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ne THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1933 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper \§ THE STATES OLDEST rd NEWSPAPER Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck &s 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- marek) outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ... ++ 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three Dakota, per year oossss 100 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 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. Bank Currency Tt is easy to agree with many a fallacious argument if one accepts the premises upon which it is based. Take, for example, the banking situation in this country. A committee of experts, urging the government to speed the reopening of closed banks, points out that bank deposits constitute the nation’s most important medium of exchange; that to unfreeze millions in deposits is to give business a much needed boost. This is unquestionably true, yet the fact cannot be ignored that the gov- ernment has placed a tax upon use of this “bank currency” by making a levy of two cents a check. Banks, throughout the nation as well as in Bismarck, have added to .20|ington to urge enactment of a new 00 trip emphasizes the fact that the bill 00 | free but keeps them in leading strings sions. But it should go far enough to correct the manifest abuses which recently have existed, on the part of both big and little speculators. If it fails to do so the’ government should not hesitate to take drastic action. The agricultural prosperity of this country is too important to be made the tool of gamblers, Freeing the Filipinos Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, famous Filipino insurrectionist leader of a generation ago, is en route to Wash- Philippine independence bill. His passed by the last congress seems to be satisfactory to nobody and needs a good deal of revision. ‘The independence that that law grants is neither flesh, fowl nor good red herring. It sets the ‘Filipinos that makes their freedom a sham. It threatens to cripple their commerce, and it keeps the United States en- tangled in Far Eastern affairs. There is little in it to commend it either to Filipino or American. If we are going to set the islanders free—and, incidentally, we promised to do so more than 30 years ago—we might as well make a clean job of it. Exploiting Children Perhaps the most appalling news of recent weeks came from Pennsyl- vania, where dispatches say several hundred boy and girl workers have walked out of shirt and pajama fac- tories in an effort to end sweatshop conditions. A large percentage of these workers, it is stated, are under 16; some of them have been earning as little as 30 cents a week. One girl of 15, the only member of @ family of seven to have a job, has been working for 85 cents a week. Last winter, according to investiga- tors for the Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Labor, child workers who complained that the shops were cold were told to “work faster and get warm.” Outline of Our Foreign Policy PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE IN contrivance, with the shaker taking the place of a punching bag on one of those upright spring stands. You hit until everything is well mixed. There are @ couple of bars—one in the base- ment of the main house and one out on the golf course—to satisfy those transient drinkers who always want to keep from one place to another. The basement of the house is espe- clally reinforced for stag parties, There is a billiard room, and a little theater where clips from ancient melodramas are shown. A piano bears the carved initals of all the guests who have ever been there, and also attached to it are a couple of large carriage lamps which Mr. Cook once personally removed from a hack in Montreal. In this same basement is the fa- mous collection of “objects no larger than a man’s hand.” Thousands of them, literally, and many suspended from the ceiling. It’s very seldom that anybody can name anything no larger than a man’s hand that Mr. Cook hasn’t got, and if such a thing is mentioned he speedily gets it. Among the prized objects is a faucet from the tub in which Joyce Hawley took her much-publicized wine bath, and, in an ornate little case, the “only baseball in existence not autograph- ed by Babe Ruth.” a a) IT’S A ‘HARD’ GREEN ‘The Sleepless Hollow golf course is something to write home about. The tee for the hole is on top of a forty- foot water tower, and the green for the same hole is on a tiny island in a pool. Another green is very tricky because, although it’s painted to look like grass. it turns out to be solid con- crete. The shortest hole is a very easy drive onto the green, which is saucer-shaped. The ball inevitably rolls right into the cup, from there down a pipe and into a desk. Going to recover the ball, one finds it in a drawer with an attested Hole-in-One certificate. ‘These and other things, such as a telephone that spouts water when the receiver is lifted, are products of the genius of Mr. Cook and his No. 1 stooge, Dave Chasen: Of late, how- ever, they have spent all their time figuring out a contraption for their new show, “Hunky Dory.” It will in- volve a marvelous sequence of violent events, culminating in a load of ashes being dropped on Mr. Chasen, who it a clip and it jiggles back and forth | ' Aiding Recovery | Act Campaign Kinks in national recovery act Plans crowd the portfolio: of Frank Walker, shown here at his desk as executive secretary to the president's advisory council. Walker, national Democratic treasurer, is men tioned as possible successor ‘to Treasury Secretary Woodin it: the latter should: resign, the signs she fears most. Vanity is beauty’s worst enemy.—Prof. a perfect back, Yes, and usually &@ perfect come-back. se % | Engineers have developed air-con- Gitioning to the point where it now cools thousands of homes and busi- ness places. However, it probably is too much to expect that science can ever eliminate hot air from political speeches, (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) ONE WAY TO WIN Mack Garner, famous jockey who accepted his first mount in 1914, has won more than $2,260,000 in stakes and purses with the horses he has ridden. STANFORD VS. N. U. Northwestern is scheduled to play Stanford University's football team in Chicago, Oct. 14. It is the second Pacific coast team the Wildcats have ever played. There are about 25,000 miles of navigable rivers in the United States. 1935-Discover less driver who admits that he is ie ia eee aA lS ee eg es ~ we saUvUOnesaYS erick P, Woellner, University of Cali- By William Brady, M. D. this tax for the small depositor by making a service charge for handling his account. In the case of a person writing 10 checks a month it is five cents per check if his balance is small. : ‘These charges unquestionably are justified, In the first case the gov- ernment needs the money and the man with a bank account is in fair position to pay. In the second the banks cannot reasonably be expected to perform services at a loss, and they have been doing that for years on many small accounts. Many per- sons have been making the banks do their bookkeeping and paying them little or nothing for it since their balances—when not overdrawn— have been small. Nevertheless, this situation raises a question as to the efficiency of “bank currency” as a medium of ex- change. The housewife, mailing a check for a small household bill, must add at least two cents (the gov- ernment tax), probably seven, for exercising this privilege. One result is the decreased use of bank currency. The housewife may find it advantageous to pay the butcher, the baker, telephone, light, In Russia, when the head of a fac- tory is found guilty of anti-social practices, he is sometimes led out and shot. Once in a while one could al- most wish that we had such a law in this country. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. with The Tribune's policies Games of Sport and the Game of Business (Railway Age) Business in the United States is now emerging from one of the great- est crises in its history, and at the same time entering another, but dif- ferent kind of crisis.” The crisis it is entering will be caused by policies of the federal government which are intended ostensibly to promote econ- omic recovery, but are intended also to establish a ‘planned economy’ which will prevent such excesses and abuses in business as are believed by those formulating and administering the government's economic policies to have caused the present depression. One of the methods being used to correct the faults of the capitalistic system which are deemed to have gas and other household bills in cash rather than by check. No one ob- jects to this, but it cannot be denied that it reduces the volume of bank currency in use, There is no questioning the im- portance of getting our defunct banks cleaned up, elther by ascertaining the losses and closing them entirely, or by putting them on a sound basis, but the handicaps which have been imposed on their operations both by the government and their own neces- sity should not be ignored. One Lesson Not Enough A good many persons hoped that the lesson of 1928 would serve the nation in good stead when boom times came around again but the recent whoopee in the grain marke? proves that its effect was short-lived. The government now has the grain exchanges “on the pan” and rightly, yet the average citizen should be careful before he lays the blame on them. They can control the situa- tion and should do so, yet they are not really responsible for it. ‘The man who caused the price of grain to skyrocket and then to fall precipitously was the little speculator as well as the big one. Scores of men in our own district gambled in that fledgling boom market. Many now are wondering at their own psy- chology in taking such risks after previous experiences. Their dealings, added to those of the professional speculators, caused more grain to be bought and sold on the Chicago mar- ket alone in @ period of two days than will be raised in this country in two years. With that situation, is it any won- der that prices did queer flip-flops, cut queer didoes. The whole thing depended on psychology and not on 1@1 value and this contributed’ to the completeness of the collapse. What can be done about it is un- certain but there is a remedy. If nothing else presents itself the gov- ernment can bar all grain specula- tors, big and little, from the mar- ket. It can do this by issuing licenses to deal in futures, by control of mar- gins and by other means, The effect would be to deaden the futures market as we have known it. Only those who make legitimate use of it—and there are legitimate uses —would be seen in the grain pits. Gambling would be barred. The grain trade will not go that far of its own volition. To do s0 would mean the loss of thousands, caused the recent great catastrophe is that of, in effect, requiring all ma- Jor industries to adopt codes to elim- self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink. No reply can be made to qu Address Dr. William Brady, THE NUTRITION OF NERVOUS WRECKS ‘This is the thirteenth in a series of quarrels with our neurotic readers. The gist of the whole subject is given in the booklet “Chronic Nervous Im- position,” which, if you are impatient, you can get at once by sending a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address and asking for No. 17 of the Little Lessons in the Ways of Health. Neurathenic individuals are not suf- fering from weak or exhausted nerves. Their nerves are no weaker and no more exhausted than their stomachs or their feet are. Most neurotics are poorly nourished, either underweight or flabby fat, anemic, physically feeble, of poor en- durance. All that may seem what you would expect from bad nerves. But that is no explanation to anyone who knows anything of physiology. Neurasthenics or neurotics are poorly nourished because they're afraid. What they’re afraid of is the big secret. Some neurotics—the crooks— will not tell. Others, the dumb ones, don’t know—the origin of the fear is hidden in the subconsciousness and it requires a skilled doctor to probe for it and bring it to the surface. Besides inate unfair competition. There is actually only one measure of the fair- ness of any act or practice in business, and that is the public interest. ‘When we compare the ways in which games of sport and the game of business are played, we perceive at once a very great contrast. Every competitive sport, from tiddle-dy- winks to pugilism, is regulated by rules the purpose of which is to make suc- cess dependent entirely upon the skill and fairness of the players, and any disregard of these rules causes a man to be disqualified as a player and os- tracised as an undesirable member of society. The game of business is the greatest of all games, and every right thinking man has views as to the rules according to which it should be Played; but getting money has been allowed to become so paramount a consideration that men who get a large amount of it usually are credited with ability and ‘success’ in playing the game of business, although they may have got the money by violating every principle of honor and decency. If the government's policy of requiring the various industries to adopt and adhere to codes of fair competition should result in causing all business to be conducted in accordance with the crooks and the dumb nervous im- postors, remember there are a good many victims of this and that organic or functional disease who elect to fiddle-faddle along, without benefit of a diagnosis, ascribing their ill health to “nerves” and indulging in much foolishness in the futile effort to build up their “nerves.” ‘With the fluoroscope it is possible to observe the journey of a meal thru the alimentary canal. Normally~ a meal remains for an hour or two in the stomach. In a neurotic individual or in a student worrying over an ex- amination, the meal may remain five or six hours in the stomach. Obviously fear, worry, anxiety, interferes with digestion. That’s why neurotic individuals are Poorly nourished. The canker of fear notonly impairs appetite but prevents normal digestion. Thanks to poor education many ignorant neurotics ply themselves with various medicines or foods which pur- port to tone, build up or strengthen “exhausted” nerves. Some years ago @ number of ignorant college profes- sors were induced by the almighty $ to sign testimonials for some such nostrum, and for a time a large por- rules that would give opportunity in business in proportion to ‘Ability and honor, it would confer the greatest possible boon upon most business men as well as upon the general public. If the government is entirely sin- cere in its determination to eliminate unfair competition, which we do not question, it must be plain to its offi- ¢clals who are charged with carrying out its industrial recovery program that it has no more obvious duty than that of equalizing the conditions of competition between the railways, on the one hand, and of other means of transportation, on the other hand, as much as they can be equalized by the application to them of comparable government policies. ‘We are embarked upon an experi- ment in economics unprecedented in all history in both its methods and its magnitude. As the government has ample power to make’ the experi- ment and is going to make it whether business men like it or not, the only reasonable thing for business men to do in the early future is to give the government officials in charge of it their full co-operation by helping them t@ carry out those policies that business men believe to be sound, or reaulred by ad regardless of their soundness, and by opposing those pol- icles they believe to be unsound Lr not required by law. What the final effects will be upon the capitalistic system in the United States no one is wise enough to foresee. It may be im- Proved, or it may be destroyed, but that the methods used in the conduct of production, transportation, com- merce and finance, and the distribu- tion of the income derived from them, will long be greatly changed now seems highly probable. Perhaps millions, in brokers commis- Scotland has been losing popula- tion of the moron population: con- sumed prodigious quantities of cottage cheese which came in a beautiful Package at an impressive price. The truth is that neither medicine nor food has any specific invigorating influence upon brain nor nervous tis- sues. Sensible folk do not select med- icines or foods for such a silly pur- pose. It is a mistake to think the “nervous” invalid or valetudinarian is weak because he doesn't assimilate his food. He doesn’t assimilate his food normally because he is afraid of something. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Once you published a recipe for a lotion for red nose. I used it and it worked fine. Now I notice my nose is “Pamiel CARTER ? LTD. FOR WHAT DOES WHAT NATION DISSOLVED ITS UNION WITH ANOTHER WITH- OUT MILITARY “| ACTION ? tion for the past 12 years. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written eries not conforming to instructions. i in care of this newspaper. beginning to look very red again. It can’t be this 4 per cent beer, can it? I take only an occasional glass of it. (. W. A)» Answer— H Potassium sulphurated . Zine sulphate Rose water . pply at night, after a hot face bath. Let dry on nose and wash off next morning. Sand Pile Sanitation *Is a sand pile on the ground in the rear yard, partly shaded by trees, a healthful provision for children to Play in? (H. K.) : Answer—Yes. The sunlight and air will keep it sanitary. The Best Skin Food Please tell me what you consider the best skin food one can use. My com- Plexion seems to lack sparkle, or may- be it is just because I am somewhat sallow... (G. R.) Answer—I think Iac bovis is the best thing of the kind. You should take a quart a day, and give your skin Plenty of ultraviolet to help it assimil- ate the food. The common name for lac bovis is cow's milk. Resuscitation Please give the instructions for the correct - method of resuscitating a drowned person. (Mrs. C. K. C.) Answer—Send a dime and a stamp- ed envelope bearing your address, for booklet on Resuscitation. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Australian fruit bats often reach @ length of 12 inches and have a wing spread of two feet. Skunks are immune to the stings of yellow jackets and bumblebees. Famous HORIZONTAL land 6 Name of lady in picture. 14 Packer. (6 Suture, 47 Ocean. {9 Prongs. 21 Stared. 23 Pair. (abbr.). 24Sun god. £6 Tunicated. 27 Fern root. 29 Long live, $2 Age. 34 Goddess of peace. 36 Provided. 38 Kimono s: 40.90, 42 Brother of lady in pic- ture, famed for character acting. “68 One who 44 Antelope, wi 45 Lava. 70 She 46To warble. our leading 47To secu! 52 Sorrowful. 54 Imitation pearl. 57 Southeast. 58 Like. 60 Brother of pictured lady, famous star, 62 Idiot. 64 By way of. eee 6 ° @ NEW YORK By PAUL HARRISON New York, July 25.—Joe Cook, as nearly everybody knows, is a delight+ ful idiot on the stage, and is remem- bered chiefly for the ponderous and intricate contraptions he devises to dram accomplish things of very little im- Portance. Thus, in “Fine and Dandy” Mr. Cook was leading an orchestra, and well in advance of a necessary cymbal clash he tapped a slumbering archer. The latter shot an arrow at an ape in @ cocoanut tree; the ape dropped a cocanut on a pensive huntsman, who discharged his rifle, which frightened a big Negro off a teeter board, allowing a little Negro to land heavily on the foot of a gouty old gentleman who took a swipe with his cane—and so on and on, through & dozen operations until somebody thwacked the drummer, who awoke and gave a mighty crash of cmybals at precisely the right moment. However, only. those people fortu- nate enough to be invited to Mr. Cook's estate at Lake Hopatcong, N. J., Answer to Previous. Puzzle 66 Legal claim. 10Giant. }11 Bone. £12 Corded cloth. . one of 13 To merit. 18She was! realize that this great gadgeteer is quite as mad off the stage as on it. He doesn’t go into very many shows, and thus has plenty of time to think up new tricks for his farm, which he Boer eneeey calls “Sleepless Hol- low.” At the door you are met by @ butler who ceremoniously takes your things and then walks over and throws them out of a window. Pretty soon this same austere butler comes in with cocktails. He will take one and say, “Here's mud in your eye, you old So-an-so,” and toss it off. ee FOR THRISTY GUESTS ‘The cocktail shaker itself is a clever Trouper with Henry ——? 20 Stree! 22 Female deer. 25 Ventilating. 28 Satiric, 30 Places where trials are held. 31 Sesame. 33 White poplars 35 Greek letter. 37 Suitable. 39 Spiteful. 41 To bark. 43 Speakers. 48 Cone-shaped cap. 49To acknowl- edge. 51 Molten rock. 53Gitt of charity. 54 Units. 551 a BEA 59 Thus. 61 Pronoun. 63 Mesh of lace. 65 Preposition. 67 Northeast. 69 Second note. VERTICAL 2 Translated (abbr.). 3 Very warm, 4Common to both sexes, 5 Cotton fabric. 7 Like. (SLong grass, 9 Beam. 15 To peruse, leading lady A aX S \i@ i | will wake up and start tinkling a tri- angle. Marry in haste—and you repent with alimony.—Dr. Leonard 8. Cot- trelf, Jr., University of Chicago sociol- ogist. See It is to those whom we call fanatics that we owe practically every step that has been made in our slow jour- ney toward a better world.—Dr. J. L. Biggar, Canadian Red Cross Society eee Mob rule has never been satisfac- tory for a jury of 12 men or 120,- 000,000.—Dr. George Barton Cutten, president of Colgate. * * A woman who sits before a mirror making faces at herself soon discovers fornia, se * The major problem is to get people back to work. If we can do that, we can get out of the hole we are in. Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, industrial re- covery administrator. + o i I Barbs { ——— se l'“* Though nobody was shot when Gov- ernor Murray called out state troops to delay the sale of beer in Oklahoma, it is probable that there were many who were half-shot soon after the ban was lifted. * * % Having been assured that edu- cation pays, the average college graduate is now trying to find out where and when. ee * Seems that one of the reasons the London Economic Conference fritter- ed out is because Europe found it couldn’t stack the cards in Roosevelt's “New Deal.” * oe Bathing beach visitors have ob- served that the modern girl has ‘MAKE = Copyright, 1930, CHAPTER LIV. M won ist came into the room just then. Both men turned and looked at her, waiting. “I telephoned Oakdale,” she said, “‘and she’s not there.” Lorrimer rose hastily. “Would Delight see me now?” “I think 80,” his swered. i Jooked in on her just now to see if she was comfortable. Lorrimer, without another word, went upstairs. Margaret sat quite still in a big chair she'd selected, her hands in her lap. She said, urgently: “Dan, he must be stopped. It’s ingest what he’s planning to 0. Mathews said, gently: “We've no right-to interfere. And we reckon without the girl. What makes you think—?” “Oh,” said Margaret, interrupt- ing, her voice a little raised, “as if she wouldn’t! Why, she hasn’t anything, and he has everything! dis, She'll jump at the chance. Dan, you know she will!” | The Proposal. “I’m not so sure. She was will- Ing to go away and let things be stiaighened out, somehow, with- out her.” vaid Margaret biter “Lo-l can't t 7 “T—I can’ understand Mary Lou, fully. Yet in a way, I can. Perhaps it’s best, no matter what ha to have things clear at last. I don’t know.” “P do. oe always beth, he id at her, lon; sramtretier loving her's ae inadequate. and knot himsel Upstai: i sat by Delight and ed to her nervous, quick recital of her adventures—cover- ing the long years. The death of her cousins—the permanent es- trangement with her parents—so Mary Lou and her conspirators had been right, after all, he thought, bitterly amused, in their fictionized tale—her removal from London at the time she heard of his death. “ 1 was frantic, I cried—quarts!” she told him at that point. Her drifting on to the stage, road companies, the col- onies, her engagement for the re- vue which came to America. “You know the rest,” she said. “Yes, I know.” He rose, stood over her, down. She looked pretty, in pastel bed-jacket, the sheer night- own Mrs. Lorrimer had lent her. er hair, heavy and long, was fan- shaped on the pillows, her face see! rounder, younger, less hard. But she did not stir him. He had no least impulse to take her hand, touch-her, kiss her. He sand merely, very grave, very in- Hi serein you marry me, Delight?” looked in the mother an- “She ‘finished lunch. || BELIEVE’ by Faith Baldwin For a girl to reveal her figure, may not always be good form. y FAITH BALDWIN Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Ine. Della lay quite still against the pillows. Her face was quite impassive, save for a very slight dilation of the pupils of her tired, blue eyes. There was a short pause in which she fancied she could hear her heatt beating. Safety, comfort, freedom from anxiety—all within the reach of a hand which for some years had not scrupled to take what was offered. One Little Word. | She said finally: “Sit down, Lorry; I want to talk to you.” rrimer obeyed, taking a low wil excitement, the sudden freedom of war-time—ready, too, to fall head over heels in youn; me. to honesty by some basic craving love with the first er who fell in love with wonder,” she asked, driven ithin herself, “I wonder, Lorry, if it would have lasted?” Lorrimer looked at her in won- der. After a moment he said: at_is what she—Mary Lou =" he hesitated over the name, “asked me.” “When?” “Long ago, when I thought she ‘was—you.” “Almost any clear-sighted person would ask that,” Delight remarked, chintz-covered chair beside the bed. De! oe aren bent room, in which eve spoke to her, mutely, of shelter. < Two courses lay 0] and apparent be- fore her. could speak one short word and life would be made atte. simple fr hee maaierer complications mig] ise she coul handle deftly, she could insist upon a fairly long engagement, and dur- ing that time the obstacles, known ly to her and one other, could be posed of; or she could make to Lorrimer the withheld explanation which she had been on the point of making to Mary Lou. Which? She turned her eyes to the man’s grave face. A attracti ive he had Mature, worthenis Yes, oe much more attractive than that forgotten poy. thought the woman who had plenty of unsought 0] ertanlty. to just her sense of values in the past few years. A man whom it would be quite easy to care for, to whom it would not e hard to remain faithful. Poor Delight! She had always wished to count fidelity among her nat Heemnee but when emotion wore a Grete cee, if me ic, further search for ha} fora fe. ating suse tor’ temoooe for_someont something, Sass paramount rd Portance that awe as a matter of ponte wane follow. Ss light! “Such a Le gesture isn’t necessary, A “It’s not a gesture, Delight,” he id her. “Yes, it is, I think. You don’t know me, nor ju, We are 10, 11 years removed from that Lon- don leave. Good title for a war play, isn’t it, “London Leave’ 2” She laughed a little, but her eyes remained somber. “I was a ay then, Long, a rather badly bfought up kid—1 brat, if you like — resenting the conventions, the dull pettiness of two Rooshearted but entirely com- monplace spinsters, resenting the mess I thought my mother had selfishly made of her life and any own. and, lore, welcoming the to Ne | wot tural | she tried to “given some idea of the circum- stances. Look here. I only saw that girl twice, once very briefly, but I can understand, I think, what. sort of a cl she gave me while she was understudying me. Don’t delude yourself that I’m like that, for, very probably, I’m not. And in'a sense she made me up out of whole cloth, no matter what cues she had from you. She wrote her own part. For the girl you knew in London hadn’t much char- Ree to speak of, either good or ‘After a little silence she went on “When she came to me end pitched me that amazing yarn I thought I must be dreaming. I—I 't have considered Sarnia f BA ‘ weal Bare let yor 4 ut of the entanglement est uu could if she had not told me sone. mother was. Sry much against having me produce: ta speak. ‘That annoyed, me. would annoy anyone. I don’t think, how- ever, I had any epersenlas, designs —” she laughed again—“‘on you ge when I ees permuade Mire’ Lone rie mer to see what she called ‘jus- tice.’ She’s awfully young. [Looking Ahead. | “What an idiot you were, Lorry, not to have seen how young she is! You must have thought I'd found the fountain of youth some- where. Well, I didn’t,” she inter- polated. “But I came out here out of pure curiosity; I hadn’t a thought of crashing the gate. Noa I! I¢ was unfortunate for you, es- pecially, that you are so fond of nature Ri permit those wood paths yours to foots. I couldn’t help turning my idiotic ankle. And that’s that.” “Whether you meant to have us find you or not,” said Lorrimer, “we have found you.” “If I married you, Lorry—mind you, I’m not saying I shall—t would have your mother’s hostility i battle with all the rest of my e. She saw the shadows deepen in his eyes and the sudden firmer set to his unsmiling mouth. To Be Continued or anyone Mary Lou to pedaranusd gstite os