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SF baser lines than the one closing. Bitter invective has disgusted fair- minded men. May the years that intervene before another election {rolls around bring about a higher conception of what a campaign/| should be. Few will dispute the sug-} gestion at least that there is great! {room for improvement over the pres- lent style. i The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST \ NEWSPAPER (Established 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. Modern Wonders Some idea of the vast array of modern wonders which will greet visitors to the World's Fair at Chi- cago next June is contained in anj announcement by the General Elec- tric company, one of the nation’s great industrial organizations. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Datly by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- miick) .. secccccscccsces T20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...... . 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three One of these is the thryatron or- years ... . ++. 2.50) gan, an instrument about the size of MRE per sears. of North | ia piano but combining the range, Weekly by mail in Canada, per |volume and musical quality of both eee vesesesses 2.00] a pipe organ and a calliope. | Then there is the fever machine, {a device to increase the temperature of the human body at will in fights] lagainst various diseases, for there} lare times when it is necessary to} fight cold as well as fever. i How sound is communicated over | light beams aiso will be demonstrat- ed. The process is one in which seund is translated into light, trans- | mitted through space in that form (Official City, State and County [@"d then changed back to sound Newspaper) j again, Scores of other marvels will be of- fered for the amusement and amaze- Uinsarporniad) iment of the onlooker, for what good CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON /|'S & world’s fair unless it contains jthings to make us gape. The ex- var — ‘hibit of this one concern alone will} Natio Will Welcome Rest | oo. apout $500,000. | For months politics has over-| . shadowed everything. No fireside| The trick of it is this. A few 3} has been immune. Newspapers, ra- [Hence we will all regard as common- | dio, agusines and in tact every | Place many of the very newest things medjum of appeal to the public has/S#own at the fair. ‘The fact that been utilized for political propagan-| they are displayed there, where mil- da. In many respects it has been a| ons of people will come to look, will bitter campaign, devoid of great in-/¢reate a market for them spiration or high ideals. Class has been arraigned against class and de-| magogy has too often held the center|_ of the stage. All parties participat-| ing for sympathy because she has) ing have been more or less guilty in| Maded the five and ten eent movies this strenuous vote getting crusade. |t0 add to her income. Some musical & 3 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. is Foreign Representatives H SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER | Madame Shuman Heink Madame Shuman Heink is not ask- ‘Today millions of voters are going,“Titics have been pitying her be-} OLOGY | avoid that, quietly to the polls. There may be,|cause she joined a Pacific coast) Popular health education helps here and there, some friction, some|Chain of theaters under contract} people who know they are ignorant! QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS bitterness, some bickering, but gen-|t0 appear several times a day.) Of < atomy, teed SH haere | Eggshell as Food “i ig . one hygiene. It makes Fil ientin erally speakirig, elections in the Uni-|The great diva can be heard ; who are con-| Reading how some scientists are ted States, despite noisy campaigns, | for twenty-five cents before 2.30 p.; | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1932 She’ll Be Comin’ ‘Round the Mountain When She Comes! DEPRESSION 11 months of laxity and one month of strict economy.—Joseph V. McKee, mayor of New York City. * * * Bank bandits succeed because they are smarter than the ordinary hi- jacker and plug thief—Sheriff L. E. Alderman of Prowers county, Kansas. * ® The trouble with me, I’m so pas- sionately fond of ice cream sodas that I could put on five pounds a week if I didn’t watch myself— Marion Davies, film star, on visit to Cleveland. | throughout the year. You can’t have * ke If employers of labor throughout the nation will give the share-the- work movement their full support, increasing employment, creating work opportunities for idle people, great improvement will be noticeable within a very short time in the in- dustrial and economical situation — William Green, president American Federation of Labor. New York, Nov. 8&—John Golden will never attend a movie version of plays he has presented. Recently he declined an invitation to the premiere of “Rain,” in the talkie version. And I can’t say I blame him. Its own producer wouldn't know it now. .. Willie Howard, the comic, has used the same make-up cloth since the day he entered the theater, and Clifton Webb never takes 4 new make-up stick until the old one is down to its last stub. .. Fred Astaire is even as the statue of immobility at lobby gatherings on first nights. «I have yet to see him crack so much as a style... Lillian Harvey, 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, sclf- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. was a slave to physic; she had start- ed with one pill every night, and had increased to two, three and four pills every night, with enemas in between. She has been taking flaxseeds for several months now and never has to resort to physic any more. thank you. being brought over from Germany by Fox after her success in “Congress Dances,” will rate the two biggest the year. With one of them, if you please, at the Mayfair. Delightful as Fay Marbe’s Sunday teas happen to be, I always feel un- comfortable when the folk I am meeting turn out to Le the Prince ‘We all (M. G. M.) Answer—We invite every victim of and most elaborate movie parties of | — cess Obolensky or the Count and Countess Mazzaverie. And other titled folk of the social set. It’s one thing to interview such folk and an- other to figure which particular spoon to take in their presence. And I always get that feeling that Tl spill the tea on someone's dress. Yet they are eae} Lies oe * Altogether Manhattan anda rodeo get together better than save Manhattan and a circus. And if you want to meet your old west- ern friends, just hang around the “stage door” for a few hours. Texans, Wyomingites, Utahans, Montanans and such are always wistfully drawn. And do they get good old “Woop— ee—eee” noises out of their lungs? But this year, the pay-off was the arrival of a real western “chuck wagon.” It seems that the big he men from “out tha-ar’ couldn't stand the dillettente New York food and demanded their old ranchats FROHMAN’S SANCTUM Daniel Frohman’s historic offices in the Lyceum theater are reached by one of those sardine elevators met so frequently in nce... And stopping hetween floors at the most embarrassing moments—such _as| chef. when a strange is ine ind B b ’ other passenger. e walls of Froh- arbs man’s ancient office are lined with is autographed photos of everyone from presidents to doormen. . . Incidentally, he has the only re- ception room from which one can look down upon the stage and see what is going on. A panel in the door slides out, as in a mystery play, and one peers down upon the heads of actors. Frohman, when produc- ing, would study the performers dur- ing rebearsals and afterward with- out their being aware. Thus he was able to make valuable notes. .. x ee LEARNING FROM “OUT FRONT” Owen Davis, who holds something like the world’s play-writing record, has studied audiences since he first hit Broadway from college and credits his success to this observa- tion... The stage adaptation of “The Good Earth” is his latest work. | Friend husband has had to think up some new excuses during the last few years. Imagine him trying to tell the wife that he was going away on a business trip! ee # An old-fashioned person is one who can remember when they used to serve tea at afternoon teas. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Roger Wolfe Kahn, back at the baton after a considerable absence, finds American dance crowds most inspirational. He likes the exercise of “ork” directing, but still dreams of being a great aviator . .. Romany Marie, after 17 years in Greenwich Village, finds it harder to get the old “Village bohemian spirit” aroused. . .| * * * } WHOOPS FOR THE RODEO The annual treat of the small boy is invariably the Rodeo at Madison Square Garden. The sight of a 10-| gallon hat sends gamins scurrying) from tenement and Park Avenue.) Each rodeo is usually good for two} dozen runaways. The silk hat crowd | |is invariably the most loyal audience | |A few cow-hands, transplanted to the city, usually sit up in the bleach- | ers and make smart cracks. And the cowboys love to swagger A girl's outlook is not so bright | | when the boy friend keeps her Address Dr. William Brady, No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. the physic habit to have a seed. Or send a stamped envelope and a dime (not stamps) for booklet “The Con- in care of this newspaper. and Princess Lichtenstein, the Prin-| target for thousands of eyes. A LITTLE LESSON IN BACTERI- | cause people have not yet learned to ression on wiser tent with their intuition. | Puzzled over the way a hen produces | ‘A wiseacre suffered a puncture of| eggshell, I am prompted to ask! stipation Habit.” (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) TS THE. - WORLD WAR through the bright lights belt, the! waiting. SQUERADE” are quiet, orderly functions in which|™. Thereafter the fee rises but far the palm from a splinter of wood. whether the eating of eggshell would thousands sobered by a solemn sec-| below what one paid a few ycars ago ond thought try honestly to cast| before age put the inevitable tremolo] their ballots for the peace, health|in the marvelous throat of the great | and safety of our great republic, | and beloved singer. | Whatever the results, our form of; She frankly explains that she/ government will proceed along con-|Heeds the money and if her public) Stitutional lines to perfect what|€a" not seek her out in the high] remedies are necessary for the relief |Priced temples of classic music she | of the masses. People have come to {and give them the programs th expect too much of their govern-| like to hear. Evidently Madar ment and too little of themselves. In! er, personal effort and| Shuman Heink finds the new role : profitable and pleasant. ression will accomplish more to | few more human singers than she is re an economic ill than oratory,| political action and high sounding | any that respond more sympath- : i at "i etically to an enthusiastic audience. The fault lies not in our stars, as} The great voice has gone to some tke poet wrote, but in ourselves, So-|¢xtent, but there is still great power ciety has within itself many potent| 2d expression there. She puts soul work, and weapons to fight depression and to! nd expression into her | j bring about economic recovery. There | ¢vem though not “in voice” as of old has been for too long a woeful lack| She is so far superior to the average of policies and an absence of real in-| Simger met in such theaters as to be) spiting leadership, Whatever the re-| Still a great box office attraction. sults today, the fervent prayer is on| ——ae many lips that out of the results wi| After the politicians are elected to come a plan and leaders, either new, |e fat jobs, maybe the farmer wil: | or if not, old ones spurred by a new| take his piace with Roosevelt's for- | vision and chastened by deeper|sotten man. Well, he had a lot of | sense of obligation. | People worrying over him for at! Unfortunately, under the momen-! least 90 days, anyway. The farmer} tum of political machines, the best| i Never so popular after as before | election day. interests of the electorate are not al-! ways protected. Too often men whoj 52 Bia HAE PM | have only selfish interest to serve,|_ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford, in their} ; 1 |zeal for Hoover, and Gene Tunney | demagogues who defile all sense of} A | busy campaigning for Roosevelt, for- honor and decency, win. In too] 4) resister so lost their vo | many instances, voters | pay : penleiaces | are powerless | ) rates: | before the sweep of a relentless and oe fe asain any tole Sb gusanics | unprincipled bloc or group. That is} a serious defect of our primary | tem which has hit at the very bul- warks of safe government. May such results, wherever they occur, be tempered, challenged and exposed by ar awakened public opinion. An‘in- fermed citizenry is the greatest safe- guard of good government. When | the press or other forms of public in- | formation become debased to hide} and obscure the facts from the peo-/ ai oe Pian | Politicians have talked much in| Perera Of pals enlighten | this campaign about the sound dol- | ment, the press, the pulpit and other |!" Some of us would like to hear | media are alert to their responsibil- |‘ ‘8 again. ities. They accept the brunt of their | task cheerfully, often when it means slanders, bitter inuendo and menda- cious attacks from an enemy which | seeks to exploit a neople and befoul | the processes of government. We often pride ourselves that the baitle fev a free press is won. When! Milton took up the cudgels for just that thing, the contest started in earnest because the principle had a brilliant protagonist. The battle for free press has never ended, however. It goes ‘on continually. Criminals, shyster lawyers, crooked politicians and others are constantly challeng- ing the right and propriety of news- papers, the pulpit and other public forums to tell the truth. The public little knows or seldom appreciates what battles these media fight to keep the sources of information clean, honest and upright. But it is @ glorious battle to be engaged in. Most newspaper men glory in the contest and rise eager to defend a great constitutional right purchased in blood and bitter strife over the centuries. Out of this election may there come Contract bridge scoring has been | changed. Probably the game has | been running out of arguments late- ly and this latest revision is to ap- pease a bickering public. Oysters are getting so tight in their shells these days that narcotics are | br used to open them. Where will this economic unrest end? Tokyo has just absorbed 82 suburbs | in addition to Manchuria. | Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editor They are published without regar to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. | Women and the Future (New York World-Telegram) Would women fare better as com- Ppetitors of men in a more scientific economic system? Miss Harriette Houghton, of the American Women’s association, in- directly suggests this question in a A number of these characteristics of salary-earning women, as follows: —Understanding of the importance of good health; emotional balance; desire and capacity for hard work; appreciation of high standards of workmanship; ability to do objective thinking; ability to see one’s work in relation to that of others; belief in the integrity of one’s self and one’s work; generous attitude toward the ability and work of others; courage. A number of these characteristics seem undoubtedly to be stronger in women than men in the higher reaches of gainful employment. This seems to show that the present is not a hi dut; the | an ideal economic society for wom-! eer etme es <ity Dott ae en. Man, attacking geographical part of press and the candidate. Few | anq industrial frontiers, has glorified will find her public in the movies, ‘ t There are; He neglected to apply tincture of iodin a first aid disinfectant, and he failed to protect the wound, after extraction of the splinter, with a dressing to exclude further infection, uch as a covering of adhesive plas- ter, or a pad of sterile gauze and a banda: or a coating of flexible col- lodion. The puncture became infect- ed and festered or suppurated. Then! acre began to apply antisep-! ng one after another, while and became sorer and sorer. he curbstoned a physician. 4 astead of suggesting t call at the office or consult a surgeon or something, ad- vised large hot moist dressings over night. This sounded too homely and the wiseacre did not follow the ad- i iy clse came along and if he had tried germicidal soap had tried half a dozen other | ly potent germ destroyers} germ killing soap ... to] sad story short the hand required deep incision and fective antiseptic. Indeed, it is} ul whether you can apply aj more effective antiseptic dressing to! any kind of infected wound or sore| than many folds or crumpled yards | of gauze (cheese-cloth) kept moist NNIVERSARY c4) not make good the calcium deficiency | you doctors say our refined diet has. | Eggshell is almost pure calcium car- bonate. I have been drying eggshells thoroughly, powdering finely and sprinkling the powdered shell on my chops and in my chow. How about it, Doctor? (Gus). Answer—Eggshell, _oyster-shell, bone and chalk are all practically the same thing, calcium carbonate.| Probably the body can utilize this calcium if there is a shortage of cal-| si cium (lime) in the food. { DRIVES CONTINUE Nov. 8, 1918, the American On army drove German troops out of the last dominating position east of the Meuse. French troops continued their drive, capturing Mezieres, as the German envoys discussed pos- sible peace terms with allied rep- resentatives. Prince Maximilian of Baden re- ned as chancellor of Germany, but resignation was not accepted. The Syphilis | Bavarian republic was established as Eight years ago I had syphilis. revolutionary groups seized Hamburg, Physician gave me just one shot of Bremen, Bremerhaven, Cuxhaven 606, and also used some kind of rays! and Schwerin. to burn off lesions. After he said I arena was well he took a blood test and | pe far as I am aware I am all right.! But I'm worried. If I should marry would my children be likely to be defective in any way? (L, K.) Answer—The diagnosis is question- able if the cure was so quickly cf-| fected. Or the cure is questionable if the diagnosis was correct. If either parent has syphilis when the child is | pa onceived the child is likely to be yphilitic at birth. You should not | x oe contemplate marriage until a com-! The world as a whole during the petent and reputable physician has| next 25 years will see a wiser and certified that you are free from! better founded era of industrial pro- later he reported I was all right. So I haven't got a job, and I have only 70. How about it?—Robert Lake, aroled convict, asking to be read- mitted to Sing Sing prison. DISTRIBUTED BY KING SYNOPSIS 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 Carstairs, whom she has never seen. The plane crashes and all but Fanchon are killed. Grasping the opportunity to start life anew, Fanchon goes to the Carstairs home as Evelyn. Mrs. Carstairs’ affection wins her heart. At Southampton, awaiting the ar- rival of her son, Collin, Mrs. Car- stairs warns Fanchon not to take him seriously. He arrives and ac- cuses Fanchon of being there under false pretenses. Collin objects to “Evelyn.” Fanchon learns that Eve- lyn had indiscreet affairs with a naval officer and a native. Fanchon’s sincerity in explaining that “her” indiscretion was only folly over- comes Collin’s antagonism. A warm comradeship ensues and together they spend a happy summer, CHAPTER XVI From enmity and armed, truce she FAITH BALDWIN FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. or wet constantly with plain soap- | syphilis. | gress than we have enjoyed hitherto. suds. Have a Seed —Charles M. Schwab, steel magnate. Give me a vial of tincture of iodin,| I passed the information about * * a pound of boric acid, and a cake of|flaxseeds along to my mother. She| Budget making should continue ny good soap, and I'll need no other a very fine ndship. rendering the secretions or discharges less infective to other persons) it would be wise to make frequent, if! not habitual use of gargles, sprays or| mouthwashes. But it is not these germs that cause the tonsillitis, rhin- itis or sinusitis. The germs that are causing the trouble have invaded the tissues and you can’t reach them) there with any such antiseptic. But continue your antiseptic gar- base. 22 Upon. 23 Fence bar 24 Sweet potato. 25 Hurrah. 27 Chase. 28 The heart. 29 To split. 30 Ascended. 32 French coin. 43 Il-gotten riches. 44 Automobile. 45 Sun persoui- fied. 46 Grit. 47 Unnecessary do. 48 Mohammedan, WHO MADE THIS NUMBER FAMOUS IM THE SPQRT WORLD "~~ IN WHAT YEAR WAS THE PANAMA CANAL BRAG NX ’ Mesa (aa campaigns have been conducted on | 8o-deverism and chiselling, Rear = ly, | i | WHAT KIND OF A Mi FLOWER IS THIS P Bi \Wn PTO COCO TI LTT NTT TN 28 Demur steps, listening to VERTICAL 29 Ramie fiber. rd tl rounds, 1Fs-leader of | 31To gain. OF spmtege ne oe te ‘ British Labor 32 Perched, In the first place she was an in part 2 Liquid part of any fat. 3 Skin, 4 To make lace. 5 Like. Ocean swell. Prickly cover- ing of fruit. 36 To contain. 38 Males. Crook. poster. ard the barrier of blood mation of her love. ; Only by telling him who she wa: again, with kindness and charged with pe: the proud might open and swallo the symptoms. , would not hide behind a not knowing that he cared. er. There alwa: St growin pleasure and pride, “Evelyn could have any man to her son, enough for her,” he growled, u thinkingly. His mother smiled, looked up and caught the expressi hy P know what you're ‘thin! ing,” _he confessed, smiling wry! ‘She was not Evelyn How- ard, And had she been Evelyn How- would have stood between her and the consum- only by confessing to him that she jen with Jennie’s love to protect her. But now every step she took seemed |, at any moment She ais pertecty, foodera Ra r before; she knew aps She faced them. She pretense of She made it, for the rest of their stayfat Southampton as difficult as ssible for him to be alone with were others, She ery popular in the colony with the gitls her own age as well as with the men, .Mrs. Carstairs watched the evidences of this popularity with Southampton,” Jennie said one day “T suppose so. And no one’s good quizzically. He and Collin Carstairs had grown into She was grateful to him for taking her at her For the rest of their stay Collin devoted himself lightly and casually to one of the pretty girls he had known for some time. remedies for the successful treatmen* - nies EERE. word and for never, by word or sign, of any ordinary surface or internal oye referring again to the original clash Reteaneee Identities of their meeting and its cause. She Until some one finds the germicide and he had a mutual bond in their discourage or retart ie mi a = “ in oe aT ener Th te Ae ene HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Puzzle 14 Husk of fruit. at the same jokes, were responsive ney tse tases! Cam scontent ta) 1 Human being. 17 Dutch coin, to the same chords of beauty. pray or otherwise wash the| 6Last U.S. min- 18 Beret. They. were pectectly. mated. And | surface with a simple solution of a {ster to Can- 20 Horse's neck alle een. 10g ee a cee, teaspoonful of boric acid in the pint ada. hates, ee a ae te of water. This is sufficiently anti-| 13 Assumed Arwen Fer ee ee dente: cerildly, septic to render the discharges harm- name. Pa ebetar tie irlishly, as she,had with Tony. Not less to other persons. That is the] 14 Valiant man. Bi Corronlye ingly, not even romantically. altruistie purpose served by such] 150s, @) coating. erhaps fallen into love at ail. | medicine . Of course, it can have no 16 Penny IM) 24¥e. She had rather grown into love, influence on the activities of the 17 Hill of sand. 26 Titular head through friendship .. . all the long germs that have invaded the tissues. 18 Color. of British La- lazy, sunny summer through. And If anything were to be gained by] 49 Accomplished. bor party. it was a mature love which twisted combating germs in the mouth,| 99 Fungus, 27 Home for the her with agony upon her bed as she throat or nose (anything other than 21 Forming the sick. lay listening to Emma's soft foot- the sea outside of her open windows, to the laughter his turn ‘but after knowing her, no one could believe all that rot! A lot of dried-up old spinsters, 1 sup- pose, putting the wrong interpreta- tion_on everything.” “That’s what 1 thought . . . from the beginning,” his mother said, placidly, but now his tone caught b latedly at her heart and she said, q ly, the Pisa, gone: “Oh, cared too much for her to contem- plate it. But—Collin must go, for whom she cared far more. It was 4 hopeless tangle, a vicious circle, For the rest of their stay Collix devoted himself lightly and casually to one of the pretty girls he haa known for some time and who gave strong evidence of delight at his at- tentions. ne gle or spray by all means, Chances} 33 Luster. call to prayer. 6To repair. 40 Double: bass. Collin—dear “Sally,” said i i are some such precaution is neces- 34 For fear that. 49 To slip side- 7 Verb. 42 Weathercock, ae sat Evel Coulee a He knew then. Knew that she Fanthon, oe rants. caren, t sary for the protection of the public] 35 Laurel tree. way 8 Company. 43 Compensated, not prepared ‘to take and could not|/knew. He said, with half a groan:|be very devoted.” aes inst y our germ-laden cough, 36 Tints. 50 Tiunk of the 9 Wading bird. 44 Cvagulated face taking. “I know. l—what can I say or] “She's awfully pretty,” answered sneeze or conversational spray. You! 37°79 dibhle. human body, 10 Charitable part of milk. Fhe enormity of her offense came|do? I'm sorry, mother.” | Fanchon, hating Sally Masters witk may instinctively screen your cough] 38 (yr 51 Hatchet gifts, To knock. to her more and more clearly.|| For an instance Jennie Carstairs | all her soul, | ot (ex with hand or handkerchief, 29 Dry wind. shaped figure. 11 Tract inclosed 46 Snowshoe. If, she thought, wildly, Collin would regretted willy, that she had ever|* Jennie looked at her sharply, But ut your conversational spray is even 40 To exist. 52 Circle of per- in foreign ter- 47 Because. only go away as he had said he asked Evelyn Howard to come tojher face betrayed nothing. Per. @ greater menace to the unwary be- 41 Organ secret- sone around ritory. 49 Therefore. would do, and go away quickly, she ee et ha Ae loved the sin Bans it_was all on Collin’s side, ing bile place. 12To soak flax. __ {0 Toward, could, perhaps win back to peace ]and the in erat. Collis must sie |Bute-poor Coliat en ne eee But—poor Collin! They returned to town late in September. Collin immersed him- self in the business of his office, run for the most part as a rule by a very efficient partner. The partner came up to the apartment for dinner and promptly ranged himself with an in- creasing line of suitors for “Miss Howard.” Collin grumbled in his heart and was helpless. The apart. ment was lovely in those first days of fall. The move had been made without any upsetting or trouble, all of Mrs, Carstairs household prob- . | lems were not prdblems at all; things Don't worry, mother, I'll see it|ran as if all were a well oiled ma through. Never tell her. She'll|chine. Fanchon went to the shops, never guess.. And—I'll go away| with nie to advise and instruct after you are settled in town.” She bought clothes, caring very Jennie said nothing although her|little, now that Coitin. wold ve, heart sank to lose him again. Sheflonger be here to sce. Jennie gave had always suffered deeply, if silent- | her a little trotteur coat of soft, dark. ly, when he went from her on one of | Russ bh her, too, an er. his vagabond trips. This time she|mine evening wrap. “You couldn't” would have Evelyn, she reminded} she explained “do it on your allow- herself. The daughter she had al-|ance. And these things you mus» ways wanted. But if she hadn't had | have.” Evelyn. she would have been able to keep Caliin beside her. She couldn't send Evelyn away, moreover, she ways'come first. That her own innocent act, of generosity and duty, of atonement, she admitted, had been the cause of unhappiness to him, was very bitter to her. But there was nothing she could do. She said, gently, sorrowfully. “Evelyn is my sister's child. Your ‘cousin. “I know.” He rose from his chair in her small sitting room and paced, about the floor, restless as one of the wild graceful creatures he had killed on his hunting trips, “1 know. Don’t think I haven't thought of i Ww in Copyright 195: By Faith Baldwin Distributed by in sing Features Syndicate, ‘Ine. woe