The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1933, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 ~ A 5 ‘ The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper by THE STATE'S OLDEST f NEWSPAPER . (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck &s second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription nates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......97.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- TATCR) ..cccceccseccscsevecece 1. Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota seecencvene 6. Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years ...... peecetearsscicccies Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . o ‘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. 1.50 Approaching the Nub Bismarck and the rest of the na- tion approach the nub of the National Recovery campaign next week. It is about to be brought home to every citizen that he has a part to play. The question will be asked in definite terms “What are you going to do about it?” Upon the answer depends the fate of the whole program. To date the public has had cause for nothing but applause at applica- tion of this idea to our economic af- fairs, The class which has made the major sacrifices to date consists of the employers. They have added to their payrolls without assurance of financial return, making the occasion one for a great uplifting of hope that better business would follow their ac- ceptance of particular codes or the president's blanket agreement. The beneficiaries of this condition have been the thousands returned to useful pursuits. jage reduction agreements. 00} farmer need hesitate about signing wo administration wants very much to lic confession now would be unwar- ranted and cruel. Any testimony he might give would be nothing else. All Clear Money Repeated questions from farmers have to do with the possibility of the government deducting seed and feed loans from the money to be paid out as a benefit in return for wheat acre-! The answer is that such deductions will not be made. The full amount of the benefits will be paid in cash without deductions of any kind other than for expenses in adminis- tering the allotment plan itself. No the agreement because all or any of the cash involved will be returned to the government. The reason is clear enough. The have the acreage reduction program succeed. It is bending every effort! to make the proposal attractive to the farmer. If 90 per cent of the | nation’s wheat raisers come in, the | agricultural administration believes the results will be generally bene- ficial and a new era in American farming, as well as the business of farming, will have been inaugurated. Not every farmer is expected to accept the allotment. Former Con- gressman Norton of Nebraska, an agent of the agricultural administra- tion, said during a recent visit here that farmers are expected to choose the course most advantageous to them, Big wheat raisers undoubtedly will find it profitable to come in. There has been no profit for them in recent years and this proposal offers hope. Men who have given only a few acres to wheat in recent years may feel it advisable to paddle their own canoe because of the small benefit they would receive and the prospect of increased prices which would fol- low a reduced yield in the nation. Should Collect the Facts In the harvest season now coming to an untimely close, the fact which stands out most prominently is that the yield is a spotty one. One farmer may have a fair crop, But it is rather obvious that a situation wherein business bégrs all the burden cannot go on for long. ‘This is fully appreciated by General Johnson and his aides and so the next step is to induce the consumer to sign up; to promise that trade will follow the blue eagle. This deci- sion is up to the consumers. ‘We have witnessed a great demon- stration of patriotic action upon the part of American business, despite the fact that some politicians insist on picturing it as cold, heartless and wholly self-seeking. The biggest single question remaining is whether| this action will be matched by the individual citizen in the same spirit. Business and industry have shown the way. Right at Last When Herbert Hoover was in the White House it often seemed as though the poor fellow never could do anything right. His best efforts went for naught as he tried vainly to steer the nation around “the corner.” Things which brought applause in Coolidge’s administration won for him only sneers and condemnation. Viewed against this background, many may condemn the former chief executive for his refusal to appear be- fore Detroit’s one-man grand jury and tell all he knows about the De- troit banking failures. It is a seri- ous question if this attitude is: Justified. The fact appears to be that Hoover can shed very little new light upon this rather grisly subject. The idea in asking Hoover to tes- tify was to find out the “attitude” of the federal government toward the, banking situation in general and the Detroit banks in particular. That is and has not been a secret for many months. The whole picture was dis- closed before a senate committee by J. W. Pole, former comptroller of the currency, in New York's Harriman bank case. Asked why his department had not moved to prosecute the New Yorker when his manipulations first were discovered, Pole answered that such occurrences were so common they were treated as a matter of course. And besides it was considered unwise to unsettle the situation. That was the attitude of the Hoo- ver administration toward banks and bankers. Even if the people had been looted in some cases, there still ‘was hope of saving the situation. To demand justice for bank depositors then would have tumbled the financial house of cards without further ado. The Hoover administration did not want that. Apparently it had real be- lief in the financial mumbo-jumbo of the times. This would be the gist of Hoover's testimony if he were placed on the witness stand. Doubtless the former President could make @ good argu- ment in justification of it, just as those who engage in exploitation of the people never have been at a loss for similar justification. Any man smart enough to gyp the public usually is smart enough to find plau- sible excuse for so doing. With this background, there ‘s no reason to subject Hoover to a public grilling. Even his enemies may safe- jy grant that he did his best accord- ing to his own lights. Whether we egreed with him or not, all must con- cede that no man can do more. And so there is no cause for haul- ng the man forth from the retire- ment to which the people consigned him last November. To force a pub- his neighbor almost nothing. Why this should be so is a subject for careful research in order that all may learn what caused one crop to wither away, what enabled another to come through to fair success, Certain factors can be taken for Granted. In some sections of Bur- leigh county, for example, there were local showers which came at critical Periods and gave material assistance. Differences in the natural character of the soil are an unescapable influ- ence, But in some cases one farmer did fairly well and another failed with approximately the same soil and with exactly the same rainfall. The An’ the Gover’ment ’ill Git You Ef You Don’t — Watch — Out! | By William self-addressed envelope is enclosed. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE 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. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. OLD-FASHIONED IRON IS HARD TO BELIEVE A few months ago we had a piece in this column about plain’ old- fashioned iron for pale weak women. Not that there are any pale women any more, but under the rouge and drug store tan some of ’em are still as weak as their grandmothers were when their grandmothers gwere ad- vising Pinky A. Eatingham’s 18.2% “tonic” for female frailty. The old-fashioned iron we recom- mended as a good medicine for wom- en with simple hypochromic anemia (hypochromic is medical Greek for lack of color or insufficient hemo- globin, the iron-compound which gives blood its color and serves as the carrier of oxygen to the body tissues) 01 apparent difference was in the mpier in which the crop was plant- ‘and managed. The agricultural college, county agents and others interested in such things might well make a careful study of these contrasts, note what one man did and the other did not. Study on this subject ma¥ save many @ complete failure and serious heart- ache in the future. 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, Our Cuban Policy (New York Times) Returning to his former position in the State Department, Ambassador Welles has to his credit a notable achievement in Cuba. He himself Would be the first to protest against too high praise for it. He did not create the situation out of which he helped to find a way of escape. When he went on his special mission to Havana the political crisis had about reached its extremity. The Machado Tule had become intolerable. What Mr. Welles did with fine insight and is officially (in the United States and British Pharmacopoeias) called Iron and Ammonium Citrate, or sometimes Ferric-ammonium Citrate. When the anemic patient takes this medicine she should take enough, and not just trifle with it. Not less than 10 or 15 grains at every dose, though we know the body needs to assimilate only about one-fourth of @ grain of iron a day. The good and sufficient reason for these seemingly large doses of iron was explained here Jan. 11. The recipe I gave for simple hypochromic anemia is as fol- lows: Dissolve an ounce of iron and gests that sandwich dispensers mas- querading as druggists or pharm- acists should be reported to the state board of pharmacy when they betray that they do not know what Iron and Ammonium Citrate is. This pharmacist offers another good sug- gestion, namely, that if there is any objection to the taste of the solution, iron and ammonium citrate can be dispensed in capsules. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Saccharin Being on restricted carbohydrate diet I use saacharin to sweeten my tea and coffee, from six to eight %- grain tablets a day. Is this amount harmful? What injurious effects has saccharin on the body? (M. M.) Answer—Saacharin is a coaltar de- Tivative, chemically called benzosul- phinid. It is 300 times sweeter than Sugar. One-half grain of saccharin is equivalent’ to about a teaspoonful of sugar in sweetening. There is little evidence that any harm is done by the use of small quantities of sac- charin—say up to 5 grains a day. Rheum It Isn't T have made a remarkable recovery from chronic arthritis that almost to- tally disabled me. I have been on the lime and ductless gland treat- ment you recommend in your booklet “The Ills Called Rheumatism.” My physician, who administers the lat- ammonium citrate (that is one ingredient) in four ounces of water. Take a teaspoonful after each meal three times a day for two or three months. This is neutral, will not injure the teeth, and has proved more efficacious than any expensive “organic” iron medicine. . 2 Girls or women with hypochromic anemia (men seldom have it) are weak, easily fatigued, short of breath, pale, have poor appetite, belch gastrium and often complain of burn- ing or soreness of the tongue and of brittle nails, dry permaturely graying hair and dull inelastic skin. ‘When the pale weak creature has taken this medicine six or eight weeks and begins to throw her weight about tact was to volunteer his personal Good offices, first of all, in persuad- ing the President to promise large Political concessions to his opponents, in seeking to find a formula unde; which Machado might temporaril withdraw. But while that was still undecided, the whole thing exploded, the army became the god of the ma- chine, and the rest we know. Throughout the entire delicate and difficult negotiation Ambassador Welles showed himself not only a competent diplomat but a friend of the Cuban people. The new Provi- sional Government would have wel- comed his longer stay, but he quietly goes back to his important work as Assistant Secretary of State, wearing his laurels modestly. Cuba has had a long illness and is not yet by any means entirely con- valescent. There are many obstacles to her full recovery. These are chief- jy financial and cOmmercial. Offers ot help have come from Washington, but the Roosevelt Administration is /properly considerate in not attempt- ing to force any plan of its own ‘upon. the Cubans. It was at first reported that a group of American financial experts would be at once dispatched to Havana, but later it appeared that they would not go unless the Cubans asked for them. A similar respect for independent Cuba should be shown in the proposed commercial arrangements, especially as they af- fact exports of Cuban sugar. In the end the President will have to deal with our own embattled beet-sugar growers, who are already protesting against raising the quota of Cuban imports, or giving Cuban sugar a pre- ference in our customs rates. Until the Cubans “themselves are more thoroughly settled down, it will be just as well to postpone plans for ay adjustment and for reciprocal trade. Modern knitting machines can turn out more work than 3,000 persons knitting by hand, and only one oper- ator is required for every four ma- chines, and talk back to her boss, if she dis- covers that her steady progress stops before she is quite in top form, then it is avgood plan to add to the recipe »Jone grain of copper stfiphate—that is, have the druggist ‘include one: grain of copper sulphate (blue vit- riol) in the four ounce iron solution. But I warn husbands, fathers, broth- ers and boy. friends to watch out, for]. when they go off the iron standard onto the copper sometimes you can’t hold ’em. I have been pained to receive a large number of complaints from readers whose druggists inform them there is no such combination possible, or that they can’t put up the medic- ine without knowing what iron pre- paration is wanted or how much of it or whether it means an ounce of iron and an ounce of ammonium citrate or what. The trouble with the profession of pharmacy today is there is too much ham and eggs, bathing pants, groceries and hard ware cluttering up the shop. One old-fashioned pharmacist sug- WHAT IS THE NAME OF THIS VEHICLE ? | NAME. THE FIRST STATE ADMITTED. TO THE UNION AFTER THE ORIG INAL THIRTEEN WHO INVENTED THE LAWN MOWER gas, have a sense 'of' fulness in’ epi-|"* ter part of the treatment, is writing you about my case and some others in which he is trying out the treat- ment. But I owed you this expres- sion of gratitude ... (F. L. R.) Answer—Delighted to hear of your improvement. I hope it may con- tinue. Although we docs don't know what rheum it is we can cure it just the same. Readers who desire a copy of the booklet will please send a dime and a stamped envelope and ask for the booklet—no clipping will suffice. Breathe Low Sweet Harriet Would you send to this address your booklets orf “Breathing Low” land “High Blood Pressure?” (D. H.) Answer—I have no such booklets. Belly Breathing is beneficial in many cases of high blood pressure. Send a stamped envelope bearing your ad- Gress and ask for instruction for the Belly Breathing exercise. No clip- ping will suffice. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Water spots on waxed floors can be removed by rubbing in circles with a flannel cloth dampened in turpentine. British capture Washington )<.ard burn thé capitol. -Proposa ye Peace confer Ence issued by czar Russia. + O18= Countries wish theya taken confer- ence i 4 little mare Seriously: An Emperor 1Who isthe = TE i ‘HORIZONTAL ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 9 Toward. 12 The sacred man of royalty m T ats} mountain of inthe picture? {6} the pictured x 10To storm. Ty 11Gambling game at cards. man’s country. 15 Trackless. 17 Not deranged. 13 Pin. 14 Exclamation of disgust. 16 You and me. 18 Second. note. - 19 Senior. 20 Father. 21 An abrupt thrust. 23 Feline, animal. 24 Devoid of fitness. 26 Open flame, 28 Twelve months. 29 The pictured man is sovereign of 33 Calf’s meat. 34 Drunkard. 36 Crazy. 37 Turf. s 38 High priests’ headdresses, 41 Serpent IV fe fy E IL Y} (2) monster, 43 Variant of “a.” 44 The pictured man’s country ‘was responsi- ble for the setting up of the nation of 47 Subsists, 48 Doctor. 50 More courteous. 51 Dye. 52 Pastries. 54 Bottom: 55 Brought up. 57 Who is the pictured man’s ’ 20 Rodent. 22 Brute. 23 A creed. 25 Preface. 27 Molding. 30 Form of “be.” od Indian game. 32 Paid publicity. 35 Snare. 37 Innuendo. 39 Type of ink, 40 One who snubs. 41 Pieces out. 42 Skulléaps, 45 Bivalve mollusk. 46 Indians. 49 Portuguese money. 51 Noah’s boat, 52 Postscript. 53 Street. 55 Exclamation ‘Used to startle. 56 To accomplish. E | =) e| premier? 58 Prefix mean- ing wrongly. 59 Capital of the pictured man’s country. VERTICAL 2 Mister. 3 Soft food. 4 Always. 5 The pictured man a —_— before he became ruler. 6 Counterbal- ance, 7 Scalp covering. 8 Anger. jhouse writes a personal note to the IN Champs Elysee, substantia] French|second time he has ridden since ar- business men, many colorful East-jriving here. Alan Rogers, third sec- erners and Eastern Europeans, brisk] retary at the Embassy, himself a English women shoppers, American|fine horseman and polo player, ac- NEW YORK A New Yorker seeing’ Paris, Julia Blanshard here records more fascinating items from the aa and glamorous French capi- BY JULIA BLANSHARD Paris, Aug. 24—Paris is, dog’s Paradise. All the best places cater to dogs. American women, here alone, find that head-waiters are much more attentive to them if they carry a Peke or trot an amusing Dachshund or Scotty on a leash. One cafe, Au Colisee, issues a print- ed menu for dogs, an amusing little card entitled, “For your little pet, Madame.” Dogs’ vegetables, a mix- ture of spinach, carrots, green beans, cost three francs (about 18 cents); a hash of raw meat, rice, noodles and vegetables, called a special dish for dog gourmets, comes to four francs (about 24 cents). Desserts cost two francs each. At the bottom of the card just*so Madame won't worry about her pet's digestion, the effect that these dishes are prepared with the same care that has made the cooking at the Colisee famous . . . Doggie eats his repast on a spe- cial dish at the feet of his mistress. ee he can even sit on a chair beside er. Au Colisee is the most international cafe on the Champs Elysee. It stands on the site of a famous old music hall in the days of Louis 15th. Marie Antoinette used to visit the old Coli- see. It is not a socially smart cafe but it gives visitors a cross-section of Paris. Sleek auto salesmen, from the smart motor shops along the son .. house. buyers, all dine there. It has the only in Paris, an enormous circular basement room with glass enclosed aviaries lining a half-circle of the room. You look directly at these gorgeously feathered birds, and you also see the reflection of them in the mirrored pillars. air-conditioned bar xk * TWO EXCLUSIVE SPOTS A much smarter place to lunch, only about a fourth as large but twice as expensive, is La Cremaillere. Triangular shaped, it points back from one side of La Place Beauvau. It has always been there, but one year ago Maurice, director of Ciro’s for 20 years, took it over. His patrons at Ciro’s followed him... Lady Abdy, the Rothschilds, Princess Paley, Mrs. Reginald Fellows, the P. A. B. Wide- ners and the W. K. Vanderbilts, Jr., and other noted Americans lunch there at least once a week during their stay here, in Paris’ social sea- . La Cremaillere is the only Paris cafe that serves butter with bread without its being ordered ... Almost directly across the street is the French “White House,” where the President lives. Only it isn't white. It is a picturesque, huge old gray- stone mansion, set back in a gravel | courtyard flanked by offices and liv- ing quarters of the house servants. The absence of a flag at high mast and a red carpet down the broad stone steps to the driveway indicate that the President is away ... Con- Servatories flank the front of the Behind, inside the ivy-cover- ed high stone wall, shady walks, little tea pavillions and gurgling fountains. Here very for- mal garden parties are given in June. * * IN THE SADDLE Morning is the smart time to ride in the Bois. But late the other aft- ernoon, Ambassador Straus appeared on the bridal path astride a hand- some sorrel horse. SYNOPSIS Lovely, young Patricia Braith- wait agrees to marry wealthy, middle-aged Harvey Blaine because the father she adores is in financial straits. She hopes, however, that handsome Jack Laurence, a young camper whom she only met once— and the only man she ever wanted to kiss her—will rescue her from Blaine. When Jack fails to appear, she turns, in desperation, to Jim- mie Warren, her Aunt Pameli fascinating husband. They become infatuated and Pat breaks her en- gagement. Aunt Pam is suspicious but blames herself for warning Pat that love fades, inferring that her marriage to Jimmie had failed. Feeling that Pam no longer cares, Jimmie and Pat see no wrong in their “love”, Then Jack appears, but Pat tells him he is too late— the emotion he awakened, blos- somed to love under another's kiss. Jack, claiming he is the one Pat really cares for, tefuses to give up, and the next day moves to her ho- tel. Jack is very popular, but he has eyes for Pat alone. CHAPTER TWENTY Warren had made no effort to speak with her alone, nor gave the slightest sign that he remembered that flaming night in the moon dappled garden, and Patricia was beginning to find the strain of eat- ing at least twice a day en famille with him unbearable. Sometimes she hated him intensely. Then, she was:convinced that she loved him with a love as deathless as it was hopeless. This consoled her a little. Not everybody had depths enough for a big deathless love. There was something rather pleasant in knowing one’s self to be such a person; something fine and splendid in seeing one’s self in black silk' with silver hair sitting over an open fire meditating on the one big love of a long, long life; of having one’s grandchildren ask- ing—no, there wouldn’t be any grandchildren because she could never, never marry. Well, one’s nieces and nephews—only unfortu- nately, having no brothers or sis- ters, there couldn’t be any nieces or nephews. ... Then her mood would change. Pleasurable melancholy would give place to white hot anger... 4 Thoughts and conversation inter- mingled so that sometimes she had a terrifying sense of not knowing which were silent, which spoken » + « How have you the face to si there talking like that, Jimmie Warren? ... No, thank you, Jerry, no bridge for me .. . when less than a week ago you kissed me like a@ madman, held me in your arms as if you could never let me go, told me you loved me... Girls, let’s get ap some old fashioned games ... But of course you lied. T suppose that’s why you can look ao darned innocent... . Oh, no, we won't need music. We'll play some that go with songs... I suppose you're used to that sort of a scene, you roue! It means nothing to you except fun... Won’t you help us, Aunt Pam, think up some games? ... Oh, dam you! Darn you, Jimmie Warren ... How could you do such @ thing to me... When I might have cared for—someone else who’s worth two of you. And now Tcan't... The climax came one day as P; tricia lingered over her lunch. Jack had gone to get a Richmond paper. “Come on. Grand conference in the library,” said Ida Fallon. The gang trouped out after her. Per- Kins signaled Pamela on some household matter. Patricia pushed back her: chair hastily as Pamela went out. “Wait, Pat,” Warren said softly. She sank back, face ing, heart hammering. His eyes returned to his paper. “In asking me to fill his place and guard you in his absence as his one precious jewel, your father “In asking me to guard you in his are gardens, It is only the companied the Ambassador. Bp a Barbs t SY Gineinnati doctor says ~pre-di- gested food of future will make human teeth unnecessary. Does he look forward to fhe day when man will not chews to eat? xe Writer estimates the U. 8. will pro- duce 46,000,000 bushels of spinach this year as compared with 42,000,000 1932. Hey! Haven’t they heard abous this crop reduction business? (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) | o FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: All racketeers have -to expect court trouble. absence, your father quite securely locked you away from me,” Warren explained. quite securely locked you away from me. You see that, don’t you, Pat?” She saw that his face was white. The hand that held his paper was shaking. “I wanted you to know, Pat, that I’m not such » darned cad as you must have thought,” he went on without looking up. “That’s all.” *She was trembling from head to foot. Throat closed tight. Smother- ing. Drowned in the pained blue eyes now suddenly lifted to her across the table. So that was it, He cared. He cared. Daddy had tied him. And her. How had Daddy guessed? Warren continued, his voice husked. “Have you—darn it—I can’t ask you that, I—the fact is —forget it, Pat—— I mean that night. You’re too young and love- ly and——” His voice trailed off. She found her voice. “A thing like that happens once in a lifetime to a girl like me. I haven't forgot- ten. I won't. Ever. “Are you still gorging, Pat?” asked Jack from the doorway. Her strength returned. She sprang up, abundant in pulsing vibrant life. It was as if the sun had suddenly thrust through the clouds, illumi- nating the world, converting it into @ grand pageant of color and move- ment, Jimmie loved her. . ribly.... A big strong man shak- ing like that... women, choosing a silly young girl like her. . .-. “One of the finest minds at the bar,” she'd heard a renowned judge say. And I, little I, can shake him like eee It didn’t matter,now how much it rained, how grey the world was outside, The world inside her was blinding sunlight. Jack followed her, his face stern. So Warren’s the man, he thought. The darned scoundrel! Even if he | ti had not heard Patricia’s last low spoken words, the telltale faces of the two would have emblazoned the truth to him. Sharply Jack Laurence knew the desire to kill a fellow man. All the blame he put where it! belonged—on the brilliant, experi-| lenced man who had snared her con- fused senses. . knew that while Patricia was under that roof he must stand by. He would have preferred to kil? Warren and walk out. But reason told him the futility of a step which would but gratify his own passion and emblazon her folly. But to face ‘with a smile each morning the man he must, if need be, destroy—but only if need be—strained his cour- age at all times to the breaking point. “Some day,” he said to himself, “Tl get that —— off in the woods, and I'll make use of some of the strength I acquired in the quarry. It'll be worth those three years. But Tl wait till her father has taken charge of her. Then—if he can’t manage her—Well—then no scan- dal of my making will matter.” To the young people it soon be- came evident that something elec- tric and menacing was in the air. Smart and laughing little clashes between the two men warned them of under cover conflict. Warren had a way of trying to belittle Jack as he belittled witnesses, by distorting to the point of absurdity his most jeasual statements. To which Jack would make some simple and darkly smiling retort that had the odd ef- fect of making Warren appear flamboyant—as if he were “show- ing off”, whereupon Warren’s fair face would redden, his blue eyes flash and his determined smile be- come almost a & way to offer financial aid to her proud old relative, she had known he was more interested in Patricia than their relationship admitted. But she had not been alarmed. That & man might conceive a passing infatuation for a lovely girl was ‘not in itself dangerous. That Jim- mie might yield to such an infatua- lon, set himself, with all the-ad- vantages of his position and intel- leet, to win a clean young girl, was farther than her mind had gone. Moreover, having held Patricia blameless, believing the girl looked ‘upon him as a nice older man and a sort of relative-the truth was slowly impinging upon her reluc- tant mind. Patricia was not schooled in intrigue and her changing color; Quite definitely’ Jack Laurence |her possessive and triumphant eyes, decided that if he failed to win her| Whenever Warren entered the room, for himself he would in any case|Were inescapable signposts, ‘kill Warren, thus leaving her free! to choose someone who could take her before the world. And quite sharply Pamela dis- covered that beneath the colorless ash of married life living coals may Telling himself that he could not| bide. stay under Warren’s roof, Jack (To Be Contineed) © 1932, by King Features Syndicate, Isc,

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