The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 24, 1933, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 98 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail pez year (in Bis- MATICK) ...0.0e see deceesevesees Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5: Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, three years Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year 1 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 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. Science Discards ‘Certainties’ A. bright young man of today who set out to get a good grounding in the sciences could easily be forgiven for concluding that he was being asked to discard all of his certain- ties and substitute a somewhat jumbled mess of probabilities, near- Probabilities and wild guesses. A decade or two ago science was dogmatic and positive. It set up cer- tain “natural laws” and they were like the laws of the Medes and the Persians, Certain things were thus and so and no one need argue about it. To appreciate how the picture has changed you need only consider a speech made in New York the other evening by Dr. Irving Langmuir, the 1932 Nobel Prize winner in chemis- try. During the last 20 years, he said, selence has come to believe that “no natural law has absolute validity” and that “in no absolute sense can anything ever be predicted accurate- ly.” The law of cause and effect is no longer with us, and nothing in the universe is securely hitched. “Some things may be more prob- able than others,” he added, “but you. can’t say that anything is absolutely true.” It would be hard to overestimate the importance of this changed at- titude, for it carries with it one of the profoundest revolutions that the human mind has ever been com- pelled to pass through. We are not through with that revolution yet; in- deed, we have hardly passed its first phase; and before we complete it some of our concepts of man and nature and life and the universe are likely to be altered almost beyond recognition. 5.00/ the time of the armistice he was say- . eevecessseee 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 seeeees sescessseesesceess 250 50 ed Germany could and would pay the youth, Lloyd George Changes It is interesting to notice that Da- vid Lloyd George, England’s war- time prime minister, recently made a speech in London demanding fair play for Germany and denouncing the treatment given Germany under the treaty of Versailles. The interesting part, of course, is that Lloyd George is one of the men who made the Versailles treaty. At ing bitter things about Germany as the most rabid fire-eater could ask. He won England’s famous “khaki election” on a platform which insist- whole cost of the war. Evidently Lloyd George's attitude toward the defeated foe has under- gone a striking change in the years since the war. From being a fire- eater he has become a pleader for moderation and fair play. The change 4s both instructive and encouraging. The ‘Red Menace’ Fades Out The Daily Worker, official organ of the Communist party in America, admits plaintively in a recent issue that the Communist party has failed to become the revolutionary spokes- man for the American proletariat, The paper complains that “we are Still isolated from the main masses of the American industrial workers,” and regretfully states that “we still have no firm contacts with these sec- tions of the workers, and we are not, keeping pace with the general revo- lutionary advance.” All of this simply confirms what @ lot of independent observers have said before: that there is not, under Present Conditions, the slightest dan- ger of Communism becoming a men- ace in the United States. American workers have been sorely tried in the and they form a not inconsiderable part of the romantic background against which many of us spent our THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 24, 1938 i? ~~ AA The Terrible Plight of the Railroad Executives YOU CAN CUT YouR OWN SALARISS? q original Oysterman Billy, whose place Jast few years, and they are demand- ing a new deal; but they are still a long way from fitting Moscow's spe- cial brand of spectacles on their eyes. Fair Pay and Fair Hours General Johnson's terse statement disapproving of the new code for minimum hours and wages submitted by heads of the lumber manufactur- ing industry is one with which most Americans will agree emphatically. This code provided for a 48-hour week and a minimum pay scale of 22% cents an hour; and General Johnson immediately rejected it with. the remark: “Forty-eight hours is so long I wouldn't even consider it, and gen- erally spaking 22% cents is far be- low what I regard as a minimum wage.” A great deal is expected from these new industrial codes. Properly han- dled, they can form a pretty effective bulwark against « return of hard times. But it seems self-evident that if they are going to fill that function they have got to offer substantially Nor is there anything in all of this to depress the speculative soul who likes to feel that there are values which material standards cannot assess and realities which human eyes cannot see. Indeed, the exact opposite is true. It is the ultra-ma- terialist who is confounded by this change. How are you going to be dogmatic about the absolute domin- jon of material things when you can- not have one single certainty about them? In its long climb up from darkness mankind has passed a great rise, and has a marvelous chance for adven- turous exploration. ————— A Herald of Better Times An editorial in “The Rail,” a magazine published by the Chesa- Peake & Ohio and Pere Marquette railway companies, points out that however much anti-inflationists may discount the current upward trend of prices, there remains the very solid fact that freight car loadings are steadily increasing. “Generally speaking,” remarks this magazine, “when a freight car is loaded it means that someone has been put to work to make an article that someone else has purchased, and| P. the article has been shipped. All down the line it means that the wheels of industry are turning with increasing tempo.” True enough. There are few bet- ter signs on the horizon today than those displayed in the car loading figures. If the railroads are getting busier, all of us are going to be busier along with them, Se A Famous Novelist Passes Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, better known to thousands of Americans as Plain Anthony Hope, certainly won't be remembered as one of England’s Great novelists. But the news of his recent death was assuredly unwel- come to @ very large number of peo- ple, and the work that he did brought, entertainment and excitement to an enormous circle of readers. Anthony Hope, in case you have forgotten, wrote “The Prisoner of Zenda.” He was the writer who dis- covered that an especial kind of ro- mance, decked out with tinsel and invested with an enchaiting aura of never-was, could be thrown over those small kingdoms and principali- ties of central and eastern Europe. In a day when men were finding it hard to take the pretensions of dying monarchy seriously, he transplanted the whole business to a make-believe land and revived its glamour. ‘His books were never profound or Weighty—but they were good reading, more than this proposed lumber code. sive, did employment improve in General Johnson was entirely justi- fied in rejecting it. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they ggree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, Jobs and Payrolls (New York Times) things stand out as especially significant in the government report on employment and payrolls in man- ufacturing industries last month. stands now facing limitless horizons, | One is the striking reversal of a usual It has lost its old landmarks—but it| Seasonal trend. Only twice during the decade from 1923 to 1932, inclu- June as compared with May, and in both cases the gain was merely nomi- nal. Payrolls increased only once during this same period, and this gain also was the fractional margin of 0.1 per cent, But in June of this year employment advanced by 7.0 per cent and payrolls by 10.8. It would appear that the return of men to work has been accompanied in nu- merous cases by an increase of wages. The other noteworthy feature of the government's report is the evi- dence that improvement has been made on an exceedingly wide front. The sharp increase of output report- ed recently in steel, textiles and a tomobiles clearly forecast larger em- Ployment in industries making these roducts. Special influences have been operative in other cases. No very extended research is needed, for example, to explain why jobs in the “beverage” industry increased by nearly 20 per cent in June and now stand more than 60 per cent above the number for 1926, the year taken by the department of labor as its normal. But it is not only in a few favorably situated industries that im- provement has been made. In all but |’ 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 Sariten, brief and writen self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. SKIM MILK IS FINE FOOD FOR REAL FOLKS When you and I were young, Mag- gie, denizens of the town called mem- bers of the next higher caste hayseeds, hicks or rubes. Even now, in spite of good roads, telephone, radio, automo- bile, bicycle and talkies, a stigma clings to the name of farmer in the Popular mind, and this has something to do with the desire of many young country people to move to town and exchange relative freedom for a men- ial existence in industrial slavery. A college professor appraised the value of this column in popular health education. He submitted a number of articles selected at random to individ- uals of various classes and then ex- amined them to determine what they had understood of the teachings in the articles. He found that some of the articles were “over the head” of these readers. The professor’s analy- sis may have been correct for denizens of the town. They are so desperately busy trying to battle the great indus- trial machine that they have neither the time nor the inclination to learn more than they already know. My own impression gained from thous- ands of letters from city and country readers is that the professor's assay may be correct for city people but is not so for country people. The rural I. Q. is a bit higher than the urban. This is due to natural selection—the goofs move to town and die off after a vain struggle; those of better judg- ment remain in the country and live. At that, country people seem extra- ordinarily dumb in regard to two im- portant food products they grow. It seems to me country folks are slower to comprehend the great value of wheat, just as it comes from the threshing machine, as a food, and they are also strangely unaware of the aes economic value of skim milk. Of course city hicks are just as foolish about these foods, but it is not so strange that people in town are uninformed about wheat and ‘skim milk, tor neither product is readily obtainable in the city markets. The food manufacturing interests see to that; likewise they appropriate por- tion of their profits to the business of keeping the public prejudiced and uninformed about the real food value of plain ordinary farm wheat and plain ordinary skim milk. To be sure, either wheat or skim milk is good enough to feed pigs with. Yes, and pigs are good enough for People to eat. Most of the meat con- sumed in America is pig meat. Skim milk—goodness, a lot of peo- ple who have snobbish notions about these things, don’t even know what skim milk is. Skim milk is whole fresh milk from which most of the cream has been skimmed off. It con- tains everything the fresh whole milk contains except only the greater part of the fat. Here, let's compare skim milk and whole fresh sweet milk point for point. labaa Whole milk 87 % 33% 5 % 4 % 325 forvaed mover aa MOUS, Tel ait milk 805% S4% B1% 08% 170 to include Industries eo divre ox | Butter milk 91 % 3 % 48% 05% 165 those manufacturing pottery and Stoves, agricultural machinery and Tubber boots, cash registers and wa- ter wheels. June figures for non-manufactur- ing industries have also been pub- lished by the labor department. They Point in the same direction. In 14 of the 16 industries included here— anthracite mining and telephone and telegraph are the two exceptions—an increase of employment occurred in June. Of particular interest is a gain of 61 per cent in the case of building construction. For this in- dustry has lagged behind most others in the movement toward recovery. ‘The increase of employment reported by the labor department last month finds corroboration in data on new construction compiled by the F. W. Dodge corporation. Contracts in 37 eastern states aggregated $103,000,000 in June, which was 34 per cent above the May figure and only 9 per cent below that for June a year ago. It ds interesting to note that the decline from last year is due entirely to pub- lely financed projects. Privately fi- nanced work showed a gain of 53 per cent above the figure for last year. milk is Se ee ee WhoIs THIS MAN ? z Wuat parr OF A SWORD 1§ THIS? ee of its sugar—the lactose or milk sugar has been fermented into lactic acid. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS The Ills Called Ri Kindly send diet list for one who is 3 Las sufferer from arthritis, (Mrs, Answer—I know of no such list that is worth a hoot. Send a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your ad- dress, for the booklet “The Ills Called Rheumatism.” Swim, Young ’Uns, Swim Is it harmful or dangerous in any way for a girl 19 years old to go swim- ming ... (Mrs.C. F.) If & person goes in bathing too soon. after a meal is he lable to get cramps? @.R. K.) Do you share the belief of those physicians who say that swimming or bathing in very cold water is likely to cause rheumatism? (B. M.) Answer—All bunk. Anybody may go in swimming or bathing whenever he or she wishes to, and the enjoyment 4s quite harmless in all these respects. Of course older folk must consider their blood pressure, hardened arter- jes, damaged hearts, and the like. But young folk should swim while the swimming is good and give the fuss budgets & pat on the back. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Leicester, a tragedy by William Dunlap in 1794, was the first Amert- can tragedy played. It is also called “False Deception.” Harvard originally introduced foot- ball into American colleges. | A Biologist HORIZONTAL 1Given names of man in the picture => ‘Tare? 6 Surname of pictured man, 11 Impetuous, 12 Collection of facts. 14 The populace. 16 Prepared tood {II st. 17 To conduct. \9 Herb of any kind. 20 Custom. 21 His life work was carried on ina ——? 23 Inlet. 24 Currency (abbr.). 25 To devour, 26 Eye. 28 Variant of 40 Like, 42 By. 43 Railroad. 44 Cavity. 45 Witticism. 47 Paid publicity. 48 Verbal. 50 Shoemaker's tool. 53 Le: 55 Ache. 56 To decay. claim, 58 Small tablets. 10 Water wheel. mountain. 30 Frost bite. 32 Cistern, 36 Knife, 38 Sash. 89 Toward. 60To perform, * 61 Penthouses, 63 Ocean. Dupil of pictured man. TL, IZ | YU; AZ| |G 15 Y Yj ce BY PAUL HARRISON | New York, July 24—Meanderings: Aimee Semple McPherson, it’s said, doesn’t intend to remain in Holly- wood, divorce or no divorce, after her return from Europe. She wants to start a tabernacle in New York City. ++. Those grayed and frayed old. ladies who for years have sat in Chinatown and sightseeing busses as “shills,” or decoys, are losing their Pitiful little jobs to pretty girls. The business of the latter is to smile at Broadway passers-by, vamp in cash customers, then arise and leave just before each bus pulls out... . Thea- ter seers predict an epidemic of mystery plays for the autumn. Even Earl Carroll is planning to mix melo- drama and pulchritude in his next revue, which will be called “Mur- der at the Vanities.” Three-point-two is soon to mate- rialize at Columbia university; or trickle, anyway, into the institution's two large restaurants. It's the first big school to authorize the sale of beer right on the campus.... Her name means nothing to the average theater fan, but Mildred Webb is the greatest chorus girl on Broadway, ac- cording to Bobby Connolly, the dance director. Says he never has invented ® routine which she couldn't master in half an hour... The town’s talk- ing about Helen Kane's personal suc- cess in the mediocre and more-than- middling smutty show called “Shady Lady.” Dieting assiduously and los- ing @ few pounds a week, the former Answer to Previous Puzzle 64Most famous 13 Nothing. boop-a-doop girl looks more like Helen Morgan at every performance, ++. There are gay goings-on in The of —— ... University? ; 17 Secured, 18 Self. 21 Tube cover, ita V4 RICE MESIP} 27 Sea casle. CMH) 27 china’ napkin, 29 Blackbird. 31 Carbonated drink, 33 Afoot. 34 To spoil. 35 Eccentric wheel. 37 Hero and ” 1 Flower. 2 Awry. 3 Veteran. 4 Ireland (abbr. 39 Sesame, 41 Sun. 44 Skillet. 5 First king of 46 Point. Israel. 49 Ceremony. 6 Chinese gem. ; 50 Armadillo. 7 Road. “51 Habit. 8 Moisture, 52 Joint, 9 Cupid. 54To relieve, 55 Father. an 56 To observe. 57 Card game. 59 South America, 61 Pound. 62 Therefore. 11 Pictured is a famous —_— 15 He is Prest- dent-emeritus Bouwerle these days and nights, it law and order and the underworld being the fabulously swank mansion|army, heavily armed.—U. 8. Attorney Joriginally built by the Watnwrights| General Cummings, on racketeers. near Rye, N. Y., but now turned in- se % to a beach resort—the Maytair Beach} Love is not an end in itself; it is club, People there will remind you|an it and a means toward a that the Dowager Mrs. Wainwright|number of ends—Ludwig Lewisohn, was the great-great-granddaughter | novelist. of Peter Stuyvesant, first mayor of; = New York... rm meas ataee Dike Eugene O'Neill likes to go to prize-| power, we 3 wages fights aod races, but would rather|to the moving trend of prices and read a play than see it on the stage, | costs, else we shall be no more effec- before the public found me out.—Olga, Petrova. +. Samuel Seabury, the reforma-|tive than tive investigator, collects rare first |ing editions, but also likes to read the funny papers.... John Barrymore has all of his clothes made in Lon- don, but he usually needs a shave... . Oe # Al Smith’s Dish Food fads of famous folks, as re- ported by Billy the Oysterman: Al Smith usually orders corned beef and cabbage when he goes to the famous to catch a train mov- out of station by aiming for the back platform was when the train was standing still—Gen. fh ls Johnson, recovery adminis- ator. old restaurant. And Mrs. Smith just| °¢ as frequently calls for fried frogs’ Jegs.... Rod LaRoque and Vilme Banky nearly always divide a big hamburger steak (without onions) +.» Ruby Keeler, whose parents both were Irish, demands Irish ‘stew or, failing that, any kind of stew at all. Gene Tunne; on favorite dish is grilled pigs’ feet. . And delicate- looking little Lilli Gish seldom fails to vanquish a two-inch-thick slab of steak. Billy, by the way, is the son of the was popular in the eighties, and against whose bar lolled such figures as Diamond Jim Brady, Jim Fiske, Jim Corbett, Jay Gould. A lesser- known but more loquacious customer was a William Fox, who had @ cloth- processing plant nearby. He'd come in and for hours would tell of all the money he expected to make in the moving picture business some day— if he could get some capital. Other Patrons snorted into their beer as they tried to imagine anybody crazy enough to invest in such an idea, Fox got the capital, though. A fire destroyed his business, and he put the insurance money into nickeloden equipment. Billy, reflecting sadly on the madness of tossing away good cash like that, carted his friend’s first machine over to Brooklyn. “Bill,” he said, “after you go broke, come back and see me. I'll give you a good steady job.” The Eighteenth Amendment has not accomplished anything that was Predicted for it when it was adopted. —Ex-Senator John K. Shields, Ten- nessee, eae * I never was a good actress; I quit * ee The common people for the beautiful; they have a powerful hideous. —1 ‘The criminals of the old days were, almost without exception, matured men. Today, our police line-up shows @ parade of youths ranging in age from 17 to 21, versatile in crime.—Po- lice Commissioner Bolan, of New York City. OO | Barbs | @ i Judging by those prohibition repeal victories in Alabama and Arkansas, the “Solid South” is no longer solid —but liquid. % * * What the average man needs is a necktie of a color that will match the color of the gravy his wife prepares. + me Boston dispatch reveals $12,000 fund endowed to provide flannel un- dents has been untouched for years. Probably young preachers figure they will have enough scratching to do in life, as it is, ee % Unmarried men in Italy pay a tax of $65 a year for the privil- ege of remaining bachelors. Many husbands will agree that it’s worth it. * e New York has called a special ses- sion of the legislature to grant cities the right to levy new forms of taxes. Can it be possible that any have been overlooked? (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service. Inc.) The Eskimos of Smith Sound, Greenland, are the most northerly People in the world. The first mail on the American con- tinent started from New York to Bos- ton, January 1, 1673. Tt is almost like a military engage- derwear for Andover theological stu-; The electron is the fastest thing ment—this war between the forces of known to date. ™ CHAPTER LIII. Copyright, , 1930, R. MATHEWS turned to Margaret. “It’s time,” he said, “that Travers decided things for himself. You can’t hinder him; you must not. If this contemplated marri: s is not to your liking, Margaret, it is up to you to make the best of it. You've never failed Travers. Don’t fail him now. And—” “But it has been so long,” she wailed. ‘He doesn’t know her, nor she him! And they do not love each other!” It had been said. paled, set his square jaw more firmly, said simply, “I loved her once—” But he didn’t love her now. He aever would, He was in love with her as she once had been, but more in love with M Lou’s artistic conception of poise Har- ford. He knew as clearly as he had ever known anything, that De- light had never existed, save in his imagination, apart from Mary Lou’s playing of her role. And with that play-acting he was Seen ly in love—still: even though he knew it for what it was, drama, comedy, even farce. As for the irl herself—this suddenly un- nown girl with the little name, strange to him—how much of her was genuine, how much that in- Fy ied acting? He remembered all sorts of things now: situations from which she had cleverly ex- tricated herself, evasions. He'd have to find her. Have it out with her. Thank her, perhaps, fot all she'd done. But this was lossing over of ‘his real motive. le’d have to find her, see her as she was, look into the eyes which had seemed so honest, so much his own, and try to discover there how much of her was real. ] An Obligation. | But as far as the woman up- was concerned—a woman equally unknown—he was com- raltted, body and soul. If she’d have him, he was hers—with res- ervations. His name would be hers and his po: ions and his loy- alty. He wondered how much of tet praia Rye be technical. jut he owe: er. . rte eh talking to Mar- garet 0! U. “Where a she gone?” he was asking. ‘She mustn’t be allowed to go like, this—vanish like a ‘That's Lae Lak was, thought r, a oJ ere Margare me said, “she has gone to Oakdale. I will try to get touch with her. I'll tele- hone. No she mustn't be allowed B go like this. ae “You are angry with her,’ stated rather than asked the doc. tor. “Yes. No. I was. Terribly. She'd prom: me'— silence. And she didn’t keep that promise. But I see a little more clearly now. She did what she thought was right. It wasn’t her fault if her plan went astray. Ayd I suppose she had to follow her star if what she thought right conflicted with her loyalty to p me. “Ther: virtue in that,” re- marked Matthews, “for she cares for yor believe, very deeply. Only a really courageous person wrould be willing to rik the anger AKE-BELIEVE” by Faith Baldwin Lorrimer|2, long time lookin, , [of the things, lo and misunderstanding of some one | G: she cares for in order to preserve her moral integrity.” He wanted to add “‘and not only risk the an- ger of a beloved, but her entire happiness as well.” it hadn’t even been just a risk with Mary Lou, but a certainty. Yes. She had courage. And Lo! rimer, too. For Lorrimer also however mistakenly it appeared to e older, wiser man, was follow- ing his own star. |___ Gifts of Love. | Margaret went upstairs and into Mary Lou's room and sat there for at evidences ooking at the of her departure. 4y FAITH BALDWIN Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. FREIGHT LOADINGS RISE Washington, July 24—(?)—The American Railway . association an- nounced Saturday that loadings of revenue freight for the week ended July 15 were 648,206, an increase of 108,983 over the preceding week and 144,445 above the corresponding week in 1932, CLERK-POET ‘Walt Whitman served as a oT Tes the Treasury Department from to 1878, after having been dismimed from the Interior Department on ac- count of his “Leaves of Grass.” men GRADS MARKER © A girl has to have a good line. to make a substantial catch. to startle the old lady, merely telling her name and ask- ing if Mary Lou were there. Upon Gram's immediate and excited de- nial— “Was she coming out?” Gram Semaneed a ap gape erty onl iat Mary uu had gone to ae and as she hadn’t known her plans and wanted to with her, she had tried Oakdale first. She remembered, very care- fully, to ask for Adelaide and Billy —for she them through description. get in touch had grown to know lary Lou’s vivid She replaced the telephone and went downstairs. Matthews had been talking to er. clothes hung in the closet, each in| Lorrim “1 don’t hate her,” Lorrimer ae out. “I wish to heaven its fragrant enclosure ef chintz; at the shoes in their Saipan laces and the bureau, covered with her small belo: the things Mi t had 5 er. nus le gorgeous fur coat was in pac. a recalled telling Mary yu it was time to send it to stor- age; the sable scarf was there; and on the bureau the watch Margaret had given her. On Mar- garet’s own finger, put there in abstraction and forgotten, was Lorrimer’s sapphier ring, blue and clear and deep as Mary Lou’s own eyes. rou'd come to hate her, when you She'd taken ged but a ar fe dicarded. |] she'd brought with her originally, the on her back, a hat anc ht coat, her toilet articles, her ni , slippers and the - est of her n es. Her ks were there. ly, of her more personal belongings i of her people, ke Ge were Ralegad bel "i et everyt ere belonged to her; had been given her, eng of love, out of disinterested affection, no longer as part of her “salary” but as her due as a virtual dangh- ter of the hous a picked up the tele- hone book and, in Mary Lou's sit- room, she called Oakdale. “It’s quixotic. however. If I damned fool.” me, she needs someone, I aa aeaae once; I’ll not go back on out, too, 1 I'd rather said Lorrimer ore ee situation false. ly, “I'd better not.’ {To Be Continued Tomorgow.) “You're set on this?” he asked. “Yes.” . I understand, didn’t I’d call you s “Perhaps I am. But—she needs ve her Mathews said, thoughfully: ‘T know. Mary, Lou figured that not talk about her,” briefly, “That, too? She told me that ew,” said the doctor, casually. Honesty Personified. | “I don’t hate her,” Lorrimer burst out. “I wish to heaven I did. But she—Oh, it’s, all so mixeq— how much was real?” he ed, “how much was false?” demand- “The girl was real,” said Math- Don’t it didn't give her sleepless nights, the most honest person I’ve ever had the luck to meet! thought, every word she said honest. She was honest even in the per se played. Try and believe Every was “Perhaps,” a Lorrimer slow- 101 wuwee PS eee ae Se ee aeke nad’

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