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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1982 —<—= = suppose that name will become ‘fi The Bismarck Tribune|™* ‘© promote confidence in both ; musician! In the midst of his mu- ‘An Independent Newspaper _| themselves and their associates. | Another ‘Holding’ Concer n Ready to Do Business sical ‘studies, Bonelli’s health gave mous. Pas \ THE STATE'S OLDEST These and others have been cast in a way. The strain of working his way * t leader who offers ‘‘ NEWSPAPER, leading roles of the new political and studying both engineering and The Boy Scout le - the practice of whistling as a cure for the habit of pipe-smoking should be asked also to prescribe a cure for to history if there} In case your son wants to be pres- Reg iy big wel eet ‘the days] ident, Be sure and have him develop of Christ—Captain George Nichols,|a strong right hand. columnist of the London News Chron-| (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) icle. . x * * MES. SHERLOCK We are told that the world has en-/ ro. angeles—Eugenia Garren proved music had. been too great, He hur- ried west, and got work in a zinc mine in Arizona, not far from the Grand Canyon. His health regained, Bonelli made the rounds of hotels in the southern California sector, looking for a job as singer-entertainer. An accidental meeting with Arthur Alexander, com- poser-teacher, changed his plans. Yet Bonelli had to go on making his way, Time passed and suddenly from Paris (Bstablished 1873) drama opened by the election. Friends of good government throughout the state will watch it with interest, but} seekers after political pelf will be! more active. Within the ranks of the ' vuling political party, as well as with- out, the battle will go on. It is a! continuing phenomena of our system | Jor government. Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as ‘econd class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Sudscription Rates Payable in Advance i Daily by cartier, per year........$7-20/ The state will behold during the | came a letter from his friend, Alex-|tirely outgrown religion. But we are Daily by mail per year (in Bis- next two years a battle between a ander. Bonelli must come to France|not told if it has grown too stnall|to be a better sleuth than her fhus- marck) - 7.20 ! at onée—and study! He went, on $83/or too large for religion—The Rev.|/band, Le Roy U. Garren, who wm & Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ..... A Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ++ 6,00 | Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 | Weekly by mail*in state, three | Mer ibeN sce aawuten 2.50 | y mail outside of North Dakota, per year ......0..005+ 150 was the lowest of any candidate, both in June and November, attempting to dominate and rule the men whose popularity and strength carried him through to victory. The question will man who still is on probation with; 5.00 | the leaders of his own group and who} borrowed from a friend who offered to back him for several months. When that was gone, Bonelli was stranded. Then a rich American, who had heard him sing, became his “angel.” Since then—one break after an- other! Opert ragements in Mon- ‘aco, in Rome, in ‘many, Paris and Cuba. And, more recently, several Dr. Charles R. Brown, dean emeritus of the Yale divinity school. * * * ‘The recent bonus march was one of the most cowardly assaults on gov- ernment I have ever heard of vet- erans taking part in—Maj.-Gen. George B. Duncan, U. 8. A., retired. * * * private detective. She caught hubby joy riding with another woman when he told her he was “working at the office.” Judge Schmidt gave Mrs. Garren a decree and custody of the two children, Allen 18, and Betty, 13, and $80 a month for their support. ~— OUTSIDERS BARRED Nepal, one of the provinces of In- ia, is closed to all outsiders, only the be whether or not he can successfully | Men blessed with the genius of dis- seasons with the Chicago Civic Opera covery are seldom able to apply their} 4;, Weekly by mail in Canada, per | ee Company, which “folded” with the year ... 0| bite the hands which have fed him | Member of Audit Bureau of political bread. To those who battle in the interests Circulation Member of The Associated Pre: 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 | spontancous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other | matter herein are also reserved. _|of the people and of clean government The Tribune extends congratulations and best wishes. Armistice Day Perhaps the fates decreed it so, but it is a fortunate thing for the nation that a national holiday breaks (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives 1 SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO ‘NEW YORK BOSTON | Meet, regardless of political or other| tert ae | A Two-Way Problem | Officials elected by the people of North Dakota Tuesday will come to office next January facing a dual problem. First is that of piloting the state through a difficult period. Second is the task of preserving against assaults from within the po- litical unity which brought them vic- tory. The seeds of discord were sown in Plenty during the current campaign and only the desire for victory held the Nonpartisan group together. That same desire will produce trouble in the future, for control of the Non- partisan League will be important to some in their struggle for political existence. Political heads are just as liable to fall in League caucuses and/{ conventions as at the hands of the electorate. Therein lies the difficulty. ing the election campaign. Participation in this celebration of ———ja glorious event will reassure us all! that we have the common ground of | patriotic Americanism on which to differences. The event which will be commem- orated in Bismarck tomorrow with | parade and other exercises 1s one | which still is fresh in the mind of every adult. All of us can recall the momentous day when the red gods of war were satiated after four long, distressful years and peace came to the world. So significant was it in history that nearly everyone can re- member where he was and what he did when the glad news became known. Times have changed materially since then. The men who bared their breasts to the thrusts of the enemy have since been labelled by some as self-seekers who now are attempting to capitalize upon their deeds 14) years ago. Whether or not this is so| is an argument in itself, but as Amer- ica watches them march by tomor- row, in thousands of cities, hamlets and villages, there will be a surge of | the tension which was built up dur-| | | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygienc, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, wiil 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. THE GREAT GALLSTONE CURE | haust ventilation to carry the harm- ful spray or vapor out of the room. Caesarian Section 1 HOAX In an earlier talk we explained how | (chyme) from the stomach into the! to? from the gall-bladder and the bile- the passages into the duodenum, where it the ejection of the digesting food/tion stick in? Should scar from Caesarian opera- What does it grow Would the operation prevent me duodenum brings about a spurt of bile | from having another baby? (Mrs. E.) Answer—The scar may adhere to uterus. A second such delivery is simpler than the first. Many mixes with the chyme and aids the | women have borne two or more chil- A great baritone, in his dressing room back stage, will be sending at least one telegram and several mes- sages penned in hours preceding the great musical event of the New York year. They will be thoughtful mes- sages, containing a note of gratitude. Several are almost certain to go to Syracuse, N. Y. For the famous singer has never forgotten the days when he was a newsboy in the streets of Syracuse and kind folk helped him on his way. * * # THE STORY OF BONELLI He is Richard Bonelli, and seldom has an artist reached the heights over a more circuitous, varied and uncer- tain trail. | Newsboy, engineer, inventor, hotel employe, bookkeeper, insurance inves- tigator—man of a hundred jobs; yes, even a sojourner in Arizona where, ‘collapse of Insull. And this year—the Metropolitan! * e % AND SO—“THANKS” So you can understand why a famed baritone sends messages and wires from his dressing room and hotel whenever an important moment in his career reminds him of all those long years and of the kind folk of the world who helped him on his way to the heights. 3 TODAY aNeiieeeay THE KAISER FLEES On.Nov. 10, 1918, the First and Sec- ond American armies advanced on a ‘71-mile front along the Moselle and the Meuse rivers. The kaiser and the crown prince fled to Holland as the king of Wurttemberg abdicated. Serbian armies advanced north of the Danube and Save rivers, and en- tered Serajevo, scene of the assassina- tion which precipitated the World War. No fewer than 100,000 people in London live in underground rooms. genius to issues of their own day— President Robert E. Vinson of West- ern Reserve University, Oleveland, Ohio. * * * We are becoming engulfed in a pow- erful undertow pulling us back into the dangerous waters of lowered standards as to hours, wages and working conditions in industry and business—Miss Mary Anderson, di- rector, women’s bureay, U. 8. Depart- ment of Labor. $+ f Barbs | o —_+ Two million gallons of medicinal whisky will be made next year. There doesn’t seem to be any depression among ailments for which whisky is supposed to be beneficial. * * * An election is a great thing to prove how many people can vote unintelligently. . * Speaking of forgotten men, how about the fellows who play left guard? * * * How would you like to be a baby these days and be kissed by a candidate? * * OK Notre Dame has a football player named William Shakespeare. Now we British envoy and his staff being per- mitted to live in the capital. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: It takes more than a dose of soda to cure a sour disposition. for a time, it seemed the white plague {might have another victim. ~ Who would have been willing to wager that ‘further digestion of fats particularly | dren by C: ‘i =| a ‘aesarian section. They sort | ia hl ote at tees promotes the onward propulsion | 6¢ get yo habit, ey, The prospect would be exceedingly | ican, for these, after all, are the men | o¢ Todin ' bright were it not for the personality the digesting food mass. We "| BA. Olsness has been a political id of the man who headed the state ticket and in whose hands the reins of government will be placed for the next two years, Always he has been a disturber. He has contributed nothing to the good repute which the Nonpartisans have built up for them- selves in recent years and which di- reetiy contributed to victory. He has proved egotistical, unstable, vindictive and abusive. Even during the campaign he has | Started the effort to slay his enemies within the League and to build up a political machine which, if he is its} master, will force every Nonpartisan} to bow to his will or suffer defeat. How successful that effort be will depend upon rightness and ability with which the| honest Nonpartisans defend them-/| selves and the people of the state | against this effort at domination| which already is being made. | Heading the list of officers other | will | New Rockford, a farmer and a man/ who has battled for the Nonpartisan | League in bad times as well as in! good. His personal and political in-| tegrity are unquestionable, He has | never compromised to save his own | political skin in the past and it is not} to be expected that he will do so in| be poorly clothed because there are! have the complete explanation of the the future. Important in the new administra-| suffer privation and hardship tion because of the positions they hold will be John Husby, as commis- | tion of these ills are too vast and too! the Simple Simon has gallstones in efficient. | sioner of agriculture and labor, and A. J. Gronna, as attorney general. Both will be members of the state in- dustrial commission, which is headed by the governor. They, as Well as he, | will be charged with responsibility for | the policies adopted. Young men with fine records ot service behind them, they will need | courage and ability to defend the state from unstable policies and themselves | from the political scrapheap. | Husby is one of the few men in| recent North Dakota history who has | sacrificed political position in a fight for principle. His election justifies | that action and returns to Bismarck ® man in whom the people have a} right to feel every confidence. Gronna will have opportunity to win in the political wars the plaudits; of the state similar to those conferred | upon him by the government for gal- Jantry in action during the World War. His military history shows that he is a fighter, although he has never bragged of the fact. He has battled for ‘the right as state's attorney in Williams county. Bearer of a dis- tinguished and honored name in North Dakota, his activities will be watched with interest. It seems easily possible that the silver star given him by the government for bravery will be duplicated by the people of North Dakota. ‘The list of other officers includes the names of men who have been tried by fire and have met the test un- _ flinchingly. Robert Byrne, ag secre- tary of state, has ‘proved his worth. ; tower of strength and has rendered _ distinguished service to the people. ‘These men have never been spectacu- | Jar but their ruggéd honesty has done |a new generation who saved the nation in its hour of | need and gave of themselves in a grave emergency. If what they are | is open to debate—and this we do not admit—what they were is a matter | of record. When they marched off to war some 15 years ago now, they were the flower of the nation’s manhood in the full flush of their youth and |vigor. Look at them tomorrow. |Their steps are not as light, their eyes are not as bright as they once were. The resiliency of youth is be- jing replaced for many by the stodgi-| these foods from the diet of a patient ness of middle age. They have be- come or are becoming the fathers of which, if trouble looms, will next be called upon to; the forth-| defend the nation. ij Their presence in parade serves to} remind us of the need for unity in| times of stress and peril—and the country is facing one now. If ever there was need for a uni-| 24 ted America that need exists today. sullied patriotism were needed it is) now. For America is at war with! a more subtle and insidious foe than} any battlefield has ever known. It is a foe which has made us believe] that we must go hungry because | there is too much food; that we must | | too many clothes; where we must} Way in which a huge dose of peanut be- | cause our resources for the elimina- | | Armistice Day, coming on the heels of an election, will revive America from that mild form of insanity which seems to control during cam-! paign periods. It will restore at least | a normal point of view and, if we! are lucky and view the future in the! light of our needs, it may induce in| us a common point of view which | will do much to alleviate, if not cure, the troubles which afflict us. Such an end is devoutly to be wished, for it is a prerequisite to that better ‘and brighter day which all of, us envisioned for the world 14 years | ago. Editorial Comment |} Editorials printed below show the frend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. | After the Election (Duluth Herald) This editorial is not to instruct | anybody whom he should vote for, nor to tell anybody who is going to | be elected. It is simply to point out | some of the things that will not hap- pen after election, Those who win will not use their power unfairly to oppress those who lost, and those who los’ will not take an appeal from the ballot to the | bomb. Winner and loser alike will accept the result with a philosophy that often seems strangely in contrast with our pre-election excitement. The country will go on, and it will go up. Prosperity will visit it again, | and perhaps it will have learned enough from the last boom and its aftermath to avoid another. And whoever wins, and whatever the result, the demand for greater security for the man whose liveli- hood depends on his job will not jother of the fake gallstone remedies than the governor is O. H. Olson of {If ever honesty of purpose and un-|cf that ciass daily. this hoax has been worked on the further explained that fats in the diet produce more active ejection of bile | or “drainage” of the gall-bladder and | bile ges than other food ma- | ter !are especially beneficial where “non-! § ‘ical biliary drainage” seems de- sirable. These foods are yolk of egg, cream, brains, animal fats, butter, olive oil or other palatable oils. | But it happens that the foods men- | tioned are rich in a fat-like substance called cholesterol or cholesterin which enters into the formation or compo- sition of most gall-stones, and for this reason some physicians believe it might be well to restrict or exclude who has some low-grade chronic gall- bladder trouble but, as yet, no signs of actual gallstone formation. Be- sides the fats mentioned, these items contain considerable cholesterol: liver, peas, beans, wheat. i peaking of olive oil or other edible vegetable oils, I am reminded of the great gallstone cure hoax. Haven't d many inquiries about it lately, but o the exposure of some hum- received inquiries about one or an-|the When a healthy person takes a large amount of any animal or veget- able fat or oil, in the’ process of diges- , and accordingly certain foods|Of course I didn’t know. GREATNE: New York, Nov, tiaras and bauble fortunes sparkle} most everything from harvest hand vonderful stomach remedy” I|again in the “diamond horseshoe” of | to magazine solicitor. When the orches| tap of the directof’s stick and the| Prof. Butler heard Bonelli sing. Not singers hide the inevitable nervous-| only was the professor encouraging; ness of a first night— Taking your iodine ration. When I bought the tincture of iodine the druggist asked which tincture I want- ed, the 5 per cent or the 213 per cent. Which should it be? (Saskatoon). Answer—The 5 per cent tincture. My mistake—I should have mentioned that the tincture of iodin of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is not the same strength as that of the British Phar- macopoeia. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) AND GRATITUDE Metropolitan, Opera House— va hears the first 10.—When the | a young man, broken in health and with his lungs threatened, would turn out to be one of the lustiest baritones of the moment? Those who face obstacles which seem insurmountable can scan with benefit the story of Bonelli—one of the Met's outstanding stars of the season, x % # PRICELESS FRIENDS If there be one out of a score of | Persons to whom Bonelli is particu- | larly grateful, that one is Dean But- | ler, of the Syracuse College of Fine | Arts, and a professor in Bonelli’s | school days. It was Professor Butl | who turned the young man from a | student of mechanical engineering to- | ward a musical career. | Bonelli had been born in Ft. Byron, N. Y. His family was in moderate circumstances and he was obliged to go to work and help pay his way through school. He sold papers and worked in the circulation department | of a Syracuse newspaper. When high school age arrived, he worked at al- He was train- | ing to be a great engineer. And then, during his college years, he was insistent. Bonelli must be a tion the oil is converted into a kind of soap, particularly if there is some alkali available to combine with the cil, The soap, if an excess of it is produced, forms in lumps. Of course the soap is laxative. So there you oil, cotton seed oil or olive oil, of course impressively colored and fla- vored, acts on “gallstones,” whether fact or in sack or not. Especially if the enormous dose of the “wonderful omach remedy” or “gallstone sol~ vent” is followed by some disguised alkali in the form of a Seidlitz powder or similar concoction. It is funny, if you can ignore the tragic side, but gullible citizens of this free country for many years, thanks to the fake 14 Marshals. 15 Aptitude, 16 Month (abbr.), 17Gains as clear 19 Fruit similar 20 Standard type 21 Monk 23 Obscure . HORIZONTAL 1 Horse that carries a pack, 7 Corporeal. profit. to the lemon. Answer to Previous Puzzle Today’s Variety Bazaar | a cyme. 18 Pace. 22 Female sheep. 24 French premier. 25 Merriment, 27 Game. 29 Billiard shot. 3111, 33 Twitching. 36 Ruler of An- measure. nam, IE} 37 To fondle. sect of testimonials of non-existent “minis-| Gnostics. which the nostrum mongers conjured! 96 Ranks. myADE up to promote the sale of the fake. | Entertainment was Barnum’s watch- 28 Chains of 48 To encounter. 49 Opposite of in. rocks under pe word and he found the people like to Stee 50 Colleague. be humbugged. Service is the watch-| 99 \ curse, 52 Hurrah,, word of big business today—Give the} 39 jrspert So Pacer people what they want, opti Be NGIRIDE stg: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS diminish, but will swell into an ir- resistible tidal wave, 33 Light brown, 57 Myself, Spraying Enamel 54 Bird whose, BS.olly liquid. Manufacturing a small article in| 4. 019.15 “hoot” ¢¢o' Flower and basement of our home, Son sprays} *° Pinaceous vegetable bed. cnamel with electric spraying ma-| ,,'ee- 62 Types of chine. (R. A.) 37 Au aye vole," printed letters Answet—=The shop or room where| 38 eas 63 Frights. |such spraying is done should be : equipped ‘with mechanical fan or exe| 40Dried coconut VERTICAI, meat, 1 One-seeded Me ot is a a bee FCN LT NE ane L Wt 36 Enticing wom- en. 39 Flat-bottomed Doat. 41 By. 42A broach. 43 Chief city of winged fruit. 2 Abdominal appendage as in the lobster. 3 Mister. Greece. 4 Skillet. 45 To break open, 5 Ore launders, 46 Sudden fright. 6 Compound 47 Woolen fabric, ether. 50 Sanskrit dia- 7 To impregnate lect, with salt. 51 Back. 8 Obsequies, 54 Pass between 9 Buffoon. mountains. Beer. 56 To sin. 59 The soul in Egyptian re- 10 * 11 Seventh note. 12 Roman high- ways. ligion. 13 Derived from 61 Ta accomplish. mid ial SYNOPSIS Lovely Fanchon Mesedith is wanted by,the San Francisco police connection with a murder com. mitted by her sweetheart “Fon; Fanchon did not know he was a gun- man. by un- der the name’ of “Smith.” Aboard is Evelyn Howard, whom Fanchon met on a voyage from Hawaii. Eve- lyn is going to New York to live with her aunt, the wealthy Mrs, Car- stairs, whom never saw. The ly surviv. To get away from Tony and the past, she goes to the Cars home “Evelyn. strong bond of affection grows be- tween Mrs. Carstairs and her “niece.” Collin Carstairs is at first antagonistic because of his “cou- sin’s” Haw: escapades and her iteous attitude because of his ” Hawaiian escapades and -righteous attitude when his fered aid, ned Fanchon’s Southampton, F: makes her debut in New York. Col- in, though realizing their ship is a barrier, cannot resist pro- Fanchon cannot hers without reveali: A few days later, threat note comes from Tony. ‘atte hi Jf CHAPTER XVIII The neighborhood had once been very good, the strect was in a backwater, a small, blind street. It was run down now, the very trees, wing forlornly from the asphalt, ad a neglected and pathetic appear- ance. ildren played mildly enough, inthe gutter, Women | went by, market baskets on their arms. Some were slatternly, some were neat and self-respecting in ap- pearance. Before one house a ver: fine, expensive car stood, a chauf- feur waiting. As Fanchon hesi- tated an elderly woman, wrapped | in an ancient mink coat, came down | the steps of the house. Evidently she had always lived in the neigh- borhood and nothing would make her move away, not even the grad- ual degradation and decay. Slowly Fanchon went up the brownstone steps. They crumbled a little. The handrail of stone was worn, Shabby, dusty Brussels lace | curtains hung at the front windows. She did not know what she would say. She could not know. Her mind was almost blank but of her | courage she was certain. Tony— { had loved her. Perhaps, still loved her.. Possibly within his love for her she might find some core of understanding for her position, some excuse for what she had done, Yet on the other hand, that very understanding and that same love might constitute for her the great- est menace of all. She put out her slender gloved hand and rang the old-fashioned bell, Tony opened to her. He had been waiting, hidden behind one of those imp curtains. 3 “Tony—” she said, on a small basing she seemueenbered iow unt! inking! she had. cared, "Looking at him with the €yes which had looked upon Collin | p, to love him, irrevocably and forever, she felt no stirring of the senses, simply a a cd constriction of the heart, in pity for Tony, in pity and compassion for all that had been between them, in pity for the girl she_had once been, . He.said, evenly: “You came. Good. We have much to talk about.” He took her wrist and drew her gently but re- lentlessly into the house. “Come,” he sai ith a flash of his white teeth, “into this—parlor. , We shall be undisturbed. Quite afone.” She followed him. The room was long, it was dark, there were velour overdrapes. On the papered, peeling walls were.Vistorian era prints, once ‘vary: gray, gow rather dismal look- ITH BAL DWAIN plane crashes and Fanchon is the|* “You no longer care for ing . .-. Stags at bay and curly headed golden haired children at prayer. The furniture was plush, a dusty red. There was a fine man- tel. Candlesticks of wood and two conch shells reposed upon it. Be- neath it was a gas log, not lighted. In one corner, a whatnot, loaded with dusty china knicknacks; in the other, a really lovely secretary ... a bead curtain divided the room from another room. There was a small square piano, a scarf thrown’ over it. There were modern stu- dent lamps and one oil lamp, in red glass. There was a Rodgers group and a ladder backed chair and a Mor- ris chair and two pieces of Mission furniture. It was a hodge podge of generations, all of them dusty. It had a strange odor, that room, dust, decay, disinfectant, cabbage boiling and genteel poverty ... It was in- credibly depressing. Tony put his arms around her, “You are lovelier than ever,” he said softly. * There was no shock to her senses in his nearness. Her senses remem- bered dimly. But love, which had glowed through them was gone. That she experienced no revulsion was merely habit. Her senses might remember but her heart did not; nor yet her mind.- She drew herself ary, gently. “Please, Tony,” she said. He pice a chair for her; sat down himself on an Empire sofa, attered, the upholstery threadbare. He stated, fravely, “You no longer care for me?” He had explained nothing, as yet, But it was all easier than she had expected. She said, honestly, openly, “No, Tony.” He spoke without accent, But gesture was South European, A hand flung, palm up, a shrug of the broad shoulders under the well fit- ting coat. “Isee. I had expected it. When— when you found out... about me?” “I began,” she said, trying to be honest, “I began to stop caring then, It~it was a shock tome. You |™ don't know... But... T have al. Ways appreciated all you di you tried todo. And : Herta R me,” he stated gravely. tle while—” She hesitated and stopped and was amazed to find tears in her eyes. He finished her sentence for her, “For a little while—we were happy. 1 see. I would have told you—before, But was afraid. You see,” he smiled ruefully, rather charmingly, “you see, I was'in love with you, Fanchon.” She started a little at the use of her name, She had not heard it for so long. Tony's keen black eyes nar- rowed. He went on smoothly. “And 1 wanted to marry rou, But 1 was afraid to tell you Hei So I planned instead to make my pile, to turn my last trick, to marry you then and take you away some- where and go straight in some place where we could live happily and no one would ever be the wiser, least of all you. But, I didn't turn the trick,” he said. 'No.” nee Ipokes a him. pallor, that of olive skin, was per- ceptible. He had grown a tee heavier. He looked a little gross, He was no longer clean shaven and wore a small mustache, Yet there was a certain lean hunger in his eyes. His eyes looked sleepless. She began to be afraid. She shook the fear from her, “Tony, 1 have brought you your money—all of it,” she Maid ; ae handed him the envelope. He took it from her, He dit open it. He held it in his pat and Hee it. His face was expression- ess. Presently, he put i hated ly, he put it in a inside “You do not need it?” he asked with a most extraordinary formal courtesy—extraordinary under tay circumstances, She shook her head, “Very well, then. { do, But will not be enough. f must ed more, much more besides. Not for myself alone, But for you also, So that we can both go away and start all oge again... and you must help His even Copyright 1931 By Faith Batdwt; Distributed by Sing Features Sy: ee Be eee