The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1936, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1936 = The Bismarck Tribune SOIL PRACTICES FOR) T° Democratic Candidates tor State Oftice 11) A LQVINGGUP fy | yaa TEN 13 WESTERN STATES | awarospeoneat || ™", Rersonal, Health ai Dr. ge eat sense or diagnos: Br in care of The yee stamped. eelf-ad envelope. State, City and County Officiai Newspaper seat! but not juestions pertaining to Write letters briefly ‘and in ink, Dr. All queries must be accompanied by a WIN AAA’S APPROVAL | Eradication of Weeds Will Be! | BIENNIAL MEETING 125 Members of Catholic Or-| parang, BANANA OR BREAD AS GOOD FOR FAT FOLK AS FOR THIN Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and * entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. . Mrs. Stella I. Mann ident and Publish i | i: jut ‘Whether a substantial food is “fattening” or not depends principally on President ani er Allowed as Conservation ganization Attend Banquet | Whether a cabetentn' che amount of fat it contains 1. e. the munber a Sins earraae GeErr abaeves ped iter Measure in N. W. | Thursday in Mandan calories it yields on digestion and assimilation, combustion, me- | Sec'y-Treas. and Editor | approximately three times as much energy or as many calories and is there- fore three times as fattening as banans or potato. In other words one ounce bread is equivalent to three ounces or three pounds of in these three staple foods which | Washington, May 14—()—Approval jof soil building practices through which farmers in 13 western states |May receive payment ranging from | |$1 to $10 an acre under the soil con- Mandan Junior Catholic Daughter Troop No. 4 and St. Catherine’s senior court of Dickinson were ai cups for charity work and member- ship gain, respectively. as the ‘sixth Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mai] per year ‘in state outside of Bismarck) 5 Datly by mail outside of North Dakota .. | |Servation program was announced biennial assembly of the North Da- consideration if Jot org cachonyerain af tad woh oa i Weekly by mai! in state, per year ....... } | Thursday by the farm administration. kota Catholic Daughters of America Ler Bi td Boe poate is a good ita amet (raw Lona Weekly by mat] outside of North Dakota, per year The practices and rates of payment closed Thursday in Mandan. Miss yields fair of vitamin B and G. pera) Weekly by mail in Canada, per year jvary trom state to state. The AAA 6 Laurayne Steinbrueck was counselor | *54 3 fair sores of er L3% protein, 22% carbohydrate, 1% fat, 08% { a Ree Gage avail- P. H. Costello of Cooperstown and Mrs. Eugene Fenelon of Devils of the winning Junior C. 5 A. troop. | nineral salts, yields 460 calories to the pound, is a good source of vitamins A, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation \ eras of the program. | Lake Wednesday were endorsed by the Democratic state convention Two hundred delegates {rom seven p and G and a fair source of C. | _ States included in the western region = gt Devils Lake for the offices of lieutenant governor and secretary | state courts registered for the two-|" “Diiaa ss 50, water, 9.2% protein, 54% carbohydrate, 13% fat, 1.1%; . jare Arizona, California, Colorado.| of state, respectively. Costello, a candidate for the same office in |4@y session, courts at Minot and) ooo) so) yields 1320 calories to the pound and contains ally no | Member of The Associated Press Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nevada, Nex | 1934 election, lost to Walter Welford by a small margin. He is a |Rugby being the only ones not rep-|minera salts, si | eto North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, past national president of the U. S. Pharmaceutical association. resented. ‘A reducing diet which has received considerable publicity consists of i CSP Rta Eto toe po Atte deta ad flat baleen Bcd Le Ee ee Urges More Activity nothing else than six large bananas and s quart of skimmed milk, to be i Rewspaper and aiso the local news of Spontaneous or! published herein. | 7 bbe J ; tion of Women’s clubs, the American Legion auxiliary and the Catholic Daughters were urged by; taken in three or four meals according to the patient's habit, for 10 days to Pt AUT HHebte of republication of ailvocher'maiter kereia Gre alec reserved. | Two practices approved especially Catholic Daughters of America. Rev, Robert A. Feehan of Bismarck,|two weeks. The average overweight adult loses from four to nine pounds j i " Pe testy oh pe tees Al Setive pa tn eHieN orpamieating on tide net consider it an adequate diet, Many adults who have tried it Green Pastures |for parts of the area which lie in the i{ Wednesday night at the banquet in| agree—at least they could not stick to it more than a few days. milk Just why North Dakota, alone among the near northwest- | S°uthwestern dust bowl. : Lewis and Clark hotel. There|has about half the nutritive value of whole sweet milk, and about half the : fe 3 g 2 is | George E. Farrell, western regional bd 125 be: vitamin value. One who eats, say, 1% bananas with a glassful of skimmed | ern states, should show an increase in population during the |director said the practices follow rec- | ba, hegene a enaion: EViLi Lake, | milk at each of four meals daily gets about 950 calories. By no mesns suf- | last five years is difficult to understand. Certainly we have ee made by state commit- | ae district deputy. talked on the recent |ficient to maintain an adult even lying abed. There is no good reason why had our fair share of troubles and hardships and no one now| Payments for soil building practices | AeA Se ee te T300 Catholic clergy and laymen a¢] taken Years to accumulate the excess. “why the sudden, determination to | resident in the state would have the temerity to describe it as|Will be in addition to the payments | 6:1 ounham Makes Hit as ‘Pork | hospital,” "| Bevils Lake. She tevited members to| slough it off in a month? ‘In any event the banana and skimmed milk diet t a land of milk dh % averaging $10 an acre over the coun- n. and Mrs. Lyman Horn, attend the national meeting of the| should be supplemented or fortified with an optimal vitamin ration, as i Rana try which are made for shifting com-} Chops’ in Episcopal Guild | Thursdass Bismarck ‘hospital’ ™” Linstitute at Fargo in October. should any restricted diet, whether the object is to reduce or not. If such ii Still the incontrovertible fact is there and there must be/ mercial crop lands to soil conserving ‘ ay : Other ipuacers included Mrs. Wil-|a diet is properly supplemented with the essential vitamins, the patient will \ a reason growth. The soil building practices Presentation liam McCormick of Mandan, toast-| find it easier to stick to the regimen, for it is not simply hunger that de- iad ; include planting of legumes and . 58 Ecklund | master; Mrs. Dolores M. Kupitz of |moralizes so many of the stout brethren and sistern who attempt to reduce; Some explanation may be had from those who have gone | es pene eas green manure} 5. arck amusement lovers saw 8 ficimer ‘Asplund, of| Bismarck, state grand regent: Rev.| it is impairment of nutrition, and the chief factor of this is the lack of essen- away only to return. Two years ago there was something of a| cops, wag eon Of Perennial noxious |... ‘star dawn on the horizon of Bis- Hildebrand Eickhoff of Mandan, and | tial vitamins which becomes extreme when the ordinary furore when a group of folk in a nearby county left for the West. The leader of the group, stopping in the Twin Cities, mine, Ase cae Stier Guid Semistfels at tes ity aoe 10d inaaast P ANSWERS branded North Dakota as a state without hope and painted| 1n specified dry areas, the AAA |AUditorium. Anton gicerne! such a gloomy picture that every daily editor in the state joined in a private protest against the publication of such erroneous matter. Within a year that man had come back, but his return was heralded by no such blast as accompanied his departure. he had visited. He simply told his friends that he had been mistaken to move at} all and that North Dakota looked better to him than any place| weeds and a variety of soil handling methods, such as listing, strip crop- said. farmers may substitute methods of handling the soil for a soil con- serving crop thus enabling the in- dividual to be eligible for higher soil conserving payments. The AAA said tates of payment for practices on ir- rigated land are higher than those on. dry land, because of the heavier rate range from $2 an acre to as much as $5 if coupled with gully control. Rates of seeding. Payments for terracing a Baldwin, Wed- marck’s amateur theaterdom Wednes- e 11 miles east The featured performer was Wil-) « iam Dunham, better known as “Bill” land for minstrel purposes, bearer of} A new adult education class in the title of “Pork Chops.” hand work will be conducted from His portrayal of a languid and men- '7:30 to 9:30 p. m., every Monday and tally inept negro soldier in a scene|Wednesday evenings at the Will with Ralph Soule. interlocutor and!school building by Miss Ruth Erbe, director of the show, was the high it was announced Thursday. Instruc- spot of a wholly enjoyable perform- |tion will be given in making flowers, j weaving baskets and building brack- ets, furniture and novelties. ¢ J. Klipste: ince, This skit, together with the jokes which marked the intervals between Mrs. Eleanor Reichert of Dickinson, | Vitamin-poor, is sharply restricted for any considerable Past state regent. State officers introduced included | Mrs. Fred Traynor of Devils Lake, secretary; Mrs. George Ford of Man- ties, Mrs. Fenelon, Mrs. c. Mayoue of Fargo, Mrs. L. H. Carufel Mandan and Mrs. Reichert. Present and retiring grand regents present were Mrs. C. McNamara of Fargo, / 1. Mrs. Birlea O. Ward and Mrs. E. A. Greenwood, of Bismarck, Mrs. 8. M. tell me how grapefruit compares Answer—Grapefruit, orange dan, treasurer. and the district depu- | respects. . George You often speak of oranges and lemons or their juice in the diet. Please with And G) Answer—Only an ,000 units (USP. 1936) daily. Poor Man's Vitamin D How much vitamin D did you say a baby four months old must have ot Bismarck, Mrs. Fred F. Tharp of| daily to prevent rickets? @ week afford it? (Mrs. L. orange and lemon. (A. M. P.) Practically the same in all income of $26 for growing perennial legumes Tange |the music, kept the audience in up- from $2 to $4 an acre; for growing |roarous laughter during much of the biennial legumes, $1.50 to $3 an acre!one-act performance. and for annual legumes, $1 to 3 an| The singing was excellent, the chorus William Thiefault, Indian from the | Culbertson and A. P. Brazda of Man- Elbowoods reservation, was sentenced nae we Sea rvag car waitin Mrs. {to serve from one to three years in 8. P. Flumerfelt of Devils Lake. . ithe state penitentiary on a statutory|~",,. Others who had left in search of greener pastures have} come back with a similar story. The prairies of this state take! on new beauty for the weary and travel-stained expatriate. | envelope bearing your address. the past generation, and the were oke when grandma was the second day of the state high|Clarence True Wilson, founder and|and crew had taken to life boats. tog ‘seclety mews. Linda ( Invitations to her parties were} “I'd like it better if we spent the " tion, and upon the history of similar transactions in other|school week contests at the Univer-|for 26 years crusading secretary of Se a he sought after. Her intimates were | evening alone,” he said. 3 tes sity of North Dakota started. the Methodist board of temperance, MONANGO MITE LIVES Peter aske Linda to marry the more conservative members of} She smiled and that was all. No ¥ 1 countries. : Z Results will be announced in the| prohibition and public morals, has Aberdeen, S. D., May 14—(4)\—The she agrees, but postpones the colony, and she numbered | answer. The best example is Canada, the only other large nation|armory at 7:30 p.m. All contestants|asked the general conference of the| Dakota's tiniest baby, who balances among her closest friends three un-| Dix was elated. So was she. Do ! P! ta ii is United g B fe] 26 Native metal. \king Dix. She knew that he had Metro brought him out last week is Hint bipeei fb aevieve tat ae ne ae ie, Tim pune ite ie Hen pipet pet 20 Fetivall ae ae 27 Beret. deliberately planned to have her iat iad rns assumed, and women are swooning all over t States will be materially different. > . Hone c ll F ReTTTE] 23 To bind. telephone Thorne. She excused him |). "¢ ere hear it?” He drew | the lot. One of those strong, silent 4 i 9, . ‘2 Musical OIRTAIL} CT TINIEIN 2 la 29 To offer. because she knew how badly he thou; Salers fo simulated | men with a pace like a panther and e St. Mary’s Seniors character. OIN[E |EMECIOITMMBIAISII ILI 30 constetiation. wanted to get his chance. usht, “An Sdyll about boy and |e smile that breaks suddenly and } The Benefits of Change e Stage Play Tonight| 4 Atrmative. EINIGITINEIEIEY TRE IO IPE TE) 31 was victorious She prepared herself for that eri omane) Girl ee gege —Whoops!—hearts are broken!” ¢ Advocates of always keeping things as they are might BDecayed. | sz Nether World. 3 High temper. 32 To seetter wight, Kaew the sols thet she was |Earosy pega trol | Gilde De Lee tooked toward H examine the experience of the automotive industry, certainly} st, mary’s high school senior class| $0 Barley spikelet 53 niet. ature. Har theless she found herself nervous, |!°"* Sif! to Hollywood and. . "| rig. ee ot H one of the most forward-looking in America. will give the fourth and final presen-| 93 susical note, 54 Genus of 4 Poker stake. 41 Hodgepodge. not with anticipation such as she wise her tea-cu # bered that } 4 tation of its play, “The Golf Champ, plants. 42 To hoe GURPRISED out of her role, LP secre t In the beginning the motor makers, for reasons not noW/| tor the public at 8 p. m., Thursday in # Fabulous bird. 55 siixcworm, 5 Fractured. ‘o have on. had felt the last timo she bad an |S 7) amile. So Pete Gardiner had come ' ingi in Jan-|the school auditorium. ‘Wednesday a| 5 Melted again. othe —— @Awkward = 43 Measure. engagement with the director, but |p, Winds sald hastily and hotly.| 0 stonywood! i clear, adopted the system of bringing out new models in Jan- 5c - lay 87 Cuckoo. $6 It was the — persons. 44 Throe. with fear that she could not be| 2st'’s ridiculous! It wasn't s ro-| ,, } aes matinee was held for grade children. kings’ home, mance. Diz did ‘And, my dears, he has already usry. Employment fluctuated and sales were made difficult | Rey ‘Rovert A. Feehan director, an. | 88 Turf. Bea ET Last word of 45 Axillary. able to carry it off. rae aaa ee Fal S aa been annexed,” Cora Jarrett con by the rush which marked the beginning of a new manufac-|nounces that there will be a brief} %9To pack away. 544, a prayer. 46 At that time, But she did. She wasn't fiirte-| one» " * | tributed. “Glascow asked him what Returning folk find their eyes opened and they see opportun- ities here which had been overlooked before. If they have troubles—and most of us have—they find them easier to bear here than elsewhere. Nevertheless the record, encouraging though it may seem, is far from satisfactory. Too little of our natural population increase remains in this state. The trend has been away from the agricultural states and toward the manufacturing centers. The only difference between North Dakota and its neighbors is that this trend has been less marked here than in South Da- kota, Minnesota and Montana. Pastures apparently are greener here than in nearby states but they still are not green enough to keep our young men and women at home. We are doing better than some other states but still not good enough, for the young men and women born in this state constitute its greatest resource. Canada’s Railroad Experience Unless the experience of the United States government proves to be different than anyone has a right to expect it to be, the people of the United States soon are going to be in the railroad operating business. The forecast is predicated upon the extensive loans which have been made by the RFC, a government-owned corpora- in which railroads are not already government controlled. A rated in competition with privately-owned lines, as a result of the loans which were made, first for their construction and later for their operation. An added factor which can not be compared with any in the United States equation is the fact that the Canadian government was forced to build some rail- 5 ji ‘4 Fig & not unknown in Pasadena society.| America knew “a little stranger” roads in order to get certain of the provinces to join the Cana-| versity of South Dakota at Vermil 4 unk 4 lion, Carl Christensen of South Da- a jorne, she couldn't recap-|was expected in the vivacious, dian Confederation. kots State college at Brookings, and HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 Tobaster. INDA hated herself when che ous the mood that had made for | dark-haired star's menage. But the government of Canada never INTENDED to ac- 4B. Benet of the State Teachers’ Barat palace HE 6 ERT over 12 Senior. had hung up after making an hea Fcega tea occasion of Tess aie uiking sbout i) i il i i iporis.. . Ic engagement to dine with Basil|~.. a men. ‘unusi ata Party. quire the 22,000 miles of railroad which it now operates. It/"yiho¢ won first place in the junior 8 Combs of cocks [O]w! peer Thorne the next night but one.| “HOW are the lovelotters piling| Gretchen, who had been engaged DRIFTED into its present position because it had to do some- thing to protect its loans and guarantees and to prevent losses to the investing public. These are the same ends toward which our government loaning activities have been directed. There Two years ago the motor executives got together and on a change. They set forward to November the time of bringing out new models. They looked at their problem in a practical light and evolved a practical answer. The result, as now announced by the Automobile Manu- facturers’ association, has been to stabilize employment and put the business on a better basis. The earnings of 350,000 work- acre. The inclusion of weed eradication as a soil building practice came after recommendations had been made by farmers in parts of the Dakotas and neighboring states. For eradication of weeds that require chemical treat- ment in addition to periodic cultiva- tion, the AAA will pay at the rate of $10 an acre and where only periodic cultivation is required, the rate is $5 an acre. The AAA said states where this rate applied are California, Ne- vada, Utah, Washington, Idaho and “1000 STUDENTS VIE "FOR HONORS AT Minot, Jamestown,’ Dickinson Playmakers Win in High School Contests Grand Forks, N. D., May 14—)— More than 1,000 high school students competed in music and declamation preliminaries Thursday morning as are required to be present ready to chairman. By noon 1,017 out-of-town students had registered, and 207 from Grand Forks. More than 250 entries in com- mercial contests and additional mu- sic preliminaries were expected. Judges in the music contests are Dean Winfred R. Colton of the Uni- playmaker festival with Jamestown second and Dickinson third. Winners of individual acting awards among the girls was Frances Ness of Minot, while Bernard Monnes of Mi- not topped the boys division. musical program. “The Golf Champ” is a three-act farce by Austin Goets and is being here by special arrangement with the Northwestern Press of Min- Pischer, Mary James Hurning. Mrs. Edward Bannon is caring for make-up. Students are taking care of of male voices blending beautifully in songs both old and new. Probably the song hit of the show was the Bells of | Notre Dame, a piece new to Bismarck jaudiences. song lovers like and the tonal effects produced by the chorus merited high commendation. Other features were the dancing number featuring Mrs. Doris Nelson and Jack Mayo and several dances by Mr. Soule also sang several solos, in- cluding “I'm Marching Home to You” and “When I Grow Too Old to Dream” which served as an obligato for the Nelson-Mayo dance number. Typical minstrel numbers which were well received were “Can't You Hear Me Callin’ Caroline” with Lor- enzo Belk and chorus; “Why Adam |Sinned” by Bill Dunham and chorus; '“The Darktown Strutters Ball” with |xylophone accompaniment by Lloyd |Graunke and “Here Comes the Show- boat.” The cast and chorus were ably sup- ported by an orchestra under the di- rection of Clarion E. Larson. Final presentation of the minstrels will be had tonight at the Auditorium | with the curtain rising at 8:15. WILSON WOULD RETIRE Columbus, Ohio. May 14.—:4)—Dr. Methodist Episcopal church to accept his retirement. 1902, as chief engineer of the Imper- ia] Bureau of Mines. 13 Deportment. 14 Tiding. 16 Fruit. 17 Door rug. 18 Fat. 43 Mineral sprin, Prone VERTICAL 49 Auction. 1 Form of * 60 Perfect pattern 2 Citrus fruit. It has the swing which | Camille Wachter and Rita Fortune.| (au) 1DJOlR| jday. O. H. Torkelson, 313 Avenue A, suf- jfered a fracture of the arm when the motorcycle he was riding collided with the automobile driven by Mra. C. D. Aune, 609 First St., late Wede jnesday afternoon at the intersection lof Fifth St. and Thayer Ave. The state board of railroad com- ;missioners Thursday called attention ,0f North Dakota operators and ship- /Pers to a decision by the Missour! court of appeals that shippers hiring legally operating trucks are guilty of a misdemeanor. J. A. Heder, com- merce counsel of the state board, said he was of the opinion that the ruling would hold true in North Dakota and that all operators of trucks in North Dakota were being advised of the de- cision. SHIP SINKING OFF ALASKA Bremerton, Wash., May 14—()— |The naval radio station picked up a ‘message shortly before noon Thurs- 'day from the passenger steamship North Sea, off the coast of southeast message added the 180 passengers the scales at one pound, 15 ounces, has an “excellent chance” to live, her of Monango, N. D. She was born 17 days ago. Castle in Spain GO TIAIMIE} O}t |v [AINE style of architecture. 24 Shrieks. 47 Queen of heaven. 48 Fetid. 51 Burmese knife Alaska, stating “we're sinking.” The! from the Mandan court and a musi- cal salute to the senior C. D. A. by the Mandan junior members. High Speed Train May Run Via Fargo-Minot; ) N. D., May 14—(>)—N. E. Williams, traffic commissioner of the Fargo Chamber of Commerce, said Thursday that if the northern rail lines combine to operate high-speed streamlined trains between Chicago and the Pacific Coast, at least one is almost certain to go via Fargo and “There is good reason to believe the .|the amateur mother today. So I prepared said Baby. Don’t you remember’ have running around the make eleven more payments on the cost of a family. ‘Would like to know whether luminous (visible in the dark) are treated with radium or phosphorus, it is injurious in any way to have such clocks or watches? (Mrs. G. F. K.) Answer—Radium is used to impart luminosity to the paint. There is no harm in having, handling or | wearing (Copyright, 1936, St. Mary’s Athletes Will Receive Letters Rev. Henry athletic di- Holleman, jrector of St. Mary's high school, will | distribute football and basketball let- Great Northern line by way of Breck- ters earned by the 1935-36 teams at a enridge, Fargo and Minot, would be special assembly called for 1:15 p. m., used as it is the shortest distance be- | tween St. Paul and the Coast,” he said. \Friday. Rev. Robert A. Feehan, sup- jerintendent, also will take part in the FOLLY ond FAREWELL a girl worth trying to get. He liked , “Will you dine with me, Sunday, BEGIN HERE TODAY LINDA BOURNE, 20 years eld, pretty, ts left almost penatiess by the sudden death of her father. G. mewspaper PI Al NER, reporter, helps her sete wedding. WONEY HARMON, fim star. comes to Newtows, os At a rt iven by Hone: Ra ones meets BASIL i Attracted by him at frst, she later avoids him. Diz Carter comes to This time she didn’t agree to meet him at his home. They were din- ing at the Continental. She dreaded it and planned her evening. And she came very near to dis- made a blunder and was grateful that it was not an unforgivable one. He was flattered that she had finally called him. He rearranged bis tactics, adjusted his intentions, ‘was suave, courteous, and charm- ing. They dined and danced and such John F. g and whether Dille Co.) Program, which will be completed with musical numbers. found employment in the cutlery, furniture, and carpet industries of England in 1934. Russia twice has tried to mint platinum as the national coinage, ‘but abandoned both attempts. her wit and her wits, her manner and her manners. He liked being seen with her. Teproachable stars of true great- e fi * rform. Band finals were set for +4 ness. her happy. She would dispose of | study of the situation there made by the Transportation As- Jee m. but results will be withheld - Physician reported cana The Fave.e soomerin written D7 Linde. Yes, Linda Bourne, in any way,| Thorne in due tise Baa. Wek got: i sociation of America shows that the Canadian government ac-| until this evening, according to John| President Hoover was engaged by/| baby, only inches tall, is the ane, Oe 5 at any price, was a feather in Basil |tem herself into it and she would A 5 . : A E. He ‘d, instrument: contest | the Chinese government. from 1899 to| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beaver brad comm . quired its extensive railroad properties, which are being ope- — peeumentel tion for being able to dij Thorne’s cap. That was the time | set out. The only difficulty at the that Hollywood was beginning to realign its social strata. Linde brought the same elegance to Hollywood that had made her president of the Newtown Junior League. She was invited to Pick- fair, met visiting royalty and was up?” he asked, going beck to it. “I told you I didn’t save them,” she said. “Does the same thing go for sav- ing old loves?” She looked at him in complete “So you're playing lady patron- ens?” “Hardly. He comes around to seo me. If I were playing patroness, I should have sent him to you first. That ought to prove my point.” She appeared to be elaborately patient. He was thoughtful. “That’s quite Ee, Would you Ike me to meet ‘That was exactly what Linds ts Linda was careful not to mention | wanted him to say. She didn't | because of her. Already they were other arrangement Diz Carter's name. | man 22, cat, Rien for. the. tevor, Waking ber name with that oft : want indebted | director. (THORNE took her home, kissed |to him, but im her fondest hopes! ‘There was Dix, Thorne, and 20” Pfgd wee ons eater ae Meee [Petal i siaet migh come from him. “annexed’ im ie to be. tarmainat Linda refused. appeared to be thinking $t|Woll,, why aot?” Liege, abrusetd her | 1 : ss pid Lent velt by the next over. “How did you know he was|her shoulders in their beautiful is to. sd over two selli s the busi- £5 oes Bice © senate sppeeerie- fot week wad practh * singert” she asked after a while, white taflored coat. Did she ex! ich formerly was concentrated in one. And that, too,| ford Guy Tugwell, have coc! “Tos: barligee Gah etiaoties (Chien Cae oes te Sons aredAy pave ont - and sweet—voice, | string? She certainly wasn't ? ing mean. one some excellent Hae Ot 8 Bi soe eee. Linda 1 corsage tlon. She cont 4 Usd forever, dressing foom, Violets lways te Thorne's acceptance of the genre amg ive, him & card and be can sea tuloged" ber of Pete Gerdioer as! created. As a matter for ‘Bhi choc Gre er ee et f "~ & week? We'll dine alone and I'll ask some people in. You can hear him then. I think he will come.” ing something for him at last made moment was being entertaining to Thorne and thinking of Dix. eee HE had more to think of in a few hours. Gretchen Morgan was giving @ stork shower for Hilda Howe. Every movie-goer in to practically every unattached male star, sighed wistfully, “Ron ald Colman is still my dream man.” “T have a new dream man! Have you seen Gardiner, the playright? woman he wanted most to meet {0 Hollywood the day he got off the train, and he said, ‘Honey Her- mon.’ That was ait she needed. “What's happened to Basil Thorne? I thought he was her last big moment?” Someone answered, then there was the slightest pause before someone changed the subject. In that pause Linds caugct one short, Foeazor ga yenee]

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