The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1935, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1935 retary-treasurer, and Mrs, H. W. Rosenthal was named | committeewoman for the fifth district. Organizations of the type of Bismarck’s Legion post are invaluable assets to any community. It is the wish and hope of all our citizens that the Lloyd F. Spetz post will continue its progressive civic work, continue to win a place of honor in the state for many years to come. The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper i THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER S (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper The Conning Tower Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. taining to health but not dis- re b: ly and in ink, Address Dr. All queries must be accompanied by No Need for Haste & stamped, Sei raddieeced envelope. Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- bmpees N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck President Roosevelt wisely decided against allowing 4 ‘second class mail matter. his tax-the-rich legislation to be rushed into law over- ack Ge ® ia George D. Mann night. THE eta tsh E President and Publisher The administration has had some embarrassing mo- Take care of yourself, get plenty of fresh air but avoid drafts, be sure and keep well under the covers, don’t go in swimming when you are all heated up, give her nourishing but easily digestible food, don’t let those youngsters change to summer underwear this weather, you'd better wear a hat or the ultraviolet rays will addle your brains, did you brush your teeth this morning Mortimer? and oh, my dear, are you going to take ice cream u seh pal «+ these and one or two other bright sayings always make me . If one could only relax completely when tired, how fine that would be! Especially when one is all worn out and just a bundle of nerves. Boy, bring my Bronxophone. In the physiological laboratory it has been shown that tense muscles mean active nerves, and that mental activity means not only that the brain is working but also that there is tension in particular muscles. Re- laxation of these tense muscles is a means of quieting undesirable mental or emotional states. W. Simons Archie O, Johnson fi Editor ments during the last few months as the result of half- Secretary and Treasurer baked ideas having been hastily shoved through the legislative channels without proper study. The supreme court decisions holding NRA and the Frazier-Lemke farm debt act unconstitutional are still too fresh in the president's mind to permit him to make other such mis- takes. The times call for speed but the experience of three years in directing the ship of state have proven the folly of hasty action. The present session of congress has been particularly trying and congressmen are becoming more and more fearful that they will be kept in Wash- ington through the summer. They are more than will- Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . $7.20 ‘AN YOU SEE Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation ae %5,900,000,000 In reference to shifting, restlessness, grimaces, tics and other mani- ing now to get down to work. But their work is of too ORTH OF festations, Dr. Edmund Jacobson, in his work on “Progressive Relaxation” Member of The Associated Press [much importance to be carelessly done. Along with the (University of Chicago Press) explains that what the patient calls “the The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| President's mounting problems, it now falls to his lot SHIPPING feeling of nervousness” consists of the varied sensations from the disorderly ation of all news dispatches credited tolto keep the homesiqk congressmen from stampeding SUBSIDIES muscular tensions, voluntary and involuntary, that mark his responses to environment. The work mentioned is too technical for laymen, but Dr. Jacobson’s little book “Now You Can Relax” contains much that should help the “nervous” patient. As this pioneer says: ‘The evidence is growing that the cultivation of general and differential relaxation is fundamental in meeting the fears, worries and anxieties that are commonly called hervousness and in my experience the method is more effective toward ‘persistent improvement in various conditions such as insomnia, the functional nervous disorders, ‘ner- vous indigestion,’ mucous colitis and high blood-pressure than attempting to talk the patient out of his disorders by various forms of mental therapy, including psychoanalysis.” In other words we have told patients to relax and forget it so much that the advice has become stereotyped and humorous. Now, we must teach the patient how to relax, and it is an art as difficult to teach or to learn as is singing or painting. Dr. Jacobson’s larger work teaches doctors to teach pithy and differential relaxation, and the little book helps patients to jearn it. A more or less constant scowl or frown or a peculiar twist of the mouth or @ barely noticeable tic (habit spasm) of one kind or another is a familiar illustration of abnormal muscle tension. Look your friend over, or let your friend look you over for this stigmata of “nervousness,” and try a little dif- ferential relaxation on them. an published herein matter herein are into the hinterland. There is no immediate hurry about passage of the new tax proposals. On this point, the wealthy families and corporations will agree. But even Washington’s tax authorities say the legislation would be ineffective t (tias ‘thie ta'n0 nod ‘ti then, but t for years. Most of the large fortunes have been split : know no » ‘or & up among sons and grandsons and put away in tax- fan to rejoice, and to do good in his life—Ec- | |exempt government bonds long ago. e ‘The president may also concern himself with the happiness in the dis- thought that his new program, as an incident to his fance; the wise grows it under his feet—James political future, must leave as little room as possible for Oppenheim. criticism of the administration. Tacked onto the nuis- B/ance and excise resolution expiring June 30, i would have cost the government $1,500,000 tn revenue for Workers, Not Loafers every day after that date that it remained incomplete. What to do with America’s bewildered |By checking this plan, the president removed one strong has become more and more a major prob- | Point from use by his critics. He still has Huey Long a to contend with, of course, but he made more friends with aman ue Saat tassios that | f0e8 by taking the tax-the-rich Initiative out of Announcem Presi the Louisianan’s hands. the intends to spend millions of dollars to re- habilitate the jobless youngsters and to keep our school-graduating boys and girls from the OUT THERE? Inspiration for Today QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ~ Escarole ‘You stated that escarole has the highest vitamin A content of any food. Our vegetable market is unable to get it, and the seed stores have only endive or chicory seeds. (E. K. 8.) Answer—Escarole is sometime called chicory green, and I believe endive If Americans want no entangling alliances, why are we still keeping Huey Long in the United states senate? A man in Alabama failed to kill himself by butting human junk heaps of life will strike a respon- sive chord in the minds of those who have been alarmed by this gigantic problem of provid- $ng workers and not loafers for the future. That the president has considered the youth problem paramount among the human aid conundrums he has had to cope with was apparent in the first few weeks of his admin- fstration. He called for establishment of the Civilian Conservation Corps as a step towards relieving the country of shoals of footloose young men and women drifting aimlessly with the tide of weather. But the CCC was not enough. Every month saw thousands more graduated from the va- rious schools, the possibility of their finding work for the most part hopeless. Now the president proposes to keep youth in-school as long as possible and to provide ap- prenticeships in private industry for those who his head against a brick wall. Only one who is too wise not to do so might succeed. ehind the Scenes | in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER a MecCarl Shows Symptoms of White House Ambition ... ‘Who Can Be “Impersonating” Senator as Utility Counsel? Washington, June 27.—Those who see most of Comp- troller General John R. McCarl these days are sure he is preening himself for the next Republican presidential nomination. A movement for McCarl has begun in his home state of Nebraska and the atmosphere around the comptrol- a general’s office is laden with more than a faint politi- cal odor. Some of his friends are talking as if he already were an avowed candidate. They take pains to say that, if nominated, he would be a safe and sane “middle-of-the- roader,” an opponent of such projects as TVA and the Politics By FRANK BR. KENT Copyright, 1935, by The Baltimore Sun A POLITICAL TONIC Washington, June 27.—The hearts of the Roosevelt politicians, in- terpreters and intellectuals have been greatly lightened by the president's tax message, It seems to them just the tonic needed to restore the im- paired political health of their situa- tion and recover balance for the New tion of an old idea with which they more or less will have to go along. From now on the “tax the rich” topic will be favored by administration spokesmen and the constitutional issue muted. In the opinion of very good judges, however, the latter will become dominant again next spring, when the supreme court passes upon the AAA and the TVA; also the Wag- ner bill, the Guffey bill and other features of the Roosevelt program. There is a very firm belief that the verdict on all these: will be as sweeping and unanimous as that on the NRA, that they will put the whole New Deal definitely outside of the constitution. If that happens Senator Borah certainly will be in a dreadful fix. His soul will be torn by vast conflicting emotions. One week he will have to praise Mr. Roosevelt for his plan to make the wealthy pay through their bloated and bulbous noses; the next he must is virtually the same. If you can grow your own, that would be better than you can buy in any market, because the vitamin A value diminishes on standing for hours or days. According to assays published by the New York are burying their crops because they | Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor, escarole contains 6,000 could tots sell them.—Rt. Rev. Lord| units of vitamin A per ounce, carrots 940 units, cream cheese 1,400 units, William Gascoyne-Cecil, English| eggs 550 units, liver 2800 units, dried whole milk 500 units, prunes 300 bishop. se ‘The non-farming three-fourths of units, Romaine lettuce 150 units, ordinary lettuce 50 units per ounce. Distilled Water Is it injurious in any way to drink only distilled water? Has distilled the nation cannot insulate itself| water any virtue or any curative value that natural water does not possess? t the economic distress of the) (E. F. E.) agains agricultural fourth. — Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace. Summer Sweethearts BEGin GERS ropalT CATHARINE eTRYKHURST. lo. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) [apes alg dnpeselneliianmns anekore nulment, Katharine mused dully one sunny efterncon. “Of course. 1 wondered when you'd think of that.” cald Violet, Next spring! At the thought of the hours, days and nights to be Hved through, her spirit fainted, and she groaned. A dark, slim, alert figure appeared in the dark- ness of the rosebed. Deal policies, all of which were left|denounce him for unfaithfulness to Michae) tecomes engages to |consolingly. She had not dared to/ “Oh, Dr. John! Where did you have completed their schooling. Beer AeA AA cote rela ei id FN ad Gece i dee re SALLY MOON, toca! eoqustte, éve | mention the word nereelt. come trom? For those lured by the desire for a profes-| Also, At is revealed, MoCarl has been making an in- a Re a ee ueass cae seamenan ae:| | renames: Rathariee)| Selaere net sen and a keen sional training, the president offers them an| ‘pn? Sway of economics and the Problems of govern) 1. 146 test month few of his friends marry kim cot. impaistveiy, be | Sroaning, ae play sa lees ea Rai avenue that has been open hitherto to only a| ‘The comptroller general is on intimate terms with |here have been able to conceal appre- epee Seimereoene paver ien=>| pane. Fe thin’ ee limited number with scanty means of pursuing their studies. The technically inclined will be enabled to take full advantage of scientific several Republican leaders in congress, He was once secretary of the G. O. P. congressional campaign com- mittee and was appointed by President Harding to his present 15-year term, which expires next year. ° hension over the constitutional issue that appeared looming. For the first time worry concerning the future en- tered their calculations. Now some of ey her folly should be dragged into the open for all the world to see! Violet suggested that these things see & patient up the Post Road e mile or two.” She had not seen him in weeks. “You look @ bit seedy.” Rew She roused herself John was the cocksureness about the Roosevelt fortune ané title, Ge gece to were often bandied discreetly 00). 7 ps training after which places will be found for STIRS NEW DEALERS’ IRE re-election has returned. It is true} Music will some day rival football pekcpeupripcrsh erypd ia earee |that no teast word was printed 18 | rhe arst thing. pealapolemypepgaccr ry them in their technical fields. Those to whom |,,,,4% “watchdog” of expenditures, McCar! has aroused |there does not exist that old complete) in popularity among the American ‘ally. ceaware ef Wichaete (the newspapers, She had known |be blurting out the whole wretched Z ; bitter antagonism of New Dealers to the extent that some |COnfidence, but, at any rate, gayety| people—Jascha Heifetz, famed vio- marriage to Eatharine tecates | once of such @ case story to him. commerce and industry appeal will be given|have urged that Roosevelt dismiss him. has returned to the inner circle and |jinist, cece opportunity to exercise and develop what they have studied under an apprentice system. No one will deny that it is far better that a youth be given an opportunity to develop his His rulings have hampered slum clearance, low-cost housing. and other projects. He has tried to bring the TVA and the $5,000,000,000 work-relief program under his jurisdiction. Recent attack of his auditors on TVA brought a de- nunciation of McCarl from Senator Norris of Nebraska, the publicity departments are once more buoyant and brave. For weeks they have been on the defensive and nobody in the administration was comfortable. The situation was par- ticularly painful for the “bugle boys” * * % That was a hell of a thing to wake a man up for.—Adam Richetti, after being brought from his cell in Kansas. City to be sentenced to death for NO womes ts alt the world bea The girl, listening, lifted a hag: gard face. f “Why don’t you go to New Mez- ico, as Evelyn asked you to?” Vio let asked reasonably. “Put the “Oh, P'm fine, thanks.” “You look it.” he offered dryly. She leaned against the stone bal- ustrade of the terrace, and he glanced at her with something like hunger in his eyes. Her sleepless participation in Union Station mass- ever been so grievously humilf- nights. her tack of appetite hed imowledge and ability instead of lolling away Mette neat eee a;pepsidsalia} eee, Seacven mame ee acre. Gaels ated. Katharine Strykhuret was| ‘tins pei acagpas oer put a fine edge on her strong young his days on the road, in the poolhall or along | to be taken very seriously, | nt 35 pow held that Mr. Boosevalt 'A multitude of fakers, quack doc-| °ertale os Ge Se badly appt pepsi oe peasy. 2B had « _Sranaparent again shown it he is a clever An older—indeed. a wiser i, Mieieirest cure. Buch work would keep ablaze J. HAM DRIPS ERUDITION politician, While the springing of| ‘OTS, Sellers of charms on aati és tt was, however, more easily said |smudged under her eyelids where have arisen like those which afflict lese sensitive woman—would heave fhe fires of ambition the young possess.| Senator J. Ham Lewis of Illinois, in a half-hour |these tax proposals upon a congress|eq ‘nations of the Old World during] taken than dome Victor Strykhurst him-| ‘they Suttered down to hide her millions of dollars t in. educating th speech on “political reaction from the supreme court |close to adjournment does make lead- = a affairs nto her ows, hands. look of sick despair. The spent lucating them oe On the great plagues—Wilbur L. Cum: self, Katharine reminded uer| . decision”: ... “... as given us by Shakespeare: . . .jers like Senator Harrison, who had| mings, New York attorney. This brooding girl knew nothing to ‘Zoe's back,” Katharine said in . will not be wasted. Judge Wilson, of Pennsylvania, referring to the Grecian |declared there would be no new taxes se * do but wajt, She had no weapone| ‘rend. was s lawyer. To whom The depression will not last forever. There will be a very definite need for trained youth court, says: ... May I be pardoned by my distinguished friends in the Senate for alluding to an observation of Emerson, who, in essay renowned, says: ... the Praetor- this session, look rather foolish, it, nevertheless, from the political angle, achieves several advantageous things. About 30 years ago the idea began to grow that a woman with a large with which to battle the problem that faced her. All she knew wes could they go? No one, assuredly, im their group of acquaintances. the silence that followed. “Oh, is she?” “She's splendid now,” she went the not distan' ure. jusrd rushed ramparts, family was a lunatic. Now she has hand: ed “Lm afraid to trust anyone.” Kath: |. trying to make conversation. et too far t fut Justflcation: tee Patan Gladstone: Pence He neal (aeee teemeeueicu: come to be regarded as a crimipal rae ber. paki ene | Stine said im a tone of bitterness eine ames aoa ee : ning: ... I pause for a moment to ask the attention of |stand, and the shocking confusion |!unatic—Mrs. J. A. Lyons, wife o will-o’.| that startled her hearer. hell to live through again.” said Safety Education Emphasized my honorable colleagues to whet Theodore Roosevelt |which now saturates the new works- | Australian premier. Rat gane., LARS, END MORN EE TT oe ae te, mea -Pialet eld; |the Rector. cheerfully, Knocking his of two airplanes in South America with a| writes: ... Sir, I pause for a moment to call attention |relief program. ere th'-wisp, she had followed bim to (og . pipe against the wall. fous of 18 lives once again emphasizes the fact that/to how truly the Holy Scripture hath it: ... Says Haz- eee Don't drink, Many a great voice] marry him, only to be cast aside.| Evelyn Vincent was going to|Dipe g Itt in his essay on the Jealousy and Spleen of Party: ... Says the commentator on the course of Mr. Gladstone: ... They cry forth, paraphrasing Browning: .. . ‘Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet. Lest we forget’. . .” ee For another, it takes the wind out of the Huey Longs, resolidifies be- hind the president the extreme radi- has been turned into a rough, gin rasp by unprofitable warblings in a barroom quartet—Mary Garden, This much she knew. Michael Hleatherce had married her and New Mezico to stay with some friends who kept an informa! sort of inn there, She had suggested eee \T Katharine drearily. Was it ‘to | Opera singer. then had gone away. The newspa- true that “love is of man’s life e Secting sirplanes, sutomobiles, ships, household ap- Rui tray seas ateciivanme Pi pers a day of two later bad an-|Weeks before that Katharine e | thing epert; ‘tis woman's whole pliances and other wonders of the steam and electrical HA! SENATOR HAS A DOUBLE just suspicion that he intended to| Children of large families are often] nounced the news of his inbexj-/Company her. At the time the plan existence?” age until today they are well nigh automatic devices. Perhaps the most remarkable case of impersonation |reassure business by discouraging| better trained spiritually and socially Katharine bed waited bad seemed far away and nebulous} She wanted to ask John about But man’s development of safety factors and contriv- of & United States senator in history has been revealed | measures designed further to shatter |than children of small families—Mrs,| ‘ance. ing, ed wi every t ed @ God. | this. He was so calm and temper. following the denial of Senator Warren Austin of Ver-|its confidence’ In addition it rather |J. A. Lyons, wife of Australian pre-| day for s sign from bim. None had | ‘© the girL Now it seem: ate and sure about thii ings. But ehe ances to guard against death in the handling of these | mont that he had acted as counsel for any public utility mie! given way out of her difficulties, pay ees care. | anes babar ry y pul makes a gt pict thore saicenen, ie rT. alas come. Later she had heard, through She could bring: her painting didn’t dare. One kind word would machines gone recklessness, ss ming nator, Borah, who ir breast sol- set her off. She'd felt iperior feasness and downright stupidity destroy the perfection Following a y attack by Austin on TVA, emn indignation over the Roosevelt-| Creative enterprise is not stimu-| “me rene soattp. the story of Bis things, Evelyn eatd. The colors and | 7 net Oo | Ml gary Pek =a pe ot the machines themselves. which tended to confirm his previous reputation _|ian hostility to the constitution, and lated by vast inheritances. They bless} accident. “Now,” she sald to her-| shapes of things on the desert were) sim iis King, of course. bat 3 has only been within recent years that funds| 8 the best friend of the “power trust” in con> | now breathlessly acclaim him for anjneither those.who bequeath nor those/ self, with @ fast-beating heart, truly divine. superior all the same. And Joba gress, Senator Norris charged that Austin was attack on the “forces of great|who receive.—President Roosevelt. on last he will send for me.”|_ Dertine vetoed the plan at once. have been appropriated privately and publicly to edu-| Still a lawyer for power companies, wealth.” It shows the ease with ** se ms me" | Katharine, sick with tury and de-| would be horribly disappointed te pate men and women how to handle the mechanical) «as soon as I knew I was likely to be a United States|which, by the simple expedient of| I saw men starving in Chicago, and there was only silence Tl |spair, turned to her father. theta wonders they live with, ride in, produce with. Not un-|senator, I withdrew from utility employment, wholly, |talking about “great fortunes,” these|yet just outside was the fertile Prov} tence and the growing conviction | | “Bertine doesn’t want Yon to #8) "a, the moment passed and Kath- w been broadened and ex-| absolutely, and entirely,” Austin, who was elected March | Progressive patriots can be switched|ince of Illinois, where I think they] of a fearful wrong done. off God-knows-where with this panded that keeps develo) 3 E »|from the heroic role of defenders of a fided Mer. | Woman,” be fumed. “We've never |*rine kept silent, and half a mile ae ig = death poling bd , espns fp A eet eee the constitution to that of presiden- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Bre “oH ee pti cape ot ber ae me retaee toned windows @ ‘are nated eit - P “IMPERSONATING” AUSTIN tial cheer leaders. There is a type ‘d | white haggardness of Zs duced. But someone iy pacts as “Austin’—and pre-|of statesman ‘always ready to drop ‘ALG. U. 8. PAT..OFF. Violet had advised her to wait and paraded before the mirror and sly- ‘North Dakota has a few examples of this kind of sumably collecting fees in his name. The masquerade everything else to sink teeth in the see what happened. This Kath- stirred him. He sald suddenly. ly hid away a plain gold wedding band. must have » for Vermonters thi rich. Undoubtedly there is strong “Ne. No.” She clasped and un- = Sete ee Sete mementos ea ea mes Me a aoa wnat deme tnd ervey a |e hr mi 7B el | oy haem x ht. the es ‘The Burlington, Vt., Free Press and Times reported |Taised. It is one of the oldest in PREREE. + +, 2 BERS eae | need and want a change. Miss Vin-|Sbingled house s young map wan- = pertment, the FERA safety division, federal seronsutics | nec, 12, 1933, that: politics, and not a few men have sure her. Not ome message bedi cent is a friend of the Merser’s.” | dered in the kitchen garden where all are preaching the gospel of safety and/ “Alderman Baxendale moved to table Jast night's res- | been elected to office in this country come through from the man whose| His face altered. “Whose?” chickens pecked at dry grass and 4 bulletins on the right way to handle mechanical | olution (to buy Diesel engines for municipal power) in|on it alone—none, however, so far band she bad taken that day in'a| “That aice woman in whose horses thrust their noses inquir © ads to hymen . . ‘ view of » last-minute offer made by U. 8. Senator War- |* a” be recalled, to the presidency. sleepy Connecticut town. saree y tee oe ead tone Bs eq hy The time is not far distant when courses in safety |ten R. Austin to continue the Green Mountain Power ee . Her ring she bed given to hi De fale’ the beck or bic baa © education may be = pest of the required study in our | Corporation's sgreement with the city on standby service| The fact, of course, is that, if the Ing wa thoughtfully ‘es though ¥ 2» q at the same old demand charge of $5000.... Senator Aus-| budget could be balanced and the She had not @ shadow of proot. remember gomething he could” Pere echoot system. tin, py Mt for the Green Mountain Fowsr Corpora national debt reduced by Gree Not, she reminded herself. hotly Aa ars 5 RP COR Ret by tion, been authorized in a long-distance - | great junes, there would . eae k - Well Done—Legionnaires phone message to make this proposition to the city...” {anyone except the possessors of the sot propaly, shat she. Waniee Bey: Fate was weaving = net inex ‘- ‘Bismarck can well be proud of its American Legion Post. : * Election of Spencer 8. Boise to the stete commander- The Burlington Dally News carried 8 similer story. AND AGAIN THE SENATOR ‘The Rutland, Vt., Dally Herald, July 21, 1931, in con- nection with the Bellows Falls Hydro-Electric Corpora- tion’s $8,500,000 tax appeal case, said: “Judge J. J. Dunn great fortunes to oppose it. It would be a lovely thing to do. But, if Mr. Roosevelt's proposals are to be lim- ited to the very rich, economists say, they will produce relatively little money—certainly not enough to meet herself s0 cool and remote all these years at last had “given her heart to the hawks.” lept derk to daylight were her particu: lar scourge, 80 difficult to be got tricably about all of them The girl with the crystal eardrops was only @ puppet. although she fancied herself @ great actrese in the drama. The physician wno watched 5 the fair-haired girl with troubled = and civic responsibility that the members of the Lioyd|0f Boston, Senator Warren R. Austin, and William H. |the huge bill that must be paid. And, She writhed at the thought. rough. eyes was conscious of a shadow ‘v. & F. Bpeta post have displayed throughout the years since | Edmunds of Burlington are appearing for the Power |if they are extended, as Mr. Morgen- Violet watehed: her through the| “2 like ber, yes. She's been very peat ‘That the Bismarck post is an alert, active and lead- And not to be outdone by their husbands, two Bis- ‘marek-women were honored with elective offices in the Legion’ Sitailiary. “Mra. XM. Brown was re-elected sec- On Aug. 22, the Herald reported: “Senator Warren R.. Austin for the power company Company before the Vermont supreme court against a manufacturer who said his factory had been flooded when the utility built a power dam. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service;’Inc.) thau and Mr. La Follette propose, and as they ultimately must be if financial equilibrium is to be retain- However it is dealt with now, the administration adherents are grate- ful for a diverting issue, and the Re- Whether or not they offer you their seats reveals your stand- |publicans embarrassed by the injec ing with men. | days with s growing enztety. There wasa savage pity in the eyse just such @ hurt and it bad embit- tered her earlier years. It was ¢ + fevous shame, thought the older woman, kind to me.” “Well—well.” He promised to Pendent on anyone. Next spring she would come into ber mother's money. Then oeither Bertine’s whims nor her father’s strictures should -trouble her - ~ ing between them. He bad had s declaration on bis lips for weeks; he did not dare to utter ft now. ies . has presented argu- think ft over. [t was maddening,| This was onl; interm! frig unit of the Legion in North Dakota was further em-| ments and evidence to show...” ed, then, politically, the issue loses she turned to the fair-heired girl. | the-girl decided, going out into the|the drama, rf Pate grader] Ser Be Snes i So Seties, one more than Se Avis wat i Sinai Teporied “tobe itn. Velie: ian i Long ago Violet, too, had suffered |coolness of. the garden, to be de-|closely you nright have heard the eny other was fortunate to receive. press’ Penne Powe tuning up of instruments for the third act, life being stranger and more cruel and beautiful often times than the theater. (To Be Oontineed)

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