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= THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1982 : The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Bstablished 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Raies Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) .......++ oe see 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) eee 5.00 Daily by mail outsid forth Dakota eccccesscossees 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years sesecccsscccsssene 250 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............- 15C Weekly by mail in Canada, per VEAL ....eeeeeee +e 2, 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 the local news of | spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. <9fficial City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives i SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER Cncorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Big Show | Many residents of Bismarck and vicinity are taking daily advantage of the biggest free show ever staged in this part of the state. It is all in the day's work for the steel men who are shoving skyward the skeleton of the new capitol build- ing, but the people of North Dakota are no different from those of Chi- the interest they show in a major building project. | The marvels of dexterity are to be seen on every hand. The mason handling his trowel, the garage mechanic whose uncanny prescience detects what is wrong with your car, the man driving spikes on the rail- road, the carpenter whose eye and hand do marvels of building, all are worth watching. But no other type of workman, | with the possible exception of the steeple-jack, gives quite the thrill for the average onlooker as those modern argonauts, the steel work- | ers, who are erecting the framework j for the capitol tower. As nimble as crickets and as sure- | Who likes you even if he hasn't any-! footed as mountain goats, they go about their work in blithe uncon- cern of the gaping folks below. Every phase of the capitol con- | struction is interesting but none is} more spectacular than that phase | which sees the steel structure mount | toward the sky. It is a big show for western North Dakota and it is free. Boosting Business “Do you drink your share of cof- fee?” The average American will find that question or one similar to it staring him in the face in the near future from the pages of newspapers and magazines, for the coffee grow- ers of Brazil and the coffee packers |giddiest and gaudiest age of Ameri- | Ness.” of the United States have announced @ joint agreement to spend $1,000,000 in making the American people more coffee conscious. The effort will mark one of the most practical instances of interna- tional cooperation in recent records. ‘The coffee planters of Brazil would like to widen the market for their product. Most of their coffee is mar- keted in this nation and the Ameri- ean coffee-packers would like more business. What more practical ar- rangement, then, than for them to join hands in what will be a mutually profitable enterprise. More cases of this kind would do much to get the wheels of industry moving again. There are no better hands across the sea or across the boundaries of countries than those exchanging goods. They Miss the Nub | Chairmen and other representa- | tives of the 13 regional shippers’ ad- visory boards in the nation will gather at Chicago Nov. 16 and 17 to review the troubles of the railroad industry as they relate to the ship- Per and the public. It is possible that much good will come from this meeting, since the object is to see how the functions of the advisory boards can be expanded to better! meet existing conditions. Every North Dakotan can remem- ber when grain was piled on the ground in golden heaps, not because All that has changed and the ship- pers’ advisory boards have been large- dy responsible. They have advised ‘the railroads of the probable traffic ed the tax bill of all our govern- i ; terested in the railroads, or any other cago and New York with regard to/nusiness enterprise, he should mourn. | house wall. jland cn the verge of the black pit of | unborn, | Such matters have been handled by the Interstate Commerce commission. In the adjustment of equipment to traffic the interposition of rate argu- ments could only have caused trouble. But the railroad question today is one of stimulating traffic and getting {it back on the rails. The advisory iboards may be valuable in solving {that problem. If the railreads and ‘the shippers, as represented by the advisory boards, can reach a work- able program designed to further that end they will have done the na- tion a distinct service. road men are agreed that rates must j eventually come down as the cost of most other services has come down. Unless they are prepared to discuss rates and their effect on business the advisory board leaders will miss the nub of the railroad question as it | exists today. The Agricultural A ory Council, which is concentrating on the job of advising farmers to vote for Hoover, offers this gem: “His (Hoover's) opponent the selected figurehead of a group of office and fortune seek- ing Democrats who controlled the destinies of this country during the great war and who now seek to again capture the reins of government by every political device known to unscrupulous politicians.” At least a part of this is true, for the Democrats are surely seeking the{ jobs, but the rest of the broadside carries its own answer. The paragraph represents a type of} political bunkum which probably} does the sponsors more harm than good. Samuel O. Dunn, editor of Rail- way Age, laments the fact that the} income of the railroads, which equal-| ments in 1913, now is only one-fifth of those expenditures. As one in- In 1913 the railroad income and the total tax expenditure balanced| at about $3,000,000,000. In 1932 the| railroad income will be back to that figure while the total tax expendi- ture will be about $15,000,000,000. Now that Pittsburgh has beaten Notre Dame, giving the football ex- perts a wallop on the chin, the po- litical forecasters are getting ready to put their heads on the block. When the millennium arrives, every man will be a reformer and will work only in his own home. It's pretty hard to dislike a man thing else in his favor. Even rail-| is ; jodic and ee { | —But Is It Loaded? jj TREATY QUO74. DISARM, OR WELL BUD UP 70 LONDON jj | MIGRAINE ASSOCIATED WITH RHINITIS Migraine or megrim is a “neurosis” —that is, a disorder of the nervous | system for which there is no known pathology or discoverable organic cause. Epilepsy is also such a “neu- rosis.” Migraine has been described ; as the “sensory equivalent of the mo- tor neurosis epilepsy.” Offspring of | an alcoholic, feeble-minded, epileptic | or insane parent are as likely to be migrainous as they are to be epileptic. The characteristic which distin- guishes migraine from ordinary head- aches is that the seizures are peri- h attack is ushered in by an aura or warning sensation (as in epilepsy). This warning may be a Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the || trend of thought by other editors. |! They are published without regard || to whether they agree or disagree |} with The Tribune's policies. “Mene, Mene, Tekel Upharsin” (Rockford, Ill, Journal) | The handwriting is on every court- | It is so plain it doesn’t | take a Daniel to interpret what it ; means. The politicians have seen it. | Like Belshazzar, king of the ancient Chaldeans, “their thoughts trouble them so that the joints of their loins are loosed and their knees smite one against another.” | Not only is a warning written on! the wall but the last chapter of the | can extravagance is being transcrib- ed across the nation in bold-face type. For a generation or more dizzy of- ficeholders, intoxicated by the glitter of easy money, have indulged in a wild orgy of spending money that has finally landed this prosperous bankruptcy. If the truth were ad- mitted, local governments are bank-| rupt already, living on money pilfer-| ed from the pockets of a nation yet It was sweet while it lasted. ‘The| flowing stream of golden millions was. a temptation few could resist. Fig- ures indicating that 10 per cent of the | Population were on some kind of | public pay roll told only haif the{ story. The other half was written in magnificent checks and vouchers that quietly slipped to a silent host who had their fingers in the govern- ment but whose names rarely appear- ed—who sold the supplies and ma- { chinery and equipment, and obtained | lucrative franchises and contracts and concessions, realizing fabulous! sums of money. | People had come to look upon po-} litical money making as part of a fascinating national sport. They ex-| pected it. They wrote jokes about it. | They condoned it. A scandal at a/ high point in government was winked | at and laughed off. One who venturea | to protest or object was at once deluged beneath a flood of clamorous shouts that he was just another “po- litician” trying to make himself heard. People paid small heed to one who cried out against the squan- dering that was soon to prove the onc} cancerous growth upon an otherwise healthy form of government. There was only one end that could possibly come of it. The back of the nation cracked beneath a load of confiscatory taxes. The people could not pay. And when they could not Pay, only then did they begin to take account of what was going on. zig-gaz flashing of light at one side of the field of vision (fortification spectra) or just a vertigo or dizziness, or some strange sensation that warns the victim to prepare for the coming of the headache. The headache is always one-sided and sootier or later it brings nausea and perhaps vomit- ing—hence the common name “sick headache?” But it is a common mis- take to ascribe the headache to the stomach disturbance; the truth is that the stomach is upset by the great pain—and severe pain that lasts for hours is quite likely to produce nausea and vomiting. Another common error is to infer from the fact that bile is present in the material vomited, that the trouble is due to “biliousness,” whatever that may be, and on this frail theory to ply the suffered with medicines which purport to correct the “bilious- Now the truth is that re- peated retching and vomiting is bound to bring up bile in any case, provided the liver and bile appara- tus be normal, for this is the natural consequence of reversed peristalsis. Besides, there is no such thing as “biliousness” anyway. A correspondent says she has been greatly benefited by taking calcium lactate tablets— ... for a nasal cold which al- ways came in April and lasted throughout the summer, yielding not at all to treatment by many doctors, and in return I should like to offer to your many read- ers a remedy for the relief of sick headache accompanied by nau- sea and obstinate vomiting, from which I have always suffered pe- riodically. We discovered the remedy ourselves. Keep a thin cloth wet with rubbing alcohol or whiskey on the pit of the stomach. Do not let it get dry. Lay a heavy wash cloth wrung out of ice water on the eyes and forehead, turning it as it gets warm. After you are sure the stomach irritation is quieted take a quarter of a cup of black coffee. This treatment relieves attacks in a few hours that formerly prostrated me all PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. if you know what I mean; if you don't it doesn’t matter. In any case it does no harm to try it. Ten grains three times a day after food is a fair dose, and that should be continued daily for eight or 10 weeks for a fair trial. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Refrigerator Economics Do fresh cooked vegetables lose any of their food value if kept for two or three days in the covered dish in a refrigerator which always maintains the same degree of coldness. (Mrs. A.B. K.) Answer—Not in calories or fuel value, but they lose some of their vitamin value on standing. Bursitis Some time ago I remember you had an article about bursitis in the shoulder. My sister is now suffering with this and it is wearing her down terribly... (Mrs, T. A. E.) Answer—I suggest a series of daily diathermy treatments for two weeks. If this does not bring relief, surgical removal of the inflamed bursa. Baby Stands on Her Own Baby eight months old stands in her crib, Will this make her more likely to become bow-legged? She weighs 17 pounds. (rMs. L. J.) Answer—No. A baby’s spontane- ous attempts to sit, stand and walk are o. k. and rather tend to prevent bowing of the legs or other rickety conditions. The objectionable thing is encouraging or aiding the baby to attempt these things before he or she is ready. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) or more, it is said. Half of our foreign population has resided in the United States 20 years out a complaint in his vocabulary. Yet when Lawson went west he was one of the young revolutionist group, bent on upsetting the dramatic stan- dards. Some months later I saw him The chat- “Processional” was still table talk. But John was leading two sleek wolf- hounds by that time. xe * NEW YORK FOR STONG Phil Stong, whose “State Fair” will be the Fox lot's big film of the year after having been a best seller, prefers to do his scrivening in New York . Even while he was-making his first golden pile “out there,” Phil had wired back to Manhattan for a renewal of his lease. So far as he is concerned, you can have Hollywood and like it. Incidentally Phil's first expenditure with Hollywood coin was to take a family ranchero back in his native] Towa out of hock; for like so many of the mid-west farms bank mort- gages had haben “ lean years. * REBELLION PAYS The two most violent protestors against Hollywood have been Ben Hecht and Gene Fowler, both play- wrights, authors and _ scenarists. Hecht, although he has collected fortunes from the film moguls, has chosen to thumb his nose at them immediately the check was in his pocket. Not long ago he wrote some verses, roundly kidding one of the big producers. Yet they still clamor for his books and plays, and he keeps on_raising the ante. Fowler, who recently collaborated with Hecht on a new play, “The Great Gabbo,” was equally direct in his attack on the film center. Still and all, the film rights to the un- produced play are now the object of much dickering. Which proves that Hollywood is not always for the “yes” TODAY . FROM HOLLYWOOD THEY COME New York, Nov. 7—The big town’s favorite “visiting firemen” are the array of Hollywood stars who invari- ably arrive at this season of year for vacation “rests.’ Just where, how and when they get their rests no one seems to know. But the Shearers, Tashmans, Joan Crawfords et al storm the Fifth Ave- nue shops and leave good movie coin behind. They appear at the night spots and become decorative cele- brities for the masters of ceremonies to introduce. They lend “tone” and “class” to first nights and cabarets. They grab liners for London, Paris and way points. They help the chat- ter columns and they are stormed by free lancers from the fan magazines. | They like shows and, even though jthese attractions may be flopping | about, Hollywood moguls buy them. dust the other night Norma Shearer dropped in on a piece, “I Loved You Wednesday.” An amusing, brittle fragment of smart dialogue, la Shearer took a fancy to it even as the critics were counting 10 weeks at the most. So Metro up and bought it. Things like that make nobody mad. se # HAPPY SHOPPE-KEEPERS The Fifth Avenue and Fifty-sev- enth street shoppes fairly gush at the approach of the visitors. Even with salary slices and all that, the queens of moviedom are fairly ex- travagant customers, No such sums are spilled about by people of the theater. Many take back three and four trunks packed with new shoes, gowns, coats and hats. Even if some \*cut” is allowed a certain personal- ity, there is prestige, advertising and good profit. John Howard Lawson, the play- wright, is one of the New York writ- ers to return from Hollywood with- day. A masseuse who has lately ar- rived here from Sweden telis me they give calcium lactate to chil- dren who have “running nose” in the old country. Calcium lactate treatment has brought much relief to many victims of hay fever and also to victims of asthma. It is likewise a good remedy in cases of hyperesthetic rhinitis— WHAT 1S THE HIGHEST PEAK IN NORTH AMERICA ? _ Today @ chastened America stands amidst the wreckage and disaster and ruin that are the fruits of her wan- ton prodgality—but with a newborn, resolute purpose that the great American profligacy must come to an end, lest it destroy the vitals of this great commonwealth. Wholesale slashing of costs and expenses today is the beginning of end—either the end of Americ: folly or the end of a system of rep- resentative government that was in- tended as @ safeguard against the caused by congestions at terminals on severni oc- But in all of their discussions the question of rates has been barred from discussion by these boards | Precise evil which has overtaken it, It must be one or the other. If we may judge from what we hear of the voice of the people of this incom- parable government, it will be the end of folly and not the end of a government that deserves to endure Biblical Quotation | ANeieeea PEACE ENVOYS MEET On Nov. 7, 1918, the German peace envoys crossed the front and were ters. The allied armies, however, continued their drives. The American troops entered Se- dan. French soldiers east of the Oise and north of the Aisne pushed for- ward 10 miles, capturing 100 villages that had been in Germany's posses- sion since the early months of the war. ——_———$$ $$ 5 f Barbs | ———> Frat, Einstein now says the earth is 10,000 million years old. You'd think the old thing would know bet- ter. x eX You can’t blame Mr. Insull for wanting to stay in Greece, with the Christmas shopping coming on, income taxes to be figured out after the first of the year, and all that. Statistics indicate the average per- son will have three colds between now and March. But if you have ‘only two, don’t be disappointed. . ee * A Kansas woman recalls when corn was 10 cents a bushel, cggs 5 cents @ dozen and butter 5 cents a ‘pound. Maybe times aren’t so tough after all. | xe * A device which shuffles and deals bridge hands has been ex- hibited. Now if somebody would Just think up some machine for Playing the hands! xe k Columbia university’s student pa- | Per advocates that football players; be paid. If that crusade is success- ful, some paper ought to come out in favor of paying the Chicago teach- ers. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service Inc.) The first thing to remember is that even a nut has a vote, They , | Mean well, and I am always perfect- ly polite—John F, Killeen, who guards the Democratic national com- mittee against cranks. * * * I won’t say anything about salar- ies. Let your conscience be your taken to Marshal Foch’s headquar- i guide.—Mrs. Lucille Zimmer, taxpay- er, asking New York City’s board of estimates to ried Piss My way of going is lovely —Eliza- beth M. Trivett, in note she wrote before leaping to death from the George Washington bridge over the Hudson river. TOUGH ON MILES Oklahoma City, Okla.—Despite his pleas, Dwight Miles was fined $19 and costs on each of three charges. “Your honor,” said Miles, “I had a pistol but I wasn’t drunk because I talked to the officers about the early frost.” The total penalty inflicted for the three charges—drunkenness, driving while drunk and carrying a pistol—was $60. Some of the larger kangaroos, which stand almost as high as a tall man, cover from 10 to 20 feet in a single bound. The sulphur-bottom whale has been known to reach 100 feet in length and weigh more than 150 tons. A whale’s skin varies from two inches to two feet in thickness. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: j | Give a girl enough rope and watch her skip out, SYNOPSIS Yor and beautiful Fanchon Meredith leaves San Francisco by airplane to escape arrest in connec- tion with a murder in which her sweetheart, Tony, is implicated. She had not known that he was a gun- man. Evelyn Howard, whom Fan- chon had met on a voyage from Hawaii, is aboard. She is enroute to New York to live with her wealthy aunt, Mrs, Allison Car- stairs, whom she has never seen. The plane crashes and all but Fan- chon are kil Grasping the op- portunity to start life anew, Fanchon goes to the Carstairs home as Eve- lyn. Mrs. Carstairs’ affection wins her heart. At Southampton, await- ing the arrival of her son, Colle, Mrs. Carstairs warns chon not to take him seriously. He arrives and accuses Fanchon of being there under false pretenses. Collin objects to “Evelyn.” Fanchon learns that Evelyn had indiscreet affairs with a naval officer and a native. CHAPTER XV Fanchon remembered certain words of Jennie Carstairs, words actually urging her to begin all over, making a clean sweep of the years which lay behind. Now she-knew what they had meant. Then, she had not known. “I am_ perfectly willing,” she ar- gued. “Circumstantial evidence is a hard thing to fight against. Youth —and what we have called folly— and rumors and appearances of evil do not make it any easier.” She looked him straight in the eyes. . . . They were always together to the entertainment of the colony and the discomfort of a great many marriageable maidens, HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle carol “I have done nothing of which I'am To donate. - 25 Barbed spear. ashamed,” she said, honestly, in the 5A striving. [CIOMPIRIOMMTISE] JERTSIE] 26 Heavenly body. person of Evelyn Howard and in 10 To assist, ILIEIAMEPIEISITRBAIVIEINA! 27 one who stirs the person of Fanchon Meredith as 14 Heritable lana{) [DIE] EIMMEPILIED|UIS| — up political { well. For Fanchon, too, was young right. INEIDRION THT IE AIRBEB IE] trouble. and Fanchon had loaned herself to 15 Action center. [JHMMAIRICMEICIRIAITIE| 28 Wealthy, folly and Fanchon had met-with the 36 Sheat FARENMIESEYL 29EIm. consequences of evil appearances a7 0s Wonk. A aS Annee and circumstantial evidence. .. « Hae . LL EIAISIT COU eee Collin Carstairs held out his hand. ee ae LINITIE! ALY a moat yen ote His dark ‘eyes smiled down into fe R R . ers. 19 Ascent Cem stn 33 Makes a mis “T believe you,” he said, slowly, 20 Valuable prop- (ALIA PIAL] ., tke. “whether it is because you are so}colony and to the discomfort of a erty. ONVIE IN| EIT el 34 To go to darned beautiful or not, [ don’t]great many marriageable maidens 22 Tennis fence. tVIE IN 3 excess, know; I do know that you are not] whose eyes and hearts were set upon 23 Smartly ETE! DIEIR) 35 Gambler. at all like your letters, Your letters the conquest of Collin. spruce. 37 Entrance. seemed—insincere. ‘ou do not. for did Fanchon lack for attend- 24 Carpet. A Haha Hail tace 39 Far away. Yes, [ believe you. Shall we call it|ance. She had more young men 26 Sun bipent © Woolly Suriace 4 Circle of thet —armistice?” about her doorstep than she knew 2T Work of skill. tr have of cloth. cee “Armed truce?” she laughed and | what to do with, She had everything ab owitraea. ae AS versity 6 To press. sphere. laid her slender, golden hand in his.Jin her favor. She was young, she a8 Unit of anerey. cee: 7 Large genus of 45 To soak flax Jennie Carstairs, coming softly] was beautiful, she was intelligent, What ain ee auiacerus 47'To bind. through the garden, saw them stand-| she was a good sport and she was ee Che talites So ane, donate ih Uled dp ing there and her face lighted. She| backed by the Carstairs millions and a ie, sete house. i ae 0 Faria ee came forward with a soft exclama-| the unassailable Carstairs social po- ace ? 62 To languish. 3 curv . tion of pleasure. sition, 38 Miasma, 63 Fury § Perched. 50 Exclamation, “Collin, my darling! and Evelyn!} “The first thing you know,” said 40 Frosted. 64 Lets it stand, 10 Hourt; 52 Collection of You've met then. I’m so glad!” | Collin to Fanchon one day on the 41 Large drinking 65 Goad to action, cup. PP an VERTICAL 44 Pronoun 1A eyma; 46 To put on. molding. 47 To try the flavor of any- thing. 2 Part of Roman month. 3 Mover's trucks, 23 Christmas 11 To send forth. 12 For fear that. 3 Animal seized by another in order to de- vour it, 21 Sward. facts. 53 Drinking cup. 55 Opposite of in, 56 Morsel. 57 Side bone. 58 God of the sky, 60 Southeast. 62 Postscript. “So am I—” said Collin. His arm went about his mother, he bent his tall, dark head to kiss her cheek. But is_hand still held Fanchon fast. ‘anchon had an inspiration. She said, not trying to free herself: “Aunt Jennie... I told Collin just now I wouldn't speak of—somethin; to you. But I'd rather. I have talke to hie about it; I have explained my reasohs for not sp ..-” she looked at him Briefly, : has explained them for me. I—I'd like you to know that all I have told him he believes, That there isn’t aking, or at least | gré “; “he links, “first .thing you know you'll be getting married and then where will we be?” “Just where you were before,” she laughed, “and well rid of me... according to your own early con- fession.” “I'd rather hoped you'd forgotten that,” he grumbled and promptly muffed his easy approach to the een, “Well, so I have! No, I won't get married, ever,” said Fanchon, and her eyes were eM dark arid sombre, “Neither will I, then,” he said, anything I should tell you, not real-| cheerfully, “I couldn’t bear to bring Aye Nothing that matters. Nothing} fourth into our happy threesome. that would hurt you.” We'll just go down into a ripe old “My dear,” said Jennie Carstairs. Together, hands’ fast, the three ent back toward the house. That was the beginning of Fan- chon’s happy summer, Collin, can- celling whatever other plans he pay have had, was at “Dunerosq’ ail season save for those occasions on which he went to town on bi He faut Fanchon to ride and to golf. She was SU ARDY able to swim and her prowess in the surf amazed him. ‘But the bit of ocean which sur- rounded Southampton was child’s lay to Fanchon after her years on Hawaiian beaches, riding the great breakers to shore. He improved her tennis game and-took her to dinners and dances. They were always to- gether, to the entertainment of the age ty pepe he laughed. But his eyes were shadowed, too, He had been aware, for some time, that he was becoming far too fon of his cousin. And he looked with horror, as do most people, upon marriage of persons of the same od fat Feinsines. at his mother was a_ littl troubled, he knew also. He had teen it in her eyes, heard it in a phrase or two which she had uttered in this hearing, But she trusted him and Evelyn, She loved them both. He thought, suddenly feeling old and worn, how strange that we should have disliked one another so much, on first sight! Was that not in it- sclf a warning of—love to come? Hate, they say, is very near love. ‘ “After,” he remarked aloud, “after you make your debut and I see you safely through it and shoo all the uneligibles off the doorstep, I’m thinking of going round the world again. You'll be with mother, so I won't have my usual compunction about leaving her.” He looked at Fanchon. He couldn't help it.” She paled, under the tan, under the healthy, lovely glow. He saw her eyes fall, her lips tighten. She turned to her waiting caddy and selected a club from her bag with the utmost unconcern, 8 “We'll miss you,” she said, lightly. ‘Aunt Jennie spoke of taking me aboard in the spring for a long visit. France and England and erhaps elsewhere. Maybe we could meet you somewhere and come on home together. “Thanks,” he said, gloomily. “Why, Collin, for what?" she asked, in some amazement. “For missing me—” He couldn't help it. If his life depended om silence he would have been forced to sacrifice his life, Fond of her! He knew now, as she walked beside him, troubled, ‘not answering his challenge, that he loved her. He perl terribly, “OF course, we'll miss you,” said, still trying to keep her ue light and casual, “more than we can ‘an here was no further speech b dea bee a Ae personal nature, 5 Ne th playee wo! bad gol, | Y POR P Going home Fanchon went direct- ly to her room and lay down on her bed while Emma got out her clothes for the dance she was going to with Collin that night. She lay very still and straight, having taken off her clothes and put on a thin silken kimona, It was very warm, the hi » re: of early September. They would Soon return to town. Collin would soon be leaving them. first she had heard of it. Copyright 1931 By This was the se aoe v