The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 2, 1932, Page 4

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_THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE » TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1932 “how times have Professor Walter B. Pitkin of Colum- i destruction and to encourage refor- of teeth than children in simitar en-|curb and talk over bia University. The Bismarck Tribune| ort The World May Choose! Mironment who receive only Dastett-| changed.” ot 4 An Independent Newspaper i ized milk or dried or canned milk. ‘There's an old gray-beard who owns) 1 i. nohuy a juvenile insti- i THE STATE'S OLDEST Among other board recommenda- (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) a @ush-cart where Miss Baker once tution that is not a crime incubator. : NEWSPAPER tions is one that the government bought various articles of apparel. “warden Lewis E. Lawes of Sing Sing t (Established 1873) __}adopt a unified system of forest man- |, There's a hokey-pokey man and 8/7 ot tiary, Published by The Bismarck Tribune | ®eement. At present, three different copPerely do they ever miss a Belle tage rates cost A. T. and Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- | bureaus or departments have control | Baker opening,” she told me recently. Peni Pos gts pede sieaeae tered at the postoffice at Bismarck @S/of the federal forest preserves and | “After the theater we all go out to a checks. But there are plenty of our second Seon ait there is no common policy. delicatessen Store and have a grand big corporations who would like ta Bieident and Poblisher. Suggestion also is made that the Lert cael ry spend ® similar amount for a similar —-_ ——|government acquire additional tim- Belle was 15 when they gave her | Purpose. Sebscription Rates Payable in ber lands to round out the national @ chance at Hammerstein's Victoria A final settlement of reparations Daily by aise’ tar pias , .$7.20 | forest system and to remove from im. | and she heed de acey cairn Weed entails as a natural consequence that Daily by mail per year (in Bis- mediate exploitation, forced by taxes | Sey. One of the many of war debts. The Italian govern- See ee | KINGS DON'T DIE ucts of the East Side streets, she i5| ment has always considered the in- marck) Soscesesesesseess seeeee and other carrying charges, surplus | New York, Aug. 2—Bridge fans may| one of the few who remembers the terdependence between the problem ead Md ae et ad (in state 5.00 | timber for which there is no present get a chuckle from Ely Culbertson’s| dirty and crowded pavements with| (> wor debts and reparations an es- Daily by mail outside of North |demand. Other recommendations are | tale of a playing card confab held| sentimental affection — and always|°° 121 aspect of the situation Fore i i with the Soviet chieftains in Russia. | goes back. eign Minister Dino Grandi of Italy. i a ere +++. 6.00/for selective cutting of timber and ‘AN aby BOBEE Ginser’ Has Hed HAG ig eesizis a, " nar voar 1.0 | crest management to provide for sus- | son to remember sadly, there are o Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 tained yield; research and carefully | Kings and queens on playing cards “i Barbs r Weekly by mail in state, three | ing: | / years «see.» 2.50] Planned mergers of timber holdings | which have an unhappy habit So fall- 1S THE == f orn RO Nee NESE erent Weekly by mail outside of North and various improvements in the mar- | ing into the other fellow's hand just AR Rates on airlines are being reduced Dakota, per year ......... Kase 480 in time to beat three deuces. And as | i Even the cost of goiny is 5 Weekly by mail in Canada, per keting of forest products. i any follower of Communistic events | VE Y again. a ie up year . 2 In making these recommendations | knows full well, kings and eee and AN | coming down. Been sales id inas are not welcome| \* ceed SAG a AUAN Ba ; the board has taken another leaf peo i om sac } To In Japanese movie houses they Member oe at iH enn, from Europe’s book. The old system} ~ “y+ & ' | pay a man to tell the story of | rg ecerecx of sending @ logging crew into a! | All of which the contract wizard SOISSONS TAKEN i film Rd Ud shen ed Member of The Associated Press | woods to cut down everything mer- ; heard about at great ane Cantal On Aug. 2, 1918, victorious French tor aouitng, — The Associated Press is exclusively chantable in sight has long been a bg Sen par: fae Sovial ear ‘of | ‘OOPS occupied Soissons, which had entitled to the use for republication} .-andal in this country. All that is | 5 , ; been evacuated during the preceding ering abou of all news dispatches credited to it] SO" 0" it OU tnd which for sear FE ACE Ae cr naa, ie nan] uot se Gena” asiny” “eSPbe | ae POU cre ee co ule ee EET aco eli ee peas been attempted, but somehow the reg. | Which had been operating in the|te ir they dont hurry the Indians newspaper and also tne local news of | afterward is valueless. been Hennes) but och td athe Marne salient was reported retreating | vont take it off our hands. spontancous origin published herein.} Adoption of the selective cutting BUiers pRTSEION tor aes rote 4 rapidly. All rights of republication of all other | stem would provide work for small ill have the card |, American and French regiments ad-| 4n english scientist is working on erved. kings and queens still have : ans matter herein are also reservet vanced five miles north of Fere-en-|ine theory that plants breathe. If —__—. ‘sawmills throughout the country year preference in the land of the com-|-rardenois and French outposts were | 1 tiiaee te Rereed on ths onlntra age (Official City, State and County {after year and would do much to — ear si established in the deserted town of] fcnus should est neide alt scruples. Newspaper) stabilize other business as well as the However, Culbertson reports, rigor- | Ville-en-Tardenois, ar catia ~|lumber industry. It is not in line ‘effort has been made to discour-| , German losses during the battle Foreign Representatives aint - Oe ERE TAETETiE +4 which began as their fifth offensive SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER with American forest tradition, but ype podieadash tle! ie athe Pad such! on July 15 and ended in their most | Cncorporated) the sooner we adopt it the better. distraction keeps folk from engaging | gecisive defeat in years, were esti- CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON in more serious matters of state. mated at more than 250,000 men by To the Last Man Written rules to any card game ST©/ aiied observers. : | |C--L-T--NB-R-M-T-R The Process of Conversion There is something blood-curdling is passed from person to person. With| , THe oar, aehataiy on the Ssceal bi eoales laren rom ri $ i 5 the result that the sale of cards has| ©!” front had definitely swung senrtiscillcdicst Soatine A woman subscriber makes inquiry | about the dispatch from Harbin, Man: allies, and neither Germany nor her missing twice, one vowel is missing three of the editor if he cannot do some-|churia, which tells of the death of) | : eran __ | fallen off in Russia at least one-fifth) anies was on the offensive on any! | times and one vowel in't misting a al thing to halt the ravages of boys who|Mah Chan Shan, Chinese general, at — oe lof pimply meh and tladkhenas, 1 * ® active front. See if you can fil in the proper vowels in are damaging her fruit trees. the hands of the Japanese. | nave been told to drink a pint of but-| HAPPY DAYS? rae \ such a way that you Leth can split the The story is that of everyone else| Describing the pursuit of this ban- termilk every day and it will clear up| And there's a funny yarn, too, about line of letters in half and have two nine> wetta 5 ver yé y my blood.—(D. J.). the Democratic song, “Happy Days letter words. who is attempting to develop an or-|dit or patriot, whichever you may wish ‘Answer—Buttermilk is a wholesome | Are Here Again.” Wonder if Franklin ‘ chard. She has tended the trees care-| to call ae Associated Press gives By William Brady, M. D. beverage if you like it. I don’t think|D. Roosevelt, who adopted this tune, st -| this word picture: it cures anything. Send a stamped | ever heard it? . ie | a i Siened letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease || cvelone ‘bearing Your address and| ‘The writers of the ditty which mil- ~ feat the grasshoppers, spraying to| “They stood with their backs against)| qiagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- ask for instructions for the treatment | lions are singing were Jack Yellen, Kill insects and otherwise nurtur-|@ mountain-side, retreat cut off, and|] addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in et your trouble. who turned out many of Sophie Tuck- 6, ing a prize possession. the Japanese pressed in until they|| ink. No rend ce Peete 4 Seated not conforming to instructions. Alas, the Poor Nurses er’s tunes, and Bob Ager. Yellen wrote ‘The result, in this case, was to de-|ad annihilated the last man.” —— a or ae or Ce ere: As I am about to marry @ nurse I| the lyrics and Ager the rhythm. Depression? On the contrary, the ‘ iad Hib ouetinin ae The language of the dispatch bears am interested in your views about the} Very well—they were together in| world is just now laboring under nor- velop a fine apple orchard with pal ea adie, AEE g A HOW DO YOU LIKE THE ODOR OF , Petrolatum, enough to adequacy of the two-year course of|the music publishing firm of Ager,| 14) conditions. We have been mad green apples absorbing the heat of| Bs SALVE? make ........! ONE OUNCE training for nurses instead of the j Yellen and Bernstein for many years. for about f fi d North Dakota's sunshine. membered that every dispatch from] One of the last and best things I} Notice my recipe omits zine stearate |three years they are required to take | As collaborators on topical tunes they four or five years and it ‘ i that part of the world is censored by | suggested to stock the family medi- | (which is not essential where zinc ox- | in most hospitals. Have you seen this}got along together first rate. But] will take three or four years to get | But suddenly the joys of ee Japanese, cine cupboard with is Old Doc Salve.! ide is an ingredient) and includes {report about the movement among|after that—well, they nodded when /|used to normalcy again. We are now j tion were dimmed by the fact that | : And I confessed this fine salve was no} rosemary and benzoin as aromatics. | hospital managers in the northwest to|they passed, perhaps. ‘They wasted| producing about what we are using — i boys in the neighborhood had spied} Hd the Chinese fought to the last/ invention of mine. It was the gift of | One might incorporate a few drops of/make the course five years?—(C.|no words. In Tin Pan Alley the tale/Baron Jean Empain, Belgian finan- | the d fruit. True to the im-|™&" there would have been some-)a drug drummer, one of those manu- | oil of eucalyptus, I suppose, but I be- | W. J.). went that they hadn't spoken to each |cier. | ee «wt, { thing inspiring about it, even though|facturer’s salesmen who canvass the | lieve that would change merely the| Answer—No. So far as I know, Dr. other in some 11 years and that the ert | Petuous spirit of youth, the orchard | 5 result would have been the same, | Practicing physicians regularly in the | grand total odor of the salve. Mayo and I are still in favor of the | fecling was mutually bitter. 7 What the women of France need } was raided, the fruit was stolen and , {interest of the supply houses. When} One ingredient in the supply house | two-year course of hospital training! So what? So out comes “Happy is not the right to vote but a repu-j the trees were damaged, many limbs| 72 Greeks at Thermopylae, Crockett! think of all the hokum such agents recipe and not in mine is zine perox-|for nurses. If the idea is to make|Days Are Here” with the composers| tation for being faithful housewives, ath : 2 jt the Alamo and a thousand other} have handed me—and I was moder- | ide, If the neighborhood druggist | specialists, or maybe little tin doctors! making faces at each other. It is no exaggeration to say that being broken down. : heroes come to mind who died in like| ately hard-boiled in this respect, as! has this or can obtain it, the addition | to serve in industrial plants, depart- | oe America would have entered the war Recitation of the incident will bring | A young doctors go—well, I'm glad this | of 10 or 20 grains to the ounce of | ment stores, etc., post-graduate course | OLD NEIGHBORS two years sooner had the women of | | guilty memories to many a man who | “7CUmstances. ‘ip [Old veteran of the road included in salve might improve the formula.tin the special fields should be pro-| Belle Baker is one performer from! Paris had a better reputation in} has participated in just such activi- But there is no hint of that spirit|my order a sample of Old Doc Salve. Zinc peroxide is a powder which, like ; vided. The third year in the nurse; Manhattan's ghetto who has never America—French Senator De Las | : ea u |here. The Chinese are not noted for | That isn’t the name the drug manu- | the familiar hydrogen peroxide solu- | training course is just a little scheme! forgotten the old neighbors on the! Cases, in debate on giving suffrage to! ee cr ee Neatly allots catt| i oe.we read between tiie slines we'| facturing hiotine cave it; itis myTiAme. |ton, Hkerates axysenwhieavlbvoaaies | whereby the hospital igetd @ifullgear| Rast’ Gide, At regular intervals ais) women dn Panos { recall doing something on this order} * - I think the people who first com- jn contact th blood or organic se- | of expert nursing service at the Pay j revisits the old push-cart merchants * * * r during those years before the boys| COM? to the conclusion that annihila-| pounded the salve called it lyptoline, |cretions. with considerable ebullition |of a chamber maid. jand tenement folk whom she knew} Almost everything that we have ters. Bocarin ithe men wi to-|tion of Mah Chan Shan’s army of; probably because it contains eucalyp- | or foaming. | Raw Milk for Children’s Teeth jin the “days when.” done in America in education, and ab were Pecame the men we are to-| me 20,000 men was really a colossal! tol. They called it an “ozonized oint-|° the calves is most conveniently, eco-; Where can I find information on} There's an old lady who sells dill|especially in higher education, has das butchery. ment,” whatever that may mean, and | nomically and aseptically put up and|the experiments on the effect of cer-| pickles, herring and similar sidewalk | been wrong. Recently I looked up the t is no salve for our consciences oO offered it as deedorant, disinfectant, | dispensed from a collapsible tube, | tified milk on children’s teeth?—(Mrs.| delicacies at Delancey and Essex | educational record of several hundred now to realize that our actions in boy-|__T€ Japanese understand how to| antiseptic, non-irritant’ and stimu-| though it may be kept in tin boxes or | M. H. A Streets—for instance. Miss Baker jof those financiers who have ruined| Joye, CCADYS Powe ape é 2 a used the mailed fist. If they had no]lant, for burns, scalds, eczema, | plass jars. It is difficult or impossi-|_ Answer—I do not know. In Eng-| “pays a call” about every four or five | others in the past few years. Most of ; NREL e eraser Hiei Berger oo eomerines were MOT’ | fusialong that ane they could have | Wounds, ulcers, etc. Here is the for- | ble to keep any salve or ointment ste- |land it has been found that childrqn| months, if playing the New York ter-| them were either college graduates or! A fool usually brags that he's a self- than a little mean and unfair. We ey ed easily enough from the his- mula: lrile (uncontaminated with germs) | Who receive raw milk have less Gecay | ritory. They draw stools up to the! the recipients of honorary degrees— ' made man, realize, as boys never will, that people cia . E Zine Stearate after an ordinary box or jar has been oe ot o ’ who take the trouble to make this tory of white civilization. For, even Zine Oxide . opened for use of the salve; on the| as we shudder at thought of this mod- Boric Acid jother hand it is difficult to contami- | world a better place by growing orj making something worth while de- serve better treatment than to have the products of their toil damaged or} destroyed. All of us who are inter-{ ested in growing things understand} what a tragedy it is to have a tree} damaged. The editor has no answer to the Problem except the suggestion that parents might do well to check up on their children and ascertain if they are guilty. Whether or not they are, all of us should strive to teach the younger generation that few things | are so mean and contemptible as the| damaging of a tree in this area where | trees are relatively hard to grow. We can rest assured, too, that steal- ing green apples carries a penalty of | ern barbarism, we must remember | that our own record is none too clear. The explanation is that life is cheap when one treads the path of empire. Gene Tunney—Stump Speaker Gene Tunney pg@ably will never be seen in the prize ring again; but you might just keep your eye on the young man and see if he {doesn’t get into Politics in a whole-souled way before so very long. The retired heavyweight champion} has been doing a bit of campaigning | in Connecticut for the Democratic} ticket and from all accounts has prov- en a very effective stump speaker. Need we remark that a famous and wealthy young man who can make good speeches is precisely the sort of Benzoic Acid . Zine peroxide Aromatic oils . Special base -quantity At any rate that was the formula, or as much of it as the manufacturer consented to give out for publication. But you can’t make a satisfactory salve with such a tricky formula or recipe. So I had to work out a prac- ticable formula or recipe which any druggist can prepare to order, and this is what I call Old Doc Salvi Zinc Oxide . i Boric Acid .. Benzoin . Oil of Ros Lanolin .. | nate the contents of a collapsible tube. | |The concern that prepared the oint- | ment lyptoline for physicians declined ' (to provide it for the laity. That is! another reason why I have worked | | out a.practicable formula for Old Doc | Salve. | Keep a tube of it in your emergency |kit and use it for burns, cuts, sores, bee stings, mosquito bites, sunburn, |or wherever you crave a salve whose | Soothing influence is not confined to | its odor. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Buttermilk I am 16 years old and have a kind CT HORIZONTAL | Bible Questions Answer to Previous Puzzle ST] 15 Short stake. i CHAPTER XLVIII backed away. Xt was Cherry’s kitten, “Pinky!” Dan Phillips exclaimed. He picked up the little animal, about it. pe gray kitten mewed again. It sat on the fifth step down from the top of the flight and as Phillips reached for it the kitten Its fur mounted per-| “I didn’t want you to. The jani-| pendicularly and from its mouth there came a sharp, hissing “Phftt!” holding it to the light, It was Pinky—there could be no doubt LEAD YEAR BRIDE was entirely strange and seemed | belong to another person. “Yes, it is a surprise. Have you | been here all the time, Cherry? 1| didn’t know—”" tor said it was all right. He let me stay here. I've been down in the apartment, too—but only when | .,L knew you wouldn’t be there. No ,|One saw me. .I didn’t want anyone | |to know about it. Pinky's been| here all the while but tonight he) must have slipped out when I Pearson, below, asked impatient-| wasn’t noticing, | you know that?” only one in the world I love! Don’t THERE were footsteps on the staircase. Max Pearson's head emerged above the railing as the two in the doorway turned. “Cherry!” Pearson exclaimed. ‘Well, I'm certainly glad to know you're all right! Has Dan told you we've been tearing the town apart to find you? Thought you'd been kidnaped or smashed up in an ac- cident—1” The girl shook her head. “Dan | of “A letter!” she said. Dan. Oh, look—!” Both of them were staring at the inconspicuous lettering in the up- per left hand corner of the enve- lope. mous magazine, Quickly, with a half-suppressed exclamation Dan tore open the envelope, drew out the sheet that was inside, “Cherry!” he cried. “Why—why, Cherry—!” He held a slip of pink paper bear- ing the words, “Pay to the order “For you, ; The name was that of a fa- Daniel Phillips, $300.” i P \ mesons 4 : .of-| didn't tell me,” she said, ” its own. The digestive system of a timber that the veteran politicians are| 1 Broad neck } 18 Channels. Ree cat ete eee Maa the dered alapees. raat ere! were on felis ere ia Bn mame means pen ping ‘ Growing bey frequently is as strong always looking for? If you learn, one! _scarf. 19 Hora covering. But Dan was not listening: One flaming, stabbing words so close to Passed betweem these two was un-|Cherry. It can't bet” ie ' as that of a horse but even it has of these days, that Tunney is going to! 5 To secure on a horse’s quick glance about him and be was | Dan's lips. mistakable, . “Let’s read the letter, dear.” ‘ been known to fail under the strain | become a candidate for the state leg-| § Type of foot. running up the stairs. ‘There were| There was the briefest pause and Pearson coughed. “Oh, I see!”| tt was a brief note. The editor ; imposed by green apples. islature, or for Congress, or for some elubfoot 22.4 congregay |B threo doors opening off the third|then Phillips made a tremendous) '? sald. Qther things to talk | was pleased to inform Daniel Phil- { In plain words, green apples often] other office, you need not be too| 1% Present tion. |. floor hallway. “One led to Dixie effort, He sald, “Cherry—you want “pout. ae ey cage You |lips that his manuscript, “Night Jead to bellyache, bellyache leads to| greatly surprised. 14 Those that R} 24 Preise i Epapnon's Hay, Suarlere net ae me ite cp you?’ | siaeee axl waiting out- Tie pet won Miog Drise in the j S e e. of o the Moreaus’ rooms. - . Fh . ™ Ine’s amateur ¥ \- Regge coomemorse leads:tovconyers | __ | ee eae 27 Periahes. lips had never stepped bebind the| ‘lf that’s what you want I'll do| “Good Lofd! Ta forgotten all test. ‘The story would be naplisend sion. dios HH cone ZIG] 29 Wing. third door. It was a vacant apart-|it.” Suddenly Dan was voluble. |® rye a pen moved but the other /in an early issue. The letter ended || Editorial Comment 16 What Philis TAI IRIG) 31 Platelike. | {2 ment—but, no, a tiny erack of light “Fil do anything you say, Cherry, PUt a hand on his arm. | with the hope that the editor might | ‘Taxes on Timber ae TnAtLac@ cis aria rice yey IN| 32 To close H gleamed above the door sill! 1 mean—anything! You can have| |. oN cine care of it,” Max told/see more of Dan's work. There ’ ; Editorials printed below show the gian TIN a @ divorce if you want it. Every./him. “Got to be running along any-| were the ph “ ” Revision of the taxing policy on rend of thought by other editors. David kill? IE ILISIE} 23 Plot of groun A half dozen strides carried Dan hi fault—I k hat|how. I want to get off an an: @ ie phrases, “promising,’ ete ficsber jc inchuced PAL ec hrid ca remedy Les (Bibl y 35 To water land to that door. The kitten, having |thing was my fault—I know that) / Ov) |! want ‘Swer | “original flavor” and “vitality.” See et 4s included among with The Tribune's policies, 20 Sesame David.” VERTICAL artificially. established acquaintanceship, era-|90W. There’s no reason why ria ier 994 nipasi ais ‘; The young man raised puzzled suggestions by the National Timber || —________"__}° 21 preposition 43 Small ‘stream. 1King David's 37 To stuff. |B dled close to his arm, It was purr- | Should be tled to a dub like me! I) | You § Re apent che dept Are/eyes, “But I didn’t enter this con- Conservation Board, released by Sec- : . 22Grit 45 Tanner's favorite son. 38 Wing-shaped. ing in a sleepy sing-song. couldn't expect it ae tema | a peta ; test! I didn't—” retary Lamont. The fact that taxes Sentiment Changing 23 Fold of string __ vessel (Bibl) 41 Nights before Dan knocked. Ee frente rom, SeML casranes| || Eneat so. Tl be clearing | “Ait at once he understood. constitute one of the urgent reasons Glen: Fore Mint Ge Telegram) 25 Toward 46Small child, 2 Carbon in holidays. There was no answer but he|things in the quie oseible. On | Morrow, Dan” 5° YO" | “You sent it!” ho eried. “Cherry, ; -_ Russia, flushed with the success of] 95, diminish 47 Not bright. smoke. 42 Paradise. heard a rustling sound on the op-|'t 88 easy for you as p le. Oh, g you did this, didn’t you?” for destruction of the nation’s timber | the five-year plan, prepares to launch 26 Northeast 49 Hymn of 3 Bed. 43 Branch. posite side of the door. He knocked |¥0U're @ million times too good for| Cherry stepped forward. She put “You don’t. mind, do you, Dan? Tesources only gives added proof to}on January 1 a second, which will) °* UN neas praise. 4 Upon. 44 Larva of the @ second time, mend Lknow itt Z¥e made every |ont her hand, “We'll both se 204 | vou ssa, T kneport Rewer hares the close relationship between high| ‘Teble the financial outlay of the first,| | "ne 52 Asylum. 5 Precious metal. ghost moth. | Then slowly, hesitantly, the door| find of fool of myself a man can.|Alax. You wouldn't leave Welling:| ne story. ‘That time you asked for t : bringing the total expenditure to $75,- e H C I couldn't expect you to forgive the | ton without saying goodby to 0 Ly taxes and the cost of business. 000,000,000. 32 To drink 54 Specks. 6 Silkworm. 47 Cheats. * opened. There she stood! Cherry |tnings I've done! And I would Boodby to me,|it—1 didn’t tell you the truth. I The board asserts that the “burden| Enormous purchases will be made! __ slowly 55 Also 7 Wild duck, 48 Fray Wearing the yellow housedress 101% 49 happy, Cherry! I want that| friends.” + ‘OUBKY We were/said tho manuscript was lost. be- f taxation ture standing tim-| in foreign countries. 34 Sheet of paper, 57 Prickly pear, _ 9 Dye. 50 Valiant man. which he had seen her so often.| more than "anything else in the salle cause I didn’t want to tell you I'd Fees cat imretestengh, How will depression-hit America| folded once. 58Consumer. | 1070 soak flax. 51 The heart, Fhe Jamp light fell on that yellow | world, Ti—I'll even give you up| girl's, “OF cow nn ye eee, the| sent it away. Ob, I was sure it gle PreS-| rietire in this? 36 Influence 59 Pertaining to 11 One 53 Golf cry Gress and made it golden. Cherry's | i¢ that will make you happy!” | "Alwaysnr curse We are” he said, | would win all the time but I want- ; ent factor forcing the sale or cutting| We figured well in the middle of; 37 Pincerlike the air 12 Which of King 55 Wine cask. ‘face was pale. She raised wide,| 1° 14 yeep trom It i ways! ed to know before I told you! I’m i of timber without due regard to the| the first five-year plan. In 1930-1931, organ 61 Network. David's sone 56 An idiot. dark-fringed eyes to Dan's. saaa ay Weet arer seat peal And that handclasp, the look in|S0 happy, Dan. I've always known { current market demand for forest| the United Press reported yesterday,| 39 To merit 62 Substance in a became a king 59 Three-toed The young man said, “Cherry—!" | 444 girl, He caught her close to Cherry Phillips’ eyes meant more|You were going to be a great 5 Russia bought more than three-quar-| 40 The “Holy blood serum. of Israel? As often as she had rehearsed! nim” pan whispered, “Darli; to Max Pearson than declarations | Writer! Products. ters of our total exports of farm ma- City", “City of 68 To foreknow 140s ia acene to tating ae oa ee pered, ing—|of love from any other woman in | Heavily wooded with good timber,| buyer of industrial machinery. | But in the next few moments was noth- pcan ee ae setting along now!” worked before! | Look—the letter land may be valued at high figures 2 ing whatever like Cherry's imagin- ¢ lerry’s ley went down to the second | sys they’ 6 to ‘see more of my i for Kaptan purposes. The value is| ‘Temendous Samp, Because we with- ings. Dan took a step forward, He|S0ft cheek, like warm velvet,|floor landing together. Cherry’s| work.’ They'll see plenty of it! Bf pian Fa ia eacea Talk 9 coameren 2 if ae f held out the kitten and Cherry |®8#inst his own. Cherry unresist-| face, smiling down over the ban. | It’s—why, Cherry, this is the great ee pares: 3 sure, and so nT Englani ay our took it ie her arme. {ng that fervent embrace. Cherry | nister, was the last thing Pearson |chance of my life—I mean the real year year. e ‘The reason for this is easy to see. Persons paying heavy taxes and getting little income are often tempt- ed and sometimes forced to cut their timber in order to pay the taxes.| tore ‘Thus more lumber is tossed upon an giready glutted market, the price is foreed down and the country’s na- chinery, and in 1931 was our largest, that Russia is going ahead regardless; they see that the Soviet will have ever greater orders to distribute; they see, as Peter Bogdanov, head of the Am- Trading Corp., said in yester- day's United Press , that Rus- sia “has continued to meet all pay- ments as they fall due.” The most capitalistic and the most tural resources are depleted. < ‘The commission recommends that the land be taxed simply on its value as land, the same as other crop-pro- 3 “ hen something on the floor caught | one!” NY NYE said in a low, throaty voice, “Thank ’] Ae tree-growth be imposed at the time| ty delay restoration of Russian trade. Le ~ > prised to see me!” iit you do erarything will te ai at} It was lying just within the room | is the happiest of all endings and ‘of cutting, In other words, the trees || T NN” | ae Hg nodded, It was not Dan‘sjent! I'll never be such a fool again. Underneath the door, Cher ees | ett besinnings, Cherry said ‘are ‘taxed only after they are cut. ‘This is the system which other na- fions are practicing to prevent forest t radical interests in the United States now enthusiastically want immediate Russian recognition. With 11,000,000 Americans hungry for food and hungry for work this Red-headed boys and girls were ad- Redland cinnati mitted free at a game al Field, home grounds of the Reds, ce aoe PLO ” PTT Pt See ‘a pet I sloth. | 60 Behold! | “Here,® Dan said. “Pinky—! found him on the steps.” man was looking intently at thi girl’s face. He did not move—wa: remained there staring at her, coe had hoped for it—what happened The words halted. The young not even standing inside the room. He did not try to touch Cherry but Tr was the girl who recovered from her surprise first. She put @ hand to her throat, smiled in a way that was not quite convincing, voicé that answered but one ‘that ob, my dear—my dear, I love you 1 |Faising eyes that were like: star- light. Cherry—his own beloved Cherry close in his arms! | _ And suddenly the miracle became g|reality. She drew away. The girl's eyes—they were no longer level and matter-of-fact but radiant, may and gloriously tender—met She whispered, “Don’t leave me again, Dan! I couldn't stand it, 1 don’t want you to go away again— ever!” “You mean you don’t want a di- I love you, Cherry. ‘You're the the world. Pearson grinned. “Well, saw before pulling down his hat | 0D brim, drawing up his coat collar and stepping out into the night. ary CHERRY and Dan stood before their own theshold, Dan opened the door, touched the wall switch and they entered the apartment. “Great guy, Pearson!” he sald. “But then I’ve always told you that.” Cherry would have agreed with him, She was about to say as much chi underneath the door. Cherry picked | “Yes.” it up. “But I’m not—I'm just a dub, Oh, but, Cherry, I'll work as I never He thought of Brenda, Dan said slowly, “chances to write stories don’t mean so much, All I want is the chance to show how much I love you, svorsthing is going to be for us from now on!” The girl smiled, “We'll take that happy ending of the story.” 1”? He had used those words before. “Cherry,” How different lance together, Dan, It's—the “And the beginning of a new (THE END)

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