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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 37

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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37
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PART THRraZ WOXIENIS FEATURES WANT ADS r3tiblvv 01 1 I iApe 0, 11, 1 At THE pi 1 Va WORLD'S GREATEST Te1epc tilu Is I Superior 0100 NEWSPAPER MI MENPIEMOR NOVEMBER 1, 19 00-0, 31 i i i 1 7 I i 1: 1 1 i 1 I i I 1 1 1 i I 1 I I 1 1 1 I cl 11 1 1 1 .4 1 11 I i i GASOLINE ALLEY-WALT HAS LOST FOUR POUNDS ALREADY The Portrait Invisible BY JOSEPH GOLLOMB ISKI1 -TIAS ImNIOCEMCE OF a-uLog000 womDeRFuLt 1-ke 14NS KJO CONICEPIION OF WI-It14-1- IS FIPO4CfNIG ovea -ks OLIVZ CkGE COMES up BEFORE. -ri-ke SOPIZEME COLICZT WISH I WOCZQYINIC ANIN4 motzE t-ke ts. IF 14E. AG tkv14AcZDED PI-WLLIG VIEp AS it AM k-koPINIG Q.VENTLN PCANING, ALL WELL A413 GOOD. AF moT IS NO 'TELLING WHAT SO ZT OF FIGHT Vie WILL -lAVE 10 PUT UP.

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tt litt 2 weLL.rrs au. Goot) CMiSKI-r -nAS INt4OCEmCE IF 14e As Aukczt)Er) -RD -114Ev DONtI HAVE O-01400 0 PI-kiLLIS VIEp AS I AM 1 EVS NNI NOuCm WONIDERFULt ke Fixs i LOA I4001MG AND -7----- i OF IT FOR. At-- CONCERNED- 4'i, NO CONICEPTION Op IS PRX's(INICI, ALL WELL P644C) AkS MUCH AS I FEASt -el ff, I -n-ke CkE-SULI ikk C3N11 "IS "t4' GCQ1). IF P4T 11AERE i ft rT IS 1-7'' '1. E-mitt DEFINIrTELX 1-6IIS OUVZ CkGE COMES 7 4.

NO 'TELLING WHAT OF I .1 SUSPENSE IS -reczczytc. Op BEFORE. -1-1-ke i 1 wue. IT) PUT TIP. i i 1 SOPIZENtie COLICZT 1 i 1 1---- it 4, IC .1 WISH 'Aro) 1 WASNr-f WOCZQYING lip i f.

i I. ANN MOIZE -THAN t-ke ts. gr 4 tt 0 mob STNorsis. owner of a New 'fork gambling house, and two crooks. Slim and Butch, frequent visitor.

known as The Goldfish. They amuse him of being a stool brcal.se. be IS often in the courtrooin of Judge Robert Craig-to. who te wyees with The Gat Ith denials the charges. turns the tables by revealing be has the seeds them.

and distalases them with an ultimatumthey are to be always at lt the following Judge Craigin does not appear for the opening of a fantods yotmger brother. Bruce. known as the prodigy fudge. bitterly reeents a deteemu. targttoo that there may be a woman in the cases even when it is hinted she ma.

gmg I busbend or brother for a harsh sentence. since the elder Craigin has never wed justice with merczr. Galt. whom Bruce knew in college as The Goldfish. a student of psycho-analysis.

th a $trange power over men and tricks of rind reading. berths work on the ease. find the murdered body of Robert Craigin in a suburban cottage the tenant of which aid to he a young. woman named Rate Randall. The Goldfish announces he is going te Iwo te the house ill order to stub' the character of the suspected irdseing 'woman, by vthg her books and other details of her bonie.

Bruce urees that the investigation be even thooeh be has begun to fear it wili involve his brother in sicandal. lie offers reward of VO.000 for the arrest and convscuon of the murderer. Sanmons. Beoce's faithful secretary, is poisoned in a restaurant by a young woman etl assi-is her back to the judge's office and volunteers to substitute for her. She calls Alien.

Jane returns to the ottos and Miss Allen disappears. 'THE COEW OF P. FISHING BOAT MANN LEAGUes oPp 'THE coAST (DP IczELAND I (ESTECIDAN, vsA-TO-en. A LACZGS PLANE -11zPkveLINiCA wesnAiAtzt) A-r HIGH. SPEED.

SAW IT PASS 'MAE HoczAzoNi I4 INRECT UNE FOR LABQADoct. -THE NEWS FMP14-Et, mAdt. sTEAMER ts "me LAST HEATZD OF "THE X3 wt-IcH Lep-r CP.os?0QN, LON1001J, IsAORNDMO -rt-IE cCzEw OF A FISHING BOAT MANN LEAGUES OPP TI-e COAST OP IIRELAND (ESTeRDNY ATO-et A PLANE PLANE wes-rviAtzt) A-r IAIGR- IT allokit PEED. SA PASS Be --ri-ke HoczyzoNi IN1 A t3IRECT uNle vorZ -1-14E NEWS FZIPkE.t -ro I CRO -c-H LAr HED G-INA A mAL STEAME I OF THE X3 NAtt-mcH Lep-r LONDON, tvA02.1,14BNIG 1 :::1 --t A 17'" 0 tes miimbrAvah. ier 4.070Z -jillik 1.w-- 4k- If losifip )) Iterw.r --I s' 1 1 -110- er- wt, st.e Pia 9Wit Cawoo Mt fillp Ilmt Chismos 'tribune 4 101MMMM.

The Inquiring Reportvr THEATER INSTALLMENT XXX III- THE JUDGE GROWS RESTLESS. user and over Simmons told herself that she was a fool to come bi.ck to work; a fool to have come to work for Bruce Cralgin In the begin-pia; a fool to have been born at all. To lie In a hospital and brood over tte prospect of an Interloper at her desk had been bad enough. But by ormparison It had been the bliss of Ignorance. Gladly would she have resumed that state If she could.

For she knew at last. There was an kterloper even though she was gone. Jane did not know what there was between Bruce and, the woman. vat she did not know, however, she more than divined. Site bad ample basis for her reading In the behavior of Bruce the whole cit that Mary Allen did not appear or telephone.

lie had come down to his chambers earlier than usual. Jane guessed TT. from the many little things he found to do In the outer office and on his many glances at the hall door. By nine o'clock, just as be was kiving for the courtroom. he cast aside the pretense.

41 When Miss Allen comes in please ask her to come to Part VL at oom. She's doing some of Rev. Simpson's work, you know." Jane did not reply; but she had to clench her teeth to keep from doing so. At noon recess Bruce came In so early that it was evident he had tvried. His face.

too. told her more than she wanted to know. She had "Wings" Is Brilliant, Poignant, and in Spots 'Most Too Real of Opera Season Starts Rush for First Night Seats Every Day He Asks Five Persons. Picked at Random. a Question.

Pastors Told Reporters Are Eager Allies 1 44 THE WISE WIFE." The Tribune will par S5. for each (Plea' (Ion accepted for the lOqUirinir Reporter to ask. Send name and 'address with tour question to "The Inquiring Reporter." Chicago Tribune. For today' queestion John W. Jordan.

'7723 Vernon avenue, was awarded ia I Produced by DS Mille. Directed by E. Mason Presented at the State-Lake theater. THE CAST. Wife Phyllis Haver Husband Tom Moore Other Woman Jacqueline Logan Other Man Joseph Striker Chief Gossip Wales Value of Neirspapers to Church Pointed Out.

(Picture on back page.) While long lines of opera. lovers jammed the box offices of the Auditorium theater yesterday to buy tickets for the season beginning ThurAy night and bushel baskets full of first fighters' applications were keeping a dozen cashiers busy, the first activity toward the new 115.000,000 temple of music at Madison street and the river was seen. Samuel Insull, president of the Ch1-1 cago Civic Opera, last year announced his plans for a fourteen story building to provide the city with one of the most beautiful opera houses in the world to be located on the property bounded by Madison. Washington. and Market streets and the river.

Yesterday the buildings on the north side of Madison street had been vacated by tenants and were ready for wreckers. The Commonwealth Edison company was preparing to move frbm the structure it occupies on Washington street Although no announcement has been made concerning the date when work will begin. it is understood that all tenants on the site will be out within sixty days. Produced by I Directed by William A. Wellman.

Presented at the Erlanger theater. THE CAST. Mary Preston Clara Bow John Powell Charles Rogers David Armstrong Richard Arlen Patrick O'Brien El Brendel Sylvia Lewis Jobyna Ralston Air commander Richard Tucker Cadet White Gary Cooper Sergeant Gunboat Smith Mr. Armstrong Henry B. Walthal Mrs.

Swa3rne Gordon Celeste Arlette Marchal Powell George Irving Mrs. Powell Hedda Hopper French peasant Neigel de Brulier BY MAE 'MEE. Good morning! The Erlanger, which never in all its life before has shown a motion picture, Is now entertaining Wings." from the story by John Monk Saunders, that appeared not so long ago in THE Wings of victory. Wings of defeat. Wings soaring and gleaming.

Broken wings, tumbling to earth with the buoyant life they had borne skyward. I Wings," the picture, is the war as the birdmen knew it. It is the- aviation scenes that make this movie memorable. The story around 'which they are built is just another story. similar to.

but not so gripping as The Rough Riders." But any lack here is made up for in the air. ship maneuvers. They are magnificent. both love. Nice, but innocuous Clara' Bow is not needed in the piece at all.

nor does her role and the way she acts it add in the least to the interest ot the whole. It is, however, some-1 thing of a novelty. to behold one usually cast as a limb of Satan, as the noble martyred home girl whom nobody loves. Richard Tucker has several effective entrancesnot scenesaud all other parts are nicely played. The photography is simply great and the film has been excellently synchronized with the music and smile sort of record arrangement that gives much added significance to the air battles, as the pilots dip and rise and circle and fall to macabre music that Is the clatter of bullets and the whirr ofwings.

BY THE REV. W. B. NORTOINT. Heaven help the minister who gets on the front page of the nevrspaperl" said one of our Episcopal biahops.

My reply is that heaven will help the minister who makes the front This is one of the expressions by which the Rev. G. Wartleld Hobbs of New York, executive secretary of the department of publicity of the national council of the Episcopal church. sought to impress on Chicago ministers at their union meeting yesterday the value of the newspaper in promoting the work of the church. The meeting was the ninth annual publicity conference under the auspices of the Chicago Church federation and advertising council of the Chicago Association of Commerce.

The morning session was held In the Y. C. A. IS South La. Salle street.

and the noon session at the Hotel La Salle. ...111111110.., I Ilmtv. li ii 1 .,......0 Gebel -1, 1 1 4 7, 1,, 1 i '141 Vliti 11 is it, II 111(1 i 'gk I ,1 14, ,1111 6. .44,, I qi 1 .1, eft 111r tA it 1 I 1 I 4 1 1 1 i I The Question. Has your radio kept you at home in the evenings? The Answers: G.

A. Gamenthaler. 5924 South Park avenue, pharmacist I like to stay- at home with my radio. that's sure. In a way it takes 4i the place of company.

because I am all alone. and I love music. And apr--, one can get some good A IA musical entertainment now with the chain circuits on. Miss Lorraine Martineau, supervisor Pau list settlement.11221 :4 South Wabash avenue It may interest you to 'know that at the set- c.4, tlement we have a A radio room with a six tube set installed, and -C the boys and girls prefer the radio to the player-piano and other entertainment rooms. They enjoy music and they want good music.

Bernard Vandergoot. 1135 East 43d street, clerkI cut out the movies on account of itnot entirely, of 614) It made a big change in my home. I have been losing sleep ever since I got that set two weeks ago. It et IN. is greater than I thought it would be.

I didn't know there was so much good stuff on the air. Mrs. Wilford Holmboe, 2509 East 73d place, housewife-o-I am 77.1" indifferent to the radio, e-, i I. I don't go out much. I he radio program prongeramilndso some IL sm-, i' sionally that is of inter.

r4t est, and once in a while olz a show or a movie comes along that is worth seeing. There always seems to be something else to do or to be done that's more important. IHarry M. Walsh, 160 North La Sane street, real estateI Isuppose so. But al- though the radio fur- 4 rashes a certain amount sok' 4gt I of entertainment- I wouldn't care to ex- I I elude other forms.

slit IEven when a football game or a prize fight is being broadcast I would rather hear it I at some place where there is a large crowd than to bear it at home. PP "The Wise Wife Better in Type than in Film -KIND: Comedy Drama. QUALITY: Fair. PHOTOGRAPHY: Good. ACTING: Could be 'better.

Much overacted on the parts of Phyllis Haver and Jacqueline Logan. All in cast seem rather hampered IV( the direction. DIRECTION: Hampering. STORY: By Arthur Somers Roche. The original was better than the adaptation, I read it.

The wise wife is the lady who ins her husband back from another lady, by methods only one sweetly domestic would ever of. REMARKS: Phyllis Haver can't I stand much featuring. When she has' some one to lean on she lets go and is 1 i 1 a When I was a reporter." continued Mr. Hobbs, who was managing editor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger before he took orders in the Episcopal church four year ago. I went to an Episcopal church thinking I might pick up a crumb of news.

I sat on the back seat. The bishop came that way. Are you a reporter?" he inquired. I I said. You get out of here.

he ordered. This policy of the church saving to newspaper men. You get out of here: must stop. I am glad my church looks now upon my position with sufficient dignity that I have a seat at the national council and do not have to peep through the You are shown the development of birdmen from. you might says the egg up.

You go with them from their first clumsy efforts on the grcund to their, finishing course in the heavens. You see some of them graduate whole and covered with honors, and others handed the fiery diploma of death. The air stuff is heart stopping. It is almost too i real. Impossible to forget those- fall-1 ing planes hurtling downward with fire devouring their vitalslike strange, wild birds in agony! If some of the catastrophic efforts were got with) miniatures, why, bravo just the It is brilliant, poignant, and honest "THE DOCTOR'S Play.

in five acts. by Bernard Shaw: made known in Chicago by the Theater Guild Acting Company, October 31. In the Studebaker Theater. with this cast: Charles Romano Emmy Belem West ley Sir Co lens Ho 'Iowa: Schutzmacher -Morris Carnovsky Sir Patrick Cullen Dudley Dines Mr. Cutler Walpole Earle Larimore Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington Ernest Coogan Dr.

Blenkinaop Henry Travers Jennifer DU beclat Lynn Pontanne Louis Dubedat Alfred Lunt Minnie Tinwell Phyllis Connard Newspaper Man Philip Leigh Secretary Cbarles Romano A Waiter Edward Hartford 1 BY GENEVIEVE FORBES HERRICK. They call- the piece The Doctors Dilemma." But it's really the patient's dilemma, yours and mine and that of the fellow down the street who thinks he may have appendicitis and can't get the diagnosing doctors to agree. For when you left the Studebaker theater last night. after five provocative acts with Bernard Shaw and that excellent Theater Guild Acting company. you.

as a potential patient. bad. perhaps. lost your faith, academically at least, in medicine men in general. but you were still betting your tonsils on your own favorite physician and surgeon.

And you were pondering. as you re-fleeted on the several contemporary and contrary medical opinions in your own experience. just what Sir Colenso Ridgeon, the research man of the play, meant when he announced to half a dozen of his colleagues, Were not a profession; were a conspiracy." I But the doctors in the audience, and they were there in such numbers that the foyer. at intermission time, looked like the medical tableover in the University Out; dining roamthey seemed to like it, for they laughed and held clinics over. it.

There was the fashionable doctorH who sang a medical monotone on 1 stimulate the phagocytes." which, by the way, we always called informally white corpuscles until last night There. was the zealous surgeon who thought of health only in the terms of the cutting out of some really useless adjunct, the nuciform sac. I believe he I called it. There was the old school doc- tor who knew the recurrency cycle of every new invention and discovery and didn't take much stock in any of them. There was the struggling little general 1 practitioner whose patients couldn1 afford to go to Egypt for a change of air and whose own clothes were shabby.

Then there was Sir Colenso. the re-arch man, with his cure for tuberculosis. His battleground was a man. two men. or rather their left lungs.

Since he could save but one of them, he had to assets of that honest, decent man. Blenkinsop. or that rotten blackguard of an artist" And the figure of a beautiful woman floating across one of the scales didn't help stabilize the motion of those scales. He and in his choice he brought Up that nice bit of speculation which will enrage dinner table conversation these next few days. When is a patient worth saving.

Here is where Shaw gets in his most characteristie work with the verbs and the prepositions. For instance, as they weigh the say-ability of the two consumptives. the man whose soul is honest and whose mind is indifferently colored. and the 1 mystical artist who is. they agree, a blackguard, the old school doctor says to the research man: Suppose you had this choice put before you: either to go through life and find all the pictures bad but all the men and women good.

or to go through life and find all the pictures good and all the men and women rotten. Which would you choose?" --A-- The 4uditorium theater was a scene of great aCtivity an day. A dozen clerks who have been at work since Saturday sorting out 9.000 applications for first night reservations estimated this year's patronage fifteen or twenty per cent greater than ever before. In the subscription series the Saturday continued to be the favorite, with Thursday and lqpnday nights running second and third. There was also a heavy demand for the two new series to be held this year on Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons.

An average of eight and one-half performances will be given each week during the season, instead of seven and one-bait as heretofore. Jeritza Opens Opera' Season in New York New 'York, Oct. opera Turandot opened the season of the Metropolitan Opera company here tonight. To put it more exactly, Marie Jeritza opened the season, and the opera happened to be "Turandot." Tinsel, gun powder and ghosts make up the story of Turandot." Pat cini music decked with a marimba and a few bells for thA oriental effect, makes up the score. Pit to the boxes of the grand tier and the parterre, to the dress circle.

the main floor. the galleries and the standees this meant little. Of the 761 people taking part In the performance, 760 were largely forgotten in the opera glass that turned to the prima donna taking the name part. "There must. be sore noticed that morning when he arrived that be looked as if he had not slept well the night before.

Now he looked as if he had had no sleep at all. "Good Lord, hasn't she come?" ruder her set look Jane flinched badly; his tone had fallen like a lash on her. "No!" she said. "Nor telephoned?" Janes lips trembled. No." He uttered an exclamation under his breath and strode into his room.

Ls black robe billowing out behind him. A moment later he opened his door. "Please ask Charlie to end out if he can where Miss Allen usually has her lunch." Involuntarily she had risen as he entered; then as though his very order was too much for her strength. she sat down again. Had he been ills familiar kindly self he would have noticed that Jane was speechless she could not speak.

But he said sternly, You will do it, won't you? And at once!" She could hear him move about in his office. He was pacing hack eld forth with sudden stops, like a man unendurably waiting. He stopped eery time footsteps sounded in the corridor outsideie and resumed when Iney passed. Her telephone rang. What does Charlie say?" he asked.

Her voice should have warned him. I didn't ask him!" He burst into her room. Jane, you're impossible!" He flung the w(irds over his shoulder as he hurried into the corridor to do what she "refused. When he came inagain she had on her hat and coat. Come- back boon, won't you?" he said without stopping.

"I'm not coming back: You'd better get her to do my work!" Not even the heartbreaking effort It must have cost her to keep from IctuallY shrieking these words penetrated his distraction oAs LAIrbW WUIU VVILLIdLeU LUZ, IlIZ LAU Ii immense. Give her much and it scares herstiff. See you tomorrow. $73,378 Is Subscribed I I in Y. W.

C. A. Campaign! 1 I I work, close copy of the tragic, flaming 1 tapestry woven in the skies over 1 there." You will be deeply impressed by the playing of the two young men who enter the war hating each other and end ithow? I'll be eager to hear your comments on Richard Arlen. A strangely lovable character. this known, with with a wistful, hesitant boyishness that sits most appealingly on the athletic bigness of him.

Charles Rogers. graduate of the Paramount school of acting, sunshiny and eager, is likable and clever. but he has not Mr. Arlen's pull on your sympathies. 1 The second week of the Y.

W. C. A. drive for budget funds opened with a total of $73,378 in subscriptions, according to reports made yeterday at the campaign workers' luncheon at the Morrison hotel. Evanston remains at the head of the suburbs and the men from the wholesale houses lead the men's loop division, closely followed by the bank teams.

I am proud of the secular press of America. During my twentyfive I years in newspaper work I was never called upon to do an Indecent thing, nor sell out to any one. or any Interest. and I never knew my paper to do so. "There are many men on the newspapers of this country who love the church and are eager to serve.

But the day of advertising strawberry est 1 vals In the daily paper Intended for a million people Ls past. The churches should stop sponging. expecting something for nothing. panhandling. Let them advertise on a generous scale and pay for IL There is not a single denomination, unless we except Christian Science.

that is organized technically to get its message across." Jobyna Ralston is insipid as the girl A STRAIN ON THE FAMILY TIE. II-'Nonsense! Take your time then. But you're coming back!" She did come back in less than ten minutes, without a thought of food. S4' had never before seen him so distraught and not even her own pain "cos proof against the bitter reproaches she heaped upon herself for desert-tag biro when he looked and acted and felt so much unlike his normal self. Bruce adjourned court unexpectedly, a slight hitch in the proceedings rdng him an excuse.

Bennett. the assistant district attorney, who Was Drosetutor in the case, was surprised. Bruce Craigin was not in the habit letting trivial obstacles break up a session in court. Now when Bruce entered Jane's office he went straight to the filing tabinet here Mary Allen kept her records. His disregard of her eagertese to serve him, the sight of him engaged on what it was her duty to do, WILS cruel to her.

Only the strain in his face mitigated the hurt he Itteted. tt OCEAN STEAMSHIP MOTET. Promo. innetorik a New Albrct Bailin I4ew Pennland Now Andanis Neer CP Itse New innewask a London New Tort Scythl a York Cleveland Hamburg Ne York Belgeniand York Cedric 1.4verpool Nets York Amer. Partner.

LAMCinti York Cameronia Glasgow New York Lancastria Havre New York Sailed. Troia. To. Amer. Merchant New York Thuringia Queenstown New York Baltic Quownstown 'York Transylvania Glasgow 'York Rao New Tort Berlin Cherbourg York to Bourtionnais Hordes New Tort Oselir IL Oslo New York Mini treduin Liverpool $7,000,000 Is Given for Social Research New York, Oct.

tions totaling nearly $7.000.00 were made in 1926 by the Laura Spetzfrin Rockefeller memorial to finance research by various institutions in social science, child study, and kindred fields. IIt was announced in the annual report today. 1 More than $1,500.006 was appropriated to universities and other research agencies in this country and abroad to provide research facilities and assist-I ance and for international traveling 4el1owsh1ps. In the United States Institutions aided included Columbia university, Harvard. Northwestern university.

Syracuse university. $33,717: University of Virginia. Institute of Pacific Relations. $10,000. Appropriations were made also to the American Psychological associaton.

$76,500: the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. 800, and the national bureau of economic research, $35.000. Nearly 000 was appropriated to institutions abroad. In the field of child study and parental education. the report states, $591.000 was appropriated.

1 Whafs Doing Today. 1 a i 1 I I 1 1 1 it I 1 I 1 I 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 111 i 1 1 I i I i 1 I I 1 1 i -L 4, mIts .........,..................................................1. 1 10. 0 4 I tri, -------7-06----------- 141Ili SR. --Vraos---- 4 1 1) 4.

a 00 0 ft-- La 11 3: i rKt)IDENT i'-; -J7 541in )c -E. -7g i 11i 1., AO k. 07 ert flt 1 dil .1 :,1 1.111 Of .4 NtLi 1.w AW 13,1,, 1 1'; ') rI' 1 S' 4 .7 40 11: 1'. ,,,..............7,.1 ..,,,510,.: 1 '''''''67. 4 ill Alp 110.cl.....:4 ult A $7,500.00 Tribune Accident Insurance Policy I Ile vas forced to turn to her after all.

"Please find for me the bi.iirvss of Gray and the other current probationers. Then look up the E-hho Phile club in the telephone book. get them and ring me." She found the addresses and silently brought them in to him. He did lot even look up as bhe handed him the list. In his averted face she r.111-1, "If you had not created that abominable scene, Mary Allen would te bare now! As It is.

where is she?" Broce's orderly mind had been indulging in caprices in logic. Mary .0, ea had not appeared or telephoned. Therefore she was gone forever. w141 was gone; therefore she must be guilty of something. "Never!" part of him cried.

"Then why has she run away? Jane accuses her. And Galt acMali her!" "Jane is jealous, hysterical!" "Galt is neither!" There was only one way of proving Galt wrong at once. When MarY bad brought back the report from the Bibliophile club that it Was Randall" who had bought number 43 of their limited edition of A4cassin alai Nicolette Galt had said in effect that this could not be-- it was "-out of character." Was he accusing thereby Mary Allen of misrepresentation? It wws ea sY enough to determine now. Bruce had decided how much was in the accusation. club?" he asked over the wire.

Two is Judge Cralgin. 6. weeks ago I sent up my secretary. Miss Allen. to find out who ha'd certain numbers, particularly number 43.

of your "Aucassin and Can you without much trouble lay your hands on that informs, again. please?" 7Q1Y. Yea. Judge Craigin," a trian at the other end of the wire said. tt was only several days ago that your secretary came for the Infer-And he--" aNG it was practically a month age." Bruce broke in.

ant on Judge, but it was as be I say. I know It cause I is had out the data from some records which had not been opened by' several months. Nor by any one else. Let me see. I'll tell you date when your man was hereyes.

it was last Tuesday." I se 11-t are you talking about!" Bruce remarked. It was weeks ago for that information. And it was Miss Allen who brought It. not Iran: Tben there must be borne mistake." the clerk said decisively. "And i'itultu pardon me again.

Judge. the mistake is not mine. I can describe le.th alrt 'erY clearlytall. thin. quite impatient in manner.

his face sunken. 'KAI'. or two showing and what looked like old knife wound near Le 4 r. 7 Df '-h L4 111 )4 ot nd ar Costs Only di-lb And the research mart: "That's a devilishly different question. Paddy.

The pictures are so agreeable. and the good people so infernally disagreeable and mischievous that I really can't undertake to say offhand which I should prefer to do without." But he finally chooses. And his selection silhouettes Lynn Fontanne as the Jennifer Dubedat of the play. and Alfred Lunt, her husband. the artist as lustrous.

living lights, against a backdrop that is gray with the least wholesome phase of medicine. and the most fantastic arc of art Their work Is beautiful, and it is valid. As a substituting play reporter whose own back yard Is more concerned with the news than with the drama. I have the temerity to quarrel with Shaw over his depiction of the reporter in The Doctor's De.enuna." Ile is such a boon But the scene has reality When the doctor gives him the run around. and then reminds hint of the correetarpelling of hie DAM, MORE THAN I 4.7)7601000.00 HAS BEEN PAID TO TRIBUNE POLICYHOLDERS OR THEIR BENEFICIARIES CONVENTIONS.

Ainericati College of Physical Therapy Sherman American Management Illinois State Federation of Temple Sisterhoods COTI MSS Beauty aid Barbera Supply Dealers association Stevens Northern Baptist Convention I Stevens Research clob Bead United Lutheran Church of Arnencan (board of ministerial passional Edgewater Beach LUNCHEONS. Illinois Wo-letv of Fine rh'eaa Round Table La Salle C4 I WI) Get at Non bent Crriral I 1.11) Hamilton club Eng Aliort visit club Financial Adverttarra alt.ottia tom herman Knickerbocker ockletr La Sail Lincoln Park lawaala Panartert, act a PteW policy or renew your old one. send Coupon vn roe( 3 TODAY! 40 BO tar" Cita" pa OOOOO 00 00 0000 00 tCopyrizht: lrZI: By Joeboh Gerasuba Continued tontorraw4 I -0, m.mAr 0.

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