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i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUS! 5, 1933 The Bismarck Tribune An nt Ne Independe: lewspaper 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST ) 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 .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marek) . - 7.20 Daily by mail outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside Dako! seesesccevcseccccseses 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three FEATS .....0seseeeee soe 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .......se.0+ ‘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. Shifting the Idle to Farms ‘The government's effort to place unemployed city workers on farms where they can support themselves and their families constitutes one of the most interesting experiments in the entire recovery program. Inte- rior Secretary Ickes, under presiden- tial order, will have $25,000,000 to spend on the endeavor. The conse- quences may well be more far-reach- ing than the modest beginning indi- cates. ‘What to do with hundreds of thou- sands of workers permanently dis- placed in industry has been one of the most baffling problems of the economic and social reorganization now being attempted. Coal mining furnishes a case in point. Authorities estimate that there are now probably 250,000 idle miners who can never again find work digging coal even under the most favorable circumstances. There is no longer sufficient demand for fuel to warrant their labor, because of the development of water power, the use of oll for fuel, and other fac- tors. This fact is one of the major items in the background of the disturbance now raging in Pennsylvania. One which neither employer nor employe can cure. Obviously, direct relief, which is now such a heavy burden on taxpay- ers, will not permanently solve the problem. It is necessary and desir- able in the present emergency but cannot be adopted as a permanent method of providing food and shelter for large numbers of the population. Direct relief and even “made work,” are makeshifts, and do not perm: nently fit the beneficiaries to sup- port themselves. Difficulties in carrying out the back-to-the-land movement are at once apparent. Urban dwellers lack the experience necessary to make them successful farmers. Moreover, the government is engaged in a gi- gantic effort to reduce agricultural output, and any increase in produc- tivity would defeat this effort. ‘These and other difficulties, how- ever, do not seem insurmountable. The farms on which workers will be placed presumably will be subsist- ence homesteads which would not materially add to the glut of farm products. The migrants would have the friendly cooperation and assist- ance of the government. And small farms adjacent to cities would offer possible part-time industrial employ- ment. The project may be an important factor in the final and permanent solution of the unemployment prob- Jem, which is present even in the best of times. Results of Hitlerism Some of the bitter fruits of the Hitler tree are already ripening. Seventeen members of the board of the Hamburg-American Line have resigned, following a gloomy meet- ing in which were painted the evil results of the company’s coordina- tion with the Nazi regime. The fa- mous German line's business has been constantly falling off, Dr. Max von Schinkel, chairman of the executive board, pointed out, due to the “dis- affeotion of the outside world toward Germany.” The older members of the board. unable to align themselves with the policy of the Nazis, refused to take further responsibility and quit. Von Schinkel, a veteran of German shipping, knows intimately these ef- fects. Without any formal boycott, oceanic shipping, especially passenger service, is particularly responsive to People going abroad for sentiment. a holiday pick their ship and their line largely on sentiment. Prof. Albert Einstein, whose theor- ies almost nobody understands but almost everybody agrees are grand and highly valuable, has been driven from his homeland. The other day he sat in the House of Commons in England and heard a bill introduced extending opportunities for Jews liv- tng in other countries to become citi- 50 | possible because crowded dockets or 00/are able to postpone trials. Every these losses. Only time will tell that, but there is no need to blind them- selves e2sainst the very real and material losses as well as the more intangible ones which are apparent. Swift Justice Best Judges of the criminal courts in Chicago have decided to forego their vacations in order to help the war on crime. They will sit during the summer to clean up crowded dockets on which are listed charges against some of the city’s most notorious gangsters. Judges in other crime-ridden com- munities might well follow the exam- ple of those in Chicago. One of the chief obstacles to enforcing the law is delay in the courts. Convictions frequently are made difficult or im- the maneuverings of defense lawyers day’s delay makes presentation of evidence more difficult for prosecu- tors. Moreover, swift justice is infinitely more effective in deterring crime. A criminal who knows he will be brought quickly to book will hesitate a lot longer than one who knows his possible conviction may be put off and perhaps circumvented. The term “nolle prosse” is familiar to every courthouse reporter; usually it means that the prosecutor has dropped charges against someone because he no longer believes he can get a con- viction. Crime never takes a vacation. There is no reason why justice should. Protecting Home Owners The Home Owners Loan corpora- tion has acted with commendable promptness to nip a “racket” through which it was said unscrupulous per- sons planned to profit at the expense of mortgage-burdened home owners. Prospective borrowers, the board stated, do not need paid agents to negotiate their loans. Preliminary appraisals of property will be made without cost, and if the loan is grant- ed the subsequent appraisal and ex- amination of title will be made at a nominal cost. And the board warned of provisions | It Looks Like a Franco-German Crisis | “THITLER PLAN TO DICTATE SUES IN * * * ‘ Sweeney of Ohio. * Oe world flier. * self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Address Dr. William Brady, in the law under which persons mak- ing unjustifiable and unnecessary charges in connection with loans can be punished by a maximum fine of $10,000 and five years in prison. 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. Checking Up on Prices (Minneapolis Tribune) In a commendable effort to co- operate with the national recovery administration, Mayor Bainbridge has named a committee to investigate unwarranted increases in commodity prices to the consumer. ‘The empolyer who signs a code is expected to raise prices to ab- sorb whatever additional costs the code imposes, but he must raise them no further. The administration is de- termined that there shall be no goug- ing of the consumer, and that the re- employment agreements shall not be used as an excuse for profiteering. To this end the mayor's committee will carry on its investigation, and will presumably report, to the proper authorities, whatever suspicions it may come to entertain. In this way the patriotic impulses of the code-signers are to be subjected to a little unofficial checking up. Sec- retary Wallace's suggestion that local committees be named to keep a weather eye on price increases would seem to indicate that patriotism, which was to determine the success or failure of the administration’s cam- paign, will not be trusted too far. The administration, as a matter of fact, has decided to issue weekly lists of fair prices for the necessities of life, so that any code-signer who feels his patriotism slipping may have them to refer to. ‘These lists may make the work of the mayor’s committee easier, but even so it will be difficult enough. The task of determining what price increases are warranted by the code and what are not is obviously one that cannot be reduced to rigid form- ula. So much depends, in the last analysis, on the special circumstances which condition the individual case. The extra costs which the code im- poses, it is fairly safe to assume, will be the same for no two employers; yet each employer is permitted to ab- sorb them, and in the process of ab- sorption he may hve to revise any number of prices. To say that Grocer Jones is profiteering when he adds two cents to the price of a cake of soap, and Grocer Brown is not when he adds only one is well enough, but much depends, of course, on the in- creased costs of the code to each and how he is distributing them among the hundreds of items on his shelves. ‘The administration has set itself an excellent goal when it seeks to sus- pend all prices at a level of absolute fairness. There is such a thing as ruinous price-cutting, and there is such a thing as price-gouging, and it ’|is between this Scylla and Charybdis that the recovery adminstration is carefully picking its way. We hope, of course, that the mayor’s committee will contribute its small share to the administration's success. Possibly the mere existence of a committee of price vigilantes will have a restraining effect on some who would otherwise attempt to take advantage of the codes and make them an excuse for profiteering. But the notion that a local committee, or the government at Washington, can draw a fine price line between reasonableness and un- reasonableness for a hundred, a thou- sand, or several million industrial and zens of the British Empire. Nobody knows what Germany is losing in the exodus of talented pro- fessional people who are being driven from the fatherland. There must be thousands, unwelcome because they are Jewish, but whose talents and excellent qualities will make them assets to some other land. Of course the Nazi enthusiasts be- ‘towe ether gains wil) maka up for business establishments is one that does not seem to have a great deal to foundation it. The administration, however, is making a sincere and earnest effort to do that very thing, and it will not do to assume, because of the inherent difficulties, that the job can never be accomplished. Over 4500 ships passed through the Panama Canal in 1932 and paid a rev- enue of $20,707,377. Government ves- sels of the United States and launches under 20.40na G@ mob pay tolls PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper. THE KING CAN HAVE RHEUMA- TISM London news items says the Prince of Wales held a levee recently on be- half of the king, who is still unable to wear @ uniform because of rheuma- tism in the left shoulder. A good customer of ours who sent in the item commented on it with something akih to a low chortle of glee. The English, he remarked, are very stubborn about such things. About keeping a king who is king in name only? Or about clinging to a name for pain, soreness, stiffness or lameness or inflammation that means nothing now? King George is second only to our own President Roosevelt in my ad- miration and affection, and Queen Mary, for the way she wears her hats, gets one cheer from me for every two I give Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt for the way she fits her place. Away back when kinging was & good racket the doctors had it pretty soft. Whenever a patient complained of his bones, joints, limbs, ligaments, muscles, nerves or fasciae all the doctor, had to do was point to the damp climate, the cold weather or the Ppenetratin’ fog, and the poor goof decided it must be rheumatism. I wonder if the King’s rheumatism might not be the kind I had three pp all adhesions. Personally I'd rather have the bursa removed if it came to that. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Why Is the Common Bath Tub? You often say a good soap and water Ccleasing is sufficient to make a thing safe for use after sickness. Why then is not a good scouring and scrub- bing and flushing sufficient to make & bath tub fit to use after a well per- son? (M. W.) Answer—Certainly the tub may be cleaned and made safe enough for any one to use. But why use a tub if the Place rates a shower bath? The show- er bath is the only hygienic bath. In future bath tubs will not be tolerated in hotels or other places where the tub is shared by many patrons. Can- didly, isn’t a bath tub even now rather an anarchronism in a modern home? No Pumping of Arms To settle an argument, please re- Peat what you said about the ordinary arm pumping method as being better than the use of a pulmotor for resus- citating a person from drowning. (Miss C. M. T.) Answer—Impossible, because I have never said such a thing. What I have often said is that the Schafer prone- pressure method of artificial respira- tion is preferable in any case to any Send a stamped envelope machine. years ago. Mine was in the shoulder, too. I didn’t wear a uniform once while I had it, and it was only with difficulty that I wore even a smile. I was just as dumb as any other doctor is about his own ailments. It never occurred to me to do anything about it. I just drifted along queru- lously, until by luck I happened to get the opposite shoulder fractured, and only then was the nature of my rheumatiz disclosed in the X-ray pic- ture of the uninjured shoulder made for comparison. It was not neuritis at all. It was subdeltoid bursitis. Had I known that months before I might have avoided a lot of cantankerous- ness by having the bursa surgically removed. Inflammation of this little lubri- cating pad under the bony tip of the shoulder is the cause of many stiff painful shoulders. Pressure with the finger there detects the tenderness of the bursa. The inflammation is caused by injury or strain in some cases, by infection in some cases. Movement of the arm outward and upward is particularly painful. So it is held stiff, and this habit, after weeks or months, permits adhesions to form and the disability becomes Permanent—unless. this tendency is strictly opposed by proper manipula- tion and later active exercise at the right time. It is only in the early acute stage that the arm should be nursed, perhaps carried in a sling. By all odds the best medical treat- ment for such painful stiff shoulder is diathermy, @ daily half hour or longer, for two weeks, and if in that time the trouble does not sub- side, then surgical removal of the bursa is indicated, otherwise the pros- Pact is months of pain and disabil- y. In some cases relief has followed forcible manipulation of the shoulder, under anesthesia of course, to break Whar iA CENOTAPH ? WHAT DID THE SCARAB SIGNIFY IN ANCIENT EGYPT? bearing your address, and inclose a such @ person can see only in dark- ness? (C. 8.) Apswer—Nyctalopia means a condi- tion in which one sees well in day- light or bright light, but poorly in the dark. You have confused it with day-blindness, hemeralopia, in which the person cannot see well in very bright light, but sees better in shadow, twilight or dusk. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) ganized for a guerilla warfare against society.—Judge Harry S. McDevitee of 177Z-Poland partie tioned between dime, for an illustrated booklet on Ba 4 “Resuscitation.” Attention Nyctalopes Is it true that such a person as a nyctalope exists? If so, how is it that many miles he det: od the gale Art His Dish HORIZONTAL 1 South Carolina.: 3 Man in the Answer to Provious Puzzle tain, 18 Before light. 20 The pictured picture is Van INOIR Rijn ——? man lived in the th 11 Like, 13 Constellation. 15 Fresh-water century? 22 Child. 24 Organ of mussels, 16 Winé vessel. 17 Rock. 19 Type of larva. 20 Bed lath. 21 The man in icture was a ee by prov 42 Southeast. 43 Third note. fession? 44 Springl 3 Asiatic bird Sates ated allied to the among the magpie. Russians. 25 Type measure. 48Grew gradual: 26 Toward. ly less. 27 Average. 51 To stuff, 28 Northeast. 52.Odd job. 29 Wager. 54 Short letter. 30 Scarlet. 55 Hedge. 56 Hot water $3 At the present reservoirs. time. 58 Sailor. 35 Embryo flower.59 The man in 37 Dined. the picture's 39 You and me, fame is still 41 Company. —? 32 To be hearing. 29 Child’s napkin 31 Female deer. 34 He was of* nationality. 36 Canine animal | 37 Venomous snake. 38 Broader 40 Harem, 43 Iron. 45 Plot of grass, 46 Acidity as of the stomach. 47 Front part ot the leg. 48 Allowance for waste of four pounds. 49 Pertaining to air. 50 Type of lyre. 53 Palm leat (varias 56 To exist. 57 Therefore. VERTICAL 1 Undermined. 2Rich milk. 4Half an em. 5 Horse. 6 Handbarrow for coffins, 7 Quick. 8 Entrance. 9 Close. 10 Doctor of science (abbr.) 11 With might. 12Glossy cotton fabric. 14 Blackbird of the cuckoo family. 16 High moun- Racketeers and gangsters are or-|, them.—Postmaster General Farley. * oe x The prime minister is accustomed to take refuge in rose-colored, sweet- smelling clouds of rhetoric, in what has been called a policy of blur so that none shall really know the gov- ernment’s precise policy —Sir Herbert Samuel, M. P. IN | NEW | YORK New York, Aug. 5—(?)—What with 80 Many once-wealthy New Yorkers staying in town for the summer and languishing in their penthouses, the debutante season is starting earlier than usual, and less extravagantly than ever before .. Time was when @ daughter couldn’t be well launch- ed for less than $20,000 to $30,000. swim on a few bottles of champagne, together with maybe a hundred friends, a small band and the ball- room of one of the more modest ho- Philadelphia County Common Pleas Court. You can expect a real dictator in this country if this new deal legisla- tion fails—Representative Martin L, I don't know why all this fuss when @ fellow tried to do something and didn’t.—Jimmy Mattern, ’round-the- ‘We are grateful to the Republicans who have made it possible for us to be around, and we want to reward .Jeach one with a neat crown before And $100,000 wasn’t an unheard of figure when social competition got keen in the matter of how many big orchestras, orchids, star entertainers and guests one had. . . Now, though @ girl can be swept into the social tels. . . This season 181 debs will at- tain social-register maturity. * *e PASTIMES OF THE PLUTOCRATS Hobbies of the high-hats: Phil- ip Rhinelander collects heads; at least, he has a number of them which originally were collected by a tribe of head-hunters and shrunken to minia- ture size... . Grover Loening, the air- plane designer, is always criticizing his friends’ houses because he wants to help remodel them. He planned his own modernistic house on Long~ Island .. . Clarence Mackay, papa- in-law of Irving Berlin, has a collec- tion of armor valued at more than ® million dollars. ., And Mrs. Harry Horton Benkard owns the most val- uable collection of Duncan Fyfe fur- niture outside of any museum... Tommy Hitchcock, the poloist, likes prize fights .so well that he goes around unrecognized, to some of the palooka matches at neighborhood sporting clubs. .. And Anthony Bid- dle is so clever with his fists that he could lick the average amateur. . . Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson’s social work specialty is placing children for adoption. . . . J. P, Morgan knows more about blooded cattle than the average farmer... . And John D. Rockefeller, Jr., knows more about precious stones than many a Jeweler. . * oe * SOCIALITES AT WORK NRA code hasn't done much so far for the bored or impoverished socialite; but a lot of them are mak- ing more than cigaret-money from their jobs. There’s Prince George Sherbatoff, for instance, who has gone in for chicken raising on a farm up- state. Just to be sure that~his eggs are not confused with any common, Tun-of-the-coop variety, he stamps it is crated... . Then there's Whit- ney Bourne, historionically inclined daughter of Mrs. Harvey D. Gibson and the outstanding deb of last sea- son. She'll be on the stage in the fall, and so will Jane Wyatt, one of the in- genue sensations of ‘22 . . Two society matrons, Mrs. John Duncan and Mrs. John H. Iselin, Jr, started and are now managing the maternity depart- SYNOPSIS ‘Marriage is like reading a novel without suspense. No matter how charmed you may be at first with the words, a sustained effort de- mands little surprises, little mo- ments of not knowing what’s going to happen,” Pamela Warren formed her lovely, young niece, Patricia Braithwait, as they basked in the Palm Beach sunshine. Eight years before the wealthy Pamela had married handsome Jimmie Warren, and, in spite of an over- whelming love, their marriage had palled. Pat is shocked to learn that her father has lost his fortune. Aunt Pam suggests that Pat insure her father’s and her own future by marrying the wealthy, middle-aged Harvey Blaine, warning that the glamour of love wears off. Pat goes to an isolated spot, alone, to solve her problem, where she meets a handsome young man who only re- veals his first name—Jack. He tells her of his plantation, “Eagle’s Nest”, where he hopes to go some day with the “right” girl. CHAPTER FOUR The beach was utterly deserted. They were alone in an empty world. Even the cars beyond the hedge had ceased their eternal procession, Cloud tatters drew together above their heads, banking softly, white- ly and very low. Great clusters of palm trees impinged plumes of green fire upon the pale blue. Here and there a royal poinciana stretched strong limbs, its feathery foliage like swarms of green but- terflies hovering about the lavish outpouring of vine and blossom. A cooling wind released the tranced verdure, and all the countryside shook with happy silent laughter. Abruptly she noticed how near they lay together. It gave her a sense of guilty intimacy. She want- ed to move, but dared not, lest she break the spell that held her. A single move might fling her back into the smashed world from which she had emerged. If only by some witchery of this aloof and quiet loveliness she might be forever imprisoned in its embrace, so that there could be no return to that lucid ugliness where men and women schemed and plot- ted against beauty. If only he would say, “Come with me to my Eagle’s Nest above the sordid trou- blings of life——” She caught up her thought, startled by its signifi- cance. A deep blush suffused her face and she lifted suddenly on el- bows cupping her chin in her hands, her eyes on the high road lest he should see and guess the cause of her agitation. What nonsense I am thinking. As if there could be peace for me which did not include Daddy. And for the old there is peace only in freedom from poverty. Money is needed to buy beauty for them. And all my life he has given me beauty. She sat up. The spell was broken. The incredible future was waiting. |& All the beauty she lad felt had been a delusion—the last delusion of childhood... . I’m a woman now. And the way has been laid out for me. There’s no escaping it. He watched her narrowly, sensing her return to the trouble that had brought her to this lonely spot. “Troubles unloaded on a friend never seem quite 80 heavy,” he said, giving her a look of intimacy and appeal, like a small boy asking roundaboutly to be allowed to carry one’s books from school. How strange he was. And how nice. An urgency swept her to tell this stranger, who was not a stranger, all that troubled her—this man who had come to her out of the sea to be “a friend by the side of the road.” She spoke without turning to him, her voice weighted with pas- sionate rebellion. “I’ve discovered that life is just a nastiness covered over with smilings behind the hand.” i She stopped short, ashamed of AAC TURES'SYNDI ment of a Fifth Avenue store... And among the ex-debbies working in stores are Jane Bishop, Faith Hol- lins, Carol Barnes, Margaret Staf- ford and Louise Huntting. .. Prin- cess Troubetsky, another of the scores of titled Russians hereabout, gets ex- actly $16 a week for selling stockings. With the market revival, lots of blue- blooded youths have gone back into ~ the business of peddling bonds. One of them, though, Mr. William Fan- shawe White, is now guiding the business destinies of a jazz orchestra, ‘The belts to be seen on the sur- face of Saturn are cloud formations and are purely atmospheric pheno- mena. f ‘Tropical flowers bloom within the ice-rimmed crater of Anaikchak on the Alaskan peninsula. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REO. U. S. PAT, OFF. Some girls from the city have to go to the country to get down i to earth. MCATEANC.4¢<_ his is the Eagle's Nest,” she sighed. her outburst. But the grey eyes that met her own were grave. He lighted a cigaret, blowing a blue streamer into the thin gold air. Then: “Is it as bad as that?” he asked gently. She made no rep; and after a brief space he demand- ed: “What do you do?” Her small fair face was sullen. She answered bitterly, gazing into “Dance, golf, ride, drive, swim, chatter, flirt.” “An appalling array of occupa- ” aid with an irresistible laugh in which, against her will, she joined. “Isn’t it?” she agreed, trying to maintain her sense of bitterness, but aware of a sharp lifting of the spirit, as if their laughter had blown her troubles behind a veil. What was the mystery of him which left her without conviction in her own troubles? As if her outburst had been the dramatic spouting of lines previously re- hearsed, lines which, appearing most dramatic in rehearsal, were flat and bombastic wh-n spoken aloud. She felt shy and childish and wanted to change the subject. “You—do things?” she asked, stealing a glance at his curiously contradictory hands. “IT have done things,” he said, “Many things. Now I’m sort of tak- ing stock.” She rose with a sigh. “I must c “T’ll come for you tonight,” he said as they turned up the beach, ‘and we'll attend the opera of the sea.” She nodded. Isn’t he going to ask my last name? Nor tell me his? How will be find me? She had a pang of fear. Did he really live? Or was he merely the Spirit of ‘Romance, having no true existence? Was he but a beautiful play-boy created by all the millions of girls ‘who had hungered for romance and been defeated by monstrous, ia- credible life? When they were even with the tent, he stopped. “Won’t you come in and see how luxurious I am?” Untying the flaps of the tent, he lifted the curtain for her. With a little thrill she stepped in- side, An army cot, an array canned goods, stacks of paper plat .. books, an oil lamp and a folding stool. On the neatly spread cot a volume of Gibbons’ “Rome” lay open. So quiet. So rushing about of res! No multitude of frit. she sighed. “It is—now.” He was looking down at her, his arms folded across breast, muscles taut in his bared arms, eyes on her lips. She saw him with quivering over- clear senses, standing there in his straight dark fascination, still and pale as carved death, and she knew the effort of restraint he was put- ting on himself. Her pulses sang. She felt transfigured, cast up out of chaos on a high peak of sweet agony. Ah, this is what I’ve been waiting for all day—all my life. The long angry honking of a car on the road above and back of the tent split the witching quiet wide open. Her moment of torturing, ex- quisite hopes and fears crashed labout her. Noise, confusion and movement claimed her, just as she had achieved the summit of wo- manhood’s first awareness of her- self, He moved abruptly, as if he too had been rudely awakened. Then with a heavy sigh he lifted the flap j—and they stepped out into the unelouded crystal of day. “ ‘And day overflowed the world’,” he quoted huskily, laughing, trying to establish a casual air. Still shaken by that moment of transfiguration, she strove to be casual. To ignore what had hap- pened. “Have you just arrived from another planet? The men I know quote Mencken, talk George Ade- ese, and their entire imagination is concerned with beating the Eigh- teenth Amendment.” Her voice steadied. “Things at the top of the world like eagle’s nests and sun- light—Hah! Gaudy sham. Wagner, ‘Browning — Sophomoric sentimen- talists. Ernest Heminway knows all the truth—that life is a terrible ‘mess, and the only man that cag @ anything about it is the boofleg- ger.” She was surprised to note the swift flush that swept his face. “I |—perhaps I am—archaic—rather. I’ve been away—for some years.” His embarrassment over such a simple. matter hit her with a sense of|of shock. Away for some years, Well, what of it? And where Were not the moderns, our mod- erns, traipsing from cafe to cafe the civilized world over in an effort to escape the “American rut”? To Be Continued) © 1932, by Hing Fetus Stadicate, Ine, a | easeantirk & ww om ee Pe aes ee PEE ak saeeeen Pe me Papen Pee ee i si te el ioe ie ae le I : ] : i r q