The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 5, 1933, Page 4

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H i f H i H . Daily by ~ Dakota (Established 1873) ——_____ Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @s second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher __ Sis aetna Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ...... $7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marek) ....... eer 4. Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ........... 5.00 mail outside of North Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three <i a eee ccseecouus al Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ...........++ 150 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 2. 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. They’ll Tackle Anything Highest laurel on the brow of Science, perhaps, is its willingness te dare anything in an attempt to achieve the impossible. ‘The marvels which it has produced in recent years are proof of resource- fulness and meticulous care as well as tremendous imagination with regard to mechanics. At the same time we have been Prone to overlook the fact that men Just as persistent and just as re- sourceful have been working on old mother nature in an effort to improve her methods and implements of pro- duction. Here in the northwest we have some distinguished scientists who have, perhaps, contributed more to real progress than all of our po- litical loudspeakers put together. Fruits, vegetables and animals have come within their ken and most of The Bismarck Tribune]! 24 dignitaries start at Chicago, An travel down the Desplaines and Illi- nois rivers to the Mississippi and thence to New Orleans. Some ships in the armada doubtless will turn up the Ohio to Louisville, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. This waterway is 1,230 miles long and is made possible by a connecting link between the two greatest natural arteries of commerce in this country. that it will be of real importance, if and when the nine-foot channel in the Mississippi is extended to the Twin Cities, seems certain. Heretofore our best chance of real- izing cheap freight rates for our ex- port grain and other products was the St. Lawrence seaway, upon which work should begin soon. Before that Project is completed, however, the Lakes-to-Gulf channel will be in full operation and we may get some benc- fit from it. We Must Import, Too Secretary of Commerce Roper has Performed a public service by remind- ing us that imports as well as exports are essential to any trade recovery. Pointing out that we have no right to expect foreign nations to give more generous treatment to our exports than we give to theirs, Roper said: “It is fundamental that we cannot sell goods to other nations without Permitting them to sell goods to us. This means a mutually-profitable ex- change of surpluses.” This is fundamental, to be sure— but it is a fact that we have lost sight of in the last few years. Of course, it doesn’t follow that we must. Jet foreign nations tell us how high our tariff rates are to be. But it does mean that we must be ready to buy, as well as ready to sell if inter- national trade is to revive. 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 polictes, us are aware of the improvements made but we had presumed that in- sects were too small to be noticed and too insignificant to lend them- selves to scientific achievement. This view, it seems, is wrong. For some noted scientists now are at work trying to develop honey bees with Jonger tongues, larger and stronger wings for longer flights and larger honey sacs for carrying bigger loads of nectar. ‘The movement came about as a re- sult of cleaner farming, the felling of ‘Woodlots and poison campaigns which hhave reduced the number of bumble- bees and other wild insects. These played an important part in polliniz- ng fruits, clovers and other blooming things. In some things there is no Production without pollinization and the problem was a real one. It was thought the honey bee was unable to do this work on some plants because its tongue was too short to reach in- to the corolla tubes. Later it was found that they were capable of do- Will a Free People Fight? (Chicago Tribune) Senator Carter Glass, Virginia Dem- ocrat, found himself unable to com- plete his argument against the fi- nance bills which will transfer the constitutional power of congress to control the currency to the president. His feelings compelled him to say, “I find that I must desist.” Even Senator Borah, radical Republican of Idaho, has an ingrained sense of what the constitution has meant in the history of the American people and he also recoils from the picture of the future as it takes shape from the acts of the present. There is grow- ing among sober-minded men in con- gress, a minority it is true, but the core of the intelligence of that as- sembly, regardless of party, an alarm without bounds, . The briefest review of the legisla- tion enacted or proposed with every ‘What the immediate effect on North Dakota will be is problematical but CONCEPTION OF THE VILLAIN WHo HOLOS THE MORTGAGE ON THE OLO HOME PLACE - BUT THE. MoRTaAce HOLvER IN REAL’ LIFE 19 -MeRE OFTEN OF A DIFFERENT if AH-HA-a ! SILAS MARTIAN, T HAVE You in MY PowEeR! “THe MoRrTcaGE WE HOLD 'S WoRTHLESS. OUR LIFE SAVINGS self-addressed envelope is enclosed. RUN DOWN FROM WANT OF REPAIR All neurologists (nerve specialists), neurotics, victims of nervous imposi- tion, plain quacks and wiseacre cus- tomers to the contrary notwithstand- ing, physiology offers no ground for the common fallacy that the nevrous, the nerves or their centres are the reservoirs of energy and that when they are “overtaxed” or strained in some way this reserve of strength or energy is lost and the indlivdual be- comes a nervous wreck or maybe & neurasthenic if he can afford it but just has nervous prostration if he confidence that it will be enacted shows how very real the dangers are which cause this alarm. There will be nothing left of the American con- stitution and the system of republican government founded by it unless the conservative men in congress, few as they are, are strengthened by the ex- Pressed determination of the people ing the job but that, in so doing, they failed to produce any honey. ‘The effort to improve the bees fol- lowed. Nature may get along with Permitting such specialistic habits but not modern science. The plan Interest , where they have vast fields of sugar beets, it looked as though the industry were in a bad way. Farmers were dissatisfied with their returns and acreage dropped. Only a few of the 16 sugar mills ope- rated in 1930 and the trend was downward. Both the growers of beets and the owners of mills were worried. Each group wanted to do the right thing, and the best thing for themselves, but neither knew what that thing was. Then a bright young man suggest- ed that the contracts, whereby the mills agreed to purchase the farm- ers’ beets, might be changed. Instead of & guaranteed price, as had been Common in the custom, he suggested a modest | tracts. cash advance to the farmer and a 50- ‘50 split of the proceeds from the sale of sugar, pulp and molasses over and above that figure. The result was successful and beet growing is coming back in Michigan, acreage having doubled in 1932, Both farmers and mill owners are satisfied and efficiency has been vast- ly increased, for the farmers have found it possible to cooperate more fully in marketing the produce in which they have a continuing inter- est. Westage and spoilage has been re- duced from 12 per cent to 2 per cent; | Well deterioration from careless handling and poorly-timed delivery have shown Corresponding decreases; the number of weighing stations has been cur- tailed and the entire industry placed upon .@ more efficient basis because Of the close cooperation between pro- ducer and mill owner. Both have of the United States, organized every- where for this purpose, not to have their constitutional government com- pletely suspended by acts of the na- tional legislature violating every ele- mental principle in the fundamental law of the United States. ‘Unless this support comes at once, with a@ spontaneity anda fervor which compel respect, the days of the American people under a constitu- tional republic may be numbered. This is the wish of radicals, both collegiate and otherwise numskull, who are using a great national distress to force a revolution by unconstitu- tional and illegal acts of congress. Al- ready it has been declared a crime for @ citizen to possess property in the form in which the United States guar- antees its national currency. That is gold. In spite of the protests of the almost stupefied minority, the senate has passed an act providing that the currency shall be not what congress determines but what the president may decide at any time. The United States is preparing to fix prices on agricultural products, not even by specific acts of congress but by the order‘of the secretary of agriculture. It is proposed, and at Present there is no guaranty that it will not be done, that the secretary of labor shall stipulate wage scales, hours of labor, and conditions of con- » ‘These are only various high Spots in the program which threatens to destroy the whole American system of property rights, individual liberty, the whole conception of law, the limi- tations of government, the constitu- tion, and the nation itself. This will be done unless the bulk of the Amer- ican people, who have never given the slightest countenance to such a revo- lution, interpose their determined will between @ flabbergasted congress now rapidly approaching an insanity of hysteria and the revolutionary groups, whether of college professors, of communist cells, or of hill billy demagogues who are tearing the laws of the land to pieces and destroying the liberties of the country. It may be that President Roosevelt of the country there will be nothing remaining of American government 8 @ government of a free people, guaranteeing liberties and rights and Proceeding by ordered legal process. Quite evidently the majority of Amer- icans must be quickly from coast to coast. They have been stunned by the rapidity of the revolu- tionary movement and they have shared in the resultant increase in profits, ‘This system, developed as a result |and confused and the voices of pro- | Of poor times, is expected to be con- tinued now that better business con- ditions are apparent. A New Seaway Most of mid-America will celebrate about June 15 the formal opening of the Lakes-to-gulf waterway which will link vast productive areas by water transportation. ‘The plan is to have national offi- been almost inarticulate to the pre- sent moment. They are bewildered test and alarm which arise from them have not reached Capitol Hill. There are men in that body of legislators who would stand up and fight if they received any encouragement. Al- though they also have been stunned and virtually swept off their feet, they have endeavored, as yet lamely, to stop the destruction of the American form of government before the revo- lutionaries have accomplished’ their full purpose. It will be Thermopylae for them if thé country does not rush 3 their support. can’t. I say all this is hokum, pure unadulterated hokum, and in saying so I am backed by a solid wall of phy- siologists who are acknowledged auth- orities the world over, Show me a physician or any one else of scientific standing who disputes this teaching. Many a wiseacre reading this is al- ready marshalling in his thoughts bits of evidence which, he imagines, will give me something to think about if it doesn’t actually shake my position. That is indeed the reason why & large portion of the population is so im- pervious to health education. In mat- ters pertaining to health most Amer- ican laymen are wiseacres, and you have to use a heavy mallet on them before you can teach them anything. ‘When anybody becomes run down and exhausted from insufficient sleep (this is one of the wiseacre argu- ments) is it not the nervous system that is depleted and weakened? Of course not. Practically no energy 18 required for thinking or for the car- rying of messages by the nerves. The person who gets insufficient sleep suf- fers from plain physical fatigue or exhaustion, exhaustion of muscles and of the various organs whose functions do require considerable energy. The sleepless one becomes run down be- cuase his or her available store of fuel, blood sugar, glycogen, animal starch runs short. All the while he remains awake his organs (if not his 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, 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. woman is best fitted for maternity at identical with the breakdown that oc- curs from overwork, too strenuous play, or any prolonged endurance test. In neither case is it a “nervous” breakdown. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS It Is Just a Bad Habit. For 30 years or more I have been system is the source of power or that) aking all kinds of physick ... (P. ) Answer—If there is enough gray matter and any trace of character left, it isnt’ too late to snap out of it. All you have to do is quit, and when I say quit I mean quit. If you can’t understand words of one syllable, I can tell you in more imposing words. Send a dime and a stamped envelope Health, “The Constipation Habit.” Life for Dead Fingers After suffering for more than 10 years with “dead fingers” whenever I was exposed to cold, I discovered that if I held my hand in the sun the fingers became normal in a very few minutes. Since this I have kept my fingers in the sun whenever oppor- tunity offered, and it is over three years now since I have had “dead fin- gers.” (Mrs. W. J. P.) : Answer—Thank you. Immediate warmth in one form or another is the best relief for such annoyance. The » offered once or twice here, that chronic arsenic poisoning may be the cause of Raynaud’s affection in some cases, has brought no response muscles) are expending this avail- able caloric energy faster than his metabolic machinery can replenish it. It is precisely the same effect, though perhaps not so obvious to the wise- acre mind, as though the individual were forced to keep running or walk- ing until he falls unconscious—as ac- tually happens to many contestants in marathon races. We sometimes forget, we wiseacres, that not only the skeletal muscles, but the heart, the lungs and all the vital organs (the brain is not a vital organ) do more work and use more energy when one is in the erect or sitting posture than when one lies down, and further that more energy is used when one lies down and re- mains awake than during sleep. Nor- mally the heart beats 10 or 12 times less in the minute when a person lies down than when he sits or stands. During sleep the pulse rate is still slower, and thus the heart gets rest along with the other vital organs. ‘The little lesson in all this is quite simple: The exhaustion or run down condition due to insufficient sleep 1s WHAT IS THE NAME OF THIS ~ INSTRUMENT ? | ‘The Children’s Hour’ other than idle curiosity from our readers. Woman at Her Best When a woman has reached her late thirties is child bearing for the first time more dangerous than @ Younger woman? (M. E.) Answer—True, many women at that!hucksters and squ: age are dangerous, but actual experi- | Jone Park Avenue. Then some city garlic, jofttictals stepped in and decided shejings. A lived on Fourth. Mrs. Bacon| richest street. wouldn’t stand for that, so now she has her house listed in the Social Register without a number; simply \“North-east Corner Park Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street.” The telephone company, not being particular about street numbers, permits her to list the old address. * e *% SWANK SUPREME Continuing northward, the street mounts an elevated structure to skirt the railroad terminal, dives through the Grand Central Building, and comes into its own at Forty-sixth street. From here on, for more than three miles, it is an avenue of gold- braided doormen and imposing near- skyscrapers topped by penthouses, Rents for the latter run into six fig- ures for 12 months. = 2 In this region are the hotels Del- monico and Marguery, high-hat Sher- ry’s, the magnificent Waldorf-Astor- ia, the Ambassador, and many others. The biggest artificially constructed garden in the world, more than an acre, is in the courtyard of No. 277. The earth is only three feet deep; under it are steam and water pipes; and below them is the Grand Cen- tral's vast tunnel, really an under- ground railroad yard. The garden, with hedges, lawns and rows of ever- greens and arbor vitae, is always about six weeks ahead of the normal season because of its sheltered posi- tion and subterranean steam pipes. xe * STAINS, HERE AND THERE For all this pretentiousness, Park Avenue has its little irregularities. It was to a certain apartment at No. 277, for instance, that police went the other day and found a roulette resort in operation. The chips, and there were large stacks of them, were marked from $25 to $2,500 apiece ... ‘Then there's the little cluster of old brick buildings, standing out like a stain on a stiff shirt bosom, be- tween Fifty-third and Fifty-fourth streets, They're part of an estate that hasn’t been settled yet, so noth- ing can be done about them. Mean- while police keep an eye on prospec- tive tenants, for mail-order racketeers would like nothing better than to rent Tooms there in order to acquire a Park Avenue address. In general, though, social Park avenue is all that it should be, cor- rect and imposing—until it accom- Plishes a weird transition at Ninety- eighth street. Here are car barns and subway repair shops. And a little farther on is Bagdad-Under-the-Ele- vated—a half-mile-long outdoor mar- ket of stands and pushcarts, mawling alling children. Everything is sold here, from under- ence and statistics indicate that a, wear to hardware, cabbages to corsets, 35 to 38. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) IN Il NEW | YORK By PAUL HARRISON New York, May 5.—Park Avenue, which is supposed to be one of the most exclusive thoroughfares in the .| world, begins with an argument and ends in a jumble of pushcarts and tenements. Between its extremities may be found, in season, many of the bluest-blooded and wealthiest great names of society and business. Yet even these folk are only dwellers along the railroad tracks. True, the New York Central trains run underground; but their rumble may be heard in the small, stilly hours, and their vibrations some- times tinkle crystal chandeliers in neighboring triplex apartments. Nobody seems to agree just ‘where Park Avenue begins, because it is only @ continuation of Fourth Avenue any- way. For years the home of Mrs. Robert Bacon, widow of a one-time Ambassador to France, boasted the socially-desirable address of Number \ . HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle picture by 1 Name of the 5 profession? man in the 8 Signal system. picture. RUE INE a S| EI fa 20 Snare. 9 Tiny. 21 Dull fellow. 10Card game. 23 Three-banded 11 Munic! armadillo, police (abbr:), IRAIRIEIR] O10 24 Doot ruge. 13 Dad. Mi Bo 26 Newspaper 14 Street (abbr.), | MARK paragraph, 15 Senior. LIVINIC|H] iL IE} 27°To renovate. 16 Very high EMBL ORK ELIE} 25 Mass of cast mountain, EIS| I 1 material. 18 Mountain pass. ion 29 Deportment, 19To sound a EF Veit 31 Nautical, horn. 21To wade worm. through water, 41 Cantaloupe, 22 Music drama. ime. 24 Archetype. 43 Forest trees 25 Nocturnal of a region. mammal. 45 Moist. 28 Effigy. 46 Dog of any 30Standard of breed. type measure, 47 To make 32 Fatherhood. 5 34 Postmeridian, 49 To perforate. 35To scold 50Term of a constantly. court. 87 Revokes, 51 Ironed. 38 Three, (prefix) 39 Assam silk. VERTICAL 1The formation 33 To rent again 34King’s son. 2 Northwest. 36 lays with 3 Corded cloth. ati ig 4 Twelve months. 3¢ ¢ 5 Otherwise. “ Sem of blood. 6 Quantity. 40 Class of verte- a ebola: brates consist 8 Pareet to ing of birds. oar ly 42 Small shacks interests. built over 12 To move mines, suddenly, 44 Member of the 15 Painful to the cuckoo family, touch, 46To hasten, 17 What was the 48 Toward. 49 Pair. man in the aguy T conceive that our task is to bring smoked herring, cotton stock- tawdry ending to the world’s | Barbs | o——__—___________-* Don’t know how Premie? MacDon- ald and President Roosevelt will get along, but as for Herriot, we presume he can be depended upon to be quite franc. i ee Bankers, you might suppose, prefer their beer on draught, while lawyers refer to get theirs by the cas» about liberty and positive opportunity | > eee for the Indians within an undimin- ished responsibility for their welfare. —John Collier, U. S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs. + * * The good will and good faith which the nations of the world have so often proclaimed must be translated into action—Prime Minister Richard B. Edward J. Kelly of Chicago ee % The pictures are a swell racket— Tallulah Bankhead, actress. * # & Children ... accept what they see on the screen quite as unquestionably as fledglings in the nest accept food from the mother bird.—W. H. Short, director, Motion Picture Research Council. se Marriage for intellectuals is out- moded.—Ruth St. Denis, dancer. ne a Ig pen Pant after 10 years abroad 09 ik AR 1840-Democrats nomi- nale President i ee sabe themselves er © Gpresnment jobs. report. * Some smart fellow will probably high price marks on Chicago mercan- tile-exchange. Everything's all right; soon we'll have the Big Butter and Egg Man back with us. was @ moron, not a hero. The heroes were all the school kids who had to learn the poem by heart. Aesop created the idea for the emb- lem on the American dime, The moral of many of his stories was “in | BLAPPER FANNY SAYs: U.5.PAT. OFF. Hanging a rich aunt is frequent- Virwiaiittns| | hile CHAPTER FORTY “A boy!” Nita Nahiman cried,|and she knew that it was night. bending over the bed in which Lily| Lou and the little swaddled red| you! thing lay. “And what have named it?” Lily Lou shook her head. Shejalways answered his coulda’t talk. She didn’t want to|quickly as she could, so thet ever try to talk again. Not even to]would go away and tell Madame Nahiman to please not/could slip back to forgetfulness. shake the bed. Every time anyone “Don’t you know me? Don’t you both cheeks. “The sweet baby. Do let me hold ‘him, Schwester. Oh, the darling! Lily| How lucky you are!” She Lily Lou cast a suspicious glance questions as — under her lashes . .. Lucky?, “How happy you will be now!” Susanne oy said earnestly, her pleas- “Don't you know that you have/ant pink face alight with interest. touched the bed a pain shot up from/a fine baby boy?” her temples and out through the} Didn’t she know? How could she|@esired @ son. I want to be = top of her head. But it was easier|forget? They wouldn't let her for-|™mother, I adore motherhood.’ to bear it than to try to talk. get... that night in the apart- of it, a son! I myself have Lily Lou shut her eyes. The old The nursing sister made cluck-|ment... one of the servants bring-|*tick of pretending to sleep. ing noises as she rocked the babe|ing him. Herr Doctor Sanders, from she had taken from Lily Lou’s un-lacross the street. resisting arms. “He is a sweet, adorable, dar-|strange faces... Krankenhaus fing thing!” the fur-coated prima/that meant hospital. donna crooned, leaning over the sis-|that transcended time. _ ter to get a better look. and Lily Lou shut her eyes. She was/aprons like butchers wear... . so tired. When she opened them again|for something. ... Madame Nahiman was gone. The] Broken, wracked, all her Being put on a stretcher . + + Ago « Sisters ick white with blue dresses Her own voice begging, begging i sweet faced night sister sat dozing} gone, crying out like a little animal by the window, her head sunk on/that is terribly her breast, Lily Lou looked furtively for the|the pupils of baby. She hoped it wasn’t in the|hind thick lenses. room. When she saw it she wanted] And to ery, she couldnt remember why.| So she closed her eyes again. It|dark into which she hurt. The spec- tacled face of Herr his eyes it im then the thing over and the sharp, sudden fear of. was “Madame Nahiman sent the flow- ers. Do you like them? Now tell me what you have named the baby?” “I haven't named it yet.” “It! You're the first mother 2 ever heard call her child it! Really, Miss Lansi: ” “Robin, I think, Yes, Y'l call it— “Well! better! After “After no one. I always liked the him—Robin.” That's ‘Doctor Sanders, |222* that's all. Robin — Robin rushing) was better to sleep. Sleep, and for-|... rushing .. . hurtling into bits, big degre po dary get. They were always waking her.|But they wouldn't let her ‘Always wanting to move her and|they kept calling her straighten the sheets and plump|sisters with their trays the fat feather pillows. And they couldn’t do a thing without talk-|tor Sanders. ing. Talk! Talk! Talk! To her—| Madame Nahiman, though she couldn’t understand aj/saw her, beaming from the word—to each other—to the doc-jthe bed, tor— There were two day sisters whojdainties she Oblivion . . . blessed oblivion. ... fast te et ould you like to have him medicines, the spectacled Herr Doc-| #20704" qu ® foad rich Swiss ton, Lily Loul Sven wi will aces. be‘singiog Ing Roviers that sosclicd tex bref:| She broke off, as the sister, with came in and out, white-coiffed and | letters that she didn’t want to read. aproned. One was rosy and wore! Sometimes she picked up the glasses, And one was pale and did/ters, and set not wear glasses. The rosy one|lessly. What could anyone have brought the baby to her, Lily Lou/say that wo let it lie there in the crook of her|She finge: arm, and kept her eyes shut. This,/from Woodlake, addressed in it seemed, was not pleasing to the} mother’s pedagogic hand. She made clucking|did her mother have to do with her| noises with her tongue, and talked|now? Her mother was writing to a| ‘ld at great length in German. Evi-|girl who was n dently. all about the baby’s charm.|opera star, not to this sick woman, The pale sister brought trays of} she had turned into. food, and made clucking noises with} She put the letters down un- rosy sister. her tongue also. Sometimes she] opened. ae H s : hey Eris Lily Lou was not faking oblivion let-lthis time. Her jaw had pac peg tgs She was staring Raed pron sanne Coin with eyes that were jalready glazed and sightless. eee “T could give him away,” she the rosy sister who was trying drink out to to coax her to drink something pe alot a glass tube, “if it werent for his ears. His ears are like Ken’s. T saw that the first thing, That's Tears welled under her|W"Y 1 didn’t want to look at him. became quite cross because Lily|tightly closed lids, rolled down her| That was why. rou didn’t under- Lou wouldn't eat, and the word|cheeks. stand, did you?” = “Professor” was used to the ac-| “Tech! Tech!” The rosy day|, She beat her thin, veined hands com t of a wagging fore-/nurse was right at her side with|setber with a hopeless gesture. . Professor seemed to be an-ja big handkerchief, They| They didn’t speak English here. other name for Herr Doctor.|wouldn’t even let her cry. Lily] That was the trouble. She used to Rather than risk the Professor’s|Lou bit her lip, lay silent, pretend-|<"°W Some German, but she displeasure and further argument|ing to sleep. couldn't remember any today. She she always opened her mouth and| Bustling. Creaking of the rosy] ‘#4 gain, speaking very slowly swallowed what was offered. Then | sister's starched skirts. More clock. |*° distinctly: the sister would smile and nobodyjing noises. Bubchen! rosy} “I could give him away to Su- would bother her for a little while.|sister was bringing the , tof sanne Coin if he weren't like Ken It was 60 good to be let slone.|comfort her... to comfort her! | ‘bat way. I don’t want to look at ‘They let her alone so seldom. Al-|How funny! low terribly, ghastly| Dim, but I can’t help it. I've got ways the fussing of the sisters,|fanny! to keep him. I can't give him away Their guttural whispers. Lily Lou turned her face toward|‘® that nice Swiss family. I've Pain that gnawed so that she|the wall. The little head was dark|Siv™ away too much. I let them tossed and twisted in a frensy of|and silky, but there was something| *** Ken sway'from me, and it was feverish discomfort. Then the sharp about it, about the ears. ‘wrong. I shouldn't have them. thrust of a needle in hér arm.| “Take it away, please,” ghe|! Should have kept Ken, and my ‘Then asleep. Sleep that never lasted| begged. “Please take it away,| Wedding ring, I left it’ on the long enough. Sleep that began to|Schwester!” table in the hall. It was made of elude her long before she wanted| The sister bustled forward, and|‘i#™onds, but on the inside it said ’ to wake. Sleep that cast out pain, right at her heels came Susanne| **” t0 Lily Lou, forever and ever? Sleep that was forgetfulness, . . .|Coin who had probably been in the|D° YU understand? Forever and Into her forgetfulness Be Socios Kees ie along. Nobody ever! on but I let his fsther tell forced himself, at intervals that. y might come in, no- baat aealctes i .

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