The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1932, Page 4

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4 = DAY, OCTOBER 5, 1932 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as Second class mail matter. iEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. sure Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.... $7.20 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in marck) .......+ seeeeees Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 *Daily by mail outside of North Dakota seccccecsscevcsss 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1. Weekly by mail in state, three years ......65 +. 2.50 Weekly by mail th Dakota, per year ............. 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per cereee SO 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. (Official City, State and County Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) i CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Host to the State Just 49 years and one month ago today, the pioneers of Dakota terri- tory gathered here to lay the corner- stone for a new capitol building. The occasion was marked by bright hopes and predictions for the future. It is Bismarck’s good fortune that many of them have since come truc. Next Saturday the citizens of this state will gather here by the thou- sands to perform a similar ceremony for a new capitol building, and Bis- marck will have the honor of being host to the sons and daughters of the pioneers and others who have come after them. In the forefront will be a few of those whose span of| life has been long enough to encom- pass two such notable events. This edition of The Tribune is pub- lished in recognition of the new epoch for Bismarck which the cere- monies next Saturday will inaugu- rate. As we extend cordial welcome to the visitors within our gates, our minds, too, project themselves into the future and our hearts hold hopes | for future advancements now un-| dreamed of. The ceremonies have been ad- vaneed because the actual laying of | the stone into the walls of the struc- ture cannot take place for several weeks when inclement weather might prevent proper recognition of so im-| portant an event. Enough progress | has been made upon the capitol so the guests who come can visualize how extensive the new structure will be, marking as it will a distinct de- parture from the conventional style followed in the past by designers of capitols. It will be a building of convenience as well as of beauty, designed to meet the public demands these days for economy of operation. To bal- ance beauty and utility is not always an easy task, for the one has often been sacrificed for the other. Those informed in the builders’ art are im- pressed with the manner in which the ornate and the practical have been blended in the plans for this structure. | Saturday the state will join here | in Bismarcl: to celebrate an impor-| tant phase of capitol construction. | For years a new statehouse has been the dream of this city, whose fathers. fought so hard in the early eighties to bring the territorial capital from Yankton to Bismarck. The names of | Alexander McKenzie, Alexander Hughes, Burleigh Spalding and oth- ers come to mind in connection with that political strategy. There fol- lowed repeated efforts to have the seat of government moved to other; points, but the men who placed it at| Bismarck were successful in resist- ing all such attacks. i Since statehood, Bismarck has had| to fight several vigorous contests to! keep the capital. During the consti-| tutional convention enemies of the} McKenzie machine sought to have it! relocated. They thought his influ- ence on state politics would be less- ened if this city were deprived of the capital. But the insurgent element always failed. Later came the effort of New Rockford to secure the state capital. Its citizens sought an alignment with the Nonpartisan League, then in the! full flush of its power, to move the seat of government. The question was never voted upon. A supreme court decision pointed out legal ob- stacles for such a vote until the ini- tiative amendment to the constitu- was made operative. This a Subsequent legislature did, but talk Of capital removal had died down by then. Citizens of New Rockford had spent thousands in the preliminary @ampaign. A daily newspaper had waxed and waned in the town and both funds and enthusiasm had dis- appeared. In the fire which destroyed the statehouse nearly two years ago, cer- tain opportunists at Jamestown saw an opportunity to revive capital re- moval. That coup failed dismally, but only after this city had spent considerable money and expended ‘much time in a short but vigorous campaign. It afforded the city an ‘opportunity to gain many new — Newspaper) H friends and get favorable advertising. Those who were in the heat of the battle realized, after the campaign was over, that this city got more in good will and publicity than what the battle cost. Saturday's ceremony doubtless marks the state investment which will permanently locate the capital {in Bismarck. This city takes more ithan a perfunctory satisfaction in being host to its many friends and nelghbors on such an occasion. The campaign for a new capitol building has gone on merrily for sev- eral decades. Years ago, a new Statehouse was within the grasp of Bismarck but certain discriminatory features of the statehouse legislation caused the supreme court to find the statute unconstitutional. Saturday's ceremonies then, mark the consummation of a steady drive to house the government of this state in a structure suitable for the speedy and economical dispatch of public business. A simple program has been pre-| pared. Vice President Charles Cur- | tis, a distinguished westerner from Kansas, is honoring us on that oc- casion by his presence. Politics are to be kept in the offing. This event is to be a great non-political gather- ing to celebrate an historic event in the state's history and to show our love and devotion for a beloved com- monwealth, Bismarck extends a hearty wel-} come to all upon this occasion. The New Watchman | Most of us think of the airmail pi-| lots who speed through the skies merely as messengers of a new trans- portation medium and a new era of faster communication, but they fre- quently have opportunity to be watchmen of the nation as well. The experience of M. O. Fried, Northwest airmail pilot from St. Paul to Chicago, illustrates the point. He was flying the night mail north- ward when he observed a fire on the shore of a lake at Peewaukee, Wis. Absence of lights in the vicinity caused him to conclude that the fire Was unobserved, so he swooped low over Peewaukee and the neighboring town of Hartland to awaken the countryside. Joe Pokowski, asleep in a burn- ing building, was rescued by the aroused citizenry and volunteer ef- forts prevented spread of the fire to 25 nearby cottages. Fried continued on his flight without landing. Last year another pilot on the same line spotted a fire on a railroad tres- tle over which an excursion train} carrying passengers to a _ football game was soon to pass. His action in giving news of the fire may have | saved scores of lives. | These men, covering wide areas in| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNES Too Much Weigh t for the Wire | SiHee CALCIUM FOR MIGRAINE HEADACHES I have received so many testimon- jals like the following that I begin to think there may be something more than coincidence in it. I wish our readers who have migraine would give the thing a clinical test and report what results they experience. If a thousand migraine sufferers were to do that, we'd have something tangible to go on: | “Another important cure you have achieved in our family is the calcium lactate you suggested for my migraine headaches. I could write a book on how I have suf- fered days in bed crazy with pain. The warning of numbness and spots before my eyes was enough to cause suicide before the attack ! in full. Have taken the calcium lactate only a few months and a brief span of time, constitute a new crew of watchmen, guarding the safety and the welfare of the nation. | | Should Get Together i So diversified have become the| activities of the federal government | that one of our Uncle Samuel's hands | rarely knowns what the other is! doing. Illustration is offered by a ate licity release recently sent out by the federal bureau in charge of fish and game propagation and protection. Quoting the North Dakota game and fish department it carried an| item which said in substance: “Aided by two cans of malt, some; sugar and yeast, sportsmen of Stuts- | man county built a dam which now| is in successful operation.” | There was more to the item but} that was the gist of it. | Unless one is so quaint as to think! that the malt, sugar and yeast were combined to make biscuits (in which case mention of the flour was omit-| ted) one must conclude that the, whole business was something in the| nature of a whoopee affair. Also it! might be inferred that such chem- ical combinations produce strong, stuff on the banks of the Jamesj river, I Perhaps it is just as well that Col. | Woodeock’s prohibition department did not know about it—at least in! advance. But certainly some sort of moral! should be drawn from this rather! unusual bit of publicity. 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. Figures on Farm Debts (New York World-Telegram) Farmers in America’s vast wheat bejt. comprising 12 states, suffer most from the burden of mortgages, their combined indebtedness approx- imating $6,000,000,000, or two-thirds of the $9,000,000,000 fixed debt of the nation’s agricultural community. Interest charges on these obliga- tions will absorb 66 per cent of the gross value of the current season's wheat crop, or $240,000,000 of the in- dicated $371,000,000 worth of the 1932 harvest. The 12 states and the mort- nae bill of their respective farmers follow: Towa .. $1,402,178,000 Minnesot: 558,448,000 Missouri . 447,351,000 North Dakota 230,250, Wisconsin 529,992,000 vided among the various geograph- eas, as follows:—New Engl states, $122,494,000; Middle Atlantic States, $376,614,000; South Atlantic states, $491,896; East South Central states, $381,497,000: West South Cen- |anybody to take is 10 grains of cal- lcium lactate (in powder or in tab- not regularly, but will always keep some on hand and in my system. For over 15 years I suffered—had tried many things to help, but with little benefit until you told me of calcium lactate. The only periods of temporary relief I had were when I was nursing babies, when the attacks were few. But now there hasn't been a severe attack since I began taking cal- cium lactate. By the way, I hope any other read- ers who may report about this will be good enough to tell me briefly how long they have been subject to mi- graine, how frequent the attacks, what the premonitory or warning signs of attacks are, whether vomit- ing occurs, whether the attacks put them in bed, and the present age. The use of calcium (lime) in any form is based on the observation that in many cases of migraine there is a deficiency in calcium metabolism, Calcium lactate is selected because it is fairly soluble and perhaps less likely to irritate the stomach than other forms of lime. A fair dose for lets, or in solution in a syrupy or sweetened elixer) three times a day, after food. This should be continued daily for a period of not less than eight or 10 weeks, in order to give the treatment 2 fair trial. After that, if it seems beneficial, it may be taken| once a day or just a few times a week, | or, in some cases @ second course of} eight or 10 weeks may be taken a year later. ’ It is my theory or rather a theory) which seems good to me, that the| metabolism or utilization of calcium dime) in the body is favored or pro- moted by the following. which mi- graine victims may or may not care / to employ along with the calcium lactate medication: | 1. Exposure of the naked skin to: sunlight, or if sunlight is not avail- able, then ultraviolet rays from any carbon arc or mercury vapor quartz) lamp. 2, A daily dose of cod liver oil. 3. In some cases parthyroid gland hormone—which, of course, can be had only from your own physician. Caicium lactate may be bought in any good drug store. It decomposes on long keeping. It should make a clear or nearly clear solution in wa- ter. If the solution contains a white precipitate or cloud the calcium lac- tate is not fresh and should not be used. I have no definite knowledge of the value of calcium lactate as a remedy in other forms of headache than mi- graine, but some physicians have found it helpful in certain cases of dull heavy throbbing ache in the frontal and temporal regions, which patients have on awakening in the morning. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Lip Reading for Deaf If your young correspondent who wants to learn lip reading and be- come a teacher of deaf children will ing, 480 Lexington avenue, New York city, or to the local office of the write to League for the Hard of Hear-| PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. such treatment. The habit is pro- moted by those who profit on popular credulity. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) A FIREMAN CLEANS UP New York, Oct. 5—The vacuum cleaner, now being applied so indus- trlously to Broadway's eyesores and midway intrusians, is being guided by —of all people—a gent removed but |@ few years from Portland, Ore. is & somewhat monotonous lrefrain of the big town that the achievers and the doers are folk transplanted from the hinterlands. Still, one might expect the fellow who tries to save Broadway from it- self and return it to its old tradi- tions, to be a man of the show-world; @ Cohanesque figure who takes his sun baths in the bright lights; ay sentimentalist out of yesteryear. Instead, the chieftain of the Broad- | way Association, which has ribbed the | Manhattan police into clean-up ac- | tion, turns out to be John Gratke, | erstwhile newspaperman and print-/| shop operator of Astoria, Ore., who| wound up in Portland. * OR O® The story goes like this: Gratke | has a talented daughter. She is a/ musician. Feeling that New York| gave better opportunities for con- | tinuing a musical education and start- | schools. ing on a carecr, the Gratke family Picked up and moved. Out in the northwest, Gratke had ;made something of a reputation in | Rotary Club circles as an organizer. ‘Weber and Fields, and a vast number of others. But this form of burléycue has been dead as a last week's column. If burleycue is to get a new break, it will have to reform. On Oct. 5, 1918, the Germans hur- riedly evacuated Lille and began 2 movement to abandon the Belgian coast region. They retreated on & wide front north of Rheims and in ‘Champagne. some surprise is the fact that women enjoy a good, stiff fight—Miss Anne Morgan of the New York banking family. aR ‘The policy of imperial isolation is not desirable for the peace and pros- perity of the world.—Stanley Baldwin, head of British delegation to Ottawa Empire convention. Sige pit 4 around as haps prosperity is ‘aroun od GERMANS IN RETREAT vaned, ‘The British crossed the Scheldt Canal on the eight-mile front be- tween Crevecoeur and Le Catelet, and entered Lens. ‘Three hundred lives were lost when the Japanese liner Hirano Maru was sunk off the Irish coast. Austria-Hungary appealed to Presi- dent Wilson to conclude an armistice immediately and to start negotiations for peace. Russia abrogated the treaty of peace with Turkey. go It is amazing how wise great states- men can be when it is 10 years too late.—David Lloyd George, war prime minister of Great Britain. * When it is sofeaty to get money out of the federal treasury, why does any- one go into legitimate business?—Con- gressman Michael J. Hart of Michi- gan. ese F T’'ve been voting since I was 19, and I've never split the Democratic ticket. —John Nance Garner, Democratic nominee for vice president. * * * Among the similarities to them- |Shortly after he came to Gotham, he decided to visit the local Rotary jluncheon. There he met men who | were trying to organize a I¢-oadway Association. He volunteered to help. And that was that—from Rotary {Club to the “wisest” street in the world. Or so they’d have you believe! * * * THE MAYOR JOINS IN Gratke, a most-un-Broadwayese Personality, resents the changes that have been turning Broadway into a cheap Coney Island. As a gent from “the sticks,” he had built illusions about the big street—illusions of glamor and tradition. Recently, as representative of the Broadway Association, he furnished the police with a list of “menaces,” ranging from indecent picture dis- plays to unsightly parades of tawdry idwich men; from gyp-joint steer- to ugly auction sale signs. So, if your Broadway snaps up a | bit and looks its old self one of these | a ys—credit a visiting fireman from the northwest. x x O* Meanwhile, the sudden demise of | the burleycue houses from a rap over |the head delivered by Acting Mayor | McKee is likely to lead to court action. For the Minskys, who introduced the current burlesque vogues, have money and will fight back. It needed no night stick to lay low | the old-time burlesque, however. This had died when the first stripper pranced on the stage and began to take off her apparel. The stripper, in fact, became the big drawing card. Few of the men who packed the the- aters came to see the show. They yawned until the “strip” acts came on. * OK OK OLD SCHOOL DEAD Old-school burlesque was one of the theater's most important training Fannie Brice was a gradu- ate; so were Sophie Tucker, Polly Moran, Blossom Seeley, Vinnie Hen- shaw, May Howard, Ethel Shutta, who became a Ziegfeld star and is now Mrs. George Olson; Charlie Hoey, HORIZONTAL 1King of Egypt. {§To enamel. 21 Japanese sys- mines. he ht ide ii league in her own city, she will re- ceive all information for lip reading and teaching. (Mrs. A. C. W.) Answer—Thank you. Perhaps this will direct many deaf persons to the land | proper source of information. Oda your articles on Colon tral states, $901,252,000; Mountain states, $496,551,000, and . Pacific states, $691,909,000. as an exercise to the colon?. (C. P.) intend that the colon should Exercise i Have been interested in reading! Irrigations. Do, you not-consider irrigations of valuc, “Answer—No..-Burély nature didnot). have Egyptian King Answer to Previous Puzzle 10.Successtul ; productions. fe EI au Growing out. 14 Small island. A IAj 28 Joints of 15 More uncul- LIEIEITISMMF II [RIM .., stems. res RIAINMESIEMMCILIOISIE| 29 To pay for Ase. Na fi tainment. ie EVRA OSIM EET ° srs ut 19 Term of tenure IPILICICIAIRIOMBAIL IE] 35 Forced air. of an abbot. AIR, TAI IL a with violence ae heen! seme Oe Bal 25 Puts up asa poker stake. Pertaining to ISIPIE |e [Dj 26 JELLINIER] the poles. through the cording to Gen. Smuts, was probably the cradle of selves that men have discovered with the South African Association for only good Indian is a dead * ex It is about time for somebody to offer us a poem, mentioning ,some- thing about “melancholy days,” “sere and yellow leaves” and “the twilight of the year.” Not that we're asking for it, however. the Advancement of Science that “many considerations point to that part of Nofth Africa now included in the Saraha as the cradle or orig- inal home of homo sapiens, modern man, as ed from earlier and now extinct species of genus The average speed of a fox is esti- mated to be about 26 miles an hour. STICKEBS * * * New York's new Mayor McKee cut his own salary from $40,000 to $25,- 000. So the mayor ced York really gets a salary, after (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) BUSSES ON RAILS Bucharest, Rumania—This country has decided to replace, wherever possible, steam locomotives with gasoline-driven rail busses on sec- ondary lines. It is believed that this new type of transportation will be cheaper and that regular trains will be able to keep up more accurate and faster schedules through the rail busses taking the traffic on the lesser lines. RACE’S CRADLE? London—The Sarara Desert, ac- Jans Christian Nowadays a model wife should be @ working model. ‘ SYNOPSIS _/Bob Harkness, one of the most Tespected ranchers on the Mexican border, is “El Coyote,” the masked bandit, who has avenged the wrongs inflicted upon the peons by Paco entertainer at a disreputable resort, and Dr. Price are the only ones who know “El Coyote's” identity Mo- rales would pay well for this infor- doves “El Coyote” and is his spy, asks ber to secure it. He also em- ploys her to entangle Ted and kill his beautiful niece, Adela’s, love for the American. Ann goes to warn ‘Bob and brings Ted the news that a large tract of land controlled by Morales rightfully belongs to him. Back in her room, as Ann informs Ted of Morales’ proposed trap for hhim, the door opens and the Span- iard enters with Adela. His purpose accomplished, he apologizes and leaves. with his disillusioned niece. Downstairs, Ted receives an insinu- ating message from Jito, Morales’ The inevitable clash has come and in the ensuing life-or-death battle, Ted wins but spares Jito's life. ‘Adela visits Ann, who explains Mo- Zales’ scheme. Adela goes to Ted. ‘Together they visit the chapel and ‘speak with the padre. . CHAPTER XLVII ZHe looked long and earnestly at (Ted.s"They tell me you have come there to make your home, my son ‘Are you happy among us?” Ted flushed a little beneath the {direct look, and the questioning. “I jhave never been so happy. 1 have jmade some good friends and——" ““And some good enemies,” added {the priest, with a little smile. “Well, lyour enemies cannot hurt you. Only hose I love?” _2Why certainly. The ones we love shave in them the greatest power to hurt us, and yet without love we jeould not be happy either. It is one lof the paradoxes ofthe dear God.” Adela laid a folded bill in the old priest's hand. is to you, father.” * He smiled. “Those generous gifts tem of syllabic nose, writing. 4 5 4 37 Languished, 2Mule prosent- {estrece | Gpremettory 40 Black haw. tor. - 42 Piccolo, 33 Undene. Abe cesten. aie srapiom of 45 Flower con- 26 Contrite. 50 Glas: il . tainers. 30 Fowl. 53 Type of waten, 7 Fish. 47 Written dis- 31 Mistake. 57 River in 8 Northeast. ‘course. 33 Person under Egypt. 9 String of rail- 49 To apportion. tull age. 58 Exultant. way cars. 50 Data. 34 Devours. 60 Anxiety. 29 Pertaining to 51 Hooked projec 36 Preparation of 61 In bed. youth. tion on sal- ._ lettuce. 62 Planted. 11 Bugle plant. mon’s jaw. 38 Pet, 63 Bound. 12 Twitching. 52 Beer. 39 Lays smooth. 71 13 Sneaky. 53 Uncooked, 41-Capital of VERTICAL 4870 surfeit. 54 Fish. Egypt. 1 Pinaceous tree, 20 Border. ‘55 Before, 43 Beverage. - 2To consume, 28Harem. 56 Inland sea in 44 One that deter- 3 Wing. 23,To gladden, Africa. 4 Writing tables. 24 To hoist. 59 Behold! _ jet yours, Adela, have made the way easier for many of my parish. Like {children they believe quite literally \that God will provide, and usually (He does provide, although it keeps ‘His humble representative bu: ‘That reminds me of one I promised to see at noon. Wait for me here and rest. I will not be more than a half-hour.” And. turning, he hur- ied out. 7 - Adela seated herself on the nar- fow wooden bench beside the door. _. “If all men were like Padre Cam- pos, there would be no need of cav- alry ‘or bandits or”—she ‘smiled up at him—“of young men plucking each other's ribs out.” She looked about her. “Almost my first mem- ories are of this church when I was \po small the pews looked mountain high and the yellow sunlight up there seemed to come straight from God.” Ted did not answer. Instead his &yes rose to where the colored’ panes of al before the Virgin filtered soft ribbons of Jight down upon the floor, At the far end a little cluster of candies twinkled, and from some-: where came the drowsy chirping of birds. The spell, the peace it, filled end held him, and when he spoke it was with a kind of half- regret. ,“All my life 1 had hoped for peace ike this.’to make it a part of me, id whenever the nced comes I have led,” . . nd have you never found peace, Ted Radiliffe?” Her voice sounded : Nery calm. and close beside him in cA GAY BANDIT | the BORDE by TOM — Ted Radcliffe, the son of |! ward, who is insanely jealous of him. |. " Rr GILL " ee @ “I would rather that Jito had beaten me a hundred times right to look into your eyes—or to hope,” said Tea Penis He gave a short laugh. ;"You see how I have found peace." In a few months here in Verdi I have bruised and battered a man, made an enemy of your uncle, and beyond all this I may yet lose something I value more than anything in the world.” “And that?” “Youll” * The word seemed to hesitate upon the air, as if reluctant to die. It charged-the little church with a.new meaning. He had spoken a word and suddenly everything was changed, and he waited, fearful, yet exalted. In the dimness he moved nearer the shadowy girl His voice was softer than she had ever heard. ten to what I am saying, Adela, and make no answer until 1 am done Last ‘mght, when your uncle brought you to that room, I saw your eyes just before you turned j|away. There was no anger there— only a kind of pity and sorrow. 1 knew then, clearer than I have ever known anything.in the world, that 1 might far better lose everything in life than lose you.. The rest of that night didn’t matter. I would rather that Jito had beaten me a hundred imes than lose ‘the right to look into your eyes or hear the sound of your voice—or to hope.” _. “Hope?” The voice in'the silence of the little church was like a sigh. ‘The merest ghost of a voice. “The hope of your love. It is contemptible to say, that to you? I thought so once, but now I can't feel it contemptible that a man al- ‘most penniless should tell you he loves you. For to me this love bulks fo much bigget than all the rest of fe, And because, too, there is some- thing in me better than J myself am older and more enduring than I im—and st tells me that J care for you as others love life and freedom —as this padre cares for God. You must already know how life has changed for me since that far-off day 1 first saw you J wish—I wish very deeply J could say that a better man spcaks to you now, but I can only say’ that, good or bad, weak or strong, | love you”. Outside thé world was with the hush of mig bushed vi 4 vasepnt, ‘Jegainst his cheek, |cloud floated slowly before the sun and deepened the dusk within the church, where those two stood rapt and silent before the-eternal majesty of love. He looked up toward the, bowed head of the Virgin, then,: bowing his own head, raised the girl’s hand to his lips. |. In the pulse beneath his fingers he felt the blood throb, and soft fingers touched his hair. And @ voice, softer still, whispered through the church's gloom, “Whether we should love one anofher—whether we have the right to love one another, only the dear God. knows. I only know, Ted Radcliffe, that with all my do love you—I always havi Then again those eager, caressing fingers more Sirgaas his hair, Passing softly, lingeringly across his cheek, and at last came to rest upon his lips, So for a time they stood, silent, radiantly silent, in the pres- ence of this imperishable, age-old wonder that had come upon them. - “We are of different races, you and 1,” the girl's voice whispered in the gloom, “and our ways have been different ways. It may be that love will bring more of pain than of joy. Yet even if I knew, oh, if-T knew, beyond all doubt, that onty forrow and pain awaited, 1 would not change in any smallest way this love I have for you.” Again silence. Her hands still lay stars jn the gatheri ee se tooked in gathering dusk, looked upat him. He kissed her aay And it was so the padre found them, The little priest's discreet cough came as from another world, Adela turned. She looked into eyes. “We love lips here in your church, if Have I done wrong?” beads The wrinkled hands touched th rosary. Wrong? What can there i of wrong when Jove comes to two children of God? That is the high- est of His benedictions. And be-' fanle ps (Bp Adela, I know. yOu to be worthy of all the happii orld can give.” eo Ge, Be Satan, ‘N a =. ir Ps eae ee ee ee P) s \ P) ¢ B I a } y, BY g s By I A a A

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