The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1934, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ‘Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bi marck) 7.20 Daily by mail, 5.00 6.00 1.00 outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside o! Dakota .. Weekly by m: , ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years . 2.00 Weekly b; Dakota, per year . . 150 ‘Weekly by mail in 4 year 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of irculation 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) is matter herein are also reserved. ee It Had to Come | ‘The approaching crisis in the war) debt situation, created by the enact- ment of the Johnson bill and the de- cision to enforce its drastic terms, was something which had to come! sooner or later—and preferably soon- er—if the matter is to be straightened out on an equitable basis, The war debt question has been talked pro and con in this country for #. dozen years or more and everyone is familiar with it. All of us re- member Coolidge’s cryptic remark of, “Well, they hired the money, didn’t; they?” and we can recall without dif- ficulty the arguments for cancella- ‘tion, ‘That a change has taken place in the American attitude within the last few years is obvious. The debt situa-| tion here at home has been so much} in the forefront that the war debts/ were a natural corollary. Efforts to relieve the domestic debtor have re- sulted in a more kindly attitude to- ward the foreign nations which owe us money. We still believe they ought to pay all they can, but we are will- ing to sit down and discuss the mat- ter. In addition, the failures and re-| fusal to pay have emphasized the fu- tility of trying to get blood out of this international turnip, at least by former methods. The default by France and the token payments by all nations except Finland, the only one paying in full, have made it quite clear that Europe were just coming into full produc- tion. ‘We may as well recognize that the quota system was an effort to pre- serve for ourselves a market from which we rapidly are being driven by the campetition of the southern hem- isphere. Conditions on the Argentine pampas and in the wheat producing sections of Australia still are primi- tive. They are tilling new soil and, for @ variety of reasons, can produce grain more cheaply than we, To have induced Argentina to ac- jcept @ quota would have been a tri- | umph in diplomacy. To expect her jto ve up to such an agreement would be anticipating a miracle, Keeper of the Morals That the moral standards of the country still are in the hands of the rural population is indicated in a press release by the National Grange reciting the numerous cases in which proposals to set up state lotteries have been defeated, partly through its action, Everywhere that this proposal has been made the farming communities have risen in their wrath and vetoed The farmer takes a sufficient gamble with nature every year with- out indulging in any such wild specu- lation as a lottery. It may be that his hankering to take a chance is satisfied by the haz- ards of his occupation but a more reasonable view is that our rural communities hold to a stricter view than is true of most large cities. It is no reflection on the moral standard of our metropolitan centers to say that many city residents have adopted a laissez faire attitude to- ward the doings of their neighbors. The city man, not knowing who his neighbor is, is content to let him alone unless their interests clash. There is hardly such a thing as a private scandal. But in the rural districts it is dif- ferent. People think in the old terms and regard themselves, more or less, as their neighbor's keeper. The re- sult is greater personal interest and a common standard of conduct. It is a good thing, too. The cynics of the east may refer to the middle west as the “Bible belt” but we need take no offense at that. At least we retain a consciousness of right and wrong and an inclination to look new Propositions over carefully before en- — kotas and other parts of the west | (With No Apologies to Whistler 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. RECKLESS INDULGENCE IN PAIN- KILLERS As long as one individual or cor- Bunion Is there anything one can do to re- duce a bunion? My daughter tried Some Portraits of Mothers Twen Program for a federal corpora- tion or such strict control that whisk; ) could be sold for $1 or $1.50 a quart. After Peek was eased from AAA, Lee became law partner of Bill Mac- fame and turned over files to Col. L. H. Brittin when the latter destroyed documents sought by & Senate committee. Early FACA threats to attack the Profit issue finally resulted in dis- Patch of cost questionnaries to dis- tillers. But the answers won't dis- close profits because liquor now being made and stored—on which costs will be reported — may not be sold for months hence. Distillers contend that what look like huge profits really aren't, that banks won't give them credit, and that they must have the “profit” money to bulid up large stocks. GILLESPIE ROUTS ’EM The House restaurant is crowded. But when Congressman Frank Gil- lespie of Illinois wantsa table by him- self he usually gets what he wants. Sometimes he takes the vacant chair at a table and begins reciting Poetry, staring at each other person in turn till they all jump and run. ‘The other day he sat down beside @ strange woman, gazed fixedly at her, and went on like this— “I see you're eating soup. Well do I remember the first time I ever ate soup. I was 22 years old. It was also the first time in my life I'd worn a pair of shoes, “Yes, I never had on a pair of shoes until I was 22. All winter I walked to school barefooted, through two or three feet of snow. “In my pockets I carried two blocks of wood and when my feet got too cold I'd put the blocks down and stand on them until my feet got warm again. Never will I forget the day when I lost the two blocks of wood—” At that point his audience gulped Cracken of airmal-Senate contempt, MacCracken’s| formance of Brig, Gen. Samuel T. the last of her soup and went away from there. AN AMAZING SHIFT No queerer reversal of roles ever happened here than the twin per- Ansell and John G. Holland. Ansell originally was special coun- sel for the Senate subcommittee in- vestigating Huey Long's election of Senator Overton in Louisiana and Holland was the committee's chief investigator. Each had his own row with the committee and quit. Both said it was afraid of Huey Long and was trying to whitewash corruption. Now the two have joined together in @ law firm known as “Ansell and Holland” and are representing Mrs. Hilda Phelps Hammond’s Women's Committee of Louisiana, which seeks to oust both Long and Overton. Appearing before the Senate elec- tions committee no longer as Senate employes, they hammer away at the charges which they once accused the Connally subcommittee of “bottling up.” Ansell was an acting judge advo- cate general of the Army during the war, Holland investigated Teapot Dome, air and ocean mail contracts, and many other scandals, MR. INSULL NEVER FLEES A newspaperman here has just dug from his files a letter from a press agent of Sam Insull, received in 1926, after Insull was reported to have sneered at a threat of Senate investi- can Here's the beginning and the end: “Mr. Insull never runs from any- thing or anybody... . Anything that might tend to suggest or breed dis- respect of government is, within his Circle of influence, taboo.” (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) —— aT ae ? Additional Churches | > URCH OF CHRIST, FIRST CHURCH OF 123 Fourth Street Sunday service at 11:00 2. Bunday school at 9:45 Wednesday evening o'c! q bare icy room maintained Im me ing ‘kins Block, 200% 4th St. is open faiy trom 12'to 5 p. m.; Sunday, 3 to 5 p.m JH re welcome to attend the charch “services and to make use of the reading room. am. testimontat —— = THE BISMARCK BAPTIST CHURCH Corner of Eighth and Rosser J. 5. Lippert, Minister 10:00 a. m—Church school classes for all ages, from the youngest to the Oldest. No one {s too old to attend the church school. You can only benefit. 11:00—Morning worship. Prelude. Special music. Talk to the children. ge: “Significance of Ascen- 2:30 p. m—Rehearssl fOr Lah Day program with the Sunday sc! . F00 em Our BY. P. U. will meet for devotions and a short busi- ness meeting. Every member should be present. 7:30 p. m.—Mother’s Day program. The program consists of dialogues, reaaings, recitations and songs by the ildren. Short address by the minister. Everyone ts heartily invited. ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH (Synodical Conference) 419 Fourth Street J. V. Richert, Pastor Sunday after Ascension, May 13th: :30 a, _m.—Sunday school with all Miss Verna Brelje, supt. i—Morning worship (German). . Peters, organist. “Our Ascended Lord.” —Bible hour in charge of r League. . m.—Vesper services (Eng- lary Mahiman, pianist. “Hannah, the Christian In observance of Mothers’ es sion.” ay. Violin solo, selected by Adolph ee ‘ocal solo by Eleanore Wilson. ‘The Indian rhinoceros costs about] $18,000 in this country. "THE LONE WOLEY SO y LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE “Her children arise up and call her blessed,” Prov. 31, 28. You are cordially welcome to our " dorsing them. poration owns a patent on anything In this, as in a good many other|/the owner has a monopoly and can things, the farming communities arelexact a high price for the product. the anchor of the nation. We can/ put after the patent expires anybody take pride in the fact, even though| can make and sell the product, and we recognize that, at times, the tend-|tne price then falls, from competition. ency can be carried to extremes. Some people who believe in fairies take a dose or two of aspirin when- ever they feel at all out of sorts, tired, Future Flight |your Whitfield’s onitment recipe for her foot itch contracted four years ago. (Mrs, M. K. J) Answer—Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Care of the Feet. Readers who wish advice about foot itch “athlete's foot,” ringworm fun- gus, send a dime and stamped ad- dressed envelope for booklet “Unbid- It has cleared up. Washington Argument Waxes Hot Over Liquor Profits .. . Diners Flee When Gil- lespie Starts His Monolog. ‘Washington, May 12—You can match the protests of several con- gressmen that the Federal Alcohol Control Administration is hampering CHAPTER XLI who had without stir- watched the woman clamber back over the parapet and pass him with fixed, unseeing eyes in a face _ ablaze with fury, now turned cau- | heater—' tiously, p as he was between the window and the pier, till he commanded through the hinged opening a cramped view of the room. The Boyce, with a pose of fine|! theater, was at the moment throw- cis ing the shagreen case, open, onto By RODNEY DUTCHER ae ee aah oes rs (Tribune Washington Correspondent) | ghrilly demanded. “What's the idea? Where are those emeralds?” “‘Emeralds’?” Isquith was mo- ae, in a dumbfounded stam- mer. at—what—" “You heard what I said. They Lei didn’t know you're safe with) “But ioe both right" Lo ent “You bet me ca life I know it— Merce Pthe windows atthe when I’ve got drop on you.” woman's back. “Forgive the intru- “And you know I never pack a/sion; but when such friends fall out, and the fault is mine— but] what else can I do? Boyce whirled upon him with 3 but Lanyard had already pote of the weapons on the the one that had come e gunman’s holster was for- a “Sure I know it—nothing that trick thi: qour Pocket that looks like a fount pen and squirts a soft-nosed slug. But you ae we my in ii ie i ing Not unless you i E i Keep ’em in the air, even think of mal ap the T take eee e Boyce stepped out of Isquith’ BBS fi Ue Eel m deadly device sure of this: it will profit you noth- just, yor 4 was willing to go along on that basis. worried, restless, in pain, or whenever | q, 2 . , + 3 len Guests.” For relief of the pain, | distillers against a current idea here weren't in the case when I opened ‘As long as it was acceptable to us,| Prof. Auguste Piccard, the daunt-|they have general malaise and believe | soreness and inflammation of cumon | that FACA has let the boys run high, | it downstairs just now. Where are it certainly should have been accept-|less Belgian who flies up into the|they are coming down with some ill-| paint the area only once with tinc-| wide, and handsome, they? What was the idea? Trying able to them. stratosphere for recreation, believes| Ress. ee Deore sen ea te ture of iodin, and then apply a large| ACA has yet to hear from con- be rye Be Until Senator Johnson, » bitter-|that man may some day solve the |Pan-Killet as a Kind of Panacea See eter ee veuamiital anes Ee Biter ieetentoa Iequith, ‘effecting reer Sauces ender when it comes to collecting! problem of interstellar travel and| Personally I like a good shot of] (Copyright 1934, Lec Tile Gay aan davis pees epcianaerarl quick recovery, without raising his these debts, advanced his idea of fi-| make round trips to the moon or to|aspirin myself once in a decade or it 4 exaggerates, echoed the distillers’ Neus coe it so param laey that, nancial ostracism for those in de-| some of the planets. so, But before I have the courage | plea for lower taxes and import duties| Itkeomeum ae Hang So. é fault, we were put in the position of] It is his notion that this may be-|*© ingest it Ive got to be feeling Barbs \ewithout mentioning what Senator| round to the telephone again, = max| f wt knowing what to do shout it. |oome possible, not through the use of | Brett darn awful not Just anxious Borah calls “huge, enormous, uncon-| in uniform with the words GOTHAM | o ae 2 . or worried but in real misery. Then| Bootleggers have turned to counter-| scionable profits.” Sara Derostr CoMPANY spread Now the situation changes. The| rocket engines or by firing huge pro-|T thank the modern science that felting, says the chief of the U. &.| At about the same time, one of the| upon the bosom of his tunic moved - United States has swung a club which| jectiles from gigantic guns, but|brought a beneficient analgesic into|Secret Service. Well, if they can't| big wings of the “whisky monopoly” into the picture and picked up the was ready to its hand all the time.| through discovery of the secret of dis- te ee ae ree nae PRS make money one way, they'll make it| was found to have profited at the| case to examine it. Only te naivete of our diplomacy has integrating matter. He says that the Han Hite eee Beoiouy «RH another. pecs ne of = per cent in the last quar-) ae a it, ee kept us from using it before. disintegration of 120 pounds of lead,| more safely than aspirin does, I have Mrs. Jean Piccard is right Ghat didn’t mention that -moueh pay to do: now get y For the barring of financial deal-|for instance, would provide ample|not heard of it. about going up in a stratosphere | bootleg liquor now underselling dis- 't be more than half an hour, §ngs with the nations in default is ajenergy for a round trip from the i At ihe ane me in eine abi balloon with her husband this | tillers’ products is as good or better iene buzs when you very real weapon. In time of peace/Earth to the planet Mercury. eo BULA fat comfort of) summer. She won't have him | than legal stuff. Treasury lab tests Bi iil : | an ache or pain or distress of any| look down her. le re} the instrument upon it 1s inconvenient for them, for this) Now all this doubtless sounds re-|Kind that does not actually disable, earn Se scat s ieocaceaoa| cradle and got up, in full com- has become the world's leading money|markably like a pipe-dream, and it)than to dope myself with aspirin or| Business has improved so that! general counsel was hardly a body not if i imself, as pore prego, market. In the event of war it would| probably shows that scientists, no|/any other pain-killer and try to/many firms have been able to repay) blow to distillers. Before the big| and even, ‘by the black ‘fire of ‘is be tragedy, for Europe has nowhere|less than any other men, have mo-|“keep going.” their RFC loans, and now are free to| bust-up at AAA Lee and George Peek k, more to look for money except to the|ments in which thelr imagination| , Here is where so many people make erties the saverament. for hobding Soman succeetively for je. disiiesy:| eM cumat spas RanoRARA TLE United States. | goes on the loose. stances it proves @ fatal mistake. It pce NB IA: SOP allacer ines where do you ey ‘you'll erg Granting that the new policy is one| But it makes a nice picture, any-|is a serious mistake in any case to —_—e_e_e_=_ee to me like that? If the em- of so-called “narrow nationalism,” it! way. Dizzy or otherwise, it’s some-| attempt to kill the ache or pain or ? eralds are missing from that case, at least faces the realities of the sit-| thing to look forward to. other unpleasant symptoms of malaise Mother Ss D you know more than I do what's be- id reli ¢ the “fat that commonly announce the onset come you know I uation and relieves us of the “fat) -- of cri by dosing with any such Grug| qe know it! If there's any evpping baby” part which we too long have Editorial C and trying to “fight it off.” You idiot, > 2 being done, you're doing it. played in international affairs. Real- itorial Comment. || that isn't tignting; that’s surrender- HORIZONTAL® Answer to Previous Puzzle — dy birth een, ee feng dig oe ism {s a thing which Europe fully un-|| Editorials printed below show the ||!ng and handing over your weapons. 1, 8, 10.14 What 15 Opposed to have oe an ‘wit ‘thera? ‘What derstands nen of onan ed obaar emite . || If you mean really to put up a fight does this “from.” The man made at the same time be ey are published w out regar -comi 4 = We are stply inthe potion ofall SESE SEN uae |e es, be ens“ peac| ann) KE] isto towers” | amreedge ne Tt Det she creditor who, having a debtor who icabatentes si ‘i monia, coryza or heaven only knows 13 Uleer. Di 20 Fish, ‘ “Keep your hands off me!” The can pay but will not, refuses to ex- ~~~ "| what, you'll lay aside all minor con-} 7 Mister <abbr.). [1 /O} [SJ i] 22 Above. pistol of gold and ‘1 was whip- tend further credit. That certainly| ._ My Friend the Florist siderations and give yourself a break! 13 Mural decora- ese above. Bed up from the peed sae okies ata. (Armistead Grady, Duluth, in Ki-|by hopping straight into bed to see it tion, i ILISIE] 26 Pieces out. and Isquith started back as if she oy “one ER wanis District Letter) through. 21 The sum total. {L/D BA} 29 Makes a kind had thrust a snake in his face, “And 8) newspapers ¢ry| There are many folks to whom I| Acetanilid is another coaltar] 23 To dine. ae f lace. stick ‘em up! And be quick about “highwayman” as they did Friday. It|/turn in times of gaiety. There are|derivative, an older and cheaper one] 25 Tringular a7 i it: you know me, Freddy—you swill not hurt us a bit. In fact, Eur-| {tiendly souls—a few—I seek out with] than aspirin, that is the sense-dead- pasa’ ie SITISHRO! ‘o contend. know I wouldn't hesitate s minute.| _[| | 4 ie ;|an abiding faith when T am low in|ening ingredient in dozens of nos- aan SIE ICTTIOMMEIWIE fej 34 Artist. sist rnat goes for you too, Wally! ope will respect us more if we act) spirit and courage is not in me. But|trums sold to the public as “cold” situ itting wood. [S/T] TRBLIEIEMMAIRIE INIA) 36 Cent. ticle ‘een up and don't make me tell with common sense than if we con-|to my friend the florist I go upon all|cures, headache and neuralgia cures, Boke PUSIT TOAIRIEISI IL) 58 Greyish-green ae tinue to accept the international] occasions and versatile is this friend| rheumatism cures, cures for fatigue,| *? Tumultuous color. cn ae Shattenee. Pio ey i sympathy racket of which we have| {0% though I lean heavily upon him,|the blues or what have you. There| 95 epee? 49 Coin slit. 5 List of plays .40 To disunite. that the two men knew her temper been the gullible victim long enough. |e,meets my every demand, “mood are many records of deal, from Disagreesble 52 Networks, s company is 47 Clan symbol well to try conclusions with it, " se “harmless' - . rem. Pm In the present state of world affairs,! Diplomat is he for be the gathering| trums, either from overdose or from| 32 Whcle. be rpo palm. one le prong Peauith for one, quite aside from |«Keep your hands off me!” The Pistol of gold and pearl was whipped respect is much Dever aves than around banquet board or table set |chronic ‘habitual indulgence, Both S3Southeast —57.General sland ¢ Emgtes 48 Knocks lightly above bis ears, tok peg up from the folds of her dress. the so-called comity of nations. 3 leomi: aspirin acetanailid have their ad- ean. ular enlar; ‘| 50 Fissure of rock » struck a new tone, and|ecoat, and smartly stepped back to Neither will ‘sccomp! _Sbmaniteto Saks sean of crenaailp or, | disct. 37 Measure of nas ee aorase, cleo “Milled with one Shas mae ccoericnenely aly, A8 Poor agg f beside the other boy by that maplish Argentina’s Position Musician? Aye, and with a range| ru) does of acctanilid tn every epence| °89 Watched Hon eed trical resist- gy Sara thority. | and tusks yours | ett it dor poate play with ae foe Refusal of Argentina to accept the | gnd,Tepersolre streaming trom rolling) fut is indiscriminately sold at soda secretly. aaa the. ance. 52 Reign, Demhbe & fool, Tess, We won't} she an “Smoke if you the mystery of Le cearlasccte proposal to fix minimum wheat ex-|virgin forest, from the rollicking, restr aller, Seg ep a VERTICAL al ot Sa Threetoed Ftonss are gone—wel eres some es ed tas ieee =a oy and there isn't aay, Neither ted g +] people wi leve lor} 43 Sea eagles. AL cloth. loths. thing damned i : Ag heer port prices and the attendant re-|soaring song of smiles to the muted| everything from bilious feeling to| 45 Habitual 2 ae a funny about it—” 1 don’t get it if you want to treachery; both of you ‘ Bone. 11 Sweet potatoes 55 Still. be there isi” tale a i striction on world sales need surprise | lullaby of Mothers’ tears. A song of] prain-tag ‘ , ik know, you » The stones were in the hope, a note of cheer, 5. drunkard. 3To decay. 12 The picture's 68 Form’ of “be.” ‘And it’s up to us to find out no one. It was an inevitable thing pele he sends fgldl yg ee a A middie aged business man who} 47To come in. 4 Fishing boat. creator was ‘an 60 Moringin dye. what it is, and we won't do that, met ter 2 ine Fea fee og ge gta e and the wonder is that the matter|pain-racked friend. A tender and should have known better but was ever, unless we quit bawling each|talk ought to make everything [sg its ‘are now in m: yo worried along as far as it did with-|exquisite lullaby he brings to him| Suc" Sn insulfershle wissecre that no ofa out and do seme teamwork in- | clear. don’, you think wan a hour or 60 out blowing up. Tap Tesla and vo those who must yet lthe habit of indulging in this soda “Ob, yeaht” to-a mutior on the geaman'e ipe at] No, nol Bub pleseet™ = “SN In America the quota plan was ac-| trom the hearts of mather pire: ong | fountain dope quite regularly. He was Sis Seat esa up, now, and beln from bia Depth and Pet He let his voice out till it over- ceptable. We have committed our-|the spirits of awakening flowers—ne| $8? addict. He craved more and more “Pll put it up, all right—when I ae Wa eat ae 8} rode the woman's, selves to the policy of surplus redue-| brings to tiny folk very new in this| Of the acetanilide to benumb the dis; fe, ee. ‘Ana’ that will be when| into fen dicge pelpentn drat} “Spare me your applause, pray tion by the elimination of wheat| Word of ours. Ah, yes, my friend the| ASe°h20 tom ‘away. “Pinay ‘he took pu yours where 7oa can't pull] eubelded into a glowering silence at i You env in Atria, pasa acres and so has Canada because it| hesvtstsines + 0B) one extra large dose on retiring, and thane. Sore roe, Wally, and per Set Proved 20| patience yet one minute more. ‘The 5 J Me LJ is a coed poly for both tations | “ad poet PHI nue sictaay note tne, four hours ner ia fay m saline | Pa hat ae tae meets ot cnreenien we mur Comparatively speaking, the United|{s budding rose and there is no age| found him deeply cyanose business.” in which he seemed to ponder some orego, I'm afraid, till Ihave seen to States and Canada are older coun-| 2 the heart of » debutante rose. His| (black and blue), as are most vie- by the pulsing retort; and sitting down | STarer wedding gift to bride or wife of fifty| tims of acetanilid poisoning. of her Pon lbo the cable bet drummed|, He crossed to the table, and find- tries, Our frontiers have vanished] years alike is a lovely lyric of da than by @ threatening fist of |it with that did his mani-|!n& 8 battery of several telep and Canada’s rapidly are disappear-| and twlight, and if there be night in} QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS the pistol, the gunman with a sick|curist mi credit, and rendered te Parked upon ft, hesitated over his ing, his poem it is one of silvered ‘What, Imported Pill? grin gave fn, halting his backward|the standing merely a| choice, and ting, saw Isquith, ‘Australia could be brought into the| §4 smiling, twinkling stars. Daughter aged 17 has beginning of Drogress hen ine woraen Fee hime 1 Wy grimace. 8 negligent hand, one My friend the florist—dealer in the|@n exophthalmic goltre, and our phy- suffering her to piock the heavy Well, what's the answer?” she| toward him. Plcture because of her Droferentisl| lovelies: jewels, woman may ‘wear.| sician has prescribed an imported pill. automatic its holster at {2 citer, lone of patience, “Monsieur is most ” he tariff arrangement with the mother| The jewels God chose to crown our|8he takes one a week and has taken ta ae right.” The woman de- Pye ela a sila remarked, af the same tine country, » facto which also influ-| World and to bring comfort fo us apd them for four years, I am getting posited the ‘weapon, on a consoe-| si'd call that obvious.” without edat sco. enced Canada’s position, cues Senos 7e Rene to te (Roan ‘What shall I do? Gre. pol glee A a, bate oared ate ‘he will not resent my pret But Argentina stood alone. To ask Serecne Denti Of mae the langues ‘Answer — Stop Mamma Pp fea At Teasse! Prestige use an open wire as squandering your your healt yellow rat! Now falling back on her to fix quotas and accept restric-| of pain nor hate nor defilement. A|money on fancy nostrums and the pidge oe ook le pel Kee Ege me weld pat ee eee tion is comparable to asking the| language, pure and clean and very /quacks who prescribe them, and take ind 700 say pet and beep iF] senses and put that pistol away——” ‘to the ear of one of his con- Und a to oth tne ne| AG, eel te fa een ea oman Pe meee fale, q fm the middle nineties when the Da-| ne also is. the matter with ber, | sgn eiaeed sae shecigpe™ 0 wove to aka? eo] mii) oo = TOE 0 @ iky sacalled-fori aayoalgl os 'e Be Continued). . re

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