Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1935 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Gtate, City and County Official News- ¥ Paper. eit Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second ciass mau 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 Bis- MALCK) .....cceseeeeeeee eens 120 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ........ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North ‘1 Dakota ............ +++ 6.00 *: Weekly by mailinstate, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . . 150 Weekly by mail in r year 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of ee 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. Good Luck to Them Expectation that a program for with the new blue hat instead of the old green one or the exact hour when the man on the neighboring farm discovered Tabby with a new brood under the porch steps. Our atmos- phere is conducive to good health and longevity but we lack that in- definable something which impresses seemingly trivial events on our con- sciousness. To bring the thing home more clearly, just try to recall all the {strangers you saw in the last restaurant at which you ate—and {particularly whom you saw there jtwo years ago last March 1. Two witnesses in the Hauptmann trial were able to do practically that. There are evidences that the thing works both ways, since both the state jand the defense have been the ap- parent beneficiaries of this develop- ment, peculiar to New York and New jJersey. The memory of a 90-year- jold man in fixing a face, the color of an automobile and other details seen in a fleeting glimpse two years ago was something to marvel at, but it was as nothing compared to the prodigious memory feats performed by Hauptmann’s witnesses in at- tempting to present an alibi for him. The tip-off on the whole business may be contained in the admission of one Sommers, a Hauptmann alibi witness, that he had appeared as a {witness in many lawsuits. The first the rehabilitation of agriculture on ajwas the famous Hall-Mills murder Permanent basis soon will be adopted, | case, another trial which rocked New is expressed by North Dakota farm Jersey and the nation some 12 years leaders who soon will present their views at Washington. From their sug- | ®estions, as well as those of farmers from other states, coupled with the thought of federal officials, will come whatever new federal program is ad- ‘vanced to assist the farmer. Representing North Dakota will be # committee from the Farmers Union, which should have a better grasp of Practical farm problems than any other organization active here, and Former Governor Walter Maddock, a member of the national wheat advis- ory board. Ole H. Olson, also a former gov- ernor, was to have been a member of this committee but found it impos- sible to go to Washington when he became highway commissioner. His Place was taken by another Olson, Charles T., of Bowman. The importance of their activities eannot be over-emphasized. As a practical matter they far overshadow anything which may be done by the state legislature now in session, for the agricultural problem is national 4n scope and must have treatment on the same The object of which will be held in the agri¢ tural department, is to insure cost of production for the average farmer, the conferen plus @ reasonable profit. This is an aim about which many have talked in recent years, but toward which few have directed practical effort. The Job of our farmers in Washington will be to help devise a means for making this dream come true. Anyone who looks at the facts as they exist realizes the need for such action. He also senses that develop- ment of such a program will affect the future of this state and of every Person in it, for good or ill. The present emergency program, which has been of vast benefit these Jast two years, will be finished this year. We need something to take its place. ‘To go back to the system of un- bridled competition of farmer against farmer will only mean a return to the chaotic conditions which have ruled agriculture ever since the war, Sor every farmer must realize that most of his troubles were caused by Jack of effective organization and co- operation. ‘The experiences of the last decade have pretty well dimmed any intel- ligent man's faith in political pan- aceas. Many of them have been adopted and have brought no pros- perity. Saviors have come and gone ‘without improving conditions. In fact they have grown steadily worse. United and reasonable action by our farmers is the only way out and experience has proved that the only way to obtain unity is through the leadership of the government. Call it regimentation if you will. ‘Mourn, if you must, the abandon- ment of the old system when every man did as he pleased without re- gard to his neighbor, but there is no other remedy. For the individual farmer, and for agriculture as a whole, it is a case of either conform or face a continu- ation of ruinous conditions. We must become cooperators rather than com- petitors. Therein is our road to sal- vation. For these reasons, and because the welfare of millions of men, women end children depends upon the suc- cess of the program adopted, our economic representatives at these conferences carry with them every good wish. If they succeed in their mission a good many of the problems which now agitate the people as well as the legislature will disappear en- tirely. Marvelous Memories Resding eccounts of the Haupt- mann trial, one wonders what it is in the New Jersey air which gives people ¢uch marvelous memories. Most men can remember the ap- proximate time that Aunt Minnie died or the rueful day when the motor truck crushed old Rover, but we in this pert of the country are a little Jsx when it comes to remembering thet day two years ago when the girl next door walked down the street | may keep them for several Seasons. | ~ ago. Since then he has appeared in jother lawsuits. In one of them he {changed his testimony and finally ‘gave a lawyer a written statement |that he had testified erroneously in |the first place and had later changed |his testimony upon payment of $15, !thus disclosing a memory which was jot only marvelous in itself but sus- ceptible to influence as well. At least five other alibl witnesses |had “records” or admitted activities at variance with the law. One other witness was known by three different | | names. | | It would seem that there are some | livery fine ry cases in the mak- ing as these witnesses parade before the court in New Jersey. Unless one | subscribes to theory that memories get better as one nears the Atlantic} Jocean there certainly should be some. Austerity Breaks Down | We generally take {t for granted jthat the British parliament is the} very home of parliamentary dign | Other nations, including our own, |may send sons of the wild jackass to! epresent them their capitol; | | Britain has an old tradition under |which statesmet not politicians, are elected, and the House of Commons | does not witness those wild and un- lcouth scenes which make exciting reading in other sents of government. however, is rudely z of the recent place in the House at This concept upset by a rea | flur ich to jof Commons when a Labor member °" rose to relieve his mind on the sub- ‘ject of Prime Minister Ramsay Mac- Donald. Here are some of the things jthe man said: | “He is a mountebank. He should be flung and horsewhipped from pub- | lic life. He would double-cross his! own aunt. He attained power on the | | pennies and half pennies of the peo- | |ple and now he is robbing them. ‘when he dies, he will be cursed by | millions.” { | Undignified and {ill-considered as | {some of our own congressional out- | bursts may be, it is a long time since \any congressman has attacked the| head of his government in terms as/| wild 2s these. | Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. || They are published without regard || to whether they ag with The Tribun | Compulsory Hail Insurance (Aneta Panorama) | Insurance Commissioner Hopton's | bill to create a law making hail in- surance compulsory should meet with | universal favor among legislators, | and be enacted into law. Divided support of insurance of this kind, as practiced heretofore, under the present law, causes many to take a chance with the elements, in the hope that luck will favor them and no hail will destroy their crops. The re- sult is an increased cost of state hail insurance to the limited number of farmers who do take out insurance against the loss from hail, and the hard loss to those whom the elements did not favor, destroying their crops when it is too late. The tentative price of $4 per acre set by this proposed law, giving the farmtr the additional opportunity to increase it to an extra $4 per acre will protect the grower of small grains in spite of himself. The saving clause, that if, after June 20 of each year, his crops have been prematurely cropped by grass- hoppers, dried up, or otherwise shows no promise of a crop worth harvesting, the insured can have the hail insur- ance cancelled, should meet the ob- jection of many who claim such an eventuality is @ strong argument against crop insurance of this kind. Under a compulsory insurance law of this kind, where every farmer's crops are insured against the loss from hail, the cost of insurance per acre over the state will be extremely light, and it seems to us that no one corld afford to be without such insurazce as proposed «incer this bill, even though it was not mace oulzory. However, human nature aat it is, @ compu! ‘ory law can be the only effective way to carry this oui eZiec- tively. At one time 5,000,000 birds were killed annually in this country for use on women’s hats. India’s Sambar deer does not al- ‘ion and the bulk of its membership i | Yes—Isn’t It? | Heegecky KEEPS HANDING OUT MONEY UNTIL EVERVGODY HAS ENOUGH —— IT'S REALLY AWEULLY 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. in ink. No reply can be made to.queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. AFTER ALL, A GOOD PSYCHIA- TRIST IS WORTHY OF HIS HIRE I am 31 years of age, married eight years and have two children, I am very sensitive and my wife is a hard woman to please. Her continuous nagging has made me so nervous and despondent that it is working on my mind, so much that I ery. I try hard to brace up and forget everything, but it seems to be getting worse every day. I know that if I don’t make a change of some kind I will have to go to a state sanitarium. For several months I have been so nervous and Letters should be brief and written woman, young or old, harassed by inner personality conflicts or morbid ideas cannot do better than confide in & good psychiatrist. If you don't know one, I'll be glad to name one in the nearest city, provided you re- pay the freight—ie., send stamped envelope your address. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Chalasion I find that chalazion yields satis- factorily to the diathermy needle (Oudin current). It has proved cf- bys in several instances. (F. P., shaky that I haven't spoken to or|M looked anybody in the face, because I don’t want them to see the tears in my eyes. When they do, I’m ashamed of myself for being so soft hearted and letting a woman drag me down so low. How can I brace up and stop crying and look a man straight in the eye when I talk to him, as I did before I got married? Continu- ing the way I am, life isn’t worth living. Excuse my poor writing, for T never went to school in my life. (Letter from a correspondent.) Many adults who have had years of schooling cannot write as well as the correspondent does. T’m as good a guesser as the next doc, but I can’t surmise whether this young man’s imagination is the whole trouble or whether his wife really is nagging him more than any good wife THE NEW DEAL | | IN [ASHINGTON t_sy RODNEY DUTCHER—4 ! Imagine a Company Union in A. F. of L. Fold! There's One in AAA... Price of Beans Is More Important Than Gold to Many Capital Folk «++ Dall Dogs Well Trained. EY DUTCHER ervice Staff Correspondent) Washington, Feb. 7. — Ordinarily,! you wouldn't any more expect to find ponsored company} re AAA than you'd expect a speckled Shetland pony out of your! celal chowder. Some things just/ don’t seein to go together. | But all things are possible in the} era of the New Deal, so don’t be too! astonished when you hear about Local | n Federation of Gov- | s. Its president . West, acting chief of the AAA, the rental and benefit audit section, boss of about 3,000 em- ployes in the controller's division, | which keeps track of farmers’ con-/ tracts and benefit checks. About 430 of the union's 500 mem- bers are employes of the controller's division and maybe you don’t think they vote the way Mr. West wants| them to vote! Nor ts there any sug- | gestion that Mr. West would ever; cross the wishes of his own superiors. | What further distinguishes this un- | (NE. from others is that the controller's; division is the one AAA area not pro-; tected by civil service, These low- wage employes all had to have some | political endorsement to get their | jobs—at a time when the patronage} racket wasn't as grim as it’s been since the last election. FEAR FOR JOBS Hundreds live in fear that, under new pressure, they haven't enough political pull to hang on. They are terrorized by versistent rumors that 800 or more are to be laid off to provide new patronage opportunities for new senators and representatives. Most of them are anxious to find favor in the eyes of the boss. About 70 other AAA employes, in- cluding many of those well paid, join- ed the union largely out of pro-la- bor sympathies. “Left-wingers” sought to make the union take stands in support of labor movements out- side AAA, which was painful to West. and to E. Claude Babcock, president of the AF.G.E The result was that the intimidated majority, with Babcock’s approval, recently steam-rollered through at a union meeting two resolutions which definitely made Local 116 a “com- Pany union.” IT’S RAW, BUT— One resolution confined new union membership to empolyes of the con- troller’s office and the other forbade union members to meet together ex- \cept at formal union sessions. From the standpoint of trade unionism, this | was rather raw. But the A. F. of L., which collects | from AAA union employes, has plen- ty of company unions outside AAA to worry about. All of which probably isn’t especial- ly important except as it may give you a sidelight on how what might be called “the other half” in the capital lives, It’s typical of the sort of thing you hear here when you sit on a desk and chin confidentially with a pretty stenographer. Unionism among federal employes —chiefly aimed at scheming by both Politicians and petty officials — was stimulated when General Johnson of NRA fired President John Donovan of the NRA union for union activi- jties and was compelled by the Na- tional Labor Relations Board to re- instate hi It is of especial value in new emer- gency agencies, where working con- ditions are often chaotic. BEANS OVERSHADOW GOLD When you get outside officialdom, the bulk of Washington conversation manages to ignore the national is- sues, There's far more talk about the price of beans than about the; old case . . . Chairman Mary Norton of the House committee on District of Columbia affairs is promoting a survey of crime conditions here. She has statistics purporting to show that that in Chicago or New York... You'd have been startled, as I was, her marriage) and her celebrated dogs, Jack and Jill, enter the White House the other day. They came tumbling out of her car, leaping all over each other. But as they reach- ed the White House steps, Mrs. Dall called sharply to them. Whereupon Jack and Jill feil into line and marched, shoulder to shoulder and in perfect step, through the White | House front door... The sixth an- niversery of the signing of the Kel- logg peace pact—in which all nations agreed to renounce war as an in- the murder rate here is higher than | if you'd seen Anna Dall (just before! strument of national policy—passed almost unnoticed while war clouds whisked about and Congress contem- Plated the greatest peacetime mili- tary budget. No one would have re- called it had not Senator Costigan of Colorado, who has a long memory, brought it up briefly during Senator Nye’s speech on the munitions in- vestigation ... Senator McAdoo of California, when he’s out dancing, us- ually tries to get the orchestra to play “The Champagne Waltz.” Sen- ator Bob LaFollette’s favorite song is “On the Alamo” ... Veterans blinded in the war would receive medals cast in Braille type so that they might read them, under a bill introduced by Congressman Beiter of New York. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: a pys 2 4c Feather dusters make dust fy. 16 Glade. 17 Awkward, un- sophisticated person. ' Coml7diam, Porne | may shed its antlers annually, but 18 To pardon. {9 Gaelic. 20 Weighty *1 Ready 22 Star-shaped flower 47 Strong taste. 23 Cocks’ combs 50 Pertaining to 25 Deemed. air 29 Waited for 51 Northeast. 32 Fish. 52 Right $3 Baking dish 33 Tiny particle. 84 To crowd. 64 They are the 87To tip principal char. 39 Towing ma- acters in a ’ chine for VS farms 55 On this story 42 Olive shrubs an — is 46 Oil jug based. IDE MT INTE TAI [Babes in the Wood _| HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 10 Otherwise 1.7 Children 11 Looked who found a RI TIUIRIOITIOSICAINI INIT] askance witch's house 14 To tolerate in the wood. 2 15 Perches. 12 Malarial fever DEMO! 22 Venomous 13 To maltreat. EIAIISMe] = snake 23 Stocky horse VIE INIT] 24 Thick shrub TTIEIAISIE] 26 One who i qi {rosts cakes tml 2 iene q 28 Rim b] 39 Neuter pronoun. 31 Halt an em VERTWWAL 34 Strife Ulnjury 35 Riddle. 2 Largest known 36 To concede species of toad 37 Price 3 Lumps 38 To loiter 4 Observes. 40 Toward sea $ Gibbon 41 Lacerated. 6 The opera was 43 Meadow composed 44 Silkworm by — 45 Ozone. 7 To obtain 47 Spigot 8 Nights before 48 Devoured. 9 Sour 49 Neither ie NT TTS jf NV | EEEE NE PT J is entitled to nag her husband, or whether it is a combination of the two difficulties. But presumably his wife loves him and has his happiness at heart. She is the mother of his children. So my advice to this young man, and to any other reader, man or woman, who may have similar trouble, is to consult a psychiatrist. A psychiatrist is a physician who devotes his practice to the correction of mental disturbances, personality problems, maladjustments, obsessions, delusions or what have you on your mind. Of course any good Physician does considerable psychia- tric practice, but the man who limits his practice to such cases has greater skill from his special study and his larger experience in the particular field, If this young man wants to take the right step at the right time, he cannot do better than to ask his wife to accompany him on the visit to the psychiatrist. No matter whether she has nagged him too much or not, she is still the mother of his children, and—well, that places her in any man’s religion. Time and again I have seen the dark clouds of con- jugal discord or threatening estrange- ment rolled back and domestic har- mony restored by just such a mutual understanding effected through the wisdom and skill of the psychiatrist. Likewise the unmarried man or t Answer—Thank you, Doctor, Chala- zion is a sebaceous cyst in the eyelid (a similar lump on the scalp is called wen). The usual treatment is re- moval of the little cyst and its cheesy contents through the lining of the eyelid, which is done under local anesthesia, One Good Kidney Is Enough I am 27, 62 inches tall, weigh 128 Pounds. Is that correct weight? Three years ago my appendix was re- moved. A year later I developed tu- berculous kidney. The kidney was removed. Will this hamper my mar- tying and having children? (M. D.) T am careful not to take much pro- tein food. Answer—One sound kidney is enough for any one. No particular reason why you should not take pio- tein food. Reading at Table ‘When I was at school long years ago I learned that reading during a meal was injurious to the health. Now I would like your opinion. (Mrs, B. B. W.) Answer—Pleasant reading rather favors good digestion, just as pleas- ant company, music, conversation, and other pleasant things do. That Old Habit What foods are best for one who is subject to constipation . . . (E. W.) Answer—Any food one likes. Send dime and stamped addressed envelope for booklet “The Constipation Habit.” (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) ————$—————————— ? Barbs Len nee S tis If Ford Frick wants a good sug- gestion for the improvement of base- ball, let him not ask the wives of some of the fans. * ek * Tailors meeting in New York hhave decreed brighter clothes for men, but the men don’t happen to be women. zk k A Russian scientist says pigs can learn, but no matter how much you teach them they always manage to make hogs of themselves. ek & New York's truck drivers didn’t SYNOPSIS Talbot books pa: “Orient” hoping to find to remain home and At the dock, Mark’s stares at him in a hostile way. CHAPTER Il ALONG THE GREAT CIRCLE self, “ je on the S.S. the adven- ture he craves in travel. His broth- er, John, pleads in vain with him ttle down. tention is drawn to an attractive girl who “I guess I was born to be a sol- dier of fortune,” Mark told him- d ly every adventurer had this same unpleasant job of breaking family, ties before he man- to cul se. The first night on shipboard had relaxed, freed Tired of poninree And Tearaure:te red of the sm and_re- | sou! sure come strictions of civilization, Mark] Pass is right. Joel gave it to me!” “I wouldn't worry, Dear,” the other placidly. “T’m not wo i Td like s.r chee, Seon 101 way, south- west. Think of the time and fuel could be saved. I've half a mind to But | and felt replied | haired he and wear and tear, and all that, that | ROF had she a out on strike long enough, foals, to give visitors a chance + across town. cay ee * 4 will come when a cone Pct committee is appointed to investigate the activities of congres- ittees. Seopytigtit, 1955, ‘NEA Service, Inc.) ——— ayy I never announce anything until it's an established fact—Dr. Allan R. Dafoe. eek I watched him (Hitler) with the utmost vigilance throughout our lengthy conversation, and I am con- vinced he genuinely desires peace— Lord Allen of Hurtwood. * * * ‘The newer psychology has helped us to understand the men of the past as it has helped us to understand our contemporaries.—Stefan Zweig, Euro- pean novelist. ad IN AMERICA Author of " (COLONEL DOUBLEDAY, ta- “4 ter appointed general, laid out the first regular baseball diamond and formulated the rules of play. The brick kiln was set up at Salem, Mass. Lewis Tappan, who founded the Journal of Commerce in 1828, established “The Mercantile Agency” in New York. R. G. Dun & Co. took over the busi- wess in 1859. off himself; “T'U bet she has her chats He dismissed the voluble, sunn 'l from his mind. Suddenly jought himself of the dark. haired beauty who had passed him yesterday on the dock. He hadn't seen her, either at dinner the night before or at breakfast this morning, on deck or “Second class cabin, perhaps,” he mena and went below, She wasn’ "t on k, either; that proved nothing, of course; she might be in her maroem. ae mlee a knockout, all right,” “Wonder what oni the meaning of the nasty look she gave me.’ don’t mind,” he said. “I) Quite casually he descended to toward om Mark at last ns i fre 4 i 2 perae Thece! maul a small but ‘rom. pressure of routine for. a er of conver- i re, At|bim, ing her eyes sation the Asian world as- ise be fle semaation of endom|oTet ta gare, from Wa aval leaied Rim. He iced surveying te nd no little satisfaction that John | Drown hair and blue eyes to the long | assembly; a number of Chinese, on d the family had taken his de- |legs sprawled before} their way home to their troubled 20 pl iy. He lay|him. Apparently was | mother-land with hoarded American chair and smoked. satists a se silver, two or three individuals of “Shouldn't wonder,” he contin-|,,. Od please do!” she exclaimed./the darker races —Nesre, East In. aed, pursuing his vein of though Fag a aaicaaaaaa Malay, “Mark aida’ know “i jumbus hadn't si ered Lise pea single wutive Che amet el’ with his mether| “Well,” anid Mark, “the ship fol-|Japancse. "Ther, mostly craveled ta ee wile. i be at cae tntere | Srecein: Tousen your ep ta fats|one iiest tare bed @ eee a wel l rout fou ara Se as eee en ART Dn to oe ro wi saw her, 5 eerie {ancy amused Mack. He wes ltciy shows Hanoleta seuruwest sé] baited benny of the dock Bie ns the slap of severed waves on the|San it doesn’t follow that | sitting near a China woman who vessel’s sides, to watch the swift] the shortest way is to travel south- a baby, on a wall bench not coursing of wispy white clouds| west.” fifteen feet from where Mark stood, ‘across @ moon uarters full.| He at 2 loss to make his| She was staring past him with her “Gibbous” is the term, Mark re- dark, sullen eyes: at his start, her flected, the silvery face of, glance moved over him as the satellite. It was late when he| while her mother nodded y. | Casually as if he had been a chair or wandered contentedly to his state- fascinating! | piece of baggage. toom and slumber Mark continued,| She was beautiful, Mark decided ‘The next day was ideal. The great fly from—jat this second appraisal. Trim, scann diet price half the gice of Ghina,|slender, and slightly ‘more thet the world lived up to its name of| They're about in the same a height for a girl—Mark Pacific. Long swells raced to Co | she might j sat the spooling Oris? dividing! ‘That r. Her small ‘wl at the prow, and rushing too much of the sgivred the of the seat against quietly astern. air was warm It would be a lot slight ‘of the shi; even for March in the latitude of toward the North} her feet, drawn back California, and clouds still ‘p, the earth and | bench, looked unbelievably tiny. Her an ul blue a Great | face was set in the same know if I make eimgitaee Petellion araiost Seb cheer break: marvelous” eh pegs Ss achat aa He was lussed. mere! ear at A knot of from San Francisco to] seem the thing to address her, passengers was watching a school finished, “the ship| der the circumstances. Hi of marine animals—dol| OF por- ‘at first, and gradu-|to talk to her, but the jise—frolicking far off the star- more and more, south. finding her here had for bow to the North. shortest way.’ Beeteceds tae pa Mark's deck-chair was on the the way they fig- hesitated, the 's sunny side. He idled toward it;|are all that out!” said his com-|passed over him again, the chair to his left was unoccu! from Chicago?” | moment with a cold gaze on his but a promising blonde girl with already eyes, and moved away. Mark turne grigt Bobbed cris ‘at i the"one from Pe land walked out of the door in right, con' an Connecticut,’ bider woman in the i barons, splendid!” said] | He encountered the Captain on 3 panto tourist bound for! you'll pardon me,” said Ma: “Captain Rawlinson!” he ex. Hawaii, although the season, strict- yg was over disposal of my lug-| Wents white sutings aod sacations fo ott nd spent halt an on ir out and vacat oui Too many obligations, duties, stric- so tum being deported tures of necessity, for free choice; mamnee | ant Sarees lack and when they did win a few months his at Fedral of freedom, it was temporary. They Sane Be tte aa were still on the tether; it was peg ¥ " bf bit, ees 18 mane Hee: aoe, Bolntevile en by an an them back over her map. the discordancies of civilisation. young English-| Zhe ( But not him!” He bad broken the Pog PS The blonde girl and her mother abe was earings of Peg! were leaning over a map and a com- Mark pass, in somewhat more! Mark ap-|the than audible tones. Mark listened flushed as their eyes | waters rather disint emiled and nodded, and | stormy, “But see here. Mother! The com- ass says we're due west, and “Mistake number one,” he told nts