The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1933, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper a THE STATES OLDEST r 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 me Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in marck) Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5 Daily by mail outside of Nort! Dakote .....seseseeees seeeees Weekly by mail in state, per year $1. ‘Weekly by mail in state, three YORTS ..cesesesesererereeee tase ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. ‘Weekly by mail in C: 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 oredited 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. 7 Science’s Quest for ‘Truth’ If you have ever felt that modern Science has a cocksure and self-satis- fied air about the body of knowledge it has amassed, you might heed the words of Dr. Harlow Shapley, director of the Harvard Astronomical Obser- vatory. Dr. Shapley predicts that “practi- cally all current theories” are doing to prove mortal before so very long. The axioms of today will be the abandon- ed and outgrown theories of tomor- Tow; and Dr, Shapley adds: “The only eternal verities at’ pres- ent are the enthusiasm back of hypo- theses, the will to know and the wil- Jingness to fumble as we learn to know.” This viewpoint, to be sure, is the general rule among scientists. But Jaymen often misunderstand it, and because they misunderstand it they sometimes resent what they feel is a too dogmatic and inflexible attitude on the part of science. A proper understanding of it might save us from a good deal of our creepy dread of the rising of scien- tific knowledge. For it seems, now and then, as if the scientists were banishing mystery from the world. It seems as if science were about to say: “Thus and so was the world made, and thus and so was man himself put together, and you can make your religion and your poetry and all of your dreams fit this framework or else you can discard them—it makes no difference, for this is the way things are.” Now that kind of talk is calculated to put cold shivers down the back of any thoughtful man. But it is precisely the kind of talk that the real scientist does not indulge in. He is more likely to keep. in mind Plato's 00 nada, ‘per THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1933 Olen md an idyllic and enchanted place. We ‘use such expressions as “carefree as a child” as superlatives; we like to talk of “a child’s happy laughter,” and few of us are free from periodic desires to go back to childhood and shed our troubles. Part of the time, of course, child- hood really is like that. But there is another side to it, and few people but children realize the fact. For a child is facing a world which is utterly unknown; a world which may contain bright miracles but which also holds plenty of shadowy corners where practically anything can happen. There is much in it that 00/@ child cannot hope to understand; it is a world to be explored distrust- fully, lest it disclose hurtful things 50 ‘unexpectedly. AS we pass out of childhood we for- get about the hobgoblins and remem- ber only the sunny places; we forget that every enchanted land has its ogres as well as its fairy princesses. But children know; and we might remember that almost every child wants, very badly, to grow up. Relief Problem Remains Better business, more jobs, and higher wages have heartened a de- pression-weary country. Times are better and the march along the road to recovery is gaining momentum. While we rejoice at these develop- ments, we must not lose sight of the fact that the very real problem of providing relief for millions of desti- tute unemployed remains acute. States and cities, with treasuries The World’s Greatest Trouble L'VE SPENT THOUSANDS J BEST mM J sucks! L’KNOW MORE'N ALL OF ‘EM PUT \ TOceTHER |, . HorcHa! ‘ drained, are finding it difficult to provide food and shelter for those who have not yet felt the benefits of improved conditions. The federal government continues to give huge sums to the states, Even with the most favorable out- come in the efforts of the Recovery Administration, and with stimulated employment through expenditure of billions for construction, it will be many months before relief will cease to be a consideration of first magni- tude. Chicago Wakes Up Chicago apparently means business in its war on crime. Gangsters, rack- eteers and hoodlums, accustomed to tax prosecutions, long delays, and to bargaining for light sentences, are discovering to their amazement that quick trials and maximum sentences are now the rule. Half a dozen judges have given up summer vaca- tions to help clean up the crowded criminal dockets. The country will hope that the present exhibition of activity in Chi- cago is not just another flash in the pan. Chicago's lawlessness has been @ national disgrace, and a challenge to democratic government. The city has been the pivot of crime organ- ized on a national scale. And while there can be nothing but applause for Chicago's brave acts and. Promises, it might not be amiss to wonder why the efficacy of such great, picture— A dim cave, with man chained fac- ing the inner wall, speculating fruit- Jessly on the shadows cast on the wall by beings who walk against the sun in the open air. The highest “scien- tific truths,” the greatest discoveries, are simply shadows. Today's verities are tomorrow’s discarded theories; there remains, as Dr. Shapley says, only “the will to know and the wil- lingness to fumble as we learn to know.” They Helped Our Pride Despite the disillusionment to which we have been subjected in these recent hard years, there are some things which we like to think of as typically American. We may be wrong but we love to believe our- selves a big-hearted people who can be utterly selfless if necessity de- mands. This fine American concept got a boost the other day in that little Wisconsin village where nine men persisted in their efforts to save a village from a forest fire. Disregard- ing orders to leave, they fought on and were finally rewarded by saving the buildings in the town. To the village of Nelma their re- solution was all-important. There would be no such community today had these men fled in the face of the flames. methods was not discovered before a condition of veritable anarchy de- veloped. ae Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, out ri They are published w! et to whether they ag or disagree with The Tribu: policies, An Arbiter’s Troubles (Minneapolis Tribune) Finding a peaceful substitute for the strike in the settlement of dis- putes, between capital and labor of- fers almost as many difficulties as establishing a legal institution for the arbitration of disputes between na- tions. Fundamentally the difficulty is much the same. In both instances neither party cares to be placed in the position of surrendering sov- ereignty to a third party. In the first test of its attempt to put an end to all strikes and lockouts during the emergency the recovery administration has not been without its difficulties, That it seems now to be on the road to victory in the case of the troubles in Pennsylvania coal fields does not alter the fact that the agreements have been reluctantly en- tered into. While these difficulties in the case of the Pennsylvania dis- pute may be largely the result of the work of agitators, as the represent- atives of the uniohs allege, it is also evident that differences of opinion that run deeper than that are also involved, More far-reaching, however, than the settlement of this strike is the To the rest of us these nine men serve as an inspiration. They prove that America, as we like to think of it, is far from dead. What Children Dream About What do children dream about? A Columbia University psycholog- ist, Dr. Arthur T. Jersild, decided not Jong ago to find out. So he inter- viewed some 400 youngsters, asking them about their hopes, their wishes, their dreams and their fears—and he learned some rather surprising things. To begin with, the bulk of child- hood’s dreams are not happy or Pleasant ones. “Children reported more unpleas- ant than pleasant dreams,” he says. “Fewer than half, when questioned, expressed a desire to continue to dream.” Furthermore, fear plays a big part in these dreams; and this fear usual- ly ignores such actual dangers as ac- cidents, illness and the like and deals with ghosts, corpses, murders and eerie, darksome places where name- Jess terrors lle in wait. The realm of childhood is a queer sort of place; and although all of us have been through it, we nevertheless, have @ way of misinterpreting it, and our memories of it are not always very accurate, baad epee establishment of an industrial reia- tions board of seven members which will be charged with the task of ad- judicating industrial disputes and ending strikes. Granted broad pow- ers a national board of this kind re- calls similar expedients devised dur- ing the war. With the support of public opinion generally this step is consistent with the attempt of the national recovery administration to develop a war psychology in pursu- ing its recovery program. The ora- tors of the NRA have frequently im- pressed upon the people that we are engaged in a war no less serious than —>eree= | self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink, No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, AN OLD QUACK CUSTOM A correspondent revives an ancient trick of the trade: “We had a case of Typhoid Malaria in our family last year, and friends of ours said that this disease reappears yearly for seven years. Please advise if this statement is true, and how we can counteract this disease.” In the first place there is no such disease as “typhoid malaria” and never has been, save in the lexicon of quacks. Long years ago when people were very simple and doctors “pronounced” verdicts this “typhoid malaria” was a ae te COPIRUIY 199 BY Tie Cetcae TNE 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 convenient dodge for the doctor with @ busy practice. He could ticket al- most anything “typhoid malaria” and hurry on to the next case. No matter how the illness turned out, the doctor's diagnosis was satisfactory. If it ac- tually proved to be plain typhoid fever, well, the folks congratulated themselves on their ability to choose a doctor who could at least “break up”, the malaria. They even believed he might have “broken up” the typhoid, too, had it not been for the malaria so reducing the patient’s strength that the doctor’s medicine couldn’t take hold. If it turned out to be tuber- culosis or septicemia or defamat well, the “typhoid malaria” was wouldn't “turn into.” I competed with unsuccessfully rang @ still better change. His bad cases were “typhoid-malarial flu.” Today I think our most popular quacks label every acute illness they don’t quite savvy “flu” for the nonce, and a few days later when everybody knows it is really undulant fever or whooping cough or tuberculosis, ‘well, isn’t it just dreadful how the “flu” changes spots over night? Or if the indisposition doesn’t seem so serloys at the first crack the charlatan opines it is a slight “cold”—and, as the wise- acre population knows, that may “run into” anything from measles to lock- Jaw if one doesn’t take care to keep well covered. The seven-year supersition where- ever or whenever applied to medical or health matters is just plain old sup- erstition. If the patient in this instance had malaria and any of the parasites re- mained alive or dormant in the blood (say in the spleen) subsequent out- breaks of malaria may occur at any time. Ten grains of quinine at the first threat of chill or fever would be good prophylaxis in that case. _ If the patient had typhoid fever he is now immune. Other members of the family may be immunized if they wish to be safe—the fi Physician can immunize them with\three doses of typho-bacterin given at intervals of a week. This is coi called typhoid “vaccination” but it ia not vaccination, just clean hypodermic in- Jections of the sterile bacterin. How long the immunity protects no one knows—probably more or less for 20 ie ee which we took part in For the purposes of the recovery campaign this patriotic psychology uses. It is hastening the codification of industry and the patriotic appeal is to be the spear-head of the na- tional buying campaign. It is impor- tant to remember, however, that con- ditions today are not exactly what they were during the war when can be made to serve certain edefinite |- years or longer. Such immunity is, an excellent precaution to take be- strikes and the failure to buy bonds would have rendered the persecution of that war difficult. But whether it is in arbitrating labor disputes or pressing a recovery campaign those hose memories go back 15 years have no desire to see the excesses of re Patriotic era revived in full loom, Auto production by members of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce during March is recorded at 81,370 units, When the automobile motor fires a few times and then dies, the trouble ‘We like to tell ourselves that it 15|may be in the choking mechanism. l OF GH IS THIS A OF YEARS WRITING! |} THESE VOLUMES — THEY CONTAIN THE BEST WORKS OF THE NOS OF CENTURIES. ‘You SHOULD FOLLOW “THEIR TEACHINGS «,<- | | LESSONS OF HISTORY || stamped, Letters should be brief and wri 5 in care of this newspaper. fore you go traveling or on vacation. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Morbid Suggestion Have you @ leaflet on mucous col- itis? If so,-will you kindly send it to the address below? (E. W. A.) Answer—I have none. It will do no harm if victims of the mucous colitis complex follow the advice in the book- let “The Constipation Habit.” Send @ dime and a stamped envelope bear- ing your address and ask for a copy. No clipping will suffice. Ta Please tell me what I can do against tape worm. (Mrs. J. F.) Answer—Consult a physician. Thick Lips 1 have a large upper and lower lip. ‘Will exercise or any other means re- duce my lips to normal size? I am 20 years old. (L. EB. A.) Answer—If the lips are naturally thick and not just swollen, only sur- gery can correct the appearance. Take no chances with any other than a sur- geon of good professional standing. If the lips are swollen from casual cause, the diagnosis and treatment of the condition is a problem for your own physician. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) rheumatism or epidemic meningitis,} During the last 10 years the Auto- mobile Club of Southern California that way—you never could tell what it/nas sepnt more than $1,143,000 in caution and direction signs One of the most successful quacks|for motorists, IN NEW YORK | HORIZONTAL 1 First name of lady in the picture. § Definite article. 8 Last name of lady in the picture. 13 Hodgepodge. 14 Besmears. 16 Sleeveless coat. 17 Cereal gri ClO} RIT REO! Git tM) IIRTA'S| 36 To expiate. 38 Part of a play 39 Males. 40 Northwest. 20 To place. 21 Senior (abbr.). 22 Brancnes Of 42 Intentions. i 45 Pitcher 23 Heavenly body. 47 street (abbr.) 25 Note in scale. 43 pownward 26 Mooley apple. 27 Rebel (collo- 55 quial). 29 Walls as of a room. 31 Rental contract. 33 The color slope. Juncture of the median 52 Lug. 53 Part of fat. 55 Yes. green. 84 Within. 85A vampire. 58 Tidy. 59 Sheaves. 60 On the lee. \ N Answer to Previous Puzzle” SIL IY MIC EINMEL EAB LLIN 8 NO MAI! Lee IOINMEAIRIC) VIA] 10 Spigot. line of the face. 11 Composition 12 To withdraw. 14 Drunkard, 56 A composition. 15 To perch. 18 Deposit of NN 19 The pictured lady was the first woman to sit in Imperial —_—? Sa 24To come in again. Swelling. 28 Bandmaster's RIGA stick. IRIOTTY 39 Bugle plant, IE} 32 Male child. 35 Capital of country the pictured lady serves, 37 Right to enter 41To entice. 43 Two letters which signify the pictured lady's office. 44 Counterfeit. 45 One who eyes 46 Grief. 47 Identical or.alike. | 49 Vegetable, 51 Black bread. 52 Snaky fish. lime og @ 64-Pronoun. steam ‘Doiler, 57 Exclamation. fe LAI By 2S a VERTICAL 1 Hangmen’s halters. 2 Winged. 3 Insect’s egg. 4Com 5 Pulls 6 Pronoun. ‘7 Measures. 9 South Carolina, (music), { : By JULIA BLANSHARD Paris, Aug. 11.— Summer, the break-up of the London conference and the Davis Cup matches make Paris the mecca of notables right MPive minutes in Paris—and Raquel Meller’s sleek limousine pauses along- J. F. 2 q ae trate Bond bo: oud ager tory hg mre net, Man passes cenetite (__3 barrel r = Famous in England Fal side the taxi. Miss Meller looks very much like the dignified Senorita, all in black, with a small black high-hat and short veil—a modern mantilla, Pearls gleam in her ears...» Midnight at Fouquet’s—tha famous old restaurant which has always been and still is the haunt of racing, hunt- ing and other sports devotees—and Ina Claire, escorted by three devoted swains, applies herself to her liver and mushrooms, She has just arrived from London but has an enviable gift of looking fresh, well-groomed, zest- ful. She wears a colorful printed | summer chiffon and no jewels... . Lady Abdy sweeps in, all done up in plum velvet, high-necked, short train, with her fair hair done with an Alice- in-Wonderland comb. Lady Mendl in handsome seal brown cire, accom: panies her. They arrive in Lady Mendl’s limousine, a dignified, expen- sive model of another day... Charlie Chaplin has a table reserved here everynight he is in Paris.... | STEAM' ROOM AT THE RITZ The Steam Room of the Ritz is al- ways jammed at noon. Every Amer- ~ Ogden Reid entertained eight guests at one table, under the gay umbrells, near the petunia and geranium beds. Gwynne Vanderbilt had three guests. ‘The Bernard Baruchs, Mrs. Charles Minot Amory, her daughter, Gloria Baker and her son, George Vander- bilt, and the Max Steuers lunched out in the open, here, also. SEEN AT COCKTAIL HOUR The most popular cocktail hour Place is the new little bar in the Mirabeau Hotel, in the Rue de ls Paix. Lyolene, in white linen, with & white paper panama hat, escorted by @ young man in @ double-breasted white linen suit, sat near the door, sipping mint juleps. ... Schiaparelli, in black linen, with a touch of beige, had champagne. .. The Countess de Rohan, immediately after the showing of her collection, dropped in for a pick-me up. ... Anita Block, of the Theater Guild, New York, sat in deep |oonversation in one corner with two |French play-wrights. Mrs. Block is in Europe this summer scouting for pa plays for the New York Theater juild, ican in Paris drops in here for one Gay, at least, en route to lunch. This | team Room, across the hall from the | var which is for men only, is the only | feminist stronghold in Paris, appar-| ently. No man can sit there and or- | der a drink accompanied by a wom. | an... | Pearl White, the dare-devil of the “Perils of Pauline” of another day, sauntered in, with friends, She is a handsome woman, a little of the Lil- lan Russell about her slightly plump and smooth face and her air of quiet assurance. She has no worries now. She has a beautiful little house on the edge of Paris, a huge historic chateau near Rambouillet and a mag- nificent home near Cairo, Egypt. She keeps her own stables of racing horses, and races them under her own colors. Patou makes her clothes. She wears magnificent square-cut diamonds. Gil Boag, Gilda Grey's ex-husband, drops in for a drink. He is writing his memoirs. . .. Lunching in the patio of the Ritz any noon, from 1:30 on, you see many This is no time for slackers or conscientious objectors—Louis John- son, National Commander of the Am- erican Legion. xe * The recovery program will never succeed without inflation. .. The ad- ministration has had no real infla- tion to date.—Senator Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma. xe * The indications are that radical Temedies must be resorted to to safe- guard the business of the nation and happiness of the people against fool- ish and unrestrained transactions on the market.—Senator Joseph Robin- son of Arkansas. x Ok Ok I am old-fashioned enough to still with it an implication to the ordinary ‘man of something possessing & reason- able element of security and stability during the life of the bond.—Claude L. Porter, Interstate Commerce Com- missioner. A se * I am a man of peace—Mahatma Gandhi. | Barbs - | ———! The American Brewer says the beer is getting stronger. Good! Just when everybody feared it was going to die of Leaked a Chorus girl now working under NRA code, with restrictions on hours. After-hours gold-digging, however, is not classed as work. ‘That's still a pleasure. * * Just because you're in the red these days is no reason to have the blues FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | | prominent social celebrities, .... believe that the word “bond” carries Flighty people should be given “he bird. SYNOPSIS Life to lovely Patricia Braithwait was a series of parties, trips abroad and now—Palm Beach. Her castles crumble when her Aunt Pamela in- forms her that Mr. Braithwait's fortune is depleted and suggests that Pat marry the wealthy, middle- aged Harvey Blaine to insure her own and her father’s future, warn- ing her that love fades. Aunt Pam's handsome, young lawyer—was be- ginning to pall in spite of the ar- dent love they had had for each other. They still cared but the rou- tine of married life had made them “less lovers and more friends”. Stunned by her aunt’s revelations, Pat is seriously considering Blaine to save the father she adores, when she meets a fascinating young aame, Jack. Despite their instant attraction for one another, Pat dis- courages future meetings. That night, Pam cautions Blaine to be matter-of-fact and not sentimental in trying to win Pat, stressing the point that his one advantage is the fact that Pat is desperately hard ap and worships her father, who lives for Pat alone. His financial predicament is largely due to the gradual caving in of his plantation. His honesty prevented him from taking advantage of an opportunity to sell the property. Braithwait tries to belittle his difficulties to Pat, but she realizes he is just try- ing to shield her and that Aunt Pam was right. She accepts Blaine’s Proposal. CHAPTER NINE After dinner she hurried to her room, She eould not decide what to wear. It seemed a matter of high importance, She changed three times. Finally settled on a blue georgette embroidered in padded rosebuds of pink satin with stems and leaves of green twisted ribbon. Crygtal beads glowed like dew on the soft petals and foliage. The blue of her eyes, the gold of her head were deepened by the enchant- ing frock. She smiled wistfully at her re- flection and began dramatizing her- self, finding therein a strange sat- isfaction. She could hear people saying, “So young and lovely. How could she sacrifice her young life to that man—even for her father!” Absorbed in the ravishing figure in the mirror, she felt the terrible pity of it all, and pondered over her own indifference. She must be a very determined person who, hav- ing decided, no longer even felt sad over it.... Arthur Savage phoned up at ten o'clock. “Come on, Pat, The music has moved to the ballroom. The gang’s collecting.” Blaine was watching for her at the foot of the stairs, and her glow of gallant martyrdom expired... . She descended slowly, a very sick little girl. a swift dash he caught-her, whirled her away to the ballroom, leaving Mr. Blaine to stare after them. In and out among the dancers they swept with a rush and bril- liance that threatened continual disaster, but never achieved it, “I’m going to dance you to death tonight and bury you tomorrow so no other man will ever get you, you beauti- ful thing,” he said savagely. His whole body shivered with increas- ing violence, his feet cutting high capers. Handsome dark face down- bent, eyes glued on his feet, he ap- peared lank, absorbed, grotesque. “Glorious! Do, Arthur. Go faster.” To go faster. And faster. So that the slow pace of the old man she had promised to marry could never catch up with her. ...” I'll die if he s I’m going to tell marriage with Jimmie Warren— him everything,” she decided defi- J Jimmie, let’s find Aunt antly. So pleasing was this pictare}/Pam,” Patricia said, “and weD of herself as a martyr in Jack’s|have a party. I saw her leave the eyes that she grew pleasantly mel-| ballroom on the other ancholy, beautiful foolish dreams with a/falling into young man. One night of romance./“I think I And perhaps — who could say— strange things happened in life.... She drew in her mind’s eye a highly imaginative picture of Jack swooping her up like an eagle and|by bringing sailing away over housetops and|scene.” tall forests to a mountain craig—| The Eagle's Nest. Then she smiled| husband approaches.” at her own childishness, veranda s “Aunt Pam!” “Thank you, Pat,” laughed Mrs. “Am I in love with —a strange] Warren. “We just had time to un- young man, met —by the side of|tangle our arms.” Pamela Warren, the road? ... Oh, absurd... .” having no ear for the sly wit of her To Warren, watching her from|husband or the whimsical humor of 80 with each move she took on new grace. Pamela joined her husband. “It must be very trying for Cousin John to keep Pat as he does. For- tunately she’s beautiful. Harvey Blaine just whispered to me as a camper, who only reveals his first |*he semi-darkness of the veranda,|Mr. Braithwait Eaxyaltabeelenicawibeauayeniee| eee ates each tentative stroke of an artist,/her set. of But Arthur was also waiting. In|her. Instantly she deserted her|St7@bly upon secret, that she has promised to marry him.” “Harvey Blaine! Good heavens! Twenty years older than she is, ber’ with a face like a horse.” “His face is of no importance. He’s enormously wealthy.” Swept by a confusion of emo- ‘Certainly. tions, Warren turned back to the|roll was a protagonist dancers. “By heaven!” he thought,|and felt that this proper sounding “she shan’t be sacrificed!” conversation hid It would be no easy taak to force tions. his ‘money on her proud old father;/ “I'm afraid he was shocked,” Pabiscersbanr. he saeld ada er, chuckled Warren as they walked save Pat. gave to the big palm-clad ballroom 2 dataset paren bagenaes going to have a party, not s lec- Birds in cages cunningly concealed | ture. Let's have it in the lounge. among ornamental bowers of green, |A grill is so grimey, grubby, grue- and deceived by the brilliance of the | me and—oh heavens, I can't think room, sang loudly, their high sweet |°f another alliterative word.’ voices lifting clear and triumphant] “Gregarious,” supplied Warren. above the bombastic orchestra. “Perfect. Grubby and gregarious Now and again a couple would| really express it fully. I nol-pross dash through one of the French|the other words. You see I've heard windows onto the verandas; but for|°f the laws, Jimmie. Nol-pross the most part the girls never) means kick out, doesn’t it? stopped dancing, going part- Hee: ers, resting between dances soft fragrance of the mobn-flooded eye after a moment, motioned to partner. beauty of her “My dear,” said Mr. Braithwait as she came through the window, “I apologize for being a selfish old man to take you away from pleas- ure to have an ice and a little chat with me. But I had no taste for solitary drink,” Knowing that the old man called her for no other purpose to stop her from dancing, Warren was surprised. Instead of reproving and dictating to her to rest, he had turned it into # courteous pnich complimented and comma rr. Snuggling one of her father’s ike some arms against her sh paid, “Per. who had somehow fectiy right, Dadumsy Two hours seke-enenranes as Sop Doorn girl, are mu marked (4 aie too long to—go without, pipiens bright face “You see how she sees me?” chuckled Mr, Brith graduated against i © 1933, by Ciog Fee aicate toe \ ee Wi

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