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| f ; } The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper (4! THE STATE'S OLDEST “lib NEWSPAPER (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 ee Daily by carrier, per year ... Daily by mail per year (in Bis- MATCK) 2... se eescoeeeeeres . Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ...........+ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1. Weekly by mail in state, three 596 Dakota, per year ......+..000 e ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year Px 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. Final Step ‘The nation was only mildly sur- prised by the announcement that President Roosevelt wishes to legally abandon the gold standard. Before he took office such a step would have been a 10-day sensation »and regarded by many as a calamity. Those who hold that view now are Not very vociferous about it. The na- tion took the declaration in its stride. Last October, in his speech at Des Moines, President Hoover said Ameri- ca had been only 10 days away from being forced off the gold standard. He mentioned the fact (since proved to be untrue) almost with bated breath 88 just about the worst thing that could have happened to us. ‘Yet his successor, with no possi- bility of being forced off the gold standard, recommends that we vol- untarily leave gold to its fate, having trouble over there and the United States should do something about it. He traces the history of the republic to show the responsi- bility of this nation and quotes from state papers to prove American re- action to it in the past. Liberia is unusual in that it is the only independent nation on the African continent, with the excep- tion of Abyssinia, and is the only one in the world founded by a phil- anthropic society. When the agitation to free Negro a9 | Slaves began in this country shortly after the turn of the 19th century, 00/there was considerable more to it than alleged abuses of the blacks, such as were later portrayed in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” No matter what we have been taught regarding it, the movement to free the slaves found its base in economic tribula- oo|tions. Areas where they were un- profitable did not want them. Those where slaves could be made to pay did. But no states wanted freed slaves. Virginia labeled freed black men Gangerous to the state and wanted congress to give the president au- thority to send them away. Georgia barred them from residence in the state, as did Massachusetts, later one of the principal ¢nti-slavery common- wealths. = The natural thing was to send them back to Africa and so, in 1819, congress voted $100,000 to assist in CAIGHT WAKE iM, we this enterprise. The American Col- onization society came into being and purchased the land in Africa which now comprises Liberia. The freed slaves were established there and have been trying to make a go of it ever since, under a constitution al- most identical with our own, But things have never gone well. Liberians, it seems, have never dem- onstrated any great capacity for self- Government; its citizenry is not suf- ficiently advanced to assume these duties, and so the little black nation has encountered trouble. The Amer- {ean Colonization society suspects that France or England, or both, would like to gobble it up because it is putting high-hat ideas in the minds of blacks under their control, ‘We have come a long way under President Roosevelt and we may ex- Pect to go farther, but nothing dem- onstrates how far we have travelled on the road of the new deal than the equanimity with which this latest blast against old ideas was received by the people. It may be that they never were so thoroughly sold on the gold standard after all. The step was, in a way, a foregone conclusion. When the government placed an embargo on gold and refus- ed to pay, in gold, interest on its bonds held by foreigners, it was apparent that we were, in fact, off the gold standard. Internally the same effect was manifest when the government talled in gold coin and gold certifi- cates. No one cared about that, be- cause men who examined a greenback to see if it was a gold or silver certi- ficate were few and far between. The country went right on doing business as usual. The only question was how to get hold of the dollar, not whether it was good after it had been obtain- ed. ‘Whatever gold-standard enthusiasts think of it, it is manifest that we now are embarking on an era of “managed currency.” The idea back of this is that money should be based on tangi- ble wealth, not on a metal which is valuable only because of its scarcity, Under the “new deal” as it pertains to currency we shall see emerging from this drastic step what is called commodity money. Behind it will be wealth in a form to which we have become accustomed. Land and its products and the pro- ducts of labor comprise the things which people, eat, wear and use. They are wealth in the only form in which wealth can be used other than for in- vestment purposes. They are the things which contribute to the well- being of a nation and they are about to be given recognition. This situation is by no means new in the world’s history. On the con- trary, it takes us back to the funda- mental ideas regarding wealth which prevailed in pastoral days. As men- tioned in a series of pictorial articles published recently by The Tribune, money has had many different forms in the known history of man and one of the earliest was the possession of goods, Cattle were coin in Abrahams time, Debts could be paid in wheat or in flagons of wine. The craftsmen of that time exchanged their labor for these things and the other necessaries of life, Modern craftsmen, after the experiences of the last three years, also are willing to do so. We shall give the new system a trial willingly enough, If it makes possible the rapid interchange of goods for other goods or for labor everyone will be satis- fied. That is the goal which the presi- Gent has set for his administration and one which all of us, rich and poor alike, share. When we reach it there will be no,more of what we rather quaintly call “depression.” Under wise leadership we may yet learn to make use of the natural resources which God gave us for the greatest good of the greatest number. The Liberian Crisis Another factor in the crisis as set out by Mr. West is the fact that Liberia, after all we have done for her, now wants to cut free from Uncle Sam's supervision, fire the fi- nancial advisers we have given her and step out on her own. American interests in Liberia have appealed to otr government for help in keeping things in line. Compared to a lot of other things this situation is unimportant but it does prove the far-reaching effects of the greed which first brought the enslaved black man to America’s shores, “and it is worth pondering that the Same sort of greed, practiced today, may have similar effects genera- tions hence, 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, a Mr. Morgan (New York World-Telegram) ‘Mr, Morgan is a rare person. Not because he is so rich—others are rich- er, Not because he is so wise—others had sense enough to lose less than he in the crash. Not because he is so Powerful—his system is crumbling. But because he is so sure that all is Tight with the private bankers. Perhaps he is the only living person who still believes, completely, in the Perfection of the system which has so nearly destroyed our nation. There was a certain magnificence in Mr. Morgan as he was questioned by the senate investigators yesterday. Great faith is always moving to be- hold, And here was a man who might have stepped out of medieval times, so untouched was he by modern thought, so remote from the suffering of vic- tims of Wall Street domination, so as- sured of the divine right of the money lender, But we found Mr. Morgan more Pathetic than magnificent. To be blind to the havoc wrought by secur- ity pawn brokers like himself, to be deat to the cries of President Roose- Velt and 120,000,000 Americans for a new deal in the financial game, to be cumb and unable to voice with others the hope of reform, is a tragic state for any individual. Mr. Morgan does not think private bankers who handle other people's Money, who wield power with other Depole's money, who speculate with other people's money, who lose other People's money, should be regulated by the people’s government. He thinks the House of Morgan should be allowed to go on ruling @ great spider web of commercial banks and corpora- tions through interlocking directorates without government regulation. We fear Mr. Morgan will be shocked when he discovers that the old days of uncontrolled finance in this country are about over. If there is one thing this country has learned in the de- Pression it is that no man is wise enough or good enough to play with other people's money for personal Profit without being watched. Maybe financiers like Mr. Morgan cannot be regulated by the govern- ment effectively, maybe they have keen @ law unto themselves too long. That remains to be seen. But the government either should find the means to regulate the money trust effectively or take it over. In- deed, Mr. Morgan unwittingly may go down in history as the public bene- factor who forced the government in self-defense to nationalize banking. Cars and trucks operating in France at the end of 1932 numbered 23,495 more than on the corresponding date Add to the crises about which all of us are aware one which few of us know about, beria, Negro republic in Africa, According to Henry Litchfield ‘West, president of the American Colonization society, they have been in 1931, Ralph Waldo Emerson once de- that affecting Li-| fined a great story as one which would evoke both tears and laughter. Crops could be grown over a con- “Tod LOUD- You = SG "SSA At ; “THE TIME You * ' Wa LA bu wa > SRA comin moien toe 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, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Ad in care of this newspaper. dress Dr. William Brady, BE IT EVER SO DINKY IT’S A FINE PLACE TO HAVE A BABY Writing for advice on prenatal care a reader says she expects her baby in October. She visits her physician ; once a month. He insists that she enter the hospital for confinement. But her first baby was born at home five years ago, she was attended there by the same doctor, and every- thing was quite normal. Of course, she says, the doctor doesn’t refuse to attend her at home if she insists on remaining at home. that tack to avoid some practical nurse the patient likes. jot that practical nurses are undesirable; some of them are thoroughly capa- ble. But the nurse assisting in a labor case must understand and practice obstetric asepsis, and the nurse learns that only by instruction in a regular training school, in the lying-in room. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Tinnitus at Night I have found that a 5-grain But he does refuse to have a nurse|tablet of sodium salicylate taken at if the patient is confined at home. He says he can manage better with: out the nurse’s assistance. He a: sures her everything is normal this time. “T don’t want to go to the hospital —but I don’t want to do anything foolish either,” says the perplexed prospective mother, who expresses a doubt that assail sisters every day. The hospital is the place if there is any reason to expect difficulty or if there is any complication. physician, of course, should be en-|without avail. bedtime invariably relieves tinnitus ‘whea the trouble is particularly an- noying. One soon sinks into a slum- ber that lasts all night, and the in- terminable beating and puffing in back of head and ear is always re- lieved. (iL. M. D’0.) Answer—Thank you. Perhaps others who suffer with such head thousands of her |noises will try the remedy and report their experience. Maybe Some Athlete Kicked Him My husband, a mail carrier, had The|tried everything under the sun He suffered with gaged as soon as the woman knows |chafing and itching in the seat. Then or believes she is to become a mother. In every instance there should be an examination to determine whether he applied some of the Whitfield ointment you recommend for ath- lete’s foot. It stung intensely, but there is any complication, for the|/he applied it twice, and has had no management of the case depends on|recurrence of his pruritus. (Anon- the individual circumstances. All/ymous.) this clearly is up to the judgment of the physician. Answer—Possibly the trouble was ringworm. The fungus or parasitic There is nevertheless a factor|affection is not necessarily con- which prejudices the physician in|fined to the feet. favor of hospitalization, and that is expediency. With the special equip- ment, nurses, internes and all, it is easier for the physician and takes Jess of his time to attend obstetric cases in hospital. But so far as that is concerned, the physician’s time and service is his stock in trade. If a patient is able to pay a fair fee, then the doc- tor should be willing to attend the patient at home. It is a matter of compensating the physician for the additional care instead of paying ior the gratuitous services of divers functionaries in the hospital, or more often half-paying, for most hospi- tals do not charge enough to cover their running expenses. Another factor, which prejudices some physicians in favor of confine- ment at home, is the greater hazard of infection in the hospital—simply because a greater number of persons enter the equation of asepsis in the hospital. The human factor. I am thinking now of the home of the moderately well-to-do folks who can Side Ache What causes children or adults to have a pain in the side after run- ning? (C. P.) Answer—Physiologists believe it is distension of the right ventricle of the heart—the side that pumps blood through the lungs. With good training this side ache disappears. Probably the child should run short- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1933 Beginning to Look Like a Knockout cials. They wave as they pass, and are gone. The man misses ex- Mayor Jimmy used to lean out and yell “Hi, Mac.” The only excitement he has had in 16 years was in 1928 when @ metal star fell off the clock on the south- lern facade of the building and dent- ed the concrete right beside him. People riding by have noticed and felt sorry for McKinnon, Christmas time lots of big cars slow up Beside him to deliver gifts of cigars and socks and the like. He only has @ chance, though, to yell a hurried thanks. McKinnon’s wife has been asking him to buy a car, but he is adamant on that score. Says he wouldn’t have one as a gift, oe & BRIDGING THE YEARS Another lonely job is the one 8) ‘Peterson has. He's the official er of Brooklyn poy for 30 years. S bos'n’s chair 133 feet above river, or clamboring sure! H Bae. Bet : & i ES B the maze of cables, he slaps on fresh Pigment and inches slowly along on task that’s never done. For when he gets to one end of the 6000-foot bridge it's time to start all over again at the other. The famous structure, one of the wonders of the engineering world, is spick and span now, ready for a semi- centennial celebration of its opening on May 24, 1883, Peterson is a little sad about the way traffic is decreas- ing, what with the subways and other bridges that have been built since. He says only 9,000,000 vehicles over it last year. Lonely fellow that he is, though, swinging from his eerie perches, a few million people, more or less, make little difference. [Barbs “Japanese Claim Chinese Leaders Propose Truce,” says headline. Truce? We thought they'd denied up to now that there was even a war. ee Speaker says America has learned nothing abil iperted @ with the le. So wait tas Britain learned any- thing? ee Gandhi's going to fast three weeks er distances until she gets “second |S8%i he says. Lucky he’s doing it in wind” efficiency, but she should keep on running every day. IN | NEW | YORK BY PAUL HARRISON ‘New York, May 29.—Ever since there ‘was & metropolitan New York, writers have made capital of the city’s heed- less heartlessness. O. Henry under- stood the loneliness that is furnished with dingy hallrooms. He knew the social desolation of crowded streets. But few fictioneers have mentioned the city’s lonely jobs. Such as the]. thousands of workers in the gloomy little change booths in the subways, or motormen in the cabs of trains, or patrolmen in the deserted financial district at night, pacing their beats along the silent, lowering canyons, * # * LONELIEST COPPER Herbert McKinnon for 16 years has had the loneliest job in New York. At least, thats’ the way McKinnon him- self feels about it. The ruddy, taciturn Scot is, of all things, a traffic cop. Yet, for nine hours each day, from the time he pulls on his white gloves in the morn- ing to the time when he steps down from his little platform, he doesn’t see @ single pedestrian. His post is on the vehicular viaduct that carries Park Avenue around the Grand Central building, and more than 30,000 cars speed past him every day. McKinnon says it took him five years just to get used to the job, and even now he still gets the feeling sometimes that he's the only man in the world not in an ‘automobile. And he never gets a chance to talk to a river; although he knows hundreds of chauffeurs by sight, and the men they drive for, and all the city offi- | LARGEST DIRIGIBLE | 13 Maxeuline pronoun, 14 Industrlous, and do have every modern conven- ience in the home. Still another factor is the occa- sional (believe it or not) presence in the home of older children. If the parents have made a bad start or none, which is worse, in the edu- cation of such children, there is never a better time or opportunity to teach them the wholesome truth than this. Cut the myth and mystery and your children will bless your heart. The doctor said he could manage better without a nurse, if the patient is confined at home. That's odd. Probably the poor man has ‘to take NICKNAME OF siderable portion of Death Valley if irrigation water were applied. NAME INDVANAS THREE TH STATE? Lea51NG UNWERSITIES. 30To pursue xnme. 42 + The wround= 43 Herb. aa work. Ad dapanene fish, Staple food in'45 Street hoy, oS Chi Mb Autir. 38 Nath 47 Delfever of a 4 Hav teular 3 Carried. a 86 Sun god. 40 Pointed stick. VERTICAL 1 Mountain in ie Alpe. ‘o whip. 30'To curse. 434) mt whirle 43 Epoch. wind. 44 Revernge. BEustening, 43 Lingulst stock Sking, of the Gold tl . Con 46 Prepouition. 47 Street, { India, not here. Too common here to attract any attention. ee Maybe that stock market boom fs just td crash, * * First obligation of the undergrad- uate is to think, says Princeton dean. ‘Parade of unemployed graduates to i Washington thing to think about. falker, who always} (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) ly | Glenview a ee | N By VIOLET L. JOHNSON Philip Monroe, Lawrence Fisher and two daughters Louise and Olive visited at the Albert Larson home son Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Herbert Karges visited at the of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Simons a few days the latter, home Part of the week. Gertrude Monroe home Wednesday evening. 8 | to Bismarck Saturday, Mrs. to her home with them. [ Mary Lou Thurston, a beautiful id vivacious girl of the “home” type, orphaned by the death of her parents, lives with her aunt and uncle, Clara and Howard Sander- ‘son, Mary looks after Billy, their 'youngster, while they go to busi- fess. Larry Mitchell, energetic, young newspaper reporter, is ‘Lou's pal. Mary Lou is happy but restless and eager for adventure. Sanderson gets a wonderful chance |f@ go to the Orient on an engi- jaeering roject. Mary Lou urges Ithe ‘Sandersons to go although she will be stranded. Larry wants to marry Mary as 2 happy solution to he pedal but ie senvisces) lim they are merely go Is. |The Sandersons and tery Lou visit Mrs. Sanderson's mother, who. is to care for Billy during his parents’ absence. Clara and How- ard sail. Larry, trying to find a position tor Mary, is enthusiastic ‘over an ad for a companion to a 'semi-invalid. CHAPTER VI. “Oi course,” cried Mary Copyright, 1930, Lou recovering herself, “it’s perfect! I—why, I don’t have to know anything!” she began when Larry interrupted, with heavy sarcasm: “Nothing at all but French and a complete understanding of Bach, Beethoven, Victor Herbert and Gershwin!” he reminded her raj idly . . . “How about it? That's the 0: thing that worried me,” he e ited. “Oh, I talk. French pretty well and read it even better,” she said, almost casually. ‘I spoke very well as a child and have tried to keep it up. As for music, I do play—a Iittle. Didn’t you know that? That part’s easy. That’s what amazes me. It... it might have been written right around me!” glowed Mary Lou. Larry’s long legs gave way un- der him and he sat right down in a low chair and stared at her with earnest admiration. Mi. Ord ] de “Blushing violet,” he addressed her, “how about this ‘even dispo- ion’ business? That worried mee mr he went on, enjoying himeel: ly. “Also what of this “complete surrender to circum- stances’ and a ‘sense of humor’? tAnd the pleasant voice? Is your voice pleasant, Mary Lou, and how ell u read aloud? Of course, it sounds like a swell break, but I came down here rimed to uld wangle you out of these difficult nts. jut I peed 3 not have bom: as never knew you wi tmodest little thing, Mary Lou,” (Larry concluded quite gravely. But Mary Lou was not deceived. | year “You've listened to my voice ” she informed him, | fashic for years,’ “ far haven’t had any fsa" le. Wy for 4 even dis- josition, I’ve tolera! rou for me time, haven't I? id the of None hadnt a) peneo of who. a se! natace inflict herselt with a zene le weet? "rhe surrender to circum- stances,” ie Ts ore pee eee have hed to be pretty laptable.' shed. yon ane Joking aside, it’s erfect and the job might have jbeen made for you, wonder. [what your invalid is like, though? ‘Some erulous, highbrow old |dame. oN copetie. feaven help " PetMaybe it’s a young girl,” Mary {Lou sai mily, “pale and being ie eae, Td think lary | kn KC-BELIEVE’ by Faith Baldwin about applying for the job my- self,” Larry assured nae “No, it’s. probably some nervous break- down author of text hooks. I can just see her, long and lean, like a squirt of vichy, with gray-yellow hair and bilious eyes and a way of bursting into Freneh ... you iow . . . Ooo—La! La!” cried Larry, briskly, “Passez-moi le menu et toute de suite snappy, pe- tite potato. . . . How’s that?” “You're an idiot,” remarked Lou, with absent-minded af- fection, “‘and I hope she won't be anything like that, I’d die. It would be worse than Aunt Ade- laide,” she commented, lowerin, her voice, “‘and anyway, I thin she must be 9 Jouns—look what it says about athletic and all!” “How good are you at that, be- yond wearing out Shore Road for the sake of your schoolgirl com- Please played If with fi Pve 0] ou often enough fa the Byker links,” Mary Lou reminded him rep: ‘So you have. Your stance is swell, you look like a sizable bank roll, your approach is wild, your drive is short and your pute not 80 hot.” 8 up her game for her mendaciously enough, for she almost alvars managed to beat him. “But aside from golf, can you turn hand- springs, swing on a trapeze with your teeth, or what have you?” “You know puresy well that I swim at the Y all the year, and for five years almost I have evening gym or basket- ball. So don’t be silly!” “That's that, then. The Perfect Companion.” He pulled a time table from his pocket. “Here, you, you brisk right up town on the 8:23 tomorrow. ‘ll meet you if it costs me my job. You can get a train to Westmill about six min- utes after making a dash from Pennsylvania station to Grand Central. All will be jake. It’s about an hour out. Very swell place, very Greenwich. ou And if the Lorrimer fs is the one I’ve heard about they have so much money that no matter how much of it you ask for it will be should give them some- Johnson was a caller at Paul 's and Albert Larson’s Wednes- Mrs. Walter Simons mo- their Herbert Karges re- inson of who were Larson » Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Ine. t me? | My Mr. | Mrs, Bud Windmill. Saturday et Mike Kasak visited at his home over Saturday night and Sunday. Lawrence Ousley was a recent call- er_at the Kozak home. at Frank Simon's. at Joe Brown’s Monday. shopper Saturday afternoon. trip to Wilton Monday. in the United States. ing to the Yale School of Medicine. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: AEG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. Sy FAITH BALDWIN little arms, He was drowsy and fell asleep as soon as his curly head touched the pillow and stood looking down at him, fat sprawling rosiness, his acti ties quieted, the round face, so young and so defenseless in dreams. And her eyes filled. She’d miss Billy. Later she went downstairs to np Gram with the supper dishes and to spend a long evening with her and Aunt Adelaide. Adelaide lay plump and prone on the couch as usual. Gram was knitting, sit- ting erect by the round table, her work held under the lamp, and so Mary Lou read the evening pape aloud to them, careful not to skip accidents, deaths and murders, for these choice items constituted one of Adelaide's deepest pleasures. She would listen, exclaiming, metas Searel nabe sue ‘ings happening click- ing a busy tongue against her up- per plate, And thene the news and oe “will yoa rend ‘wor gently, “ you me the obituaries, dear?” Tonight Mary Lou read them, reananette if her next invalid would have such strangely morbid tastes. The only time Aunt Ade- laide ever left the little house was to go to a funeral. There were far too few for her in Oakdale; it seemed a strangel almost versely, healthy ocality, ee Lou had told Gram and Mary Aunt Adelaide about -her Possible shown them the ad- » — Shi hoped, she said, that it wasn’t tu- berculosis—so catching and, as she had said, time and time again, Mary Lou’s sales wasnt a good no matter what gise might thinkt And i¢ paralysis, ala lary Tou believe herself ng enoug) ul and lift? And if—here” her veins dropped to sepulchral depths—if insanity, wouldn't that be awfal? lary Lou’s nerves could never stand it, never in all the world! Out To Conquer. 7 Ue ee Lg a mere ae Bite tied cy a 8 le jumped up, p er to her ¢ found her- fect, kissed hee ear, released her, | self course of bbed his hat and started for would be e1 e door, “I’m off, the captain ‘8 ition or shouted,” he remarked, en rounte But finally Aunt Ade- “don’t fail me. Keep your chin a gloomy silence, high and likewise your spirits and | sensitively pondering on the fact don’t forget that you are a lineal shut-in it descendant of Henry the Eighth!” than . Mary Lou spent the rest of the| B soon and dis- day sponging and pring her doubt. best tweed suit with the Mary Lon re- Uittle far collar, for which she mirror. Hat shred oo Jong and hed bought skirted and ago. e even let the hem i, e new frilly ja- down a bit, hay in t she'd bought recently, suc- ion magazines skirts were|cumbing to the sudden return to to be nearer the und, She femininity, even with tweeds. And looked at her ret, whieh} her shoes were shined and her ‘was new and smart, and found | stockin; Tunless, her gloves just that her gloves and shoes were/the it stage of newness worn good enough to pass muster. And | off. bbiness not-set-in. Yes, she read the advertisement in be-jshe looked all right! Her cheeks tween these homely duties and|were bright with color and her found her excitement mounting little nose well powdered, She with her hopes. It all sounded too the stopper of the good to be true. fume bottle Larry ‘hed, given her She went out at last to round|last Christmas back of ears. up Billy and give him supper and|It was lovely perfume, lasting but ut him to bed after her evening} not cloying, and she was glad foo of- reading Peter Bunny to|she’d been so penurious with it, im was completed. There was| using it only on state occasions. the usual struggle over bath and fecking in, “the ‘lane “good-agt uc in, the - kiss, for Billy, manly is possible during the daytime, # little scorn- ful of embraces, always slipped = long way back to babyhood at night, and Mary Lou often had to disentangle herself by gentle force from the clutch of his strong _ Toe Geatinge 5! small daughter Jo Ann left last Sun- day for Nevis, Minn., where they will visit for two weeks with the Geert a Jaay De Long shopped in Blamarck Mr. and Mrs, Reynard Spitzer and four children were Sunday calkra Mrs. C. M. Jacobson visited at the Agnes Lind home Wednesday after- noon. was @ dinner guest Mrs. Lester Larson was a Bismarck Lawrence Johnson made a business Czar Alexander II freed 23,000,000 serfs in the Russian Empire at the same time 4,000,000 slaves were freed An archaeological expedition in northern Iraq recently unearthed fh cosmet Scott, Mrs. Lars Jacobson and | Wozy combs and stone diac Johnson called at W. Simon's Tuesday evening. M, Jacobson called at the Lange Clark Vice, George Oeltjen, Alyce Strandemo and Maxine Joh: Wilton were among those Sunday guests at the Bill Mr. and Mra, Loule Farnum and Large parts of the human brain can be removed by surgery without handicapping the individual, accord- i on™ wecovso woodes as eewkd aaah eee eS eee ee ee ge See ‘ c : :