The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 29, 1935, Page 6

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ane THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1935 cc a RAREST The Bismarck Tribune | Mending Time An Independent Newspaper \ Gu Your Personal Health THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Bstablished 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper in Washington i i I | WITH RODNEY DUTCHER 1 Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- fmarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘as second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year . Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the uso 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. Sa Inspiration for Today For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk: the bud shall yield no meal: if so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up.—Hosea 7:7. Wickedness, when properly punished, is dis- graceful only to the offender; unpunished, it is disgraceful to the whole community.—Charles Simmons. | Good for the Farmer One of the items upon which farmers of the northwest should post themselves is that re- garding the volume of imports and the effect of such imoprts upon their personal fortunes. They should think the matter over sanely and reach their own conclusion before the politi- cians take the stump for the next campaign, which seems to be opening now, 14 months in advance of the next presidential election. In this part of the country great stress is Jaid upon the fact that agricultural imports have been coming into this country. The infer- ence is that they represent a handicap to the producer. The first thing, of course, is to ascertain the facts, then interpret them in the light of cur- rent conditions. Here are the government fig- ures on agricultural imports for 1935 with a comparison with the preceding year and with averages from 1925 to 1934: Cattle, 230,581 head, compared to 51,229 for the same period in 1934 and a nine-year average of 125,998. Hogs, 46,734 pounds, compared to 4,066 last year, a 10-year average of 2,814,096 pounds. Wheat, 12,178,644 bushels, compared to 5,605,523 last year, a 10-year average of 6,188,- 190 bushels. Oats, 10,054,861 bushels, compared to 21,093 bushels last year, a 10-year average of 123,044 bushels. Rye, 7,550,800 bushels, compared to 3,943,- 222 bushels last year, a 10-year average of 805,- 243. Barley, 4,404,284 bushels, compared to 6,926 last year. Barley was not classified sepa- rately prior to 1930. Corn, 17,620,195 bushels, compared to 152,- B87 last year, a 10-year average of 266,141. Total pork, including pork, fresh hams and shoulders, bacon and pickled pork, 3,076,934 pounds, compared to 736,911 last year and a 10- oe New Banking Bill an Unquestioned Triumph for Re- moving Federal Reserve System from Wall Street Influence; Financial Capital Gravitates Strongly Toward Washington. ° oe Washington, Aug. 29.—The debated question of whether the new banking law represents a victory for Senator Carter Glass or Governor Eccles possibly is less important than a couple of other issues, to wit: Does the act tighten and centralize public control over the national banking, credit and financial po- lictes? Does it tend to free American banks from the do- mination of Morgan and the big banks of New York? Each time, the answer seems to be: Enormously. Those were the chief aims, as every informed person knew, of the Banking Act of 1935 when it was first Proposed. The present Federal Reserve Board, regarded as more or less hostile to Roosevelt and friendly to the New York banks, will be dropped. Roosevelt will ap- point a new board of seven men. The 12 governors of the regional Federal Reserve banks, now to be called presidents, must hereafter have the approval of this board after they're chosen by bank directors. Three board members must be Republicans, but Republican No.1 undoubtedly will be “radical” Gov. Marriner Eccles him- self and the other two probably his choices. eee POWER OVER CREDIT The new open market committee is empowered to order Federal Reserve banks to buy or sell government securities—which at least theoretically will enable it to expand or contract credit by increasing or decreasing reserves of member banks. The committee, thanks to Glass, comprises the FRB and five Federal Reserve bank presidents, instead of merely the FRB as urged by Eccles. Whether this will mean public or banker control of open market operations remains to be seen and depends on the care with which Roosevelt selects the board. Remember that the five governors must have been okayed by the FRB. Now, just contrast that new set-up with the present open market control system, under which the 12 bank governors undertake to control those operations, rep- resenting and responsible to private bankers. eee TWO OTHER WEAPONS The FRB has other powers over credit—also re- garded as weapons with which to head off speculative booms—which are now to be expanded. One is the power to change the rediscount rate (interest charged by Federal Reserve banks to member banks, which con- trol rates charged by latter to borrowers) and the act makes this more specific and enforcible. The other enables it to change reserve requirements, under which member banks must keep 10 per cent of demand deposits and 3 per cent of time deposits with Reserve banks. Heretofore the FRB could only change those requirements by declaring an emergency—which would automatically create an emergency in case the board were merely trying to anticipate trouble. The new act permits it to double the requirements without any such declaration and it's important to note that such a doubling would just about cancel out the Present vast amount of excess reserves which so many experts regard as potential dynamite. By HERBERT OLITICS NATION’S CAPITOL | PLUMMER Washington—No man on the left side of the dividing political aisle in the senate during the 74th congress has had as much attention paid him as Arthur Hendrick Vandenberg of Michigan. ‘The reasons: 1. He was one of the few Republican senators to survive the ’34 elections; 2, He's among those most frequently mentioned as the ’36 G. O. P. presidential nomi- nee. There'll be a lot more heard about him in the days ahead. Keep this picture of the man in mind as the front pages. from now on record his SHIFTS TO CAPITAL Eccles and many other bankers have long been op- Posed to domination of the banking system by Wall Street bankers, who—more or less controlling the Fed- eral Reserve—have worked out credit policies, set the pace on rediscount rates and worked with European banks. Policies have sometimes been made in view of the international rather than the domestic situation, as when the discount policy was adjusted in 1927 in order to support the pound. The FRB now certainly will have no less than a balance of power between the New York bankers and the other bankers and it looks as if control might de- finitely be shifted from New York to Washington. ; ae er open market committee can force region- al banks uy government securities, it will be much , more difficult for New York banks to carry out tacit |is nothing about Hamilton he doesn’t threats of revolt against the Roosevelt program by re-|know. He has written books about fusing to buy treasury issues, him, He will talk with you about eee him for hours. He believes that no man can know Hamilton without being a better, safer, more dependable American citizen, for: “Hamilton believed in the constitution of the United States, in indissoluble union, in unselfish public service, and in the integrity of the Republican party.” story: His hero, ideal, and greatest Amer- ican is Alexander Hamilton, There LIQUIDITY FACILIMATED Another break the outside-New\ York banks get is in the broadening of requirements on paper eligible for discount. Originally the only eligible paper was high- ly liquid short-term stuff and in 1929 many banks went to the wall with sound assets because their paper was technically ineligible, ‘The new act removes that and other restrictions, ex- tends eligibility to nearly all sound assets and allows Self-Educated national banks to lend much more liberally on real| His cronies say he started thinking estate. That means a lot more to bankers outside New | While still a kid. York than to the big institutions of % His acquaintance with words was ‘ cent begun while writing news stories out of the Grand Rapids, Mich., city hall. He's a self-educated man to a large extent. The only schooling he ever had was a high school education and one year at the University of Michi- It may remove shackles in many cases and the adminis- tration, for the umpty-umpth time, thinks it has pulled something from the hat which will do a lot toward elim- inating the bankers’ “liquidity complex.” (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) gan law school. Nevertheless he can put after his name “M.A.” and “L.L.D’—honorary degrees. At 22 he was editor and publisher of the newspaper with which he started as copy boy. Twenty-eight years later he was in the United States senate sitting where the man who gave him his first big job had sat. Politely Sarcastic He is a striking figure on the floor of the senate. Tall, handsome, his that the nation cannot be rescued without another amendment, then amend we must.—Gov. George H. Earle, Pennsylvania. x * * We want no war! We want no wealth gained from war! We want peace and we do not propose to go into a war to settle European con- troversies.—Administration Leader Joseph T. Robinson, +} sudden marked peripheral vasoconstriction which lasts for 60 minutes. By William Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady will ions pertaining to health but not dis- ease or diagno: briefly and in ink. ldress_ Dr. Brady in care 0! 11 queries must be accompanied by @ stamped, self-addressed envelope, HOW TOBACCO AFFECTS THE CIRCULATION Some recent laboratory observations would seem to indicate that smok- ing raises the blood sugar level, probably as a consequence of stimulation of the sympathetic nerve. This immediate but brief rise in the blood sugar may account for the momentary lift or relief of fatigue the smoker derives from a few puffs or inhalations, or the snuff taker from a sniff, or the tobacco eater from a chew. The effects are the same, by whatever route the drug is absorbed, Other laboratory studies show that the smoking of a cigarette causes a Don't go way, girls, for this has as much to do with your complexion as it does ‘with your health, or maybe your limb, and when I say limb I mean limb, Thrombo-angiitis obliterans (Buerger’s disease) has made amputa- tion of many a leg imperative, and smoking is certainly a factor of this disease of the peripheral vessels, whether other factors are concerned or not. So you girls had better know about these penalties of indulgence, which heretofore were paid chiefly by males, by males of weak will who overindulged in tobacco. When not inhaled, cigarette smoke still produces vaso-constriction, but the vasoconstriction lasts only 15 minutes. Difference between simple puffing of a mouthful and expelling it at once and drawing the smoke deeply into the breathing passages or inhaling and expelling it slowly or through the nose, is merely a matter of greater exposure—larger area of mucous membrane gassed, greater amount of tobacco, nicotine or whatever the active substance may be absorbed. Larger lose. Peripheral vasoconstriction means contraction or narrowing of the arterioles or smallest branches of the arteries farthest from the heart— the vessels which regulate the supply of blood to the skin and to the extremeties. Cigar and pipe smoking produces the same peripheral vasoconstriction as cigarettes. By scientific instruments the rate of blood flow in the skin or in the hands or feet was measured, and the smoking of cigarette, pipe or cigar was found to slow the flow from 50 to 80%. As a rule this retarded blood flow in the peripheral circulation accompanies a rise of blood pressure of from 10 to 20 millimeters of mercury, and an increase in the heart rate of from 6 to 20 pulse beats per minute. From these observations it is reasonable to assume that any one who smokes from half a pack to a pack of cigarettes a day is on the road to ———— Well, it will make a good deal of interesting and more or less profitable work for the doctors of tomorrow. Yeah, and it betokens better times for the beauty business, for a girl who is good looking when she begins smoking naturally wants to keep her good looks or the best imitation she can contrive. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Outbreak Son, 20, has outbreaking of acne, troubled a lot, also has bad tonsils ». GC E.G) Answer—Send stamped envelope bearing his address, for monograph on acne (blackheads and pimples). Focus of infection in tonsils may be one factor. Simplest and safest way to clear up the septic focus is dia- thermy (electro-coagulation), which good physicians everywhere now employ. Bright and Brave In giving first aid as a life guard I have found that the only means of stopping the backflow of fluid into the windpipe is by using the subject’s hand as a pillow for his head. You must remember that when applying artificial respiration the patients usually vomit, and what is to stop this vomited matter from backing up... Answer—If I caught you putting the hand under the head I’d command you to correct the mistake instantly, or I’d put a fist under the jaw. Any one who wishes to know the correct method of resuscitation (Schafer meth- od) in contradistinction to the erratic Red Cross method, send ten cents in coin and s.a.e. for booklet, “Resuscit re @ it, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) head is almost bald. black spectacles which he puts on and off incessantly while talking. He smiles great desl, but lst heartily seldom. His voice is one of the best in the senate. It can be heard beyond the galleries out into the corridors. He hates to be inter- rupted while speaking—lets it be known often. In debate he is vehement and sar- BEGIN HERS 1 JO DARIEN oreaks & ment te SRET PAU! e summer ecvert gues “bask | ISS, DOEOs. Te eee |) SSeS erent Linke slageane him and his political enemy but per- a sonal friend—Pat Harrison of Mis- sissippi—lock horns, as they do fre- quently, is a forensic treat. He works hard, takes his job seri- a irked attentions. jo mai atten: ants er to marry eo soon as ously, plays little. When time per- he eam ceeure @ . mits he slips out to see W: ae life guara "BABS MONTCOM: ERY. ech fashington play a baseball game, usually sitting whe ts in Vice President Garner’s box. And if he has nothing better to do in the evening, he may be induced to play @ rubber of bridge. eeturns 7 ander- part ef © motion fenort. Jo hecomes LOLA MONTEZ | ‘There ts a party tor the © RW Bane te marry Deugias after Sarsh. Betheenats KG Tso We've changed the Constitution feave Crest to with 21 amendments, and regretted Ghe agrees to ge immedi- Ps ae the corrider she meets only one of them. Now, if it appears Now GO ON WITH THE STORE CHAPTER XXXIV took im Jo's bathing “At least for a ume, Tubby.” Jo emilea, found it hard to keep the tears back at the thought of leaving such a truly devoted friend. “Unless you want to go to Hollywood with me.” “Holly—you're really going to Hollywood?” “iL think eo, Tubby...” Jo rose from her chair and walked to the window. “I can’t think of any reasons why 1 shouldn't.” She turned to the other girl sua- denly. “It'd be grand to have you there with me.” Tubby shook her head. “Not me, Jo.” They were both silent a mo- ment. Then Tubby added slowly, “Be sure to drop me a tine once in a while, Jo. And I'll do the same.” Jo managed a laugh. “Don’t be "| 80 serious about it, Tubby. After all, Hollywood isn’t in Russia. You've bad such a grand time looking out for me—that’s the jexorine Jo’s frantic accusa-| Teal reason you don’t want to see tion, Mrs, Marsh’s sharp gase| ™¢ £0.” sult, the daring white one she had bought|Stinned Tabby. “I guess you're righ! 8 t that,” walked wouldn't go with Fragonet. To accompany him to the cinema city would only encourage him fur- ther, and Jo was afraid of that somehow. She had just completed her note to Marsh and sealed it when @ knocs sounded at her door. Her first thought was that it was Tubby again, with come iast bit of advice. Smiling in anticipation of this, Jo flung the door wide. But instead of the short rotund figure of Tubby Davis she was confronted with the tall, dark Peter Fragonet. Without waiting for her to epeak he walked into the room and closed the door be- hind bim. “Well?” he said, smiling down at her. “Are you coming with me?” Panic struck Jo, and she blurted out, “No... ’m—I'm returning to town with Tubby.” cee FRsconer taised bis eyebrows, “That's odd. I'm sure 1 saw her leaving the Inn to catch the 1:30 train.” He took Jo’s bands Quickly. “Look here, Jo, why should you be afraid of a man eo breathlessly at Lytsen’s. quickly to Jo, kissed her on the| who's so much in I . Reprinted to w chee! m love with you year average of 3,569,618 pounds. With Other show what : | sola: Pte Cen ee aoe “Go lone, Tubise end” good geek nee fem st: ges: amet Total beef, including beef and veal, fresh, DITOR S Be ser oF Rebus Puzzle by my own eyes. Even the clothes! ‘Uk. ce paeat dad “You—you took me so com- pickled and canned, 44,099,721 pounds, com. sures with : | | ratop iti” Jo erled, her nerves| *’slclousiy, Jo caw Tubby Burry | Psi” .O7 surprise.” she faltered, pared to 16,211,131 last year and a 10-year aver- HORIZONTAL _—Answer to Vrevious Puzsle 12 Work. cracking. “I won't stand your in-| (oy Tin Seer, ane! ame the] ""«1 meant to,” Bragonet laughed Pelee Gite ome a stow that b Whither the Nugiat? Ca an (Sey eta, | Seg. Desteh SMyemtet ae ea Ta as atte Su ere anton yn Ss seem s) lew York Herald-Tribun: ° O [ jeave! m5 : Snow. at beef and The profession and practice of el in New Jersey nyson’s “Idylis Rate rao iSio] _ body. She might have forgotten her-| gione in all her life. She realised | °°!f, of me. | ? wheat, the two prime dietary staples, took the] has not yet been challenged by of the Kings.” (MATHEWOO 7 gelt even ‘more completely bad/ now that she had depended much| ,. But! need time to think, biggest jump among foodstuffs under the pres-| being Unclothed in mixed bevies as the New verk wane| She adored VIEMBSIIIDIEMMSIFIA] 19 Novices, not Tubby appeared and grasped| oe Tubby Davis. It Led been niee| Peter. After all, the plane doesn't sure of low-production in this count: ‘dure recently imposed. But the troubles which the North . SUPPL CIEIeTS ares. nd ttocted So Ponte mater | to have Tubby worrying and tret-| ee eet ees head. “N ountry, caused | Jersey Health Institute is now having with its Gourland STUIPIBIEL ALWIT AR TIL IETR 4 0: Sereny. inpice. a helping to fight battles. " 4 by the drouth. Even so, they were not tremen-|Helghbors in Long Valley are proof enough of the weak-| °° Gurmioal e| wOOA ANboORg gh revales ny But just before she closed it, Jo’s| But now that was all over ...|:. ° the plane we're going to slously in excess of past averages. nesses in human nature which the not-a-whisp cult must| (5 Mates. a ie nijaite Prag friend turned agaip to| just when she needed Tubby m pie Dg alla che Cres tmont _ alld still overcome to make the world safe for sartorial frank- 2 irs, Marsh. “Haven't you done| of all. our, | wired The figures decrease in importance when| ness. wRray sina pale et enought” {he asked angrily, them) | Stoeling herself, Jo turned to| It mudi last aignt to send ap 7 :. e door a bard slam pecta! — seen against the background of meat-buyers’| tnis particular tame Vortec ued by the chiet of (abbr.). picture. to cut of whatever answer Mra.| eg mincow, Eazed out across the) Fs topped suddenly, and Jo saw strikes in the east, agitation for removal of the| ‘reely to magisterial authority and the press that, while| 8 Occurrence. é HEIR! 35 Convivial. Marsh may have bad. “[ don’t need anyone but my-|that ne had discovered the en- wheat processing tax. Who ki te the members of his middle-aged clientele, averaging more | 0 Males. IAIMIATS I) 37 writer's But Tabby was almost as exas-| self,” she whispered slowly. “Not| velope addressed to him. He took - W nows to what) than 150 pounds in weight, can learn to abide the con.| *1 Like. marks. perated with Jo Darien as with| anyone.” it ap im his slender fingers “Ot ends these movements might have gone were! stant inspection of equally uplifted and herole fellow re-| %2To steep. #3 Female of 59.7 mention. 35.Cure. Mra, Marah. | ee 6 course you don’t mind my reading fit not for the stabilizing effects of imports? A vealers, they just cannot be looked at critically by 24 Reproductions. 2 ; arty 4 ca 40 Depression. “Can't 1 let you out of my eight) q WO hours tater Jo sat at the oe. since it’s addressed to me?” 3 uninspired berry pickers and muleteers without imputing 26 To annoy. 45 Pertaining to * 42To make lace ® minute without your getting little desk, the tip of a pen- fore Jo could protest he had Yew farmers who had produce to sell may have ee yokels ow and nibald thoughts. When such berry| 7 Arabian | a poilery. VERTICAL 44 Manta iste tpablery me Rearee @ deep| holder between her strong, even @ rd sarelons and a sera # ers and muleteers persist, by virtue of their rty commander, . 1 Rubber pen- faculty. ig onestly believe you were . Behind ber on the bed >. Fae Fea quickly, lost but what would the effect have been on| tights, in taking Up positions, dy atte carr noe ene | 19 Wheater — SoCow-hendea | Rubber 46 Wrath. fitting yourself’ out for marder| were her bags, packed and lockea,| bis tace brightening. : from e 58, pac | ‘those thousands of others whose production was | they can thoroughly establish a vulgar worldly reaction to 20 Noisy goddess. 2 Like. 47 Species of just as { arrived.” But they were not as bulging as “Then you were planning to go ‘down to almost zero? middle-aged amplitude in “the altogether,” the uplifting festivity 52 Rhythm. 3 Frozen water. pier. “It wasn’t that bad... but/they had been when she arrived|‘ Hollywood all the time!” he Fe ic ical + ha qualities of the life pristine and immaculately fawnish be-) $2Folding bed. 53East Indian 4 Wheel hub, 48 Small insect, she did drive me to the point) at Crest Lake, for in the closet|¢zclaimed. Dropping the letter to iogical to assume that, had con-| come hopelessly soured by the horrid thoughts which the 33 Subject of a money. 5 To choose. 49 Every. where I didn’t know what ! was|hung ali the clothes she had|the floor, he took Jo's shoulders th sumer pressure become pronounced enough, the otherwise gentle nudist mind predicates to the gaping, talk, 54 She was calied 7 Dye. 61Cry for help, saying—or care.” Jo looked ap/ bought at Lytsen's. in his strong brown hands. “What unsympathetic yeomanry. 36 Denoting “The lily maid 8 Title. 53 War fiyer. at her friend. “It’s all over,) Bending her head over the note| difference whether you go atone, whole AAA structure would have b ‘This is e been swept the weakness which the Long Valley nudists final end. ot —.” 9 Billiard rods. 5&5 Behold. Tubby. I’m leaving Crest Lake.”’| paper, she finished the short note|°F with me, Jo? Why shouldn't away. In fact, there is no assurance that it| (ieplaved freely in the sult that they brought (and with-| 39 Preposition _&6 Direct. 10Sea eagle, 67 Structural “But_1 thought you'd decided| she planned to leave for Dougias| We return there together?” His will not still go down to destruction, And there| tives then bated eee connect Searles. ‘The good n&-|- 41 Woolly, 58 Lariat. 11 Note in scale. unit. to stay?” Marsh, thanking bim again tor|"oice dropped to almost e whie- V , ion. And there foe fen ares their souls. Such were conditions next aoe “I bad, But this new decision) his fairness, and explaining that| Per. “There isn’t s chance tor is no denying*that the crop benefit program has | find to lock oo ten inns Soeitled, iat Shey SeRy. Poe eee she was leaving “the wardrobe of| YoU to escape me, Jo. | want you ‘been a God-send to the farmers of this state. they not have been tempted to see? The Aeae and mio ee ee eipemerierne | Teen corte, Eee clone a al Holseess ts Eee A Glorious Ending Bismarck’s 1935 baseball season closes in a blaze ot Slory, the team representing this city having won the semi-pro championship in the tournament at Wichita. The result is as much a tribute to Bismarck’s inherent interest in the great national game as to the ability of the players, for only strong local support enabled Man- ger Churchill to put together a team of sufficient class Those who feel that this team was the best ever to ‘The two pitchers who twirled for us at Wichita un. available display of such sights in a meadow as a body couldn't otherwise see outside his or her own looking glass is a temptation to kids, state policemen, uninvited ¢! Suests and visiting kindred which is disruptive of the community's peace. The knowledge that, down across the brook in the hollow, there is a woman, older, fatter and plainer than Aunt Tessie, prancing naked among Veown:s7e0 sieane, im 6, Spm Aa Tuin any housewife'’s ven sense or the jel qualities out of a Picking of elderberries, ne Whither then nudism; and where is its safe refuge? New York begins war on noise. We won't believe the city is sincere unless its next election is preceded by whispering campaign, pees Aka. s RRR Belle ee NO NS baseball enthusiasts, Bismarck is on the map in a big way. re} | | US yout” asked Tubby unbelievingly. Jo nodded. “Very gently. But Bevertbeless that’s what ata.” “Why—why—®” Tubby coulda’t find expression for a moment. “I'll bet a doughnut I know who's behind this.” “That doesn’t make much dif- ference, does it?” The other was silent. “Well,” she said GSnally, “let’s pack our duds and get out of here then. You needn't think I’m going to stay any longer Hy moe don’t.” ° 0 looked at Tubby. “Remember that 1 told you I didn’t think Ya return to the university?” Already on the desk lay & sealed envelope sddressed to Peter Fragonet. It bad been hard to write that note, but Jo felt it would be safer to write than to try to explain. And she bad thought it all out im those two hours since Tubby bad gone. There was, she bad decided, no reason why she shouldn't go to Hollywood. She had never seen the place and had always wanted to see it, And now that her father had a job there was no reason why she sbouldn’t spend a iittle of the money si id earned at Crest Lake. She less doubt- about getting @ job, ful this tii and | want all Hollywood to know that you're going to be Mrs. Peter . ‘ll stop acting. 1 mean it, Jo. You're more to me than all the picture laurels I could pick up in a lifetime.” “But, I—I don't Peter.” Fragonet tossed his head im- patiently. “Don't talk of love now. Listen, | know what you've been through here. if you can't call me anything more, then cal) me your friend.” He stood back, glanced quickly at love you, - The record of the tournament discloses that in man- es . oye for bord bead “ a ee intangil yet “Hurry, Jo! 4 uestionably league . “Wel 1 ya’t think 1 even| necessity called “experience, minutes to get to tl j | & color Biber 5 Ses Re ay pele eae 3! i aa as roe one CAD BPO Fe MeN? EAE 42D want to ‘reture to the same town,| if necessary she could obtain a/ The car’s : ying bridge, where escape from mental tribulation Tubby. Can you understand that,|letter from Dougins Marsh—al-|the bed. “Are these your bags?” “7 big leagues today. The same thing holds true of some | lies in the adage “when in doubt lead trump.” At too?” though sbe hoped not to need to} Dazediy Jo watched him take / of the others arrayed in Bismarck’s baseball livery. | Wichita the rule was applied to the great national pas- Tubby nodded. “I—1 guess so.! ask for that. up her luggage. +) ‘The city owes much to Manager Churchill for having | time. If you can lead an ace often enough a grand slam You mean this is where we split; Yee, Jo had decided, she would) “Yos,” she said slowly. | brought it this distinction. In the ranks of semi-pro| is certain. wr. Teally go to Hollywood. But she (To Be Continued) f $ A, 2 ¥

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