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q\- / THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1933 * ~ - The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper he THE STATE'S OLDEST i NEWSPAPER: (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une. » Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘a8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ...........+ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .. o sesecees 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years seeeveceeee ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ....... eeeee Weekly by mai] in year Canada, per 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication spontaneous origin All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Problem in Arithmetic Numerous inquiries received by The Tribune regarding recent in- creases in the price of bread indi- cate the advisability of doing a sim- Ple problem in arithmetic. Tt is not the purpose of this news- paper to defend increases or de- creases in the price of anything, but the factors in this case are rela- tively simple. In @ statement Friday, Secretary of Agriculture Wallace fixed the jus- tified boost in bread costs as a re- sult of the wheat tax at one and a half cents a pound. In other words, the pound loaf which used to sell for seven cents might now be properly sold at elght and a half. Most of the bread sold in this dis- trict is in the form of one-and-a- half-pound loaves. Applying the in- crease at the rate of a cent and a half a pound we find that the jus- tified rise, according to the secre- tary'’s figures, is two and one-quarter cents, It the baker charges more than that, til assuming Wallace's data are correct, he is making a little extra. If he holds the advance to two cents the customer is getting a| slight break, | If the beker has a year’s supply of flour on hand he still must pay’ the tax because it applied to “floor stocks” of flour and flour in ware- houses on. the date the levy became effective, Those bakers who bought flour when it was lower in price than it is now are in happier position than those who have been buying only enough to meet oufrent requirements. In this respect they are no different, from those citizens who have been! taking remunerative filers in the wheat market. All of these things have been Printed in this newspaper from time to time as they developed. They are assemble‘ here now only in explana- tion of this “bread question.” A Good Sign Dun and Bradstreets, after a sur- vey of the building industry, reports that it has gained 83.7 per cent since February. This impressive figure testifies to two things. The first is the rapidity + Of the recovery. The second is the depths to which the building indus- try sank luring the Jate and un- Jamented depression. The fact remains, however, that even this impressive percentage is not enough and the rate of building still is far behind the need. ‘When every industrial concern has all the room it needs; when every farmer has a good home and ade- quate out-buildings; when every American family has comfortable quarters and every commercial and Public need has been cared for we will have good reason for stagnation in the building industry. Until then there is no really ade- quate excuse, no cause for real joy in a mere 83.7 per cent increase from. the pitiable levels of the last two years. ‘We can accept the record as an excellent augury of better things to come, for the building industry is not only one of vast importance, it is the best sign of a changed manner of thinking. Only people with con- fidence in the future will support building enterprises. Union Labor’s Opportunity Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson's blunt statement that it is not the purpose of the industrial recovery act to unionize all American labor empha- sizes sharply the responsibility and the opportunity which rests today upon the leaders of the American Federation of Labor. Under the new law, as General Johnson points out, full unionization 4s possible. The government will see to it that organized labor gets a break. It won’t permit big indus- tion the tremendous extent of the illegal liquor traffic since 1920, it is easy to see that they are not, really, as large as they should have been. They are, that is to say, a record of failure and not a record of success, A very large part of the present re- vulsion against the prohibition law unquestionably arises from the fact that it has not been well enforced, as evidenced by the success of Al Capone and other underworld lead- ers, Those prohibition bureau fig- ures, high as they are, should have 20} been a great deal higher. That they are not is one of the reasons why the movement to repeal the 18th amendment has met, 80 far, with so much success, New Deal for Husbands It is a new deal for husbands which has been inaugurated in Illinois as' the result of a new law which “per- mits” wives to join the alimony clubs in that commonwealth. The first cards, apparently, were dealt in Chicago where two husbands had the pleasure of hearing a court tell their erstwhile spouses to make’ regular delivery of alimony as a re- sult of slipping the marital harness. There have to be laws covering these things, of course, but on the whole this change seems a little silly. The manifest evils of the alimony system in cases where the marital bark hits the rocks will not be curbed by making the thing work both ways, One wonders how a man must feel who lives off the largesse of an ex- wife. He wonders, too, what will happen if the ladies refuse to pay. Will they be locked in the calaboose as many men have been when they fell behind in their payments? Our $12,500-a-Year Boss It is rather interesting to learn that Gen. Hugh.8. Johnson, adminis- trator of the industrial recovery act, is being paid just $12,500 a year for his services to Uncle Sam. In his official position General Johnson will be giving orders to some very high-priced executives. Men to whom ‘$12,500 a year would be mere cigar money will be coming to him with their hats in their hands, and if he chooses to get hard-boiled—and he seems to have a certain capacity for that kind of thing—they will be doing just about what he tells them to do. And somehow all of this impresses upon one the utter absurdity of the common method of gauging a man’s ability and success by the size of the salary check he draws. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below the trend of show thought by other editors. Something New in Extortion (Billings County Pioneer) We, the people of the state of North Dakota, have something to think about. It is a “New Deal in extortion.” Many may say that this is all wrong but seeing is believing and it is a reality. It is a disgrace to our state, which is becoming the laughing stock of the nation, and why shouldn't it be? If the people of this grand old state of ours let this sort of thing go on much longer, what chance have we to get new settlers in to take up their residence, “The Leader,” which, according to Langer is an administration paper, is getting its start in a too high- handed manner for me to stomach. It is nothing short of extortion. They come to all the laborers on the high- way and say, “donate five per cent of your pay to The Leader or be pre- pared to find a new job.” If that isn’t getting money under threat, I'll eat the whole shebang. Langer says that the dallles are not telling the truth about the pres- ent administration and that they need The Leader to give the people, his dear people, to hear him talk, the truth of what is being done. He says that if a man doesn’t think enough of the administration to give them five per cent of his wages he does not deserve a job. How much do you suppose he has kicked in? You can guess on that one. Nonpartisan leaders say that the paper is a Langer proposition and does not have the backing of the League. That closes the case. He is just thinking of the future. In a’ short time, if the Nonpartisans fail to give this man the bounce, woe be unto them. The way it looks to many people is that Langer feels himself slipping and is preparing a nice soft spot to land. He most likely will need it and the people could turn his feather tick into a slab of stone if they would refuse to support this new ballyhoo sheet. They should be able to put out quite a paper for the amount of money they collect in this manner. It is a shame to convict a bank robber, as I feel that they have a little more principle about them than do these people who are going out, the man’s er away from them and attempting Make them “salesmen.” Some of the papers in the state say that if we don’t look out they will be saying to the big stores, give us your advertising or we will fix you. Any time politics get that rotten, it is time for the people to throw up the sponge and give the big boy the We have lived in this state for many years, and one hates to see it trialists to compel their men to stay unorganized. But it isn’t going to do any spoon-feeding. Prohibition’s Record Records of the U. 8. prohibition bureau at Washington show that the federal government, in its 13-year effort to enforce prohibition, has im- Posed a total of more than 40,000,000 days in jail sentences and fines which add up to around $71,000,000. ‘Those figures look pretty impres- sive; and yet, when you stop to an- under the leadership of a man who does things in such a high and mighty way. It is Taxation Without Representation. Northing more and nothing less. ‘They claim that those who make the donations should go out and sell the subscriptions at $1 each. Who in heck would pay any of these fellows $1 when they know that the money has already been paid? It would be poor judgment. If Langer thinks the administra- tion is so weak that they need a paper as bad as all this, he had bet- ter shove off for parts unknown. It was a shame to bump off a man like Jessie James. He did have some good alyze them, and take into considera-| points. Among the Dangers of Livin, HELLO JOE—— 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 ai self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink, i reply can be made to qu dress Dr. William Brady, Letters should be brief and writ erles not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspeper, HELP YOURSELF TO ALL THE SYMPATHY YOU WANT—YOU'RE STILL A BLOOMING NEUROTIC A lady who establishes her unas- salable status by informing me she was & patient of the late Dr. Some- ‘body “ @ nerve specialist who stood high in his profession,” rebukes me thsu: - “I know how to pity people who have real nerve trouble, I think it is too bad to make such a general shee as you do. It is un- When Dr. Somebody lived and ran his sanitarium business it was quite the custom to diagnose “nerves” “nervous prostration,” “neurasthenia” or “nervous breakdown.” But not now. Show me @ physician or a specialist who dares to perpetuate such a diag- nosis today,.and I'll show you a quack. Not knowing whether the lady is a Class A or a Class B neurotic I cannot attempt to surmise what the nature of her ailment or complaint may be. It may be as real as any other disease or illness I can mention. But I can easert positively that real nerve trou- ble does not cause symptoms which would suit a neurotic. Patients ill of actual nerve, spinal cord or ,brain lesions are not at all “nervous,” fh the popular sense, Neurotics of either class may pat themselves on the back as much as they like and chide hard-boiled Yoc- tors who have no sympathy for such impostors, They are atill neurotics for all of that. Class A if they are just dumb and don’t know enough to go to an honest, capable doctor and find out what really is the matter, Class B if they are using nerves as a good alibi or a means of evading the trials of life—shoving responsibilities off onto the shoulders of others. That's all there are, just Class A and Class B neurotics. They're all fraid cats, The A’s are a lot too dumb to realize that fear is at the! bottom of all their “nervousness.” The B's re- sent the threat of exposure of this fear factor because they do realize only too well that such exposure means the end of their imposture. So there we have it. I’m hard boiled, unsympathetic, cruel, ignorant and intolerable because I tell the: scientific truth about this “nerve” racket. Doctors who use “nerves” or “nervous breakdown” to conceal their ignorance and incompetence and string credulous customers along for a while, are gentle, kind-hearted, wise and eminent specialists. These same fine birds who come to the aid of their paying patients with loudly than do invalids who have gen- uine illness. ‘Yankeeland has suffered e: from nervous imposition. It is time to break up this infernal neuracket- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Prepared Chalk Following a suggestion in your val- uable little booklet on Diet I am using Prepared chalk for gas and I mi say it is the best remedy I have foun (Mrs. C. R.) Answer—It is preferable to soda or Other alkalis commonly taken for acidity, heartburn, gas or “indiges- ." Ten grains of prepared chalk (caleium carbonate) will neutralize acidity for several hours. Glad to send the booklet “Guide to Right Eat- ing” to any reader who incloses a dime and a stamped envelope bearing his corerct address, Pimples IT have tried eliminating fats, starches and sweets for months at a time, without apparent benefit. Can't the doctors find a cure for such a simple skin disease as pimples? (Miss M. W.) e Answer—Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and mention your trouble. Where did you get the funny notion that fats, starches or sweets have anything to do with it? Has it never occurred to you to con- sult a physician about your troubles? Or is it too simple? Tests Kindly advise whether a Wasser- mann blood test and a purine test would prove the presence of any so- cial disease. (V. W.) Answer—No. Your doctor's opinion is the only reliable one. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) ‘The quality of the sleep we enjoy is more important than the quantity; slumber disturbed by dreams is a sign that the brain is still active. 8 fake diagnosis of “nerves” or “nerv- ous exhaustion” are of a feather with the doctors who pronounce the illness just a bad cold—until it turns out to have been meningitis or pulmonary tuberculosis, but by that time the simple customer will have forgotten the mistake. Even if it were conceded there is any such thing as “nervous weakness” in the way of an illness, the only reason in the world why any one should heve more pity for the “nerv- ous” invalid than for any other kind is that the “nervous” one demands ‘pity 80 much more constantly snd Js ; "V OF BIRD 1S THIS? WHAT IS THE FULL. NAME OF THE POWERFUL NEW YORK CITY | “DeMocRATIC POLITICAL GROUP ? iz in Chica ya cin AY 1s forecast, Edmonton reports grains progreasing rapidly. The Peace river territory crop outlook is excellent. Business Continues Upward, Figures Show New York, July 15—(#)—Statistles appearing during the Jast week in- dicated a continuation ‘of the rise in business activity, according to Moody's index figures for freight car loadings, electric power production, and steel ingot output. These index figures are adjusted for seasonal variation—that is, if the change from the previous week should coincide with the normal sea- sonal change, the index figure would be unchanged. A Car- Com- loadings Electric Steel bined May Call for Wage Increases Saturday Washington, July 15.—()}—Satur- day .aboar? President Roosevelt's yacht smewhere on the Potomac river may be shaped a fateful decision to call upon all American business to raise wages and cut working hours Tight away. Hugh 8. Johnson, boss of the re- covery ion, who for days has been studying this idea for ob- taining the quick boost in the pur- chasing power of the masses, will fly down to report to the president on its possibilities, ‘The plan would involve having every line of business from the big factory down to the corner store agree willingly and without waiting for adoption of a code of fair com- petition, the vehicle provided by law to spread employment, boost wages and give industry self-regulation. Agreements among industries to spread work and lift pay are helping the ordinary laborer, but most of the trade codes do little for the big mid- die class. Johnson holds that a gen- eral increase by all American busi- ness would reach this group, and thereby tremendously increase pur- chasing power. Northwest Canada Grain Crops Good Winnipeg, July 15.—(#)—Crop pros- pects in northwesterly wheat growing areas of the western provinces con- tinue good and in southern-areas re- cent rains have been beneficial, says the weekly crop report issued Satur day by the Canadian National rail ways department of agriculture. Pre- viously damaged areas are not expect- ed to recover fully, however. In the Brandon-Portage La Prairie area in Manitoba, fall rye cutting has begun. Wheat is headed out and coarse grains are starting to head out in the Dauphin district. The grain crop is better-than-average and hay crop excellent. A short, patchy crop is likely in southern: lgcprreillge despite re- cent , the report says. Prince Pie arion reports crops in good condition, a More moisture is needed in southern Alberta. A short, below average crop HE DRAWS CROWDS a? ae FTN A FEW TPN PCP NPT HORIZONTAL ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 2Who fs the LIOSTE TOBA UIT] ie UVISTTIAIL LIN] UME IDI ITIO! age 45 Form of “he.” 46 Deity. 48 Exclnmatt of norro' 50 Russian moune tains, nt of n 52 Cancellous Hindu woman. ty ie skull. , by 54 To overlook, a nucee: of 50 Structural light ble unit. 41 Te busty on- 57 Constellation. bony tissue in th 1, le ention ax an ixOSS * VERTICAL 1The presence of the man in 47 the pleture | ors 3 Neuter proe Latest week 62.7 1069 725 980.7 Prev. week 62.1 66.3 789 55.7 515 70.0 ago |= 48.5. 16.1 52.6 1933 high 62.7 12.5 80.7 1933 low 456 88.7 155 50.5 (1928 weekly average—100). (Copyright, 1933, by Moody's) Two Indians Killed In Truck Accident 5 Kalispell, Mont. July 15.—()— When the driver of a truck fell asleep two Flathead Indians were killed and three other injured as the vehicle crashed off the highway near here Friday. All were en route to Logan Pass to take part in the Going-to-the-Sun highway dedication Saturday. The driver, Leslie Ryan, told a cor- oner’s jury he had been driving for many hours and found it difficult to keep awake at the wheel. He was ex- onerated. Michel Kever and Louis Kulloyah were killed, Mrs. Marie Kever, Soph- ia Moises and Michael Smallsalon were brought to a hospital here, where their condition was reported serious. Other Indians on the truck were not seriously injured and the driver escaped unhurt. Minot and Portal In Baseball Final Minot, N. D., July 15.(AP)—Defeat- ing Van Hook, 25 to 13, in a semi- final game Saturday morning, Portal will clash with Minot Saturday even- Junior baseball district championship. Minot won its way into the finals oy evening by defeating Garrison, 2. With five teams entered in the tourney, an elimination game to bring the number to four was necessary. Portal and Kenmare were drawn for the elimination tilt, the winner to meet Van Hook in the semi-finals in the upper bracket. Minot and Gar- rison were in the lower bracket. Evangelical Society Reelects Local Woman Jamestown, N. D., July 15.—()}—J. Nehrenberg of Drake was reelected president of North Dakota Mission- ary Society of the Evangelical church at Saturday's session at Streeter. About 150 are in attendance at the meeting, which will continue through Sunday, ~ Other officers named are Mrs. C. F. Strutz, Jamestown, vice president; Mrs, L. Eichorn, Lehr, recording sec- retary; Mrs. W. Buschat, Linton, cor- responding secretary; Mrs. A. W. Heidinger, Bismarck, secretary young People’s mission circle; Mrs. G, H. Mittae, Bantry, secretary mission bands; Mrs. C. Welschel, Grand capital of Shantung Province, the Tiver is said to have reached the top of the dikes in the vicinity, endanger- ing the city. Meanwhile the Yangtze, which a fortnight ago threatened to repeat its disastrous flood of 1931 and then receded again, is rising once more as a Lilt heavy rains at its head- wat 5 Government Speeds Cotton Price Plan Washington, July 15.—(#}—Fany tors put real speed into their crop price-raising plan Saturday in an effort to get the bulk of $100,- 000,000 into the hands of cotton farm- ers durifg the next three weeks. Originally it was estimated it would take six weeks to two months to give this money to the cotton farmers in 16 states. But that has been cut in cotton program by 700,000 farmers who agreed to cut their acreages 25 to 50 per cent. — STEAL PLANE PARTS 8t. Paul, July 15—@)—Theft of airplane engine parts valued at $8,000 was reported to police Saturday by Forks, secretary of little heralds; Mrs. W. A. White, Drake, secretary of literature. Bishop George Epp of Cleveland and Miss Susan Bauernfeind of To- kyo, Japan, are principal speakers. Mighty Chinese River Is Threatening Floods Shanghai, July 15.—(#)—The spec- tre of famine and flood confronts mil- lions of Chinese within the ‘Yellow River Valley in North China. “China's Sorrow,” 98 the mighty stream is called, has been flooding during the last month and Saturday had reached an even greater volume, bringing the danger of disester clos- er. Reports from communities on the headwaters of the river, which also is known as the Hwang, or Hwang Ho, say rains are continuing, causing fears of a further rise. From major points on the Yellow tiver come dispatches saying the stream is over-running its dikes in scores of places and-is flooding iso- lated areas. Many thousands already have been made homeless. ing for the sixth American Legion TYE Copyright, 1930, by Feith Baldwin Travers Lorrimer, shell-shocked son of wealthy Margaret Lorrimer, i Mary Lou. Thurston, 1 orphan, for Delight Har- ford, whom he claims he matried in England during the war. Mrs. Mierrissers request, Mary Lou' assumes the role of Delight. + Complications arise when, after months of happy companioi Travers insists upon Mary Lou loves him. She real she cannot go on actin; bas grown to care. At tl moment, Larry Mitchell, Lou's newspaper reporter fi locates the real Delight rer Mrs. Lorrimer, i Mi Lou, hopes that Delight is not Travers’ wife and that she will return to England. After a sleepless night, Mary Lou visits Delight. She finds her hardened by life and misfortune, Mary Lou broaches the subject of Delight’s marria, Delight no longer loves Travers, whom she thought dead, She surmi: hat Mary Lou loves Travers. Mi to give her a week in which to per- suade Mrs. Lorrimer to see her. CHAPTER XLVI. M* LOU shook hands with Delight gravely. “Good-by,” she. said. “Not upandty i But Mary Lou knew it must be good-by. She hoped never to set eyes Boon Delight Harford again. When Mrs, Lorrimer had bee suaded to see Lorry’s side, his right of choice, his right to the truth, she, Mary Lou, would gd away somewhere where she would never see any of them again, emecialy this woman whose place she had taken and who had now returned. She, Mary Lou, must be the usurper. She left and stood out on the street, blinded by the Spring sun- light; hailed a taxi and went to the Pennsylvania Station and took a train to Oakdale. Waiting for it, in the station, she went into a lunch room and drank some milk and ate something, mechanical enough. But she was faint wit! hunger, and with a vast emptiness of spirit which had nothing what- ever to do with her body. ever to do with her body. | ‘Woman’s Intuition | ‘At Oakdale she saw Billy, forced herself to listen to new symptoms which Aunt Adelaide ac- uired since last she had been there, talked to Gram, played with the little boy and got a train back to New York in the middle of the afternoon, arriving home—home? —in time for dinner. She was tired, she said, when Lorrimer, back from a successful day at the field, teased her because she was quiet. Yes, she had been in town, on various erra! aret watched her anxiously. After. dinner when they were alone for a moment, she her: “An wrong out on Long Island ‘Is there anything I can “No, they're all fine,” Mary Lou told Bere in just tired, that's all.” ‘But it wasn't like Mary Lou to tire easily. Margares looked at her with compunction. The strain telling on the child. mined that somehow this—this in- truder into their now ordered lives—should be disposed of, and somehow, some way, Mary Lou and Lorrimer brought to ‘happi- ness. + Lorrimer was in excellent spirits that night. He seized Mary Lou and took her, by force, out to walk with him in the budding gardens, along the sweet-smelling borders, He was gentle with her and con- siderate, but, he said, after a day in the shops the air would do her good. He did not refer, in words, to what had happened the night of the Wynnes’ party, but he held her arm close within hig own and bent his tall head over hers and was, mutely, the lover he had|she said, i At|talk to y Lou asks Delight mist been per-| J And|day. Delight went through: the At Tsinan, a city of 400,000, the | BELILV Distributed been, the lover he always was, wi her. It was ‘unfortunate that should have chosen that night. She went to bed, half with worry and‘unhappiness. No use to Mrs, Lorrimer that night. She herself was in no fit state for es, argument. It would ave to wait a day or two, She | Too Honest | After Mary Lou had left her, herself. She had, for some years, cae her ne pete ‘worst— ser, guide, losopher, mentor and friend, “She had liked’ the younger girl, She had felt for her that curious mixture of tolerance, pity and se os ith which a woman of her experience regards a girl of Mary Lou's type. She thought her honest and candid, and aken, For, argued Delight,’ if she really loves Lorry ee suaded him to love her, what a fool she is to throw -it all away without a battle! For much as she had come to dislike Lorrimer’s un- known mother, Delight could see her point of view and was frank to it to herself that in Mrs. Lorrimer’s place she would com- with him in the mit just the sins of omission she i ed the > Fi Lou had asked it er a week in wi fight! was" perfectly willing She light was ect . She would not’ approach the Lorri- mers, and yet she began to think it wise that she have them looked way, shape or form. ground. A a gt feade. any romise to Mary i aoe such a Sroceaunte a The following day was Satur- teniiar motions of the matinee and ev Performances me- chanically enough, cupied xan, ber ga amazing and unexpected problem. — After cararday night show she joined a other girls who were go- ing out to Long Island with half @ dozen men, them was an elderly person, a stock broker, whose air upon this occasion was that of the small boy who sneaks behind the barn to smoke a for- bidden cigaret. Delight made her- self very agreeable to him, And in the course of the, to her, rather monotonous evening, she incaired carelessly about ‘“people called Lorrimer.” — She'd known the son of the family at one time, many yeare ago, ~ ” Sy FAITH ith heated social position, their vast amount of money, which, partments moe a ents mi tel holdings, government and such, and therefore probably a free from the inroads of the ( break gradually and often... . |“a atiful woman,’ lie ‘And then added idly ‘that he had heard the son was, unfortunately, an invalid. Delight Harford took counsel with | said to| smoke risi to | heard ter, the hysterical woman at a nearby table, listened - to one of her apartment-mates quatre! i boy who sat next to her— Bp ae some wanted $0 be vey, sure of her | Y« out hearing. substantial people, thought of safety, protectioh, tree er perries: me see vers Lorrime: Baa thought of him, when one thinks of one’s ith—van. ished, regretted, never. to mic ena et Shoneht of him fall- a: ake Mes ward the fur- valiant death, a young Icarus’ ' Te Be Continued the Auto Engine Works. An official said they apparently had been re- moved from the machine dur- ing several nights but were not missed until Friday. FOXX GETS HOMER Philadelphia, July 15. jimmy Foxx, of the Philadelphia Athletics, major league home run leader, Satur- day bit his 26th homer of the season against the Detroit Tigers. The drive came in the second inning with no one on base. HOOSIER SUCCEEDS STRONG ‘Washington, July 15—(P—P. J. Maloney of Columbia City, Ind., Sat- urday was named treasurer of the Home Owners’ Loan corporation, suc- ceeding James G. Strong, former Re- publican representative of Kansas. SEEK 13-YEAR-OLD GIRL Lyons, 13-year-old girl, who was last seen @ week ago when she left her father, William Lyons of Sacramento, at Merced to go for lunch with a strange man. Use the Want Ads BALDWIN by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Mr. Evanson ob! ly expati- upon the their he lained, in real estate— ly, with some ho- bonds had a week in’ which to accom-|late stock market disaster as any- plish her purpose, a week in which| body’s could be. He spoke of to break her heart. For hearts| Mi whom he had once met, he said. “Shell-shocked, or something,” Mr. Evanson, “No one sees him, and his mother rarely goes ne when she appeared at the event wi e opera with Lorri a was a Mr. Evanson. Tt used to be quite an imer, senior. He remarkable man,” droned “They live in the meet a (ee they not?” asked Delight, most English accent and most bored Mayfair mann er. “In Connecticut. At Westmill. I understand they have a D Nadia per- place there,” si - Evanson. M i ‘Them as has, gits. Some people 5 and the have all the fuck . . . lucky breaks as well. Take my case, Miss Hackett. Two years ago I bought a block of Fisheries—" nited He wandered on, -but Delight was no longer listening. She Lorrimer seized Mary Lou and took her, Tee Sas oath b 7, by force, teh pied ae mm ed, idly, the gardens. crowded dancin; loor, the of black iring men, the whorls of blue to the low ceiling, the chatter and the - shrieks a ling with the silly college “I thought you were a good egg. ‘ou make me tired, you come: Something for nothing; that’ Sou think of, Well Teeasett he poe a that she had not been—whil grew more Cockney fee word. deeply preoc-| | Just a Memory ad | piece [YS Ae | lovely Muriel aT ee that with each spoken Delight listened, however, with- e Lorrimers were Again she m from financial and ’ oth She had never thought she did ll, which was infrequent, as dying a clean and But he lived. Pa » iS]