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The Bismarck Tribune An it Established 1873) —<$ $< $ Published by The Bismarck Tribune Cempany, Bismarck, N. D. and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as gecond class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. ———$—$— Subscription Rates Payable in Advance THE STATE'S ‘OLDEST the worst of us try to fulfill a trust NEWSPAPER if we have voluntarily accepted it, watched in horror. There are some things which just aren't done. Even and the respect of a boy is quite as worthwhile as that of anyone else. The best of us likes praise, admira- tion and respect. They all come to the good Scout leader. Bismarck is particularly fortunate in the fine group of men active in its Scout program. To them it rep- resents considerable expenditure of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1938 would not have to join the jobless;back ... As the resull lines. She would get air and sun-/| tie newest Wells’ . shine! The country was the place! /ington of Blup.” Therein is-a * * acter whose education has him to run away from the ‘Very well, she bought her farm/ realities; who seeks to interpret and, with her mother, moved out./ things in terms quite remote from the There were many jobs to be attended | unpleasant. facts and to go through Dally eveesee 8720 : Daily ty cama per your tii Pia time, effort and money. But they to, go she hired a caretaker at a small/life facing few truths. Maybe marck) ....... Perret . 7.20] like it, And they get almost as much salary for part-time work. know of them! Well, they're “blup- Daily by mail per year (in state 800 out of it as the boys. She had settled down but a few/ers” henceforth. isteiete ee rrinesee cates Old Ponce de Leon shouldn't have ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years ...... Prereeeetterrrst os ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .........06 eee 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per YORE ..sseccceccccsesseeeeeeees 200] ing the columns of the newspapers COMES WITH WHAT IS THE NAME GIVEN TO SUCH 41g i ania bw moked that ia else Ore ex-chow girl. tion, it would seem. ELABORATELY CARVED IMAGES Member of Audit Bureau of The rustic handed her a note, It} (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) ertttis Circulation armament conference is active again was signed by the daughter. ‘ 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. youth, He should have organized a Boy Scout troop. Active At Geneva More important things are occupy- in Geneva. Committees and groups have resumed their interminable round of conferences and reports and consultations. The dove of peace, badly bruised and very shaky, is hope- ful again, We all are, even though our hope is SHE ALWAYS you “Perhaps—but in what way?” Pe “Ti bout my daughter,” said the/year. After all, this would pack rural—“Please help me, she’s @ nice,|city’s largest playhouse to overflow- pretty good girl—” ing—something like 9,000 persons a “But what’s the matter?” asked the /day. It's Manhattan's biggest attrac- All right—you've guessed it—the country girl had saved her pennies = tage * & | A little of this and a little of that: e) Vee Even as Sinclair Lewis’ new novel, “Ann Vickers,” appears simultaneous- ’ All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. not strongly tinged with confidence. ly in twelve languages and fifteen | If a stable and lasting arrangement / countries, the red-haired Nobel prize T have known convicts to commit Breen RenreeentAUEWER |COUld be made whereby swords would pet IN as bstanegdted mi petal teen (incorporated) be beaten into ploughshares it would Kl edema ea imam a more comfortable than so-called free- ‘And the Princess Der Ling, writer | dom.—Chi . Osborn, former - and kin of old Chinese royalty, stops|eror of Michigan” bts the eee crowds by appearing *e # on ts and at luncheons in| Can anything be harsher to the her elegant Manchu regalia . . . At- | privileged thant the words “there is no thur Guiterman, the jingler, and Wil-j work” are to the unemployed ?—Wil- liam Beebe, the author-explorer, head /}iam Green, president, American Fed- an Authors’ League “bungle shop” |eration of Labor. aie bepytsthrer heated is ap ee # julged in by writers who don't | There never has been and in all % pen to be doing so well . . . But where } probabilit; again such appropriation, but evidently stool/ solid pair of shoes brings the equiv- | an comorrnity for nevancesvons in- Pigeons aren't going to have any/alent of two-bits... And the Annual | vestment it present.— P ERSONAL HEALTH SER V ICE irae Ba tt Senile Ars Dal wisare sissy Tonk UNG | Ore, writer on invertmentes y ve r enTe lay-outs, this year aee By the proved fruit of its efforts) ging deeper into a commercial im- By William Brady, M. D. It's better for chikiren to get 98" costumes would anyone make aan ara cmvecomnized ne a good) esse Because of the weight of thel! sieneq tetters pertaining ti al health and hygi t to ise: Ab the ago ot 15 to" pub eu taete fective story tat te iin relgon "eal be . igned letters pertaining to person: ea] giene, not to ase al e age on ir And the detective * ally come to be recognized as a go0k war burden upon the backs of many || disgnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, || rubbers, says Mrs. Franklin D. scsi ee ee = thing. 3t has bene! STOWN-UPS! nations. Fear of war and national|| self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written || Roosevelt. As if telling them, at as well as budding youth and so has) j1ousies eat the vitals of many|| im ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instruc- || 15, made any difference, CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON /bring joy to the people of every na- tion. Boy Scout Week But always the people are bilked. Bismarck today becomes the centeT| Fear and the necessity for keeping of interest for thousands of boys iN} their position as good as their neigh- the Missouri Slope area as it OPENS! bors acts as a weight upon the whole the celebration of Boy Scout Week. AJ nusiness, For many years we have Court-of-Honor program tonight! heard of disarmament. Yet every marks the beginning of @ period of} civitized nation now is providing all activity even more intense than usual} +n armament it can afford. among our most active class of citi-/ with yocal demands for peace on zens, every international lip, we are bog- = won for itself a place in the mind and peoples. tions, Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. * * * ’ . Now they're ket ra- heart of America which is indeed)” yes we hope the meeting at Geneva, dio sets for patroimen ‘en’ the beats, enviable. WHY MUST WE SLEEP? pelled by an interval of active exer-| yight y Bae é is successful—and if it cannot do ‘ ight be all right if the coppers don't Probably it is not perfect. Nothing The skepticism of the uninformed | cise. Bet their programs mixed and find anything else the American delegation | i, invariably aroused when we allude QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ever is. But it is good enough to after an hour that they’ve been try- i might keep the expenses down a little.| here to the scientific fact that there @ The Wild West Way ing t “ ‘arch ie keep many a boy on the straight and is no such thing as nervous energy,| California reader writes: “You sent fen bids ae = narrow path who otherwise might} Congress got all fussed about what| nerve power, brain fag, nerve strain| me to Dr. for diathermy extir- eee stray. It has inculcated in many a , |Or nervous exhaustion. Such an as-jpation of tonsils. Never missed a ile mind lessons of work and ee ct ety etn) aboh sertion does not jibe with the favorite/ meal. In fact I gained two pounds a. those fellows ought to hear the fel-| fancies of that portion of the popu-| after the first treatment. The ton- ift, of honor and honesty, of cour- ¥ 1 2 @ weekly occurence to the wage thrift, , low next door when he gets to tell-| lation whose education along these! sils were gone after the third treat-| earner with a wife, six kids and tesy and kindliness which might nev-|ing em what's what—and just what) lines is at the hands of the great | ment. I cannot praise the method| a pay check. : er have been learned otherwise. they are. Pevhs and cee eater Nev- aa Peat taey a ee of the eee ste “i fe a — of the The cynical and hardened man is ertheless, it is the undebatable scien- | other way (the refers to the old} at any rate, Roosevelt's critics can't ostere her che charge of & she is said softly. “Just trust me. . « 5 tific truth. Find me a physician of | Spanish) “4 by “4 happiness knows no bounds she meets chance. mak inclined to look — contempt upon} Out in Arizona a gunman pulled| standing, a physiologist, or any other] Answer—The fear is legitimate. I carionnte: pevbline sg petite fi con wigirhoadist t fe : i 23 the Scout motto of “Do a good deed |a victim's gold teeth because the poor | reputable authority who dares to take am rather fond of nice clean opera- | trade.” ous ieteee eave ar oe: . She stood on the pavement, watching the red tail-light of his car bo ; Domestic allotment may be new to the farmer but it’s just Lite to pret HAT, HAS GONE BEFORE. of the car, Her mouth was like a . Carroll meant working an un- soft dark ‘Th i pd Somes wid mea a continsance of bee arab existence, | 0¥'s face — ‘ei “int e socially promic cr, | “Don't be afraid, Ardeth,” he every day” and yet, if the grown-ups | fellow didn't have enough in his pock-| issue with the fact as I state it. tions myself, provided I can have lots (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘8 try it this would be a bet-| et, " » Altho we have not yet solved the; of ether and air . . . but I would would all try it this wou et. After that we know there is no| _ stery of sleep and may never know |not take @ chance on the standard his mother’s wish that he me, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. ter world, for the grown-ups have|way to go but up—and who says it| any " ve know now i ee cuummmremerd Ty y more than we know now about it, | surgical tonsillectomy while diather- as the chill sense of much better opportunity to make | always pays to smile? we do know that the principal pur-|my is available, because I, too, fear CHAPTER XIV. he don’t mean, to oo forlornness crept over her. their good deeds count heavily. —— | pose of sleep is to give the body rest|the complications of the guillotine CO TAAT OTHER didn’t have a soul | 387, spe See eden oe should she feel this, she Those of us who look back upon| Tax eaters at Washington are tak-|and permit recuperation of its worn|and snare method. to turn to after father! managing” gic sharp Sap) rf ‘ or exhausted powers, especially mus- Nature in the Mild ur own boyhood are apt to forget ralerea A postal revenue gain of | cuir powers. Sleep is not primarily| Will it have any serious effect on that conditions have changed . for | $100,000,000 is seen. But it may only for the benefit of the brain, the mind| me in later years if I do not wear, boys quite as much as they have |be another mirage. ‘or the nervous system. There is no| stockings, hat or gloves now? I wear changed for men—and deep in our reason to imagine that the brain,|the same clothes in winter I do in hearts we know they never were per-| “Women Hunters of Big Game in |mind or nervous system needs recu-| summer, three pieces, plus @ sweater | New Mexico”, screams a headline, |PeTation. To the best of our knowl-|sometimes. Often get my feet wet! si edge the functioning of brain, mind | walking to and from school . . . (R.| 5 ht 3 died—no relation, that! Warned by her proud little move-| when Ken Maa eld her thay he is. And she was too proud to tell ment he ¢ her closer ? hastily. “ ‘y B "t friends—even the Parkers. Be- ae Yon = Taube ‘ f sides—she was afraid I’d know. | UP» int That is would affect my future. Rade op re n ie ag This was silly nervousness! This I'd just entered college and she ot Secckeeiaet that I’d have those fe You'll help me, you dari Fiber couldnt heap them apart q . And in all other states too. 4 solv 1 What man is there who didn’t be- or nerves involves so little expendi-| B.) | BROADWAY TO FARM four years free of worry or econ-| they other. She ; ——_—_——__ e of energy, so little metabolism,| Answer—No, daughter. Any cloth-! New y, omies. There was no money to cp in her heart faint doub | must not let doubt creep into her pine some sort of gang oF BOUP) Russia may have another five year) as to be ‘ally negligible in that| ing or lack of clothing that you find | Sete eae | send me to college, but she found hurt HEE ete ey Sat ove for Bima, | She ae fe 2 ys, banded together for those Fj i. rf i ‘ure you, t#€ for the short-short-short story a way urt. But she crushed it as dis-|" 7, ** Plan to complete the first one. s ing the mind is called| comfortable is healthful, I assure you. ye : loyal, K t e glamour of the night fel nebulous purposes so dear to a boy's y by courtesy. There is no um | boys has been passing about the big Ken drew a long breath out his) O38). Fe ae sca). t6i Sey away as she walked the heart and so utterly mysterious to | / z ;levidence that the functioning of| Have been told never to let my lit- genie colire canes. rendezvous. j vale ano all her jewelry, Sho | their happiness. =a street Caged the pocgrnel flat, Fs “ups? recall the | } oY iH -s in any or all parts of the body| tle girl have gum because if she ere was, it seems, a certain at- ’ q ? shrinking inwardly from ring grown-ups? Who cannot recall the | Editorial Comment {is at the expense of energy, strength | should swallow it she might have to| tractive chorine who, when times were| told me she was going to Europe Darkness enfolded them before! of her own heels on the cement. longing to go places and do things, || to travel until I finished my four |they remembered, with a rush of Editorials printed below show the or nourishment. The functioning of|be operated on. . . (Mrs. J. A.) | 800d, saved her money. For years she laughter, that they had had no 1 just for the doing? | trend of thought by other editors. nerves is comparable with the func-| Answer — Occasional accidental| had danced and chortled in the vari-| years. She got a miserable hole | ne place things, to the We would have been willing to take |/ They are published without regard ng of the wire of your telephone |swallowing of gum is harmless. | 0S music shows; had begun elmost| of & room in & furnished house, | °U/hot comers of her mi out to ] f man along when we were kids if we || tO EN The eres OF tinaeree || system. It.doesn't wear out or ex-| (Copyright, John F, Dille Co) | Cas stage child and was still young ie eceried inte Eis Role soe bers igen Frege Seco per to tala. gverwhelm ber. The ol old, gray life knew he was a good fellow andj~ care ee ma {Bette ey Serabibeapiae rd aie sae one Pelee ly Ye keep the truth from me. Her let-|wenches to live on love! It cuts| —the ickering—Aunt Stel’s nag- wouldn't spoil the fun, but most cf; Europe Re-enters America [nerves do, and it is all that nerves | Barbs || chorus calls; grew weary of rehearsals "England snd remailed, Ste ‘she laughed. but her heart had Se os tank ‘irltated fe the men who had the time and in- (Chicago Tribune) ‘do. They convey messages, impulses; | @: and of Herts that flopped; grew kmew the difference until she was] given a mad leap of happiness, Al could always rouse in her The é c clination couldn't qualify as individu-| Secretary Stimson, proceeding with |they do not expend energy. Muscles! 4. gone know what the senate| med warchive ment tiie nee poo! taken so ill that they took her to/wife . . . Ken's wife! Golden| present stretched before her like a “, als, ‘They were too likely to preach | his reformation of American foreign do that. ; aie ik se ae tion eee ae wile Ing night club floor shows. the city hospital. Ill, because she’d| wine bubbling through her veins, which she must cross si at us or to dote on “Dont's.” Policy, last week began to dispose of} Now see here, doesn’t it stand to|/ TAY CO 0 the prohibition bureau's} if only she could get out into the ae starved herself!” turning her eyes ‘and her lips| fo Tach tat bright future with a the Monroe Doctrine. He invited to! reason, even if you're a wiseacre lay- His voice was stifled. “Then 1|sweet so that he must stop the car] Ken. c There were, of course, times and/a conference on the controversy be- | man without any knowledge of anat- Jearned all about the whole crazy, |to kiss her again. She went softly up the Pp trips with Dad which were different | tween Peru and Columbia Paul Clau-|omy or physiology or hygiene or] dreadful, eplendid scheme! They ate in a little beach restau-| steps of the flat-and let a but he couldn't always spare the time |del, the ambassador of ‘France; Sir| Pathology, doesn’t it stand to reason “Lord—that place she'd been/rant, sitting at a window table] in with her ‘The familiar a and very frequently he lacked the | Ronald Lindsay, the ambassador of| that if “brain work” and so called b | living, Ardeth! A dark hole of a/where they could see the lonely xorg’ the hall : ry frequently Great Britain; Katsupi Debuchi, the| “nerve strain” and “high tension” ague (@) ations iace in a disreputable neighbor-|light of t energy. Work was harder then and| ambassador of Japan. | jobs involved any expenditure of en- ood —= my poor, proud little dey ry it is a job to keep step with a gang ane feaioersy, between Peru and| ergy or any Gage of Deere, bah yes nena} | bese ; Wall paPee an inp F a jColumbia is a purely American af-|er or strength, people who live IZONTAL — Answer to Previous Puzzi . ied fi : he ists [fair It would be fantastic to argue| their wits would naturally require the| 1 Region in sidan! eae 1. Redeth, I sat down and cried like tt old gang spirit still persists | that j t of sleep for recu- PLA 'o wail. a baby when I saw it. te that it threatens in any degree the| maximum amount P northern —S 12 Decoro } “i ly died. I felt as if I P in boyhood. No generation within | peace of France, Great Britain, Jap- | peration? The truth is the opposite— Atrica next to JONLOIN] EIA cl \ See ee hr “Even if’ it was| many centuries ago? ‘ae k our ken will see it disappear, A 12-|an, or, in Mr. Stimson’s favorite | it is the people who do honest muscu- Egypt. (a G] 15 Written | had aa es ees shed| At the thought Ardeth’s eyes}, She had turned to her way, year-old has instincts as old as the |Phrase, the peace of the world. The|lar work or play who need the rot 7 Atrocious. - documents, piety oe ‘me. She’s been sickly| went across the table, The candle| ‘© the staircase which ed to the hills and as unchangeable, intervention, even a diplomatic ap-| sleep. We parasites who get by with-| 43 coalition. MK IAITISIO] 18 Baser. ever since. And I'm the only thing| threw its up-gleam on Ken's face bt a flat when she started and 2 f Pearance, of European governments| out doing honest labor can get along/ 44 Female sheep. e f 21 Chattered. le she has, Ardeth, to care for.” and her gaze went over it lovingly. a small scream. ‘The Boy Scout movement recog-|in the affair would, in pre-Stimson | with considerably less sleep than hon-| 3 Stripe or (GIA Al 22 Salty. 2. Already so dearly familiar . |, 4 tall figure looming before her nizes this, hence it organizes the boys | days, have been considered a breach est working people have to take in eidg ; mA Ict Pl ss.sia Conflicting Emotions. clean-cut good ” blue] in the hall. The weak gleam into troops. There are many differ-|Of American policy and would have | order to keep fairly fit. 17 Concludes, 2 "1 ey 26 Lids, Ken stopped speaking and for/ ey, smile, That|of the street lamp filtering in . ences between @ Scout troop and a| Srought a stern rebuke from the gov-| That is what sleep is for—to pers | yemro piunder. . ‘ J eee a moment there was only the faint | wp, eyebrow which went] through the colored glass panel of bed ernment at Washington. But Mr.|mit recuperation of the tired body.) 39 isan 4 I wie) ala 27 Uncouth, | splashing in the lake to break the!nigher than its mate when) he| the door lit Neil's face. knot-hole gang of two or three de-| Stimson not only does not protest; he | Never mind the mind. The mind plays fish Ne WUIRIA wi] 28 Throe. silence, A moment, tremulous, |tessed her, The sparkle andcharm| He ped her wrist. “Where've ] cades ago but only two of them| invited European cooperation. @ passive and comparatively minor] 4) 5ot BENAILIVIE} 29 Ferrule. with the beauty of the , anemia of him. . . . And he was hers.| you Been he asked between are important. ‘The first major con-| _ The Kellogg-Briand treaty, in Mr.|role. The mind trails along after the) 9) Doth SIVA B 2 One who bets, weaving ag i * that for; Nothing could hurt them now that| clenched teeth. trast is in the different attitude of | Stimson’s interpretation, is the sanc-| body. All education proves this is 80. 23 Mi mere. 31 Disfigured, ever after the # ee dak Ken loved her! Oh, surely, life Wisached her tion of this invitation. France, Great] Any educator who has had a sound nor note. - 32 Where does this as a time of perfu daced| Would be kind... . ~ wes back arm away the grown-ups. There was a time/ Britain, and Japan are signatories of | professional training will agree that #4 Domestic 4 37 Tauebier {Sere the League of and the gg Happy Thoughts. ry, ack at Neil with an- 7 . i hysical, rv quad- sound, —— Aires, Nath against eee aes au Gea PERE iety ilteany emia al Ge ws eo eal Tphysicel education | __ ruped, 28 Northeast. city of Arken- 32 Auto bedy. stars locked through. Polgnant| ‘They drove back slowly through| ing iu 7oU,te #t0R this! | Com. - ship by taking too mu : 25 Concedes. 39 Foot levers tina? : | joy stealing though her, stinging |ine dq M, at me suddenly like this and us an obligation of consultation with |or not. js 34 Table linen, irk park, ing little now, questions! — Wha‘ interest in boys. The old ideal was ‘Athletes know that recuperation| 26Jewel weight. 40To cut off. | 2Subsidiary 36Genus of tears to her eyes. « 5 content to be » The girl's t business Pt h he sensed this, Ken is it of yours? the stern individual who commanded and renewal of muscular vigor is most | 28 Flat surfaces. 41To make a building, trees. art Shough, He, Scrme, his ‘mouth [teed rested happily: against Ken's!" “1 make it my business whe rather than led. In the old days it easily and completely effected by rest| 29 Whorl of 2 mistake. 3 Drive. 37 To fit. pectin patsy on her shadowy lips, tenles, Now and then she turned! you out Hg Ho hour Py ‘the was “Don't.” With Scouting it is without sleep. ‘Those who do “brain spiral shell. 43Consolation. 4 Genus of 39 Measuring theart . .. Sweetheart ey COM inisy aims tad at it with other fellows. Think I “do.? work’ find that weariness is best dis- ref eae. 44 Bee's home. pe es ios . »-. -” came his muffed iss 4 Taleess nad wenlae"Wae ye ji t see you Gout a, the corner r be .7 . ‘o dwell, iy The suggestion now is what to do, 32 Male goose, : 6 Longed, 42 River. mh Tt was | heart. low? Tit knock is head otf? sal rather than what to avoid. It recog- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 33 Calm. % 7 Cures. 44 Side bone. than a spoken ad- abet an ome the had dreamed She felt her face flame in the 7 ties ine Unitiens physical energy and a rae oe 35 Incite 49 Excites 8Celtle deity, 46 Chaos. I dot” he had sald so! Some day. . .'|¢a%:,, Understand-this once and the abundant mental activity of youth| , No such interpretation of the Kel- 36 Earlier. 50 Hangings. 9Northwest. 48Sun god. Clinging to him with closed eyes|soqn , thay would ba oucceiad. for all, Neil, I’m not a child who and furnlaes It an out. | LMT Deai'at Zoe pepu a te ta ai feet cont 'e| Sie’ ea he Se lad ade nnn! Now a .. 1e ie Uni- = o i arms. | : ted States. Had it been intimated in A Ak le a as future take care of iteelf. rie * by Bags soot with anger, but o senate wi was passing up- rs He felt that ber face was wet.| She lifted her drew it] 8, ae » It 2 EN 12 a bat ‘asted the salt of her tears on his|down ‘of fis nose. “Such yy ® up came out - ips and his arms parte Bh ‘a nice nose as it has! There! I’ve scene. A little sick ‘My Ma Yale, “pag [wanted to do that since the vary in her heart. le feel- Shout you. from the first... =|") ze belinda ths hone) Sang with Nek lovely thing, you!’ left. me to drive wonder. | 0” this magic night when Ken had tin ete apa ing what I'd sald to make you run “Neil—” she spoke wi t conrad have to go,arlittie slow at|*"EEs flushed and tried to laugh, ed gentleness.’ “Don't let's be a first, sweetheart, 1 have 2 ab: 1 OR «.. .you don’t know my fam do we always fight ‘ sides mothet, you know. II went|ily! I’ve never been able to wi ee . i to her and | her we—we were|anyone visit me, but——" he threw off little | going to Tarvied, t would be checked Herself,” The’ dhought ot] M4 she Tad ‘placed x his erat of Ger tg nce eontalgt hate alcge Geng ha |e eg f ; en's wagt thus er Hf 1 etn songht onthe dant corner whar| pH? fy, vent Fou, ; help it We don’t want to, hurt |he siways tke the car.” Fell| uke all the rest of ‘rotten fe- anyone happiness, Street gaunt wooden fellow spend money i Ties wes a. white Nice in| pee ann away in the/[m you.and everyone else can go - And the exemple is wari the thick light when she glanced g, wistful She was suddenly scorched with « © aby good. ‘The man in the case aad clung as they $74 hel anger, “That's rottent ahe tise down ee eae is fe oem 70m she | “Ken, ~ aten't I silly? Vi, "t 1 He's no bet- , would no more think of letting eouldn’t help but love you. I only | afi ‘1 ter off than youl He! | his “bunch of kids” than he would Rad sear bate stand bee be say~' 's ‘o A girl can't always Slaves a man oe wera he dy nd a reer out even when she has nuasber., A eyes loo!