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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspape j THE STATE'S OLDEST PAPER NEWS!) (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance state yt outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three FEATS oo .scesesssere ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............ 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ...eseee sees « 2,00 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. Different Reactions Decision to send the first North Dakota contingent of the Citizens Conservation Corps to the west coast probably will be hailed with joy by the young men directly concerned, received with doubt by their parents and the cause of chagrin to those state officials who had hoped to keep them occupied in North Dakota. All of these reactions are perfectly natural under the circumstances, just as the order of the federal govern- ment transferring the men to Cali- fornia was both natural and justified. Nowhere will you find the spirit of adventure more active than in a group of men of 18 to 25, the age lim- its for the C. C. C. Romance always lurks around the next corner and the lust for new experiences calls to them. Their response to the order to move will be just as sure as that a flower turns toward the sun. Mothers and fathers will wonder a little at having their sons sent so far from home. To be sure, they could be of no more use if the boys were stationed in Bismarck than if they were in Alaska, but it is the nature of parents to guard their young with @ watchful eye and the thought of tremendous distance carries a worry of its own. Any who feel doubts about the sit- uation, however, will find their fears unjustified. These young men are in excellent hands. Many of them are receiving better food, clothing and medical care than would be the case if they were at home and the disci- pline is fully up to the standard set by most parents. Those officials who have sought to keep the C. C. C. in North Dakota may enter protests, but before they do so they should look carefully at the situation. None of the projects upon which it was proposed to employ these men in North Dakota is yet ready for defi- nite action. Most of the dams upon which they were to labor still are in the dream stage. The hard, construc- tive work necessary as a forerunner to the beginning of actual labor has not been done—or at least has not been completed. The blame, if any there be, does not lie with the federal government. It lies with the state system which has done more talking and less working than the circum- stances justified. From the government standpoint there was nothing else to do. These men were due to be moved from the camp to make room for others. There ‘was no place in theisjate for them to go at this time and their services could be used elsewhere. By the time the second group is ready to go to work we may have something for them to do in this state and this also may be true of succeed- ing contingents, but this first detach- fment probably will not be seen in this section again until the period of its enlistment expires. Modern Miracle The Mahatma Gandhi, completing two weeks of his projected threc- weeks fast, astonishes physicians with his power of resistance. For 14 days the great Indian leader hhas taken nothing but water, rein- forced now and then by a little salt and soda. Yet he lives and the prob- ability is he will survive. For a normal human being this ‘would not be so difficult. Most per- sons could live 14 days without food and suffer no serious impairment, but Gandhi is not and has not been an or- dinary person for many years. He was only skin and bones to begin with. Apparently both the skin and the bones have shriveled since the fast began for the Mahatma lost about a Pound and a half a day for the first week, at which time he was down to 87 pounds. His weight now probably is still less. When Gandhi began his fast he had very little margin to spare. Still it seecesesees 2.50 for a great character, one possessed of a great Soul. Some will regard the success of Gandhi's fast as a tremendous triumph of mind over matter. Others will view it as the nearest thing to Proof that man has a soul which we have seen in our generation. It all depends upon the nature of the indi- vidual and the point of view. ‘Ambulance Chasers’ ‘The “ambulance chaser” has been with us for a long time, and efforts to rid the legal profession of his presence have never been entirely successful. However, a note of hope is to be found in a recent warning from the Minnesota supreme court that lawyers found guilty of ambu- lance chasing hereafter will be sub- Ject to disbarment. The court issued this warning after hearing the case of a Minneapolis lawyer accused of maintaining an aggressive organization for procuring personal injury actions. Sometimes this man even made contact with victims through relatives while the victims were ‘still unconscious. The ambulance chaser blights so- ciety in several ways. He clogs the courts with needless lawsuits, he harasses people who are not at fault and he brings his whole profession into disrepute. It is to be hoped that other courts besides those of Min- nesota will see their way clear to hamper his operations. Spirit of the Navy Whatever may be said about the dirigibles used by the United States navy, there doesn’t seem to be any- thing in particular wrong with the young men who make up their crews. Moody E. Erwin, one of the Akron’s three survivors, went to his home in Memphis, Tenn., for a month's fur- lough not long ago. Reporters, nat- urally enough, asked him a lot of questions about his experience; among other things they asked him if he had been scared by the crash. “Scared?” he replied. “Were you ever in an auto crash? Did you have time to get scared? Did it get my nerve? Say, man, that's what the nhavy's for. It takes nerves out of you.” And so, in line with this talk, the young sailor has already applied for assignment to the crew of the new Macon. If that sort of spirit is general, the navy may yet make a go of its big dirigibles, 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, In the World’s Laboratories Minneapolis Tribune Even when the world is at an eco- nomic standstill, the men of science who scours its nooks and crannies must press on in their effort to dis- cern more clearly the present and the past. These men may work ob- Scurely in far places; sometimes the Spotlight of world publicity beats sud- dently down on them. But always they are motivated by a consuming curiosity, a fascination for the unex- Plored byways of science. During the past year, for example, the Smitlsonian institution sent out 21 scientific expeditions, and its ex- Peditions and its explorers journeyed to widely separated parts of the earth in search of material ranging from bones of early man to new varieties of Srasses and flies. The barest outline of these expeditions cannot but im- Press the laymen with the vastness and variety of the world laboratories in which science labors. A curator of Seology ranged through the Ohio val- ley in search of fossil crinoids which might shed new light on ancient geo- logical periods in the history of North America. In the course of that search, he was compelled to explore many old quarries on hands and knees. Another Smithsonian repre- Sentative collected bones of an ancient, thinoceros in Colorado, and discover- self-addressed envelope is enclosed. 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. SURGICAL FOGYISM PREVENTS PROGRESS When earnest, studious physicians departed from old established lines and found they could obtain better re- sults with less risk and misery for the patient by electro-surgical treatment of prostatic obstruction (bladder neck obstruction) and rendered a report of their work to the entire profession last summer, the Voice of Old-Fogyism was raised in the symposium to utter these sapient words about the new method: “What will be the ultimate results? . . . This valuable procedure should not be undertaken by the unskilled. Prostatectomy (that means the old-fashioned way of removing the prostate or the obstructing part of it —an operation that any man may well dread to undergo) is not an obsolete operation and merely a reminder of the past.” Perhaps not, for patients who are willing to believe the old established methods are the best. Snaring and guillotining the tonsils is not quite ob- solete yet either, but notwithstanding the bitter resistance of Old-Fogyism in American Medicine the diathermy method has made tremendous gains and the more intelligent classes every- where are passing up the old Spanish custom and choosing this modern method when they wish to have their formidable for the victim than having one’s tonsils removed by assault and battery. “This valuable procedure should not be undertaken by the unskilled”. The very words the Old Fogy nose and throat specialists or their mouthpiece used in their campaign to prevent the electro-surgery from gaining popular- ity in the nose and throat field. ‘What procedure or method of treat- ment should be undertaken by the unskilled, I wonder? The truth is that lack of skill is the reason why the ed partial skeletons of an ancient sabre-tooth cat and other long extinct mammals in Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming. Another spent three weeks in the Uinta mountains in a vain search for a huge meteorite re- Ported to have fallen there about 20 years ago, and still another prowled through the caves of Porto Rico in Spanish explorers arrived there. Then there was the zoologist who explored the wild mountain regions of Siam to make natural history col- lections; the grass expert who made a collection of grasses in Yucatan; the man who sought new species of flies along the Pacific coast and in the Rocky mountains. There was Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, who continued his archeo- logical excavations on Kodiak island; the archeologist who explored caves in the mountains of western Texas for traces of an ancient people hitherto unknown to science; the explorer who spent several months -among the head-hunting Jivaro Indians of the upper Amazon country to study their customs, religion and culture. Thus did the representatives of one scientific institution alone carry on Old Fogies do not employ these mod- ern methods. They make a few bun- gling efforts, get bad results, and give up the attempt to adjust themselves This is the essence of to new ways. fogyism in medicine and surgery. Old-fashioned prostatectomy Poses greater suffering, risk of life, anxiety, prolonged convalescence, eco- search nomic loss and financial hardship cal treatment of bladder neck obstruc- tion thru the cystoscope. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A Uvula Is Not Worth $25 Patient sues doctor for $25,000 dam- ages, charging that when he removed the tonsils he also clipped off the uvula, without’ the patient's knowl- edge or consent, and that this has caused an impediment in speech and, of course, the customary intense pain and suffering that occurs in most cases where there is hope of collecting damages from the doctor. What is the uvula and what is its function? (8. 1. L.) Answer—The uvula is that little dingus which hangs down over the base of the tongue, the tip of the soft Palate. It has no function, has noth- last year, and that was only a small Part of the story of the men from many countries who busied themselves with adding to the world’s store house of knowledge. In many lands, and on many frontiers, the search was Pressed. Some failures were recorded, and many brilliant success, but the net result was a fuller storehouse from which science might draw in its continuing effort to make the world @ little less of an enigma.’ It is such men, carrying on the search for knowledge in obscure places, who ful- fill some of the finest of scientific tra- ditions. A good-sized, healthy elephant in apparently will be enough. He noW|the Philadelphia zoological gardens is expected to win out in this latest | has a daily ration of 100 pounds of demonstration against the age-old In- dian doctrine of “untouchability.” timothy hay, 10 quarts of crushed vegetables and 16 quarts of oats and bran, We of the occident find it difficult — to understand this whole business,| Plant breeding work for the pur- and yet we feel a strange lifting of the spirit when we think of this man in far-off India. Pose of developing a satisfactory} muskmelon for growing in North Da- kota is being started this spring by We recognize him |the Agricultural college. ing to do with speech, and sometimes FOUGHT AFTER | | PEACE HAD BEEN H DECLARED ? t tonsils purloined. It is so much less|@. im- it just serves as an irritation until the doctor snips it off short. Two shill- ings would be a fair price for it. Food Has No Relation Recently a test of my urine showed traces of albumen. Should I change my diet, and if so, what foods should {1 avoid? I am 23 years old and in excellent health. I swim about an hour every day. (T. A.) Answer— A trace of albumen is like- ly to appear shortly after any. stren- uous exertion such as @ race, a foot- ball or tennis game, a long swim or any vigorous muscular work. This is @ normal occurrence. In any case, the character of the food has nothing to do with the fact that albumen is present in the urine. Don’t be soph- omoronic about that. Craving for Candy Altho I eat everything, lots of fresh vegetables, orange juice, etc., I have an unsatiable craving for candy. I try to leave it alone and can't.... (E. M) Answer—Depends on your age, height, weight and physical activity, how much candy you may take. Often, I think, the craving is indicative of thyroid gland deficiency and for that you need medical advice. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) 4 Barbs Ireland has at last abolished the oath to the British king. Oaths at the British king will undoubtedly con- tinue as usual. ee % Lots of times a fellow get all HORIZONTAL 1 Largest city in FIDIOIN Brazil, Rio de IRI TAI MMCTT Se p (8) 7 Mosses, 1 Mi TT 13 Scandinavians {i ae collectively. ede 15 Finely strati- PANDO fled rock, 17 Sesame. 18 Upper limb, 20 Onager. 22 Frozen water. 24 Handsome. 1 OAS ia exon JQ} INEIAIT “Answer to Previous Puzzle MBOVBIEE o PITRE INOUE] 12 Basics nest DASIEDIIVIAN NEBSIAITIEIOL TAIN TESA MIME Ie | ISITIE TE IRMEWIAINIT) 26 North America IS|ADMEHAISI TIE] INSESIE INT) 43 Apart. 44 Strip. 46Greek “T.” 47 Data, < 49 Era. 27 Self. 29 Exclamation, 31 Sphere of action. 33 Sun god. 51 Constell 5 34 Reserve force a gapeial atten. in the Turkish 56 Eucharist army. * vessel, a Wasaite hotel. §§ To annul. impetuous. 60 Decreed. 40 Plea of having 62 er been else- ermine. where. 63 Auctions. 41Greek letter. 64 M: 42 Wearled. Raped 65 Outer garment. set up over a victory. But the jockey who won the Derby got set down. eee If love is really what makes the world go ‘round, perhaps that’s why so many of the young folks are dizzy at this time of year. ee % Latest figures indicate that $11,000,- 000,000 of the $22,000,000,000 in gold mined since 1492 cannot be located. People are so careless! ee % beginning the. latest drive into China proper. Well, they have had to take a lot. x * # President Roosevelt may not make a hit every time he comes to bat, but his average so far is certainly ‘way above 3.2, es 8 If wine is a mocker, as the Scrip- tures say, then the new 3.2 wine wil! be pretty hollow mockery. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) N yl NEW | YORK By JULIA BLANSHARD New York, May 23.—(#)—Opening Notes: Quite a commotion was caus- ed at the opening of the St. Regis roof garden night club when some- one started the rumor that Huey Long was there dancing with a blonde. (The Kingfish is known to be a persistent nightelubber.) The double turned out to be a Bostonian with clipt Harvard accent... Rafaelo Diaz, tenor, brought | South America _ meat? .* 16 Coronet. 19 Divinely sup- fr _ piled food. 21-Plank. t 23 Disciple in RIEIE |} India, 25 Minor note. 28 Cupidity. IR} 30 Leg bone. ! 32 Capital of Ay Esypt. 35 Aversion. 36 Having faith, 38 Celestial. 2 Variant of 39 Hand shell “a 3 Short letter. 4 Silkworm. 5 Small body of land. 6 Second note, 8 Exists. 9 Gossip. 10 Possesses. 47 To total. 48 Species of pepper. 50 Low vulgar fellow. 52 To slumber. 54To put up & 11 Otherwise. poker stake. 12 Northeast. 55 Gaelic, 14 What country 57 Hodgepodge exports huge 59 Mine hut. ‘quantities of 61 Prophet. guests to their feet cheering and/than usual the other noon at the Col- made them forget the Kingfish epi- sode, when Vincent Lopez, orchestra give a few impromptu songs. . . Lita Gray Chaplain, (Charlie Chaplain’s ex-wife) was the center of attention at the St. Moritz Sky Salon opening, in white lace with black chiffon over her shoulders escorted by three de- voted admirers. She is much older looking, a sophisticated brunette. ... American women are learning, but few at the St. Moritz seemed able to accept the gallant Count Lakopo- lanski’s hand-kissing with the ab- solute nonchalance that Euro- pean women do. .. Mrs. 8S. Stan- wood Menken is one Social Regis- terite who attends every night club opening—always looking the “grand dame” part, with costly jewels and her graying blonde hair done in its pompadour-roll German coiffure of another day.... 6 ek ® RANDOM JOTTINGS Countess de Forceville designs and makes many of her own clothes. . . Amelia Earhart is the most popular woman after-dinner speaker about town. . . George M. Cohan has writ- ten and appeared in more than 80 plays. . . Beatrice Lillie won a $50 bet that she could get a seat in a crowded subway train, by a certain little subterfuge not long ago. Un- beknownst to the man with whom she laid the wager, Bee bought three little wiry green snakes and slipped them under her coat. Inside the subway train, she grabbed a strap with one hand, then leaned toward the man sitting in front of her and wiggled the three little snakes’ heads up into view. He immediately gave her his seat, and bre oe nsea down the train. * * MAN WITH THE HOE A former convict, returned from the Atlanta Penitentiary, reports that Al Capone is allowed no special privil- eges. He now works as a gardener, and is an excellent and an industrious one. sk & NEWS FOR TABBY In the front window of the snappy London Dog and Pet Shop on Fifth avenue, a crude hand-made card- board sign announces “Fresh Cat- nip”... When Edouard Herriot sail- ed for home, he took back to Paris seven negligees for his nieces which he shopped for and selected person- ally in New York. . . Doris Duke, to- bacco heiress, looked more like Garbo "MAKE Copyright, 1930, by Faith Baildon CHAPTER I. walking along Shore Road on a bright Autumn morn- ing, gazed wistfully across the Narrows and at Quarantine, where @ great ocean liner had just come to anchor. The water was spark- ling blue and the sky was a great arch of azure. Fussy little tugs plodded along, a sea breeze swept bright color into Mary Lou’s round cheeks, an airplane droned over- head importantly. “Mary Lou!” ._Mary Lou tugged her giddy little beret over one eye and turned to behold her young cousin and charge, Billy Sanderson, leaping up and down on his 6-year-old legs, Pinioned to earth only by the string of the red paper kite he held in his fat hand, “What is it, Billy?” “Jever go up in an airplane, Mary Lou? What makes airplanes M= LOU THURSTON, stay up? Kin I go up in an air- plane, Mary Lou?” inquired Billy, all on a ee ia “No,” said Mary Lou, regret- fully, “no, Billy, I’ve never been up in an airplane. They stay up because—” Here Mary Lou, floun- dering in the sea of her own scanty knowledge, ended firmly, “because of the engine .. .” “Autos have engines they Fal down,” remarked Billy, help- ‘ully, “Look,” cried Mary Lou, “at the big Boat» ees ‘While Billy looked and his 20- year-old cousin sighed with relief, the airplane vanished into the hori- zon, and Billy began formulating other questions, relative to boats, in kis busy mind, Mary Lou sat down on a green aud white bench where the drive curved to a wide look-out, topped by a flagpole circled with red Autumn flowers. “Stay right here, Billy Sander- ”” she commanded, an anxious eye on the cars sweeping up and down the road. While Billy clambered over the seats and fell i: clutchi his kite, Mary looked over the water and dreamed. : She was always dreaming. She was round and delectable, and vital. She had red. and eyes as blue as the flowing past the sea wall. She had a Nose and a sweet, gallant, red mouth and the most charming hands and feet in the world. Also, she was slender where slenderness is demanded and curved where curves are necessary for beauty. Small as a watch charm, lively as a cricket, fresh as a budding rose and dreaming as a May night... this was Mary Lou Thurston... sitting on a green and white bench on Brooklyn’s Shore Road—once known as Millionaires’ Row—look- ‘3 static ocean liner and wi ; herself in Persia or Peru, Afghanistan, India, England— lot that Mary Lou was un- happy. She was too healthy for unhappiness, too sweet for dis- oontedi: But she re as vital restless as a pup} Uj at jeash; And thee ‘was t, dreamer orn, a weaver of enchanting fairy tales and legends, with the inno- cent eponeat of youth. She read herself into the pages of every book, she saw herself as the hero- ine of every play she went to. She was always ining herself in the most amazing, the most en- chanting situations. The side streets off Shore Road are a hodge-podge of architectural “periods” —Civil War and General rant, Tweed Ring and strict]; “modernistic.” Rows of red bric! houses, each the twin of its neigh- bor, run along only to be brought up short by a great, sprawling, bay- windowed frame house, built for space and comfort, sitting back in its own flower garden with per-'in . Tangy figure in mannish tweeds, same height leader, caught him as he danced past| and same hauteur, same type of finely and got him up onto the platform to] sculptored high-cheek-bones and lean chin, same dreamy eyes. BLACK-EYED BEAUTIES Over in Hell's Kitchen, a notorious- ly rough part of New York's gang- section, the hello girls at Cen- ral Telephone office wear smoked, spectacles going and coming from work to discourage unwanted atten- tion from the roughies hanging about the streets. in American life today. But its vital- ity is in the nature of a ci activity, not of an underlying basis for the motivation of government.— ‘Willfam Wallace, historian. * # # Nevada is the moral sewer of the nation.—Rt. Rev. Frank W. Creighton, bishop of Long Island. * # * We have made a complete turn- around and at last America’s face is toward the future—Henry Ford. * * # ‘The religious are attacking me he- cause I am religious; I paint what £ See.—Diego Rivera, artist. ene ‘The obsolete pre-war economio theory that prevailed here and else- where ignored our transformation from a debtor and young undeveloped country to the greatest creditor and surplus-producing nation in history.— Brethren, I think these two months’ | Secretary of State Cordell Hull. annual summer vacations for pastors ** # have got to go.—Rev. Edwin Bradford; The cultural history of ancient Robinson of Holyoke, Mass, 2 8 I am smiling; I always smile when things go wrong.—Hjalmir Schacht, German banker. ee Individualism is still a vital force lands should be taught as a Nordic achievement—Dr. Joseph Goebbels, Nazi minister of propaganda and pub- lic enlightenment. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: wo sposperis that Bit o fein wna BELIEV haps a little vegetable patch added. Now and then, among more tentious pseudo-Spanish dw of cement and stucco and almost- wrought-iron balconies, one sees a small frame dwelling of an earlier day, white painted, green shut- tered, demure and lovely. In such a house Mary Lou Thurston lived with her young unt and uncle, Clara and Hi anderson, and their extremely lively youngster, Billy. Mary Lou Thurston was that fast vanishing American, the “home” girl. Once she had had the most charming and delightful parents imaginable, young and careless, happy earted and improvident. Her father had been a painter ace a very good ainter, but a very happy one. On a tiny income he and his beautiful young wife and Mary Lou had traveled almost all over the world, Then they had come home and there had been an epidemic and presently there was only Mary Lou left to remember. jo, at 15, she had come to live with her mother’s brother and his wife. And as Billy was a baby and as Mrs. Sanderson wished to continue with her excellent “job” as secretary to a publisher, Mary Lou had fitted in, a valuable addi- tion to the little household. An old rake has a hard time keeps ving up with gay young blades. . MY by FAITH BALDWIN Disrbated by King Features Syndicate, Inc. of her own age and sex. All the re-|girls she knew went to businesy and although she saw them occa- sionally they seemed somehow to live in another world. Her best friend— But at this juncture he arrived, a slim, spare young man with a freckled face and hair much redder than her own. “Hello, Mary Lou—hello, Billy —gosh, what atummy! You'll eat ourself into the grave, my lad. yk out... over you'll go and the kite with you.” [A Real Pat) Larry Mitchell, 26, very inquir- ing reporter on the Dally tar, lucked Billy from the back of a ench and set him down, tweaked Mary Lou’s beret completely over: that bright eye and sat himself beside her. “What, no greetings?” he in- quired. “Of course. What are you do- ing here this time of day?” asked Mary Lou severely, but her eyes danced. She was very glad to see him. She always was. a ‘Looking for a murder,” was his morbid reply. “Sent over here to scare up a little news. Is: Thought I’d find you here. Mary Lou had ywn Larry for three of the five years she had hile Billy fell into the bed clutc! his M Lou looked pg pew and a ee It was Mary Lou who looked after Billy, who kept the little white and on. house 858 as as a new pin, who wande! 01 Third Avenue with a basket on her! arm, remembering the Italian of her childhood, to the delight of the fruiterers, laughing with ‘them, asking Politely after the health of their i pinching lettuce oranges and doing’ bargaining. It was " ton who ieerned ocak, to pu ’s spinach through a sieve, to provide the Sanderson family with tested recipes from the maga-| catio: zines away from| th and to wean cans and delicatessen. So the youthful Sandersons went forth to work and Mary Lou stayed at home with Billy. ly was going to school now, proud as Punch, amd Mary Lou had a littl time to herself. But today was Saturday and she and Billy were ind in thei: ly pes lulging in their daily | Hamil ng the drive. Rain, shine or snow, Billy was bundled up and trotted out for his exercise, like a little racehorse. And he cer- tainly responded to it, being fa but ‘not too fat, and rosy an almost bursting with energy. Of course, life wasn’t all Billy and spinach, gas stoves and dust cle Mary Lou had her Sundays she was free many evenings, Generally, however, she was to be found with her cunning nose stuck had friends a book. She many lived with the Sandersons. She had seen him on an average of four times a week ever since. For fe out of the Middle Western town which had given him birth to chall New York with his enthusiasm, his vitality and his typewriter—to say nothing of his insatiable curiosity—was much concerned about Mary Lou’s edu- cation. Oh, not her book learning —she had enongh of that—too much, he thought privately—come at in and devious ways—but her education in practical sophisti- mn. He thought her too much e dreamer for this world. He took her ob ats y little jaunts, in- it in Fort ton park, and on Autu: Sundays they sometimes went tee polo game at the Fort itself, They went to motion pictures and they went to theaters, the latter excur- sions generally due to tickets given Larry by the dramatic editor of his paper. They sat on the San. derson porch when the nights were clear, 6r, on rainy evenings, inside word pusties acieiny Sout, Tote , Bolv ders, squabbling an lnuphing ta ® couple of youngsters. {Te Be Continued Tomorrow)