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The | Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper { THE STATE'S OLDEST f 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 Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marek) outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail outside Dakota ...cesesecsscscsscenen 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Dakota, per year «. 150 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . wese 3. 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. Defeating Justice Unless one takes a second thought on the subject it is natural to assume that justice was done in the case in- volving the removal—and the restor- ation to office — of Axel Soder, Charles Swanson and H. F. Tiedman as Burleigh county commissioners. The fact, however, is that exonera- tion of the three accused men did not and could not give them full justice. The attack on them was un- fair from the beginning and noth- ing can change that fact. The completeness with which they vindicated their action is shown by the fact that Governor William Langer, none too friendly to them judging by the speed with which he ordered their removal, gave them a clean bill and returned them to of- fice. But this action did not and can- not erase from the commissioners the stigma of having been removed from office. It cannot repay them for the time and money which they were forced to spend in clearing their good names. Among those who know them and to whom all the facts are familiar, their reputations are better and brighter than before. This is so be- cause the record shows that they opposed political chicanery as prac- ticed by a disgruntled contractor and refused to be coerced by threats against them. By their actions in this case they proved their worth in office. But calumny speeds on the wings of the wind while truth finds the going much slower. Many outside of Burleigh county may find it diffi- cult to believe that the charges against these men were so utterly baseless as actually proved to be the case, The evidence shows clearly that the basis of the whole ouster action was the desire of a disgruntled bid- der on a county contract to make the commissioners do his bidding. When they refused representations were made to the governor, and his action was swift and immediate. A removal order was issued without inquiring into the matter, the gov- ernor thereby making himself the vietim of his own impetuosity and of the misrepresentations of his alleged friends. That he decided the mat- ter fairly, once the whole truth was known to him, is in his favor. For the instigators of this case nothing commendable can be said. Five men lent their names to charges which were given them to sign, alleging that the three com- missioners were guilty of crime, col- Jusion and other offenses, any one of which would shock a decent citizen if true. They did so without per- sonal inquiry or adequate reason, get- ting the things which they alleged as facts, either wholly from their own imaginations or else relying upon the word of parties inimical to the com- missioners, who were not themselves willing to sign the charges. Judging from the fact that each of the five men apparently was solicited to sign the accusations, the latter appears to be the fact. ‘We have here a case in which a disgruntled bidder, defeated in an attempt to dictate to the county com- mission, attempted to misuse the Power of the state to achieve selfish ends. The fact that a lawyer profited to the tune of $260 as a result of his activities, not to mention any fees he received from sources other than the state, merely intensifies the fact that selfish interest caused the peo- Ple of the county to be deprived, for @ period of two months, of the serv- ices of their rightfully elected offi- cials. This practice misuses the avenues of justice and serves to defeat good government. If officials can be re- moved and embarrassed every time they violate the will of a disgruntled bidder, honest government has been struck a vital blow. In its place will come intrenched greed, oppression of the taxpayer and an invisible gov- ernment which neither understands nor cares for the interests of the People. It is this phase of the matter which deserves the attention of Burleigh county citizens now. Those interest- ed in good government, justice and fair play should express their dis- gust with this whole proceeding in all ways possible. 20 | ties. si grapefruit cotton is more important Commodity Money Coming Although there has been nothing recently to indicate it, there is every evidence that the United States soon will adopt the commodity money proposal long advocated by Professor Irving Fischer of Yale and many other economists. The argument for it is that it will maintain the purchasing power of the dollar at a par to be determined by the prices of standard commodi- Fischer has some 800 listed, all “weighted” as to their importance, to serve as a measuring stick for the purchasing power of money. The “weighting” process is neces- sary because, for example, wheat plays a far more important part in our scheme of things than does than silk. It is an experiment in monetary management never before attempted but that can hardly be urged as an argument against it. As society be- comes more and more complicated new methods become necessary to keep it in adjustment. The only question now appears to be when this nation shall officially adopt the commodity money system. Indications are that we shall try it at about the time prices reach the level of 1926. The best proof of intention is con- tained in the president’s money mes- sage to the economic conference at London in which he said: “Let me be frank in saying that the United States of Amer- ica seeks the kind of dollar which, a generation hence, will have the same purchasing and debt paying power as the dollar value we hope to obtain in the near future.” Therein he touches upon one of the main arguments against the gold standard, mentions, almost in so many words, the commodity money & the Johnstown flood. When the first bloomers ap; folks were scandalized within ‘lives. Eyebrows were raised ‘months for them to come down. idea. 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. At the London Parley (Katherine Dayton in Washington Star) This week, it seems to us, has made @ new low in what can no longer be called the infant industry of political commentating. Which, we hasten to add, is not at all the fault of the po- litical commentators, God bless ‘em every one! Goodness knows Grade A political commentators are bringing more on the hoof than they have in years. But this history-in-the-making stuff is getting them. It is the old, old paradox ever new—the bigger the story, the harder to write. And this week in politics hasn’t confined itself to one tremendous story. It's been more like an anthology. More history has been made, f. 0. b., in. both Washington and London this week than we can remember, but to put a political commentator on it is like putting the well-known cham- eleon on a plaid—they simply go all to Pleces. Naturally, they keep right on commentating, because that’s what peegee paid for. But what is there to say Take our own case. Of course, com- mentating is pretty new to us and we just play at it, as you might say, so you may think our case is not typical, though it is all the more pitiable. As usual, we tied on our long, white beard and got out both pairs of spec- tacles—our rose-colored ones and the smoked ones—and took a bird's-eye view of the state of the Nation pre- paratory to emitting some erudite opinions on whither practically every- thing was drifting. ‘What we saw, as we peered near- sightedly, was much too much more than, as the saying goes, an eyeful! In Washington, intrepid Gen. Hugh Johnspn jumped from code to code carrying little NIRA—national indus- trial recovery act to you, if you pre- fer to be formal—while leaders of what may be roughly divided into capital and labor and Mr. Donald Richberg and his staff bayed at his heels. In London—but what's the good of going into that all over over again! The more we looked, the more everything seemed to be going ‘round and ‘round. We knew that history was being made, because everybody said so, but we couldn’t make out just what the history was. That made us begin to wonder about history, and the place in it this big moment we were living through, without knowing a darn thing about it, would hold. What would we answer to any hypothetical little Peterkins of the future who would gather about our old knees saying, “Gramma, tell us exactly what happened at the Lon- don Monetary and Economic Confer- ence of 1933, and what was it that America wanted?” Could we say, as did our fortunate forbears: “Taxation without repre- sentation could no longer be borne?” Or, “This nation cannot exist half slave and half free?” Or even, “Re- member the Maine?” Alas, no. We will have to mumble something about “fetishes of so-called - international bankers were being replaced by efforts to plan national currencies with the objective of giving to those curren- cies a continuing purchasing power which does not greatly vary in terms of the commodities and need of mod- ern civilization.” And if little Peterkin, drat him, Says: “But what does that mean grandma?”—well, you've got to admit that the answer is going to sound pretty silly, even if it is the right one. And speaking of history and poli- tical commentators, there is at least from the experience of that prince of them all, Horace Walpole. Writing in March, 1774, he says: “Even America gives us no pain— at least it makes little sensation, for the opposition have not taken up the cause; ... the general tone against the Bostonians is threats. It remains to be seen whether America will be as pliant as we say they must be. I don’t pretend to guess, for I seldom guess right, but we could even afford to lose America.” Isn't that cheering? It makes us almost—but not quite—feel like going out and drawing a few conclusions ourselves from this week's news. Come oe, boys—everybody off on the wrong loot! 4 I - (Copyright, 1933) @ crumb of comfort to be derived]. These old fashioned cardinal virtues have Been modernized almost’ beyond recogni tion, or elee—— We used to think “inflation” was something terriblewa cross between the bubonic plague and Cw THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 17, 1938 The Changing World Teliy we peared the home an inch of their ¥ cent ti nadiet and 20 high it took °° ‘= tary‘ie about 90 ‘Orr Mite Th age Ti, ——They fiqve joined the ranks of the unem- 1 ployed. It is hoped they will soon be back on full time work before long. find ourselves in @ mild form of controlled inflation and nobody seems to be werry- Today the bathing beaches are about 90 per ee the great charm of feminine mys- per cent gone. Se fa ye Carine ° Signed letters pertaining to personal self-addressed envelope is enclosed. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. 1 health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a 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. TINCTURE OF IOLIN THE BEST FIRST AID DISINFECTANT ‘The fashion in antiseptics changes almost as often as does the fashion in millinery, For many years Tony the Wirish Terror and I have relied on good old tincture of iodin (iodine to you, old timers) to take care of all the wounds we have collected on our evening prowls around the neighborhood. Not that we have been without liberal samples of all the newfangled anti- septics. We just had more faith in iodin. A few years ago we ventured to express our opinion about this pub- licly. But that benevolent effort only brought us grief. First the customers besieged us with protests because they discovered a poison label on the jodin vial and they wondered what we were trying to do. Then the in- terests that seek to popularize newer and, if you can believe it, better anti- septics, directed a barrage of so called scientific reports at us, reports of lab- oratory researches conducted by bac- teriologists and other research work- ers. You know, the kind 'that count the germs so many drops of the an- tiseptic kills in a test tube in so many seconds. These interests were so ag- gressive in their attitude that Tony and I figuratively pulled in our horns a bit and lay off the subject for quite a while—but we went right on treating our wounds-with a dash of tincture of iodin and ihen forgetting them, Dr. J. S. Simmons, an officer in the United Stutes army medical corps, as well as a bacteriologist and instruc- tor in the army medical school, has recently published a report of his ac- tual tests of tincture of iodine (it’s jodine to the major, too) and mer- and, in my opinion, the after effect is rather soothing. At least it seems that way when I touch a sensitive canker sore in my mouth with tinc- half, once a day—which I think is good treatment for these annoying canker sores. At any rate the burn- ing sensation one feels when tincture of iodin is poured or swabbed or) painted on a raw surface lasts only} @ few moments. Another reason Tony and I are Partial to the iodin vial is that we each take a nip of iodin, about a drop in a good drink of water every week or so, to keep us from getting old too young. So the same vial that insures us good first aid disin- fection of our wounds, bites, scratches and abrasions, also keeps us cheerful in spite of all the other dogs and docs. = QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Baby Book Is Solid Meat ‘We have two or three fancy books on the care of the baby, but we value the Brady Baby Book above them all because it is just solid meaty instruc- tion and we have profited by it many times in raising our three children. Ww. Wo Answer—The Brady Baby Book goes on the assumption that you are curochrome as first aid disinfectant, in simple skin abrasions, superficial cuts and deep incisions which were ‘contaminated witlt cultures of the common pus producing germs Staph- ylococcus aureus, anc Streptococcus Pyogenes. Applications of iodin to 210 such contaminated wounds ster- ilized them (rendered them germ free) in 156 of the cases. Mercuro- chrome failed to sterilize any of the 210 wounds. From this. actual test on wounds the expert concludes that mercuro- chrome is comparatively so ineffec- tive in the sterilization of contam- inated living tissue that it should not be considered as a substitute for iodin Mercurochrome has one virtue which might make it preferable to jodin as a first aid disinfectant for raw wounds of any extent—it causes Jess smarting or burning when it is applied. But the bite is momentary ——— PEOPLE LIKE 70 BE FOOLEL OF THIS STATEMENT? WHAT IS THE UNIT OF MEASUREMENT USED IN ASCERTAIN- “7 |] ING THE HeIGuT OF i ail PTE A “iil a mae ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 15Bodice of, 2 151) LIL NISIUIN [TIEIAI (El HORIZONTAL 1Who ts the man in the ples ture? 13 Melancholy. a] term of 44 Dower prop. ty. 4 50 Upper human Amb. h_ mote. ture of iodin and glycerin, half and /ful to keep the vial tightly stoppered, |fever that a person can get from eat- FORMER PRESIDENT not quite a numbskull to begin with. All reverence for venerable tradition is omitted from the booklet. Send a dime and a stamped envelope bear- ing your address and ask for a copy. Exterior Decoration I M Told U have a paint that re- moves corns. (R. W. P.) Answer—The best remedy, I think. is salicylated collodion—30 grains of Salicylic acid dissolved in half an cunce of flexible collodion. Paint the corn or callus (never a bunion) with @ coating of this once daily, and af- ter a week or so it will soften and you can easily wipe it away. Be care- and to keep the collodion off from the neck of vial. Tularemia Please advise whether there is a ing rabbit meat, and if so, how to pre- vent it. (C. P. 0.) Answer—Not if the meat is thor- oughly cooked. Tularemia is a grave infection which skinners, or persons who prepare or handle the meat may contract, through some scratch or puncture of fingers. Only wild rab- bits, not domestic rabbits, are subject to the disease. Such handlers of game should wear heavy cotton gloves, and carefully wash and treat any slight ‘wounds or scratches im- mediately. (Copyright, 1923, John F. Dille Co.) The total solar eclipse of Jan. 24, 1925, occurred but five seconds later than the time predicted by astrono- mers, The first horses in America after the Ice Age were brought over by Cortez for the campaign in his con- quest of Mexico, begun in 1519. v1 oman’s dress. Fy 37 The aide of » ditch next t the parapet. 38 Postmeridian nt slink coin, Hiway xtas 9 Falsifi hing seem anxious to be branded with sweethearts’ spiration to get themselves tattooed just for a lark. ner, dean of Amercia’s needle artists, has come upon the twilight of his colorful career. Square, where impassive Chinatown blends into the squalid Bowery, the professor sits among his vivid pig- ments and his patterns, and wonders if thefe the intimate art. Promoted to a fad, like riding bi- cycles. Perhaps women can be per- suaded to let him tattoo color into their cheeks, or beauty marks on their shoulder blades. Maybe the re- peal of prohibition would help. * * % A ROYAL PATRON ness 44 years ago, tattooing was a painful and laborious process done by hand. In 1904, though, he and a co-worker, O'Reilly, invented the electric needle. The craft was taken up-by hundreds, with standardized designs and rival schcols of technique. Wagner had his whole body done in Biblical scenes as an advertising stunt, and Chatham Square became internationally known as a center about which a score of “professors” had their studios. three, but Wagner still maintains his Chatham Barber Shop, itself a fa- ‘mous institution of an older day. Its window still bears a sign: “Black Eyes ‘Made Natural.” HIS MAGNUM OPUS IN l NEW | YORK By PAUL HARRISON New York, July 17.—The tattooing business, as you may imagine, isn’t what it used to be. The Atlantic fleet hasn’t been to New York in a long time, and mere merchant sailors have lost the urge for petsonal deco- ration. Modern swains no longer t initials, And bibulous fellows of today seldom have the in- So it is that Prof. Charles Wag- Down at Chatham "ll ever be a renaissance of Maybe it can be Jongshoreman named Thomas Lee. He had the broadest shoulders the Professor ever hed seen—a mighty, muscular back worthy of any artist's supreme effort. Eagerly Wagner ex- Plained his plan to the Client. Lee assented, and over @ pe- tiod of two months came in for 20 ‘sittings of two hours each. tering needle and heaved a great sigh. The largest single piece of tattoo! in the world was finished. “The Celebration of the Fiesta of Our Lady of Mount Carmel,” it was two feet by three, included nine col- ors, a large area of elysian clouds, seven golden trumpets and exactly 23 angels, Truly a magnum opus—prac- tically a mural! Wagner wishes professional ethics didn’t forbid mention of the names of prominent people who have been tattooed, for he says he knows the vain little secrets of various society women, gay young blades, actresses and explorers. However, he doesn’t mind mentioning foreign patrons of the art: King George V of England had a dragon tattooed on his arm after Czar Nicholas II and Queen Olga of Greece set the fashion. ‘When Wagner went into his busi- the late Prof. Samuel Today the number has dwindled to little booth in one corner of the *?¢ 8 Ever since the World War—when Ny Travers Lorrimer, shell-shocked son of wealthy Margaret Lorrimer, mistakes Mary L4u Thurston, beautiful orphan, for Delight Har- ford, whom he claims he married in England during the war. At Mrs. Lorrimer’s request, Mary Lou assumes the role of Delight. Complications arise when, after months of happy companionship, Travers insists upon knowii i Mary Lou loves him. She realizes she cannot go on acting, for she has grown to care. At the crucial moment Larry Mitchell, Mary Lou’s newspaper reporter friend, locates the real Delight acting ina revue. Mrs. Lorrimer, favoring Mary 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 marriage. Delight no longer loves Travers, whom she thought dead. She surmises that Mary Lou loves Travers. Mary Lou asks Delight to give her a week in which to persuade Mrs. Lorrimer to see her. Copyright, 1930, CHAPTER XLVII. 'F, when the stipulated week was I up, that strange, eager little person—what was her name? Thurston?—were to come to her and tell her that Mrs. Lorrimer was still determined to ignore her existence, what should she do? The only sensible thing to do, thought Delight, was to confront Mrs. Lorrimer, manage to see Lorry, carry the battle into the enemy camp and see what hap- pened then. If, as far as charac- ter was concerned, Lorrimer had not changed, Delight thought she knew that he would feel under a sacred obligation. He had been a very chivalrous boy, generous and idealistic, under the hard;boiled veneer of war, the laughter, the almost hysterical gayety of leave- time. She had been dreadfully in love with him, had offered, be- cause of her own surge of emo- tions, half adolescent, half forced into flower by the unnatural cir- cumstances of war, to go away with him for part of hisleave. He had refused. He had insisted that he didn’t want her “that way.” But wanted her as—his wife. j An Idealist Was he still idealistic and, well, impractical, she wondered. She thought so, somehow, remember- lary Lou’s almost fantastic of his fidelity to a memory, his frantic search, his unhappiness at a loss. Yes, she would be all kinds of a fool not to take advantage of this amazing piece of luck which had come her way. If Mrs. Lorrimer changed her mind and sent for her or came to her, they would have it out. If she didn’t change her mind— Delight rather fancied she coul change it for her. Meantime, per- haps it would do no out to Westmill, incognito, and see how the land there lay. She might catch a glimpse of Lorrimer. She ‘wouldn't make herself known to anyone, but she * would rather like to confirm what Evanson had said with her own eyes. Therefore, on the following morning, which was Sunday, De- light got up at, to her, an ungodly hour, and proceeded to Grand Central station, where she took a train for Connecticut. _ all other states vote to repeal na- tional prohibition—Heber J. Grant, president of Mormon * * live according to someone else’s idea of what is proper.—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. good speaking and more bad speak- ing may any other Prof. W. H. Yeager, George Washing- ton University. lic opinion; it should either lead it or let it alone—Prof. William Lyon Phelps of Yale. teaching of temperance is the one point on which wets and drys are a Daniel A. Poling, dry marry. Re-marriage should be lim- Ce i ate hr slot nae AKE-BELIEVE’ if}some distance from the gates of to £0) bee, ‘Wagner had to hire several assistants|ited to annulments obtained on to implant patriotic symbolism in the| grounds exisiting at the time of mar- hides of doughboys and sailora—the |riage—Clarence E. Martin, tattoo trade had been falling off. So|American Bar Association. it was with the utmost satisfaction —_—_—_—_. that he recently turned out the/ Magellan, who is credited with the crowning achievement of his career. | first circumnavigation of the globe, His aesthetic enthusiasms seem to} was killed in the Philippine Islands run to area. Huge spread-| before the journey was completed, eagles on chests slways made him glow with pride. So did the re- Production of Rosa Bonheur’s famous three horses that he tattooed on a square foot of American sailor. But he still wasn’t satisfied—even when he was commissioned to etch the por- traits of nine U. S. presidents on a considerable portion of a circus freak called Lady Viola. Last spring, though, in walked a Finally Wagner silenced his chat- ing Titled FLAPPER FANNY SAYs: (RES. U. & PAT. OFF. Let Utah remain dry even though church. * I am sorry if I offend. No one can ae % While congress is in session, more be heard there than in place in the country.— ee # The college should not follow pub- * % * i I think you will find that proper =, Many a girl starting her vaca- tion by boat often continues by 4y FAITH BALDWIN "Ditibated by King Fosters Syndeate, Ine * *% *% One-third of our divorcees now re- by Fath Baldwin At the Westmill station she|the underbrush checked. The path asked how far the Lorrimer place} wound and twisted through the was. On being told, she looked for | trees, and Delight followed it idly, a taxi, for she was not in form,|something young and untarnished and hadn’t been for years, to walkin her responding unconsciously to several miles even under the ideal | the frail green lows of the new poenas oa by = “sae pares aps brrser ieee pring: y and a Toi sunlight an; e \7 flanked with tall budding trees. | blue sky. She had the taxi set her down at She forgot, for a moment, al- most everything, and was a child again in land. ea ane knew it wt had come close and heard voices. rag ease One voice was Mary Lou’s. It was ae clear, and Delight stopped, er heart beati: fast, and listened. oe stepped ee ageing tree, Lou was laughing. ‘igi a) “Loi rou’re silly!” sai Mary Te, y 80 ly!” said ie je grew vel igh and thick, Pr ni been Tionst into entertaining formal patterns. It Bad also bem train on iain & sort maze, and was wi i & semi icirele at the point at whick viewed i Apparent); Mary Lou and Lorrimer were sit. ting there, just beyond her view. “Well, it’s a swell day to be ‘ily Lotimer ‘ Dalene leaned forward iter ‘Westwood house. She wanted, she said, to walk the rest of the way, the weather was so delightful. The taxi driver meantime, grown loquacious, after the manner of his kind, had regaled her with stories of the Lorrimers; of Lorri- mer’s long illness and his recent miraculous recovery; of re- gained interest in life. ‘, “Why, he’s even taken to again,” said the driver, in awe. “‘ was talking to him down to the station just the other day. I guess after all the burnt child don’t erfully pretty giel vititing ea aad a ly pretty girl iting him an his mother. i remember drivii her to Westwood House the day she came here, last w |___ Castles in the Air After having made careful in- quiries as to the extent of the Lorrimer place, Delight: got out of 1 i‘ the cab, paid the ive driver, ~ The voice was sazange and proceeded, avoiding the gates, |to her and yet touched a chord in to walk along the main hi which skirted one side of es- tate. The sun was warm, igh- heeled shoes not the most practical things in the world to wear on a Protracted wandering and _ she stumbled along, uncomfortably, a little wearily, warm in her Winter coat, wishing sarhgety, that she had been able to afford the smart spring suit she had seen in a Fifth Avenue window. Well, perhaps she could soon! But she had been afraid to spend what little was left over from her salary after the hotel bills and other necessities had bern paid. ne a in ve ae ‘unless, luc} she found she no longer need be, quired, She began to think of little ony of cot Sgro aH 5 urse, vender an ofa Gud laughed Mary Lou. “Why “(Sounds rather boudoir,” he ome on, z afternoon, Delight +o | The The listener shrank back against the poakh hark of the great tree, hearing name epoken to some- one She felt like a ghost, ,” continued Lorrimer, “let me take you up for a ride. You like flying. You'll trust yourself with me, won't you?” he asked, “You know I would,” said Mary simply, “But not to me,” rrimer her. “‘Ion’t that righteoreet told Sho was silent. ude Woman who listened heart beati: rf It was deeper than led it but Vibrant, as overtones as the voic she had known, a voice stammered love to her, rotestation: “You're all m: world, Delight. I'll love you ways.’ ‘She smiled, a grimace, remembe: “Suppose,” ks, course, but you'll get an ides. s haps you'd Tike in chose a ats rf eme,” he int seriously, ob- this to h ance Almayy en, the, ouside, 100! in, ol 2 ma think of Harry now ten esses: to dispose of him all 5 Presently, very tired, peat to a low rh ro. But I’m you day you con- convince y’s love was, which has not bother eac] of Delight Ti admit us, you perhaps more than I teste ally. But I must have known then the sort of girl you woul become. the sort of girl who would return to me, the only girl in the world!” - (Te Be Continued Tomprrow) beyond that a perfect tangle of boxwood hedge which reminded her somehow of England, which she called and thought of as “home.” She went down the two shallow steps, under the little broken arch through into the pretty path. That corner of the place had, with so many others, been left to grow wild at its own sweet will, with cleared and merely the path kept President | ve