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r ie Mibieeede Tribune tie of sete nae won te eek At each Cc S| SRS Ee oy SUE Lape ap DP ares Cos Bismarck Tribune ]?!ce 0 mumbo-jumbo would relleve _ Am Independent Newspaper | “THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ‘Bismarck 48 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher “Subscription Rates Payable in Advance i Daily by carrier, per year ..... Daily by mail per thd dn Bis- i Daily by mail per year. (in state outside Bismarck) ..........- Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ... A ‘Weekly by mai ate, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years .. - 2. ‘Weekly by Dakota, per year ‘Weekly by mail in year .... Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Distinguished Son Of all the North Dakotans who have obtained distinction in the na- tion as a whole there seems little doubt that Porter J. McCumber heads the list. Part of that distinction, of course, came by reason of his long service in the United States senate. Few men have served as many as four terms in that body, fewer still are those who have exceeded that number. But any sound analysis of McCum- ber’s career discloses much more their distress, If it were only a matter of being generous, North Dakota farmers would have no right to object. We have suffered so much that we know how to be generous. But the matter goes deeper than that. It easily may strike at the very vitals of the whole farm relief move- ment. By getting away to a bad start the whole business may be so badly upset that little will be accom- Plished. This would be tragedy mul- tiplied. Then, too, there is another factor 00/ which North Dakota farmers cannot 6.00 | forget. This is the insistence of farmers in the winter wheat belt on 50 Planting increased acreages despite pleas from other parts of the country that they refrain from doing so. At the request of the government, Northwestern farmers have cut their acreage in recent years. In Kansas and elsewhere the reply was that they could make money with 40 cent wheat. The request for reduction was ignor- ed there. There was no federal crop insur- ance when our farmers faced the most complete drouth on record in this dis- trict and no provision is made by the new law for granting such largesse. If it can be done without upsetting the machinery Secretary Wallace should help these farmers, of course, but he should not do so at the ex- pense of agriculture in other parts of the nation and, above all, he should not rush into something which may Prove a boomerang. He may get more done in the end if he does not try to do too much at once. Signs of Improvement In case you're looking for signs of than mere time in office to prove his greatness. The character of theman stands out prominently as his great- est asset. Whatever may be said about poli- ticians in general, McCumber was a man of principle. He believed in cer- tain things and he was not afraid to espouse them. He was the type of senator who dared occasionally to pit his own judgment against that of a majority of his constituents in the belief that time would bear him out. For him there was no craven vac- illation on a public issue until he ascertained which way the winds of sentiment were blowing. His habit was to decide things on their merits as he saw them and to follow the convictions so attained. This is something which a great many of our modern officeholders might copy with profit to the nation, if not to themselves. McCumber possessed a sense of the framatic, as every good politician must, but he never made obvious ef- Torts to erash the headlines. He knew that, if he did his job well, people -would eventually come to know about him. He preferred not, to be noticed at all rather than to be noticed unfavorably, and therein lay, at least in part, the basis for a Proud reputation. A conservative of the hard-boiled type on such things as tariffs and money, McCumber nevertheless was Progressive in many ways. His es- Pousal of the fight for laws govern- ing the preservation and sale of foods is credited with putting that important advance on the statute books. A firm believer in prohibition, he helped to pass the 18th amend- ment in the belief that it was a for- ward step, even though he lived to see it pretty generally discredited. ‘His frequent reelections to the sen- ate proved he knew how to make and keep friends. Never a great hand- shaker or back-patter, he wore well with those who knew him. He was faithful to his friends. At the peak of his power he was. defeated for the Republican sena- torial nomination in a campaign with many peculiarities. He knew, as everyone else knew, that he might have won that campaign had he deigned to sacrifice his principles or to throw his friends overboard. That he did neither is credited with losing him his place in the senate, where he had grown to be a power. It is, at the same time, to his ever- lasting credit as a man that he pre- ferred defeat to an inner feeling of dishonor. This occasion also gave him oppor- tunity to demonstrate the loyalty which was an essential part of him. A lesser man might have sulked in his tent; thrown political stones at his successful rival for the nomina- tion. McCumber did neither. He was a@ Republican and a sense of party loyalty was strong within him. The fall campaign of 1922 found him campesigning for the man who had defeated him in June. One wonders, as this great son of North Dakota is laid to rest, when we will find snother public servant of his caliber. Some of the men now on the scene may develop to match his stature but they have yet to prove the fact. Take It Easy Every farmer wants the new agri- cultural bill to be made effective as | or quickly as possible, but not every farmer will support the demand made Thursday by the heads of cot- ton and grain cooperatives that the allotment provision be applied to this year’s crop. With regard to wheat, the proposal business revival, you might be inter- ested in reading the early reports from Great Lakes shippers. During the first two weeks of this year’s navigation season, more than 650,000 tons of freight moved through the St. Mary’s Falls canal, between Lakes Superior and Huron. The first two weeks of last year’s season sent only 368,000 tons through the canal. Wheat movements are up more than 100 per cent, coal more than 500 per cent, iron ore more than 100 per cent. Business on the Great Lakes freight lines, quite clearly, is better than it was last year at this time. And you might remember that these lake steamers carry those bulk commodi- ties—coal, iron ore and grain—whose movement is the very backbone of the nation’s business. If this im- provement continues, a good deal of optimism will be justified. Low on the List How necessary it is that North Da- kota improve its streams and rivers if it would make full use of the fed- eral money which may be alloted to it to aid unemployment is illustrated by figures of the Associated General Contractors of America. These gentlemen, more interested in buildings than in highways or dams, are looking hungrily toward a Slice of the $3,300,000,000 which the government proposes to spend. AS Part of their campaign to obtain full recognition for the building industry they have made a survey to deter- mine the number of needed public buildings which might be constructed with this assistance. For North Dakota only four proj- ects, estimated to cost $460,000, are Usted. South Dakota has four with only $360,000, Wyoming two at $325,- 000 and Nevada one at $30,000. Leading the list is New York with $319,631,874 and second comes Cali- fornia with $215,509,000. Big figures, those. It 1s apparent, therefore, that North Dakota must look to other improve- ments if its workmen are to be em- Ployed at home and fair proportion of the federal money spent here. 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. The Road to Peasy. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 20, nine i ei a ee “WE WE TEACH OUR YOUTH THAT THIS 15 AND THs \S ART ~AND THIS 1S LITERATURE AND THIS 1S PROGRESS - SWE OUGHT To DEVELOP A GREAT CIVILIZATION IN A COUPLE OF GENERATIONS. Signed letters pertaining to personal self-addressed envelope is enclosed. RICH FOODS DO NOT PIMPLES MAKE One of the fallacies we physicians and especially skin specialists reluct to relinquish is the famous old granny notion that blackheads are due to eat- ing too much greasy stuff, fried food, hanky-panky is very marked, sugar, candy, pastries, cakes and ice cream. In fact about all the old fogies would leave a healthy young person to gorge on is spinach and grapefruit. Is it any wonder so many maidens with acne become depressed and moody? Isn’t it acne years fall for the pure bloot hokum and subscribe to some charla-/ tan’s system of developing superb manhood in a correspondence course? You may pore over all the recog- nized textbooks of human physiology and consult all the authorities on hy- giene and study all the works on die- tetics and nutrition and you will find no scientific ground for the fancy that the foods mentioned, or rather overin- dulgence in such foods, causes or pre- disposes to blackheads and pimples. But what’s a little thing like that to @ skin specialist? Now and then I get off a foolish crack about our mod- ern “brass” specialists—that being my may to indicate that the quacks ap-, peal directly to the laity for patronage, and not to physicians in general prac- tice, as real specialists should—and I always think of neurologists, peditrists and dermatologists as outstanding ex- amples of the evil. I regard the neu- rologist with a dull pain in the cri- coid, I admire the pediatrist for his showmanship, but I cannot envisage the dermatologist without grave risk of laughing before he arrives at the point of the story. Nearly if not quite all the standard authors make ® pass at sweets, pastry, fried foods, and some of them don’t like meat very well either. None of them offers an earthly reason for the notion that; these foods have anything to do with) blackheads or pimples. There is just about as much sense in the notion as there is in the popular notion that a Address Dr. William Brady, fats, oils, and, when the fondness for! inevitable that many boys in their) Teaching Our Youth PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. 1 health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stam} Letters should be brief and wit in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Goltre Treatment We were told that you have stated that goitre can be cured without an operation. Wife has “toxic” goitre. though it has not bothered her for the past two years ... (F. G. K.) Answer — Exophathalmic (wide) staring or prtruding eyes) or “toxic” goitre is curable in most cases by a course of medical treatment similar to the regimen generally used for pul- monary tuberculosis. In a few cases operation may be advisable. Your lown family physician (not a special- ist) is the best adviser. Store Babies Not So Pientiful Your allusion to the simplicity of the adoption of babies make me furi- us . . . we found 500 applications |ahead of ours, at one institution .. we finally got two illegitimate boys, and we are waiting now to adopt two girls. As for taking infants on ap- ‘proval, the law requires six months trial before the final adoption pro- ceedings . . . No thinking foster par- ent takes the hush-hush attitude of which you speak. I intend that our children shall know as soon as they lare able to understand, and social series workers agree . (Mrs. P. IN. W.) Answer—Well, what shall I do— burst into tears? It is no news to me that you love your adopted children. |Why not? That’s what I've been try- jing to tell you. Cancer Not Communicable Please tell me if cancer is contagi- ous? My mother and my father both died of cancer a few years apart. (Mrs. R. J.) Answer—The cause of cancer is as yet unknown. So far as we know it is not communicable. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dill Co.) ae NEW BY PAUL HARRISON New York, May 20.—One of the lesser-known racing promoters around town is Mr. Arthur Phillips, ®@ young man so well-spoken and tas- tefully clad that you’d never associate him with the business, And as a matter of fact, Mr. Phillips knows Practically nothing about pastors or track. He races cockroache: Actually. And he's clan, 80 well at it that he has been called to Chi- cago to set up a big cockroach-racing concession for the world’s fair, to- -!gether with a stable of his fleetest runners, Mr. Phillips is, he says, a writer by profession, and has traveled a lot. (He still has a sort of conti- nental accent). Anyway, he discov- ered that in several European cities, especially Paris, many people amused themselves by betting on cockroach races. After spending 830 francs on an indolent insect named Francois, which always lay down for a nap about an inch from the finish line, Mr. Phillips decided that this was a novel] and uncertain enough sport to appeal to Americans. xe * GOOD BREEDING WINS! Back in this country he consulted entomologists, and on their advice ordered several specimens of the prisoner upon his own recognizance. {4 Composed of lines, person with albuminuria should not eat eggs because eggs contain albu-; men. Silly, isn’t it? But our great! American dermatologists don’t see it that way. And the skin specialists are not the only ones who reluct to relin- | quish this quaint theory. No less than; (From The Magazine of Wall Street) Having done about everything else he could to set back the clock of his- tory, Hitler has now reduced the Ger- man people to mere serfs of the state. Every German must hereafter per- form manual labor at the dictation of the government. Fascism and Bolshe- vism are but other names for despot- ism, and like all despotism it arrives: in the end at tryanny. We are sorry! international good we hope Mr. Hitler | will find many things for them to do. Pletely engrossed in internal affai for a long time. It’s probably a good thing for both the Germans and the World that he is now busy at home. The trouble is that he may bring about so much domestic resentment ‘and ill-will that he will turn to that favorite resort of unpopular govern- ments—foreign aggression. In the Present mood of the world that would be the end of Mr. Hitler, but unfor- tunately, perhaps also of the German tion. The next time allied armies cross the Rhine the German tribes Hitler likes to talk about will be noth- ing but tribes when they retire. There would be again many German states but no German nation. Chiffons and crumpled artificial flowers may be freshened by holding them over the steam of a kettle for a few minutes. 4s that a processing tax be assessed by August 1 and the proceeds used to finance farmers in the stricken winter wheat belt as a sort of insur- ance. Crops are bad there and this The original power-driven biplane the first flight in a plane equipped with an engine is now in the South Kensington Museum, England. in which the Wright Brothers made half a dozen young women have writ- | {ten to assure me that I’m all wrong ‘about it, for they have noticed repeat- | ledly that they have a fresh crop of; ipimoles shortly after a gorge on fudge : or something. For the purpose of de-; bate these bright young ladies disre- gard the fact that the other two mil-; ion girls who gorge on fudge at the jsame time experience no such sad consequences. |” Rerely is any dietary restriction ade} for the docile German, but for the visable or helpful for a young person; with blackheads or pimples. Never} {mind the diet. Send a stamped We wouldn't mind a little rude resist- envelope bearing your address and ask ance, to the end that he may be com-/for instructions, if you have black- heads or pimples. TO JAMES WATT ? HOW FAR APART ARE THE RAILS OF A STANDARD GAUGE = \ RAILWAY 9 (5 Where is Scotland Yard? iu Blare of a |, horn, | 8 Stir. 19 Closest. | at the states- te men's meet- |. articles ings in Wash- ;. 2 22 Precipitate. ington? | 2470 pull by 36 Street boy. violent 38 Dressed. twisting. 40 Corrosive. 25A wise saw. 42 Roman 26 Large wild or — ©mperor. sad domesticated 45 Pronoun. ox. 46 Imbued with 28 Races inhabit- perfume. ing a region. * 30 Also. : | 32Low, vulgar 51 Incidental fellow, experience. 33.Who repre- 63To withdraw. sented France 54 Merchant. | Scotland Yard | HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Joo 12 Roofing 1 Current-revers- material. ing device. 16 To mend 7 sj) i7 Trial. 4 Situations. NIT] 20To redecorate. | 13To release a 23 Detested. 25 Fortified work. 27 Ancient He- brew measure. 29 Tanning vessel. 31 Utterances sup-, Posed to issue from a divinity, through a medium, usual A Ly a Brloet. 65 Takes a partic: 34 noe as ular direction. cakes, 56 English ivy. 35 As soon. VERTICAL 37 To translate a 1 Shoot of grass. code message. | 2 Animal similar 38 Map. + to @ raccoon. 39 Measure equal 3 Large ship. in volume to 4 Pass between one kilo of peaks. @ water. ~« 5 Enthusiasm. 6To renovate. 41 Deepness. 43 Less cultured, 7 Formative. 44 Musical drama. 8 Staple of 46 Variety of cotton, chalcedony. 9 Social insect. “ 47 Dreadful. 10 Stops. 50 Coal box. 52 Sorrowful. 11 Auriculate. “On the other hand, the common roach of the North is a fleet and willing runner. But because of \mil- lions of generations of being chased, he always tries to take a zig-zag course. So I cross-bred the latter, called Sylopyga orientalis, with the field variety. The result was a high- spirited specimen, narrow-bodied and with long, powerful hind legs espe- cially adaptable for taking hurdles in steeplechases. And these insects also ran in a straight line. “After that, though, I had to find some way to make them run. Novices will flee from a noise, but they soon get used to it. For a few days, too, they'll run from a spotlight; then they overcome their shyness and, in- stead of running, will rise up and take a sort of bow. “Only one thing will keep them fen and that’s the feeling of be- ing pursued. So I finally perfected, and now have patented, a special cockroach race course. At one end ate 10 glass tubes, each containing an insect and, behind, a marble. At the starting signal the tubes are tilt- ed at a slight elevation, the marbles roll, and the roaches run, The mar- bles stop after a few inches, but the Tacers continue along the separate grooves of an eight-foot track, head- ing for dark holes at the opposite end. The first insect to hide him- self wins.” eee MENDEL WAS RIGHT Mr, Phillips’ racing stable is in about its hundredth generation now, | © and the track record has been low- ered regularly until it now is four seconds flat. “I think this proves the doctrine of Mendelism, ” said the sportsman-scholar, “—that selective breeding will vary determinately the Phenomenon of inheritance.” For some months now, he has been taking his patented board around to hibition was held, appropriately enough, at the Village Grove Nut Club, The racers were named for ieana) common in some parts of the brities. South. “I found the big fellows sturdy but most lackadaisical,” Phil- lips explained. “They weren't im- bued with any competitive spirit. Wy Foy German education has been of smut and dishonesty.—Student Leader Gutjar, after German book * * % I will not wear knee breeches — Robert Worth Bingham, U. 8. am- bassador to Britain. * # * The government can produce evi- dence Martinove has been distribut- ing sBagea idee ee North- up, immi inspector, at ation hearing. ee * * % Prohibition officials have estimated that the annual consumption of bootleg whisky as a beverage has been about 100,000,000 gallons. — Harold Jacoby, distiller, ee * In modern industrial development we have largely lost sight of the fact that the primary reason for in- dustrial enterprise is to furnish a livelihood to workers.—Donald +R. |etant field roach (Periplaneta amer-|the ‘occasion after New York cele-|says the National Advisory Committee And one, of course, ran un-jon Illiteracy. Might send them to der the colors of Don Marquis,|Germany, where they wouldn't be al- | literary agent for the celebrated |lowed to, anyway. cockroach ee Archie. ee % Chicago labor union gangsters oper- ate on the principle of all for one and gun for all, eee Market seems to be substantiating the humor of a big rise, but person- ally we don’t take any stock in it. * ee New York woman who's just turn- ed 100 wants to live long enough to vote for repeal. Never too late to learn, ee % At eee we know who the For- gotten Man is—Charlie Curtis! (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc, FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Richberg, counsel for railroad labor f Barbs | All work and no pay (for teachers) makes Jack a dull boy. xe ® Cleveland councilman introduces an ordinance to make it “illegal to steal baseball equipment from teams that play in city parks.” Lots of people will agree that it is about time steal- x * * More than 4,000,000 people in this ing was made illegal in this country. + country can neither read nor write, | There’s many « slip ‘twixt the hope and the trip. F Parties. The first public ex- CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE She wanted Bess to come to as Francisco for the two weeks, to fring all the children, and stay jwith her at the Fairmont, Robin Should have children to play with, ‘and they were his own cousins... ; But Bess, shy or independent, would not come. She invited Lily Lou to come up to Woodlake after the opera season, instead. “I can easily take care of you and the boy,” she wrote, “but don’t bring any French maids with you. We still eat in the kitchen and proud of it—” | She would have loved to see her father. But he was off in the back country working on a sheep ranch, May said, and there wasn’t any way of getting mail to him. May didn’t have much good to re- port of him, It seems that he was (paying attention” to Mrs. Veemer, the dressmaker in Woodlake, quite ‘an ordinary woman, red cheeked, ‘well upholstered, good natured, and tertainly not too refined. “He should be restrained!” May ‘The old fool, wanting to get married again, after all the putting up Mother did with him! After the way she tried to make a decent citi- ven out of him!” ‘When Lily Lou did not answer, she cried, “Oh, woll, you've been away so long that nothing matters to you. You don’t care what Dad does, and we're all just ancient his- tory to you. I don’t suppose you'd ven know Kentfield Sargent if you saw him, You know, you were how to get out of that, Good eavens, Lily Lou, you almost nee everything, just by being so illy as to go and get married the way you did! By this time you'd ve been an old married woman, ike me, and maybe a couple of kids—” ‘ Lily Lou smiled. “What about Robin?” “Oh, he’s just a fad with you. A child that isn’t your own isn’t ony jmore trouble than any other kind jof pet. Bess said that! It’s jextravagance, thai . And here ‘you are, with the world at your fingertips—with everything!” “Yes,” Lily Lou said, “with feverything!” And after May had gone she took Robin on her lap and played Cow- {boy and Indian until he was sleepy. | ; \{Yes—everything,” she thought— “or, as near everything as one eets—” And then she smiled a little as she thought of what May would have thought if she had told her she would have traded everything for \what she had—a home, even a ishabby home, and someone who loved her— Traviata was a triumph. With Tony conducting. Tony ever watch-| ful ot her interests, Tony jealous of nad pat of applause anyone else got! | Madame Butterfly on Wednesday, ‘and a packed house. That was the (big night for her. Snow, Maiden & good part, she liked it, but = Imatinee didn’t count so much. ‘There had been letters and flow- jers and friends—Tony’s friends— 'friends of the theater and the world lof art and music— She wasn’t disappointed. She had| jnot expected any of the people she jused to know. Once upon a time she would have expected Ken, but \if he failed her when her mother \died, naturally’ he'd fail her now. } She couldn't help hoping that Ken’s father would read about her, He had laughed at her when she said she’d be a star, Well, she was. Her name had been written in elec- tric lights.. She was yourtg yet— years ahead—for greater glories. Might as well rent for them, [t would help Robin... . he brought him with the Snow Maiden. It was she had promised him. Bess had not in old fellow outside who's determined to see you, Madame come down from the lake with the children. They would have loved the fairy opera. She thrilled to see her little boy’s sparkling eyes, as he stood in her dressing room and admired her in her gown of frost and stardust. “You look just like a fairy prin- cess,” he told her, seriously. “A rather made-up princess,” she told him, laughing at her reflection in the brightly illumined mirrors. But she did look like a child’s dream of fairyland, with the glori- ous glittering head-dress, the filmy white of the gown, her black hair in long curls, like a doll’s, cascad- ing down her back. After the performance Marie brought Robin back to the dressing room. He was scarlet with excite- ment. “Mother, I wish you would be the Sleeping Beauty some time. I would like to see you be the Sleep- ing Beauty. Don’t they have an opera of that? Then I wish to see one with cowboys, like Auntie Vera's opera, mother, can’t we have one like that, please?” He was talking about Vera Voti- paka, and her role of Girl of the Golden West, with which he had been much impressed, “Some day. We'll see, darling!”| She knelt beside him, still: in grease paint and glittering draper- Hes, holding his little hands. George Farmers, the publicity, manager, tapped at her door. “There's an old fellow who's de- termined to get in to see you, Madame Lansing. Says his name is Lansing, and he’s a distant rela- tive. Do you want to see him?” Lily Lou’s heart bounded. Stopped beating for a second. Dad! Her own father—it must be! It was. He followed close at the publicity manager’s heels, a little shy, but not too much impressed with all the show, the unfamiliar surroundings, the little group of admirers who waited outside. “Dad!” she hugged him, laughing and crying, a little hysterical at the thought of having him here, in the] ¢, city, at her performance— She scanned his weatherbeaten nxiously. He hadn’t changed . He seemed a little younger, . little happier, a little more like i ” said Farmers. Uncle Eph. ... “Oh, Dad—you don’t | know how T’ve wanted to see you!” She hid her face on his shoulder ill laughing and crying, not know. ing just what to say. “I was proud of you, Dolly,” he told her, holding her off at arm’: length to look at her. “You sang all your notes true, and you looked very handsome. Tbought me a good two dollar seat, and it was worth it—” “Dad, you could have had th stage box—the front row —any- thing!” f “Now, don’t you go throwing your money away. You save your money, Lily Lou! I didn’t mind the two dollars. Didn’t I say it was worth i She looked at him. His old, shiny suit, his carefully combed hair, the collar that was too large, and frayed along the edges. Her heart was bursting. “Yes, I came down from the lake last night,” he 1. “I don’t always read the papers every day. I’m up at your Uncle Eph’s place most of the time now, and sometimes I kind of let the papers pile up and read them all at the end of the week, So when I saw you were here—” “I tried so hard to find you, Dad. Bess—” “Yes, I know. Bessie, she doesn’t like me herding sheep up there. Verner’s kind of putting on the dog lately, and I guess she wants I should dress up more. It’s kind of a relief for me not to dress up, Dolly. I guess I’m kind of a care. less old man now. But I slicked up for today—” “You could have come in your dungarees!” “Yes, you and me... sort of alike, Dolly. That your boy?” She had forgotten Robin, playing quietly in a corner. For one hideous moment she he tated. The lie that had been so e: peers was impossible now, ‘And eb... ‘The old man did not wait for her nswer, me see you? grand-dad, son,” he said, holding a horny hand out to the child. ‘To Be Continued) ' Copyright wk King Fi Featates Syndicate, Toe,