The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 16, 1932, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1932 The An _ Independent Newspaper 1 THE STATE'S OLDEST ‘ ‘APER: (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis. Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) .,.......,.+ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .......seseeeeceseeeeee 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Bismarck Tribune Siberian serfs; the publicist who averts public wrath from such people by acting as their apologist—these men, without exception, think that they are doing the right thing. They are, in other words, scrupu- lously honest according to their lights. The tragedy is that the lights by which they live are at fault. That is the point we must recog- nize if we are to iron out the kinks in our national life. It isn’t enough to have leaders who are honest—for most men, after all, are as honest as they know how to be. They must also ‘know exactly where they are going. In plain English, they must combine honesty with intelligence. A Wise Move What They Wanted—and What They Got! | ford University, Cal. Ketchup T have been eating ketchup literally —(C. F.C.) Answer — Excessive indulgence in any condiment is rather injurious. A dash of ketchup, mustard or other such delight is all right occasionally, but all wrong when used habitually. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) at every meal. Will it harm me any?y tor and out a side entrance. Carry- day of the year. I’m telling you, you’d better be funny, my lads. And what with the heat and all, all the taxis were busy. Then one of those nice little New York sidewalk mobs began to gather, And someone on the sidelines spouted, “No, no- body fainted. It’s just Frank Buck, bringing ‘em back alive.” I gave one those Beatrice Lillie shoulder flips and took a taxi. Well, there he is right now—Ignatz, staring at me with those plaintive rhesus monkey eyes! He’s right there in the front parlor shoving straw all nearest pet shop. No, they wouldn’t over the floor and shaking the wire. The missus just came back from the take him, but they would sell a load of monkey food. And the wife’s just reached that “let’s keep him for a while and see what happens” stage. band. Perhaps at the trial of this ing that heavy crate on the hottest|suit, the presiding judge will throw some light on how these things may be done in a manner becoming a hus- band. xe * . Despite all the talk about repara- tions at Lausanne, the thing the con- ferees really decided was to let Uncle Sam pay for the war. ee Ke Now that someone in Texas nas pro- duced a tearless onion, we presume that all the steak-and-onions devo- tees will be crying just for sheer joy. * # The difference between a statesman and a politician is that the first is working for the public, while the sec- ond has the public working for him. ee Now that fashion has decreed the return of long skirts, it looks as if women will be taken at face value POE ekki sets sksacéasanes MONKEY BUSINESS Just maternal, that’s all. ; tie: Weekly by mail outside of North The Medical Society of New Jersey New York, July 16—S 0 8 to Olson| | Every now and then she gives me| 92%!” x kK F Dakota, per year ............. 1.50/has set up a committee to limit the and Johnson, c-o National Broadcast-|one of those, “Where did you really) 4 susie critic says that all good ode Al oe Se tte ber designation of “specialist” to physi- ing System ... Come at once and get! get him” looks. singing is heavenly. That may be eo Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. cians scientifically qualified to as- sume it. When the committee has completed its work, any doctor who wants to practice as a specialist must submit his scientific and personal cre- dentials for a strict examination, and if he is turned down he must simply list himself as a general practitioner. This ruling will appeal to the ordi- nary citizen as exceedingly sensible, Ignatz. He's driving me nertz! Fun is fun and all that, but when you scatter 25 live monkeys around this town, without due warning, you're going too far. It might have sounded like a good gag to give away a young jungle just to get us to remember your “monkey business” act. But did you ever try to get rid of a monkey in New York? Well, your act had better be just twice as funny as that, big boys. * OR OK * # * HA, HA! (Hollowly!) Every five minutes the phone rings and some fellow scribbler asks me if I want a monkey. Ha, ha! And me reading the directions which says Ig- natz has to have. bird seed at 2:30 and scrambled oats at 3:20 and a glass of water between meals. No week- ends off; no vacation. Just stay home and attend to Ignatz. Monkeys are delicate, booklet. Well, so am I. And if Ig- Says the true, but the most we can say for or- dinary singing is that it is unearthly. ee % One of the paradoxes of our times is that frozen assets make things hot for business, (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) STICKERS (Official City, State and County worthy of emulation by other state It wasn’t enough that the gang in|natz isn’t out of my house by 11 ] | | | | R i IG po LM aper) medical societies. The layman who the office had been giving me that|o’clock this night, I walk into the | | | | | iH R | oO eee Wante © igeeuliat ta, efter al “balmy Bessie” look for a long time| broadcast room and drop him down Foreign Representatives oe ; ipa as it was. No! When I come back] Rudy Vallee’s pet saxophone. By adding six straight lines and one SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER or less at the mercy of chance. In from lunch there sits a crated Simian! And try to get a laugh out of the diagonal line to the top line, and seven (Incorporated) many localities any inexperienced on my desk. if customers after that! straight lines to the bottom line, you can 4 1 CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON |young sawbones, fresh from his in- Gates OE Heke S98 make a nineletter word out of the top The Norbeck Bill Loses Norbeck Bill Loses ternship, may list himself as a spe- 5 ee eerrain Hin tor a oc of weeks Tine and an eight-letier word out of the ‘The East, which long has basked|‘!@llst, and his prospective patients and he can turn out rape TODAY bottom line, in the sunshine of tariff and other aia tnd of judging his qualifica- ant was Senator: citar! a .¥1S THE »- \ i) governmental favors, termed the Nor- | “ns. Suc! bream as this of New “You're all right, kid, we see the} we R WAR 13 FANNY Says 3 beck bill to increase farm products a ain looks like a very good way of same thing!” | AN WY] SARY LAPP! ER FANNY SAYS: \ radical experiment. Word came from |ndling the situation. = : je tulieay ‘ike ARE ‘And I've got! N% " mae the white house that it would be ve- ‘A Real Hero treatment he was unable to find any] to ine MFO it. I've got to go on! toed and so the senate called it back Sergeant Hilmer N. Torner, the ma. evidence of hernia and he had to pass|somehow. It isn’t the heat, it’s the from the house and “reconsidered” it. ‘ sa hy A 3 S me. I am certainly grateful for your | timidity. GERMAN DRIVE CONTINUES g This is just another way of saying iia sited 7 a who a a navy dis- ae ee Biot os ’s treat-| And I haven't eet co etd nua te a 16, pb ‘art Ghid drive * Inguishe: lying cross for landing a onne ment.—(F. H. J. to fall back on, either. Ignatz can/continued on a 60-mile front from ; that i ig done to death, quietly and) iiane after the pilot had fainted By William Brady, M.D. ASN civil service examiner|make just as funny noises as any|Chateau-Thierry to Rheims, and Ger- effectively. 7 4 i reminds us of the bumpkin who didn’t | crooner, at that. man official bullets reported con- seems to have had about as Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease gal *. The amazing thing about the whole}. experience as any ai ane eee diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- eels in Gate our proteesion hla le reel ole hao - $ business is that the East should be ; plane Pas-| addressed envelope is enclased. Letters should be brief and written in ||!*tHors a good many such skeptics. |NO TAKERS ve Chad nica ade il okt senger ever had. ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions, y the way, T have received many} Old Grandpa Gilbert has taken aj across the Marne and driven toward 3 3 the final arbiter as to whether or not Torner had never taken any flying Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper, letters from others who are delighted | lot in his time. But it’s too late for} Epernay in a day of terrific fighting. » 4 a @ proposal is “radical.” What may lessons and knew, to all a . with the cure of hernia by the doctor |advice. Any sap could have thought| At Prunay, near Rheims, the French \ } appear like a wild departure to one te new, to all practical pur- - - who cured yours. of saying: “Just take him to a pet|were also forced to give ground, and fnpical ten poses, nothing at all about piloting a IT WON'T BE LONG NOW | tins in the case of the prominent poli- Life Guard Tells Us shop.” Yeah! Well, I've phoned four|the end of the day’s fighting found man may seem @ logical step to an-\piane. So when his pilot fainted| “Many oPus cai remember a time | Uician are dishonest—or else the emi-| I'd certainly like to know where Dr.| and have visited two in person. So|the Germans in possession of the vil- other. It is in such situations that} white car rying him high over Camp| when intelligent people deliberately | Ment medical man makes extremely |Clelia Duel Mosher received her de- | what? lage. 1 the so-called powers that be do their eGeiy aN eS exposed their children to mumps, | bad guesses, gree in medicine. I happened to see| So they say, “Another one! can’t] American troops were being rushed BeeWOrK, ‘They issue # dicta and earny he prepared to use his para- measles, whooping cough, scarlet fe-| Occasionally some health officer or |Your column regarding women going | you column guys be funny without ato the front in large numbers to re- i chute. Then, reflecting that the pilot] yer or chicken pox, because they be- | Physician still insists that exposure to| swimming during the menstruation] stooge? You're the twentieth. What| place the tired French veterans, if that ends the argument. would die in the crash that seemed! lieved that every one must have these | cold or wet somehow “lowers resist-| period. As a life guard in one sum-|are you trying to do; feed all the un-} The long-range gun resumed its | ‘The Norbeck bill may or may NOt} inevitable, he moved forward; di idiseanes Gooner or-lnter and-s0 46 was | ance,” whatever that may mean, and | mer I have carried over 10 such cases} employed animal acts?” bombardment of Paris. i have been radical. To the hard- » Grag~| setter to have them in childhood and | @dvises that plenty of good wholesome | from the water, suffering from severe} Things like that, until I called the} In the Balkans, French troops eeid farnter and those in sympathy ged the pilot from the controls, flew get it over. food, rest, sunshine, fresh water and {cramps and pain.—(W. R. A.) zoo. Well, maybe they might be able | stormed three villages on the eastern the ship about until he got the hang|~ ‘Today this is regarded as a crime,| Pure air will keep up your resistance.| Answer—Johns Hopkins. But when | to call for him in a couple of weeks. | bank of the Devoli river. j with him it did not seem so. It ap- of things, and then brought it down|even in backward communities. Now | But there is no scientific ground for |you firemen or life guards get a no-| Whereupon, I says to the boss: “Can } peared only as an effort to revive the | ;, fe lnnal and then a child dies of one of these | this. It is just an old Yankee notion.|tion, what difference does it mak2/I leave Ignatz around the office?” se i flagging finances of agriculture with| "a sne ancine: so-called diseases of childhood. Sensi-|APart from immunity, which is spe-/where the dumb doctors received their) “Isn't “one of you enough?” he Barbs | RUPEEA css ‘ecuinwiat- aliniiar in pure Such presence of mind, bravery and| 16 folk know too, that no such ill-|Cific and has no known bearing on|cducation? Every girl or young wo-|comes back with that certain lift of ry q m P capability are well worth a decora-|ness is “good” for a child, and ac- | ¢XPosure to cold or wet, nobody knows | man should read and follow the sane | the eyelids. In one of the new divorce petitions ! i aes ip pose to the tariff bill of 1930, which | 115) 1¢ the marine corps is producing |cordinely the modern practice is to} thing about “resistance”; nobody | advice given in Dr, Mosher's “Per- ee % a woman charges that her husband} !O%A Ccn o> Senator Watson predicted would re- like “ try to protect children from contract- | CaM even define such a state. It sim-|sonal Hygiene for Women,” published |SNEAKY—WITH A MONK! “abused, cursed and struck” the plain- ; When some people have an attack of eivaieverything in-60 days. oe is cchpvahineian it is more ing these diseases, and in an encour- | Ply en exist. If you or I happen|by Stanford University Press, Stan-| So I sneak down the freight eleva-|tiff in a manner unbecoming a hus-‘ the blues, they do it up brown, v vi ul I. i He Te may be that Norbeck would have cece lena ae fee eee Lee sos et ter teaiemee main ee 3 been as bad a prophet for agriculture Parents’ Liability from gach vAlssaes: Physicians and| Should be satisfaction and comfort | scss¢mmmmmmmmmmnnn i meme rmmermrm ma —_ , rc as Watson was for industry, but @/ The grand jurors of Kings county, | health authorities nowadays do not|in the iowiedss, the wee ie & ? ii eee ate P sia : Sar i "|refer to these diseases as “diseases of |N0 amount of exposure to cold or wet | 3 good many persons would have liked |New York, presented a novel and ie | eereaah Childhood is getting a|or other discomforts can rob us of it. a : "j _ the opportunity to find out. | teresting suggestion the other day in! better deal. | We have this assurance not only from! 3 : \ ji Meanwhile, they are just a bit re-|a report on juvenile delinquency prob-| Superstitions which were all very | “opie experiments Enea from (6 Lou sentful of the fact that, every time | lems hand .| Well for medical profession and laity | all human experience, leve. ir they hear of something which sounds 7 fee es Tear Alensor SS ES point) years ago are absurd today.| _ It will not be long now till all the KMAN i : Laughlin. Before we knew anything about the | World recognizes that discomfort, at ©1932 oy Ma ence WC. feasible to them, it is labeled as radi-| Declaring that present laws govern-|cause of diphtheria, pneumonia, tu-|the very worst, frostbite, is the only cal and thrust into the discard. 2 le 2 ds igitis, | hi body can, suffer from e¢ le . ing juvenile delinquency need drastic | berculosis, cerebro-spinal meningitis, | harm anybo ‘ el {X= BE HERE TODAY about the lucktest guy on earth.| wonderful? Who 1s he, Dan? How] Vail thinks I can write, bel } They are rapidly getting to the | revision, the jurors remarked: | tonsilitis, whooping cough and the | posure to cold and wet. In anticipa- CHERRY DIXON, pretty 19- | And don’t think I don’t realize it! | did it happen?” I'll show them!” e, believe me, H eel ah te 1" i lother respiratory infections, the the-| tion of this state of popular enlight- year-old daughter of wealthy par- |rnot crabbing docsh't mean any- : i Pee wipers they ‘will distruatvelther| “we recommend a law to enforce | ory of exposure to cold and wet had|enment the old timers in the profes- rey apts epee ate thing. C a I'll help with the Eee ea eamn aniaaek| Kd Oana tne sever abantlly:. Daa i LIPS, newxpz ‘ ; = fe “Ty ” ; the voice from the high places or |compulsory morality in the home, to|the virtue of necessity. The doctor |sion had better prepare to adapt their quarrels. with her tather aboot | dishes!) erp wis the dignity, | “Ils like this, lady,” he spent an hour dressing with scrupu- ‘ ; themselves. the effect that parents and dians | had to come to bat with some sort of | theories and teachings to a higher or- Dan and then, : jbegan, “I was walking down the| lous attention to detail. ! ® i Ang Suardians | explanation for the illness, and what|der of intelligence, lest the public et Leap Year, asks He was unusually cheerful) strect— Cherry teased him as he stood ; n Iwmpie Financi may be held responsible for the de-/eoutd be more suitable than that? | laugh at their quaint ideas. for the first time finds what it | throughout tho rest of the evening.) “stop it this minute!” Cherry in-| before the mirror, trying to make The 0 ponie inancial Angle |jinquent acts of children under their Everybody had to be more or less means to Inek money. ‘They take | After they had finished tho kitchen | sisted. “And tell me what's really | bis hair lay the way he wanted it. Depleted finances, it appears, Will | care, not only in the children’s court|exposed to weather changes, drafts,| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Fie pol ‘are discour. | Work they rode down town to sce a/ happened. Who is this writer and| “Anyone would think you were ‘ ha keep the United States squad of ath-| hut in the magistrate's court as well, |0CC@Sional wetting of the fect, damp- Civil Service Passed aging. DI NON motion picture. Dan talked more] how did you meet him?” calling on your first sweetheart,” +4 ‘ 1 letes for the Olympic games below | _, ; | Ness, raw winds or other discomforts.| January 10 I took civil service ex- gritic of th than usual. It was only occasional- “It's not a ‘he’,” Dan told her. she told him, 4 Se iatesrath of former years, Not where they may be prosecuted and! tence it was always plausible enough | amination and was sailing along PEARSON, nino on the News, ly that he seemed to forget and} rs 9 ‘her? Brenda Vail. cr.) “Say, I guess you know what this fF ae Sho sathi ‘ i fined.” jhow he came down “under the|smoothly till the doctor discovered a fter ‘several weeks Cherry's |lapsed into silence. Then Cherry |yo.q anything of hers? mig ae means to me!” f, more than 340 athletes will wear the | chore is a certain amount of good, | Weather.” rupture, which prevented further pro- Eiri te called home aud there tag [S2™ the brooding look return tol truth neither have T but ches wc |. “Of course I do, Dan.” She t' - kk United States’ colors during the |.ounq common sense in that. Mak. | ,. The Cold superstition is by no means|gress. ‘As you suggested I had Dr. Sraonellintion wth’ men baventes | his face, F the bie Chote oq, Dut she's one | touched his arm gently. “It means 4 mes; in 1928 mor | nse in that. Mak-| discarded by the medical profession give me the ambulant treat- but pride will not allow her to nce of the big shots.” He rattled off the| 3 ict to me, o han 400 wi a lot to ‘ games; e than ere | i, : A - She could not persuade herself | names of a half. » too. But I’m so sure Q ing @ parent legally liable for the mis- ! as a whole, but it is fading. The dumb| ment, and late in April I was again cept financial nid from es of a half-dozen magazines to! o¢ you, D, I don’t Present. Hl When MRS. DIXON ts stronger she |that whatever was troubling him| which Brenda Vail had you, Dan. lon’t need a Miss 1 : behavior of his children ought to| public is beginning to suspect that the}examined, and although the civil And’ her husband leave for several | had vanished co easily vShe's head Vail had contributed. | vail to tell me you're going to be z Nevertheless, this figure compares make some empty-headed fatl q|eminent medical man’s early bulle- | service doctor ridiculed the method of ! months at the seashore, x She's hero on business, Something | 4 great author!” F i very favorably with the number which pty ed Zathers and | July brings an intense hent It Dan was worried he gave no|about some land she owns and ee ” mothers think more seriously than | wave. Friends invite Cherry and | indication of it during th i He laughed at her, kissed her will represent other nations, Ger- ly a ot Dan to a swimming party at a | Wdication of luring the next few | wants to sell. Rogers usually does hastily and was v many is sending a team of 77. Swe they have ever done before about the | nearby renort, Dan is delayed nt any Hennat Punctual at meals,|all the literary interviews, you 7 Te. , ; S reaponeiblllae or earenthiecd: | L C t ] W d e otlice and Cherry nets out with | talked of his work and seemed in-|know, but he’s on vacation. I h den and Finland between them are |‘°S?° P on en Ta. or Ss epee se RN cere A Bene pi terested in Cherry's recital of each | didn’t have much to do this after- Beeps VAIL adjusted the | sending 91. Other nations will have |---| : | tose shele Say. At gh ae ese day's events, noon and Bates sent me over to talk shoulder of her black lace farms of about ihe ne 5 . 2 A { here, 4 rg * There were more letters from/to Miss Vail. It seems that years | frock. ; Pere wae sae phy athe Editorial Comment || cae temas, ee ence ha agen Oey PaeTe a moter, | Mra, Dixon ro-/s80 When she was & Xid/she ball! ‘the effect must have Deen satiety » Editorials printed bel: how th IPIAIRIAI IP a Scar and niter oe Ganeereng | ported she had gained four pounds.|an aunt who lived here. She—1 = & 3 L country should need so large a team. frend 2E, UHGUERE by other editor: one WIAIGIE] ye Beare | drive arfive homes “*™S*FU* | She and her husband were consid.|mean Miss Vail, not the aunt——|!2& She was a tall, rather slender ‘ > eee ec enets, 1b seems tous, are un-|| to'synether they auree oe ‘disagree || 10 Claw of a bird | © plank. | verry he in tited of the town'and | CT!26 8 drive into Maine with some | used to spend part of the summers] woman. The black of the dress : ¢ contrasted stri! 1 der a great handicap from the very with The Tribune’s policies. of prey 1} 12 Stabs. Wants to go to New York, friends for a short stay. The let- dere, Temete & pretty fair feature oe ibs Tee eee the mass i start when they are outnumbered so | —— ——-'| 11 Lodging. 13 Cluster of Now Go on wit THE story | ‘'S consisted chiefly of trivial bits about the famous author coming |>f auburn hair that waved about Ee, 4 ; : 5 g B i f news. There had been a touch of | back to the scene of her childhood | her face and was fastened in a knot He remarkably. Would it not be a little Ending Reparatio 13 Convent 3 fibers, CHAPTER XXXIV . 5 1 f . Di ns Pest hot weather but now it was gone, |—but that’s not the important part! |!0W on her neck. There was too * a better sportsmanship for the United (New York Times) | Sie comne: dE A eee aivaay: DJD4AN 2s beside her. “Why, no,"| Mrs, Dixon hoped Cherry and Dan| “Wo got to talking about writ-|™uch of that hair for the sleek, " £ States to prune its squad down to| ‘The announement of the Lausanne tea 19 Remains. | ho said in a startled voice.| Were both well. ing. She’s—ob, she’s marvelous! | {8hionable outline but {t was un- ‘ > something near the size of its com-| agreement, the full and technical de-| gg apart a 21 Classifies. “That isn’t what I mean at all, 1| There was a card from Dixte|The minuto you see her you know doubiaaly, SUE Bele. Brenda Vail ’ etitors’ squads? Be ee ren ate wunlishen this) ss shnlahes, © 24 Valuable prop- wouldn't go any place without you,| Shannon, bearing @ Canadian post-) Youre not meeting Aries yorid| i Hhonetse a aaa Half-Honest_Peopl promise of good. It bids fair to; “” cneqn® 26 Bridie straps, Phery, Yop know thst” ReVGe A cleeeh speckions cea | and tle eae Mt eaten ee variably brought her attention, ‘ When ‘the gat eee a p, | @uicken hope not only in Europe but) 22 racgrated. 29 Sober. “But you said you wanted to get| would be sorry to return home. _| don’t know how to describe her ex: Saher Af (Nps, the craving pends, > 3 Epi - seep ees euenone. Lod mpele wees. A per-| 23 Representation “end of. 62 Air toy. 31 Scrutinizes, away from all this. I don’t see how| August proved to be as agreeable | tly. There's something about rapes had for attention, I peers eerie! bishop of Colorado, | sistent distazher of the peace to ro] o¢ the Virgin , 47,To wander VERTICAL (34 To glitter. We could leave. There's the lease/as July had been hot and unpleas. | er. though, that's ditterent from|syone in the nent voce Ae a ‘ told the graduating class at Union Sj only toward European ai mea Mary, mourn- about. 1 Who replaced 35 Refuse after on the apartment—” ant. Cherry, reading in newspaper other People. She wanted to know hurrled forward jom. Miss Va‘ 1 college the other day that the bane) ment and better understanding, ing. 49Gave medicine 3, Senator Fess —_ pressing phat ” society columns that Gretchen al-| !f I'd ever written anything except . g, but "That's just it!” he insisted. new: tuft “Yes?” she sald crisp!; : of American life is the nation's vast| toward financial stability, recovered| 28 Wen. to. ashead of the _ grapes. & den and her mother were extending | "®Wspaper stuff and when I said at fe sald crisply. Imme- y ; number of “half-truthful, half-hon-| confidence and stimulus to commer-| 27 House canary, 51 One affected by < Republican 36 Fish. Leases — bills—always something] their stay at Lake Louise, that |! tried but hadn’t been able to| lately her voico changed. “Oh, =| 1c ON | Se oe When the full effects| 28 Crude. a display of National Com- 39 Bobbin. to force you into rut! That’s| other acquaintances were summer. |®el! anything she asked me it she|!t’s you!” The words came softly. q { est” people, he touched on a flaw that | gl exchanges. When the full effects! 39 hing. wealth, mittee? 41 Billiard shot, what I hate, Cherry. That's what|!ng at Newport, attending the race | ould See one of my stories, Said | /¥e® of course. I've been waiting 4 } usually gets overlooked. when {t ls accepted here that, pend-| 32Southeast. §2The Senate 201 (sux), 43 Muted. Tomanito cer aeas conde meet at Saratoga or visiting distant | Ste’d read it and maybe she could| fF you. Won't you come up?” These people, he explained, are those | ing a readjustment of the war debts,| 23 Sclence of house, 3Old church 44 Bronze. 4 deat cas hae resorts, was not in the least en-|°dvise me where to send it, Can|_ The room had been furnished as “ the exist! tori classification. 54 Gets up. title. 46 To recede, lon’t see how things would be| yious, you imagine that? A writer like|® living room. Hastily Brenda Vail 4 that “make our political platforms, | the existing moratorium must natur- 35 Mountai: 5 ized 4 Soon. 48 Dirty. different anywhere else.” zs Brenda Vail going to all th: pulled a small chair nearer th t i; regulate the stock market and mud- | ily be extended, the improvement in jountain. 16 Good-size : sh : Her life settled into an agreeable yee eduiboed MT 4 ~ pes t financial sentiment and business out-| 37 Ocean. mouthful. 5Clan symbol. 50 Writing Dan stood befere the window, a/calm, Dan, to his amazement, re-|I8 for someone she'd never seen |CHalse longue that stood near the a ee dle our whole educational system with | look cannot fail to be marked in this| 38 Snacks. 57 Enclosed 6 Cry, of eur- table. mutinous figure, He rubbed a hand|celved the long expected reisa in| Detore?” window, She adjusted the pillows, ; the half truth that education will | country also. 40 Part of. charge of prise: He Monkey. through his hatr, pushing the locks | S@lary. It meant $5 a week added|, Cherry had been lstening intent.| Stepped back and eyed them criti. f make 2 nation righteous.” To dispute over the question who curved line. + explosive. Reale Ay Bapralie. a Bl p Susbing the looks tnt scanty household budget,|1¥- “It’s fine, Dan!” she assured ety. ciesiiias % is entitled to the credit for this wel-| 42Genus of 59 Dexterity. vessel. eity. ye The him. “What are you going to moment later she was opening : E As individuals, he said, not one of {come settlement ts 0 sterile proceed herbs. _. 61 The spinal 8 To droop. 60 Neuter pro- “Ob, T suppose you're right. But,| a a naires punter at take?” ; RE 0) the door. i them would pick another man's poc-|ing. Many contributed to the auspi-| 45 To bevel the cord. 9Prying sneak. _ noun. Lord! I wish something would come| first week's $5 aan) why, 1 thought 14 show her smiled “Tye rete q @ : x . 0 “It's 80 got Hi bal as pepe ofa gat noe gious, eeu By wey be bald Fey along to stir things up. I’m not Then, on a Thursday evening Dan tet ware apeue the ean te ie come. I've been arate ee a porn cht seanomis that Europe proceed to set her own used to this sort of life. I've al-| arrived home excitedly. “Cherry!” | 2 "a Crime. Nobody ete niet | was to do with myself this whol | would bilthely deprive a nation of its| nouse in order before making any ap- ways pushed on somewhere else|He cried as he pushed the door| empy's Crime, Nobody else has|tonely evening. Won't you ‘come heritage. roaches to the United States. In the when things got too tame.” Teens San E SURRECUBAL A Dan. ree ora sine on ths ptaae aor i, pened!” story. ye ieee ee Pebop soci. to ‘have | aotual newotistions it ts evident that Tho girl sald nothing. Phillips The one that came back after I eent| omer ee He, seemed 8 trifle re been getting at is the fact that we|Ptime Minister MacDonald played a turned and saw her brush her eyes| «Nov of cours Toate are cnem: [it out, Miss Vail sald tf 1'4 bring | mira ae ig, a LOB You don't BL cy part ediary io, of course I can’t,” she sald, + he said. “I took ' do not ie i sa > cian an black-|and conelliaton ‘But’ success sould with a handkerchief, He crossed | “What is it?” Xt over to the hotel tonight she'd! word’ and brought that story’ ire 5 and-white world as we to sup-| not have hoe mege Bee Se oak the room and put a hand on her| “Say—walt till you hear! Boy,| «you're going to take 1 you to read.” t 4 pose. We may be betrayed, over and | been resolve o! jer auouldes. did I run into luck today! It’s the 7» 0ing to take ft to her] “But I'm delighted! Here—won't man delegates and the French to “ a tonight? you take thi; 2 } over, by political or business leaders, | nore their minds meet, at aime ant “Listen, honey,” he sald. “You | bance I’ve been looking for— : ‘@ this chair? You'll find but the betray us "t " y 4 2 . “For hi "s sake, D: ‘Sure. You see I don't know how | lgarets in the box. That's right, men who aren't | sacrifice, in order to get rid of a know I didn’t mean to hurt your ‘or heaven's sake, Dan Phillips, | j he'll Mi " long she'll be in town. It depends| Make yourself comfortable.” conscious villains. Instead they be-|threat to peace not only between fell Why, I ldn’t do that | 8t@nd still a minute and tell me ne their two countries but in all Euro} OF the Worlae Suet fost: aot | what you're talking about!” on this business deal, she says.| She sank to the chaise longue, Jong to that half-truthful, half-hon- lite on Papen one Ad for the world! Just forget 1 said u Gosh, Cherry, suppose she likes my | laid the manuscript casually on a { : est group which has lost the capacity ead nares igceemsteat: Gly’ te anything. I’m just a tramp I guess| He caught her by the shoulders story! Wouldn't that be great? You | table behind her. . i ; =a nogood who doesn’t realize|and held her away from him.|seo she knows a lot of editors and| Miss Vail rai; q to assay its own actions correctly. heads of the respective delegations, e4 “whi ” ised a cigaret in a 4 ‘The politician who accepts the sup-|seem to have taken thelr courage in when he’s well off. You won't Hh af meus won say,’ be began, | she might be able to put in a word | long ebony holder to her lips and x of @ corrupt and thereby |Poth hands, conceding much to each think any more about tt, will you, |"! Sen Bs nt one o she Pee for me! You know just sort of—| expelled a curling wraith of smoke. : Port of gang other, but both obtaining the one Cherry? Promise me you won't! a by ne teats ry has} well, ask them to give me a|The gray-green eyes narrowed. helps to perpetuate it; the financier on which they had set their ee utes want you to be happy, a ree cabs ead sl ee chance!” “Later,” she said, “I'll read your who fans the flames of speculation i It is what they ae been ate His ceeun ware Acoling Bie oy ny | sed to erlticize them and help is ‘aren pete like it, Dan. It's a Hey, ut ey I'm interested tn : : ance a1 r her. e : you. You know, Mr. Phillips, I ‘and paves the way for ae td that makes the shouant I be-henps? Tea.xot poe, | Aad o markett | Phillips grinned. “Ob, you're think that I like you very much,” : industrialist who owns a coal mine eighth of July, 1932, & day from which aven't Say, I guess I'm just ‘Oh, Dan—really? Why, that’s| prejudiced,” be sald, “but if Brenda! (To Be Continued) Where men are as truly enslaved 85/0 date a :

Other pages from this issue: