number millions, shot their wad, believing blissfully in what turned out to be nothing more than political sophistry of the worst type. Leave the chicken in every pot; the two «>rs in every garage and prosperity: lurking just around the corner to the Republican orators. Democratic appeal must be made of more substantial stuff if it is to win the next national election. Farm Prospects Brighter The hope of the East is a sharp dmprovement in the stock market. ‘That of the Mid-West in a major ad- vance in pork prices. The East is still waiting, but the hopes of the hog growers are being realized. Recent weeks have seen a steady vrlge im pork prices, a trend most raisers throughout the coun- 4 a A EEE RENO EL ACPO ne aI A ARCS SAA ORES AE LAAN CBE BERRA ECHR ON ? ne this | | | | Beware the Prosperity Issue | Those who are gluttons for pun-j ishment and listened in to the all-} night session of oratory punctuated and saturated with resonant plati- | tudes must have been impressed with | one trend of the nominating and sec- onding speeches. Climaxes, banners} and other means of political cajolery | were heavy with promises. “Jobs not doles,” read one banner. “Press on to prosperity” with some- body or other read another. Allitera- tive and attractive slogans hurled hither and thither were too remi-/ niscent of the lind of prosperity promises made so disastrously by the} Republican party. Democrats should avoid the pitfall) of the prosperity issue. Victory with specious issues and high-sounding promises would be dearly purchased. | The predicament of the Republican | regime promising in time an aboli- tion of poverty shows how dangerous | this kind of political chicanery is. For the most part, the Democratic! party leaders seem to realize that the | struggle back to a normal and more | solid basis is going to be a hard and arduous one. In the heat of political oratory and partisanship many wild; promises are made in behalf of this! and that candidate but the Demo- crats, if they are wise, will leave the} prosperity issue to the Republicans who have always waved the flag with! one hand and the They 11 dinner pail} - | observers Ecli, All astronomical roads now lead to New Enland where the world’s fore- most students of the stars will ob- serve on Aug. 31 a total eclipse of the sun, Eastern observatories have already | transterred their telescopes, special cameras and other equipment to Maine and New Hampshire and the Lick Observatory and Mount Wilson astronomers are preparing their equipment for the 3,000-mile journey from California to Maine and New | Hampshire, respectively. Never has an eclipse of the sun, a phenomenon of only a few minutes’ duration, received as much of man's time and attention as the next will attract. It will be studied from air- planes and mountain tops and ob- |served through telescopes and spec- troscopes and perhaps several other varieties of scopes as well as from the Plates of giant cameras. Some of the equipment to be used ‘in August was designed since the last total eclipse to fill gaps discovered by while watching the last “blinding” of the sun, Expenditure of so much time, money and brains upon a three-min- ute eclipse may seem like shametul waste to the layman, but science Places great weight on it. It expects to add to man’s knowledge of the universe and would not be surprised! if some startling discovery were made. When the astronomer looks into his heavens he never knows what new phenom ay ii iF enon may come into his ken. tained in the blood or Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the f thought by other editors. are published without regard | to Whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. The Prohibitionist Party (Minneapolis Tribune) both the Republican and Since Democratic parties have deserted the cause of absolute prohibition it is only natural that the old prohibition- life and begin to give serious consid- cration to the nomination of a can- didate for the presidency who would express its views. to draft Senator William E. Borah/suffer from the obsession find life one as its candidate for the presidency,|constant succession of “internal| as the convention of the Prohibition party now meeting at Indianapolis is said to be planning, does not seem likely. That it will be able Although Senator Borah has de- clared himself to be unable to sup- port the Republican ticket in the coming campaign it is extremely im- that; ! means prosperous times for every-| 6.00| body who docs business with the! 09 | farmer. And who doesn't, either di- probable that he would care to un- Gertake the hopeless task of run- ning for president as the nominee of a dry party. Regardless of his sin- cere faith in the eighteenth amend- ment he is politically too wise to be- lieve that he could do himself, or the cause he champions, any great g00d | by making a fruitless campaign. Sen- ;ator Borah has resisted more allur- ing offers to become the candidate of a third party than a place at the head of a prohibitionist ticket would be. And not only that, but Senator Borah, in so many other respects, represents a liberal wing in his party | |that would have difficulty asserting itself in the Prohibition party. As a factor in politics, the Prohibi- tion party has never been particu- larly significant. In more than 50 years of entering a presidential cam- paign with a candidate of its own,| the Prohibition party has never been | able to poll over 265,000 votes in any national election. When the old Temperance party made its appear- ance in the campaign of 1872, with James Black of Pennsylvania as its candidate, he received only 5,603 votes. In 1876 the Prohibition party appeared and has had a candidate in every election since that time. It polled the largest vote in 1892 with John Bidwell of California as its candidate when he received 264,133 votes. Even when prohibition as a cause was at its height, its vote as a party was falling off and since the eighteenth amendment was enacted its strength has been negligible. It is conceivable that the Prohibi- tion party would find added strength in the present campaign by attract- ing the votes of sincere drys whocan- not stomach the wet planks in the platforms in both major parties, but that they would become a contending factor in the election is not likely, even though they had as their candi- date a man with a personal follow- ing comparable to that of Senator Borah. The cause of prohibition won its fight by working through both of the old political parties and the anti- prohibition forces will accomplish whatever reform there is to be through the same channels. The real test of the! strength of the prohibitionist cause will come in the fight on resubmission and not through an independent political party. A party in which the advocacy of pro- is too restricted to build up a strong financially from 8 | jeft- political following in s presidential ath i aetinated ak between shy four percent People are handed. E BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932 ; | liver, or if one’s health education has been obtained in the modern school (rear pages of magazines) perhaps one prefers to call it autointoxieation or intestinal stasis. But no matter how thin one slices it, it is still bo- iologists and pathologists agree that harm is done when the natural waste products of metabolism are re- tissues, and such faulty elimination of vital com- bustion products is a secondary fea- ture in many disease conditions. But good health every one should under- stand clearly that this type of bod! costive or constipated habit or state. It has nothing to do with the food residues in the intestine. The old-time quacks explained it all by blaming the liver, and their dupes forgot it all almost as readily when they took “liver regulators” as thing absorbed from the colon, so that in some cases the wretches who baths.” Yet the more they wash aw: the imaginary poisons the more poi- son they imagine they have. the autointoxication theory is Metch- nikoff, who conceived the hypothesis that the constant production of tox- JUST TOO BAD IF IT COULD! HAPPEN | i d i Whenever one eats or drinks too! thesis the famous bacteriologist based | #2 Porous pots add considerable mois- much and neglects daily exercise,| his scheme of discouraging bacterial] ture to the air of a heated room in work or play to burn the surplus fuel, Putrefaction in the intestine as athe winter season and that is always the first alibi one thinks of is a lazy! means of preserving health and pro-| “desirable. | | i | Perhaps the highest authority for | freely. 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, Back in the Driver’s Seat After Eight Years! Answer—By the same logic you would have to equip the boy with arch props, corsets, shoulder braces, and sooner or later a pair of crutches and a wheel chair. Tell the in-laws to rent an auditorium. Plants and Flowers in Sickroom Mother thinks it is harmful to have growing plants in the sickroom .... —(F. A) Answer—So far as the effect on the air is concerned it is insignificant. ee | : AUTOINTOXICATION WOULD BE |putrefaction in the intestines causes] Either growing plants or cut flowers many human ills, includi rema-|in the sickroom are beneficial if the ture senescence; and on thie hyee invalid enjoys them. Growing plants longing life. What the great bacte- riologist didn’t know about health and disease fills many books. milk is scarcely ever heard of; only Get the Ice Man’s Opinion You claim glycerophosphates and His | hypophosphites do not feed the nerv- Utopian dream scarcely survived the }ous system. man himself. Today “Bulgarian” sour|do . . .—( ) Answer—Well, let's call in the ice; Our druggist says they R. commercial interests now exploit the {man and leave it to him. acidophilus sour milk preparations which succeeded Metchnikoff’s Bul- Sarian bacillus cultures, Metchnikoff was not much of a physiologist. that in the human intestine putre- faction is a natural or normal con- for the sake of peace of mind and dition. A physician who is not blinded by subsidy or hope of reward knows that the temporary prevention of in- poisoning ‘call it autointoxication if | testinal putrefaction makes no appre- you like) is rarely if ever due to a|Ciable difference in the state of the individual's health. I believe I am fairly expressing the consensus of medical opinion at the Present time when I say that physi- cians with scientific training neither recognize “autointoxication” as a cause of disease nor deem the “elimi- they did when they took nothing.| ation of toxins” a factor in success- Modern charlatans have a freer flow| ful ist party should take a new lease on} of language and much more expensive | faddists and a few old fogies in regu- ways of keeping victims from forget-| lar medical ranks are the sole ex- ting it, but they still ascribe the evil|Ploiters of the autointoxication ob- to poisoning of the body by some- | Session today, treatment. Nostrum mongers, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Holding the Baby Up Our “Big Noise” is a Brady Baby. He is a tough guy and a happy one. He has never worn shoes, though he is now 17 months old and runs about Sometimes we put moccasins on him, The in-laws are horrified and say that unless we put on stiff shoes to brace his ankles he will be 11 Female horse. 12 To degrade. 13 Smart. 15 To flutter, 16 Mineral spring. 19 Having holes. 20 To practice capricious de- ception in love. 21 Ado. 22 Part of ancient Roman month. 31 Twinge. 23 The VII 32 Quantity. Amendment to 34 Neck scarf, the U. 8. Con- 36 Jargon. stitution con- 37 Spar. cerns the right 38 Present. of trial by 39 Dry. —? 40 Became con- 24 Tile kiln. gealed with 25 To permit. cold, 26 Sand hill. 41To possess, 27 Part of a 42 Sour. window, 43 Ascended. 28 One of a pair. 44 Merits. 29Margin of a 46 Mathematical watercourse. term. 80 Ulcer. 47 Sheep farmer. LN i i ev POCO Pi UN TT Zsa ins by bacterial fermentation and! deformed ...—(R. W. E.) w : =o” G Questi Ct - HORIZONTAL © Answer to Previous Puzzle ing metal. 10f what state 15 Blaze. is O. Max 17 Pastry. Gardner gov- 1S Detention. ernor? 20 Last month, 21 To subside. 23 Principal fiber used in making burlap. 24 Strong taste. 26 Missile weapon. 27 To breathe with difficulty. 28 Lunar orb. VERTICAL 29 Company. 2Egg dish. 30 Cakes. 3 Rants. 31 Remunerated. 4 Three at cards, 32 Less securely 5 Pronoun. fastened. 6 To banter, 33 Soft mud, 7 Obsequies. 35 To plant. S$ Upright shaft. 36 Curly. 9 Exists. 37 Saline solu- 10 To euddle up. tion. 13 A proposed 39 Skin disease. Amendment 40 Material of to the U..8. which glass is Constitution made, concerns ——? 42 Verb. 14 Fissure in 43 Onager. rock contain- 45 Exclamation. SORT a Tere ected et nH TT cE RE Sugar Test Please explain the use of Benedict's test tor glucose.—(Mrs. C. P. W.) Answer—Benedict’s solution is an A physiologist knows|alkaline solution of copper sulphate, sold by all druggists, at 10 cents an ounce. To a teaspoonful of this in a 4-inch test tube add six drops of the sample to be tested, shake up, and stand the tube in a tin cup of boiling water for five minutes. \yellow, red or brown sediment re- is sugar (glucose). (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) PLAYBOYS VANISH New York, June 7.—Many ‘of Broadway's gay playboys may now be discovered playing tag with sher- iffs and: landlords. Even the wealthiest of them seem to have van'shed like a promoter’s assets. Heading the list of the rich- est, most romantic and generous, of course, was Billy Leeds. Phil Plant ran a close second. It is no secret that even such fortunes as they com- manded have undergone terrific shrinkage. So many a week has gone by since seen frolicking about the night spots. Just to show you how the old high spirits have been affected: one of the minor plnyboys actually slug- ged a columnist, the other night in the suburbs. Anyone might have told him that the only way to get @ columnist is to land an uppercut on the ego and then take three jabs at his vanity. * KOK FORGOTTEN MASTERPIECE A paragraph in Danny Thomas’ | Hollywood chatter department drew conversation the other night to the colorful, eccentric but greatly gifted Von Stroheim, Von is back acting now, and the report was that he had been in tight financial shape. Four of us agreed that some day “Greed” would be taken from the archives and given iis due place as a film masterpiece. I recall when we all sat for some 12 hours watching the un- reeling of that picture’s pre-view. And spellbound for the entire period. * * * Von's personal courage had long en a subject of off-stage conver- sation among the newspaper folk who gathered on his lot. There was, for instance, the occa- sion of the knife throwing. * * NO DANGER! A scene demanded that camera, facing a wall. An expert j knife tosser, some yards away, drove a stecl blade through the air and, of course, missed the actor by a nar- row margin. Trick photography could have been employed so that the actual hurling of the knife would have been un- necessary. The actor assumed that the director would see to this. But Von demanded realism. His knife thrower was a circus man accustom- ed to typical, heavy bladed sideshow If a green,| i ind jumped and cu! mains in the bottom of the tube, that | stamped and ji The player wouldn’t Without further ceremony, Van dropped his mega- phone and walked to the wall—doub- The knife left the thrower’s hand in a neat arc, but just a bit too high. A studio lamp was dangling on the set. The blade scraped it and went off ‘A second later it was quiv- ering in the wood, not a hair's any of the playboy tribe has been! a per-| former stand with his back to the; knives. | substituted. was ready. But the actor, jto happen, refused to go on. to no avail. take a chance. for the performer. hare was a tense moment. course. breadth from Von Stroheim’s ear. “See, you yellow slightest danger!” * & ON FIGHTERS — The Schmeling-Sharkey * voices rising and tempers figures of old. the most heated argument. it to Mizner—he's a smart guy! Grant?” i cision!” | i] tor William E. Borah of Idaho. * * ¥ film actress, * oe OK chequer, England. , xe % The turning prosperity in this country seems corporation. ee * It would appear on the basis New York, ‘eave LEAP BEGIN HERE TODAY al newspaper reporter. They ‘are it means to lack money. Her struj &les with housework aging. DIXIE SHA’ critic of the News, Cherry. § her mother enclosing 3500. She returns th a © CHERRY DIXON, pretty 19- yeni daughter of wenlthy pare ents, in love with DAN PHIL- r. married and for the | first time Cherry finds out what jome MAX SON, who also works on the Cherry receives a letter from to IN After a terrifying wait Cherry’ father tells her the doctor is ready to see them, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVI 'HERRY was on her feet now. The eager hope that had shone in her eyes vanished as quickly as it had appeared. Her father remained in the door- way. Not so much as a muscle seemed to change in that relentless face. “Dr, Knowles—?" Cherry began. “Ho's in the living room, We're to go there.” They went down the stairs, Cherry just a little akead. She did not look at her father again. Through the doorway of the living room she saw the doctor standing before the fireplace. There was a great bowl of roses on the table at the right. Cherry's mother had always kept flowers in that bowl, cutting and arranging them herself each morning. There was the basket,where her mother kept the bit of sewing she liked to have handy for the hours before dinner. Nothing was changed and yet the whole room seemed empty now. Deserted. Cherry rushed forward. “Oh, Dr. Knowles, tell me!” she cried. “I can’t bear this waiting. I can’t bear it! I’ve got to know—!” Dr. Knowles put an ar the girl’s shoulders. “ there!” he said soothingly. “You promised me you'd be brave and have control of yourself. We're not discouraged. Not in the least. We're making the biggest fight we know how. You niust help us!” He had known Cherry almost since babyhood, had seen her through the attack of chickenpox which, at 5, was her first illness. The girl buried her face in bi shoulder. A moment later when she looked up she was dry-eyed. Walter Dixon's deep voice broke in, He said crisply, “How {s she, doctor? Has there been any change?” The doctor nodded. “Mrs, Dixon has been resting,” he said, “and rest is what she needs above all YE hours this afternoon. She's awake now but we're hoping she'll drop off again before long.” ji newapaper rex sate He turned to Cherry. “Will you marrels Ww 0 ” quarrels gvighy her father about | promise,” ho said firmly, “that if I asks Dan | let you sce your mother for a few moments you won't become hysteri- cal? Will you promise to go in quietly and say just a word or two and then leave?” “Oh, yes, doctor—I promise!” “Well, then,” Dr. Knowles consid- ered, think it might be a good idea. “Nothing must happef that could disturb her. You understand that? If she should suddenly be- come aroused—worried—any slight emotional disturbance just now would be dangerous. On the other hand I think she'd be pleased to know you're here. Well?” “Tl do exactly as you say, doc- tor,” Clerry said earnestly. “I’l— I'll be brave!” The doctor looked across at the other man. “I think you'd better come too, Walter,” he said quietly. eee HE three mounted the stairs and walked down the hall to Mrs. Dixon’s room. A nurse—not the one Cherry hd seen before—opened the door in answer tothe doctor's light knock. “She's awake,” the nurse whis- pered and stepped back for them to enter, A single lamp, heavily shaded, gave the only light in the room. The shades at the windows had been drawn and the furniture showed only as dark outlines cast- ing black shadows. Against the opposite wall, just out of the lamp- light, was the great white bed, The face on the pillow looked as colorless as the pillow slip. .A tired face. Expressionless, The gray hair, drawn back severely, made the face seem old. One arm lay out over the covers. It was Dr, Knowles who stepped forward. The tired eyes seemed to widen a trifle. “Someone to see you,” he said quietly. “I’m only going to let her stay a few moments. Cherry—?” The girl knelt at the bedside. Her two hands, so strong and young, clasped the mother’s enfeebled one, “Mother! Oh, Mother!” Cherry breathed the words as though they were a prayer. Her head bowed down against the covers. “Cherry!” 6 \ It was the barest whisper but both men heard it. The girl lifted her head. There were tears in her eyes but she was smiling. “Oh, Mother, dear, you're going to get well now in a hurry! You must.” . A transformation seemed to have come over the mother’s face. “My —little—girl,” she whispered. But she was not looking at Cherry. Her eyes had raised. They turned to- ward Walter Dixon, lingered plead- ingly. “Walter,” she said slowly. else, She slept for almost two ‘The man bowed at the other side of the bed. He did not speak. Only R BRID the eyes that had seemed so grim and unrelenting a few minutes be- fore were veiled by a thin mist. There was a moment of silence. Then, as though summoning su- Preme strength, the woman went on waveringly: “Walter—forgive— Cherry?” Dixon’s hand slid over the covere Jet. It found his wife's. Then the heavier, darker fingers clasped Cherry’s. It was one of those elec- tric moments when the stillness seems alive with a thousand voices, The man’s words broke the spell. “It's all right, Alice,” he said husk- ily. “Everything's going to be all right as soon as you’re stronger.” The nurse’s starched uniform rustled in the background. Dr. Knowles stepped forward, “You'll have to say ‘good-night’ now,” he said with professional firmness, “It's time for Mrs. Dixon to be resting.” For an instant Cherry’s lps brushed her mother's hand. She clung to the fingers, then slowly re- leased them. “Good-night, Mother,” she said softly as she rose. “I'll be here in the morning.” Dixon did not speak again. The two men and the girl filed out of the room. D bad the hall with the door closed behind them Dr. Knowles fum- bled for his watch, found it and an- nounced hurriedly, “Well, I'll have to be off. I'll telephone in an hour or two. Sleep is what she needs now. If she can get that it’s a big gain. Good night, Cherry. Good night, Walter!” The doctor’s broad shoulders dis- appeared down the stairway. Cherry raised her eyes timidly to meet ber father’s. Suddenly the girl was in his arms, her face buried against his coat, and she was sobbing des- Perately. He tried to quiet her. shoulders rot sively, “Don't!” Dixon said. “You mustn't cry this way. Your mother may hear you.” “It's — my — ft moaned brokenly, she’s like this!” Dixon’s arm tightened about his daughter, “There's no use saying such things,” he told her heavily, “Or thinking them. We've all made mistakes.” “I can’t help it!” Cherry pro- tested. “Oh, if anything should | happen—! “Knowles says she has a chance. It all depends on these next few days.” The girl did not answer. Her sobbing continued less violently. Dixon patted her shoulders. It was 4s near a caress as Cherry could remember having received from her father, “I think you'd better spend the night here,” he told her. “The nurse will let us know if the: jany change. Now, Cherry, you must Pull yourself together—!” Cherry's and sank convul- 1” the girl “It's—my fault The thrower i I in a corner and warmed up Wi for a time; then reported that he| A real Mexican dagger al discovering what was Von sed, but 1” shouted Von. “What did I tell you—not the decision still echoes in table debates, with a roe of sport writers, gat in a mid-Broadway spot, recalled one of the famous tales told of Wilson Mizner, one of the more fabulous Mizner—way back when—was sit- ting over his beer and skittles when two friends came up, engaging in “Here,” shouted one, “we'll leave Now who was the greater general: Lee or ; “What difference does it make?” drawled Mizner, “Grant got the de- I do not believe that this marks | the start of the fall of the American jZepublic, nor do I believe the Ameri- | can republic is going to fall—Sena-; If Hollywood is going to tall about a divorce, it will have to talk ...i can’t be bothered—Ruth Chatterton, In my view there is today in Eur- ope a greater approach to unanimity both as to the.causes of the trouble (depression) and as to the steps nec- essary to solve the problems, than! there has been at any time since thc; termination of the war. — Neville, Chamberlain, chancellor of the ex-/ point toward eventual | have been reached. — Charles G. Dawes, in notice of resignation as, president, Reconstruction Finance) present information that not less/ than $50,000,000 will be needed for the | coming year for relief work (in New) York city).—Welfare council report, | There's no “home” remedy for itch TODAY *1S THE -- ae AN BREAK FROM RUSSIA Russian -control. Supplies were ceived from the United States. IVERSARY On July 7, 1918, the entire popu- lation on the Murman coast broke away from Russia and set up s¢- They allied themselves with the entente and announced themselves ready to fight against re= The White Guards occupied Yar- | cow and Vologda. oslav, 173 miles northeast of Mos- American forces on the western front returned an attack staged two « days previously by Germans on a ‘isoners. Pritalian forces massed fdr an fronts. ed to pasture. 321654987 ==J-NN-TT Four vowels are missing from the above word, If you fill in the proper ones and then put the letters in their proper order, according to number, you will have a git’s name, in which you can find four other girls’ names. | ! i | to i of | GuaACyS ing feet, (©1932 BMA SoG | She raised her head and the trem- ulous lips made an effort at steadiness. For an instant Cherry’s eyes met her father’s, Neither spoke but in that instant each un- derstood the other. ee IXON went downstairs and Cherry returned to her bed- room. She saw that Sarah had laid out a dainty nightgown and dress- ing robe, Cherry was swept by an impulse she had not known since childhood, She crossed the room, knelt at the side of the bed and pressing the palms of her two hands together, began to pray. ‘When Sarah entered 10 minutes later the girl was standing before the open window. Sarah carried a tray. “You must eat something,” she urged soothingly. “You know you can’t be makin’ yourself sick.” “I don’t want to eat,” Cherry said wearily, However she sat down in the big chair before which Sarah had drawn a small table and set down the tray, There was hot broth, a Salad and tea. The food was ap- petizing and Cherry ate more than she had expected to. Presently she Pushed the tray away. “T'll have to telephone,” she said, 'm going to stay here tonight.” She called the number of the apartment and after a time Dan an- swered. Ho said, yes, he had found her note. Was her mother any better? He hoped she would be soon. A few more words and the conversation was at an end. Sarah bustled about getting the Toom ready for the night. There was the sound of water running in the bathtub and then Sarah saying, “Your bath, Miss Cherry.” The girl undressed and bathed mechanically. Before she got into bed the nurse tapped at the door. “Your mother’s dropped asleep again,” she said. “I thought you'd like to know.” “Does that mean—?” “It's a good sign. I’ve just talked to the doctor and he was pleased.” The nurse departed. Cherry turned out the light and slipped between the fresh linen sheets. The bed was as soft as down. There ‘was no sound but the faint rustling of the trees outside the window. pee breeze was fresh and comfort- ing. Cherry closed her eyes and tried to sleep but the silence of the house seemed ominous, She repeated the doctor’s reassurances, “She must get well!” she told herself, “Sh going to get well!” But in spite of this insistance the girl did not sleep. She turned and tossed and finally gave up the ef- rere to stare open-eyed at the ceil- ing. She was still awake hours later when there came a knock at the door, It was the nurse again. “Your mother,” she explained hastily, “I think you'd better come!” - (To Be Continued), front east of Hamel and in the Vos- ges. Where the Germans failed, the Americans were successful, taking much ground and several’ German at- tack on the Grappa and Col Caprile About 90 per cent of the total cul- tivated area of New Zealand is devot- STICKERS = : = ; te « i | 4 rod e Omy