The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 30, 1933, Page 4

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Se RE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1933 ° The Bismarck Tribune }24##t!on of the power which a good Mrs, W. L. Nuessle, 710 Second St.;|Miss Arlen, Sanborn, 522 Eighth St,,}vet turban and black suede shoes., Year's day, Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl, pase “ example can have; and it is interest- Mrs, George Bird, 711 Second 8t.; Dr.| xccompanied by Miss Beatrice Vater,| Her flowers were light pink carna-|tor, will conduct the annual installa- on Werden Hi 6 bes How fhecPSARUiiig tha OL: L. W, Larson, 315 Park St.; Mrs. Nel- |407 sixth St., sang two numbers, tions combined with fern and tied| tion of officers. THE STATE'S OLDEST fasta ls thive was fh Bi tag son, Miss Rust and Miss Petron. Personal remintscenees of James=| With pink tulle awl! Mastin: of Gaaa faded ds i z Miss Mar, Koch, o sister e (Established 1873) When © man comes to grips with| By William Brady, M. D. se ® town college, given by Judge A. 0. dde* Ms tasld of honor ie cone leetings of Clubs Dain and weakness and utter discour-|| signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease 40 Attend Jamestown [Str nas been a trustee of the college | tume vas a brown silk crepe dress And Social Groups agement, as Mr. Roosevelt did more || diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, 7 since it reopened in 1909 and has sent | timmed a coller, a amall/¢ EY than s decade ago, and feces them|| 8elf-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters ahould be brief and written College Dinner Party three children there, His sister, Miss |brown turban and brown suede shoes,| The meeting of Chapter N, P. E, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. —— A. D. Burr, also was a guest at the | She carried carnations of dark pink|O. Sisterhood, scheduled for Monday Gown and licks them to @ frassie and ‘Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspeper. Covers were placed for 40 slumni|dinner, shade tied with tulle, , Jan. 1, haa been President and Publisher goes on his way as if he never had . and former and present students of! Out-of-town guests were Mr. and Sees on Gm tik cin Gk ae ——|seen them, he doesn’t win his fight! ) Qorop,, | Jamestown college at the dinner given| mrs, Scothorn of Mandan and Miss|»is brother, John Garnier. . Bakken, 519 Avenue ©, will be Bubsoription Rates Payable in| tor himself alone, TOR'S WHO THINK PLEASE who are qualified to give this treat-| Friday evening to honor the 17 stu-|Mabel Kipp, Jamestown. Close relatives of the bridegroom | hostess, Advance He may think so at the time, but WRITE |ment. I attribute this to two factors./ gents who are at their homes in Bis- dinner was prepared by Mrs, and bride were entertained at dinner xk Daily by carrier, per year ......87.20 | sore, to it than that, ‘This| Some of the methods of treatment First, the brass surgeons have » kind| marck and Menoken for the Alfred 8. Dale, Mrs. F. H. Waldo, 712|Sez¥ed st noon at the bride’s home.| The Order of the Eastern Star wilt Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- wohl end an ee jwhich I recommend to the public Of corner on the treatment of hernls| The party was held at thehomeot Mr.|jourth St, and Miss Pauline Bureell, | Covers were laid for 12. A green and| hold @ regular meeting Tuesday eves A marck) . ane .. 1.29] World 1s so constructed that a fight have been harshly criticized or con-, SMyway; for up to the recent past the/ and Mrs. G. A. Hample in the O. W.| mrs, M. O. Steen, 623 Thayer Avenue, |Pink color scheme was emphasized in bead at 7:30 o'clock at the Masonia "f by mail, per year (in state —_—_|Ifke that echoes for s long time. demned by certain “authorities.” For Tadical operation has been he only | Roberts residence, 117 Main avenue. | West, and Miss Estelle Dale, Dale|the trimmings of the tiered wedding | temple. Bsc) Mae A vot and H Outside of Bismarck) ......... 800/ It’s ® long way from a beaten vice that reason I have extolled these Srey Gane that Benn People| che dinner was served buffet style | apartments, assisted them with serv. | C®K®, Dink and green ee election eee ; | Daily by mail outside of North | nresidential candidate suffering from| Methods before various medical so- generally know that reputable PhYS- | rom a large table, which was centered |ing, ‘Miss Beatrice Register, 622 Fifth |deeP Dink carnations and fern. Miss Gaices' Si ge (hte et : Dakota ... coins paral: cleties and asked members to let me Clans have nothing other then oPerss | with green and red tapers and a circle |St.; Miss Jean Converse, Dale apart- Leingang, Bismarck, ® cou-) | Mrs. George M. r tl i Weekly by mail in state, per year 1,00 | ‘nfantile paralysis in 1921 to a wound-| know what experience they have had tion to offer the rupture sufferer, and | Seo On Cuotstmas trees, ‘The guests|ments, and Elmer Dale’ 1016 Eighth |i2 of the bride, was @ guest at the/ St, will be hostess to the Women's i ‘Weekly by mail in state, three ed policeman getting a new supply|with the new methods, I have ob- 80 the majority of Lg) victims COn-| were seated at 10 small tables with| St, were the reception committee, Biead i tira a ie rip ee ae ne : YEBTS ..sesennsereecseecsereers of hope and courage in 1933; but the |served considerable diffidence on tre sult physicians only when some com-| 44 ana white candy canes used to sk & couple home which eld at 3 o'clock ‘3 td ho hay ch Plication makes medical attention im- bridegroom's farm, 16 miles northeast | Tuesday afternoon. C, G. Boise, i ‘Weekly by mail outside of North connection is direct, after all. Part of doctors who have had su rative. As a rule they fool with|™ark their places, Red candles and | 77 dalen Koch: Weds _|ot Bismarck on Route 1, after Jan, 10.| 604 Avenue D, is leader of the pro- 4 Dakota, per year ..........+++. 1.90! ‘The greatest victory Franklin Roo- pec? ‘They seem to La intimi- | Pert Mien tunths ‘ai poinsettias used throughout the rooms |lagaalen Koc. e 1S Up to the At can ae Sede sumane : j | Weekiy by mall sm Gina Der 5 Jaevet ever won was his victory over ated bY the loud-mouth brast sur-/ ESS, tne ‘wan, nope of nding |i carried out the seasonal deeere-| Charles Paul Garnier |hss teen ‘arming with Ms mother| 7 Mise Marguerite onnedy, S18 : a ___— | his own body; and a victory like that anything new that doesn’t conform Cure or lasting relief. " do| , After dinner, Alfred 8. Dale, presi- near ere ‘The bride ages Sixth St. and aoe ‘8010s by Misa 4 Member of Audit Bureau of keeps on working long after the fight | with traditional theories or practice. | Some Cgc thank i avery sme | dent of the Jamestown College Alum-| Miss Magdalen Koch, daughter of a ities beige Letaead wan Emma King, Meno! Circulation is finished, Sometimes I wish I could afford 0 | ae wn Se Own house. | Tl association, gave @ brief welcome to| Mr. and Mra, Jacob Koch, Menoken,| Per onibahamad Member of The Associated Press | Yor it 1s © demonstration that what |TUn ® want ad from week to week housekeepers do thelr, OWN Mouse) tne guests of honor and everyone | and Charles Paull Garnier, son of Mr,|"F Parents Mrs. T. C. Madden Is ‘The Associated Press is exclusively | happens tos man’s muscles and bones | Wrded like this: tndependetign aha 60 to think| Present gave his class and present | and Mrs. Frank Garnier, were mar- ‘lli ts Winner in Contest entitied to the use for republication |ang sinew is not, after all, ao very| Wanted—Physician of good stand- | (UCheneiee Sk Hetone. ng yn. | address, Hed during a nuptial mass celebrated Willing Workers Name Miss Marguerite Kennedy, 518 Sixth St., played “Etude in E Flat” by Lisst and McDowell’s “Bre'r Rabbit.” Mrs, a oe ql severt lege songs, Miss with a tan bow of the same QUESTIONS AND aNey ES | Kennedy played the accompanimenta, | material at the neckline, a black vel- I have been drinking five bromo- a ig Sina 0 es FORBIDDEN VALLEY tory of North America for my Sey average dose contains 4 grains of Wiktiom Byron Mowou, ing, not over ninety years old, who is competent to give such and such modern treatment for so and so, Mention your clinical training and your experience with the method. Confidential. In that way I believe I might compile of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of gpontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. at St. Mary's Catholic church at 8 o'clock Saturday morning by Rev. Father Robert A. Feehan. The bride wore a maroon silk crepe vestigate, learn and adopt modern ad- vances or improvements in methods of treatment. important—so long as he keeps alive that indomitable spark of fearless determination in his own heart. Mrs. Gladys Nelson}, mrs. t. c. Medden, 1030 Fittn st, papers ae ee ee Mrs, Gladys Nelson, 306 Pitteenth | Stony won sittin Si, was elected president by the filaseesien for Oneisao pesents Bo ‘Willing Workers of the First Luther-| Mrs. Madden followed the slogan of an church when they met Friday eve-| the modern woman and supplied her ning in the church parlors. She suc- enth St. H. H. Engen, 921 Sev-| onsored by the Kelvinator company officers presi- in which women were required to dent, Mira, J. A. Erickson, a1 ‘Eley. | Wile letters telling why they wanted enth St.; secretary, Mrs. Rex B. Al-|® new Kelvinator for Christmas, Just Guessing Scientists, meeting at Boston, come forth with the assertion that the old-fashioned girl of the Stone ‘Age period had a brain capacity of 1,480 cuble centimeters as com- pared with 1,300 for the average Happy New Year ' smhat hope which springs eternally fm the human breast always finds new vigor at the New Year. It isa time for looking back at the past and peering forward into the future and service to readers. s I thought it was difficult enough | acetanilide ee : oe ice tate getting such data when I began pro- | ated water. Ath becat as moting the chemical obliteration of grown fond of the flavor . acini varicose veins years ago. But that| Answer—Flavor my eye. | 4|you have grown fond of the effect of SYNOPSIS: Leaving for 6 Curt laughed. “Don’t be crazy, brecht, 718% Mandan St.; treasurer,|_ Mrs. Madden wrote a letter and ft says much for the resilient spirit/YOUNg woman of today and that she pf ort iincitl ab eesti sense-deadener, acetanilide. The ee} qroak chem he to traing Arn.” Mrs. J. P. Engen, 811 Sixth 8t.; de-|Santa Claus delivered the goods, one nati years despite the sneers and the carbonated water (soda, seltzer water, fate the, Bing bh of oe Geue cee theo! raised the water made to sparkle by pumping . Gane eastern Oc fettconsatited “anthoriten* PYnen | carbon dioxide, carbonic acid gas in- Foncouver for | ‘format Son Stess's the diathermy method of extirpating to it) is all right. But your ace- je odd tonsils came along, the brass throat tanilide habit will ruin your health specialists put up a determined re-) soon. sistance and the compilation of my| Borax Makes ar ar roster of physicians skilled in this! The hardness of the _ method was slow work. Quite often shaving unpleasant. Friend suggest it always does|St0od nearly six feet tall, which is Gereiks cpdaiam, irate? considerably above the average for ‘There are new resolutions to be|modern females. made and subsequently broken. New| It is all very interesting, but the plans for the future. New ways of average individual, who lays claim to expressing old aspirations. It is a/O more science than the law allows, time of change and the natural hope|Cannot help but wonder how these and instinct is to seek one for the|Dright lads know all this. Could they, “What's crazy about it?” “The whole idea! To leave her out of it and argue from Karakhan’sa viewpoint, he'd never let anybody know where he’s hiding. He didn’t even allow Jim Gunnar to take him into those mountains.” “Yes, I know; but Curt, think of of the 25 machines awarded in the nation-wide contest. Restrictions Taken From Two N. D. Banka Release from restriction of two corating committee: Miss Alice Brown; 415 Ninth St., and Mrs. 0. W. Por- ter, 1714 Rosser avenue; hospital visit- ing comimttee: Mrs. O, N. Nordlund, 314 Mandan 8t., and Mrs, H. A. Swenson, 820 Fifth St. Mrs. Engen and the other retiring officers served refreshments following the business meeting. S259 SE FerwesP seas wvsereersey weers ? a te really the daughter of Prince yeni Volkov, Russian migré. A Russian friend of her family ts describing the escape of this: he’s been there in that God- state banks and the voluntary liquide ae 2g¢e8 for example, take a single skull of|1 learned of a doctor using the new|Using borax in shaving water as the Volkove from the Red Terror, a xk * ation of another was announced Sat« better. rou! jsoftener. Is borax used in this way forsaken country for nine months; ie 1 ‘What prospect there is for general|#0me prehistoric woman and learn|method successfully only tl we ae arena ole skin? (8. J. HK) he's gone almost 4 year without Announce Traditional poten Adam A. Lefor, state bank about her sisters all the things they|Casual mention of his name by | Answer—! ll, indeed it is Chapter 28 sight of a white woman's face. And A 4 fmprovement may best be Judged of his patients who happened to write | wer—Not at all, Tea at Fort Lincoln| ‘The First state Bank of Wishex after s look at the past. We already|*s#ume they can? me about something. joften beneficial, keeping the skin soft NEW LEADS another thing, Curt—we know he was released from restriction as to Re hhave come a long way up from the| The answer is rather obvious. Much bottom of the depression. of what we are told as fact is not Millions still are out of work, but|#¢tually beyond the realm of pure fot as many millions as was the case|SPeculation—and that goes for a lot ® few months ago. of things not in the field of science. Buffering and want still stalk the} When they constructed their theory Yand, but not in as aggravated afot this ancient Amason, however, the form as we have recently known it. |Scientists may have been inspired. sils without any mention of the name by some kind of quackery they dwell on the quack’s name ant refer only vaguely if at all to the method of And there’s a curious fact. People jand smooth, write enthusiastic encomiums about | the diathermy method for the ton-/ of the physician who gave the treat-| ment. But when people are obsessed | Ben Is Back I was operated on for goitre 18 years ago. In March, June and Sep- tember of this year I took your fodin ration, But have Ben Told it is dangerous for one who has had such an operation to use iodin in any form. Certainly I have felt better taking it, but... (M. P.) “] MET the Volkovs again in Mon- golian Urga half @ year later,” Feodor Plekhanov went on. “They had won through. As my son and I had. Prince Stephn welded us into a band for self-defense and got us through to Peking, and there we threw over Helen Mathieson and took up with another girl just a few weeks before he pitched off. We've never found out who that girl was. T'll bet my governor's title against a shirt-button that it was Sonya Vol- kov!" Curt stepped on the starter, “Your” ‘theory’ is a waste of time, Let's be of many years’ George Warren Harris, commant their home from ¢ to 6 o'clock. In accordance with the tradition standing, Colonel deposits on Dec. 18 and the State Bank on December 20 after having been on a limited withdrawal officer at Fort Lincoln, and id basis since early in the year. Harris will be host and hostess New Year's Day tea to be eesti stone, halted receipt of deposits on The Gladstone State Bank, Glad- Dec. 18 and will pay off all of its dee Guests will be officers stationed at |Positors, Lefor said. Fort Lincoln and their wives, and >¢—_____________4@ This season Tom a ttered to four winds.” ,» "1 friends of Colonel and Mrs. Harris A ° Instability and insecurity still are d a nied asd peirereiatld gince I began recommending the | Sry ee ate se bbatirest “No abrerdeetintebe that Son- cae eee iho live in Bismarek, No cards have Al Smith Dons His ant don’t serve onor= iral for yor °, Common, but it is evident that things ae ae im Boston there proba) Smbulant treatment of hernia to Te |nas had no-goitre or goitre operation.| 7 had turned on him with such} They drove back to the Marlin been issued. | Derby on Birthday fre settling down and soon the aver-| able n Bost Prob-| public I have encounte! violence when he mildly praised the| home, mapped out their program for Assisting Mrs. Harris receiving ‘age man may feel safe again. ably is a satisfactory substitute. Also, it is apparent that the path is forward and that those who long Not a Reliable Crop for a “return” of prosperity are due} Reports by the government agricul- for disappointment. After a calamity tural department indicate that North such as we have known things have|Dakota’s seeding of winter rye rose never returned to their former status. 10 per cent this fall from 952,000 acres difficulty in learning of physicians ee ee | Additional Society | —_——6 Dorothy Petron Named Girl Scout Director (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) noon meal, had nature study periods, de accessories, had camp fire at Tis o'clock and started home at 4:45 o'clock. Pioneering was carried on throughout the season, with the girls cooking their meals over an open fire. ‘The Girl Scouts were divided into units, which had separate camps and Leninists that evening in the prison house. And no wonder she seldom smiled. Gradually swinging Plekhanov away from the émigré story, he led the old Russian to talk about the Volkovs in Victoria. But with that phase of their life Plekhanov was the following day, and separated. see te the next morning they met at the pier and flew across to Victoria. Baldwin started out to cover the private school where Son- ya taught and the family where she had been governess, Curt took the guest of his,father and mother, Mr. and Mrs, Simon Makiesky, until after the New Year's holiday. * ek * New York, Dec. 30.—(?)—Al Smith celebrated his 60th birthe day Saturday with an interview in his office at which he said ‘I hope to God I live to be 90.” Sitting behind a huge birthe day cake in his office in the Eme Pire. State building, the former 5 cas Car Pat Instead, and this is more cheering,|to 1,047,000 acres but that planting) 41. 1oothy Petron, 311 Rosser idea of mak-| 20t #0 well eoquainted. They had! other leads as his part. Mr, and Mrs. R. W. Carlson, 402] governor of New York and one- | they have always advanced to new/conditions were bed, germination h8s) avenue, west, was elected part-time Polat algeria ‘Areas were Eleventh St, and their daughter,| time Democratic nominee for the | and higher levels and old standards|been uneven and growth retarded. | airector of the local Girl Scouts to/cleared for camps. Permanent facili- Merilyn, are to for a| presidency said: New Year's visit with Mrs. Carlson's “There's a decided better bust= ness condition and I am looking forward to a still better rise bee ginning with the New Year.” McLEAN CO. HAS 60 PROJECTS 1 have been left behind. AS a result, condition of the crop is , There are more than @ few evi-|Put at 55 per cent of normal, com- dences that we now are traveling|Pared to 68 per cent a year ago and that kind of road. The year 1934/74 per cent the year before. dawns just as we have made @ start| Figures for the country show seed- succeed Miss Harriet Rust at the Girl Scout council meeting held Fri- day morning at the World War Me- morial building nursery room. Chair- men of all committee submitted their reports to the council during the ties installed include incinerators, drains, towel racks, refrigerators and fire spots. Wood has been piled for future use. Camp accessories made in handi- craft work were coat hangers, toast- at an informal afternoon and 6 o'clock z ings 14.7 per cent larger than a year | meeting. ing sticks and broiling sticks. Nature supper Thursday. Sewing was the| Washburn, N. Dak., Dec. 30.—Sixty id 3 ane ate fear and trem-| #0 With an average condition of 69.9| Miss Petron has been prominent in| work was based on the aim of having pastime during the afternoon, sige for aoe county have oe Girl Soout activities since she became | the girls recognize trees and birds at eek en approved by state CWA. Nearly bling but they push ahead because compered to last year. Most of these there is no other way. Others walk|!Mcreases have occurred in Minnesota, with hope and confidence. After the|10wa and North Dakota. trials they have known they feel they| The conditions estimates, coupled have proved thetr strength. with the fact that the average of ‘And so, as we stand on the|*2andonment during the last three threshold of 1934, we can look back| ears is 40 per cent of the sown acre- and thank 1933 for the splendid) ®8e Seems to cast some doubt upon things it has brought us. Chief|‘¥¢ ®® major crop in this ares. Ex- Mrs, A. E. Brink, 400 Avenue ©, has had as her holiday guest her niece, Miss Mary Jane Phillips of Grand Forks. Miss Phillips now is visiting captain of Troop No. 3 two years ago. Last summer she directed the Bis- marck Girl Scout Day camp, which had a total attendance of 200 girls on 13 different days during August and September. Miss Rust resigned as nart-time director and now is direct- ing troop activities of Girl Scouts in St. Paul. In her report on the day camp, which was a new project in 1933, Miss sight. The camp fire was @ song festival with a few games with the objective of teaching the girls folk songs re- quired in order to secure the minstrel badge. Three senior and four junior coun- selors assisted Miss Petron on the camp staff. The senior counselors were Mrs. C. B. Nelson, Mason apart- ments; Mrs. G. M, Oliver, 711 Avenue * * & Miss Dorothy Edson, Moffit, came at noon Saturday to spend the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hughes, | 90 519 Eleventh St. Miss Edson is re- tensive as our troubles hat n emong these is a new spirit, The| Sms 00 avand other cress, | Peon shows that TL girls attended A, and Miss Bisle Nelson, 022 Eighth turning to the State Teachers college| MARMARTH PAPER SUSPENDS apathy with which the year began a "/once, 45 attended twice, 10 girls at-|st. Miss Betty Laist, 506 Fifth St.; at Valley City. aaaeis a has been replaced by a new vitality.|‘DeY Seem more reliable than these |+ended three times and two girls at-| iss Dede Barrett; Miss Marjorie ee * Marmarth, BE tien reall! JS was important as all beginnings figures indicate rye to be. tended four times. The camp is lo-| Doll, 309 Tenth St., and Miss Irma Patrick Murphy left for Duluth Me reese re iy ee . cated on the river road. Fern Logan, 208 Gecond St., were jun- Tuesday after Christmas plant mov » Mont., ‘ere important. Old gods have fallen but new—and ‘we hope better—ones have risen to, take their place. Man's responsibil- ior counselors. | Where J. C. Abel will launch a new Members of the committee were: Mrs, W. B. Pierce, 831 Sixth St.; Mrs, T. C. Madden, 1030 Fifth 8t.; | Minnie Craig Suffers Broken Ankle in Fall Craig, speaker of the 1933 session of the North Dakota leg- In a typical camping day, the girls met at the World War Memorial building at 8 o'clock, arrived at camp at 10:30 o’clock, prepared and ate the oie. Become: Bima Eaapiae, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Bakken, islature, suffered a broken ankle Sat- ahe tripped and bench in the court room in the federal building urday afternoon when fell from the judge’s HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzile Prima Donna | 13 She is famous Curt and Baldwin met at the pier. gone 4 different road from his, and He went first to the office of the ken’s sister, Miss Marion Bakken Chicago, during the Miss Bakken, who is temporarily tioned at Fessenden by Avenue C, are entertaining Mr. Bak- home at Zap Friday night berculosis, Mrs, Emil Klaudt, 29, died at Besides her husband the Red here. 15 Who is the for her ——. he saw them rarely. But he did| lumber company to meet her father, will return to her work after | # brothers, Gus Witt, Beulahy . Craig, who for the last several In another know the lumber company that the| confident that he would need go no | CTOSS Ted and Gottlieb Witt of Halliday. But life is always lke that and wel tT Pe pene —. a place. men were connected with, the name| further. To his keen digappointment |New Year's neg, ae Funeral will be at Beulah ean only put our trust in the honesty, 16 Company. of the school where Sonya taught,| her father and brother were both ‘Miss Mabel Kipp, Jamestown, ar- Sunday, ef our own hearts and in the Provi. 10 Stems set m8 17 English coins the family where she had been| gone on a long trip to Viadivostok rived Priday evening to visit until dence which guides us, im 19 Eccéntrie | governess, and the address of the|on business. He was surprised tq | etter New Year's Day at the home of LEIPZIG BEATS FREDA If we do this, we can feel at ease ree wheel. ‘Volkov home, hear this. Sonya had led him to be- |wr. and Mrs, Alfred & Dele, 1016| New Leipzig, N. D., Dec. 30. et) arecives and the world when pees 20 Nobleman. |" Curt decided that with those good lieve that Russian soi! was dis |kighth St. Mrs. Dale's mother, Mrs, aged Lene’ ‘Trojans, ply ei nilahieces arith al manlle cm). 23 Nominal value | leads it would be easy to run across tinctly dangerous for the Volkovs, | Alma Lusk, left for Jamestown Friday eam, swamped Freds greet New Xe 14 Part of plant 24 Guides a to Victoria and get the information| He located the president of thé evening after visiting here since be- and a Happy New Year. below ground. A svessel. | he wanted. Thanking their host, he| Emigré Society, a genial Muscovitd | fore Christmas. ~ A Great E 15 Points at. A 26 Click beetle. | and Baldwin went down to the car. | of fifty who now was managing & x * * reat Example 16 Indian boat. 26 Minor note. _ “Well, did you get what you were| warehouse on the C.P. docks, He | Miss Betty Allison, who is here from In a certain middle-western hospi- 18To consume, 27 Stain. after, Curt?” struck up an acquaintanceship with | Beach for a holiday visit with her tal lies a policeman, paralyzed 19 To applaud. 28 Sloths. “It was worth while, I've got a|the man, went home with him for | aunt, Mrs. E. J. Taylor, 611 Sixth St. the hips to the toes. He has 20 Italian river. 32 Mountain good grasp of her background; but] lunch, and met his wife and his ‘was commnlinseeibed A free Amant Mae ieee rectly Utes stern, = qrcqrae ep nothing that he said gives me any three vivacious daughters. can Tareas Eas # -!| WHO WANTS lass us fought » gun battle Deas ete Son per. | 22 Northeast. idea of what she's doing in the Lik| In an hour's talk with the girs |Ceorge Will. La ener : bandit and got a bullet in the return ae com ays on | 23 Bucket. Pry onsen gp _ Curt turned her private life inside ee StL aL ae colataliied’ fae —income—All. dividend For a long time he has been 34 Sonthaast. py Badwin turned on the switch key, out, earning a great mass of detaile | Lumty, 311 in morn eo 26 Hairy man. snapped it off again, toyed with the | about her work and friends and im ’ £e & diversificati 3 despondent—as Harvey of 413| 26 Young sheep. 44 She has a —— strap of his swagger stick. terests. But nothing that they said The Senior Luther League Healion —~ major ‘Bismarck, are parents| 27 To rob. sae “Cart, I've been thinking of Sonya | gave him any clue to her trip north. industries represented Ni 29 Street. 30 Far away. 46 Frost bite. 48 Myself, . : ia wee that ¢hose two were acquainted. Kerakhan must've known her; he made it his business to know all the émigrés in these two cities, for he didn’t want somebody who knew him in Russia to bob up unexpectedly sive bim away. It’s another safe that egytE Hs H ! ay U fii. rT; ln i tt cieape g TGie : E E a: As a last hope he taxied out to the Through her Curt learned that Ralph Nichols frequently had called there, The woman told of another man also, whom she had seen op many occasions, a tall handsome Russian of thirty-eight or forty. He came from some near-by city, likely Vancouver, the woman said; but she had not seen him since last fall, Yes, he had been a very frequent visitor for a month or more, ‘The description of this unknown caller sounded 1o Curt remarkably ke a description of Igor Karakhan, At four o'clock he met Baldwin on the pier. To his question Baldwin shook his head. “Didn't flush a bally thing. What luck did-you have?” “None. I found out everything about her except the one thing J wanted to know.” He said nothing about_bis talk with the woman end Sonya’s caller last fall, (Copyright, 1988, Wiliam B. Mowery) rt retul got a theory about this situation.| Volkov home, The house was locked, % at 11 o'clock. O. O. conditions ashe wase | desu. ic ape aL Maybe it's occurred to you. Did you| the shades drawn, a dozen old news: |Loxken’ pia Seventh Bt, has pianed|| | 108 economic sre Kg a Ba ‘houg! a trip. ever wonder whether Karakhan| papers on the front porch. As heex- |the program which includes an ad-|| —marketability at all times he oe “ srs 43 Fairy. mighto't be at the bottom of this] pected, no one answered his ring. , | dress by A. B. Thompson, 881 Pifth|! According to the combined, tee S5Sheisahighy in ——. é7By ee ee thatr* 100 ee ean ae te ae rey Ceding, “Mary Eise-|| OPinion of America’s beat “Karakhan—how's volunt some . a ‘iness ‘inancial une di = ee fee hare, is a pretty sate bet| information about the Volkova, beth." by Mrs, I. A. ako, On New|| bus rae om —flexibility to meet chang- servers, sound common stocks are the best hedge

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