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H The Bismarck Tribune } THE GhATES CUDERT" NEWSPAPER (Betablished 1973) Biblished by ‘The Ristnarck ‘Trib- whe Company, Bismarck, N.D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 88 sBCoTA Class mall matter. GEORGE Dp. MANN Presitlent and Publisher Rtibacription Rates Payatle in Advance Dally by carrer, per year Dally by mail per vear fin tmarck) Dally by mail per veer tin state Outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Dally by mall outside of North Dakota 4 aon ‘Weekly by matt in state, per venr $1.00 Weekly by malt in state, three years. gan Weekly by mail outside of North $7.20 730 Dakota, per ve 150 Weekly br mall in Caneda, per year 200 Member of Audit Ruorean of Cleentation Meinher of ‘The Asenciated Prese "The Asenrlater! Prece te exctisively eftiHed to the ts6 republicattos of all Hepatches vredited tr it or tint otherwlee credited in this Newepaper and alten the lneal news of spontaneous oriety published herein All Hehte nf republication of all other matter herety are ale reserved, Two Trpes of Men WI the nation howling for 1 P Morgan's blond ae the yeenlt of the fact that he patd no Income taxes in 1990 nd 1931, Clase nf Viroiiia pete inin an aren ment Perora as an apparent defender of the Wall Street Croesus The effert may he to cet Mr. Glass “iy had’ with a erent people why will feet that te te de tending and the “Hploated bond-holder.” Tt de to be expected that same of the fMarnel mouthed politictans may fol iy the condemnation, tt world all be ty Keeping with the American habit of RVING fr execs Three veare age J. FP Mivgan wae Renator Carter Attorney with Mumber of special privilege America’s preatest financial eaint wutshining even sueh geninges as Bariel Inui, whos was eaving to make everyone vel. It was worth thousands fo any mean to be iten toned in fhe same breatly with Mor ean sought his Nothine but aved eonld come froin) jain Bo thoneht and asid many of the Individuals are shouting “down with king.” ineiiding Romie of the very politicians whose eries of stremious protest rend the air, Rrevvone favor whe now the tor Glass was Never simone those that, back In 1983, they could have pitchased valuable property for a song. In this state opportunity still Hes in the tani. Harbingers of Business ‘The treveling man is more than list @ part of a complee sales organ- ivation, He is a harbinger of busy tmnes, anod business: when he is on the road in force it is a safe het that real prosperity Is an agent of not far off 1 Ig interesting, therefore, to read the remarks made al Hruston, ‘Texas, +R. Carton, nattonal dl the Travelers’ Protective recently rector of asanviation ©¥ou will enon see traveling men hark on the road, the forerunners of better hustness and renewed eommer- rlal life.” Inomy round 1 find truly a feeling he said of optimicn. Ralltoad car toadines ere nn the Increase, Rall transporte Hon companies are installing fast freiohts ty handle (he increased ton. Men are ening back Acaressivences and enthit: age qulekty fo work slaciy have eupplanted pestle,” Making Vetter Men Aside from the minor diff ieutties i Herent iv se vast 9 profect, and the fact that a few troublemaking radt reals managed fe draw attention to stages, the training of the bie reforestation army themeetves ty the early seems fo he preeressing i an emt ory manner ently eat Perhaps the most encouraging re Port Knox, Ky doetors there the other day eherked mp on the health records of BRO voune men whe had eome down + eomes fron Army from an industrial eifty a month he. fore. They found that during thety montl ty eam these venne men had anined ai average of 1 pounds each iy weight. Cold anvthing testify hetter ta the Whether the reforestation ariny plants a lot of trees or not, I has at leart taken a lot of voune men who weren't getting enonaly fo eat and filled them wp, im proving both thelr health and thetr morale, Henefits of these camps? her editors i ont yerard to whether ther apres oy disanree with The Tribune's policies: | shed wit The Old Guard Passes e NOV. World WW spite of attacks by Benator Reed | c4 and Mr. Mills New Peri will he made easier of 7 iy American economic and. political |y who adored on bended knees, fist as the now refuses to foin the rabble | which would treat the money master harshir. | Despite his devense of Morven Pi- day, it is to be noted, the tery Vir- ginian fs the ome man in congress | who has attempted to do something definite about the banking situation and to curd Morgan's power, He ts The sponsor of a banking bill whien 38 declared to have more sharp teeth than any other Ridered for passage. Tf it goes thing it Will be ® greater check on Mor: wan's activities than al of the mouthines of ali of the congressmen and senators who go in for that sort ‘of thine. Bome of the hovs confine Selves to talking They point out ‘mequalittes and injustices without atempting to do very much about it Benator Glass is © little short on that accomplikament, but when it comes to fighting for a banking ve form din which ven} APANE ROME thing he leads the field, even if he Gta rise to Morgan's defense because ‘of what he considered unfair ‘nent. ever seriously con them iy treet Money and Things | Writing in a church magazine, 9 Yeading divine esserts that mow People will wee the next release by Joon Orawford or Novma Shearer than have seen Hamlet since Shake- 7 ‘ BPenre wrote it 200 years aco. Taking & wellop at the cinema, he says its trouble is that it Vexpresses © tyne of mind that hex ‘Yost All sense of the spiritual values all sense of the burden of man's des Tasty tiny. Tt sees life oniv as ® whirling rushing, confused strumele after Toney and things, and then mow money and more things.’ ‘There may What the gentleman savs and if so the movie makers should take note ‘Of {6 but on the whole the man ts absurd. He may be up on his theoloe, put he rather underrates the intelli Bence Of the avernce American People go to the movies to be or tertrined, just es they go to me 6 magician to be fooled Tn event they seek something di. ‘trom the usual routine And ‘no spirituel velues? My Stars, didn't the man ever see Garbo? be a grein of tenth in epithe Opportunity Most of us dream of Arabian trens- ure or gold in Samarkand but the Teport by the Bank of North De- ‘kote that Jand sales are picking up Proves thrt x good ‘many North Dr- ‘kotans Know the best plece to win Success is right here ext home. Never in the ‘recent history of this State was Iand cheaper than it is now. "With taxes reduced and the prices of farm produce rising, North ‘Dakota land was never a better thin it ts today. is herd to sell only ‘proves this to be ‘the ‘fact, All tangible wenlth springs from fe soil ane it iRy Not be tone ‘now Wefofe we hear ‘persons lamenting |Tibeval legisiation were 4 The fact thet it | history, the Republican The personnel, doings and disappear | a ance of this notable group are made | ination, but ts afraid he will have the the subject of an excellent article bY cane unsatisfactory experience again Mr. William ©. Murphy, Jr, in the American Merenry, As he suggests Unwittingly, doubtless, the lament ed Hoover administration made tts 4 greatest bid for the embrance of posterity by barying the Repnbliean. OW ‘i fe Guard were the political |p, ‘ough which the moneved |, yuled the United tex Tor dime heiween the € “state the chief complaint, but nev 4 ed the height of on of MeKinley and the de nang represented the jet & a1 months olé baby cod Iver ofl os ape ag | viosterol Miss b. D.) thost persed’ oxen irigation in Aver | ‘Trouble with the correspondent, 1{MaEe Oks dozma that the main purpose of gov. SUPE. T# That he began BY APlO-\4 Babe ander a veer eEnINeAt ts Oho WA gizing to the doctor for coming at All, Sanded as dail food. Wel a the generation before the Civil wa wes unhorsed hy the defeat of the Bonth, the Repudlican Old Guar 4 iW pei a ana ¢ the correspondent. may have picked tem of industrial and fi Yend. & Remi fossilized practiiioner, one who slism unmatched elsewhere in tage point from which to work The the senate, as Mr, Graney didi a gen: eration Inter in the lobby But 8 Mr. Grundy was elected to the senate |inaiton it would be more akin to ten he ‘“wealized the impropriety of doing | berri 2c no lsat e fined side.” | service depends on the individual eir- the cumstances and the particular studies openly in the senate what he hesitation in lobbying for o is fret in showed that s of the Old “were over The leaders of the Ole Guard were Nelson W. Ald Allison, of Towa, Or ville Hitehoock Piatt, of Connecticut, or not you certainly need it after 95 John Colt Spooner, of Wisconsin. | eful Hentenants were Quay, of Pennsylvania; Platt and Depew, of k: Hale, of Maine, and Lodge, Of Massachusetts, Povetner nable wall over which the waves 0! Hberalem and vedicalism broke ir 1 the defert of Tati in Now even ‘hoodore Roosevelt's s veln unt ents Velesvan) {who asks tis question says that re- President Roosevelt's |have a thorough physical P yealigation as a yesult of the passing heart and his nose, of which th But the curious fret is that Bena-| of one of the more Notable landmarks ‘elient complained ‘Old Guard.” |the reader says he would like to have they consult a physician to think ft is shrewd to give the doc: and x ¢ their power between |p. fost what neuroite With some ir the PAS To very definite system or plan modern world. ‘They seized upon the (tO follow im raking a health exam-| 9 . United States senate as the best en- | ination. |tforms with a lot of silly questions to) policies anc methods of the Old be Tiled in Ye Guard in connection with the protec. (Course of provadure in the exarmnina- ion of property and the crushing of | tions, TMeasurements or tests the doo- jivect and un- tor makes to determine the state of . bashed. They carried on openiy in| the various organs and functions. or tests that may be necessary n city. ‘The thing to do When you want 38 Inttexivte ich, of Rhode Island; an apnual check-up on your general pip Pant leonditton—and whether you want 10 17 One of & SIavic people, Yh Venening. explanation is required. You're Just ® gOxi Dusiness man or WomAN ANd & Of corse you take annu they formed an impres- |. wale ct them or his investigaifon brings up the subject of the complaint _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1938 na nig “A Great Send-Off \ . - ae RX! \ PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | By William Brady, M. D. Rigned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady ff a stamped, Felf-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink, No reply can be made fo queries not conforming to instructions, Address Dr, William Brady, in care of this newspaper, best, eriterion of your present condi ifon, WHAT SHOULD A THOROUGH EXAMINATION INCLUDE? What should the pertodie health QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS xamination include? The reader Black Throwback Acording fo rumor a negro baby enily he went to his physician to Was hort at the local hopsital to a examination, Couple purporting to be white, Tt only said the father, however, is an octo- | ‘ eit0on, <8, A. BY Answer—Tt is an old Yankee cus- tom, cfreulating such nonsensical | yarns. No such thing ever happens. | The offspring of parents either of | whom has a fraciion of negro blood | he physician examined The entire ihfer- few took about five minutes. Now mother doctor give him a real exant- will have less negroid characteristics than the darker parent. Hard Water s Where T am living the drinking wa- Tt leaves a lime-like Some individuals are carey when ‘They seem or as lilile information ax possible, | nf) answer his quesiions evasively the beggar to find out ov himself what is ie matter —if e can. The doctor must be ever on ard when seh persons consult him ous tO health? Not at all satisfactory as to taste, the hardness | 5 ean do no harm to health i Tf ihe water is Medicine or Food? Father quotes you as saving thal people would be deiler off if didn't take so much medicine veprimands vay sister for giving } ask him what is the maiter that is the time wor cue for That's he patient to retori brightly T came here to find ont pardonable boast of good health nd that approach suggested to the joctor that here was just another ial trouble . necessary for a baby over a year old. | unless there is some ailment for which * ment. i Om the other hand, for all we know ——————— ‘There are 56 kinds of fatigue, says! Dr. Donald A. Laité, Colgate psycho- | logist. The worst case, probadly, is) T don't mean just Ddienk| T mean the general Tt physicians were to set a stand- wd fee for a periodie health exam s. But it is silly to attempt to fee, for the value of the HORIZONTAL UPntenncer, & Connetoun, Ve Tertnining to is to voport to your doctor and tel. im what you want. No apology or 20 ene 1 inventory have any spacial complaints the doctor asks you about you hotieing 6 KyWe tom, hy NEON tna Viner. tr the wente Of hicere. Bern rote ns Here ts an instance where it is im- Cet maeeate were ble to overcome novtant to RvOld specialists Of AAV Em Sipmvere Tn 1012 they applied the steam ron. | Kind. Even if you should happen to 47 Drew. pro er to Roosevelt mt Chicago, taking the | Slect the most brilliant spac | Ra Goreme tn tector. B {eenern| knowledge and skill would be, lopien] position that they preferred to maintin control of a deferted party Mouth Afriom. 40 Preevini. 46 Wom flow. hi Nuliited, veh. BS Crimped frbyte. inferior to thet of ® general prac- +e ir f K rather then to sumender dominion | (one: whe has the edvantage Of Rthvtine to b4lte.run Keny over a victorious one. During the | XPOUCECE | inte aiMaetesaes eh Heit || aoetaiete we RIDTiL Seah yonte Ot Tt is a distinet ndvantage to return D Work of veer ine chen lean vente Of She Wilson alintn: |. “dye anmne physiolwn {Or vol Im scone. ifptute mutts, istration they had tough going, bit eS Deve iene On| at Beenie, Jo Orton ther took on a new Tense of life under (fest wear Rfter very. for this recor ‘8 Higheut wore euttnrs. Harding and Coolidge. | ‘They were no longer, however, the | seme old powerfi] autocracy thet hed once been led the heughty Aldrich | The ole leeders had died. Only Boise | Penrose in any way ‘matched the! giants of the old days in consctence- | Jess irresponsibility and arrogance of | mane ne he died on the lest day | Of the year 1991 | The direct election of senators | brought Into office men ‘more inclined | to give some ear to popular opinion. Thsurgency grew apace, being helped | on notably by the scandals of the Harding sdministration, ‘The era of feudal sristocrats was superseded by the age of belihops, Finally, in No- vember, 1933, Smoot, Watson und the remaining stragglers of the once mighiy cohorts were smothered tinder | fn nvalanche of ballots cast by the millions who were determined to have | | ® New deal of one another, | 4 chi In Minnesota Heanse fees is | | expected to save ‘motorists of that! State more than $3,200,000 nest var i a ‘ of your forme: statis gives him the | WHO BECAME THe WORLDS MOST FAMOUS: PRINTER ? tne | ihe physician presoribes such treat | 7 te (Copyright, 1983, John F. Dille Go) | | Barbs He: PRINCE OF ORANGE | ANSWER 70 PREVIOUS PUZZLE oan AN’ THATS ONCY THe FIRST DAY — THERE ARE A HUNDRED AN’ FIFTY. Four, MORE “To come ! that of a husband whose wife makes. him help with spring housecleaning. eae U. 8. treasury warns everybody to be on the lookout for new counterfeit $20 bill, For a long time, we've been ‘on the lookout for a good one, eae A wise man is one who stops in his kitchen for a sandwich before going) to a church supper, ee 8 Henry Ford says the country has made a complete turn-around and is now going forward, Here's hoping that the speed in high will soon be equal to what it was in reverse, x x OR ! Los Angeles and San Francisco both had earthquakes on the same day. ‘ou can’t beat those California towns when it comes to rivairy. x eH ‘That movie actress who boasts that her dining room contains “no two pieces of china alike” really has nothing to Boast about. We can say that, too, Copyright, 1988, NEA Service, Tne.) Church Notices 4 THE SALVATION ARMY ‘Mrs, Herbert St jeers in Chars: € ASS eut any the i Weated on A Thaye pel singing an i invitation is extended to ail. Ve welcome ai the “Salvation Army pel Tent.” Weasels turn white in winter to Thatch the snow. Where no snow falls they remain unchanged, ery fant varinnd, TUG. S. Wan tome pornrily or fered 2 mnt 14 Witlinm the Silent, Prince of-Ornee, wae the Wherntor of em? 216 Hewnitim Pootwtock paneer. 48 Browt bite. SUNort of Hehe xpenry, 24 PereWed, 26 Gayot. 20 'To Jenwon Yepes Y antion. BOTIncen with reference to WERTICAL xome peculine Tenturen of Maple whrude, them, 4 Superine Rien Vieite, tention, 88 One who RV eHow Wugle, inverts. 48x Woon, Wi Verbal. B Nm. 6 Goon Ceti) 4G Mutiviows RT Neventh more, mE of mM Herb. atwelling. SL Inquinitive = Cunntus. ane. RSinee, 42 Outenss. VPovmed By 45° Pile brown, a8 Fnther, vivers. WORwelling pro W) Rendy. a by Wate Bo Prophet, weed | PIN ] NEW |i YORK By JULIA BLANSHARD New York, May 27.—“Tablecloth notes” from the farewell dinner to Madame Minister Ruth Bryan Owen: Anne Morgan was the only one at the table of honor on the dais, who in any way acknowledged the Depression. She wore the same blue evening dress that she wore last Nov- ember . . . George Palmer Putnam turns out to be &® man with a fine sense of humor, & man who can re- tain it even at the foot of the table, husband that he is to Amelia Ear- hart"! ... Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt arrived late. Woman-like, she had been try- ing on summer dresses. Mrs. Owen's 12-year-old daughter, Helen, came in after dinner and pulled her chair up hela her mother and Mrs. Roose- velt. woman all children feel free to pull up a chair next to—she always makes them welcome ... Ruth Bryan Owen has more than a little of her father, the late William Jennings Bryan, in her, Her voice has that same undercurrent of senti- {mentality that almost draws tears. And like her father before her, she always saves the day with a humorous story just when everybody's reaching for a handkerchief. . . Grover Whalen was present, with the red gardenia he reserves for state occasions . . . There, too, were sauve Samuel Untermeyer; debonair Daniel Frohman with a fair dinner compan- fon; pompous Bernarr MacFadde: Irvin Cobb who got weary and nodd- ed; alert George Creel; dignified Will Hays; Banker Jules Bache; Senator: Royal Copeland; Ida Tarbell, I. A. R. Wylie; Will Irwin and his wife, Inez Haynes Irwin, and glamorous Fannie Hurst. +e TOOTHSOME DAINTIES Mrs. Roosevelt is the kind of | @ these days. “sparkling” smiles! ‘one-half carat blue-white diamond set in the center of the left front tooth of her upper plate. She inherited it, right from the mouth of her mother, a German acrobat whose first hus- band had given }t to her and had it set in her tooth when she was 19. Mrs. Dahlberg has willed it to her daughter. But she is afraid that the daughter may not wear it in her mouth, Bernard Radgiewicz, a personable New York taxi driver, goes Mrs. Dahlberg one better. He has two diamonds in his teeth, a rather large diamond in the fourth upper tooth from the front, set down deep into the gold surface, and a smaller one in the second upper tooth from the left, also ® gold tooth. “It’s a sad story,” Bernard tells cus- tomers who catch his scintillating smile. in the middle west. Had a swell car, lots of money and @ grand girl. One day when she went to the dentist's! with me, my girl had a ring on with these two diamonds in it, She thought @ lot of me, so she asked the dentist aa could put them in my teeth. He “T turned honest. I lost my car and T lost my girl. I’m hardly making a living. But I still have my dia- monds!"" "> : if’ e If the children will not think for themselves, the motorist must do their thinking for them. —State Highway Director Merrell of Ohio. 7 ee T've been through every depression since the one of 1873. They are all the same. Business always comes up quicker than it goes down. —Samuel M. Vauclain, chairman of the board of Baldwin Locomotive ‘Works. Diamonds in our teeth sound not only like fiction, but ike boasting, i | | and vivacious girl of the “home ness, oung newspaper reporter, is meering project. will be stranded. | Bim they are merely The Sandersons and | visit Mrs. Sanderson’s parents’ absence. CHAPTER V. color and perpetual motion = siowly away and there was waving the presence of Larry beside and he was holding her hand tightly, a fact of which she onconscious—despite the hundreds of strangers there, milling about, waving, calling farewells, felt vers mach alone, very forlorn, as if she were the only person left an altered and suddenly inimical world. Larry took her to a hasty lunch: eon, for he had to get back to the office, and tried to cheer her w ever a lavish outlay of bdroik chicken, but her appetite had failed her and she was glad some- how to go back by subway to the empty, echoing house, there to wait for the last moving van, to turn the key in the lock and to surrender it to the agent of the owner. Ry the time this was done it was evening, and she went next yee woe youth and tears, ah ui into a pillow, 2h hor fathoms deep into sleep and when she wi ® streaming how things didn’t seom #5 bad. was over, she had no more homo, gqeey & Sennings would ‘fend him i ‘on ‘the sly if not severely jiseouraged. She walked » ‘ot when she was, free and tet Mary Lou Thurston, a beautiful parents, lives with her aunt and|ture with uncle, Clara and Howard Sander- son. Mary looks after Billy, their youngster, while they go to busi- Larry Mitchell, energetic, “ Priel | Lou's pal. Mary Lou is happy but ‘estless and eager for adventure. | anderson gets a wonderful chance to go to the Orient on an engi- Mary Lou urges the Sandersons to go although she Larry wants to marry Mary as a happy solution to the situation, but she convinces rood pals. ary Low mother, who is to care for Billy during his | type, orphaned by the death of her i JHE pier was exciting and Mary Lou was smitten with nos- talgia, as always, for far places and strange sights, for the feel of a ship’s deck under her feet, for the sound of the waves, for the vast expanse of changing |inge, which would is the sea. But, presently, it was all over, and the ship had pulled frantically with Howard beside her, and Mary Lon, — er was pon Morning sunlight, some- It}roading ll the help wanted col- Any- endear ar-| publishing house as s reader or | school and learn, for ‘that’s ‘out |%° Tead manuscripts, I hops, took {Dad and what is impossible. Larey, ttle ‘boy it up in the kitehen, | He she was thot ‘Grand- tthe cold, frosty No- ‘blow some ‘the eee “I used to be # bootlegger out) sinning Yet New York has two) little fellow with certain attainments of refinement and an indefatigible Mrs, L. I. Dahlberg, a German-Am-| musician par excellence. erican actress of the old school, has a] —Judge Nicholas M. Pettee, of Flush- ing, L. I, in deciding against tenant who complained crickets bothered ee If I had my way about national parks, I would create one without a Toad in it. I would have it impenet- rable forever to automobiles, a place where man would not try to improve upon God. —Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes. Alexander Winton, after only ore demonstration, received full payment and delivered to Robert Allison the first American automobile sold to a bona fide customer, in 1898. ‘The Egyptian Ministry of Com- munications during the fiscal year be- May 1, 1933, will spend about $100,000 for the purchase of motor vehicles. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: ° Mh “PARNER It's a blooming shame the way some ‘The cricket... is an intellectual] girls cut up. AKE-BELIEVE” Gonyright, 1930, by Fath Beldain Dustribeted cobwebs from her brain. And on the first Satu: she went to town for lunch a motion pic- and also, reck- lessly, from small _ store, bought herself a new hat. “There's nothir as good for the blues,” said ‘Wary Lon, “as a new hat, “But,” she told Larry, “Tl have to have that job soon. I can pay a little—not much—to Gram. She doesn’t want to take that, bless her. But Adelaide’s a big expense. Larry, I wish you could see that woman eat! It’s amazing! And I can’t tres long on their hospi- tality. like to get settled somewhere, if the space is two by four. I haven't unpack in Oakdale: there isn’t room even | Ss oy tings I have, my oks and pictures, the possessions Ive always had with me at Clara’s and love so much and miss so much. I—I tled. Of course, I Gram’s or get a living in New Yi She Jooked at him anxiously, sure of his understanding. “Don't worry,” said Larry. “I'm ‘umns and I'm asking around. . .” After 2 moment Mary Lou sai meekly: “I am fairly intelligent after all, Clara asked hor old omployer— Mr, Fiske—if 1 couldn't get in the something. But there wasn't an | opening ae Still, if you came across something like that, Larry. it would be wonderful. Nothis T've had 2 chance to gp to ni 1 imtend t do, you -s8e, as soon as 1 fmd some sort of paying no- sition. But I have enough sense d to know what is good and what is washing dn ‘the ‘Isun-to ‘laundry. at her from ther ‘tubs, with her hands covered with xosp, and weaved @ Newapaper in her "A job,” cried Larry, “and it Tooks like ® corker. ‘ion t> some ‘rich invalid wr other and oodles of salery and = ewe) resi- of the laundry and into the room. dimmed sight that she had it twice, three times, before she spoke. A before her in an erent attitud Larry errived in Qokdale and jound Mary doing her si f lary doing simple 4y FAITH BALDWIN by King Features Syndicate, Ine. dence. Cease your laundering, my lass, and listen to me! morrow you must apply and be quick about it.” For to- He dragged her, still soapy, out ving They were quite alone, 28 even when you can’t afford it!/Mrs. Jennings was upstairs with Especially when you can’t afford aomrie end Billy was playing it m loor. Shoving Mary Lou unceremoni- ously into a chair, Larry the per into her dripping hands and commanded happily. “Read it and leap!” Larry's enthusiasm seemed to affect even his gay red hair, for it stood literally on end, due to the vigorous thrust of his hands through it, and Mary Lou, catch- felt her heart beat faster ing fire, and her eyes mist with excitement as she looked at the neat little had marked ent for her with bold, colorful slashes of editorial bine pencil. Perhaps was because of her suddenly to read meantime, stood absurdly bellig- hands new color which flushed her cheeks and the shadow cast hy her long dark “Wanted” (she read) “com mig for semi-invalid. Must young, strong, healthy, ontimis- tic. Must heve sense wf humor. Must have able to re edge of French and music desir- surrender voice ant be aloud well. Know!- t® cir ;|Cumstances nevessury even with typing and such. Not until | of how aoa my being 2 reporter?” shire reading of this most umusua) e asked, on & sudden inspiration, t her blue eges shia pret tke enewaret on long iS on God, Zorbia!” replied Lay astonished, Beluga and don't give up the ship! ‘Once |mquirimg ities: BIE cEisp ‘Larry will provitie.” “What's ‘the matter with the p| Three days lator, ‘in the milidle |gitl?” Larry jeggyort Sra ee ta “ag tay dumb : Satie P| Buy ‘to somewhere is or wg ing? = Ain't ty | Larry arrived im Oskdale and }grand, Miss Thurston? 1 eon found Mary ‘Lou doing her simple | What could ‘he more ect” (Get a snatching the paper trom “Anil her still damp little ree fucn. necidadl ‘to. read ‘the aliwertie ativertisement through, with stops, pauses ant imtmations guaranteed to i the ‘mest umenthusiastic, impress (Ce Be Continued Tomerrow) ie te ee he ad a a i 1 ue ee 6 he te Pe n 1 N d el e w ee fe