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sai 7 REESASRED BRE Assess? ma. PERSE2" Es. a: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1933 it Ne per THE STATE'S OLDEST : NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) @-_ Published by The Bismarck Tribune Cempany, 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 A@vance ™MDaily by carrier, per year, $7.20 Daily by mai! per year (in Bis- Pi marck) 3 720 Baily by mail per year (in sta 5.00 outside Bismarck) ...........- Daily by mail outside of North 5 Dakota .. + 6.00 Mweekly by m: $1.00 TWeekly by mail in 5 2.50 Dakota, per year SWeekly by mail in Canada, pe! r Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation b, AGRE NI Ce eae @ Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it not otherwise credited Newspaper and also the local news of ‘spontaneous origin published herein. Pall rights of republication of all other Tmatter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives @ SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER . (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Cone E Rus Vs. America co There is something in the nature of Ia warning to the capitalist world ir Ehe recent announcement that Russ yoas started on her second fiv r talan. The first five y to be 5 Gailed to produce result vere expected, but there is yng the fact that the Soviet has made phenomenal progress as compared {with the rest of the world. ¢ The figures which show she has ad- anced from sixth to third place in foal production; from sixth to second In pig iron; from fourth to second in machine building, and from eighth to phird in electrical energy are some- hing to reckon with. They are open to more than one }nterpretation, of course. If the wheels of industry in all other nations had not slowed down so much in the Yast three years it is improbable that phe Russian showing would be quite .).$0 impressive. The fact is inescap- ‘able, however, that the Russian sys- tem has kept the Soviet peoples at work while that employed here and in “most other countries has permitted idleness to become a curse upon the ‘Nand. ‘There is no gainsaying that in! ““this one respect the Russian idea 1s +. Superior to our own. - On the other hand, we have the * spectacle of people going hungry in @ nation with greater agricultural Possibilities than any other. Farmed ,with American intelligence, industry “Jand equipment, Russia could provide food for nearly all of Europe. It is doubtful, however, that a surplus in Russia would have quite the same; iragic results as in this country. They are simpler than we and, therefore, might be expected to make a more direct approach to such a problem. | \ There is no gainsaying the tremen- | tious defects of the Russian plan as! compared with our own. They are so . vital and so obvious that one cannot imagine Sovietism being established in ~~ this country except under tremendous pressure. And right there lies the fuk, With millions of men idle in this! =—fhe Bismarck Tribune less on small plots of ground where -[ | As | | | 50 ;and guard these new settlers for years | | \ in this| , | centers. nj worth while trying. they can raise food to feed their families. Some produce trickles into market from such ventures providing revenue sufficient for clothes and bare necessities. Many are ready to begin over, leave the city and return to the land if only to scratch for a living. When that trend starts, a necessary step {toward recovery has been made. lAbandoned farms will become occu-| Pied provided the federal government an active land policy. to making families self-sustaining on the land, of which there is an abund-/| ance, The process will be a slow one. Any land policy developed must shield juntil they get upon their feet. It} | may be that a liberal homestead plan lcan be devised by the various states {to throw open to entry the farms which have come to the state and jare a dead weight on its hands. | Man n the cities want to get| away 1 the bread line. They know! too well that the days of easy money | jand high wages have gone, probably , |for this generation at least, and al |new start must be“made. Here lies/ an opportunity for states with va-/ cant farms. Craze for the excitement | of city life has caused many fertile| jacres to return to weeds and pests. | | It will take money to get these / people back in the old environment.! jbut millions are now being spent keeping them in present misery and |discontent. A wise plan could bring jabout a s in population to the |benefit of the cities and the rural Such a plan is at least Here in North Dakota a modest start could be made. A land policy is most sorely needed. | | i | Attorney General M. Q. Sharpe of | South Dakota gives the people of his state something to think over as the! New Year starts. He tells them in his report that the rural credit administration of Gover-| nors McMaster and Norbeck will even- tually cost the taxpayers some $38,- 000,000. South Dakota's experience has been identical with that of North Dakota. Our sister state, however, has ceased operations and the department is now engaged in the task of liquidation. He reports that only $19,700,000 will be realized from resources with a cost value of $36,000,000. Bonds and in- terest to be paid total 968,000,000. This state must get out of the rural} credit business as promptly as pos- sible. No time should be lost in liqui- | dating the department, salvaging the assets and retiring from the business. If present losses go on, this state will be so tax ridden in another de- cade that more land will be confis- cated and revert to the state. | Figures of the North Dakota rural credit situation have neen given sev-} eral times in these columns. The record in substance is no different! than the experience of Minnesota and | South Dakota, Editorial Comment |) Editorials printed below show the |} tre! of thought by other editors, are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, | Or Dictatorship (New York World-Telegram) country, the news that there is no un- * employment in Russia will raise a/ sharp question in many minds. Why{ ‘Cannot we manage our own affairs as, well as they do theirs in this respect? | Millions are cold, ill-clothed and/ hungry in Russia, but so are other} millions in America. The Russians} hhave them because they have been! -unable to produce tne goods necessary «to relieve the situation. We have | \sueh conditions because we are too Bble to produce goods to relieve them. Of the two faults ours is unquestion- ably the greater. It looks very much as though we can take care of every- he’s need but will not. No sane adherent of the capitalistic {Bystem would want to trade our own | {Wasic ideas for those of Russia, where “ @ dictatorship which the Khans of old might envy has been established. Americans would rather go cold and | hungry than submit to such condi- ‘tions. But there is no reason why they ‘should. Our duty is to make our own ; Plan work so much better than that of the Soviets that there can be no Pores ‘ ;, The simple truth is we haven't done ft and that revisions in our system re necessary to make it perform “properly. Those who support the (eapitalistic system most strongly | ‘should lead the way, if for no other ‘zeagon, in a spirit of self-preservation. Wanted: Sane Land Policy Population is shifting from the velties beck to the land, not for profit War prosperity took millions away land to the factories and the city. Now millions of the bread line or have the farm home. instances, the farm home was ‘abandoned for the gay lights of the Ay dhnagagn comadaaaal ‘germer of course’ is not accelerating nthe beck-to-the-land movement, but ‘to millions the dire necessity facing _jthem forces the conclusion that they gt least eat on the farm. @ities are seeking to place the job- | that “violence may subordinate tech- In too| § As we start the new year we are} warned once more that we must re- organize our economic and political life if America is to escape the dan- ger of dictatorial systems of one sort or other. This time the warning comes from President Hoover's re- search committee on social trends, composed of eminent scientists, whom no one can accuse of being alarmists or sensationalists. The committee reports, after scru- tinizing the whole sweep of modern life, that social invention has failed to keep pace with mechanical in- vention, So we find ourselves bewildered by starvation in the midst of too much! food, dazzling skyscrapers next to re- | volting slums, the ability to send our! voices around the world in a few seconds, but having no clear idea as to our place in world affairs and our} relation with other peoples. In this situation we can drift as we have been drifting, trusting blind- | ly to the future and running the risk nical intelligence in social guidance.” | Or we can, as the committee suggests, determine “to undertake important integral changes in the reorganiza- tion of social life, including the eco- nomic and political orders.” The committee warns that “noth- ing short of the combined intelligence of the nation can cope with the pre- dicaments here mentioned.” i For woven together are such re-} sources and crime, the position of agriculture and birth control and im- migration, mechanical inventions and the position of the church, extension mental hygiene, foreign relations and the changed status of women, public! and private medicine and the use of | leisure time. ‘The research committee has chart- | ed trends, it has not solved problems or proposed a future course. But it It is challenging particularly to the | new administration, which must take | the lead if positive steps toward | out our salvation are to re- place our policy of drift. tion not yet thought of in order to evolve a way of living adapted to “the special needs, opportunities, imitations and genius of the Ameri- ean people.” But unless a start. is consciously made, the end can never be reached. and the agricultural states can evolve! Millions spent | now in charity doles might be used | South Dakota’s Experience \| of government duties and powers and}. i i | | i ' i Can He Get By Niagara? | (aaa ila ciate da in, Signed letters pertaining to personal diagnosis, or treatment, will be ans self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink. No reply can be made to tions. BORIC ACID AS HOUSEHOLD | ANTISEPTIC | A correspondent says he has been! using ear drops as suggested in this, column (a few drops of a solution of | 10 grains of boric acid to the ounce; of pure grain alcohol, put in the ear; once or twice daily, for chronic -un-! ning ear) and he derives much bene- | fit from it. Many correspondents | have testified to cure of chronic run- | ning ear by this remedy. I don't’ know about cure, but anyway it is harmless to try it out for, say, @ month. If your druggist seems diffi- dent about putting up the solution without a prescription for the alco- hol, that’s too bad. Nothing I can do about it, except to warn you against using anything but pure: grain alcohol ‘The correspondent says that lately he has been using boric acid solution, in the proportion of a tablespoonful of boric acid to the pint of water, to syringe his throat and nose, what- ever that may mean. But his wife thinks it is dangerous to use boric acid in the nose or throat, as she has heard it is poisonous. But the way- ward boy keeps on using it in the be- lief it may serve as a_ preventive against catching cri— Oh, no, of course the man didn’t use the term cri. I just insinuated that for propaganda purposes. What he actually said is that he uses boric acid solution in the belief that it may serve aS a preventive against catch- ing diseases that enter via the nose or throat. I, in my queer way, group such di: e$ as common respiratory infections, or designate any or all of them as CRI for short. But don't get restive, dumb folks. “You may go right on, in your gentle bovine way, calling cri “cold,” for all I care. But you can't call it that when you speak to me. I wouldn't know what you're talking about, and neither would you. Whether the use of a nose spray, or sh, or irrigation of cid solution is of any value in enting respiratory infections I don’t know, but if any antiseptic me- dicament is effective in that way, I believe boric acid is the best agent r the purpose. Indeed, cid is the essentigl, if not the 1 antiseptic ingredient of fancy preparation which is ly extolled for this purpose. rength of the solution for spraying the nasal passages or for gargling or mouthwashing should be a rounded or heaping teaspoonful of boric acid to the pint of boiled wa- ter. The same solution, by the way, is satisfactory as an eye wash or for eye drops. ys have the solution lukewarm | or about the warmth of the body, especially when using it in the nose or in the eye. Be sure the water has boiled at least 5 minutes. Tap water is all right, but distilled water or snow water is better. If swallowed in large quantity boric acid is somewhat poisonous, but not in the amount one uses in a gargle or spray or mouthwash. No harm if some of it is accidentally swallowed. Another of my notions is that boric acid is particularly efficacious against the Pneumococcus, Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ~ PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. health and hygiene, not to disease | wered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written querieS not conforming to instruc- Answer—I advise you not to read such stuff. Feather Bed Somewhere I have read that sleep- ing on a feather bed, that is, a tick stuffed with feathers on top of the regular mattress, is bad for health, as the feathers are non-conductors of electricity. Is there any truth in this?—(C. R. K.) Answer—I suppose dry feathers are non-conductors of electricity, but that would never make me hesitate to dive into a nice feather bed on a cold night. You Just Imagine It's Clear Does applying menthol ointment inside the nose to keep it clear, once or twice a day, do any harm?—(G. oO. F.) Answer—It doesn't keep the nose clear—the pungent effect of menthol just makes it feel that way. Can't say it does any serious harm, but surely it does no good. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) la year's research of farm conditions in Kansas and Missouri. * # * Competition has long passed the point at which its maximum benefits are achieved—A. C. Ernst, head of Ernst & Ernst, national accounting firm. ee #8 ‘Women are likely to develop hairy professor of anthropology at Colum- bia university. *# # & Our economists and most of the bankers have known long since Ver- sailles that the vast sums of repara- tions and debts could not be paid — |Dr. Francis D. Tyson, professor of \economics, University of Pittsburgh. eee | | dencies which are being shown in | some quarters today are doing serious |injury. The sufferings of victims are entirely overlooked in misplaced ;Sympathy for the criminal.—Justice | McCardie, widely known English jur- | ist. S. OO | Barbs | {o ——_——» | Technocrats accuse the steel in- i dustry of holding life-long razor} + blades off the market to keep up the/ IZ Marital happiness is not a mat- ter of sentiment, but a matter of knowledge, ideals and ethi¢al con- trol.—Prof. Albert E. Bailey, dean of Butler university (Indianapolis, Ind.) extension division announcing course in matrimony. * 4 The happiest people on the farms, I believe, are the people who have gone to the farms from the cities.— Henry Stern, Kansas City, Mo., after | AA demand; but they can't bring that jcharge against the styptic pencil | Boys. ** * When it comes to holding back improvements to keep sales clicking it must have taken our | best minds years to keep cigaret | lighters from lighting. xk , Charity never seems sweeter than} when you enter it in the exemptions }column on an income tax return. ee & Oklahoma sanitary inspectors smashed 18,594 cracked dishes they ; found in eating places in the state. It's things like that that make | Pharmacists mad. | ** & | Let's hope the country gets | Straightened out on technocracy Pretty soon so that everyone can River Questions HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 13 Stir. 1The St. Law- " 20 Aye. IRIETT TY Ie TO} rence river is [iy _ 21 Leek-green navigable to AIVIEIN AL LIRIOIN SI quartz. ocean-going jj 23 Weavers’ vessels as far __ frames. as——? 24 To espouse. 8 Key fruit. 25x. 14 Melody. f] 26 Hoisting 15 Data. _machine. 16 Mite or tick. 27 Wigwam. 17 Tranquil, 28 To rub out. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Don't Delve in Morbid Reading Appreciate it if you could send me some reading matter or suggest read- lig matter on Parkinson's disease .. . —(™M. 8) WHO DISCOVERED: THE SOUTH POLE? 18 To stitch. g} 29 Aging. 19 City in U.S.A. 31—— and on Lake Erie. groom? 20 Taxaceous France. Hatters’ tree, 38 Water fowls. flows into the mallets, 21 Sau¢y. 39 Dike of piles. Arctic ocean, 35 Measure. 22 Click -beetle, 41 Recipients, 2English coin. 37 Alarmed. 26 Crenic acid 42 Tardy. 3 Nothing. * 38 Secured. salts, 43 Rodent. 4 Beret, 40 Solitary. 30 Stem joints. 44¥Marlier than. 5 Slackening 41—— and 31Chafty parts 47Hog meat. bar ina loom. - Pythias. of grain. 48 Ten cents, 6 Afresh. 43 Wrath. 32 Before. 51 Mangle. 7 Legal rule. 44 Child's napkia 33 Product of: an 52 Since. SGlossy cotton 45To make a CRE. 53 Kiln. fabrics. mistake. 34 Alloy of 54 Races of 9 Fruits of oaks, 46 Enemy. copper. animals. 10 British colony 47 Ugly old 35 Spread of an $5 Generator. in the Medi- ‘woman. arch. terranean sea 48 Drone bee. 36 Little devil. VERTICAL 41 Verb, «49 Bugle plant. 37 River in 1What great 50 Males. MAN RE SC Re 12 To free. legs and chests if they continue to bob their hair.—Dr. Bruno Oetteking, I am satisfied that emotional ten- |" get Bro and con on daylight saving. ** % some folks are won't hold water. Gilbert Swan 1 i ' |THE CHRISTMAS CAROL New York, Jan. 7—On a recent ef- have been observed in progress in the quiet. somnolent, crypt-like library which houses the fabulously valuable book collection of J. Pierpont Mor- gan, In keeping with a holiday custom of many years standing, certain trusted j librarians went to a certain niche and took therefrom a manuscript. It was the original edition of Charles Dick- ens’ “Christmas Carol.” Each year, the great money king sends for this classic and meets again Tiny Tim and all his associates. The touching story is read at least once to the grandchil- dren and children and, I am told, re- read in the silence of a study. There are, one hears, hundreds of manuscripts which Morgan owns but rarely sees; buying them as a collec- tor of originals and first editions, rather than asa reader. But the Dickens pages are never overlooked. * # CANARY LOVER * This is but one note in a long col- lection I started recently on the in- teresting human slants and hobbies of the famous. Arturo Toscanini, perhaps the great- est living symphonic director, ha: heard and directed the finest voices of the world. But he loves the songs; of canaries and breeds them. When- ever the musician is in New York he gives them hours of attention and, when in Italy or on the road, boards ence more to debating !his pets with trusted friends. ‘The’ Already finding that their New Year resolutions|JUST TINKERING ternoon, something of a ritual might| y live in a mid-town hotel and sccm to thrive on it. * # * ‘Then there is Jose Iturbe, the great (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.)/Spanish pianist whose hands are amagingly nimble on piano keys, but who—in off hours—uses them to tink- er with machinery, He haunts gar- ages and climbs under cars and tink- ers with automobiles. The jeguar pet of Lily Pons, Metro- Ppolitan prima donna, has long since become famous. She moves it with her wherever she goes and it gets the small attentions of a gentler pet. A beautiful animal, she never wearles of watching it and exhibiting it to friends. xe % STARS AND ANIMALS But Joseph Lhevinne, another fam~- ed pianist, is an astronomer of real consequence. No mere tyro, he haunts observatories whenever he is in the neighborhood of one, and it was he who, one fine evening, discovered the little known “novae aquilla,” a sel- dom-seen star. He is prouder of this, one is informed, than of his great suc- cess as a musician. Ernest Hemingway, the author, on the other hand, goes in for fishing and cooking. After living in France for many years, he moved to a little col- ony on the Florida coast where the tarpon, yellow-tail and swordfish were to be found. His gastronomic gesture is best expressed in a certain spaghetti sauce which he learned to make in; Italy and which he introduced to Hollywood, when his “Farewell to Arms” was being made. 8. S. Van Dine, creator of a new) detective story type, raises blooded dogs, and Katherine Cornell, “first lady of the stage.” has some fine specimens of dachshunds. Dorothy Gish, who dwells in Gramercy Park, goes in for both dogs and fancy sweaters. Thornton Wilder, you will ; recall, started an across-Europe walk with Gene Tunney, who also likes the! open road. x * * RARE BOOK FANCIER Eram Zimbalist, great musician, is @ rare book fancier; so is Heifetz, and all the Rockefellers collect stam) Zane Gre; Lave. ‘is another deep sea fish fan, and Harpo Marx has @ big collection of red wigs. The late William Mor- ris was an autograph hound and Julla Peterkin studies southern darky dialects. My own collection of paper match jacekts, by the way, could use a few out-of-town additions! THE BOYS GET A BREAK Jacksonville, Fla.—Judging from re- marks made by Sheriff W. B. Cahoon, a boy is not normal unless he has swiped fruit, The sheriff talked to prominent men, and they all had the same opinion. In fact, they all con- fessed to having made raids on or- chards when they were kids, as did the sheriff, The sheriff understands the sweetness of forbidden fruit, and it is easy for him to pardon orchard raid- ers. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS:. ; It takes more than a profes- sional juggler to balance some accounts, A ING BB Coprristr py COVICI, FRIEDE, ENC, —? DISTRIBUTED BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC CHAPTER XXXII. SOW tier did you meet her?” “We arranged to meet casually at an auction in an art, gallery nearby. But she did not ap- pear. Later I learned that cireum- stances made it impossible for her to leave the house.” “And you spent the next hour waiting for her in the art lery 2” “I did—more than an hour.’ “During that time, did any one see you who could testify to your Presence there?” Subsequently, when Colt had these statements checked, not one Person could rememb seen Doctor Maskell in the auc- tion room. “I did my best to remain incon- spicuous.”” “In that time you could have ‘one to Peddler’s and committed the murder.” i cere do ae if é. ly will testify to th facts?” ae “I will not permit her. I will not name her.” e forward on her en?” “She will c own account “Not if I can prevent it.” “You would rather die than in- volve her?” “Undoubtedly.” “Why?” “For a good reason.” “That is the sort of yarn that Chapman, the super-bandit, tried to put over. Why don’t you to be original?” Dougherty fle As Thatcher Colt gave the Dis- trict Attorney an uneasy glance, he fell into a grinning, triumphant eae ‘i «» .Don’t you realize, Doctor, that if there is such a lady the police ae not nase any fear of that.” “Do you lieve it was your wile whe was laying that trap for ou. “Could she have killed Gerald- los Sow and tried to put it on “She is cunning and cruel.” [___The Net Closes] “Do you know this key?” Thatcher Colt placed in the doc- tor’s hands the key that had been found in the coat pocket of Ger- aldine Foster. : It is the key to the house on Peddler’s Road.” wee did Geraldine get hold of | “I don’t know.” “Was the pillow case the prop- ony at the lady you are protect- “1 don’t know.” ‘You saw the pillow case?” “Yes,” “Did you buy that pillow case?” “I don’t know anything about pillow cases.” “What is your wife's full name and where does she live?” There was no answer. Thatcher Colt bent over the huge form, list- less and sprawling in the chair. At the sae manent Shere came a basty rapping on Te S Thatcher Colt seemed more con- cerned about the unreplying doc- er having | carri ini Foster. Wake up, Mas- The District seized th itsaptag ‘nce ant aaeee him rou; emt the prisoner is captor, who drew'a decumen from pocket, “Doctor Maskell,’ “T ar- repr dl murder dine os z. Here is the war- the out of the library. Then Colt faced Merle Dougherty. 1] Not $< t ae through with this farce?” he asked. “Farce?” “Yes. You think this was a crime path ecneey It was not. It was a cold-blooded, business prop- osition—and I do not believe that; the murderer and victim were even acquainted with each other.” oan sometimes I think you are “Mad, because I do not believe Maskell is guilty?” “He will | t it. Hogan will clear up the de- fails ‘for me and well Fush. the case to trial—I’ll be ready in three weeks.” Thatcher Colt folded his arms, and said quietly: “Nevertheless, the police department will go on with the work—it does not regard this case as closed.” rel ae) friends, but no one could have guessed it to see them eanee wan lates an- tagor pre; for a struggie. ‘You will me your aan to yourself, unless ied can prove them?” asked ugherty un- “, b jutely—until leam ready. wil ke have another glass of ae 5 t care if 1 do,” said the District Attorney heartily. And the two men, in spite of the tension of the moment before, were still able +> clink glasses and drink. But I kept my eye on my chief and I was not surprised when he let fly a handful of parting ar- tows. “Dougherty,” he said, “before you can convince me of the quilt of Doctor there are four questions you ie ve to answer.” are?” be was Geraldine Foster kill- ed eee axe? Would it not have be indicted tomorrowbeen simpler to shoot her, poison Fag OH gg ie ih the furious, foree Le eo Cooaty haste and excitement and held in| belonged ged to the Police Department, man the doctor found at the front of him a bulky bag-like ob-| Colt would have pit Rin ti tote Laci “Hogan!” cried Dougherty, Bronx for his impertinence. hands with | Tha ‘Colt. “what's up?”. - pale Pi? heaven mags, Beene te Peer end i tal, he shouted, his bundle ‘on the . It was a|nocent o! this crime es you are. | 7ONs Questions.” nrene low case embroidered with rose-| And if you give me prove the head cialdine Foster. less feet anlar The No one spoke as tic | Dougherty put his hands on his fiumphtey Masks sade Poster and held = home Police Commissioner, them up, piece by piece, for in- he remonstrated, “you're eet the papers frennicd impossible. I have been more pa-| with Ree Zone They were the blood. | tient with you than any man in my talk of nothing else, could clothes of the murdered girl. position should be. pow I'm} Unmoved by George Maskell’s be) did get these?” Maskell iled Geraidie| open dentnciation ef the th asked Colt 5 Foster and he’s going to fry forjof the District Ai % “t found them in a. closet in the in” erty went straight a a office of Doctor Maskell,” gasped “And what if later I prove you! purpose. Farly the next morning with a grin at the prone ba, A . peaepeared fore the Grand Ji figure on the couch. “Pll be the first to ! with him » parade of wit : ns ae sae turkey!” ex- yet sippone B eer Leas ‘nesses. On our, vy to Juneh, A n electroc! that time’ Thatcher passed But Thatcher "colt, gven, thane Duties Attorney shok acne ‘door of te Ging ination a the Dissict’ Attorney. | Het ‘be. electrocuted tong, anid in a low voice eee ™ “Doctor Maskell fas fallen|long time before you or “Observe the two eld men asleep,” he protested. else proves him innocent He|lounging at opposite sides of the “The deuce with that,” answered | retorted confi A "You're | door J Dougherty. “This man kijled Ger-|through with this case now, For-| (Teo Be Continned To, oY