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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune °° tte: 74 denied that he or his friends are| seeking the retention of Brookhart in order to pre a An Independent Newspaper clude opposition to him at the primaries. He de-, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER clared that every senator should act on the merits! (Established 1873) of the contest, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Now that the Republican organization has taken Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at such an attitude toward Senator Brookhart, it seems Bismarck, as second class mail matter. unlikely that any political expediency would swa; George D. Mann. President and Publisher ;, from, supporting the committee report. Even the Subscription Rates Payable in Advance possibility of increasing the Democratic minori Daily by carrier, per year... secseceesees $7.20 One vote, as threatening as that might be ultimately Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)........ 7.20 if the November ele = go awry should not make Daily by mail, per year, the Republicans back down. If the Republicans | (in state outside Bismarck).... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota + 6.00 lose a few seats in the next Congress one vote may | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | throw control to the Democrats. ! Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the This situation complicates matters, but the Ke- publicans cannot afford to stultify themselves on . this issue providing the canvass of the senatorial Hanes ap lvelnd ne Te acess ee a vote in Iowa was conducted fairly and without preju the local news of spontaneous origin published here- dice. The committee report was practically unani- in. All rights of republication of all other matter mous and there is every reason to believe Senator Keren are also reserved. | Brookhart got a fair deal. Foreign Representatives Pa G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Nothing Game About It CHICAGO DETROIT Gerald Chapman, who deserved his fate, was not Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. “game” PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ‘ NEW YORK . 3 " Fifth Ave. Bldg. His career and end were despicable. pA A eee Bo Much written about this bandit in an effort to throw about him the glamor of chivalry is veritable ; What Chances Are His? vaveivnh eel ‘ Republicans who beli Net they knee the Iowa po- | Of thirty-eight years, he spent cne-third of them litical mind are decidedly of the opinion that Sena- behind prison bars. Not all the members of his: tor Brockhart cannot defeat Senator Cummins should | family went crooked. Records revealed that he he try issues with him at the approaching primar | ¢#Me from a respectable home. He had better than he “now has before it the report of |2% ordinary education. His sister, who came to the committee which recommends the seating of | Weep and pray at his grave, was respectable and Daniel F. Steck and the ousting of Senator Brook- | had gone straight. P hart. If Senator Brookhart is unseated, he threat- | Students of heredity have not been abe to fix the ens to enter the Republican primaries against Cum- | C#use for the: criminal bent of Chapman. Those mins. who thought an autopsy might reveal some clue.) Whether this is bluff or bravado no one knows ai | hive been denied that experiment. | this writing. The facts are, however, that Senator | Chapman's career was no different in type than | Brookhart received the votes of only about 75,000 | that of thousands of other burglars and murderers, regular Republicans when he ran the last time, | He directed a million-and-a-half dollar robbery, lowa srave President Coolidge a plurality of 158,476 | Staged a daring escape from prison and shot an of- and Brookhart won on the face of returns by a plur- | ficer of the law in cold blood and so earned the - ality of only 755. The Senate investigating com- {Newspaper title of a “super-bandit”. mittee has found that he was defeated by a plur- | There was nothing game uper” about him. ality of 1,420, He had money and powerful friends to fight his case The proceedings doubtless have special interest for |to thé bitter end. Like many a criminal not so well Vice President Dawes, It was Brookhart who pub- | advertised, he did not cringe or faint in the death ; licly denounced his nomination and urged the Re- | house. Nor was this game. | publican National Committee to throw him off the] No youth should be misled by Chapman's so-called j ticket. He declared the Progressive West would |crime “success”. Without money, he would have | not suppert the Republican ticket if Dawes were on | paid the penalty long ago and many of the avenue: it. Brookhart proved as poor a guesser as he did a|of publicity would have been closed. No sporting. poor Republican. instincts can be attributed to the man who steals Senator Brookhart has been read out of the party | and kills. The word game as applied to Chapman and doubtless the inclination of Republican senators | might as well be used to describe the attributes of is to vote to unseat him. He is excluded from the | the hyena or serpent. caucus of Republican senators and generally has} No, there was nothing game about Chapman. been a red flag to the organization. He had every reason and inducement to 0 Senator Cummins has taken the right attitude up- | straight. Deliberately he preferred a career of on the issue which is embarrassing to his political {crime and at the end of the trail was a noose, future. He asked to be excused from participation A powerful lesson if youth only reads aright. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | | i} i i | 1 Reels, 26 | kate: Oren March 18 | | | Bismarck, a son. A large drum. the gift of Buffalo | . Mrs. Willi N. ed, | Fy 13 did not have one, Pec Beek spit A Herr \ Given to Museum To Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Dale, | _ | March 20 North Dakota Historical society by | To Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Gustaf-| J. M. Carrignan of Fort Yates. who son, Bismarek, a daughter. came into possession of the drum Number of Births and Deaths 22 3 at the time of Sitting Bull’s death, To Mr. and Mrs, Lewis Schurle,| December 15, 1890. For First Quarter Both Judson, N. D., a daughter. When Sitting Bull joined Buffalo; To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lewis*Barth,| Bill’s circus troup in 1884 one of te | Less Than 1925 Rismarck, a son. chief duties was attracting crowds March 23 hy beating on this drum. Dressed — To Mr. and Mrs. Roy L, Ponto,|in full native costume and_hbe: e Forty-six children were born in the | Bismarck, a daughter. warlike measures on the drum h city of Bismarck during the month To Mr. and Mrs. John Hill, Emmet, | added the final touch to Buffalo Bill's of March, records filed ins the city} N. D., a daughter. wild west shows and aroused great auditor’s office show, of which 26 March 24 Ht interest among the crowds who had | were boys and 20 were girls. The To Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Heidt.| heard of his exciting history. In parents of 21 of, the arrivals live | Bismarck, a daughter. the fall of 1884, when Sitting Bull in this city, while those of the other To Mr. and Mrs. Enos G. Strand-| returned to North Dakota, Buffalo 25 live elsewhere throughout the | emo, Baldwin, N. D., a son. Bill gave him the drum that had pl: state. March 25 ed such an important part in Deaths in the city during the month To Mr, and Mrs. Arley J. Baker, | ci of March numbere. , of whom eight | Moffit, N. D., son. 4 history of Mr. Carrignan’s con- were Bismarck residents and ‘the March 26 a nection with Sitting Bull and other other 18 were people whose residence} ‘To Mr. and Mrs. Nick Reidinggr,} of the Hunckapapa Indians is an ‘Was elsewhere. D. daughter. 2, interesting ‘story self. He and! uring the st three months of Mrs. Alf. Flling- | his sister, now Mrs. Margaret Neehan 1926 there have been 102 births and daughte of Montreal, Canada, were teaching in 65 deaths Bismarck, as compared h 28 the Indian schools of the district and with 121 births and 71 deaths during Mr, irs. Ansel Ternes,| soon became very intimate with Sit- the same period of 1925. The births | § a son. ng Bu!l, more so than any othe! hree months and deaths for the pa: have been as follows: Rirths Deaths 20 20 Mrs. James Karas, | white people, not excepting Major Me- | a dapghter. Laughlin, the Indian agent at that} Ignatz Schmaltz, | time. 5 | Sitting Bull would visit the school | sereay. 38 sta Mare’ 30 after hours and took great delight | he a 3 To Mr, and Mrs. Thomas in making drawings on the black- Burch, Bismar D., @ son. board. It was through this that he . 102 65 To Me anf sas. eorge Weibel, | learned to ba 4A his same sigoriing eT tty | Bismarck, a daughter. é to stories told L. F. Crawford, state | dugg ins and deaths in the city | "To Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Haibuk.; historian and. curaior, by Mr. Car. | cords, were as follows: Steele, N. b ri Miss Carrignan suggested ” Births March 31 e sign his name to the draw- March 1 _To Mr. and Mrs. To Mr. and Mrs. William Dolan, isk, Bismarck, \ ings and in order to do this h carefully learned to write his signa- i: e ‘o Mr. and Mr: ture, his only accomplishment as a jp aie Schlaback, Driscol penman. He never learned to speak | To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Schlos- \ either English or French. sér, Mandan, a son. Deaths et “To Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Schafer, March 1 + Mandan, a son. herine“Helen Klein, 33 Bismarek.| | Temperatures and af To Mr. and Mrs. John O. Lynstad.| Elmer Norman Kaealek, 7 months, : Bismarck, a son. Bismarck. \t Road Cor | ' To Mr. and Mrs. Ingvold Christ} March 3 | nditions | Paulson, Taylor, N. D., a daughter. Hazel Iona Paulson, one day. Tay- | a at March 3 2 wis: lor, N. D. ay | (Mercury readings at 7 a, m.) ‘0 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Westrum, Mare i ni Raleigh, N. D. a daughter, Prank Weinhandle, 11, St, Anth- Puna eke lsat Aa vara fea 0 Mr. and Mrs. George Frickson,| ony, N. D. . . Bismarck, a daughter. March 5 Ui srader Sag ale: Ernest Gates, 6 months, Bismarck. animate “Clan, ABE) Neage Rae) dl. Bismarck, a son. N.D. aon ‘ To Mr. and Mrs, Oscar P. Brugg-| Ole G. Bagley, 74, Fort Clark, N. D.| F&P&e_-Clear, 19; roads good, man, Fort Yates, N. D., » daughter.| Katrina Lipp, 11, Center, N. D. Fo mp ge Hibbing—Clear, 2 March 6 March 6 To Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schill, Zap.| Arthur J. Buehfink, 19, Stanton,| Mandan—Clear, 21; eda Ne ‘a daughter. D. na—Clea 5; roads rough. {| ast ; Ban, ee Rochester—Clear, :32 1 fo Mr. and Mrs. Norbert J. Rit-] Alice Barbie, 8 Bismarck. gs dpteent h a th, Stanton, N; o.8 daughter. . March s ty — z ea o é rel Edwin Johnson, 26, Mandan. . To Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Nev- March 17 ' RPO Dauer, Bismarck, a son. Elnora Leone Samuelson, 3, Hazen, ‘CORPORA LTONS || To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Loran,| N. D. :dDitkinson, N. D., a son. March 18 t- hi March 10 Katherine Brady, 74, Hazen, N. D.| oftersbure Supply ‘Company, Pet ‘o Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Edwards,| Joseph Bullock, 45, Moffit, N. D. ag, Henry E. Engesather. ;, Bibmarck, o Saihise. kee: Maseh 1p 5, Harvey. | go¥tliow Ca¥ company of Bismarck, se MacWilken, | W, D. ig oo i: Bae: Roy Hanson, Martin Manson, | , @ boy and s| Maria Pfenning, 60, Beulah, N. D. HS. Aevon, debe Every March 20 or) Trovatten and Bogart, incorporated, Joe) Werre, 40. Tuitis, M.D. Alexander, N. D., to deal in automo- Lealie Merritt Wall. 9, Bismarck. | sites, supplies and accessories, $20, 81 000; Oscar R. Trovatten, H. P: Bogart, B se. N. D,| Bella Trovatten and Hazel E. Bogart. Sige Griggs county Ab: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SERUM IS BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMINNG Surgeon General, United States Pu Health, Service The Pasteur treatment wi from developing if given early enough, but it will not cure isease has begun, It is pr i ting a rabbit with | ear Madame Seria, T know it is perfe of you to deck me out an to night, I did not suspect anything. Of course I knew that Lola Law- rence did not come to the shop any 11 comfortable dies in about! culated rabbit 16 days and another rabbit is inocu- tated from the first one. ‘abbits have been inoculated a: is obtained which will kill in] | from five to six days. The spinat cord of a rabbit killed by fixed virus is carefuly dried for At the end of. this time is spinal cord is cut up into little its, ground up in salt solution, émall portion is injected unde: skin of the person bitten. have nothing of my own that is good enough if that black velvet is suit- ay J wear that charming | little ‘silvet tissue froe i Tremaine and Miss had’ broken with I knew that Mr. liked Madame Seria very much, con- sequently there seemed nothing dut of place when he invited us to din- r coat trimmed ipes around the bottom?” me Seria called a in a few minutes I As soon as Mr. Tremaine left the shop, Madame asked me if I had pretty evening ‘frock. » pretty or oth ju want to lend it e? Perhaps it will be a ement,” I added. 1 did not. know that that costume We went into the where the stock Mareh 19 | Bill to Sitting Bull, famous chief of ; / To Mr. and Mrs. James Howard| the Hunckapapa band of the Sioux Culligan, Bismarck, a son, Indians, has been presented to the Lawrence and Mr. been with he! has been dried fo iven of cords which have been dried for six, fi three and even two tions lasting for from to three injections bein, gorgeous black h very decollete. once for Lula Tremaine had left an order with Ma- \ Iwas to have any evening costume in the establishment that NEA Service, Inc.) “I| TOMORROW: In Fool's Paradise. ne -TWINS, THE FORTUNE TELLER I HICKORY TREE Master Rubadub peeped into all his | cans and shook all his bottles. Then he looked into the soap box, | and shook his head. “It's a good er feel-| might choose. = (Copyright, 19 whether or not the treatment it was all right, for she tively free from danger. the danger from rabies is greater that the may be ignored. If all dogs could be prevented from biting for a period of s discase would disappear. humanely de 8 Dog owners should be made jlegally responsible for injuries in- | Hage by age Cap! All dogs hontd “How about the! be properly and humanely muzzled . jand kept muzzled wherever rabies Joofty says to go to the| from the treatm “Then hell know all te’ iy went the March Hare lippity Nancy and Nick and the Hare ar: ed at the hickory tree together ? But there was no answe: They began to look about then, e other side of the hickory | tree was a big hole. away from it in the opposite direction | €a8e. were footprints. “Reddy Fox!” gasped the March | Solution was the fortune teller Problem of the mad dog. Finally, an attempt is being made! dogs. against this dis- roves to be successful it may prove. the to the somewhat vexing thing that near! “All the cleaning | ed. Didn't Marty | Mink and Charley Otte when they were fi “I should say so,’ ick as new broom: At that he looked in his big book again where all the names were. : a land he fooled us.” They never got him jan’t spring-clean yet. (To Be Continued) . 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) | Phone 3 Vapo. Carpet Cleaners. Bis- phone 398. Mandan aid the March hasn’t been done yet. “Oh let's ski “He's too meaq.’ him,” said Nancy. Fairy Queen would find it out | ind she gave strict orders to sc everybody, regardless of disp or anything else.’ “He'll be harder to catch than a said the March Hare. , But if wepmust, we must. So away went the three of them again down the little path to the} little bush, and meadow to the woods where Reddy don’t know what house Redd: rented this” year,” the Marel saying, when from the trunk of a large—a very'| large hickory three beside them came ghier. Mankato--Clear,_ 40: roa ‘Fortunes told! Fortunes told! Who. To Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson,| Fiore M. Irvine, 69, Stewartsdale,| gogiant OTK “Cleat 26; roads | wants his fortune told? you?” said the March Hare stroking ‘and trying to look the didn’t cate any more about ‘tune told than he did about Christmas’ plum pudding. am the fortuni in the hickory. tree, |*Come no nearer. THERE ARG THIS HOUSE. © CITYCEe’ EXP ENSS i aad HATS A JOKES Ul ¢ Stay where yo I shall tell your fortune said Nick~ “I'd like “That's good,” my fortune told said honest Nan I might ‘listen to one my id the March Hare, "if it’s a good fortune.” “T tell nothing but good fortunes,” “Each of you make. I can tell you if it will come | DON'T BITS ume SITS THE Jon Book (11 Oe ‘Am { going to get a new bicycle | on my birthday? “Wait until I Oofty Goofty | the dutton-hail | y that time he will | Cooperstown, $30,000; Nela P. Nelson, rstown, 5 Nel ee son, month Biman vePOr! "| Edwin H. Nelson and Palmer G. Nel: 23. so! r Harmon, ‘N. D.| Big Do: Oil 6 ny, Van Hook, fern Rares Bal oe Mouttrail county, 000; 3. C. Zel: Joseph Lacher, 17, Venturia, N, ty; F. "at V“Am'T going to have So off went Nick toward. the but- I going to get, a new ddll ato: y cy. \ ntil I ask Oofty Goofty,’ voice. “Oofty Goofty says! te the fence and ask-—he’ll! carrot pie on FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1926 Youth, beauty and charm—these ‘are ethe possessions. of Barbara Brown—plus one dime. She reck- | lessly yoes to a New Year's party gwen by the mysterious Nan Adoms. ‘There she attracts J. B. Hurdiman, owher of the house, enormouasly wealthy and u rare conporsseur of youth In the morning Barbara awakens | to find Nan Adams gune in a hug, nd the servants instructed to con- sider Barbara their mistress. She | revels in the new lweury for a while undisturbed -- and then, frightened, calls on Hardiman to have'a showdown, He takes her to a@ cabaret where she has too much to drink, thence home where he de- clares his passion fur her---but she repulses him. Now yo on with the story. Muddy passions, gathered through the weeks, loosed them- selves in a torrent of jumbled phrases as be tumbled to his knees | aud threw bis arms about her. She | Was rigid-in his embrace, faint. | Her fiugers soaght the edge of the | mantel for support. She heard his heavy voice saying childish thin, “I love you! 1 want you! I've got you!” Her own, cracked with panic: “Please, J. B., please! I—I've had too much to drink. Not now, i J. B. Wait till my head's cleared— { th I’m myself.” He was so. grotesqve, there on his pudgy knees. He dragged him- self erect. His hands pawed her hungrily. “Please, J. B., please!” He pajted her shoulder. “There, little girl, don't cry.” She closed her eyes und he went. Aeons later she heard slamming of | faraway doors. The last crash echoed in her head. It shared space therein with a thought which hammere1 against her ear-drums, as if her fear were Apel iaeeer and her skull the) Hl. “He'll come back!” In. those seconds, clutching with all ten fingers the ledge of the man. telpiece, she estimated at its full ; the cust of surrender. But silence continued, spread like a balm over crawling nerves. “Nut now, J. B., wait. tik my head's cleured—till I'm myself.” She had stolen a victory in crisis. ‘The warmth of her reviving hope was the spoils. Texts a Outside the half-opened door of her bath Hannah waited. She was obliged. to bend from her sentinel pose as two shoes came hurtling through and skyrocketed to the other end of the room. “Hussy!” The word snapped from between tightly compressed lips. Bible texts imaged them- selves in the housekeeper’s mind. This fiery, uptamable, trace-kicking girl had brought nothing but worry aud. woe to her since her spectacu- Jar, iy ii - = “Am my sister's ee per’ thought Hani her grim re- 1 certainly am.” Barbara's torn gown figw through the aperture. Hannah snatched it from.midair. She sur- veyed it with a shocked wrinkling of brow, It was ripped, dirty, on one portion of the shimmering green, where Barbara had rubbed her blood-stained knuckles, was 3 spot of brown. Hannah was sol- emnly convinced that the stain be- tokened murder, “That girl would do anything,” she muttered. “She’s positively criminal!” Just ‘now the girl was doing nothing criminal. If, indeed, clean- lness ig next to godliness, Barbara, splashing like a spaniel in the room -beyond the door, was rapidly pproaching the perfection of a int. It was good to lie in warm water, to relax, to push fingers through sayy el But ‘Hannah, attendant in ber time to a ‘representative assort- mest of the scrubbed but sinful rich, was not convinced then or r that soap and salvation had ything in common. Triumphastly, along a path strewn with biblica) wreckage. Hannah bad come to a destination of self-justification. She bad. ugly orders to carry ont. In the morn- jug, when she bad.reported to Har- diman, J. B. had instructed her to take whatever steps she thought necessary to prevent Barbara from leaving the bouse. “There was only-one’ way to do this. With an‘ord! girl a warn: fog, mild surveillance, would have been adequate, But this was no ordinary’ girl. Stone walls ‘do not & prison make. But there are other conclusion that the most “effective way of carrylog out Hardimau's in- structions was to dispose in some manner of Barbara's clothing. The decision had brought with tt a twinge of conscience. Now, behold, she was absolved in advance, She had found justification. A good Bible education Is a grand thing. Strengthened by went about her business with zeal, and just a bit of necessary stealth. She took the wardrobe~ closet first, working prodigiously and silently, Clothes came from their perches by armfuls. She dumped them on the bed. Finally the closet was bare. On the top of a rectangle of captured rainbow on the counter- pane lay a dosen pairs of boots. She rolled the whole mass to gether In the counterpane, swung the bundle over one rectangular shoulder and made quietly for the door. When she returned a few mo- ments later, there was a sound in Barbara's room. She steeled her. self, What would the girl do when the trick was discovered? Burn down the house, likely. Sounds of laughter came from Barbara's room. Laughter. Han- nah couldn't believe her ears. The girl was insane. The laughter of, the lunatic presently subsided, and her voice came through the door. “Hannah!" The housekeeper stiffened, bat said nothing, “Hannah,” called Barbara. “What have you done with all my things?* “They're not your things,” came wer. “They're Mr. Hardi- They were only loaned ta ye “Hannah! Give me back th@ clothes I wore when I came here. Keep the others, but give me those!” “I can't do it. TI promised Mr. Hardiman that I'd keep you here, and I'm going to do it.” "If you don’t bring me my Hannah, I'll stick hot hat- , pins into you.” “Even it I could I wouldn’t——* Il catch you and tle you im your bed and pull your toe-nails out!” 've burned them!” “Ont” The silence that followed waa ominous. In her room Barbara, naked shivered and tiptoed to the bed. She took a sheet and wound herself in it. She opened the door and confronted Hannah, who faced ther sternly, although prepared to take flight in an instant if need be. “No use arguing,” sald Hannah. “You don't get your clothes back autil Mr. Hardiman arrives, ang hat won't be till morning.” Barbara, “to heat a hatpin right vow. Tin too tired to argue, even if | wanted to. I'm going to bed juow, Hannah, And when | wake up—beware!” Rising, she went to the door, and cut off a retort from Hannah by slamming it, with all the strength she had left, in the housekeeper's face. She was cold. There was'a kick or two left in the dying Winter. She wound herself in the bedding, and gradually her body warmed. She had no right to sleep. She was a woman of many problems, and acquainted with grief. There was a telephone down stairs, Wrapped tn her bedsheet, she could creep downstairs. She could get to that phone, and call up some / friend for help. What friend? Her mother was dead. She had no brothers, no si Her father was in Saygoulii wherever that was, and: were he across the street she woulda’t appeal to him. Whom coylé she call? ~ Not a soul, Not a soul in the world. Exeommunication She judged the hour of her awakening to be midnight. She did not switch on the lights. For an hour, wrapped in the over- sheet, she sat up in bed, To the thousand hypotheses ‘she com She worked tn the dark on the rumpled linen whith she disentem gled from arms and legs. worked and whistled a little lines of a thing called a job, “There are worse things thew bles lonely,” she comforted hen self. She found the exact center of Ahe sheet and tackled it with sharp teeth. When she could work a finger through the hole tipped. Then she pulled the shest over her head and forced her head through the opening. She was i answer to her question. There “ was only one Way to proceed. The bend Of the stairs was fe miliat, She Knew the back of the house —-Hannah's domain — wos be the best place to begin her ee SEP Bae only a vague nowledge of the geography va Yartot ny house. : ca @ white ghost tiptoed thro a: Corridot. . Her heart clamored when, fad ing berself in a room, she heard raucous snoring. She managed te * get out without waking the sleepeg —probably the cook. _ ‘The house, which tad been sa silent; was now full of tiny, sims - ter noises. planks She could. hear the loud ticking a clock, : pl aan ’ _ HELP THEM TODAY — i M, Platte, js a rT troubl correcting iri kidney” quan clearing sec’ ae \Foley Pills have m; Union, Pearjs. iI tie witchnb: es of Foley Pills’ removed ait aieeor Pek toms of. my kidney troubd! mon yn. ‘Month bene damp weather put a heavy. 4 lelp them todi ‘ee! amply our di it for ¥ rugeis! 4 devices. Hannah had come to the.‘ | >, « ith, Hannah *‘!* -—— = > ~ m too tired and sleepy,” said ‘