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_ The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspa: 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. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) . 5. didate for governor made vicious at- tacks on salaries paid in some gov- ernmental departments. These prob- ably helped to secure the passage of the Taxpayers’ Association measures. Probably most of his propaganda was merely demagogic vote baiting and now that he is in, we will hear the last of it. That has been his record in the past. Yet the damage has been done to a fine personnel of state and county employes. If it is decided that these cuts apply to our institutions of higher education, some of the best men may leave. Positions are not 09 {80 easy to get now, and the exodus Daily by mail outside Probably will be slow, but with re- Dakota ............. +s++e+ee++ 6.00 | sumption of good times, North Da- ' Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 xota may find that slashing salaries Weekly by mail in state, three , 45| indiscriminately was not such a Weekly by maii outside of North | Smart thing after all. Dakota, per year ....... aeseete | ns Weekly by mail in Canada, per | Mr. Capone's Plans Beers citi? siti 200/ Announcement that members of Al Member of Audit Bureau of Capone's gang are planning to con- 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. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Good Common Sense President Hoover's action in asking Franklin D. Roosevelt to confer with him in determining America’s war debt policy was sound common sense. Only by close cooperation between the outgoing and incoming chief ex- ecutives can the nation’s foreign po- ley be maintained without serious interruption. Many countries now are asking for consideration on war-debt payments. The things we tell them now should not be contradicted next March when @ new leader takes the helm. Both Mr. Roosevelt and President Hoover have had wide contacts with the American people during the last six weeks, Each has been from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast and back again. Each should know what the feeling of the American public is and that knowledge should be reflected in the policy adopted. This country knows as well as any- one that blood cannot be extracted from a turnip, that some sort of ad- justment must be made. It cannot say to debtor nations “you must pay” ny more than the private lender can say the same thing to the farm- er who has nothing left to pay with. But it can say to Europe “Cut down your expenses. Reduce your armaments. Do not ask our pity with one breath and boast of your power the next. America is willing to do the right thing by the world and by itself but it will not be hood- winked.” Now, if ever, comes a fine chance to do something constructive for the world. Protests that debts and arm- aments are two separate things and should be considered separately must be brushed aside. They are not two different things any more than the purchase of luxuries and the failure to meet honest debts by the same in- dividual are different things. One reflects on the other. America knows as well as any other nation the manner in which it has been bilked and mulcted at peace and disarmament conference tables. In the heart of every citizen of these United States rests the conviction that this is a peace-loving nation; that we would gladly scrap our arm- “Aaments if the other nations would do 60. Since 1922 America has voluntarily ) *felinguished its position as the lead- ing sea power, held at the close of , (the war. It has reduced its army >and navy in accord with the desire ] of other nations rather than not ac- complish any reductions at all. ‘Now the United States holds the whip hand. President Hoover and , President-to-be Roosevelt have with- —_ their grasp an effective crowbar a Which may be used to pry Europe out ti Of its present manner of thinking, S«centuries old. Let’s hope they do it. Ril c © The Salary Issue It is not North Dakota's spirit to be niggardly with her public ser- ‘ivants. Regret is genuine among fair- a; Minded people everywhere that many a faithful honest public officials must hiwork at reduced salaries, far below ‘what men of the same calibre draw never been large. During the stren- pl uous days of the World war, few vote to 7 Unfortunately, thé Republican can- trol the legal beer business in Chi- cago,,if and when the sale of beer {becomes legal, phasize the muddle into which this whole business of selling intoxicating liquor has been drawn. One of the chief arguments of the anti-prohibition forces was that the dry law had promoted gangsterism by making it tremendously profitable. They contended that repeal of pro- [hibition would strike a death blow to |such organizations as that Capone | has built up. | Now, however, Capone and his j “muscle men” lay open plans to con- | trol the legalized beer traffic in the |same way and by the same methods able. A bartender’s union would be! organized, and woe be to him who did! not join or who failed to pay his! dues. In addition to control of the! liquor business by the agencies ap-| Pointed by the public, there would continue to be a higher “invisible” control which would line its coffers despite the will of the public. Whatever comes of the present re- volt against prohibition, it is obvious! that we are going to have a severe ! struggle to obtain decent control and| regulation if and when the 18th} amendment and the various state laws are repealed. The bootlegger, of course, has thrived only because he has had cus- | tomers. Desire of those customers for contraband goods made prohibi- tion a failure in the opinion of the majority. It is to be hoped that everyone, whether he drinks or not, will interest himself in the effort to promote to the fullest whatever ideals are held out to us as a successor to prohibition. Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt's reply to President Hoover was cor- serves only to em-| that made bootlegging hugely profit- | \ | i | ! i i | | COOPERATION IN COMBATING The ‘War’ Is Over, Let’s Have Peace! | 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 it 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. ‘about the removal of adenoids were | was one of the favorite indoor pas- PASSING OF THE ADENOID OBSESSION Ten or fifteen years ago queries fairly frequent. Such queries are now | quite rare. From this I gather that | teachers, nurses and other dilettantes are not so keen about the game of guessing the child has adenoids if he looks or seems dumb. Formerly this times of the little tin doctors. School boards everywhere are made up chief- ly of hard-headed business men and women—hard-headed and conceit- ed. Asa rule they are just as ignor- ant about everything pertaining to health education and the training of the body as are most laymen. Per- haps that is why they assign to teachers and nurses certain functions dial and most spontaneous. He is right, however, to insist that the De. mocrats cannot now assume respon: sibility for an administration's polic which has until next March 4 to run, The nation can best be served in this crisis by hearty cooperation between the two parties. Politics can advan- tageously be adjourned for the next four years. There are bigger issues pressing for a solution. Just wait until “Bill” Langer hears that Senator Nye rode to Chicago in President Jaffray's private car. The railroads at least are not fighting all Nonpartisans, are they, Bill? Editorial Comment to whether they agri with The Tribuni or disagree policies. Hope in a Test Tube (Minneapolis Tribune) It is not a habit of the scientist to Predict extravagant results from an experiment in advance of perform- ance and, therefore, more than usual importance attaches to the program to be undertaken at the University of Minnesota and having as its aim the development of new uses for the agricultural and natural products of the northwest. In these days of mounting surpluses and contracting markets, the finding of new uses for of attack upon the maladjustments from which we are suffering today. In any attempt to solve the prob- Jems growing out of an economic order in which abundance rather than scarcity is involved, the seeking out of new markets is highly impor- | tant. Since competition in all the | markets of the world is keener than ever before, any research that leads to the establishment of new ant able can bring y benefits. The northwest, with great natural and agricultural resources, not only offers an excellent laboratory for re- search of this nature, but its own Specific needs at the present time ohalenee ee ogee to come to the assist e Of people. Agriculture, and other vital industries could well use the additional markets which the four projects proposed by the Uni- versity of Minnesota seem to offer. Turning North Dakota lignite into commercial fertilizer with the aid of Lennie available in Montana; ol the basic material for.ra- yon from the aspen trees of north- 4 it importance for its benefits are not temporary but of a permanent variety. It is a step in a direction where the fruits of research are rich and ynlimited. a silencer at the owner's expense. | i known products offers a real means} stable uses for products already avail-' | which are really medical. Clearly this is a saving of the taxpayers’ money, for a teacher or nurse can be hired {for a lower wage than you would have to pay a doctor, and chances | are the child's parents won't notice ; anything fishy about the quackery. | If this school board sponsored quack- lery is going out of fashion it is be- cause the practice is too ridiculous to withstand criticism nowadays. The adenoid body, otherwise called the pharyngeal tonsil, is a normal structure of the same character as the ton , situated on the vault of the thro cavity up behind the soft | palate. So far as we know it serves | the same purpose as the tonsils do, {that is, the defense of the body | against germ invasions. | Nowadays we do not condemn a | child’s tonsils merely because they are enlarged. We know that in health a child's tonsils are naturally large, and that with the usual infections Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. bowel action ... have not used a physic or any other aid since last March, and best of all... (P. E.) Answer—Glad to send the same advice and instruction to any read- er who writes, incloses a dime (coin) and a stamped envelope bearing his address, and tells me he has the con- stipation habit. Remember, I am not offering a cure for anything. Goat's Milk Some one told you goat’s milk has no cream. We have had 20 milk goats for four years. Two give milk on which cream rises at a cool tem- perature, and we have churned this cream into butter, white, but as good as any cow butter. As for goat meat, I prefer it to beef because it is free from tuberculosis and tastes the same as beef. (Mrs. R. R.) . Answer—Thank you. Lucky young- sters to have goat's milk. More peo- ple in suburban sections and small towns should keep a goat for the milk. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) aA Keeping up with the Joneses is out of fashion, but it is just as bad to try now to keep down the Joneses.— Loring A. Schuler, editor of Ladies’ Home Journal. * e Let no man tell you it could not be worse. It could be so much worse that these days now, distressing as that occur in childhood the size of | the tonsils varies considerably from season to season. | For instance, a health officer examined all the pupils in a small school and noted enlarged tonsils and adenoids in a large number of them. ; So many seemed to have enlarge- ments that the doctor decided to postpone his recommendation of ton- and watch the children. The young- sters seemed husky enough. At the end of the school year he again examined all the pupils. With one or two exceptions they all had small tonsils now. The doctor concluded | that season or weather has some- thing to do with it. Certainly sunshine has. The more sunlight on naked skin the more Vitamin A the body receives, and this fortifies against infections and pre- vents overgrowth or hypertrophy of tonsil and adenoid tissues. Ultravio- let light from artificial source has a similar influence, though direct sun- ight is far richer in the ultraviolet ys even in midwinter. If the tonsils or the adenoid body | be badly damaged by infection, and | possibly a base or depot from which erms can make raids on other or- | gans of the body, then the defensive {role or purpose of the tonsils and | adenoids is no longer a consideration; rate disinfected. sil and adenoid operation for a while. they have become a menace to health and had better be removed, or at any It is a mistake to assume a child requires adenoid removal just because the child has a dull expression or breathes through the mouth or re- minds teacher or nurse of a picture they are, would look like veritable open all the year round to every guest prosperity.—President Herbert Hoov- er. se The mind of mature men and wom- en should be like a first-class hotel; except criminals.— Prof. William Lyon Phelps of Yale university. ne * Capital and the men who fight in the trenches must bear equally the burden of our next war, if there is one.—Patrick J. Hurley, secretary of war, i se Neither the League of Nations nor any other power can change our de- termination to pursue our establish- ed aims in Manchuria.—General No- buyoshi Muto, supreme Japanese military and diplomatic representa- tive in Manchuria. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: A girl's anger mounts when the scales get high-handed. | “Central Cross” _| s HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 14 English port. 1 Pink sea skele 15 Withered. ton, 1€4 16An Irish fuel. 5 Animal similar 18 Rock at the to the civet. entrance to the 9 Learning. Mediterranean (0 Monetary unit Sea. of Japan. 20 Altar screen. (2 Oue. 21 A rule of diet. 4 Crippled. 24 Bees’ homes. 15 Leather strip. {7 To draw along. 19 Yellow bugle plant. | 20 Receded. 22 Prophet who trained 40 To fly. Samuel. 41 Net weight of 23Go on tmusic). container. 24 Valiant.man 42 Right. 25 Secular. 43Grain, 27 Pound (abbr.). 4° io makibetst: 28 Bewitching. 7? *® make tor 29 Hard-he pias 47 Beverage. 48 Legal claim. 50 Whorl. 51 Fruit 52 To ogle, 54 Golf device. 55 Flock. 56 Repasts. 31 Administrative oficial, 32 Pope's triple crown, 33 Triangular In Berlin a noisy machine is con-|. . . fiscated py the police and fitted with of the “adenoid face” she once saw in some quack doctor book. This tin doctor diagnosis has brought too many children to an unwarranted operation. What, the bell? I verily bélieve the censor invented this sys- tem, for the bell always. rings just as I am about to say something. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS White Coats Cleaned T have a white coat on the back of my tongue. So far as I know my breath is without odor. What would be good for this? (B. K.) i Answer—Sometimes such @ coat- an odor meals or bed-time snacks. was making a wreck of myself with increasingly harsh physies every jaighe and constant worry about my eee 26 Violation of the law. 28 To stitch. 30 Woolly sur- face of cloth, 34 Artificial channels, 35 Becomes active VERTICAL 1 Tuft on a milk- weed seed. as @ geyser. Metallic rock. 36 Cubic meters. Second note. 37 Coffee house. 4 Famous report on Japanese ag- 39 To depart by boat. gression in 42 To peruse. Manchuria. —44'To abound. 5 Contorts. 46 Pastry. 6 Chaos, 47 School period. 7To finish. 49 Born, 8To become 51 Tiny green weary. 9 Molten rock, 11 Silkworm. vegetable, 53 Sun god. 55 Masculine pro- 57 Visible vapor. 13 High. New York, Nov. 16—Out in Texas they may'be interested to hear that the dashing, colorful Johann, Prince of Lichtenstein, is soon traveling west to spend Christmas with the wife's folks. Prince Johann is ruler of that pic- turesque, amazing little kingdom where nobody pays taxes and stout meinherrs sit over their beer and Pipes yodeling to the mountains which enclose the tiny principality. Out of the family exchequer Johann has built a good road service which is famed throughout Europe. The princes of Lichtenstein have a sort of paternal, rather than sovereign tule and their little capital has be- come one of the most romantic in the world. x kK * HOTEL IS HIS PALACE stark” fashion, married a handsome and charming Texas gal, Alene Mac- Farland. For more than a year he has made New York his home. They live rather quietly, if expensively, in an exclusive hotel-apartment, He is about 35, rather handsome, with 2) tricky little military mustache to}: give “that sort of air’ when he goes about in evening clothes or semi uniform. tal for Malignant Diseases. And helps to underwrite cancer experimenta- tion. Recently he sponsored a fund- raising concert with the great Cha- lapin as the star. Chaliapin is the young prince’s favorite singer. For Johann’s country has many wander- ing street singers and Chaliapin rose from the streets. ed ANENT THOSE BRIDGE RULES By the way, the only effect the new bridge rules will have upon my life—insofar as I can figure it—is to make it more expensive for me to play and hence make it easier to spend nights reading. rumored as “Sherlock Holmes” again for one more round of the cir- cuits, appears actually to have retired to his suburban estate. This time, I hear, he actually means it. tenth of a cent—will be sufficient to cure me. hae SIFTING THE MANUSCRIPTS Only a producer knows the num- ber of bad, fair and middling plays that are being turned out in the cities and countrysides. Thus George Tyler revived a last yeer’s opus after all but tossing up his hands. This son of Chillecothe, O., has read 1,000 manuscripts thus far this season and has found but two that he even con- sidered. HoWever, many a big league producer has let @ prize package slip through his fingers. The outstand- ing example, at the moment, is “An- other Language,” which goes on-and- on although turned down by almost everyone in town and finally snapped up by an unknown to Broadway— Arthur Beckhard—for a little theater group. GILLETTE’S RETIREMENT * * * William Gillette, although often threatening to take out of storage Gillette's particular playthings on his huge place are cats, Japanese servants and a pigmy railroad. The jtailroad, drawn by an electric engine, | winds in and out of the grounds, Gite + = - |through tunnels and performs similar cee faites viata a wees stunts, The cats have been gathered from many corners of the globe and the Japanese are valets, servants,) ete. Barbs ——————— ly ‘We thought football togs made | tough guys tougher but the Sing Sing | Already he has found a pet Amer-| prison eleven walloped a bunch of jean charity: the West Side Hospl-| boys from the Bronx with only one little five-yard penalty. * * * A New York ren herd so enraged with a nographer's errors that he shot and killed himself, But let's not forget that many a stenog, too, has Jamped out of the window. * * * New Yorkers are sure the worst of the depression has passed, for taxicab drivers no longer say “Thank you” for a 20 per cent tip. ee * Huey Long's boast that “I can sell Thus with 2,500 points scored by a] anything” doesn’t appear so incre- grand slam, my customary losses—at dible in view of the story that at his bi COpYRICHT 1931,°BY PAITH. SYNOPSIS Lovely Fanchon Meredithis wanted | by the San Francisco police in con- nection with a murder committed by her sweetheart, “Tony.” Fanchon did not know he was a gunman. She escapes by airplane under the name of “Smith.” Aboard is Evelyn How- ard, whom Fanchon had met on a voyage from Hawaii. Evelyn is go- ing. to New York to live with her aunt, the wealthy Mrs. Carstairs, whom she never saw. The plane crashes and Fanchon is the only sur- vivor, To get away from Tony and the past, she goes to the Carstairs as “Evelyn.” A strong bond of affection grows between Mrs. Car- stairs and her “niece.” Collin Car- stairs, the son, is at first antagonistic | pains oe his “cousin’s” Hawaiian escapades and her self-righteous at- titude when his mother offered aid, but Fanchon’s sincerity overcomes his objections. They fall in love. After a happy summer at Southamp- ton, Fanchon makes her debut in New York. Collin, though realizing their relationship is a barrier, cannot resist professing love. Farichon cannot acknowledge hers without re- vealing her identity. Later, a threat- ening note comes from Tony. She visits him and s his advances. ponraitee Fanchon that Evelyn is » but has lost her memory. He threatens to expose Fanchon un- less she introduces him to Mrs. Car- Einisiag he bee Evciyn in te apast- 8 Evelyn in his apart- ps oe refuses to let Fanchon see her. Two days later, he calls at the Carstairs home. Collin and his me of Fanchon’s ringere attinade in his presence. ter, tells Fanchon she must induce Mrs Carstairs to wear her emeralds to the Van Suydam Ball. He suggests that Fanchon go away with him. CHAPTER XXIII Events played into Tony’s hands. It was Mrs. Carstairs herself who suggested that he be included in the invitation to the famous yearly Van Suydam Ball which was held in the avi ‘Van Suydam house, one of the last_of the great stone “mansions” on Fifth Avenue. And as Mrs. Car- stairs always gave a dinner before the ball, he was asked to that also, Collin, laughing, protesting his boredom on such an occasion, was nevertheless persuaded that he must not disguise himself in a domino or simply go in evening dress, masked. ‘When he learned that his mother planned a Juliet costume for her niece, he promptly ¢lected himself Romeo. To Fanchion he said, light- ly enough, but with a straight, un- smiling gaze. . . “Romeo was a tragic sort of ass. Appropriate enough. Still, Mercutio has some lines I find even more appropriate ...‘'tis not so deep as a well nor so. wide as a church, but ’tis enough, ‘twill serve—'” Fanchon’s Juliet gown was con- ventional enough, in line and fabric and in the color—which was white. Her dark blue-black curls were bound with the Juliet pearls—small seed pearls, quite genuine. Her mask was a ig frivolous affair of satin. She looked almost intolerably lovely, the ‘turquoise eyes brilliant under pearl-capped dark hair, her golden skin flushed with authen- tic rose, her lips painted, an even ‘deeper scarlet than was natural with them, And Collin in the black velvet and gold of his doublet and hose was an interesting foil for her. But Cesare Gilli arrived in an al- most identical costume. The two men looked at one another and ex- claimed ... for, with their eyes hid. den by masks, they looked very much alike... they were somewhat the same build, they were both dark skinned, both wore small mustaches, Collin felt an illogical anger at the introduction of a second Romeo, while the other guests crowded about them laughing. For a moment Fanchon was almost as white, save for ber lips, as her ivory and pearl | cown, : mother are skeptical about him be-|* | he borrowed $10 marriage ceremony from his Pod Vad id preacher. A fessor can’t know every- thing, a8 witness the Duke Uni- versity pedagog who genially ask- ed a new student from Philadel- phia, named Cornelius McGuilli- cuddy, Jr., if he might know Con- nie Mack, Jr. who too had de- cided to come to Duke! (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) —— SHE TOOK NO CHANCES Boston—People may laugh at su- perstition, but not Mrs. Thelma 1. Morrell. The other day in probate court Mrs. Morrell was stepping oms the witness stand in her suit for di- yorce from Gerald V. Morrell, when she dropped her glove. Looking at the glove, she said: “I don’t like to pick it up. It’s supposed to be bad luck to pick up your own glove.” Her attorney quickly stooped and picked up the glove and returned it to its owner. Mrs. Morrell won her case. COLD HATRED Oklahoma City, Okla—The “Wom- an Haters” club, @ group of boys from 15 to 17 years of age, will have to do their hating out in the cold from now on. The clubhouse where they held their secret “hating” meetings caught fire and before the firemen could reach the scene the only trace of a clubhouse left was the stove. WHAT ANIMAL ISTHIS ? UES EAST OF CANADA ASQUERADE BALDWIN — DISTRIBUTED BY-RING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. . Collin felt an illogical anger at the introduction of a second Romeo. “But,” said Senor Gilli, apologeti- cally, “I had no idea of your chosen costume, Mr. Carstairs. What an absurd coinciden¢e!” . Mrs. Carstairs remarked, laugh- ing: “Our Juliet deserves two Romeos, docs she not?” and the Party went into a dinner which Fan- chon, for one, barely tasted. Jennie looked magnificent in a Russian court costume of the time of Catherine the Great. The ropes of Carstairs emeralds were looped about her neck beneath the heavy peatls and fell‘to her waist. There were emeralds’in her ears and she wore a small tiara of emeralds and diamonds. There were great square stones on wrists and hands, green as spring, clear as water uniquely beautiful, It had taken no tactful appeal on Fanchon’s part to make her wear them, She always wore the emeralds at the Van Suydam's ball, at the opening of the opera and on one or two other occasions. Fan- chon could not drag her eyes from the jewels although she had seen them before. The first time Mrs. Carstairs had shown them to her, “They must go,” she said, “to Col- lin’s ‘wife, but ‘I've left you other jewelry, dear ,. .” The dinner table glittered with crystal, with silver and gold plate and flatware; it had been built about a square space holding a mirror lake banked with orchids. There was wine... and excellent food.. and superb service... and around that table, thought Tony, with the feel- ing of an Alexander, were millions of dollars in jewelry alone, How- ever, the emeralds would ge him it and Fanchon for the res} their lives, There was a place, in Paris, and another in Rotterdam, where broken from their settings they could be disposed o1. He knew of these places, He had not served one term in a reformatory for nothing; nor had"he confined his activities to the service of drug rings and gang wars alone. Tt was quite sate when shey went, in what practically amounted to a fleet of cars, to the Van Suydams. As it happened Fanchon drove with Collin. The other Romeo had been unable to make other arrangements but bided his time in silence, fol- lowing Collin’s small French town car as it pulled away from the curb before his did, with his dark and secretive eyes, And Collin had made his own ar- rangements, He and Fanchon were alone in the Er ays fot, an immpas- sive driver divide glass and steel. eae tren by “I had to get you to myself,” he said, “and we aren't going dire to the Van Suydams, SWerare dete. ing around the Park frst, I wanted to tell you how beautiful you are... it would take me many years to tell you that, Evelyn, ‘but I must content myself with a few brief min- utes. I am not,” he added, with qereed lightness, “the cals one who 8 $0... . Just as bo ec ae as Iam not the She said, trying to keep th = viration from dangerous ground: “It was an amusing coinciden Cesare’s coming as he eee the cosets pis alike, afi in coloring. uppose the; cont mote they came from the same Collin turned his mask i hands. The high collar, ay ane perce became Bin very well, She never, she tl seen handsome... si ae She thought... I love you. And you will never kriow. And toni; is pe end. Of everything. a omething like a little moan es- caped her. He tu: i ssbed in pene, ined quickly, he “Evelyn, what is it? Patae what is it? You are not “I’m all right,” she ans d, then, seeing a hance to establis a lan, Tony’s plan, she added | have, perhaps a slight headache.’ | “sd