The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1935, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune ‘ An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) f State, City and County Official Newspaper — __ —_--- -- Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- Merck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 68 second class mai) matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O, éohnson Kenneth W. Simons @ecretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ............ Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) «» 5.00 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 ts 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 ri, eo republication of all other matter herein are Inspiration for Today Blessed are the meek; for they shall inherit the earth.—St. Matthew 5:5. eee Meekness is imperfect if it be not both active | and passive, leading us to subdue our own passions | and resentments, as well as to bear patiently the passions and resentments of others.—Foster, People Learn Slowly How difficult it is for all of us to learn is aptly demonstrated by the current milk strike fn the Chicago area. We have had many such strikes in that sec- tion of the country. When farm prices were at the bottom there were numerous such mani- festations of discontent throughout the entire + farming country. Adverse conditions were met with violence, buch as is now reported from Chicago, but there fs grave cause to doubt that these demonstra- tions had anything to do with the improvement which now cheers the country.. That was brought about by clear, calm thinking and ac- tion based on a sound estimate of the problem to be solved. War never provides a real answer to any- thing, whether it be fought on an international or an economic front. ‘ The only value the trouble near Chicago can haye is to bring all parties concerned to an un- derstanding that the best course is that which will lead to an amicable agreement. A truce arrived at by forcible means can only be an armed one and there will be no telling when new disturbances will occur. But the human mind seems to demand a cer- tain amount of hard and gruelling discipline in such matters. Only a succession of hard knocks can bring it into proper focus, as has been amply proved by the history of industrial conflicts in many parts of the country. It is only after considerable travail and misery that all parties connected with such arguments are brought to a realization of the futility of force jn dealing with issues where a meeting of minds can offer the only lasting solution. Hard to See It All We who live in the farm country take it for granted that we know a lot about the agricultural situation in the nation as a whole, but do we? America is a big country. * How many of us realize, for example, that in 17 states milk is the most important commodity? In nine others it is the second most important. In five states wheat is the leading crop, second in wo others. Cotton claims the lead in 10 states and second in two, while hogs are first in two and second in four. Next to milk comes cattle, with leadership in six states and second place in 10, while chickens and eggs fare first in one state and second in nine. Tobacco is first 4m three states and second in two, while oranges are first in two. The list of second place crops includes such things @s truck crops, sugar beets, wool and apples, Examination of this classification discloses why it is that the wheat farmer sometimes has trouble in being heard. It gives us a glimpse of the terrific importance of the dairy industry and of the potency of the barnyard biddy as an economic factor. Figures as to value show that milk is far and away the most important article in agricultural commerce with cotton in second place, cattle third, hogs fourth and ‘wheat fifth. In this classification chickens and eggs do not reach such a@ large total but when income from this source for all states is considered, they may supplant one of the items which are listed as preceding it. Although our state is more completely agricultural than any other in the nation, we find incentive toward both humility and increased activity in the fact that we were seventeenth from the bottom among the states in point of the value of agricultural production in 1934, even considering allotment payments. The obvious thing is that agriculture still is such a tremendous industry that even we who are a part of it have trouble in seeing it in its entirety. : ‘All for Better Manners ‘The campaign to teach the American motorist a few ‘manners goes on apace. The anti-noise movement, orig- Anating in New York, is now transplanted to St. Louis, ‘where the police are preparing to crack down on over- enthusiastic horn blowers. _ ‘The 8t. Louis police will hand out tickets to drivers _ whose horns are louder than is either customary or nec- ‘essary; to drivers who park in front of residences and jhonk lustily until their friends eome to the door; to get- gut-of-my-way drivers who speed along with horns con- ‘stently blaring; and to truck drivers who use loud high- “way borns on city streets, It goes without saying that city life would be much ter if all these nuisances could be squelched. And worth noticing that each offense is nothing more. “less than plain, everyday boorishness, The un- erly motorist necds to be taught the elements of ehind the Scenes | in Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER War and World Series Only Two of Many Events That Keep Capital Stirred Up ... There's Really More | News on Marina's Vineyara .. . Notables Throng There to Rest. i Washington, Oct. 9.—Washington, perhaps as never before, feels itself on the inside looking out. Which is one way of saying that there’s very little news here and that all those who aren't off on trips are squatted behind telescopes, peering in every outward di- rection toward events which interest Washington in- tensely, but whose scenes are remote. War is on in Africa and official eyes are strained at the League and a dozen nations, not forgetting Germany and Japan. The world series was so far off that few pir Med and girls attended it, though many seemed excited. Roosevelt has been off at the other end of the coun- try, his speeches and their reception followed breath- lessly by his home town. Local necks are craned at,Kan- sas since Hearst declared for the Republican presiden- tial candidacy of Gov. Alf Landon, eee PLENTY TO WORRY ABOUT Over in Baltimore a conservative federal judge is considering the validity of the holding company act. The American Legion met at St. Louis and now the A. F, of L, meets at Atlantic City. The RFC and ICC were all of a twitter while the Van Sweringens were buying back a chance of control over their railroad empire in a New York auction room, Oth- ers are wondering what on earth Gen, Johnson, far out west, will be saying next, Strike threats. local reactions to WPA projects and PWA’s eclipse, feeling in the big potato states, resettle- ment schemes—these and other things keep Washing- ton’s mind on matters outside. The capital distinctly isn’t the center of the stage. But the supreme court is back, the president will be re- turning, and then congress. So no one here is worrying about possible oblivion, . . j ISLAND HUMS WITH “DOPE” i You could hear almost as much news and dope on the little island of Martha's Vineyard, under Cape Cod, where your correspondent spent his vacation—and found various Washingtonians doing the same thing. Steve Raushenbush, chief investigator for the muni- tions committee, was at Chilmark when his New York office telephoned that the coast guard had rounded up Anthony Fokker, whom he wanted for a deposition as to airplane sales, on a yacht off Montauk Point. Fokker wanted to come straight to the island to see Raushenbush, which caused no end of excitement among us until Steve decided to take the deposition elsewhere. Scattered in cottages “up island,” bumping into one another only occasionally, were Tom Blaisdell, economist who has supervised various New Deal consumer units here and is now with Tugwell—his hands full defending the New Deal against “reactionary Republican” natives at Vineyard Haven; Jerome Frank of RFC, similarly be- set by left wing radicals around Menemsha and Chilmark; Max Lowenthal, chief counsel under Senator Burt Wheeler for the railroad financing investigation; and Guy Emerson, wealthy New York lawyer, who lobbied here fér Morgan on the banking bill and seemed satis- fied with results. eee MORE NOTABLE VISITORS Congressman Tom Amlie of Wisconsin, visiting Edi- tor Selden Rodman of Common Sense, who was excited by a hot series he’s about to publish; ex-Senator W. M. Butler, a complainant in the Hoosac AAA test case be- fore the supreme court, whose daughter was being mar- ried; Larry Brown of the munitions committee, who for months has been digging into the Morgan files in New York; Dick Quay, young attorney for FHA and grandson of the famous Pennsylvania senator and political boss; Eddie Greenbaum, New York lawyer and. one of the treasury’s most important unofficial advisers; Charlie | Boni, the publisher, who has an interesting art project | for WPA; Tom Benton, the great painter of murals, who spent eight advisory months here and left because offi- clals couldn't decide what they wanted on the walls, now back at work in the Missouri state house; Jean Mon-| tague, whose husband runs one of the big newsreel agen- |cles; Dr. Donald Slessinger of University of Chicago, down here to head a housing management school for the National Association of Housing Officials in conjunc- tion with PWA. And Max Eastman, Trotskyite, author jand tennis expert; Carlo Tresca, anarchist editor and celebrated chef, and Corliss Lamont, Communist and son of Tom Lamont of J. P. Morgan's firm. It was a cockeyed cross-section. But everyone was having a swell time. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Reprinted to show what E With Other | #2r" DITORS | 232 them. l ee Two Kansans View the AAA (Chicago Tribune) Senator Capper of Kansas and a number of other Republican politicians are saying that the AAA must not be an issue in the forthcoming campaign. The Repub- licans must accept the idea of paying bounties for arti- ficial scarcity; otherwise they will lose the farm vote and the election with it. Fortunately all Kansans do not think alike. Capt. Dan Casement of Kansas, a highly successful farmer, is president of the recently organized Farmers’ Independ- ence Council of America. He knows farmers. He is con- vinced that many of them, and probably most of them, today regarti the Wallace scheme as an abomination. He is confident that if a campaign of education is under- taken vigorously the vast majority of farmers will see that the New Deal is attempting to bribe them into the sacrifice of all independence, The farmers who, like Capt. Casement, oppose the AAA are the competent and successful men in the busi- ness. They know that the AAA has cost them money already and if persisted in will cost them much more. Some of them went along with the scheme for a time and some didn’t, but they all see through it now. These | men know that they can run their own farms better than ; any one in Washington can do the job, and they know } also that no matter how high the benefit payments are | pushed they cannot be high enough to pay the farmer | for the independence he has lost when he joins the | scheme and for the markets that have been closed to | him, The AAA scheme appeals to the one-crop farmer, the j land speculator, and the shiftless who want a good living | without work. In effect, Mr. Capper says such men con- stitute the majority of American farmers. In effect, Capt. Casement says they do not. Certainly Senator Capper’s opinion of the American farmer is not flatter- jing. He assumes that the farmers will sell their votes, their freedom, and their future for a benefit payment. If the government is interested, Lon Warneke or A Couple of Worried Gentlemen Prove that he was the real boss of {the Democratic party. | While it helped Van Buren in 1832, Jit later led to his downfall. He duly succeeded Jackson to the presidency |in 1836, but. four years later he liter- jally was howled out of the White House in the famous “log cabin and| hard cider” campaign of 1840. NATION'S CAPITOL | OLITICS | By HERBERT PLUMMER Washington—There has been talk Barton Cutter, president Colgate University. # *# # I tell you that any man who has $5,000,000.000 to spend can be elected. I can take $5,000.000.000 and elect a Chinese as president.—Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler. ee & You don't have to go around look- ing glum, nursing a mood and look- In 1844 he had an excellent chance \ing tragic all the time to be an emo- in well-informed quarters of the/to stage a comeback. With a sub-|tional actress. That's all tosh! Act- Democratic party that “Big Jim’) stantial majority of the convention Farley, chairman of the national com-| back of him, his managers did every- thing within their power to have the mittee, is preparing quietly to admin-| i4.o.thirds rule set aside. They failed! ister a knock-out blow to the time-/and Van Buren lost the nomination to| honored two-thirds rule at the 193¢|James K. Polk because he was unable, convention, j to muster 32 votes required under the! He attempted to have the 1¢4-year | "We old rule governing the nomination of presidential candidates abolished in Changed History 1932, incidentally with almost disas-| Since then the two-thirds rule has trous results to the candidacy ofjremained securely fastened to the President Roosevelt. |party’s neck. The 1936 convention will be an ideal | minorities have frustrated every ef- time to abolish the rule, in the) fort to abolish it. opinion of Mr. Farley. He is convinced| The rule has had a far-reaching that Mr. Roosevelt will be renomin-/ effect on the history of the country. ated unanimously, hence there will/It has dashed the ambitions and be no danger of treading on any one's| hopes of many individual candidates toes. In 1932, FDR entered the na-| as well as splitting the party on oc- tional convention shy of the neces- | casions. Sary two-thirds votes to nominate and! In 1860 when neither the northern all attempts to chuck the rule which | nor southern wings of the party could has caused so many deadlocks and | command two-thirds of the votes in some disasters for the party proved) the convention at Charleston, the unavailing. | split was so wide that Lincoln was ae | swept into the White House and the | civil war ensued. Had it not been Jackson Started It ;for the two-thirds rule, Champ Clark If Farley is successful, the Demo-| of Missouri and not Woodrow Wilson crats will have displaced a = | would have been the Democratic * * * mechanism as old as the party con-|nominee in 1912. - ventions themselves. It was in 1832 that Andrew Jackson forced the adop- | tion of the two-thirds rule at the Party's first national convention. Jackson didn't need the rule for himself since he was certain of an overwhelming renomination, but he wanted to show how much strength he could muster for his running mate Hopeful convention ; ing is a mathematical science—Alice Brady, screen comedienne. * * * Patriotism is a good thing, but it may be carried to“extremes. If we deny that law can be substituted for war, we deny that society is capable Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. rtaining to health but not “ ‘Write letters briefl; and fn ink. dress . Bragy i care ot’ Tribune, all @ orien must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope LET LEFT-HANDEDNESS ALONE ds this history: Wicd ‘of mine was left-handed. They tried to make her use her hi in school by rapping her upon the knuckles. She eventually Farinte the hubit of using fer ight hand for many things, but her best broken of left-handedness, but as the bandage she began to use the left hand again. In school they did their break “her, but it wouldn't work. Now she is married and three of hi four children left-handed. One day her oldest gil was dolng ber home work, when her father started to chastise her. He said r Was COM} it was the parents’ fault for not making her do things at home with her right hand . . . Then I came across the bit of verse inclosed, about mak- ing a left-handed child nervous wreck by forcing him to change to right- handedness. This convinced the father, and he took it to the teacher, who was also convinced and she did not interfere any more. The child’s nerv- ousness stopped and her school work has improved remarkably since they stopped nagging her about her left-handedness. (B. J.) If there is @ good reason for interfering in natural left-handedness, have never learned what it a + ere — If you compel a left-handed child change -handetiness I 8 brea HRicngy Ge ea CRILAAEA Very ES ee ee le 5. May tnstaciose are on record which indicate that forced change of na- tural left-handedness to right-handedness is likely to produce stuttering or other impediment of speech; and in such cases the best remedy is gen- erally resumption of unrestricted use of the left hand for all fine work. Statistics show that three or four out of every hundred children are naturally left-handed. aa — probably be better for the world if there were more left-handed peop! it. This advice I would give all parents and all teachers: Let left-handed- ness alone. Nature knows best about such things. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Dye Dermatitis About every six weeks I get an irritation of the eyelids not the eyes, but the skin of the eyelids and sometimes the cheeks and over the bridge of Looe with a kind of burning blistering. It is very unsightly. (Mrs. H. ) | Answer—A common cause of such dermatitis in women is irritation by some dye used in a cosmetic applied to darken the eyelashes or as “hair tonic” or in a hair wave or wave lotion, Lemen Juice } In your opinion is lemon juice a good thing to take to help keep the liver in proper condition? If so, what quantity and at what time in the day, on arising or a bedtime? (Mrs. G. K. T.) Answer—So far as I know, it has no more virtue for such purpose than has orange juice or tomato juice or any fruit juice which is fresh. Barefoet Children Daughter has two children, 4 and 2 respectively. She lets them go barefoot in the house all winter. Of course they do not go out barefoot and she keeps the rooms warm with gas. The children seem healthy enough, but it seemstome .. . (Mrs. C. F.C.) Answer—If the children enjoy it, rest assured it is best for their health. (Copsright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) lot greater progress—U. 8. Senator! A man who tries to think with » M. M. Logan. Kentucky. brain denied its normal blood supply se (by pain or ache) is like a man set- Tt looks as if the league thinks I ting out to buy $10 worth of groceries |8m a collector of deserts.—Mussolini, and shooting away $2 in a crap game. jafter league's peace offer of two —Dr. W. A. Guild, Chicago brain ) BEGIN HERE TODAY eral ate be a :. in her aetions. 1m MeNeil! has fallen ith, whom he Van Buren. The senate had refused| The greatest sinners probably are to confirm Van Buren previously for|the philanthropists ahd the doctors. the post of minister to England and|They have done everything they and falls asleep. Tk BLUE DOOR Rachel “Mack @ mss NEA Sewvice, lac. “No serfous thinking permitted) Bet you wear anything your little tonight! I wonder if you like/heart desires.” plain beefsteak as well as I do?”| Her little heart desired to wear “Order it,” Ruth told him, “and/ the tace dinner dress. Yearned to I'll show you. Do yeu happen to| wear it. After her bath she ar- notice how I’ve put om weight/gued with herself about it: since I've been here?” “John’s not dressing. The correct | “pve noticed,” he replied. “You| thing for me to wear would be look a hundred per cent better.jone of the knit dresses—or the Don’t ever carry dieting to that|navy biue satin. But he’s seen extreme again, Blaine! Will you|me in all of them. He’s never promise me that? seen me in the aes: rt port She saw that he was in earnest.| Wear it tonight, he never, w She wanted to promise’ bim, but|... If I don't wear it Il slways how could she know what the|Wish I bad. It might get to be future might hold for her in the|® Suppressed desire with me a shape of meal tickets? She com-| turn me into s criminal or som promised by saying, a believe|thing! I'll wear it T’ve learned my lesson. I can see whet rest and regular meals have| \/HEN she had put # on she done for me. I believe I’m fit was not sorry. Its cream-tan for anything that’s ahead of me! color flattered her brown eyes and new.” hair, Its little round collar was Ruth hed never seen a play by|Youne and demure. famous professionals, wut no one} Jobn was late. It was after 6 woulc have suspected it as she| when he called for ber, breath- sat beside John McNeill and|less and spologetic for having studied her program with quiet| been detained at the factory. “I'm “Old Hickory” was Schoolboy Rowe might furnish valuable pointers on controlling that old potato. “Seals Becoming a Menace,” reveals a California paper. Husbands will certainly be glad when the fur coat season is over. decent behavior, and the police are the logical persons to do the teaching. The Final Word Congress may have adjourned some weeks ago, but. it is worth remembering that the final word has not been said on all the legislation it passed. ‘The supreme court is about to meet, and its coming sension may go down in history as one of the most mo- mentous it ever held. Among the New Deal acts it must pass on are the AAA and its processing taxes, the cotton control act, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Wagner and Guffey bills, and the right of the government to lend money to mu- nicipalities for purchase of power plants. In addition, the validity of the utility holding company bill may | come up for review. ‘ In these bills lies the heart of the New Deal. By its decisions on them the court will exercise an almost in- calculable influence on the shape of things t come. determined tolcould to keep the unfit.—Dr. George NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XVIII | Biblical Dancer J sol nla age tnd couraged the drives they took HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzsie 9To accomplish otiher before or after the evening 1Girl who "7 eE fe 10 Electrifi meal danced for a OR ARCA particles. On the day after John’s return man’s head. ID [UIP MMA INIA Bi S [VORESHILOF 11 Toward sea. they went to Cleveland to see the 6Her mother [6IRMESIOIP] ‘i ul mc lol 12 Prophet. opening of a New York play, ustare vas —. MOBIMARISENAL| 18 Honeybee. TOE tho “aelvet dress "beneath AIRISIEINA shell- re yeep IS BROMINE IR RC 19 Small island. the fox-trimmed evening coat and 15 Slack. ‘ IN te AIT IE R 22 Idiom. wondered if she ; ele ‘orerty 16 Policeman. WAIKIEINEEDIR IO! 27 One who rises, dsenaes 05 39 ing the — 17 Condensed [SIPEPIEWHEJEBAIG [0] 29 Chest bone, appeared tl eee news sheet. ALUISMEDIERIAINGIE! 33 Beaters Joh tistyingly impressed. 20 Born, RAIL CMe UIPIE IE 34 Sandpipe-. “Youtre stuaning!’ ihe 40M Bet 21 Long grass. NIAIPIS | IAIT] 35 Genus of terns. looking across the table era 23 Soft tissues. [SIONWIUEI INT TA 36 Marries. Pe poneigaete dearly 24 Russian ruler. 38 Native to these clothes you' et haar 25 Subsists. 43 Cubed. the head of Holland. lately? You ane vightly. All 26 Part of eye. 44 Abode. John the —. 40 Sour. gage, if I aber FRE. A 28 Deity. 48 Indian. VERTICAL 42 Witherea. 70D had wae eeedly, r aldn't 29To lift up. 49To slander. 1 Implous. 45 Musical | uaeete teen te amraaing Kaa 30 Note in scale, 51 Cat's foot. 2 Bitter Qrug. composition. for the funniest reason! Last 81Sins. 52 Ragged tree. 30 canter. 46 Spar. spring my-—rmy family sent = box 32 Vegetables. 54 Sea eagle. 4, Upon. 47Female sheep | for Saint Stephens’ rummage sale %5 Southwest, 55 To divert. SEncountered. 49 Since. and it got here too late, Penny 37 Structural unit 57 She received 6 Tiny mountain 50 To sup. dragged it up to the store room 39 Having a this reward 7Qne who runs 653 Measure of and it’s been there ever since. scalloped edge. from ——. away. area. We opened it after I came and 41To put out. 6&8 She wanted 8 Ancient. 56 Musical note. it was stocked with fall and winter i el il we ed ffs a el Ud as clothes from last season.” John said, “A girl who's crazy enough to come off without her clothes doesn’t deserve # break like that.” “No,” answered Ruth humbly, “she doesn’t. 1 haven't deserved any of the breaks of this visit, John. Finding you next door, for instance, Liking you—” “«Just—liking me, Blaise?” S#2 replied, making patterns op the table cloth with ‘one fn- ger, “Sometimes | write things go away, maybe I'll leave s letter for you—” ‘“[ don’t like the sound of that,” he replied, shaking his head and staring at the glowing Up of his cigaret. ‘It sounds like you're planning a dismissal for me. When is this to happen? Any definite ‘time set?” , “No definite time,” she an- swered, not looking at bim. Her (ace must bave registered some of the turmoil of her Sboughjs, tox dobn sald auiekiy, I’m too inhibited to say. When I| ready? poise. He liked her silences. He ” he told her. had always hated chattering girls 5 who talked nervously with a hor-| we'll step on it. The first 40 miles Tor of pause. ‘ is gee szaiees ee ‘ However, on the ride home was part roa after the play, not even John| that proved their undoing. About talked. Ruth, exhausted by ex-|30 miles from Worthville, doing citement and “by the strain of be-| % careful 60 miles an hour, John’s ing o fairy princess for an entire] Car was overhauled by a police evening, slept soundly, her head|™otorcycle that had been loiter- against his shoulder, her breath-| {mg in a side road. There was no ing as soft and regular as a/®?sument. child’s. “John McNeill, Worthville,” pene snapped John, giving the infor- HEN she accepted John’s in-| mation with some chagrin and vitation to go dancing with|irritation. “Yes, I was doing 60. him, Ruth knew she had added] What of it? The road's clear. one more reckless link to the| Got to get to dinner, haven't we?” chain of folly she was forging. The callous one said, “It’s She also knew that she was glad.| nothin’ to this township if you It was two days after the the never eat.” Ruth ‘watched bis ater party that he asked her. He/ pencil move, fascinated. She could said, “There’s a dinner dance at/see there was other printed data the Country Club tonight. Or we/on the card to be filled out. She could go slumming—to one of the/ swallowed bravely and said in a decent roadhouses, I mean. Or/small, clear voice, “And my name we could go to Cleveland. It is Ruth Woodson.” doesn’t matter to me where we} Both men looked at her. The go, just so we dance.” officer smiled and said, “Your Ruth replied quickly, “Not the name's not necessary, lady. I’m Country Club, Jobn! I don’t want/| just interested in the driver.” to see a lot of people I’m expected John MeNeil! said nothing. He to remember—and don’t!” took the ticket offered him, said “All right,” he said. “So much the better. If I took you to a local, dance I’d play stag all eve- ning. Now I know a place called the Allegheny Cabin that’s 60 miles from here toward the moun- tains, but worth the drive. { run by a couple of people trom Maryland — down-and-out gentry later be said with a challenging smile to the girl beside him, “He wasn’t interested ip your -alias, was he?” Ruth felt tears stinging her eyelids im the darkness. She had supposed the officer would ask her the] mame in just a moment and thet right patronage. No rough stuff. A/ John would be compelled to say, beautiful log lodge overlooking a| “Elaine Chalmers!” She was re- ter Hangs borrowed it, and she must leave it as bright and shining as she had found it. But John would never know the reason for her lie. No doubt he thought it petty, press agent for this paradise, or just feeling lyrical? Anyway, I'm sold, What time shall I be out Mke that, Well, zo matic: “We'd better allow an hour and| now. She blinked back the tears a half.” he calculated, “on ac-jend laughed s bit hysterically, count of the curves. I'll phone} “Just protecting my good name. for 7 o'clock reservations, Let's| Wesn’t it crafty of me?” leave here about 6:30. Do you| “Yes,” he answered. “Ruze think Bertha will object: Woodson. Sort of cute, boney.” Ruth shook her head and} “It’s my favorite alias,” she laughed. “It’s not very flattering} said. Then, “I can’t do the to me, but ber one idea seems! dance steps. Do you mind?” to be to get me out of the house.| “Angel!” he replied. “You're What must | wear, Jobo?” | saying that because you know f He said, “It's one of those, can't do them!” She vas happy places where anything gees. !| again, on't drome Won't have time’ cowardly in her to heve spoken:

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