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Sor m@recewor MOOS pte ae A ee SEM RN AMO AO ee Am Py ‘H. BISMARCK TRIBU SATURDAY, MAY 5, The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) eo 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 oN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.......87.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- marek) ..........65 se seeeeees Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota 2... .. ss eeeseeseseeeee 6.00; ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00) Weekly by mail in state, three | years Weekly by mail outside of North | Dakota, per year 1.50} Weekly by mail in Canada, per | year Gong + 2.00) 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. } the first that it would not work out. Now we find it meeting a severe test, and emerging with flying colors. For the sake of industrial peace and continued business revival, one hopes! that it will have equally good luck in all future disputes referred to it. Equality in Brains Poor children are just as intelligent as rich children, according to Dr. Kawin, psychologist of the Institute for Juvenile Research in Chicago. Dr. Kawin gave the well-known 20) Stanford-Binet and Merrill-Palmer intelligence tests to 62 children in a nursery school in Chicago's famous 00| Hull House. Then she gave the same tests to youngsters in a Winnetka public considerably higher social and eco- nomic level. | 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, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. 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. |THE CORNHUSKS’ SOFT ALLURE |decorated and equipped as the boy or Some artist, I suppose, conceived a |girl wishes. Too often the children trick picture which at close view |must retire reluctantly to a sleeping showed a lady busy at her dressing jroom that is dreary and uninviting, table, but from a little distance | fitted rather for some granny or a changed to a grinning skull. For a|monk. ‘time I had a copy in my office, but | the young ladies saw only the girl and {her mirior and the elderly ladies were | shocked by the ugly death’s head. To a doctor all is vanity. The doc- | school nursery—youngsters from a tor sees the private or secret side of life. He doesn’t pause long in the re- |ception room but enters directly into the bedroom. And what a strange |. Except where it is too warm, & jfeather tick makes a famously com- fortable bed. Next to that, a down cover is well worth its cost as an in- |vestment in comfort, The lighter the jbed covers the better. Heavy covers j tire and cramp the body and cause unpleasant dreams or nightmares. |One soft, loosely woven lightweight And she found no difference in the sad difference he sees between the |blanket or cover, no matter what average groups. The next time you hear someone lament that poor people have a higher birth rate than rich people, you might remember this fact. The child of poor parents gets just as good an allotment of brains as the intelligence of the jing room and hall and the crude tawdy fitments in the sleeping apart- ment, From what I have seen as a country and city practitioner and from some experience in correcting the evils re- \ferred to, I am convinced that most |insomnia, unrefreshing sleep, disturb- ing dreams and nightmares, not to All rights of republication of all other | child of the rich, if this test is any| mention various purely physical ail- matter herein are also reserved. Harrowing Thought | As might be expected under the| circumstances, opinions as to the guilt or innocence of William Gum-; mer, serving a life term for the slay-| ing of Marie Wick in Fargo in 1921, are being rather freely expressed. | Some persons firmly believe that| Gummer was convicted of a crime which he did not commit and is serv-| ing time unjustly. Others take the| position that, having been convicted | by a jury which heard all of the facts! at the time, the presumption is! against him. i} The jury which sat in the case at| Valley City felt Gummer was guilty “beyond reasonable doubt” else it) ‘would not have convicted him, There criterion. Blossom Time It is blossom time in North Da- kota and everyone can rejoice. ments, are due solely to unsuitable sleeping equipment, especially a bed spring or mattress that a self-respect- ing body should be ashamed to be found half-dead on. And the covers that go with such niggardly sleeping This state has few enough fruit/arrangements are as comfortable as trees, but here and there throughout inlaid linoleum. It is by no means the countryside and in the backyards! Poverty that accounts for the misery, of city residences may be seen cherry trees bursting into bloom. Others are ready to follow suit. In certain localities, their fragrance fills the air and gives definite prom- ise of a crop to come, We still need rain and need it for most of the homes that cling to such antiquated furnishings sport au- tomobiles of luxurious class and squander money freely to put up @ fine front. Bed springs rigidly anchored to the rails at the sides or ends and sagging like a hammock in the middle may be just what an old sailor wants. Folk badly, but the chances are we will} accustomed to sleeping ashore should Get it soon and, meanwhile, the blos- soms offer encouragement. It is hard to be downcast in blossom time. pra aon cnt ns INDICT. 41 MEN IN was “railroaded” or denied any of the protections accorded him by law. } Nevertheless, the absence of “rea-| sonable doubt” in the minds of that| 1921 jury clearly does not settle all doubt in the matter and the thought that possibly a 21-year-old boy was erroneously convicted and sentenced to a life term is a harrowing one. We like to think of justice as a certain thing, even though it is administered | ‘by human beings prone to error. | Now, apparently, we are to have| the whole business reviewed again, not by a new trial of Gummer but by the trial of another man accused! of the crime. After 13 years the dead ashes of the case are to be raked over, primarily to see if something) important was overlooked in the first sifting. For there is no denying that} the proposed trial of Arthur James on the charge of murdering Marie Wick was instituted as a sort of re-| view of the Gummer case. If James) is convicted Gummer will go free. | This unusual procedure should | meet with the approval of every jus- tice-loving citizen, even though it! means the state will be put to con- siderable expense by a new trial. If} it resolves the doubts which now ex- ist as to Gummer's guilt, or proves him innocent, the cost will be more than justified. Incidentally, recent developments in the case are a tremendous tribute to! the faith and persistence of one man. He is H. W. Swenson, Devils Lake attorney and Gummer's brother-in- law. Throughout the years he has never quit working on this case, has never lost faith that Gummer is innocent. Year in and year out he has sought @ judicial review of this conviction. Now, apparently, he is to have it. It has been a demonstration of loyalty and affection such as few brothers-in-law could hope to emu- late. Choice By Lot ‘The Daughters of the American Revolution plan to send one school- girl from each state to Washington next spring on a patriotic pilgrim- ‘age and have adopted a sound method ing. pf selecting the girl to receive the ‘honor. Candidates within the state will be selected on the basis of good citizen- ship, which is just another term for character and leadership, but there will be no effort to determine which ‘among the girls nominated by various localities is most entitled to the honor. Instead, the names will be placed in a box and one selected by lot, ‘This is sound common sense. It is! Dbviously impossible for these women | or any others to look into the minds and hearts of a large number of very fine girls and select one among them as best from the standpoint of citi- eenship. The world is full of good xitizens, both men and women. A Severest Test—Met! ‘The automobile labor board: set up tial Report of Grand Jury At. St. Paul St. Paul, May 5.—(#)—Eleven per- sons were charged with conspiracy in connection with the $200,000 abduc- tion of Edward G. Bremer of St. Paul in a secret indictment returned here late Friday by a federal grand jury under the so-called Lindbergh kid- naping act. Federal agents heretofore have named only seven men as suspects in the case. Identities of the other four indicted were guarded with utmost secrecy, The indictment was returned in a Partial report of the grand jury to Judge M. M. Joyce. George F, Sulli- van, United States district attorney, immediately asked for issuance of bench warrants for those accused. Warrants were mailed Friday night to Chicago. These were believed to be for John J. McLaughlin, politician who is said to have confessed and then denied handling $53,000 of the Bremer ransom; his son, John J., Jr., William Vidler, gambler and former convict who is alleged to have had $2,665 of the ransom money when ar- rested, and Philip Delaney, a Chicago bartender. All four are in custody of federal agents at Chicago. It is believed the indictment also names Alvin Karpis and Arthur (Doc) and Fred Barker, southwest gunmen suspects in the Bremer kid- naping. Plan Examinations For Postoffice Jobs Applications for 13 third-elass post- masterships in North Dakota must be submitted by May 18, it is announced in a communication received from the U. 8. civil service commission. Oven competitive examinations to fill the positions at each of the 13 of- fices are planned. They will not be examinations under the civil service act and rules, but under executive order of July 12, 1933. The date for assembling of competi- tors will be stated on admission cards which will be sent to applicants about 15 days after the deadline for apply- Postmasterships and salaries for which applications are in order in- clude Alamo $1,200; Antler $1,200; Bowdon $1,500; Braddock $1,400; But- te $1,400; Fordville $1,500; Hatton $2,000; Lehr $1,800; Niagara $1,300; Strasburg $1,500; Tuttle $1,500; Wer- ner $1,200; and White Earth $1,100. Examinations will be held only at Bismarck, Carrington, Dickinson, El- lendale, Fort Yates, Grafton, Grand Forks, Harvey, Stanley, Westhope and Williston. A competitor for any one Of the offices, however, may take the examination at any one of the places named. Bankruptcy Bill Is Approved in Senate Washington, May 5.—()—Ending a two-day legislative impasse caused by an oratorical marathon by Senator Long (Dem.-La.) the senate late Fri- day passed the house corporate bank- Tuptey relief bill after rejecting, 37 to 11, an amendment by Senator Frazier (Rep.-N.D) proposing a virtual 6% year moratorium on farm debts. Long did prevent the bankruptcy bu from being returned to the house lor action on senate cl en- tering a motion to ne il The bill provides that a NAILS AUTHOR'S STORY 5 BREMER ABDUCTION : select rather a flexible bed spring that gives as much at the margins as in the center yet has a firm level base support at all points. Support and rot suspension of the body is the thing desired. Both spring and mat- tress should give enough to conform to the uneven pressure or weight of different parts of the body yet afford fficient support to give the effect of buoyancy. A mattress that consists of a landscape of hills and valleys—well, just contemplating such a horror is enough to make one hate the thought Charges Are Contained in Par-| of going to bed. Now that is all wrong psychology. The sleeping equipment and environ- ment should be as attractive as pos- sible, so that the thought of hitting the hay shall always be pleasant. Wise parents give much thought and spare no reasonable expense to make the children’s rooms attractive, not merely prettied up but arranged, two| pleasing array of doodads in the liv- | material, is warmer than two heavier jblankets of more compact material. It jis the air layer retained in or by the cover that keeps you warm. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | Cornaro Wrote in Columbus's Time | Some time ago you referred to a book by Luigi Cornaro on long life. | This book cannot be procured from ithe public library here. Please give {me the title and tell me where one |can get the book. (E. W. 8.) | Answer—“The Art of Living Long” ‘was written by Cornaro more than 400 years ago. Some chap had an edition of it published not many years ago. Libraries and book collectors are like- ly to have the book, The Little Tin Doctor A nurse addressed a group of girls. \She said the first child of a couple who have indulged in kissing before marriage will very likely be born blind, hare-lipped or open-backed. . eo Ve ea). Answer—Which would be comical if it were not so deplorable. It is cruel to imply that such defects of devel- opment as hare-lip or spina bifida, which may occur in any family, have any such significance. The nurse is incompetent to instruct girls. Chalk Is Chalk Following one of your suggestions I asked my druggist for some prepared chalk. He gave me precipitated chalk and said it is the same thing. Please assure me about this. (Mrs. F. M.) Answer—Prepared chalk is the only form of chalk used in medicine, The chemical name for it is calcium car- bonate. Calcium carbonate may be had in tablets, in powder, or in the familiar liquid suspension called chalk mixture. Ten grains, in tablet form, is @ moderate dose, as an antacid for stomach acidity, gas, etc. and the remedy is preferable to soda and other alkalis for this purpose. A tea- spoonful or more of the chalk mixture is a small dose. (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Bismarck High Pupils Enter State Contests students will be among the thousand young people assembling at the Uni- versity of North Dakota at Grand Forks for the annual high school con- tests Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 17 to 19. The local school will enter Veil Lifts,” a one-act play, Junior Playmakers festival, scheduled for the first day. In the cast are Jane Smith, Phillip Gorman, Emma Langer, Ruth Christianson, Mavis “The ginia Cayou. A number of Bismarck high school | in the} Mitchell, Marion Pederson and Vir- | G. E. Juell of Spokane, Wash., resi- dents of Bismarck until nine years |ago. Mr. Juell, who formerly was em- |ployed by the Bismarck Tribune, now is following the printing trade at Spo- kane. eek OK Mrs. C. H. Rogers, who passed the | winter months with her daughter, |Mrs. Ralph Dean, 215 Ninth 8t., has returned to her home at Spokane, | Wash, | ee * |_ Two officers of the Community Players’ drama appreciation group shifted their positions in the annual jelection held this week. Mrs. Ralph ‘uman, 314 Third St., former pro- gfam director, became president; Miss Miss Smith, Miss Cayou and Wil- | Bessie R. Baldwin, 414 Avenue B, who liam Mote will represent Bismarck in|was president, was made program the declamation contest. The boys’ |director. Mrs. Frayne Baker, 508 division will be heard Thursday aft-|Thayer avenue, west, was retained as ernoon at 1:30 o'clock and the girls’ , secretary. declamation will be heard at the * * * same time Friday afternoon. Judge and Mrs. John Burke, 224 In the music division, Bismarck | Avenue A, west, entertained a group contestants will be Marjorie Hawley, | of their neighbors at dinner Thursday Frances Frahm, Gladys Risem, Ber-| evening. There were eight guests. Nottingham, Eng.—Col. G. 8. Hutch- inson, author. was quoted by the Not- Journal as King Albert of Belgium did not actually , but was the _ and Mrs. Ralph T. Davis of Arcata, of the Belgian “ Sock | and Mrs. nard Flaherty and James Hyland. Bismarck also will enter track and golf teams and at least two tennis players. Announce High School Commencement Orator Rev. Roy E. Olson, protestant chap- lain of the Minnesota State Reforma- tory at St. Cloud, Minn., will give the address at the commencement exer- cises of Bismarck high school Thurs- day evening, June 7, according to W. The class night activities will be held on June 5. Music for the exer- cises will be presented by Miss Ruby Wilmot’s grade school pupils and by the high school boys’ chorus, directed by Clarion E. Larson. Attend Meeting Here Leaders and delegates from Bur- leigh county’s 16 4-H Homemaker clubs assembled in Bismarck Saturday for a training meeting under the di- rection of Miss Julia Brekke, of the extension department of the state agricultural college. Though only a dozen appeared for the morning session, it was expected many more would be in attendance at the afternodn session, during which a study of the advantageous use and possibilities of a commercial pattern was scheduled. Early registrants included Lucille Ebeling and Mrs, A. C. Dance of Menoken; Mrs. H. M. Gulson, Jeanne Gulson, Corinne Buckley, Naomi Buckley, Mrs. J. E. Chesak and Betty Jane Small, all of the Bismarck dis- The meeting is being held in the World War Memorial building. Additional Society Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Titus, 212 Thay- er avenue, west, received word Thurs- day of the birth of a daughter to Mr. Calif, on Saturday, April 28. The child is a great granddaughter of Mr. Titus. Mrs. Davis was Miss marriage on the jaw” if he would repeat the/riiyan A. Juell before her and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. [4 * H. Payne, principal. Rev. Olson has| 8 Who is the appeared before the high school stud- boo skating ent body on two previous occasions. star in the Payne also announced that Rev. picture? John Richardson, rector of St. 5 Tatter. George's Episcopal church, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon to the 1934 ue the fuk graduating class at the Bismarck city ower i auditorium Sunday afternoon, June 3,| 16 Nee. at 3 o'clock. ITA passage. ‘We may have overnight flights to Europe in five years, says Glenn Mar- tin, famous aircraft builder. Most likely the flights will be from, not to, Famone, the way things are going ere. LANCER DISCUSSES FEDERAL CHARGES “IN TALK ON RADIO Declares No One Claims Money Was Diverted from Pur- pose Intended Des Moines, May 5.—(#)-—-Governor William Langer of North Dakota dis- cussed his indictment or a charge of misuse of federal relief funds in an address here Friday. The speech was broadcast over WHO-WOC. Explaining that North Dakota oper- ates its own fire and tornado insur- ance department, its own mill and elevator, a state bank and other com- munity enterprises, he said: “I am greatly concerned that the credit of our state shall not suffer because of my indictment by the fed- eral government. May I not make it clear that no one claims that out of the millions of dollars spent by the state that no. claim is made that a single dollar has been diverted from the purpose for which it was appro- priated or that it has been embezzled or stolen. “What I have heen indicted for is conspiracy to interfere with the oper- ation of an act of congress and @ conspiracy to solicit contributions for campaign purposes, not from CWA workers, a8 some newspapers have claimed, but from relief workers. “I believe that the place to try a law suit is in a court room and not over a radio, nor in the newspapers, but I do want the people to know that no claim is made that a single laborer of any kind has ever contributed or been asked to con- tribute a penny. Says He Needed Newspaper the gas refrigerator. It is recognized, the committee said, that stimulation ct selling in one industry has com- inl dable reactions in other indus- = A total of $6,700 in cash prizes will be distributed among winners with a “blue vase” as the symbol of success. The ‘blue vase’ idea is taken from Peter B. Kyne'’s “The Go-Getter”, which teaches the lesson of over-com- ing sales obstacles, it is explained. As part of the campaign, free copies of Kyne’s story are being distributed to thousands of gas company salesmen. The contest began April 1 and will continue until June 30. First prize will be the blue vase plus $300, second bevel with appeal ari fifth $100 , wi monthly prizes of $100 each for April, May and June. YOUNG DEMOCRATS WERT HERE MONDAY Will Lay Plans for ‘Moodie-for- Governor’ Banquet «nd Drive for Members Plans to hold a “Moodie-for-Gov- ernor” banquet in Bismarck will be discussed at a meeting of the Burleigh County Young Democrats club called for 8 o'clock Monday evening at the World War Memorial building by Leonard H. Miller, Bismarck, county chairman, Tom Moodie, Democratic endorsee for the gubernatorial race, will be in- vited to come to Bismarck for the Proposed dinner, which is to be pat- terned after the banquet held recent- ly at Williston. Plans also will be laid for a mem- bership drive to be held by the Bur- leigh county organization in coopera- tion with other Young Democrat clubs in the state. Arrangements are “The facts are that the farmers of North Dakota between 1915 to date have spent over one and one-half mil- lion dollars in establishing 55 news- Papers in North Dakota, 53 weeklies and two dailies. “All of them, because of either boy- cotts, poor management or other cause ‘went out of business, except four small weeklies. The result was that the ad- ministration, when it was attacked, had no medium with which to answer these attacks and a meeting of heads of departments was called and a newspaper purchased. “This was financed by asking the heads of the various departments to contribute five per cent of their salary in the form of subscriptions to a newspaper. The employes in these various departments were not compel- led to contribute five per cent of their salaries for subscriptions to the news- Paper. These subscriptions were actu- ally furnished voluntarily. “Forty-five thousand copies of the newspaper were sent weekly to these people and the result is that the money was not used for campaign purposes at all, either by myself or by anyone else acting under my direc- tion, but the money was used solely and only for establishing the news- paper so that attacks on the admin- istration could be answered, and let me tell you this, that the owner of that newspaper is the chairman of the Republican party of the State of North Dakota.” Local Gas Company In National Contest Participation by the Montana-Da- kota Power Co. of Bismarck in a na- tion-wide gas refrigerator sales con- test has just been announced by W. J. McDonald, official of the local con- cern. More than 500 companies already have registered and it is expected that between 700 and 800 companies with approximately 8,000 salesmen in all parts of the country will be engaged actively in the campaign. In describing the “Go-Getter con- test”, McDonald said the American being made to have a speaker address according the meeting Monday, to Miller. An invitation to attend Monday ‘ST, ALEXIUS CLASS GRADUATES MAY 12 Commencement Exercises Will Be Held Next Saturday at City Auditorium ‘The Sisters of St. Benedict and the senior class of the St. Alexius School of Nursing have issued invitations for the 1934 commencement exercises which will take pace Saturday even- ing, May 12, at the Bismarck city auditorium. The class roll includes Eunice G. Benz, Moffit; Catherine Roberta Carey, Mandan; Anna M. Fode, Gackle; Edith A. Francis, Regan; Eleanor R. Fridgen, Glen Ulin; Goldie M. Grove, Carrington; Lucille K. Helier, Staples, Minn.; Madonna H. Hutchison, Rhame; Majel P. Kirc- hoff, Lemmon, 8. D.; Adele Mathews, Napoleon; Millie M. Monk, Bismarck; 'Florence Judith McFarlane, Hastings; Sister Gwendoline Pattock, Bismarck; Jean Stirling Robertson, Langdon; Julia G. Schlosser, Brad- dock; Irene M. Schumacher, New Engand; Agnes Josephine Seven, Grenora; Anna B. Sogstad, Braddock; Neoma M. Steinhaus, Napoleon; Edna Ann Thom, Jamestown, and Ann M. Wotrang, Bismarck. Announcement of the speaker and commencement program will be made next week. For their class motto, the 21 gradu- ates have chosen “Semper Fidelis.” Their class colors are nile green and coral and mixed gladiolus have been chosen as the class flowers. ‘The invitations are brown and white folders with a picture of the hospital and the graduating class forming the cover page. Members of Silver Bloc Are Encouraged Washington, May 5.—(?)—Senate| silver bloc leaders returned to Wash- | ington Saturday after a train con-/| ference with President Roosevelt con- | night’s meeting is extended to all young voters in Burleigh county. “THE LONE WOLES fident thet the chief executive is, providing for the nationalization of silver and a pesmissive purchase plan looking towarf the c:wstion of 70-30 ratio with gold as primary money. Members of the group who traveled northward with the president as far as Baltimore expressed gratification at the results of the conference and unanimously predicted an agreement. jcould be reached. The silver senators were so optim- istic over the possibility of an agree- ment that they indicated the pending silver amendment in the senate would be laid aside Monday to await the outcome of further negotiations. ? Additional Churches | OSB.,|'' ———_—_— ——@ GOSPEL TABERNACLE Corner Rosser and Eleventh Herman G. Johnson, Pastor 10:00 a, m.—Sunday school. G. Mandigo, supt. Classes for all. 11:00—Morning worship. The Lord's Supper will be observed at this serv- ice. Mrs. s 3:00 p. m.—Radio service from sta- tion KGCU, Mandan. 7:45 p. mi.—Evangelistic service. by the orchestra. Special Uncompromising preaching ‘Come 7:45 p. ie singing. 5; of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. and bring your friends. ; Tuesday at 8 p. m.—Preaching serv- ce. ‘Wednesday—Full Gospel service conducted under the auspices of the Christe’ Ambassadors in the McKen- sie hall in McKenzie. Service opens at 8 o'clock, Everyone invited. Thursday, 8 p. m.—Tarrying serv- e. Sriday at 8 p. m.—Christs’ Ambas- sadors service. A. cordial invitation to all to at- tend the Tabernacle services. Sal- vation, healing for the body, baptism in the Holy Ghost, soon coming of Jesus, Holiness, hed and be- lieved. Let us help you. FIRST CH! CHRIST, SCIENTIST 723 Fourth Street Sunday service at 11:00 a. m. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room maintained in the Hoskins Block, 20015 4th St. is open daily from 12 to 5 p. m.; Sunday, 3 to 6 p.m. All are welcome to attend the church services and to make use of the reading room. 3 TRINITY Avenue A Opie “There is a co! T y’ Fifth Sunday after Church school. 9 m. Morning. worship, 11:00 o'clock. Sermon by the Rev. J. H. Lunde. 8. Rindahl, Pastor ial welcome at ster, May 6: sympathetic to a legislative program Organist—Marie Lemohn. \ , ou LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE CHAPTER XXXV fighti: With the nose of his own gun|Jjust Flee few =f | enough a 00! sufficiently digging into bis back the gunman a good if stood cowed ani Maurice with his fully went thi found but one hiess, wi to cuddle in the although scarce! its fellow of the holster. inman, while profiti by permission to mop the spil! hile | Provol ree hand skill- th his pockets. os er wea! ) aside from an ordinary per inife—e but most of the locks snub-nosed automatic, small enough lm of one’s hand, less deadly than laybe I got a key,” he volun- teered. “I don’t know as it'll turn the trick—it’s my own room key, in this dump are intercl ible.” “Permit me to felicitate you on ought. And be nro e to the cating | door and—try your luck with th: ~| key. I hope very truly, monsier for our sake, it will it” The iting of the lock behind her, the rattle of the nol swung! ry from his features, was seek- a ing, thought too obvi reassert £01 ing of hi ascendancy. “Hell, noth: think of would make nervous than you ought to be. jously, to forfeit Id uu any more tried a new tack, emboldened by the addition of a ess to their num- , ber. “Tryin’ to make a person be- lieve,” he sneered, “you'd shoot them down like a dog with a lady Present?” “Believe what you like,” Maurice dourly retorted. “But do as I tell you, or the least you may expect is ‘ that I will—in your American 1 ap geke this gun over your ead.” He smiled agassuringly at Fenno, but the smile was fiecting; he ha time to pay her no more attention till he had seen Isham seated as he directed. And even then his eyes were seldom all for her, but most ¢ Say, who do 7 ‘think you are—and where? Where do you think you’re goin’ to get off, after this, in a hotel owned and manned and run by mobsmen? This aint Paris, fella, where you've got only frog cops to look out for, and a smart punk like you can get away with murder.” “No? Yet murder,” Maurice in Gas association refrigeration com- mittee, sponsor desired to take ad- vantage of the increase in buying power and the popular acceptance of Ice Queen Answer to Previous Puzzle HORIZONTAL 18 European shad 19 Brought up. 20 She won the —— champion- ship twice. SMe) Maint 47 To act asa —_—_—_—— 22 Citadel. model. 4-H Club Delegates 26 Caustic, 49 Topic in 30 To peruse. 31 Deposited. 32 Audacity. 33 Dwelled. $5 Ever (contr.). 86 Unit. 37 Sun god. 9 You and me. 40 Opposite of loses. 51 Collection of facts. 52 To divi 53 Total. 54 To hasten. 55 Before. 56 In what field did she win the cham- pionship? BAN Vil errr 14 Chum. 15 Monetary units of Rumania, 20 Commands. 21 Immature. 23 Native metal. 24 Subsiated. bi 25 Roof edge. 27.A murderer. 28 To split. 29 Small fish, 32 She is a native EMIT REMAl of ——. WILIDIOWS Ty) 34 Arid wilder. ness, VERTICAL 38 To be ill. 1Godly person. 39 Custom. 2 Hops kiin. 41 Unless. 3 Born. 42 Cosy, 4 Vessel for 44 Net weight of preserves. container. 5 To depend on. 45 Burden. 6Tiny particle. 46 High social 7To labor for position, breath. 47 Fairy. 9To recede. 48 Heater for 10 Neither. baking. 11 Wrath. 50 Mooley apple. 12 Completed. 52 To harden, his most silken manner pointed esd “murder in the full sense of word is grecioely. what I shall away wil » my friend, if you ates it. If imagine I do not know Thave taken my life in my hands, yourself r flatter oan is no guard set?” from member sealing. it.” “Yeah——thal The fonmen nan with cut la head. “Not any, f bul y rout ne whole minutes if I have to break the ir, if an unsight mere heap on the floor, and tal whatever in the that I haven't “Mademoiselle must this i ‘ t fecatee [ntzneion sithont knocking. It isn’t a Ponies ee covered, in her frantic search for a| up way of eicape, sommannen & Abeer drop of seven stories. the floor clerk's a wise moll | Saf ’s how they took her shook You're all wet this time, and don’t let nobody tell you dif’runt.” aint a chanc’t on in’ in on that “Think again, I tell you, 1 shall be with Miss trosier within’ five pod down. acre? And what will I be “You will be a pathetic spectacle, monsieu: tly one—s of the time constant to hi “You're all right, Fens? ghey enn—teer weren't brutal wi “Brutal? But did realy, except tell moTd int ine in here, and as soon as the door push me through and lock been half beside myself, What does it mean? a fancy hla pelea} can ton What of Mr. Crozier, my friend? He was not, of course, involved in Sri giwan,” the nas Inman growled, cauie you didn’t know that was = enadgt can't tell me where he ts, Fenno, the emeralds.”