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t t 1 ! | are proposed only in areas where the —% The | Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune , 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 currier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) .. 7.20 Daily by ma! outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail outside rt Dakot® ....ssscceceseesseeeee 6.00 < ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years ...... sessccscsscecceees On Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ........+..++ 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . 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 tne 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 The Wolf and the Reaper Data compiled by the committee on the costs of medical care indicate that | the most pressing problems facing the average American are those having to; do with his battles against the wolf on his doorstep and the grim reaper who always stands ready to snatch the weak or unwary from this mun- dane sphere. Unfortunately, they appear too fre- quently at the same time and hand in hand. Where illness precedes the | death of the average breadwinner | debts are incurred and families are frequently reduced to woeful want,| even before the final disaster occurs. | To meet this situation, there are | springing up here and there through- | out the country medical benefit cor- porations, to which payments are; made while a person is in good health but which gets nothing while he is il It is the old Chinese system of paying a doctor for keeping you well. | ‘The modern touch is seen mainly in| the form of organization. Some of these organizations make provision for disability benefits dur- | ing the period of illness, in addition | to guaranteeing medical care—and| there is some talk of adding a life} insurance provision. Thus, by paying ene premium, a citizen could insure his life, his health and his income. | The organization of such mutual- benefit corporations is one of the} signs of our times and is the present- modify its policy of improving inland ‘waterways. The rival statements bring to light, it would seem, @ hold-over from the trust-busting days in the early part began to grip the railroads and to restrict their operations. | This part of the northwest wants jits waterways to become lanes of commerce again. This is especially true of Bismarck, once a great river port. But it is not particular who does the work. All things being equal, it would prefer to have the water | transportation industry in private hands rather than under government control. It is a bit silly, therefore, 'to bar the railroads from the inland water transportation field. What 50}once seemed a cure for manifest ills now rises, in its turn, to plague us. It would seem only the part of common sénse and fair play to forbid rate-cutting by the railroads and to open to them all transportation fields, for both freight and passengers. Let "Em Howl The average citizen, soft-hearted though he may be, will relish the news jfrom Wall Street that a good many “bears” have had their fingers burned as the result of recent advances in stock and commodity prices. ! The bears have been advocates of gloom for the last few years and many have made millions by their refusal to believe that things ever were going to improve in this country. Like crows sitting on a fence, they have jbeen harbingers of financial distress and economic misery—and they prof- ited by it. Now, when they are caught in the trap which their own mental pro- cesses set for them, they squeal. It is music to the average man’s ears, for it is retribution long delayed. ‘There have been a good many things wrong with this country and some ad- justments probably aré yet to be made, but one of the most important was accomplished when the profes- sional gloom spreaders were taught a lesson. Use Your Own Judgment With grain prices rising, cheer re- turns to North Dakota and other ag- ricultural districts. Reports printed Friday by The Tribune indicate that the bumper crop in prospect a month ago has not been fully realized but that yields in this area are better than average, although some of the grain is not of high grade. The next question confronting the farmer is how and when to market his grain. Those who sign the agree- ment to hold their wheat should keep their word. They may profit by do- ing so. The plan to market only 10 per cent a month has merit, regard- less of any effect it may have on the price. Many persons are predicting that grain will go to 80 cents or a dollar a bushel at North Dakota elevators within the next few months. It may day concession to the truth of the} theory that it is better to stand to-| gether than to fall separately. Also, it shows intensified develop- | ment of foresight, a quality whose j value has been much enhanced these } last few years. It may be that these corporations! are no real answer to the medical} )~ problems of the average family, but the fact that they have become rather widespread indicates they are not! without some merit. The Biscuit Battle Lawyers will watch with some at- tention the suit which has been insti- tuted by the Kellogg company against the National Biscuit company under the anti-trust laws. It began with the attempt of the Kellogg company to make and mar-| ket shredded wheat products and the efforts of the National Biscuit com- pany to keep it from so doing. The shredded wheat product was originally patented and its present makers thus had exclusive rights to it. When the patent expired, how- ever, it became public property. Other | manufacturers of cereal products have sought to use it, according to this new and unusual complaint, but have been prevented from so doing by “threats, coercion and intimidation.” The Kellogg company asserts these Measures were used against it and asks $3,000,000 damages therefor. The case probably will go down in the lawbooks as one of some import- ance, since it offers some peculiar angles. A good title for it would be “The Battle of Biscuits.” It Seems Foolish Information sent out by the Missis- sippi Valley association, a group spon- soring further development of inland waterways, protests that the railroads are attempting to ruin the established barge lines by cutting rates. Proposals by the land carriers are cited as proof of the assertion and it is further claimed that these slashes warge iines are getting considerable easiness. On the other hand, Edward J. ‘White, attorney for the Missouri Pa- cific railroad, recently appeared be- fore the committee investigating gov- ernmental competition with private business and protested that govern- ment money 1s being spent on inland —and we hope it does—but there is nothing certain about it. The sound thing for the average farmer to do is to watch the situation closely, take careful note of his own situatién and then use his own judg- ment. It probably will prove as good as anyone's. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, Drafting the Citizen (Minneapolis Tribune) In announcing the appointment of @ committee of citizens, headed by President Coffman of the University of Minnesota, to make a study of land utilization as part of a broad policy of conservation, Governor Olson has drafted another group of individuals to work out some of the problems of government. In recent years groups of individuals, who are not a part of the government of the state in an of- ficial capacity, have been called into being to do work that is both legisla- tive and executive in its nature. A similar committee has been making a study of the taxation system in Min- nesota and both groups will be ex- pected to make specific recommenda- tions that may guide the governor and legislature in shaping new legislative Policies. ‘This growing practice of making use of the services of public-spirited citi- zens in preparing a legislative pro- gram has much to indorse it, but thus far practical results have been few. Legislatures have been slow to accept even the work of their own interim commissions, to say nothing about re- ports from committees whose mem- bership is recruited outside their own body. Yet in the instance of both taxation and land utilization, the problems involved are of such import- ance, and touch so closely upon the public welfare, that the work of these two special committees appointed by Governor Olson should receive the thoughtful consideration of the state when they come to make their specific of this century when the I. C. C. first |’ Address Dr. William Brady, WELL, WELL, A CURED PATIENT ADMITS IT Listening in to one of Aimee’s tes- timonial meetings where, singularly enough, all the customers have pre-| viously tried only regular medical} treatment—and that in a neck of ‘the woods where it is hard to find a regu- lar physician for the hordes of irregu- lars milling about—one is reminded of a quirk of human nature. We delight to tell the world of our cure if there is anything unorthodox about the; remedy or treatment. If we are cured by a regular doctor or by orthodox methods, we prefer to forget it. But here comes a lady who has! been cured of Raynaud's disease and doesn’t mind admitting it, notwith- standing the fact that her cure was brought about by common garden doctors with strictly scientific meth- ods. “In your column recently,” she writes, “I read an article written by a woman who said she had noticed that twice in one day her fingers had turned a dead white and there seemed no life in them till she put them in hot water, which brought the circulation back. Your reply was that the condition is known as ‘Dead Fin- gers’ or ‘Raynaud's affection’ and that you knew of no other relief but the hot water treat- ment or heat in other forms. “I just want to say that I, too, was a sufferer from Raynaud's disease, so much so that I had two gangrene ulcers on my feet. October 2, 1928, I had an opera- tion, Lumbar Sympathetic Gang- lionectomy, performed by Drs.— and—. Today I am in splendid health and my feet have been Perfect ever since. “If anyone else writes to you suffering with this disease kindly refer them to these doctors at such and such adéress.” The removal of the sympathetic ganglion (sometimes called “sympa- | thectomy”) is now frequently resorted to, as a means of relief for Raynaud's affection. In most cases it gives high- ly satisfactory results. Other suggestions which have come from readers who are victims of the trouble are: Diathermy treatment, with one elec- trode on the arm of the sympathetic ganglion and the other on the limb involved, has given considerable re- lief. In cases where the attacks occur at night patients find they can get a good night’s rest by wearing on the affected foot or hand a suitable tent cover with an ordinary 25-watt elec- tric light bulb burning all night, to provide moderate warmth. In a few cases the exciting cause of Raynaud's disease seems to be mild chronic arsenic poisoning, from do- mestic or occupational exposure to arsenic in one form or another. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Beauty Sleep I maintain sleep is more beneficial before midnight, than is sleep after midnight.—(J. P.) Answer—So far as we know, it doesn’t matter which hours you sleep, so long as you get sufficient sleep. Shame I am 52 years old, have a wife and five children. Business has prevented getting exercise I need. Want to join gym class but every man must take shower, and I am so self-conscious over my underdevelopment. Answer—Which seems silly in view of the fact that you are the father of children. Perhaps the mental and moral standards of the men in the class are low. That is the only ex~ cuse they could have for noticing or commenting upon such a thing. Angina Again Some time ago you explained that Vegina comes with scarlet fever. ‘The Suez canal was 13 years in con- bi Dniversity of Pavia, Italy, was in the year 825. Please explain this again, to settle a family dispute over the meaning of Vegina—(L. R.) Answer—The term is angina. It means literally a throttling or chok- ing. The sore throat that usually oc- curs with the onset of scarlet fever, and other kinds of choking inflam- mation in the throat or chest were formerly called angina. There is no good reason for using the term at all) pore By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to discase diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to querics not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper. I shouldn’t do this, because if I don’t feel any effects now I will when I get older .. —(G. B.) Answer—It is just an old grand- motherly custom, George. It will probably die out when you have grandchildren who like to go fishing. Meanwhile, let us try to grin and bear it, (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) 1 Gilbert Swan BRIGHT IDEA New York, Aug. 9.—The thousands of steamer trunks, suitcases and hand bags left behind in hotel rooms by gents who cannot pay their bills even- tually find their way to an auction room in 49th street, New York. It was the bright idea of one Henry Livingston to become official salvager of abandoned articles, It’s just one of the odd professions to be found in Manhattan. In their rush to get away, many leave clothing and knick-knacks. Now and then photos of sweethearts and family groups are discovered. Fre- quently a deserted suitcase and its contents are “sold blind,” with bid- ders taking a chance on the con- tents. Recently the gold braided uni- form of a European nobleman might have been acquired by anyone who cared to participate in the gamble. aoe OR Discovery was made not so long ago that the former owners had a habit of showing up and bidding back their Possessions at a small fraction of the property and hotel bill value. After which hotel detectives might have been found from time to time scat- tered through the crowd. em CIVIC VIRTUE’S REWARD In view of the Seabury hearings, the eventful fate of Civic Virtue +doesn’t seem so terribly important. Still the current problem of what to do with this most discussed bit of statuary, now that it’s to be tossed from its moorings in City Hall Square, seems to write a final chapter to the most adventurous career any sculp- ture could boast. Having been given to the city of New York, together with a fountain base, Civic Virtue was modeled in Normandy. It was at a time when the Ger- mans were marching toward Paris and, to protect it, the statue was hid- den in a barn under a pile of hay. Later it was smuggled into Paris where it was buried in the earth for months. When, finally, it did get to Gotham, a large critical howl went up. Civic Virtue, it was said, was an insult to womanhood, and an ugly mess. The storm died down and Civic Virtue stood, all but forgotten, until a relandscaping of City Hall park was ordered and the statue had no place in the plans. It will cost some $5,000 to move. * % # CUT-RATE EDEN Tales of a $1-a-day Eden that have drifted in from Majorca for three years or more are refuted somewhat by a note at hand from Whit Burnett, one of the most facile graduates of the newspaper school. He writes that New York publisher is building a winter home on one perch of the island; that an ex-World reporter is running an American language news- paper for the “States” folk and that an Englishman now gets out a weekly there. The rush of authors, artists and busted brokers has boomed the idyllic isle in the Mediterranean and prices have soared accordingly. A little the- ater group is starting to put on arty plays. And just about everyone I used to see around New York two years ago is there. oe Til spend the summer right today, because it is vague and mis- leading. Grandma's Boy I am 18 and I do a lot of fishing, sometimes in the water without boots for several hours. My grandmother, , with whom I live, says; oe (Sa ES tN | Barbs | OO Kidnaping has been made a federal offense, but here's hoping it doesn’t | ANNIVERSARY become as popular as some other fed- {eral offenses. ee ® | If congress really wants to get the bonus army to go home, it might try setting the ex-sokliers a good example, ee & Who says the 1932 girl is more at- tractive than her 1900 sisters? asks a writer. Well, the 1932 girl, for one. x # % Money not only goes farther in these days of the depression, but it stays away longer. ee An ex-style expert says he can see nothing attractive in the backless bathing suits. Maybe he’s been going to the wrong beaches. «Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) TODAY ~*1S THE = | 25,000 GERMANS TAKEN On Aug. 9, 1918, British troops on the Somme battlefront pressed for- ward more than five miles on a front- age of nearly 20 miles in a day of des- Perate attacks and counter-attacks. German resistance was stubborn in the extreme, and this fact helped ac- count for the 25,000 prisoners taken in the two days of bitter fighting. German losses were enormous. Their troops on the Somme front were tired out from nearly four months of continuous fighting, and their reserves were not sufficient to plug the huge gaps in their lines. In general, parents take better care of their children physically, men- tally and normally than ever before. ‘They show their love in more ways and more intelligently—Ernest W. Butterfield, state commissioner of education for Connecticut. ee We are ready to collaborate on any scheme—ours, the French or any other—which will relieve the depres- sion in’ Europe and start nations on @ sound business basis.—Chancellor Franz von Papen of Germany. se ee With thousands of jobless in the city of New York, we are facing the likelihood of not being able to finance home and unemployment relief dur- ing the coming winter. In the mean- time, the city is spending millions for free college educations. — Borough President Harvey of Queens, New York. x OK OK Dazzled by the material achieve- ments of the age, we turn the regula- tion of the public affairs of our cities over to little groups who utilize their public powers for their own enrich- ment.—Samuel Seabury, counsel for the Hofstadter investigating commit- tee, New York. ee ‘You know, I think people are better now than they were 50 years ago, because they think more.... I feel] sure that their morality is 1,000 per cent better than we are led to be- lieve it is, too—Henry Ford, auto- mobile manufacturer. * % me All we ask for is toleration in our endeavor to bring Germany out of her trouble. My colleagues and I in- tend to go before the Reichstag with our of constructive effort and dare the members to unseat us.— Franz von Papen, chancellor of Ger- many. * # 2 It is the duty, not only of the great interests, but of every man and wom- an to push on together and in due time we will reap our reward.—Atlee Pomerene, chairman, Reconstruct! Finance Corporation. ee & I am, and will remain, a Lincoln Republican. I call upon all Repub- licans who share my views to re- pudiate the leadership which has de- ed: the republic-ix-Benator #tenty en republic.—Ex-} r Henry oC ane ids ada ad qr Dakota. No longer do the American people regard the Philippines with a broad, statesmanlike and economic point of view. Therefore I say it is better to cut loose as soon as possible and face whatever is before us.—Manual L. Quezon, president, Philippine senate. ; | Draw Visitors in By GEORGE D. MANN Camp Curry, Yosemite Park, Aug. 9. Spell of Yosemite Park Attracts Tourist Horde Olympic Games and Several Large Conventions Also —Approximately the size of Rhode Island, Yosemite park, despite eco- nomic stress, has more tourists this season than any of the other federal preserves, ‘The Olympic games, which have at- tracted thousands to the Pacific coast, and several large conventions held in cities near this park are responsible for the rather unusual rush of tour- ists to the gem of the Sierras. More than 500,000 tourists visit this park annually. Massive shafts of granite, majestic peaks, the songful streams, Merced and Tuolome, wild game life in abun- dance, wild flowers of wide variety and a bird life of unending interest are factors which explain the grow- ing popularity of Yosemite park. Those who plan a trip by stage or in their own motor car, by all means enter via Fresno, visit the great red- wood trees, then turn away from the floor of the valley and go to the rim or ridge of the Sierras. There it is, preferably at Glacier Point, prac- tically on the top of the world—at least you feel on top of the world— that you get your first impression of this mighty combination of granite, forests and waterfalls. The floor of the valley, where there are broad highways, jazz bands, mov- ies and other concomitants of our humdrum existence, is much less im- pressive. One must get a measure of the park’s splendor from Sentinel Dome, Glacier Point, where reverber- ates the roar of the Nevada, and Ver- nel Falls, or Inspiration Point, which brings into sharp focus the most com- manding of the park's peaks. More Than 728,000 Acres Yosemite park comprises more than 128,000 acres of superb playground as well as a most alluring laboratory for the scientist, be he a geologist or bot- anist or any other kind of an “ist.” Sleek, sluggish, black California bear waddle to your car in search of food, deer eat out of your hand, and lazy grouse, grown fat on tourist feed- ing, almost hop on your lap. Striped chipmunks will nestle on your shoul- der or play about your knee if you will only feed them. I saw one perched in the blonde locks of @ col- lege sheik while a deb fed the little critter peanuts. If you get up early enough in the morning you can see gorgeous sunj effects out on the rocks near Glacier Point. I ran upon a small sect hold- ing its devotional exercises here at sunrise. What a great and impressive cathedral nature furnished them. Someone has referred to Yosemite as the great outdoor cathedral and only the most hardened tourist can fail to feel the sublimity of this park. It must have been that which caused these humble people to move out of their cabins and under the blue canopy of heaven to hold simple re- ligious exercises, too much out of date in this age of hustle and speed. The federal government, through the department of interior, has been seeking for the last decade to human- ize its park system. Naturalists, trained in the science and lore of the park, give lectures and the commu- nity gatherings at night about the great camp fires reveal a cross section of American life which is most virile and interesting. ‘Dude’ Sees One Side There the hard-boiled park ranger of daytime, directing traffic and disciplining unruly turists—there are very few of them—becomes the camp- fire entertainer by night. With him is a lecturer. He may talk of Indians, the flora of the park or tell interest- ing adventures on the trails that lead up to the Sierra heights. The “dude” in the great carabancs sees. but one side of the park. Horses must be used to penetrate the silences of the in- terior where there are “books in brooks, sermons in stones, tongues in trees and good in everything.” When the melancholy Jacques spoke that Philosophy, he had much less inspira- tion in the forest of Arden than has the everyday Yosemite tourist today. These forests have the same peace and calm that Shakespeare makes one feel when he writes of the forests of Arden. This haunt surely is exempt from the great public stream, except in the more noisy and more commer- cialized floor of the Yosemite basin, Camp Curry and its environs. Uncle Sam has provided trails and means to lift one above all this into the peace of Arden-like woods. One of the marvels is that the au- tomobile can bring you up by narrow, tortuous roads some 4,000 feet above aaa FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: A politician sometimes clouds an {s- sue because he’s in the dark himself. STICKERS BCFGHST Hf you add the same three-letter word , to each of the above letters you can form seven four-letter words. the flodr of the valley. Now the gov- ernment is piercing a hill of granite with a tunnel 4,000 feet long, 26 feet wide and 18 feet high so that winter tourists can visit the Mariposa grove of Redwoods. ‘There also is agitation for the con- struction of a shaft from the floor of the valley to Glacier Point, so that elevators will transport lovers of win- ter sports to Glacier Point. If this is done here the American continent will be a rival of St. Moritz. A start has been made in the New York Adi- rondacks by the lovers of winter sports, but if a base for such activi- ties can be established at Glacier Point, the possibilities surpass most mountainous winter haunts. Are Good Safety Valves No better safety valve for restless Americans than these national parks. Aside from the preservation of wild life and dedication of great natural monuments, the federal reserves pro- vide a means of recreation within the purse of nearly everyone. Profiteering is prevented by federal regulation in all national parks, and there are ac- commodations to fit every purse and every taste. Geographies have made Yosemite familiar to the youth of the land. The writer can remember the illustration depicting the big stage coaches being driven through a redwood tree. It was in every fifth grade geography as well as were pictures of the Three Brother cliffs, Yosemite Falls, Mir- ror Lake and that mighty shaft of granite, El Capitan, as high as seven Woolworth’s, but not looking massive because it is in the company of giants, both of wood and of stone. Streams draining this area during a long period of erosion and earth tipping, assisted now and then by earthquakes, are responsible for these enormous walls of granite rising al- most perpendicularly from the floor of the Yosemite valley. It took many thousands of centuries to do the job as the great Sierra block tipped to form this most interesting range. One night in the floor of the Yo- semite basin is sufficient for ea seers unless fishing in the Merced desired. California state authorities stock these streams with many va- rieties of trout. Fire Falls Famous It is necessary to stay over a night also to see the famous fire falls above! Camp Curry. On Glacier Point, park rangers supervise a spectacular bon- fire of fir bark. When the fire has been reduced to glowing embers, comes the ceremony of pushing the fire slowly over the great wall of granite. To those thousands of feet below, this fire as it sputters over the granite walls resembles a great fire fall. Tourists come from the ends of the nation to see this spectacle. Man- made though it is, the fire fall has become a custom. It originated in the early ’80s when a thrifty Scotchman, by accident, pushed over a fire and got the effect of fire falls. He was paid $1.50 a night to repeat the per- formance a few times a week. Now the stunt is more pretentious. The fire is started at 7 o'clock at Glacier Point as part of the outdoor commu- nity entertainment. It acts as a sort of timepiece for the speakers, for when. the fire gets to the “shoving off” point, the program ends and the long rakes are hauled out. There is hal- looing from fire cliff and Camp Curry before the sparks fly in wild profu- sion, The effect from above resem- bles a display of monster fireworks, but viewed from below the spectacle is even much more effective. It is hard to leave the spell of this park. Tourists entering by Fresno return if they desire by Merced, a lit- tle village, as hot as_Tophet, on the Southern Pacific. Dickinson Will Hold Golden Jubilee Fete Dickinson, N. D., Aug. 9—(®)— Dickinson’s golden jubilee anniversary will be held Sept. 15 and 16, it was decided at a joint meeting of repre- sentatives of the Association of Busi- ness and Public Affairs, the Rotary and the Lions club. A city-wide cele- bration of Dickinson’s founding 50 years ago is planned. Members of a generai executive include R. R. Wolfe, chairman; Dr. committee in charge of arrangements A. P. Nachtwey, William Lenneville, Fred W. Turner, Frank P. Whitney, Lynden Rader, Dr. A. E. Spear, D, A. Cutnaw, Henry Brown, Theodore Kel- logg, E. W. Tobin, and H. A. Mackoft. FARMER LOSES BARN McClusky, N. D., Aug. 9.—Fire starting in the hay mow destroyed a large barn, several smaller buildings, 60 tons of hay and threatened a near- by field of grain on the R. H. Horn- bacher farm in Lamont township, near here, last week. THOMAS OPENS CAMPAIGN party’s national campaign with an He issued a call “to ri 1 unemp! h which Airship Questions Norman Thomas, socialist candidate for President, opened his address In Ulmer park, Brooklyn. loyment with a hundred times the men seek the repeal of the elght- iendment.” (Associated Press Photo) HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 10 The ex-king of 1 Historical RIATRIE TS what country legend. OIPIEIRIAI died recently? 5 Place at which BIE MOIN] 12 The hub. @ race ends, Als|k] 13 Photograph, 9 Navy's new IE |S] 15 Sudden in- giant airship vasion by po- uv. Ss. Ss. —? Asics He Where is this 16 Legal ¢ 5 airship being 2 18 Particularly. built? 23 Observed. 18 Bee's home. 26 Electrified 14,To angle in. RIO} a Baarioles m. SN i ig Epoch. HEINDIS| 29 Possessed. 20 Journals de- 34 Hastened. @ regular poly-31To depart by tailing the | 35To accomplish. gon. boat. writers’ expe- 36 To chatter. 56 Believers of a 33 Active. riences. 38 Deviated. particular 34 Remainder 21 Farewell! 41 Pale. creed, 35 Ana. 22 Glass in an 42To go toex+ §7Roll of film. 37 Trunks of optical instru- —_ cess, . VERTICAL trees, ment. 44 Orifices. 1Man of learn: 39 Wand. 24 Quotes. 45 Fiber from the ing. 40 Aye. 25 Passage in the century plant. 20One in cards. 41 Trapper brain. 46 Enticed. 3To depart. 43 Radio bulbs. 26 Label. 48 Baleful. 4A caper. 45 Punitive 28 Urgent de 50 Black. ‘5 Strong cur- 47 “City of the mand of pay- 62 Finished, rents of air Hills.” ment. 53 Designating a 6 All right. 49 Gift of charity. 29 Garden tool. solid whose 7 Work of skill. 51 Second note. 30 Bone, edges are 8 Ligulate. 54 Right. 32Bxisted. qual, but not 9 Mud. 55 Grain. ¥ ' x q f | { | he