The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1935, Page 6

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isaac Sas pussesaaaersnsceumensaretncnrnn peruyesurmnwaeim ds THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1935 |. The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper i 4 : THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER i (Established 1873) ehind the Scenes | in Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. r { . State, City and County Official Newspaper Dr. Brady will answer q 5 pertainint to heatth but not ~ ’ Siaty ince eek Tribune, uy ‘queries must be accompanied by a a a ; . ; : : | Svstemapeds Caddressed envelope. marck, N. D., and ent at the postoffice at as second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher ! Archie ©. Johnson Secretary and Treasurer Tugwell Decides to Replan All His Planning ... Many Farmers Will Need Help . . . Woopa Puts the Hush on Its Projects ... Boom for Labor Party Still Alive. Washington. Oct. 15.—Dr. Rexford G. Tugwell. the Kenneth W. Simons |New Deal's National Planner No. 1, has quietly dissolved Editor his own planning division. @ stamped, SO-CALLED OBSTINATE COLDS re Many cases of chronic running nose, obstructed LE Lee | a lagnoned ag snus dense and Ones operations of tapping of sinuses ter. In such cases often repeal » Femoval of turbinates and snaring of pool have been pecfonaed wit ile . ile sometimes occ! fering from all. fg air, perennial hay fever (that is, ert hay bridal fe out of season, say in the middle of winter) may appear as an lependent The siaif of about 40 persons engaged in planning the program of the Resettlement Administration, of which Tugwell is the administrator, has been disbanded. This is not quite so much a triumph for the American} . Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year : : an example of the varie- Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)........ 7.20 || Liberty League as it is for the principles of simple arith- Sftectine: die either to foods & ee Ty chia Conmbatn the last five cases Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of |metic. Much the same thing has happened to Tugwell, gated etiological factors (that a Author for investigation by @ rhinologist FSMATOR) ic cissccciascccsecucesses® vee BS though without any publicity, as happened to Secretary which have been referred to the reensitiveness to wheat, to pyrethrum Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . Ickes, who thought he would be having a huge PWA pro- ype! Weekly by mail in state, per year gram. | Nearly all the five billion dollar workrelief appropri- tion is to be used for Harry Hopkins’ relief work projects, and fulfillment of Roosevelt’s promise to put 3,500,000 persons at work. Now the position of Resettlement is just another de- nouement in the incredible planlessness of the whole pro- gram at the top. As one braintruster explains it: “We all went ahead independently and planned to make five billions do the work of 20 billions. The presi- dent finally discovered this couldn't be done.” eee and parrot feathers, to cheese and the eumococcus, and to tobacco respectively. If practitioners, especially Fhinologists (nose specialists), had a more widespread Ophea of the allergic nature of many chronic incurable nasal vasa wi they treat palliatively year in and year out, -there would be less unsuccessful nasal surgery and a great decrease in the sniffling population. ‘The foregoing paragraph is quoted from a paper on allergic hearted thea by Dr. T. Wood Clarke, Utica, N. Y., before the district medical society published in N. Y. State Jour. of Medicine Feb. 15, 1933. Laymen need not ask where they can get hold of the article, They can’t, sofarasIamcon- , cerned. “Allergy” sensitiveness of body cells to specific protein sub- stances. Its hinpictetiee ‘as a cause of asthma is pretty well known, but few victims of the type of nose trouble mentioned by the author sre aware of the nature of their trouble. These allergic “colds”—as this doctor insists on calling them—occur without reason, the trouble often developing abruptly and running to beat Weekly by mail outside of North Dal Member of Audit Bureau of 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 news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. me tose MILLIONS LESS TO SPEND Anyway, instead of an anticipated $600,000,000 or more, Resettlement probably will have something Jess than | $250,000,000 to spend. Since Tugwell has about 525,000 farm families on his hands this year, all in need of some degree of relief or Inspiration for Today All nations before him are as nothing; and they are counted to him less than nothing, and vanity.—Isaiah 40:17, "i x rehabilitation, little money will be left for resettlement, subsistence homesteads, and other experimental projects. Such planning as seems required will be done under the band for a while, then subsiding or clearing off as inexplicably as it be- gan. But trust the educated ninnyhammer to account for it all—there is always a chilling, dampness or sudden change to be assumed responsi ible, and of course the ninnyhammer has tried some remedy which “breaks it een Dr. Thomas C. Blaisdell, functioning as economic adviser up.” The most violent passions have their intermis- ||| to RA. er Why certain individuals manifest this peculiar hypersensitiveness or al- sions; vanity alone gives us no respite—Roche- | foucauld, | 4 MANY FARMERS NEED AID ~ a RA figures about 325,000 of its distressed farm families will need straight relief this’ winter and about 200,000 will need some helping hand, such as being given a cow or a couple of horses or a plow. Many other rural persons, considered hopeless as re- habilitation prospects, will have to have work or relief from Harry Hopkins. Through his own organization, Tugwell hopes to have rehabilitated 100,000 farm fam- ilies off relief rolls by next summer. RA expects to pick up about 10,000,000 acres of land 80 per cent of it submarginal enough to be retired t6 forests, park, grazing, and other non-productive use. Instead of moving 50,000 farmers off such land and ee a — — onto good land by July, as previously planned, it now hopes the right kind of defense against it. Before i fa | tire-tong hi tik just before entering the ‘ i to resettle 15,000, which will be h, 5 Se at 80 very long we were lending the Allies money to make a carlacing duntanabraticnver EyuaCageete O I ITICS chamber. x ek - at the - lergy, we don’t know. It is not rarely encountered in young infants and indeed is not to be ignored as a possible explanation for obstinate eczematous conditions in early infancy. It is my studied opinion—I may be a bit prejudiced about this—that three or four per cent of all alleged “colds” are of this nature. Of course allergic conditions are never communicable. So we can’t precisely include these cases under the classification of Cri. But so far as your own selfish interest goes, it is well to remember that not all that sneezes is catching. ; Hay fever, hyperesthetic rhinitis, asthma, these are the more charac- ? teristic manifestations of allergy. I just. thought I’d drop you folks @ line about this, in case you arr annoyed by bleary beezers. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ie Little Red Veins te teiapereciesbitiee ? I have visible capillaries on my cheeks and over the o Is there any way to remove these blemishes or to make them less conspicu- ous? (Miss D, 0.) Answer—Yes, a physician skilled in chemical obliteration of varicose veins can obliterate them, using @ superfine needle and binocular loupe. Or a physician skilled in electrosurgery (surgical diathermy) can obliterate them with desiccation. They are not capillaries, but dilated venules, Tuberculosis Look at It Squarely Jf you put your ear carefully to the ground these days you can hear the first faint squeak- ings and twitterings of a great propaganda chorus that will presently be in full cry. The same phenomenon was noticeable in 1914, and Americans failed notably to devise has made it possible for the common man in the street to read and judge the righteousness of the cause.—New- ton D, Baker. *x** 8 The destinies of the nations are too closely bound together for one to set itself aside and pretend that no other jnation exists.—Senator James P. Pope, Idaho. - WOOPA USES SOFT PEDAL weren’t to be paid anyway. ‘The daily sheaf of WPA’s announcements of project Right now. the Propaganda noises have allotments has become much more discreet. Frankly and Geneva as their base. unblushingly, the Hopkins organization for weeks detailed its most bizarre methods of making work for the white- |@ The League of Nations has imposed “sanc- collared unemployed and others. This brought many ti Ais b ti & i a sarcastic comments in the Republican press. jons'; member nations, in other words, are Now WPA doesn’t do that any more except where asked to put trade and financial penalties on Coonibaen Sree orotate is involved. Neither 2 a a Ree er the amusing or unique phases of its k, Italy, in the pious hope that Signor Mussolini under the head of “boondoggling.” t just chaigee the can thereby be persuaded to see the light of |™oney up to “Community Project.” The orders came from the White House. reason, (Most of the boys and girls who work for WPA refer Through it all we hear a great deal of talk|' thelr organization as “Woopa.”) about “enforcing peace,” and about the chal- lenge which the war presents to the world’s collective machinery for averting war. This makes fine reading, but we should be-| enureportin Aiea tiseat be * ‘ i a ig @ growth of sentiment among their ranks ware of taking it all too seriously. For it leads |tor tabor political organization. Some of the aenand: to a long lane which has no turning, and at they Say, comes from even such traditionally conserva- the end of the lane there is another fight to ” Cartan Ine eand end Pennsylvania, to buy our own goods, going to war to protect |done on a large scale. the loans, and then learning that the loans SA Nia Emergency Wardrobe There was a time, however, when NATION'S CAPITOL formal attire absolutely was required. The late Chief Justice Taft once curtly rebuked an attorney and ordered him to stand aside because he came before the court in a sack suit, without a vest and with coat open, displaying an expanse of expensive shirt-fronting. In those days, an emergency ward- robe was kept on hand at the court. A medium-sized tail coat— which seemed to fit everyone—was avail- My physician pronounces me apparently arrested from Tho. I have @ girl doing my housework. She takes care of all rooms but never comes into my room. I have always been careful about using sputum cup and burning my own cup . . . (Mrs. H. M. F.) Answer—Your physician is the one who should advise whether it is now safe for the girl to do your room work and wait on you personally, If tuberculosis is “arrested” of course it is not communicable, . By HERBERT PLUMMER ‘Washington.— Those long familiar with the austere dignity of the su- preme court arched their eyebrows when the chairs used by the justices lin the court's old chamber in the See ey AEE OBI ae (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) capitol were moved to that penton? | torially unp: ORAS A68sc pile of marble “across the hill” and | sorted sizes and a black tie or two {set up in their accustomed places. ease up ee eben stowed in a Not until Mr. Justice Cardozo re-| closet in the clerk’s office. marked that the chair in which the| The coat, a “garment antique and late Justice Holmes sat for 20 years|rusty” with braided edges and ‘an was comfortable enough for him;|impressive flare below the waistline, B id they understand. figured in many an imposing argu- 4 y © 1993 NGA Service, tne. “There wes a time—and it hasn't|ment before that grave and austere Rachel “Mack BEGIN HERE TODAY been so long ago—when a justice ap-| tribunal. It was worn by many a peared on the bench wearing a bright- | !awyer who later became wealthy and RUTH WOODSON, pretty, hued tie and later made a formal call | famous. spirited gitl of 19, im at the White House still wearing it. refuge from ee * | ‘The middie class of people 1s like the temperate zone; the creative strength of the world is there—The Rev. Dr. H. E. Fosdick, New York City. LABOR PARTY IDEA GROWS You needn’t take William Green’s remarks against formation of an independent labor Party, voiced at At- lantic City, as final. Relatively conservative labor leaders all summer have best numbers on the clock. If it’s clear I'll be in the garden. If it rains I'll be in the big room (her “I thought this was standing open,” she told herself, idly eur- prised. y But its day has passed. The last Pee EP atic varia‘ exte tic aeaeerney. mages Certain leaders. though believing a labor Party both thing, in which American troops and warships would be greatly appreciated. Italian imperialism has provoked a new war. That much is undeniable. What we can easily overlook is that the shouting at Geneva comes desirable and inevitable, have urged their followers to soft pedal the idea at this time, lest they make it easier for pepublleats to defeat Roosevelt. reen himself has indicated recognition of the = sibility that labor eventually may demand a party of its own, (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Still Much Formality \y. Wags around the capital made much of it. But today a red tie in the supreme court is nothing unusual. Formal: in dress is passing rapidly. The dig-| nified black no baat is required. * * the form of a darkehued citizen of Washington whenever he appeared on ceremonial occasions. >—<$_§|_ ii —___4 | So They Say 1 ity heard of the coat was that it draped j seeks ol atone house wii o name for the drawing room) and have a fire in the fireplace.” She had felt as certain of his coming as if they had put it in writing. And now it was after 8 and he had not come. A few lights shone from the lower floor of his house, and yet she fancied an unusual She entered the room and set her candlestick on the long tead- ing table that stood near the bookcases. The table was of blackened oak, heavily carved and looking as if it had seen service in some English castle long be- fore finding its way into this principally from a rival imperialism whose toes No, not that! Ruth went into the old drawing room and waited with her hands m pened tied Wi Penny. He receives Elaine's |"0t to be tense or impatient or fear Fetter and’ renlines thane the girl |ful. until she heard (ve our oure could have happened before Silas they sounded less booming, but stili| Hunter bought it for this room she could count them clearly—one, | in this house!” | Paice and on to the inevitable SHARP little pos ‘ She got up from the stiff old her thoughts and she jumped haircloth sofa and covered over the| nervously. “A mouse!” she fire carefully. Then she swept the| breathed with s shudder. maybe some wealthy squire kept his accounts here... or an exe travagant young nobleman may have had to part with it to raise money for taxes or debts. All that | { wear dark stillness about the place. His car|room, Its top was worn smooth W ith Oth Fen TiBteaite | Pineda eropee iar increasing Wars are never won. Wars are was not in the driveway where he| by use. Ruth thought, “Maybe are about to be stepped on. U er cies tae tendency among lawyers of experience| nly and always lost both by the Worth: ‘usually left it. Could he have been|some knight sat here long ago, Britain is the movi: irit in thi: i We may or |llnever to appear for argument except! Victor and vanquished alike. — Ber- pester ence ork (detained at the office? Could he|reading an filumined manuscript n e moving spirit in this action DI I ORS Byte, Tet |[lin the black cutaway, striped trousers, Nard M. Brauch. k-end_ané@ learns from |have forgotten to come—? before he went off to war... for sanctions; and Britain, you may remem-||| “S'them. "||| dark cravat and tall white collar. But Spe Lae ether, GWEN DEAL, that ber, has the greatest African empire the world has ever seen. It got this empire in precisely the way that Mussolini is trying to get one— by walking in and hitting the original posses- sors of the soil on the head. Africa is a large continent, but it does not contain room enough for two rival empires, both interested in the same territory. If Mus- solini achieves the empire he wants, the British The cause of peace is the cause of free speech, of a free press, of hu- man liberty, of constitutional govern- fi it is a matter of choice. Court junetonaries Dat hei shal, clerk, crier and others always are formally garbed. And the care-|ment.—Senator Borah, less visitor who dares hang an over- x *k * coat over the rail of a vacant seat} Preaching is doomed. In five years in front of him quickly hears a voice | people will sit in their homes and in authority muttering a demand that | have their choice of listening to, and he remove it. looking at, any one of perhaps six It’s a matter of record that at one|of the finest preachers in the coun- time an eccentric, who never had worn | try.—Dr. B. C. Clausen, Pittsburgh. a collar or tie, almost succeeded in ee # pleading a case so attired. He was in- esen| from am insane asylum. John worries about “Elaine” be- ker apd DUNCAN HUNTER, has American Geography of Song (New York Herald-Tribune) The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers’ analysis of popular radio songs by subject matter, showing that mother, moon and love topped the list for 1934, might be followed by another (perhaps it is already made) that would tell what regions of the Unit- ed States and territories are most, celebrated in song. The lyrics now sung on the radio would be perhaps too harrow a selection, though, for those whose hair is now alone in the eld Hunter house ae » 4 i ving with a dressed to Rath and asking ber to walt for his return. empire in Africa will be threatened. * Hence | Downing street is anxious, British warships are concentrated in the Mediterranean, and Britain is prodding the league into activity. It is up to Americans to refuse to be fooled. The league action is less a move to enforce graying or entirely gray. Pennsylvania’s “Blue Juniata” is seldom praised these days. The Dresser classic on the Wabash likewise, and who raises his voice for Herald Square and Broadway as often as in the good old days? Coney and the Bowery are not lyricized as of old. The “Sidewalks of New York” lives on in popular favor. But nostalgia for Baltimore seems to have been eased, and yearning for Tennessee, once at the top with Alabam’. Memphis, however, holds its own and Harlem is the Tage © longing for the Carolinas seems to be enjoyed more than| @ HORIZONTAL ‘Lame as it is, the league has done duced by court attaches to break aj what has never before been done. It U. S. Diplomat. Answer to Previous Puzzle 19 Matgrass. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY hearth with the hearth broom and CHAPTER XXIII ow Bertha stood in the kitchen with John McNeill’s letter in her hands, staring at it. She said, “Going away, is he?” Without compunction she drew the folded paper from the unsealed envelope and applied herself to blew out the two candles that burned on the mantle. After that she went upstairs. In the upper hall Bertha accosted her, almost as if she bad been waiting. The old servant said, “Are you going to bed now, Miss Elaine?” Ruth said, “Yes, Bertha.” The noise had come, apparent- ly, from the bronze waste basket under the table. She gingerly pulled it out to investigate. There was no mouse there, There was nothing at all in the basket but one crumpled piece of heavy writing paper. . “It must have been the paper moving,” Ruth decided. “Some- i many| +6 America RISTEL Ic aye reading it. ‘The kitchen was light tha said, “We'll be missing| times it docs when it’s crumpled peace than amoye to protect England’s African eee pees eee tee) places ‘envoy. . AR eas ie = ial m and the writing on the paper was Me don _ Seems like ao into a knot that way.” ™ ° - Possessions against the designs of a rival| as Kentucky and the Suwanee River have given way to| 10 Foretoken. ORBMISIATTIAINMMEILIGL. 23'Ship’s deck. large, She made it out. They werelnim and his mother get to Wash-| Then her mind came alert with power, a multitude of blues for the deep South and the lower) To ad SE IEILISMITIONMMPILILIES] 24 Genus of trogs. going fo Tipe berm ington, they never want to some|s sort tt feck. She thought, ' course 0! ie ississippi, Hill bill onward. 1A “Wf jome.’ “Paper ma! that no! If we let ourselves get swept off our feet by | genuine and synthetic, are still Pry eeeray ay 12 Knapsack. 4 Role ald au Kaper pe ner aaicbe spanag warp yd [aad Wel acca Does crampled!™ ws a 01 Lal * z ‘" cause of peace, we may yet find ourselves send-| Hawaii is still a great favorite, neck and neck with| coverlus. ISIEID} IAT DT 30 sharp pall. they talked to each other that way, eee aatiagop lis al clagrigs dyer ened ing troops across the sea to preserve the Bri-| ‘he deep South in recent times, according to the source| 15 And. CIEIRIE|S} y CTE 31 To require. did they? Like sweethearts! Ber- |7MHE old woman nodded. “That's! She had heard the old servant's tish . And il e just mentioned, possibly ahead a trifle. Western and| 16 Writing fluid. |KIMIKINIE] EIJIOUINIT IE! N is tha muttered, “I don’t want her to where his sister, Florence, lives. asthmatic snores as she passed ish empire. whi le that empire may be | intermountain states have been burgeoning very modest-| 18 Year. “ia ia NMBEIOINBBAIT) 33 Ho was wait for him, I want her to go.” | she's got two or three children and | through the hall. ... ‘Yet ssauaenes well worth preserving, it is hardly our job to|W, in, the last tong onde a allies meatal Beco WOMANI ARICIAL ARP ernlamandor, Sho struck match and burned a ng husband. H's & lawyer | nad poen im this room #0 recently i s . ne. ERIE AIRJAIB LAIN) rt oven of the e. | there.” vy crac! do it. bravura years ago with “California, Here I Come!”| ‘22 Gaiters. 2 34 Damp. aie oy th went out into| “Bertha,” sald Ruth, holding her unknown, hand... pecs 4 ‘When I First Met Kate by the Golden’Gate” and “Don't 24 Knock. 413.1416, VERTICAL 35 To leak. After dinner Ruth went ou! volee tight and atesdy, “why 40 youl “I'm bet silly” Ruth ; Health, a Public Job Nevememember California in September?” (or was it] 27 Bellows.’ 42 Thin. 1 Jestera. 37 Sundry. toe ee ear ee October, diy end (say John MoNelll has gone tol horscit firmly. “What's ell to Foe etical’ profession ts, still reeponsibie for the! tay tees been’ Sure ce Gee fairly recere Sears | 29 Enslish coin. 43 tmmerses. 2'To leave out. 38 Seral. etill and hazy. ‘These qualities lin- | Washington?” scare about, anyway?” She took care of the sick, just as it always has been. But some} are Boston, Charleston, Chicago, K: Geen New| °° aes U.S. 45 Police spy. 3To harden. 2 Ores eoarg \'gered on into the evening. “I saw him leavin’,” Berths re-| the crumpled paper from the big of the burden now rests on the shoulders of statesmen | York still in the van and St. Louis champion perhe diplomat to 47 Measure of {Half amem. 42 Molten rock. 4 plied. “Him and his mother,| bronze basket and laid it on the and public officials, and the responsibility cannot be| with its great classic of the blues, Hollywood and Reno] 4» cravay cloth, $epeins ot rere. eee note juct ts be waiting She cd |catelin’ the evenin’ trate ust bo- table, Bhe pd a chair : ; shirked. are arrivistes in this class. 33 Thick shrub, 49 Freedom from 7-79 regrét. 46 North America imagine how it would be when she | F@ Supper. I tho Wt | uae, aad with ©: ers that shook So says Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal] research or elmplsy the meoriey coaegit, Of informal! 24 tndicated. war. STo discern. 47 Belg. heard John MeNelIl coming to her. | Eu: "CAP OF Te vee eae” | hardly at all she smoothed eook Mi : 38 Above. ‘0 gibe. 13 Burden. pany. ry Paeae Eee eee Peeoeten contention Baraat | tei et oe Lig ed 39 Those that 54 Acidity. 16 . 52 South America porch steps and striding across the | #nd steadied herself before she eyes read: No one has battled more strenuously against “social- ized medicine” than has Dr, Fishbein, His remark, therefore, is all the more significant. It emphasizes the ‘way in which shifting economic currents and new con- ceptions of social responsibility have made the mainte- for Virginia, Florida and the Bronx? Draw your columns for the whole country, friends; write down your. titles and present him or her with the highest total of uncon- tested ones a pair of silk stockings, a carton of cigarettes or a box of good cigars, as the case may be. The winner to sing his old or new favorite. get @ toehold in this country, One answer, and perhaps the most important, is harass. Jot. 55 His title (pl.).17 To discuss, 53 Road. turned to go into her room. She undressed mechanically and went to bed. At first she could not think what this meant. It) ‘was too sudden and too amazing. And then, after an hour or two lawn to her. Tonight she’d let him put his arm around her. . . and before he left she'd let him kiss her goodnight. It would be their good- by, only he would not know that. ‘Tomorrow morning she was going end like this!” “When & person decides to end his or her life it is no concern of the world’s, Yet tt is goner- ally advisable to leave & letter Somehow missed house. Mrs. McNeill would be at/ Lying there in the peace. Perhaps I find it eae bounekeeine, Peliahd oe oe bed, Ruth knew it would be hours zone. (a there fore morning. 1@ cou! not meerning my family, I have be tonight and Jobn beelde ber. | face that eternity of sleep! this to say—” i ower and despair. She must have a sentence ended in a. tarse he 08 Soieteiees Satiaad pat oo atiseiel lad oot sas ie |cibwtiom ohn teeta ee clock on the put on slippers robe a: ‘8 been under the| which some other nations do not know. | eight times Ruth left the garden| toed cautiously down the stairs,| ten!” she breathed shakily, the na- | differences which divide our party organizations are, and went indoors through one of| carrying her candle, Into the great, dark drawing that the TT WN the brary windows. She was pur-| Her efforts to move ailently|roo: the door stood open. Ruth Elec- SS sled. Last night when he bad! were defeated, for bait way down | looked at the dim void intently, of patie WN” brought her home from his house the staira a board creaked loudiy.| “The person who ‘wrote it went NN ‘| be-bad sad to her, “Would 7 o'clock | Then the tail door into the lbrary | through that door: when I came : be too to start the evening to | stuck, and not until Ruth bad|in from the hall. Oh, [ve stu: i ee tad = - t i Y , was | of tossing, she thought she knew; nance of @ proper health level a concern of the public i SImast time for the oiber girl to |sohu bad found het out and had| ‘tis, Wretched sad Sighly vere at large as well as of the medical men individually, American answer would be revolt, both covert and open, come. No more fainthearted Iin-)left in anger and disgust. Not! my going is entirely a matter of v and defeat of such a movement in short order. Neither gering after tonight! ... . She|Just John alone. John and his| ny choice own ace United in Principle is it probable that dictatorship, such as exists in Italy, would leave about 10 o'clock. At | mother. 7 Despite all of the attacks made upon it and the | Germany and half a score of other nations, could ever

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