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SL a eee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MAY 19, 19386 smarck Tribune An independent Newspaper —— Qooeee. Your Personal Health: - ) coco rococe | eorocooocces Scenes 4 The Bi Behind | the Tackling the Masked Marvel THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER aie t| (Established 1873) i Ww h ii | By William Brady, M. D. State, City and County Officiai Newspaper | } as ington {| ia ations pertaining. te nealth but, po Eo a | Seeast Str Guay ast Be kosompsaled"by's Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and| ~ Sh ci ess oeamreae| Brady Jp care of, bung. All queries eau |No Matter What May Happen inj Washington, the Lawyers Seem to Have a Big Hand in it... There's the Item of F. R.’s Power Memo . . It Stirs a Mad Scramble Among the Legal Talent... Leak of Its Contents Arouses Ire of New| Deal Chiefs. entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. Mrs. Stella I. Mann President and Publisher | Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W Simons Vice Pres. and Gen'l. Manager Sec y-Treas. and Editor i | | } é ANEMIA CHANGES TOO : We seldom hear of “the green sickness” any more. This type of anemia, known as chlorosis, was fairly common when I was a tyro in practice, not only among servant girls recently arrived in America (as the “doctors’ bible” points out) but also among the daughters of well-to-do farmers—contrary to Osler’s observation that chlorosis was “not often in countrybred girls, as Maudlin sings in the Compleat Angler.” Aside from the striking symptoms Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ........-.+5+ 4 By RODN DUTCHER | anemia) the Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) ......... .... es | (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Ree Sia Gar Vina oh etn’ any Dinary’ ESieoIa wan he Daily by Lea aati Metal eee wie siboud tal 600 | on, May 19.—It seems that | relatively great diminution in the proportion of hemoglobin (coloring m: are PERN I atdca, pet eae ee 100 || ally anything that happens in ter) in the blood. This was impressive in contrast with pernicious anem: eckly by mail in state, per year... 130 | | ton is largely participated in in which there is comparatively slight decrease in the hemoglobin but s mertly by mall outside of| North Dakotas, 200 | |by lawyers, marked diminution in the number of red corpuscles. ee eee eee “|| Please note that the principal lf YOu'D Just In ordinary anemia the diminution in the strength of hemoglobin is ; < - characters in the following story are emir proportionate with the diminution-in number of red corpuscles. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation President Roosevelt, a lawyer; Secre- CO-OPERATE Now that “the green sickness” has passed into history it is interesting tary Ickes, a lawyer; Newton D. to note the principal views as to its nature and cause, which physicians ad- Member of The Associated Press Baker, a lawyer; Dean Acheson, a vanced when the disease was common. They ascribed it to “emotional and Ue af i Jerome Frank, a lawyer; nervous disturbances,” to love sickness, to defective development of circu- ee . | Louis Glavis, a lawye: nator Hugo latory and generative organs, to insufficient food and too much confine- a c h f bit thon ee eee dispatches credited fo it or not otherwise credited in this |Black, a lawyer, Silas Strawn, a ment in poorly lighted and badly ventilated rooms, to constipation, to lack newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. |lawyer; Jouett Shouse, a lawyer; of proper exercise and fresh air and to corset wearing. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. | Judge Alfred Whea |Henry Hunt, a lawyer. se In the background, available for Two Decisions === chorus purpases are congress. aboct Rejection by the supreme court of the Guffey Coal bill was four-fifths of its members lawyers— a foregone conclusion. In the light of the NRA decision it was taneleas. rat gta ee wi? evident that the justices would penetrate the thinly-disguised | On Sept. 10, 1934, Roosevelt sent antonti Rens es as hours of work and|# Memorandum to Ickes, dated from intention to force the federal judgment as to : : a |Hyde Park, signed “F. D, R.,” con- labor conditions upon the coal mine operators, a thing which the|cerning PWA loan-grants to’ muni- constitution clearly does not contemplate. The bill imposed a tax of 15 per cent on soft coal production » & lawyer, and Remember, these were the ideas physicians had before chlorosis was clearly distinguished from ordinary anemia (by Duncan in 1867). For us to conjecture about it now is like exhuming George Washing- ton and holding # necropsy to determine what he died of. Maybe I'm just nuts on the subject, but no harm done, whether you take it or leave it. I believe chlorosis was due to vitamin deficiency. I think the immigrant girls who came here and went into domestic service in the homes of nice, kind Yankee families who pinched and starved their servants to the limit of the law, missed their potatoes and their whole grain cereal—foods which, in the old country, at least furnished good daily rations of vitamins B and G. I think Washington succumbed to diphtheria. I feel quite safe in both opin- fons. Frankly, though, this is merely conjecture. Today what is known as hypochromic anemia appears to have taken the place of chlorosis. But this modern type of anemia has features which cipalities for erection of public power plants, The first the public heard of this with the proviso that operators who lived up to the federal rules}memo was when, recently in the differ in some respects from the green sickness. It occurs usually in middle would get a 90 per cent rebate of the taxes paid. Thus the co- Corina, eet th Gener of aged women instead of girls in their early ‘teens. With it there is common- , Bak etary war ly @ deficient secretion of gastric juice, and a lack of acid in stomach, whereas in chlorosis there was normal or oversecretion of gastric juice and hydrochloric acid. Patients with hypochromic anemia usually complain of sore tongue and often difficulty in swallowing meat; and their Bens See : and hair show nutritional deficiency. Now I have just a vague ion tha! stand that the result was the imposition of a penalty for failure BBG i ‘4 nase hypochromic anemia is due to a shortage of all the a particularly sl ena for a memorandum i to obey the orders of the government. |deseription along. with many” other Senet ee ee This has nothing to do with whether or not the AIMS of | papers in PWA file: | 6 . VG eee QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | the government in setting up the coal code were REASON-| ie see | z == ‘Coming Back Z ‘ i Seek to Show F. R. “Intent” ABLE. In so far as they were intended to improve the lot of] ‘The inference was that the Roose workers in the soft coal industry and relieve the numerous operator would pay a tax of one and one half per cent as com- pared with 15 per cent levied on the non-cooperator. It took no particular perspicacity on the part of the judges to under- » and Acheson, ary of the treas- for “power trust” groups in an effort | to kill such projects, obtained aj Mrz. and I owe you a great deal. In fact we both feel that you several years of more abundant health and youth. We certainly feel and look years younger since we learned about the iodin and regeneration regimen. Our relatives and friends never cease marveling at the way we are coming back . . . (C. H.) Answer—Thank you. I never cease marveling at the impulse that prompts a correspondent to write such a report when he has no favor to ask. Readers who are stale and old before their time, send ten cents and stamp- ed addressed envelope, for booklet “Regeneration Regimen.” (Copyright 1936, John F. Dille Co.) “ David Lawrence (Copyright, 1936, by David Lawrence) | are looking askance at the ig ees cago that Governor narieg bes Th tt im-|8roups. Actually the words “ us- (mapped out his strategy in the even! Before arian re eeee the \iness” mean little today in national/of nomination and that he would not Washington velt_ memo would tend to show an a : m ‘ administrati e ing abuses which prevail there, the objects of the bill were} ee UN Oa Ri teu idl WHOLLY LAUDABLE. power rates by providing competition from publicly owned plants. does the nation a service, for a system which could be used to}ton, including those in PWA, once bring about a laudable result also could be employed to impose |>elieved that was exactly what Roose= Hunt, as PWA general counsel, made 4 | : u might easily result in confiscation. Social advances are ad-/no particular effort to refute the idea called a right-wing position, the Dem- primaries as a personal matter, bul mittedly necessary but not half so nec that they be loan-grants, to ‘e down private x ies e' and in rejecting i court The trouble lies in the method and in rejecting it the ¢ Practically everybody in Washing- 4 i “ rete a 5 «1 |velt and Ickes had i ? the selfish will of politicians upon business to an extent which SS EARLS when power companies first began to sahiid bind heme sive plat "Mr Borate {sue on the ground that the loan- Politics and instead there las come |hestitate to criticise during the cam- @ progressive platform. Mr. Borah’'s accompl: in striving to go forward, we lose those gains we already have made. holding the relief act invalid, was on the same general grounds | though the cases differed sharply in detail. hed within the framework of the constitution lest,|grants were unconstitutional. AAA case, motives The decision of the District of Columbia supreme court, |Frank, brought in jon the PWA cases, shifted the line} of defense. In the Greenwood county case he put Ickes on the stand to/platform that seeks to move away | for instance, several of the old school But the supreme court, as in the began to indicate that were all-important and! S special counsel | moment is the very definite way in| ‘which various influences, factors and|to the front a new group of business jevents are tending toward a contest, | men who are much more interested in not between a reactionary and a|® fair opportunity to bring re-employ- radical program, but between a Re-|ment and profits than they are in publican platform that looks more Special governmental favors. toward liberalism and progressivism! There are, of course, minorities in than any since 1912 and a Democratic |all groups and factions and there are, . - — be as jtepudiate the testimony of a PWA|somewhat from its left-wing extremes.|who think all that is necessary this In the latter no one contends that the government has NO| engineer and a PWA press release | RIGHT to aid the people.. That is clearly established and tojand to assert that the fundamental| New York State Republican clubs of Of money, sing a hymn of hate about hold otherwise would be ridiculous. To say that a government | Purpose of PWA was to increase em-| progressive and forward-looking | Roosevelt and the election will be which could appropriate 30 million dollars for buildings world’s fair could not appropriate 20 BILLION dollars to keep functions of government. | ployment at @|through public works. | and purchasing power | That strategy turned defeat into) peals said it couldn't go behind the The adoption by the Association of year is for them to contribute a lot platform which marks a pronounced | won. departure from the ultra-conserva- | Just beginning to dawn on some of tive and standpat platforms that have 'the business men is what the young- Republicanism for many years is an|right along, namely that the time has its citizens from starving would be to deny one of the essential | Victory when the circuit court of ap-|been emanating from New York state/er Republicans have been saying But the question here is WHO shall have the power. Un- der the 1935 law the congress turned its job over to the pre dent. It was he who set up the RESETTLEMENT administr: tion and other machines in the relief system. Congress had! word of Ickes. Baker and Acheson, representing power companies in; Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas, and Iowa, |have tried ever since to nail down) biind, their contention that PWA sought to| control rates. * * x | event of large significance. It is sym-'come to meet ideas with ideas and bolic of the revolt of younger Repub- | for the Republican party to show that licans all over the country against the'i¢ is just as humanitarian, just as uncompromising, indeed Ob- | progressive, and just as jealous of the solete politics of the so-called “Old ‘rights and opportunities of the com- Guard” groups. . |mon man as is the New Deal party. If the younger Republicans only | Now what is meant by “Young Re- paign, in fact to disavow many of the Republican doctrines of the Harding, Coolidge and Hoover regimes and ‘would move closer to the social jus- tice idea which was embodied in the ‘Theodore Roosevelt Republicanism of 1912. Certainly the direction of Repub- licanism today would seem to be away from the extreme right and in the left direction, well toward the middle point. The platform of the New York ‘Young Republicans is an excellent document for a start, but it is not concretely definitive, though it will doubtless furnish the basis for the national platform that will be writ- ten at Cleveland. Curiously enough, as the Republi- cans move away from what might be treme left wing that they have main- tained for three years and are tend- ing now ‘over toward the middle again. The influence of middle-of- the-roaders inside the New Deal is rising and the platform will not dif- fer in several particulars from that which the young Republicans have just adopted. This is because the ob- Jectives are much clearer to the Dem- ocrats themselves now that the coun- try has manifested its protest in var- ious ways against regimentation and concept of the need for free compe- tition and an attack on monopoly may provide considerable controversy at the sessions of the platform com- mittee, but in the end his views will be accepted. Unless all signs fail, the Republi- can party of 1936 will be progressive. Anything else will mean a forfeiting of the campaign on the day the con- vention adjourns. As for the Democrats, their chance of winning back millions of votes they usurpation of governmental power by | have lost lies in a convincing demon- bureaucracy. stration of their readiness to abandon Inside the Republican party, the | unsound experimentation for a sound power and influence of Senator|program that protects the wage en- Borah becomes every day more of aj velope against inflation arising out of factor. The Idaho senator is not! unbalanced budgets and wasteful ex- likely to take his own defeats in the | penditures. + little to do with it, at least not enough to make the law con- New Deal Slant Upheld \realized how strong they are, how | sublieans?” It is not a classification Frank told Judge Wheat that the|Telatively simple it would be for them Te de ee FOLLY ond FAREWELL ‘ form to the rules laid down in the constitution for the guidance jSenaledbneebmctetemestas coon of the legislative, executive and judicial branches of the gov- ernment. The answer would seem to be for congress to do a better job than it has been doing, give enough attention to the situa- tion to find out what properly should be done. This can be done by calling in the heads of the various bureaus and agencies Roosevelt-to-Ickes memorandum \ confidential and protested against ing forced to produce it. Wheat up-| held him. The power group undertook to infer | that here was a government denying to capture the party and with it the |@Xin to “flaming youth.” imamnatann of many independent |Seneration that went through the voters, they would move unhesitantly | World war and is just coming of age, toward aggressive leadership. Per- $0 t0 speak, a generation that knows haps they do not know that many of |the difference between sound eco- the forward-looking businessmen of Momics and “crack-pot” economics the country who year in and year out and knows also that government for power of the courts to ask for docu-|),., “ » |the few doesn’t get the votes for the ments in its files while its senate |#ave been supporting the “Old Guard with campaign contributions, fighting Simple reason that it is fundamentally BEGIN HERE TODAY LINDA BOURNE, 20, pretty, is left almost by the sud- den death of her father. PETER GARDINER, Rewspaper pe yeg ing society news. Linda is in | ith DIX CARTER, bat he gore abroad to study singing. em Peter asks Linda te marry him -. agrees, but postpones the fighter?” he asked. Linda permitted herself a very small smile. “I don’t think she'd fight,” she said. “But she might ask him what he thought it best to do.” “Thereby showing a lot of sense for a ribbon clerk,” he an- was thoughtful, but then Linda realized that the new day was on its way. She couldn’t be found there! Their motor was out of order and Thorne had told her it was 30 miles back to the last house. Linda threw aside the coats and sf lobby committee under Chairman BAS, 5 swered. ‘Now the point is, what * 5 a & shy of direct participation and ieav- | wrong. out gingerly on the rough, cold now in the field and applying to their recommendations the Blak had cubboensed private tele ing it to the Priltislens to deal with| These trends and tendencies toward men te pepmer: Satine would he say?” if he| 2° j f 2 ss i s, causing Strawn to sue and/the supposedly mysterious subject of |a progressive platform do not mean e were a gentleman he eee judgment of the congress itself. is Pies President Shouse of the American | polities” are just about ready tole ‘left wing” program. But consid- bare a scenario written, by Lins: | wouldn't ask her to walk home. Se sa cia cane plese sali sa And if the bureaucrats do not know it is time they were} Liberty League to denounce it in| abandon the old groups for new and |ered in purely Republican terms, the and. by expressing Ideas that are |He would find shelter for her,|© spproached Thorne. Shaking ¥orced to find out. Sundry speeches and statements. _ inspiring leadership. |forthcoming platform is very likely to Frege “distover |80d just because I'm a director! nim, she cried, “Basil, please wake Meanwhile, Ickes put PWA Chief) This, indeed, is one of the amazing be what conservative Republicans new stars, Seon she fo a celebrity. |and not a prize-fighter doesn’t!» "it’s nearly 6. We've got to —— Piveseaice eee ae the Job to find | undercurrents of the campaign. It would a few years ago have denounced tox Carter comes te Hollywece, |mean that I can't do the same.| se pack. We would never be able + Pj - out who had tipped the power in-|might be supposed that tite “Old as radical. indo eA jease | What about these cabins?” 4 The Export Picture |terests as to existence of the mem- (Gre “ poppy tom to explain.” What has happened to America’s foreign commerce is in- dicated by figures released in connection with the national ob- servance of “Foreign Trade Week” now being held. The statistics still show that Uncle Sam is one of the |orandum. Ickes now has a very good idea who the culprit was. * Oe OK “Leak” Angle to Be Aired Guard” and “big business” together | For many weeks it has been re- | Well-Known American | to her ane distraste Therne. er Gardiner writes a sauce Pet cessful play and te Helly- wood. 2 ‘sees Bien and they 5 ‘““Thorae drives her te a moun- director, dislikes “I'll take the one with the roses climbing over the door,” Linda said with a gaiety she did not feel. “We're all out of roses, but would an orchid bush interest And when he was awake and had shaken the sleep from his eyes, he looked about him. “Don't be stu- pid, my dear. Of course, we can explain. That's the only thing we + - = tain resort where the 7, is can do. We can't get out of here world’s greatest traders but he is constantly changing his line ene veet ae Het: ° > Fee agg 8p wnt” “Be.gaken. Waking be ite without a car. Let’s get a little of goods to meet world conditions. Where, in the old days, hejrefusal simply on legal precedent,| HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pusslo ‘ hemaae. og NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | cabins, With a flashlight, they ore see and we'll talk about it used to peddle cotton, wheat, corn, pork and beef he now is|Will tise in court to ask Baker and| 1,6 Man in PASTEURL, ine" CHAPTER XX cat iemriet, ite exterior. Tt was not! "He closed his eyes and drew » selling machinery, chemical products and allied items in which | officials, to help the government find Heir rine Wael x wage a eEieapeltsiess ‘mde perp see og Through the gapes that oe Mate Uinta aauaed this country has taken the lead. Agricultural products still are |out how copies—or knowledge—of the : i U SIT ITE MEHIAI 3 was bitterly cold, penetrating |had been windows they saw the| ci” . memorandum came improperly into| 10 Persia. 10} al Bae ae an 12 He 1s also rae ery ome ecttness of her|fith and debris within, Linda| tim for moment, and then, put. important but they are rapidly being pushed into the back- ground, 2 The dollar values of exports prove the point: Automobiles and trucks $235,813,000; chemicals and allied products, $136,- 677,000; industrial machinery, $116,959,000; electrical goods, $82,078,489; agricultural IMPLEMENTS, $32,040,000, and toys $1,834,640. Dollar figures on agricultural exports are not available but private hands. Insiders say the memorandum it- self contained no instructions to Ickes or direct statement of policies. Rather, it seems to have been a Roosevelt expression of pleasure over the effect of the PWA loan-grants in driving down private power rates. The government goes back to the time of Thomas Jefferson and the 1 Rowing device.! Dublisher of D) ILJE TAK MEOIRIE(S) 187o recede IEE OMMSIPL IT] therer. SIT MEP IOIcIOMESIE Fa as 18 Father. TREHIY PIO 19Greek letter. [AIBIEILIE MEI DIC IF |AIRIOMEWIAIt [TEP FIRIAINICIES (Clie IMLUISIt i 17 Foes. 19 X symbols. 21 Ans. 24To yawn. 26To mend. ree, 20 Alleged force: as tc, andes. 22 Northwest. 23 Pressing. coat. Looking at the dark cabins and the figure of Basil Thorne, bending over his motor, she shivered again. “I'm horribly sorry,” she said, Plucking at his sleeve. “I've made a dreadful mistake. When I got home late tonight my maid told me there were telephone mes- shivered and drew into the warm arms about her. “Pll sit in the car while you find two habitable cabins,” she told him, He was gone 10 minutes and it seemed an hour. “There's only one,” he re- ported, “with windows, bunks, a ting on her coat and tucking her hair under her hat, she opened the door softly and made her way out to the road. Linda may have walked two miles; she thought it must have been 20. The thin soles of her shoes were small protection hard road. The early blew in icy swirls trial of Aaron Burr to show that the| 25 Walks through sages but I was in such a hurry fair amount of cleanliness and | against her, and her lips needed in 1934 (not 1935) 34.3 per cent of the tobacco crop, 58.3 per |courts have held there was no power water. ” pia isle ETN te get cout, 1 didn’t look at them. |besrth. May I share it with your" the soothing oll of a lipstick. She cent of cotton, 49.9 per cent of phosphate rock and 23.4 per Hearne rarer ries canst cue tS ii oar hae: pre ae was a change of plans. I can’t} GOMEWHERE in the outer dark-| was headed for or what would cent of lard were exported. These percentages were less than /dential. It says any other ruling by| 28Corded cloth. 42 To warble. gee tell you how sorry I am about/“’ ness » penetrating wail broke when she made an arrival, normal and the exports of other f: it important |the court now would make it pos-| 31 Tax seal. 44 Southeast. aM having you drive me so fer to 20/the silence while he waited for|and she didn’t care. tas i Tae aieecs eee a tee sible for countless litigants, if they] 32Mouth parts. 45 Sanskrit Peg cong purpose, As you said, thay must|her answer, Frightened. che drew|" And then she heard the roar actor In our worid trade balance, were sharply reduced. employed stool pigeons to filch inter-| 33 Tiresome dialect. 2 ne. ave been 4 here. him. may,” she/of a motor, an orne’s white The reasons for this condition are not, as some might sug- Seas memoranda from fae people. s Parnes. 3 Measure of Thorne was tinkering bg eee. owe: iL gay. up all night and car sped down the road toward + A aye White House, to force the presiden 35 Melody. lext. area. some mechanical gadget. ovies. er. gest, superior producing ability on the part of manufacturers | Tre the witness stand to explain him- | 36 Frozen, water. 51 Says. again. sorry, too, Linde. Sdrry for you,| “I used to be a boy scout,” he| “A stroke of luck,” he said, as compared with farmers. It is due to the fact that American self. 37 Men of 83 Carriage. said, among other nonsensical coming to a stop. “Found a piece * * 7 FA A " , as he gathered t and . skill and ingenuity have managed to keep this country in the ian Ho InBeS oe i ee learning. 54 Kagle’s claw. anes going t0 Ne atte 6 out br or Be eenare iid 94 et site ae Hed bee up. Climb lead as a manufacturing nation and, where necessary, the tar-|memorandum, Roosevelt has no in- nected some way. I don’t know|cabin, but gradually it grew| Linda was too tired, upset and iff which guarantees our manufacturers the home market en- ables them to sell at lower prices abroad than they are forced to meet here. The frontier of new processes and new inventions knows no limit and America is unusually apt at exploiting it, hide behind our tariff wall and export only such items as can be disposed of in no other way. Lack of facilities for taking the game advantage of the tariff handicaps the farmer and be- ides, his skills are reproduced in greater or less degree in every nation in the world. The cause of the decline in agricultural exports is clear ih. The difficulty lies in finding a cure. nber of commerce spokesmen demand a return to “sanity in gov: it.” And they don’t mean Santy. : tention of allowing it to be produced in court, (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) ber that I've got something that changes the color of @ person’s hair over- night. Man in Crowd — Yeah, Ive got a son “My uncle sits up half the night gloating over his clippings.” “Is he a movie actor?” “No, a movie censor.” = the first thing sbout engines their make-up, but it doesn’t look to me as though I could do any- thing about it.” Linda was getting @ little des- “Can't you do something?” she pleaded. “Not a thing with the car, I'm afraid. We might walk, but it must be nearly 30 miles to the last house, and there are moun- tain Hons in these parts,” oe E drew her toward him in a kind, big brotherly embrace. “Wheat & little ribben clerk do if she found herself in a situ- So she stion lke this with « rite. | aad ho hed tucked bes away! warmer and Linda's eyes grew heavy with want of sleep. They talked and talked. Later Linda couldn’t remember what they talked about. They were hungry, too, as the and crushed. By the early, waver- ing light she saw that it was nearly 6 in the morning. She didn’t re- tember going to sleep, and opened her eyes wider and wider to find herself on a blanket-covered wood- hungry to answer that or any- thing else he said to her, but when they were nearing a town she turned to him. “Basil, I want to ask you one perate. “Basil, we've got to get t favor. Please, will hence its advantage. HIE.OF HUMOR but, We can't stay here alllnight wore on, Tho last thing) turn off the main road’and please, y er " " night!” Linda remembered before waking|as long as you live, will you But farm costs have risen until the American farmer finds IS RELISHED BY He lowered hood _and/ia the cold, dark dawn, was wish-| promise me never to tell 1 " it impossible to compete with those in other lands. The days THE BEE OF MEN looked about him. “It might bare! ing she hed some food. Ing soul about last night?! "of free land are gone. American costs are higher and living|¢ | been sere. Es east . a Ma} Hh. Rigi g ind eee becenne ail @ chila standards are higher. The only remedy has seemed to be to| {; PA ante ba ae cold in these mountains at night.”’| stiff. Her crepe frock was rumpled | need to worry. Now, I has ask of you. Will you marry me?” “Marry you!” Linds looked at him in surprise. She didn’t like looking at him. His eyes were blurred and bleary. His beard was dark on his red cheeks. “Thanks awfully for doing the decent thing. I’m afraid I can't,” she answered, and didn’t see the awift anger that flooded his red. Be Continued)