Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
12253Are you going to have the best in 1905?
36417''Do you speak Scotch?''
36417''Johnny Gaunt, Sir?''
36417''Nor Italian?''
36417''Spanish?''
36417''Suffolk?''
36417''Welsh?''
36417''Who is it?''
36417''_ Charon._--How?
36417But what talke I of this earthy nourishment of_ fire_?
36417From whence comest thou, Passenger?
36417How haue the_ Fires_ of Heauen( some few yeares past) gone beyond their bounds, and appeared in the shapes of Comets and Blazing Starres?...
36417How many frightfull Ecclipses both of Sun and Moone?...
36417How, I thought, could artists and journalists so work concurrently that the news and the appropriate illustrations should both be fresh?
36417Speak you German?''
36417The carpenter, however, rejoins,''But who regarded"hold"before?
36417The writer concludes, with true newspaper vehemence, in the following words:--''Where is the glory of the British name?
36417There is a dialogue between Strafford and Charon, of which the following is a specimen:--''_ Charon._--In the name of Rhodomont what ayles me?
36417This was repeated so often that he became quite weary of the constantly recurring question,''Is Corder executed?''
36417Were not their ears to them as pretious as your nostrils can be to you?
36417What blazing Starres( euen at Noone- dayes) in those times hung houering in the Aire?
36417What is thy name?
36417What was there so remarkable in the case, in the persons, or even in the costume of the accused, that they should be made the subject of a picture?
36417When the Duke of A----, in full Highland costume, entered the chapel, there was a general inquiry,''Who is that?''
36417Where are the terrors that used to accompany our fleets and armies?
22872An''what do you think, Mrs. Lathrop? 22872 But what can I do, Mrs. Lathrop, I did n''t know of nothin''?
22872But who--?
22872Did he tear the sheet any?
22872Did--?
22872Elijah? 22872 Now--?"
22872Oh, of course not,said Susan,"but they can take him up by the tail an''horns, ca n''t they?"
22872Oh, the picnic?
22872Well, Mrs. Lathrop, what do you think,--what_ do_ you think? 22872 Well, what was I sayin''?
22872What do you--?
22872What is it?
22872When--?
22872An''you do n''t see nothin''funny in it, do you?"
22872Brown?"
22872But I was hardly out when a lady as I had n''t seen yet see my little flag an''pounced on me an''said was I Miss Clegg?
22872Did I say as Elijah said he''d sleep at the store to- night?"
22872I stood by the bed an''looked at him hard an''then I says to him, I says,''Well, what did you wake me up for?''
22872It''s a letter an''begins,''Dear Aunt Abby;''then it says,''Do you think it is possible to be happy with a young man with freckles?
22872She said,''Oh my, what would Mr. Roosevelt say to that?''
22872She says, would n''t that drive a good wife right out beside her own mind?
22872She yelled,''What was it?
22872The next one is this one an''it says,''How long ought any one to wait to get married?
22872Then I said,''Where do you want the plaster, Elijah?''
22872Then Miss Clegg drew a long breath and re- began thus:"Well, now, the first is,''How can you put pickles up so they''ll keep the year''round?''"
22872Well, Mrs. Lathrop, what do you think that particular new thought was?
22872Well, she says he did n''t say nothin''for a minute an''then he said''Wh- a- t?''
22872What do you think?
22872What_ do_ you think?
22872What_ do_ you think?
22872You know the rhyme in Mother Goose where the dog is four legs an''gets the mutton as is one leg in the man''s lap?
22872You''ve been an''woke me up an''now I''m woke up what do you want me to do?''
22872what was it?''
22872what was it?''
33251''Do you see that rebel battery down there on the hillside?'' 33251 ''Fraid, are ye?"
33251And does he by any chance--I inquired in as serious a manner as I could command,"I mean, of course, when he is angry-- kick the cat?"
33251Anthy?
33251But now, Fergus,persisted Nort,"if you were editing a column in the newspaper what would you put in it?"
33251But, Fergus, what have you got against me? 33251 But, Nort,"I continued;"you may have seen the church in Hempfield, but have you felt it?"
33251Captain,said Nort, instantly, before the old Captain had a moment to express his surprise,"have you seen the Sterling_ Democrat_ this week?"
33251Do you know,Ed asked the Captain,"the motto that I''d print on that door?"
33251Ever study the anatomy of a gasoline engine?
33251Fergus, where''s Nort? 33251 Fergus, where''s the fatted calf?"
33251Fine, is n''t it?
33251Found her, have you, Cap''n?
33251Free of what, Nort?
33251Going away? 33251 Got anything larger?"
33251Have you said_ exactly_ what you think, Uncle?
33251Have you seen Norton Carr?
33251Have you thought that wherever you go you will be meeting Ed Smiths?
33251How are you getting along, Nort?
33251How did you know?
33251How''s the Captain?
33251How, then?
33251I''ll tell you, Nort: The greatest joy in this world to a man like you is the joy of new ideas, of wonderful plans---- Now, is n''t it?
33251If I love her and she loves me, who else has got anything to say about it I''d like to know?
33251Is n''t every word of it true? 33251 Is n''t it a beauty?"
33251Is n''t it wonderful-- all of it?
33251Is that all you came back for?
33251Is there anything that should encourage one to truth- telling more than the church?
33251Is this Anthy?
33251Is this what you came to tell me at three o''clock in the morning?
33251Just found it out?
33251May I come in?
33251Nort,I said suddenly,"you have n''t been seeing any terrible truths about Hempfield, have you?"
33251Now what was Ed Smith thinking of-- putting a piece like that in the paper?
33251See here, Miss Doane,he began excitedly,"what right has the Captain to discharge me?"
33251Seen the_ Star_ this week?
33251She told you?
33251Surrendered?
33251Tell me, has he chin whiskers?
33251Ten, did you say? 33251 Then you would n''t put the truth in the_ Star_?"
33251Thrash the editor?
33251We can show''em a thing or two, eh, Nort?
33251We enjoyed printing the poetry, did n''t we?
33251We were going to have Uncle''s editorial, were n''t we? 33251 We''ve got to keep the_ Star_ going somehow, have n''t we?"
33251Well, Fergus, where did you drop from?
33251Well, Miss Grayson,said he, coming up the steps,"have you decided yet whether you and David are most indebted to the Macintoshes or the Scribners?"
33251Well, we got to live, have n''t we?
33251Well, what do you want me to do?
33251Well,said Ed,"what would you have?
33251What brings you here?
33251What could n''t you put in her? 33251 What did he say?"
33251What do you mean? 33251 What do you mean?"
33251What do you mean?
33251What do you mean?
33251What do you mean?
33251What do you want him like?
33251What does it all mean?
33251What is it, Margaret?
33251What is most interesting to you?
33251What right has the Captain to discharge me?
33251What was it?
33251What would you put in her?
33251What would you put in the paper, anyhow, David?
33251What ye going to do?
33251What''s all this tomfoolery about printing the truth in the_ Star_?
33251What''s friendship to do wi''it? 33251 What''s that man Kendrick been doing now?"
33251What''s that, Cap''n?
33251What''s that?
33251What''s the matter, Harriet?
33251What''s the protective tariff or the Philippine question to Nat Halstead compared with the price of potatoes?
33251What_ are_ you all so serious about?
33251What_ is_ the matter?
33251Where am I?
33251Where are you, Anthy?
33251Where is it?
33251Where''s Nort?
33251Where''s Nort?
33251Where''s that reading notice about the electric light company?
33251Where''s yours, Fergus?
33251Who is it? 33251 Who was that now?"
33251Who wrote this item about a strange young man?
33251Who''s editing this paper, anyway, Captain?
33251Whom shall we send it to?
33251Whur''ll ye do better?
33251Whur''ll you find a better one?
33251Why not, Fergus?
33251Why not?
33251Why should you fight me?
33251Why, what''s the matter with Norton Carr?
33251Why?
33251Why?
33251Will ye fight wi''yer coat on or off?
33251Wo n''t you come in?
33251Wull?
33251Ye think I wrote it?
33251Yes,she replied faintly;"but, Uncle, how did you get it?"
33251You do n''t really think I wrote it?
33251You have?
33251You''re in the newspaper business, are n''t you?
33251You-- fired-- Nort?
33251''John Tole''s Favourite Poem,''What do you say, Miss Doane?"
33251About themselves?
33251And absurd?
33251And ca n''t you drum up a few new subs out there for us?
33251And is it not a worthy moment when everything that is selfish in a human heart is consumed in the white heat of a great emotion?
33251And what better than a wandering flying- machine?
33251And why not Norton Carr, editor?
33251And why should he get ahead?
33251Are n''t you trying to run away?"
33251Are n''t you trying to run away?"
33251As I stood there in the printing- office, looking about me, Fergus glanced up from the"Adventures of Tom Sawyer"and said:"Wull?"
33251As I went upstairs I heard Harriet, in a frightened whisper:"What in the world is the matter, David?"
33251As the town came into view, with the eastern sun upon it, Fergus burst out in a voice as wild and harsh as a bagpipe:"Wha will be a traitor knave?
33251At that moment the old Captain''s voice was heard from upstairs, booming vigorously:"Is that Nort?
33251But how could one put that in the_ Star_?
33251But what was that strange object in the corner on the floor?
33251But with that second"Wull?"
33251Ca n''t you see how foolish it is?"
33251Ca n''t you see it?"
33251Carr?"
33251Cookies from Buffalo Fragrant New Cheese"What else is it that smells?"
33251Did n''t I, Anthy?"
33251Do n''t you see?
33251Do you realize that such beautiful things as these are going on all around us, in an evil and trouble- ridden old world?
33251Do you?"
33251Got any more where those come from?"
33251Graham?"
33251Graham?"
33251Had he not come to the_ Star_ with the idea that Anthy---- Could he not have made a lot more money by going with the Dexter_ Enterprise_?
33251Had he not shown that human flight was contrary, not only to immutable natural laws, but to the moral law as well?
33251Had he not stumped the state for Blaine?
33251Had he not, again and again in the columns of the_ Star_, proved the utter absurdity of attempting to fly?
33251Had not congressmen come to his door with their hats in their hands offering him favours in exchange for his support?
33251Harriet heard me laughing, and called from the other room:"David, what_ are_ you laughing at?"
33251Have n''t you a favourite poem you can put in?''
33251Have n''t you given up?
33251Have n''t you given up?
33251Have n''t you given up?
33251Have n''t you sent for money?
33251Have n''t you sent for money?
33251Have n''t you sent for money?
33251He pulled his forelock again, and in a voice still more subdued and respectful, repeated:"What shall I do next, miss?"
33251He tinkered away industriously for a moment, and when I continued to stand there watching him, he inquired solemnly:"A hen has no spark coil, has it?"
33251He was forever calling in Fergus, never Ed Smith, with such remarks as these:"How does she look now, Fergus?
33251I asked here, and,"Have you seen Norton Carr?"
33251I leave it to you, David, how any man is going to write a novel which he can neither get into nor get out of?"
33251I may say in passing that the Captain''s inquiry:"What has become of the officer of the law in Hempfield?"
33251I saw the Captain with my own eyes as he wrote: What has become of the officer of the law in Hempfield?
33251I went over to see him on the second day of his illness, and the first thing he said when I came in was this:"Where''s Nort?
33251I wonder if this is at all an ordinary experience with men?
33251I wonder if you have ever awakened in the morning with a curious deep sense of having some peculiar reason for being happy?
33251I wonder why it is that when small communities jump at conclusions, they so often jump the wrong way?
33251If it had not been for this second"Wull?"
33251Indeed, Ed Smith said---- But can we ever measure the best things in life by their financial returns?
33251Is it anything I have done, or have not done?
33251Is it the Newtons?"
33251Is n''t that your favourite poem, Fergus?"
33251Is this an orderly and law- abiding town or is it not?
33251Is yours any different, Nort?--or_ yours_?
33251May I depend on you?''
33251My father devoted all his life to it, and then, there was Uncle Newt-- how could Uncle Newt live without a newspaper?"
33251Now, I ask you if that gives you any picture of what the meeting was like?
33251Of whom was he to get ahead?
33251One of the visitors inquired:"May I see the proprietor of the_ Star_?"
33251Our prices are the lowest"How''s that, now?"
33251She had called upstairs only once:"Anthy, where did you put the cinnamon?"
33251She had no need of making any changes, for this was all she had to say: DEAR NORT: Why have you gone away from Hempfield, and where are you?
33251She''s a good one, eh, Fergus, for her age?"
33251So what''s the use of printing it?
33251Some one asked the Captain:"You knew General McClellan personally, did n''t you, Cap''n?"
33251That evening, rereading Nort''s letter, she said aloud:"What does he mean by saying Fergus is right?
33251That in nearly all lives there are such perfect moments?
33251The moment he saw me, he forestalled any remark by inquiring:"How''s the Cap''n to- day?"
33251To be needed in other human lives-- is there anything greater or more beautiful in this world?
33251Was it not the natural reward of the faithful party worker?
33251We did n''t know we had a gold mine in the Cap''n, now, did we?
33251Well, what could he do?
33251Wha sae base as be a slave?
33251Wha will fill a coward''s grave?
33251What are you doing here at this time of the night?"
33251What could be a better personal item than a poem by-- who was it, Miss Doane?"
33251What do you consider yourself, an oak or a reed?"
33251What do you suppose Nort and Anthy talked about?
33251What has Fergus to do with it?
33251What has come over him?
33251What have you been up to now?"
33251What wild- goose chase was I on?
33251What will she say?"
33251What would she do?
33251What would she say if she saw him running?
33251What would you do about the passage, anyway?"
33251What, after all, had I come for?
33251What_ shall_ I do?"
33251Where was Anthy?
33251Where''s a pencil and paper?
33251Where_ is_ Fergus?"
33251Who are ye that ye should be lookin''upon a girl like that?"
33251Why all this confusion?
33251Why do such visions smite us at our most solemn moments?
33251Why have you gone away from Hempfield?
33251Why not a wonderful new country journalism?
33251Why this rank commercialism?
33251Why was I in this absurd printing- office?
33251Why, then, these sensational changes?
33251Why?"
33251Will she stand for a little stiffer spring, you think?
31138And the Irish?
31138And three pounds of rice?
31138And to- day is the Witch''s holiday?
31138And what are_ you_ doing here?
31138And who governs while he is away?
31138And you-- may I ask whither you are bound?
31138Are we to be a wholly lady- like nation?
31138Can it be that the Columbia Mills people are ashamed of something?
31138Child, what does this mean?
31138Did I know him?
31138Did you ever,said he,"read Edward Everett''s address at Gettysburg?"
31138Do you, indeed?
31138Does your arm hurt you again?
31138God help me, where''ll I hide myself away and my long neck naked to the world?
31138Grandmother, what has become of your diamond- filled teeth?
31138Has he ever caught you, little one?
31138How is everything in Rainbow''s- End?
31138How long have yez had Home Rule?
31138I beg your pardon,she said,"but are n''t you the father of two of my children?"
31138Is a wheeze about the seat of learning too obvious?
31138Is it like the land of the musk- ox in summer, when the mist is on the lakes, and the loon cries very often?
31138Is n''t it perfectly mean, Mowgli?
31138Is there a beautiful Princess, with many suitors for her hand?
31138Is this a roof garden?
31138My dear,she said,"why do n''t you put your skill and energy to some use?
31138Oh, did Waverly write that?
31138Oh, is that a fruit store?
31138One can never really grow tired of it, can one?
31138Ten pounds of flour?...
31138Unless I have entire power,said he,"how can I make this a democratic college?"
31138Was n''t Beethoven deaf?
31138Well,said the lady petulantly,"what do you suggest?"
31138What are you whaling that cur for?
31138What do they manufacture here?
31138What do you know about that?
31138What has become of Mary MacLane?
31138What is the matter, Abner?
31138What is the pineapple ice?
31138What lies yonder?
31138Where is he?
31138Which used it first?
31138Whither are you going?
31138Who''s there?
31138Why do n''t the Cartoonlanders have machines that_ can_ go?
31138Why does he have to do that?
31138Will it hold us?
31138Would you like to come along?
31138_***Are we all to shudder at the name of Rabelais and take to smelling salts?"
31138(_ Lord Dunsany._) What is it to hate poetry?
31138*** A frequent question since the war began is,"Why are there so many damn fools in the faculties of American universities?"
31138*** A man will sit around smoking all day and his wife will remark:"My dear, are n''t you smoking too much?"
31138*** As a variant for"loophound,"may we suggest"prominent hound about town"?
31138*** BUT WOULD IT NOT REQUIRE A GEOLOGIC PERIOD?
31138*** By the way, has any candid merchant ever advertised a Good Riddance Sale?
31138*** Did you think"I''ll say so"was new slang?
31138*** How could the teacher rebuke Emil when she read this excuse from his father?
31138*** In considering additions to the Academy of Immortals shall Anna Quaintance be forgot?
31138*** Is there another person in this wicked world quite so virtuous as a chief of police on the day that he takes office?
31138*** LAME IN BOTH REGISTERS?
31138*** MY LOVE, DID YOU KNOW THERE WERE SO MANY KINDS OF MAIDS?
31138*** May we again point out that pessimism is the only cheerful philosophy?
31138*** OH, DON''T YOU REMEMBER SWEET MARY, BEN BOLT?
31138*** Overheard in an osteopath''s office:"When does it hurt you most, when you set or when you lay?"
31138*** THE G. P. P. Sir: What is the gadder''s pet peeve?
31138*** WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE HE WANTS?
31138*** WHYNOTT?
31138*** Was there ever a character more delightfully detestable than Mrs. Norris?
31138*** What could be more frank than the framed motto in the Hotel Fortney, at Viroqua, Wis.--"There Is No Place Like Home."?
31138*** What do they mean"industrial unrest"?
31138*** What do you mean"prosperity"?
31138*** What is a story?
31138*** What is the use of expositions of other men''s philosophic systems unless the exposition is made lucid and interesting?
31138*** Why is it that in nearly all decisions of the Supreme court the most interesting opinions are delivered by the dissenting justices?
31138*** Why is it that when a woman takes the measurements for a screen door she thinks she has to allow a couple of inches to turn in?
31138*** William Benzine, who lives near Rio, Wis., was filling his flivver tank by the light of a lantern when-- But need we continue?
31138*** YES?
31138***"After submitting a contribution, how long must one remain in suspense?"
31138***"Are we going crazy?"
31138***"Do you not know,"writes Persephone,"that with the coming of all this water, all imagination and adventure have fled the world?"
31138***"In fact, I''ve finished-- would you say a sonnet?"
31138***"What is art?"
31138***"What, indeed?"
31138***"What,"queries R. W. C.,"has become of the little yellow crabs that floated in the o. f. oyster stew?"
31138***"Why care for grammar as long as we are good?"
31138***"Why not make room for daddy?"
31138***_ BLAKE COMES BACK.__ Little Ford, who made thee?
311381, which runs:"First Comedian:''Well, what made you get drunk in the first place?''
31138A LINE- O''-TYPE OR TWO_ Quicquid agunt homines nostri est farrago libelli._--_Juvenal._ Question: Who is this Juvenal wheezer?
31138A question to be matched by that of the superintendent of Cook county''s schools,"Why should n''t a man say''It''s me''and''It do n''t''?"
31138After ascertaining the amount the receiving teller asked,"Did you foot it up?"
31138After the"Confessions"and the"Memoirs"what in the world is there left for the man to avow?
31138Ah, yes, why not make room for daddy?
31138And Villon starved and Keats, Keats-- Where am I?
31138And What''s- his- name''s pig sausage?
31138And is there any more uncongenial club than the Human Race?
31138And it is pacific, is n''t it?"
31138And speaking of Mill, do you remember the library catalogue which contained the consecutive items,"Mill on Liberty"and"Ditto on the Floss"?
31138And yet how come That Myra Tinkelpaugh, of Cobleskill, New York, conducts therein The Music Shop?
31138And you used to print so many of the beautiful things they wrote?"
31138Anybody want them?
31138B. C.:"Large or small?"
31138Balfour?"
31138But did you know that it originated in Columbus, O.?
31138But hoonel, as Orpheus asked Eurydice, wants to be a camel?
31138But ought a Bostonian to split his infinitives in public?
31138But what is romance?
31138But why mar the pleasure of a journey by taking notes?
31138But why multiply instances?
31138But why not have one on a grand scale?
31138Can Al have added a little hard water to the mixture?
31138Can it be a sanitarium?
31138Can not they be signed for an entertainment in the Academy?
31138Can you ask?
31138Can you whittle a wheeze out of that?
31138Can you write?
31138D. K. M.*** Just what does the trade jargon mean,"Experience essential but not necessary"?
31138Did you ever see an engine like that outside Cartoonland?
31138Do n''t you mean"consequently"?
31138Do you expect us to get stuff That is clear over our bean?
31138Do you fancy_ that_ is easy?
31138Do you remember what Henry Ward Beecher said of the Chinese?
31138Do you think she was bawling me out or was she paying me a compliment?
31138Do you wonder, my dear?
31138Do you?
31138Does that coincide with your experience, my dear?
31138Dost thou know who made thee?__ Little Ford, I''ll tell thee, Little Ford, I''ll tell thee.
31138E. P. P.***"Will the Devil complete the capture of the modern church?"
31138Give us a line on the geezer-- What is he trying to say?
31138Have you not received courage?
31138Have you not received endurance?"
31138Have you not received magnanimity?
31138Have you seen my garden, Henry?"
31138He replied,"Ai n''t it hell?
31138Hint for Briggs:"Wonder what Henry Ford thinks about?"
31138His subject for Sunday night will be"Is There a Hell?"
31138How absurd was Prof. McCoosh of Princeton, who, having answered"It''s me"to a student inquiry,"Who''s there?"
31138How did we manage it?
31138However, everybody will be crazy as a hatter before long, so what does it matter?
31138I ask you, ai n''t women funny?
31138If you should ask,"Who was with he?"
31138In the woodshed?
31138Is he not?
31138Is it eeen that box on the platform at the depo?
31138Is it not a marvelous invention, father?
31138Is it not?
31138Is she on the floor?"
31138Is the whale, then, superior to, say, Senator Johnson?
31138Is this merely luck, or is evolution modifying the human coco?
31138It do n''t make you writhe, do it?
31138It is?
31138It''s a plant that live on air, Could you find an odder fodder if you hunted everywhere?
31138L. A. H. To continue, the Scotchman said:"Well, Pat, what are we going to have to- day?
31138Little Ford, who made thee?
31138Maecenas?
31138May I not suggest that the Congress be petitioned to make the move by degrees instead of inches, and thus avoid great suffering?
31138May we not hope that the w. k. infinitive also may be preserved intact?
31138Must we tell?
31138Nor is it necessary to inquire,"Are we on time?"
31138O Mores!_-- What do they ever get from you-- Your Laura, Pan, Dolores?
31138One of the questions is:"Can you read?
31138Or did you stop at the woodchuck hole?
31138Or five hundred?
31138Or was it Huysmans?
31138Rain or snow?"
31138Reply: If you''re too lazy to look for Juvenal''s name in the Dic, Why should_ I_ go to the book for Such a cantankerous kick?
31138Said B. L. T. to F. P. A.,"How shall I end the Line to- day?"
31138Shall we trust our intelligence or our senses?
31138She was continually at war, and what did the Grecians do for art?
31138She... but how compare her?
31138Should he not have given another twenty- four hours to so large an opus?
31138Sir: Did you ever ride on a street car in one of those towns where no one has any place to go and all day to get there in?
31138Sir: How long do you suppose the Snow Ball Laundry will last in Quinter, Kansas?
31138Sir: Last night I disturbed the family catawollapus-- née Irish-- with,"Are you asleep, Maggie?"
31138Sir: Overheard at the Studebaker:"What''s put him off his nut?"
31138Sir: Remember the story about Theodore Parker and Emerson?
31138Sir: Should G. E. Thorpe''s typewritten communications carrying the suggestion GET/ FAT precede or follow our communications which carry EAT/ ME?
31138Sir: What position in your letter file, respecting the suggestions of GET/ FAT, will my typewritten letters land, as they end thusly:"HEL/ NO"?
31138Sleepy weather, is n''t it?
31138Sounds like Lope de Vega, does n''t it?
31138That is a simple proceeding: Why not adopt it?
31138The Wolf pitched his voice as high and unpleasant as he could, and called out,"What is it, Hawkins?"
31138The doctor cuts him down to three cigars a day, and his wife remarks:"My dear, are n''t you smoking too much?"
31138The question is, how shall we set about it?
31138This is all clear to you, I suppose?"
31138This young ash, robed all in yellow-- what can the sun add to its splendor?
31138Topsy- turvy world, did you say?
31138Unless obliged to, why should anybody write when he can read instead?
31138V."And how is the Princess Aralia?"
31138Voice:"Is the elevator ready?"
31138Votes for women?
31138Was there ever another character presented, so alive and breathing, in so few pen strokes?
31138Wer is the thing you seet on?
31138What brought them there?
31138What do they ever get for these?
31138What do you advise?"
31138What do you make of that, Watsonius?
31138What do you mean"and yet,"Stephen?
31138What does the gibberish mean?
31138What drives a historian to write history?
31138What has happened to their sense of humor?
31138What if we do n''t have palaces, With damp and musty walls?
31138What is a politician?
31138What is the"S"for?
31138What literary acid do_ you_ apply?
31138What of it?
31138What say they?
31138What traveler can better that?
31138What''s in a name?
31138When the lad came to he looked around( ruined church on one side, busted houses, etc., up stage, and all that):"Where am I?"
31138When the train halts you do not have to ask,"What place is this?"
31138When they asked,"Are you well?"
31138Where am I now?
31138Where is he?
31138Which E?
31138While more humorous than perhaps was intended, they fall short of the forms suggested by Max Beerbohm, in"How Shall I Word It?"
31138Who''ll contribute a buggy?
31138Why do n''t the men propose, mama, why do n''t the men propose?
31138Why does not some pianist give us a really popular recital programme?
31138Why is it assumed that the Old Boy is attempting to capture it?
31138Why leapest thou, Why leapest thou So high within my breast?
31138Why prose?
31138Why?
31138Will a few other trades acquaint us with their classics?
31138Will that be all?"
31138Will you can it or no?
31138Wonder how he explained it to the Prof?
31138Would he add anything to the landscape gardening surrounding the Academy of Immortals?
31138Would you buy such an ark for a child?
31138Yes or No?"
31138Zazzo?
31138_ Our favorite Brahms?
31138_ You?_ So as I quaff my spectral wine, At ease beside the Styx, Would I contribute to the Line?
31138_ You?_ So as I quaff my spectral wine, At ease beside the Styx, Would I contribute to the Line?
31138and P.), Or the second piano quartette?_ Sardi.
31138becomes"Dieu m''aide, où vais- je me cacher et mon long cou tout nu?"
31138he exclaimed, taking the spaniel by his shaggy ears,"did you dream_ all_ that wonderful dream?
31138stuff?
55535''Ullo, Polly, lovely weather, do n''t it?
55535), and at last he blurted out,I say, Beaver, what''s the name of the girl that sits nearest the door in your office?"
55535A woman journalist?
55535All the same,said Barboux,"Paris is a wonderful city,_ hein_?"
55535All well?
55535And what about myself; must not I begin over again, too?
55535And what becomes of those who live? 55535 And you wo n''t run off this time?"
55535Angry?
55535Any good? 55535 Any telegrams from London?"
55535Anything big from Paris?
55535Anything special?
55535Are they difficult to do?
55535Are they relations of yours?
55535Are you going to be sacked, or is your salary to be raised?
55535Are you saved?
55535Are you so wrapped up in it?
55535Been busy?
55535But I''ve kept the cab waiting.... Well, have you two said your sobbing farewells?
55535But WHY did he do it?
55535But do n''t you think you''d do better on a daily paper?
55535But do n''t you think you''re too sensitive?
55535But were n''t you only going to stay in journalism for another year, Humphrey?
55535By the way,said Larkin,"heard about Tommy Pride?"
55535Cannock''s?
55535Could n''t I? 55535 Could you tell me if Mr Beaver happens to be in the office now?"
55535Dance like that-- in front of all these people?
55535Did he often come here?
55535Did n''t I tell you? 55535 Did you have your cocoa?"
55535Did you?
55535Do n''t you feel like that towards me?
55535Do n''t you see how impossible it would be?
55535Do n''t you see it too?
55535Do what?
55535Do what?
55535Do you know,she said,"we have in our office thirty men who are doing the same thing, and, in all London, there are hundreds more?"
55535Do you often come here?
55535Do you really think so?
55535Do you take tea or coffee with your breakfasts, Mr Quain?
55535Do you write books, Mr Pride?
55535Does n''t it revolt you?
55535Does nobody realize the ruin and wreckage that belongs to big cities? 55535 Does your brother help?"
55535Funny, is n''t it, that we''ve got to fly for a safeguard to the People''s Committee? 55535 Getting on all right?"
55535Glorious day, Quain,he said;"makes you feel glad that you''re alive, does n''t it?
55535Go away? 55535 Going to be a blushing bride soon, Lily?"
55535Hallo, here''s Leman-- have you voted yet, Leman?
55535Hallo,said O''Malley,"been here long?"
55535Have n''t they printed your stuff?
55535Have you accepted the post?
55535Have you forgotten? 55535 Have you told your aunt?"
55535Have you told your mother yet?
55535Heard about Wratten?
55535Home,said Humphrey;"where are you?"
55535How could you have been when I had n''t met you? 55535 How did you get it?"
55535How do you help them?
55535How do you make that out?
55535How''s that for descriptive?
55535Hullo, Grame,said Wratten,"anybody else here yet?"
55535Hullo, Quain... what are you doing here?
55535Hullo,said Wratten,"where are you off to?"
55535I forget the name of the street-- somewhere near Charing Cross-- that''s a railway station, is n''t it?
55535I say, old man, lend me a bob, will you?... 55535 I say... may I call you Lilian?"
55535I shall send a boy from the office: I wo n''t set foot in the room again.... Wonder who''ll live here next?
55535I suppose he gets a pretty big salary?
55535I''ll send somebody else up to see her-- she''s at the Hilarity Theatre, is n''t she? 55535 I-- would I let my old and faithful Englishman down?"
55535I? 55535 Is it as big as London?"
55535Is it true?
55535Is it very late, dear?
55535Is it?... 55535 Is n''t it dramatic?
55535Is that so?
55535It was I who asked you to come, was n''t it? 55535 It''s a nice picture, is n''t it?"
55535It''s good of you to say that,she said, and then, with a frank smile,"tell me, Humphrey, do you really miss me very much?"
55535It''s only for to- night,she said...."Why did you kiss me?"
55535It''s pretty here, eh?
55535Life''s not so bad when you get used to it?
55535Look here,he said to O''Malley,"who''s going to give me anything to prevent the soldiers bayoneting me?"
55535Look here,said Humphrey,"are we going to meet again?"
55535M''sieu, desire...?
55535M. Charnac, is n''t it?
55535Married?
55535Me?
55535Me?
55535Milk or cream?
55535Miss Sycamore?
55535Mr Jobling-- the man who''s gone out?
55535Nice pig, is n''t he?
55535No-- are you?
55535No-- what is it?
55535None of my men drink, eh?
55535Not well?
55535Nothing would make you give up Fleet Street, I suppose?
55535Now, yesterday, for instance?
55535Of course, you''ve never thought of that-- have you? 55535 Of what use is tea and coffee to us?
55535Oh, well, you see he was in love with this girl..."Which girl?
55535Oh,said Mrs Filmer, rising and coming forward to shake hands with him,"how do you do?"
55535Oh? 55535 Ought n''t I to meet her?"
55535Pray, what of my bulrushes?
55535Sacked?
55535Sad business this of Mr Bellowes?
55535Shall I tell you? 55535 Shall we go now?"
55535She has n''t been here lately?
55535Slumming, eh?
55535Somebody in Easterham?
55535Still with the nose to the grindstone?
55535Still, it''s nice to see everything, is n''t it? 55535 Stopping for the declaration of the poll, Pride?"
55535Tell me, soldier,she sang,"what do you think of in battle?
55535Tell me,he said, with a lover''s vanity,"when did you first know that I loved you?"
55535Thanks,he said( was his voice really as strange and as husky as it sounded to his ears?)
55535That all the experience you''ve had?
55535Then it does n''t matter...?
55535There is nothing that is happening, ai n''t it?
55535Tired?
55535Very sad, is n''t it?
55535Wait?
55535Was I so late?
55535Well, Pride, I hope things are going all right?
55535Well, how goes it?
55535Well, what about a drink?
55535Well, what about your father?
55535Well, what are you doing to- day, Quain?
55535Well, what do you think of the life to- day?
55535Well, what''s up?
55535Well,Mrs Pride said to him;"so you''re going to try your luck in London, Mr Quain?"
55535Well,said Beaver,"got over your hump?"
55535Well,said Humphrey,"what sort of a chap was this Mr Bellowes?"
55535Well?
55535Well?
55535Were you ever a reporter?
55535What about Miss Sycamore?
55535What about food?
55535What about mother?
55535What can one do?
55535What did I tell you?
55535What did you do yesterday?
55535What did you do-- go away?
55535What do I take, Beaver?
55535What do you mean by the Blind Alley?
55535What do you want to do?
55535What do you want to get married for?
55535What do you want to see me again for?
55535What do you want?
55535What does your brother mean by slumming, Miss Carr?
55535What else can I do?
55535What for?
55535What have you been dreaming about? 55535 What if we did?"
55535What is it-- have they wrecked the train?
55535What part of England?
55535What train are you catching?
55535What''s he doing?
55535What''s he like? 55535 What''s the good of waiting?"
55535What''s the good of writing novels... they do n''t pay, do they?
55535What''s the joke?
55535What''s the missis doing?
55535What''s up?
55535What''s up?
55535What,he cried, horrified,"you go to the Special News Agency after we''re married?"
55535When can you start?
55535When do they expect the verdict in the Hanon case?
55535When will he be back?
55535Where are you stopping?
55535Where did you get it from?
55535Where''s Wratten?
55535Which one?
55535Who are you from?
55535Who''s Collard?
55535Who''s the lucky lady?
55535Who? 55535 Who?"
55535Who?
55535Why did n''t you make him talk?
55535Why did you do that?
55535Why do n''t you come out... come to the Club?
55535Why do n''t you help us, Miss Carr?
55535Why look on the black side of things, Carr?
55535Why not come up and see?
55535Why not? 55535 Why not?"
55535Why should n''t I, if I want to?
55535Why was he so discouraging?
55535Why?
55535Why?
55535Will you come? 55535 Will you have some more tea?"
55535Will you pay the late call at the newspaper offices? 55535 Without them?"
55535Wo n''t t''old hoss do, guv''nor?
55535Wo n''t you come and have a cup of tea?
55535Wo n''t you play something?
55535Would n''t he talk?
55535Would you? 55535 Yes, why not?"
55535You are n''t married then?
55535You could n''t expect me to live on you...."Why not? 55535 You mean to the funeral?"
55535You must not say that.... You wo n''t mind waiting, just a little, will you? 55535 You no like the fricassee, sare?"
55535You sent for me, sir?
55535You will allow me to pay?
55535You will, really?
55535You''ll be editor one day, eh?
55535You''ll let me see you home, wo n''t you?
55535_ C''est quelque chose de grave?_she asked.
55535_ Dis donc_,Desirée said,"are you going again?"
55535_ Eh, bien!_said a voice at Humphrey''s elbow,"she is very good, our little Desirée,_ hein_?"
55535_ J''adore les Anglais, ils sont si gentils._"And why can not you stop?
55535_ Qu''est que c''est?_Margot asked, fussily.
55535''Do I_ look_ like a dying man?''
55535''Y a pas chose--''suis sa chose à lui''Y a pas mal-- Quoi?
55535("Have a drink?"
55535("I believe those eyes were saying something to me?")
55535("I wonder what her name is?")
555353 pit: an explosion; a fire--"What is it?
55535A change of voice, a change of expression, a movement of her body-- what was it?
55535A glorious touch, eh?"
55535After all, he thought, was this knowledge?
55535After all, what did it matter?
55535After all, what did it matter?
55535After all, why should n''t he tell Ferrol?
55535And Margaret...?
55535And he thought:"Will my hand be like that one day?"
55535And is n''t it dreadfully difficult to fill the paper?"
55535And now--?
55535And then--"Tommy and I are going to retire soon,"Mrs Pride said, with a fond glance at her husband,"are n''t we, Tommy?"
55535And, as Humphrey left the room, he heard Wratten say casually,"I''ll do that Guildhall luncheon to- day, Rivers, eh?"
55535Anything happened?
55535Are they as bad now?"
55535As bad as the flight to Varennes, is n''t it?"
55535As soon as you marry, what happens?
55535Ask''em who''s Cannock?
55535Barboux continued:"Is it not the most beautiful, the most wonderful, the most entrancing city in the world, young Englishman?"
55535But what of the woman at home?--cooped up in her home with babies?
55535But what''s going to happen to me?"
55535Ca n''t remember it... never mind, I say, old man,_ can_ you spare a bob?"
55535Can you both manage the big one?"
55535Can you imagine anything more peaceful than that book- case?"
55535Can you speak French?"
55535Did n''t you know?...
55535Did you ever speak to her, then?"
55535Do n''t you like being called a boy?"
55535Do n''t you think I hate the idea of never being able to write it as I see it?
55535Do you come often?"
55535Do you see?"
55535Do you think of the glory of the Fatherland and the splendour of dying for France?"
55535Do you think we can live on three pounds a week?"
55535Do you want to go there?"
55535Does all this go towards the making of a man, as the steel is tempered by the fire?
55535Eh?
55535Eh?
55535Eh?"
55535Explain to them, wo n''t you?
55535Go out in the morning and ask people?
55535Had he really taken more than usual care to write his account of their doings?
55535Had she ever been like Lilian?
55535Have n''t you got her?
55535He forgot everything else... what else mattered?
55535He found himself pausing, pen in hand, at his desk in the reporters''room, thinking,"Would Elizabeth be pleased with this?..."
55535He had felt humiliated by her words: did she imagine that he had no heart at all?
55535He made swift calculations-- twelve and seven-- nineteen, and coals-- what of coals?
55535He would ask himself, almost unconsciously,"What does it look like?"
55535He''ll have to pay the cab, Elizabeth, wo n''t he?"
55535His eyes wandered to the buttons.... What_ did_ he want to do?
55535How could one abandon a calling where fortune may change in a moment?
55535How did one"Get On"in the world?
55535How did one_ make_ people talk?
55535How old are you, Beaver?"
55535How?"
55535Humphrey had never said that he was a reporter: how did the policeman know?
55535I mean... would n''t the room be lighter without them?"
55535I shall be able to help you with your work,"he cried, buoyantly,"or will you drop it now?"
55535I''ve done it Will you go through the evening papers?
55535If only Daniel Quain had been there, with his world- wisdom and philosophy.... Tears, Humphrey?
55535Is it that nobleman who came here a few weeks ago?
55535Is it worth a contents bill?"
55535Is there any system in life?
55535It''s funny how few real, social friendships there are in the Street, is n''t it?
55535Let''s go and have supper at the Chariot d''Or.... Will you join us, Mr Quain?"
55535Married, is n''t he?"
55535Miss Filmer, her name was, was n''t it?"
55535Next to the Agency men they''re the most useful people in the world, eh, Beaver?...
55535Odd, is n''t it?
55535Of what avail would all their writing be, if it were not for the men and the machines below?
55535Off Southsea, eh?
55535Or, had there been nothing very special about the story after all, and was her letter merely a courtesy?
55535Or, was it that the vision of her, and the recollection of her earnest eyes, inspired him to better work?
55535Remember that time we had up in Chatsworth, when the Duke...?
55535See?"
55535Seen anything more of that fellow we met in Portsmouth on the Royal visit?...
55535Since that day when Humphrey had first met him in Ferrol''s room, and he had laughed and said,"You''re not a genius, are you?"
55535Tell us?"
55535Then there was always the question of the other correspondents of London newspapers: what were the other fellows sending?
55535Then you hear people saying,''How on earth did he come to marry her?''
55535There''s always room with us, ai n''t there, Tommy?"
55535There''s sure to be a ticket in your office, why do n''t you ask to do it?"
55535These children here will go through their school- days, and then-- what?
55535They soon find out that it''s better to let hubby do the reporting.... Hullo, young man Trinder, what do you want?"
55535They turned at Humphrey''s wavering"Excuse me....""Eh?"
55535Think you''ll be able to do as well as John K. Garton one day?"
55535This''ll be your first, wo n''t it?"
55535Unless what?
55535VI"One lump or two?"
55535Was he?"
55535We''re not going to be married to- morrow, are we?"
55535Were they_ really nice_ people?
55535What are you doing to- day?"
55535What d''you want to know for?"
55535What did London mean to him, then?
55535What did Mr Filmer do?
55535What do you do?
55535What harm will it do?"
55535What mattered anything to them, except that it touched the root of their lives?
55535What of the others-- have any of them done as much good as he has done?"
55535What on earth could have happened?
55535What on earth should he say?
55535What was his name?...
55535What was it?
55535What was the magic key that the other reporters had to unlock the conversation of those whom they went to see?
55535What was their business and what did they achieve?
55535What was there to be done to avoid it?
55535What would Beaver say?
55535What would old Worthing say...?
55535What''s happened?"
55535What''s her name?"
55535What''s his business?"
55535What''s up, old man?"
55535When are you going to get married?"
55535When did that happen?"
55535When?
55535Where would your home be?
55535Who shall explain this extraordinary passion for bulrushes that still holds in its thrall the respectable landladies of England?
55535Who were the Filmers?
55535Who wrote it?
55535Why could he not have told her all that he had felt?
55535Why did you ever leave it?
55535Why do all these people hold meetings?
55535Why not?
55535Why should n''t I have thought as I did at the funeral?
55535Why should n''t you leave now?"
55535Why was it necessary for him to mask and screen his emotions with absurd talk that only seemed to waste precious opportunities?
55535Why?"
55535Wratten,"he said, jovially,"coming up?"
55535Yes, she had remembered him, and nodded to him, and that smile-- what did it mean?
55535You have n''t a father, have you?"
55535You know him?"
55535You were there, were n''t you?"
55535You''ve asked me the question I''m always asking myself-- How is it to be done?"
55535do n''t you think_ I_ feel it too?
55535have you thought of that?
55535he said, hopelessly,"when are we going to get married?
55535nom d''un nom_--to- night?"
55535said the man, looking about him confusedly, and then, with a touch of indignation at being suddenly dragged into the game,"Me?
55535she cried,"is anything the matter with you?"
55535some one would be asking, or"What about Berlin?"...
55535was n''t I in it?"
55535where does she live?"
55535yes; you''ve been on an Easterham paper, have n''t you?"
55535young Quain-- been busy to- day?"
16447''Strictly and absol''--see here, did you ever read''The Wrecker''?
16447A detective?
16447A little blackmail on the side, eh?
16447A little cleaning- up, maybe? 16447 A reporter?"
16447About which I shall doubtless hear to- morrow?
16447After this, you tell me that you ca n''t, you wo n''t?
16447Agony Parlors?
16447Ah; but when was that?
16447Ai n''t I tellin''you I''m through with that game? 16447 All of it?"
16447Am I an amateur Cupid, or what''s my cue?
16447Am I going to die?
16447Am I require at the factory?
16447Am I to have my price?
16447Am-- am I that to you?
16447An explosion?
16447And afterward?
16447And are buried?
16447And are you going to the office now?
16447And does young Surtaine give you inside glimpses of the machinery of his business?
16447And if I do, what then?
16447And if he does n''t?
16447And is the Board of Health satisfied?
16447And is the editor often kind and obliging?
16447And it''s as bad everywhere as here? 16447 And my privileges?"
16447And now, suppose I offered to leave the check in your hands?
16447And now, what about a little reading notice for McQuiggan''s proposition?
16447And now?
16447And she''s got typhus?
16447And that appeals to you?
16447And that is all?
16447And that the''Clarion''ca n''t afford to touch the thing at all? 16447 And the German family at the top?"
16447And the news of the outside world?
16447And the picture?
16447And then--''Try Certina,''eh?
16447And were n''t you just as bad as you seemed?
16447And what does Science so far from its placid haunts?
16447And what earthly good does it do to print stuff like those shoplifting cases? 16447 And what is your diagnosis, Doctor?"
16447And what was she to you? 16447 And what''s the use of printing that sort of thing, anyway?
16447And you call that decent journalism?
16447And you did n''t break it because of him?
16447And you did n''t know him at first?
16447And you heard what I said?
16447And you intend to print it?
16447And you need n''t say,''Was it?'' 16447 And you think that is all that''s necessary?"
16447And your soothing, balmy oils for cancer? 16447 Andy?
16447Any message?
16447Any one waiting to see me, Jim?
16447Any other orders to- day?
16447Anything more?
16447Anything more?
16447Anyway, tone your article down, wo n''t you, Boy- ee?
16447Are n''t they well treated?
16447Are n''t we going through?
16447Are n''t you afraid of contagious diseases?
16447Are n''t you afraid?
16447Are they dry?
16447Are we going into the mixing- room?
16447Are we talking about business? 16447 Are we to sit still and--""Is it?"
16447Are you as busy as all that, Dad?
16447Are you asking me to suppress the epidemic story?
16447Are you going to be?
16447Are you going to let people know that it''s typhus?
16447Are you going to marry Hugh?
16447Are you going to run the paper, Doc?
16447Are you going to take that woman''s money?
16447Are you in pain, Boyee?
16447Are you not going to get me any supper?
16447Are you ready for this? 16447 Are you responsible for this?"
16447Are you scattering the blessings of Certina amongst a grateful proletariat?
16447Are you sure that John M. Gibbs is back of that sewing- girl ad?
16447Are you sure?
16447Are you the editor?
16447Are you vain, Hal? 16447 Are you very busy, Miss Neal?"
16447Are you warm enough?
16447Are you-- have you been''bad,''as you call it?
16447Are you? 16447 Are your hands so clean, then?"
16447At what hour does the victim''s dying shriek rend the quivering air?
16447Away? 16447 Because of that old agreement?"
16447Because she''s one of us?
16447Been feeding with our representative citizens, eh?
16447Been reading that slush, Hal?
16447Been through the plant yet? 16447 Better''phone the coroner''s office, eh?"
16447Bewitched, Hal?
16447Booze?
16447Bought in? 16447 Brain- food?"
16447Bringing him up to the trade, eh?
16447But afterward?
16447But are you beating it out?
16447But ca n''t we do something in the mean time?
16447But for him?
16447But how can it be? 16447 But how could I come?"
16447But what interest have you in saving the''Clarion''?
16447But what possible good will it do?
16447But where are we to get revolvers on a Sunday night?
16447But why?
16447But you were so immersed in your floral designs-- What kind of a play is it?
16447But you''d take my word?
16447But you''re enjoying yourself, are n''t you?
16447But your own part in this?
16447But, Dad,queried Hal, with an effort of puzzled reminiscence,"in the old days Certina was n''t a kidney remedy, was it?"
16447But-- stanch, do you think?
16447By the way, where''s Young Hopeful?
16447By the way,said McGuire Ellis,"how do you like the paper?"
16447By whom?
16447Ca n''t he? 16447 Ca n''t you control your own son?"
16447Ca n''t you see that makes it all the worse, in a way? 16447 Ca n''t you see?"
16447Ca n''t you sue them for libel, Dad?
16447Ca n''t? 16447 Call myself?
16447Can we do it, Mac?
16447Can you blame him? 16447 Can you find the copy?
16447Can you prove the facts?
16447Can you pull it through, Boss?
16447Can you save him? 16447 Certina?"
16447Changed the formula, have you? 16447 Changed?
16447Circumstances?
16447Come down to see the old slave at work, eh?
16447Coming? 16447 Compounding the medicine, you mean?"
16447Couch? 16447 Could n''t you tell me that without a cane?"
16447Could yeh sell me half a bottle to try it, sir?
16447Could you look into it for us; for the''Clarion''?
16447Courtesy of the profession? 16447 Cure?
16447D''you think I like it?
16447D''you think I''m made of money?
16447Dad, do you want a retraction printed?
16447Dad, when you made your report for the''Clarion''did you tell us all you knew?
16447Dad, you believe I''m honest, do n''t you?
16447Did Dr. Surtaine send you here with that thing?
16447Did I kill him?
16447Did I really hear them sweet words in Andy Certain''s voice? 16447 Did I?"
16447Did he get the press?
16447Did he get the press?
16447Did he hurt Dad?
16447Did he? 16447 Did he_ have_ to print it?"
16447Did her father tell her?
16447Did n''t Festus tell you?
16447Did n''t I offer fair and square to match you for his soul? 16447 Did n''t he?
16447Did n''t live there, did you?
16447Did n''t you know I was a little sister of the poor? 16447 Did the law hurt our trade much?"
16447Did the''Clarion''do that?
16447Did you ask her if she was exceeding the speed limit?
16447Did you break it for the same reason that drove you into it?
16447Did you bring the proofs?
16447Did you dance with Will Douglas?
16447Did you design it?
16447Did you ever fail of anything when you put on that wheedling face and tone?
16447Did you get the message I sent you about Letter Number Seven?
16447Did you give me away to him?
16447Did you happen to notice about the prettiest thing that ever used eyes for weapons, in the hall?
16447Did you obey a royal command and go to his office?
16447Did you order it killed?
16447Did you see his interview in the''Telegram''?
16447Did you see that?
16447Did you speak?
16447Did you think it was queer?
16447Did you think your son was Milly Neal''s lover? 16447 Did you want me?"
16447Did you want to see me?
16447Did you? 16447 Did-- he-- get-- the-- press?"
16447Die? 16447 Do I get an answer to my question?"
16447Do I get you righd?
16447Do I go too far, since you have let me kiss you?
16447Do I look thirty- five? 16447 Do I understand that Certina--""Say, wassa matter?"
16447Do I understand you to say that this attack is due to your refusal to advertise in the''Clarion''?
16447Do I? 16447 Do all newspapers carry that kind of stuff?"
16447Do kidneys have seasons?
16447Do many people ask favors of an editor?
16447Do n''t I always confess my good actions?
16447Do n''t I? 16447 Do n''t he own the town?"
16447Do n''t it?
16447Do n''t want to match? 16447 Do n''t you have to keep a check on the mixing, to make sure it''s right?"
16447Do n''t you know the Rookeries?
16447Do n''t you promise, with your Relief Pills to get women out of trouble?
16447Do n''t you recall where?
16447Do n''t you say in the advertisements that Certina will cure it?
16447Do n''t you want me to go into it, Dad?
16447Do the writers of those letters-- symp- letters, I believe, you call them--he began;"do they seem to get benefit out of the advice returned?"
16447Do they expect to get money out of you this way?
16447Do they? 16447 Do we go in?"
16447Do you deny what the editor of the''Standard''said about Certina?
16447Do you get that''and mine''? 16447 Do you know that-- you who know everybody''s business?"
16447Do you know the nickname of this paper?
16447Do you know what a Hardscrabbler is, Ellis?
16447Do you know what an Old Home Week is?
16447Do you know what they''ll call you if you print that? 16447 Do you know what you''re doing?"
16447Do you know who''s really responsible for that tenement? 16447 Do you know_ who_ the Sewing Aid Association is?"
16447Do you mean you''re going to run the paper honestly?
16447Do you mind telling me why?
16447Do you often go out wading, ten miles from home?
16447Do you read it?
16447Do you realize how strong it is, Esmé?
16447Do you really like Mr. Pierce, Dad?
16447Do you really want to know?
16447Do you respect your business, Doc?
16447Do you see something else around here that answers the description?
16447Do you see the rest of it anywhere?
16447Do you think I would n''t be amenable to your stern discipline?
16447Do you think I''d make a good Goddess- Outside- the- Machine, to the''Daily Clarion''?
16447Do you think I''d make a valuable employee, Miss Milly?
16447Do you think many fathers would do this sort of thing, Dad?
16447Do you think the Chief would make any other kind?
16447Do you think,blandly inquired the editorial roosters,"that when you tip the hat- check girl she gets the tip?
16447Do you want a drink?
16447Do you want me to quit?
16447Do you want me to stay?
16447Do you want something to eat? 16447 Do you want to be better than the law?"
16447Do you want to hear about it?
16447Do you want to take him back?
16447Do you wish to speak to the question?
16447Do you, now? 16447 Do you?
16447Do you? 16447 Do you?"
16447Do you?
16447Does it cure it?
16447Does it hurt you much?
16447Does it mean that it must be printed?
16447Does it weigh upon you?
16447Does my father know all this that you''ve been telling me?
16447Does that square accounts between us?
16447Does the Chief_ know_ it? 16447 Does the''Clarion''really intend to publish anything about an epidemic?"
16447Doing any sickening, yourself?
16447Doing_ what_?
16447Dr. De Vito, what''s the newest wrinkle in brain- food?
16447Dr. Elliot,said Hal quietly,"did you think I wanted to print that about Esmé?"
16447Dr. Surtaine''s son?
16447Dying, then?
16447Ease it? 16447 Ellis, are you trying to plant an impression in my mind?"
16447Ellis, how are you? 16447 Elpy,"said Dr. Surtaine, abruptly,"do you remember my platform patter?"
16447Epidemic? 16447 Europe?
16447Even the''Clarion,''which is supposed to have labor sympathies?
16447Expensive, though, is n''t it?
16447Father, does Certina cure Bright''s disease?
16447Fetch''em? 16447 For instance?"
16447For long?
16447For long?
16447For me? 16447 For the''Clarion''?"
16447For what?
16447Foreign proprietary,said Dr. Surtaine, using the technical term for patent- medicine advertising from out of town,"is n''t it?
16447Forgive my stupidity, but what has the advertising manager to do with social news?
16447From an æsthetic point of view?
16447From whom?
16447Genteel?
16447Get what, dear? 16447 Gimme a shot at him while you''ve got him on the wire, will you?"
16447Give the people who buy your paper the straight news they pay for?
16447Give up a business worth half a million a year, net?
16447Go down to lick the editor?
16447Got a grip on your temper?
16447Got any rope?
16447Got anything in its place?
16447Guardy, is he preaching?
16447Had a drink to- day, Mac?
16447Had n''t we better keep away from that?
16447Had n''t you better think it over?
16447Had n''t you heard? 16447 Hal, where''s Europe?"
16447Hal,--Dr. Surtaine turned to his son,--"has McQuiggan brought in a new batch of copy?"
16447Has it ever been done here?
16447Has it? 16447 Has n''t it cost you something more than money, already, Boyee?
16447Has n''t it taken Mr. Hale, the only friend I''ve got in the world? 16447 Has n''t there been enough judging of each other between you and me, Boy- ee?"
16447Has there ever been such a thing as unhappiness in the world, sweetheart?
16447Have I gone too heavy, sir?
16447Have I got any dollars away from you, Andy?
16447Have I said enough?
16447Have I? 16447 Have a good time?"
16447Have n''t we published everything about all the charities that you''re interested in?
16447Have n''t you done that yet?
16447Have n''t you enough troubles in your own business, Dad?
16447Have we got other medicines besides Certina?
16447Have you been taking that-- those pills?
16447Have you done it in your paper?
16447Have you ever worked?
16447Have you forgotten me, Hal?
16447Have you forgotten?
16447Have you laid a wager as to which will keep silent longest?
16447Have you reckoned the Pierce libel suits in?
16447Have you set yourself that little job?
16447He talks awfully young, does n''t he?
16447He? 16447 Heart disease, you say?"
16447Her? 16447 Here?"
16447High- pitch?
16447Honest, eh?
16447How about getting a United States Public Health Surgeon down here?
16447How about the''Clarion,''Mac?
16447How are you going to get me out of it?
16447How can I tell, sir? 16447 How can I tell?
16447How can advertising be news?
16447How can he tell? 16447 How can my father hope to answer all those?"
16447How can you expect an institution to run, bereft of its presiding genius? 16447 How can you know?"
16447How could I break through the solid phalanx of supplicating admirers?
16447How could you get Certina here?
16447How did that fellow get here?
16447How did you find out?
16447How did you know?
16447How did you like Esmé Elliot?
16447How do people live in places like this?
16447How do they get in there, then?
16447How do you account for this, then?
16447How do you know about the epidemic?
16447How do you know they''re stung?
16447How do you know?
16447How does it spread? 16447 How else can I make a career of it?"
16447How have you managed to keep them out, thus far?
16447How is it you Americans say? 16447 How is the paper going?"
16447How long can you go on at this rate?
16447How long has she owned it?
16447How long has that been running?
16447How many bottles does it take to cure?
16447How many of the_ other_ cases have you had here?
16447How much did you pay for it?
16447How much of a verdict would bust us?
16447How much?
16447How often do you see Hal Surtaine?
16447How old are you?
16447How was he stupider?
16447How would it be if I was to put you on half- time, Milly?
16447How would this do?
16447How''s that, Doc?
16447How''s that, sir?
16447How?
16447How?
16447How?
16447Huh?
16447I got ta make a living, have n''t I? 16447 I hated to have to say--""What does it matter?"
16447I want to know what you''re going to do for me?
16447I? 16447 I?
16447I?
16447I?
16447If I tell you, you wo n''t publish it? 16447 If it really does amount to anything, would n''t it be better,"said Hal,"to establish a quarantine and go in there and stamp the thing out?
16447If it were I?
16447If it were you, would you ask it?
16447If there''s no epidemic, why should I keep away?
16447If you give''em advertising matter free, how can you ever expect''em to pay for it?
16447If you''d known in time would you have--"Left that out of the paper?
16447If-- what?
16447In other words, you think the paper would get along better without me than with me?
16447In the Number Four?
16447In the''Clarion''?
16447In this block?
16447In what paper, Kathie?
16447In what way?
16447In what way?
16447Including that of homicide?
16447Insolent? 16447 Is Mr. Shearson the society editor?"
16447Is Mr. Surtaine in?
16447Is O''Farrell agent for all these barracks?
16447Is any one hurt?
16447Is he in love with you?
16447Is he telling the truth, Mac?
16447Is it a bet?
16447Is it a partnership, where one party is absolute slave to the other''s slightest wish?
16447Is it about Ellis?
16447Is it because it''s Certina money?
16447Is it some sort of epidemic starting?
16447Is it the word you''re afraid of, or is it me?
16447Is it to run to- morrow?
16447Is it true, do you think? 16447 Is it your habit, Mr. Ellis, to run at the first suggestion of disaster?"
16447Is n''t everything all right?
16447Is n''t he a trouble- maker among the men?
16447Is n''t it pretty late for explanations between you and me?
16447Is n''t she morally bound to know? 16447 Is n''t that rather a fine distinction?"
16447Is n''t that right, Ellis?
16447Is n''t there some other association we can get into?
16447Is some one dead?
16447Is that an order?
16447Is that question asked in good faith?
16447Is that so?
16447Is that your uncle, the gentleman that fixed my arm?
16447Is the editor in?
16447Is the game playing out?
16447Is there a pestilence in the Rookeries? 16447 Is there any chance?"
16447Is there_ anything_ that Certina is good for?
16447Is this all yours, Andy? 16447 Is your church in this district?"
16447Is your father a leading citizen?
16447It could n''t be either of those, could it?
16447It need n''t be a muckraking paper, need it, forever smelling out something rotten, and exploiting it in big headlines?
16447It was only attempted suicide, was n''t it?
16447It''s rather yellow, is n''t it?
16447It''s run by an outsider, too, is n''t it?
16447It''s true, is n''t it?
16447It?
16447Just how does that concern this discussion?
16447Just what do you mean by that?
16447Just what was that about Number Seven?
16447Know Redding? 16447 Law?"
16447Let us print a statement from you, from her--"In your sheet? 16447 Let''s see, when does it come?"
16447Libel, eh?
16447Liquor? 16447 Look here, Ellis,"he said:"are you trying to be honest, yourself?
16447Mac, what''s the matter with you?
16447Mac,said the brusque physician, for the first time using the familiar name:"between man and man, now:_ what_ about the boy?"
16447Machinery? 16447 Make a fool of the paper by righting a rank injustice?"
16447Make what all the harder?
16447Making and unmaking judges, for example?
16447Malaria?
16447Max? 16447 Me?
16447Meaning our friend Pierce?
16447Meaning?
16447Meningitis?
16447Milly''s? 16447 Misgivings?
16447More than usual?
16447Morphine?
16447Mr. Denton,said Hal,"did Miss Pierce explain why she did n''t return after running the nurse down?"
16447Mr. Ellis,said Hal,"will you''phone Mr. Wayne to send up the man who covered the Pierce story?"
16447Mr. Surtaine, have you thought what you are doing?
16447Must I?
16447My dear young lady, ought you to be risking your safety in such places as these?
16447My own money? 16447 My part in it?"
16447New cases?
16447New? 16447 News?"
16447No doubt what that means, is there?
16447No? 16447 No?
16447No? 16447 No?
16447No? 16447 No?"
16447Nor even suspect?
16447Not a little bit on the asker?
16447Not doing any doctoring nowadays, are you?
16447Not going in for reform politics, are you?
16447Not going out after those hundred drinks, eh, Mac?
16447Not running an honest paper this week?
16447Not so much that you''ll think Worthington dull and provincial?
16447Not? 16447 Not?"
16447Noticed that already, have you? 16447 Now who could that be, I wonder?"
16447Now, what kind of a little game is this?
16447Of the''Clarion''article?
16447Of what sort?
16447Off?
16447Oh, that''s all in the game, is n''t it?
16447Oh, yes, I know: we cure Bright''s disease, do n''t we? 16447 Old Home Week?"
16447Or burying the dead in quicklime?
16447Out all night again?
16447Over Harrington Surtaine?
16447Over the Pierce story?
16447People die of tonsillitis, do they?
16447Perhaps you''re the boy to do it, eh? 16447 Plague?
16447Plain facts are what you want, are n''t they?
16447Prefer to be fed up on pleasant lies?
16447Pretty good, live town?
16447Pretty little exhibition of temper, is n''t it?
16447Pretty sound sense, eh?
16447Prying into the secrets of the trade?
16447Quicklime? 16447 Rather an intangible fortune, is n''t it?"
16447Rather goes in for that sort of thing, does n''t she?
16447Say,appealed Charley,"did you hear that cough- lozenge- peddling boob trying to tell me where to get off, in the proprietary game?
16447Scared? 16447 See here, Mr. Sterne: is n''t it a fact that this attack was made because my father does n''t advertise with you?"
16447See here, Neal: what made you quit us?
16447See what?
16447Septicæmia hemorrhagica?
16447Shall I go, Dad?
16447Shall I release it for Monday?
16447She''s left?
16447Shut your eyes and swallow it and ask no questions, if it''s good, eh, Doctor?
16447Since when did you get so pick- an''-choosy?
16447So the mystic''Must''is not exclusively a chief- editorial prerogative?
16447So you call yourself an M.D., do you?
16447So you''ve heard?
16447Some kind of machinery?
16447Something new?
16447Something wrong?
16447Somewhere about four thousand a week out, is n''t it?
16447Speech? 16447 Stand?"
16447Still sticking out for the money- back- if- not- satisfied racket-- in the other fellow''s business, eh, Andy? 16447 Still working at the Certina joint?"
16447Still worrying about Dr. Surtaine''s influence over the paper?
16447Stop?
16447Suppose,said he,"a horse runs wild and makes a dive through that window?
16447Sure? 16447 Taking''em?
16447Tearing it down?
16447Tell you? 16447 Thank_ me_?"
16447That my old pal, Andy?
16447That remains to be seen for me, does n''t it? 16447 That will be soon, wo n''t it, sir?
16447That would be news, would n''t it?
16447That''s quite unusual for your set, is n''t it? 16447 The Certina advertising?"
16447The Chief?
16447The Doctor thinks?
16447The Rookeries deaths?
16447The Rookeries?
16447The arbutus? 16447 The contract that you said was no good?
16447The epidemic story? 16447 The epidemic?"
16447The father_ is_ rather impossible, is n''t he?
16447The killed story?
16447The readers, you mean?
16447The wife of the son of a quack? 16447 The_ best_ friend, Boy- ee?"
16447Them other cases the same thing?
16447Then it''s to be killed?
16447Then what does it matter if we hold it a little longer?
16447Then why do n''t you get work on some paper that practices your principles?
16447Then why were these bodies buried in quicklime?
16447Then you meant nothing by it?
16447Then you''re going to settle down here?
16447Then you''ve seen the editorial page this morning?
16447There always is, is n''t there, in a boy of that age, for a woman years older?
16447Thereby keeping the graft in the family, eh?
16447They wo n''t?
16447Think so?
16447This is n''t a bluff, I suppose?
16447Tip O''Farrell, the labor politician? 16447 To the business?
16447To undertake a partnership on five minutes''notice-- that is n''t business, is it?
16447To- morrow? 16447 Up to me?"
16447Upon what victim?
16447Veltman? 16447 Veltman?
16447Want to play it alone, do you?
16447Wanted to? 16447 Was I staring very outrageously, sir?"
16447Was he in love with you?
16447Was it good?
16447Was it?
16447Was n''t it simply a case of currying favor with the working- classes?
16447Was that what you had to tell me about the paper, when you asked me to come to see you?
16447Wassamatter?
16447We''re going to have a new press?
16447We''re partners, are n''t we?
16447Well, I''m-- What''s the idea? 16447 Well, Milly: what''s up?"
16447Well, it can keep''em private for its own good, ca n''t it? 16447 Well, telescope''s sight, ai n''t it?
16447Well, what about her?
16447Well, what about it?
16447Well, what newspaper is likely to do that?
16447Well, what would you make of it, yourself?
16447Well, you did n''t say there was anything more, did you?
16447Well,replied the girl brazenly,"he said he''d seen me about the Rookeries district; and if that is n''t a low--""Had he?"
16447Well; now that you own the''Clarion,''he said after a pause,"what do you think of it?"
16447Well? 16447 Well?"
16447Well?
16447Well?
16447Well?
16447Well?
16447Were you ever in St. Jo, Missouri?
16447Were you there all the time? 16447 Whaddye want to know, else?"
16447Whajjer want uvvum?
16447What about her license?
16447What about my opinion of amateur journalism?
16447What about that roast?
16447What about the Rookeries?
16447What about the''Clarion''?
16447What about''Must not''?
16447What advice? 16447 What are the Relief Pills?"
16447What are their interests?
16447What are these, Dad?
16447What are we doin''here, anyway?
16447What are you doing here?
16447What are you going to do about it? 16447 What are you going to do with her?"
16447What are you going to do with it, now you''ve got it?
16447What are you going to do?
16447What are you going to talk about?
16447What are you poking me in the ribs for?
16447What are_ you_ doing here?
16447What automobile?
16447What became of Douglas? 16447 What bodies?"
16447What branch of the work is this?
16447What business is that of yours?
16447What can he do?
16447What can you do to E.M. Pierce''s girl in this town?
16447What compelled you?
16447What could they do? 16447 What d''you know about copper?"
16447What did they say?
16447What did you do to him?
16447What did you think of their stories of the accident?
16447What do I owe you?
16447What do the certificates call it?
16447What do you call that?
16447What do you mean, then, by telling me you run an honest paper when you carry an abortion advertisement every day?
16447What do you think of Old Lame- Boy?
16447What do you think you''re hiring, a Professor of Journalism in the infant class?
16447What do you think?
16447What do you want me to do, Boy- ee?
16447What do you want me to do?
16447What do you want to see him about?
16447What do you want, anyway?
16447What does Dr. Merritt really think? 16447 What does he think it is?"
16447What does it all matter?
16447What does it care for the best interests of the town?
16447What does it matter?
16447What does the guaranty mean?
16447What else could it be?
16447What fer?
16447What for?
16447What for?
16447What for?
16447What for?
16447What good does it all do you or anybody else? 16447 What good will talk do?"
16447What has that faded beauty done, then?
16447What have they been?
16447What have you done with my subscription- flower?
16447What have you got there? 16447 What have you to say for yourself?"
16447What have you to say for yourself?
16447What if it is? 16447 What in?"
16447What is he up to?
16447What is it, Emily?
16447What is it, Norrie?
16447What is it, Veltman?
16447What is it?
16447What is it?
16447What is it?
16447What is it?
16447What is life, my dear friends? 16447 What is that?"
16447What is the Neverfail Company?
16447What is the formula now?
16447What is the''Clarion''seeking to do?
16447What is your question?
16447What is your suggestion?
16447What is''honestly''?
16447What kind of a letter?
16447What kind of labor?
16447What kind of trouble?
16447What limits are there to the boundless privileges of royalty?
16447What on earth are you doing here?
16447What on earth do you mean?
16447What on earth is all this about, then?
16447What on earth should I be vain about? 16447 What on?"
16447What paragraph is that?
16447What reason do you think drove me into it?
16447What secret?
16447What shall we do?
16447What sort of business is it?
16447What sort of sickness is it?
16447What trade is that?
16447What trick?
16447What undertaker?
16447What were you doing there?
16447What were you thinking of her?
16447What would my duties be?
16447What would stop us?
16447What''d you think of''Anti- Pellets''?
16447What''s a Hardscrabbler?
16447What''s all this about?
16447What''s happened to you, since you used to itinerate with the Iroquois Extract of Life?
16447What''s he saying?
16447What''s his trouble? 16447 What''s in it?"
16447What''s it to you if I have?
16447What''s its value to you?
16447What''s left of it?
16447What''s left of the epidemic spread?
16447What''s that you''ve written on it?
16447What''s that? 16447 What''s that?"
16447What''s that?
16447What''s that?
16447What''s the answer?
16447What''s the fad now? 16447 What''s the game?"
16447What''s the matter with business in this town? 16447 What''s the occasion?"
16447What''s the other part?
16447What''s the price,asked Ellis,"of the cigar and the compliment together?
16447What''s the''Clarion''?
16447What''s to be done, then?
16447What''s to be done?
16447What''s up there now; more murders?
16447What''s up? 16447 What''s wrong with it?
16447What''s wrong with it?
16447What''s wrong with its tone?
16447What''s wrong, Esmé? 16447 What?
16447What?
16447What?
16447What?
16447What_ is_ up?
16447When?
16447When?
16447When?
16447Where and when?
16447Where are they?
16447Where are you going?
16447Where did I get it?
16447Where do you come in on the idealist business, Mac? 16447 Where does a paper get its news?"
16447Where does that lead to?
16447Where has he been?
16447Where is it? 16447 Where shall you go?"
16447Where''d we get the money for a lawyer?
16447Where''s Dad?
16447Where''s Mac?
16447Where''s my Dad?
16447Where?
16447Where?
16447Where?
16447Where?
16447Wherein have I failed in my allegiance?
16447Which job do you like best: the Certina or the newspaper, Miss Neal?
16447Who are you,continued the journalist,"to talk standards of honesty in journalism to those boys?"
16447Who are you?
16447Who are you?
16447Who do you suppose runs the newspapers of this town?
16447Who else knows it''s typhus, Doc?
16447Who fired you?
16447Who is Jerry Saunders?
16447Who is he?
16447Who is it with her?
16447Who is she?
16447Who is that?
16447Who is the man, Milly?
16447Who is the young Greek godling, hopelessly lost in the impenetrable depths of your drawing- room?
16447Who said anything about the''Clarion''s honor? 16447 Who to?"
16447Who was it?
16447Who''s that?
16447Who''s the physician down there?
16447Who''s to match him?
16447Who''s treating them?
16447Who''s''we''?
16447Who, me?
16447Who? 16447 Who?
16447Whom did you dance with mostly?
16447Whose writing is that?
16447Why ca n''t I?
16447Why ca n''t it be done?
16447Why ca n''t it?
16447Why ca n''t you?
16447Why deliberately stir him up, Mac?
16447Why did n''t you say so to our reporter, then?
16447Why did n''t your sister sue the company?
16447Why did she leave?
16447Why did you come here to kill my father, Milly?
16447Why do n''t you develop it?
16447Why do n''t you take McQuiggan down to meet your Mr. Shearson, Hal?
16447Why does n''t it get honest reporters?
16447Why not this way? 16447 Why not wait till to- morrow?"
16447Why not? 16447 Why not?
16447Why not? 16447 Why not?
16447Why not? 16447 Why not?"
16447Why not?
16447Why not?
16447Why not?
16447Why not?
16447Why not?
16447Why should I go to Elias M. Pierce''s office?
16447Why should he be?
16447Why should it be? 16447 Why should n''t it be so?"
16447Why so?
16447Why the fortification?
16447Why unfortunate?
16447Why would n''t you? 16447 Why, that''s John M. Gibbs''s store, is n''t it?"
16447Why, what do you think the disease is?
16447Why? 16447 Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Why?
16447Will he die?
16447Will she get the fever?
16447Will that medicine cause abortion?
16447Will they?
16447Will you come?
16447Will you help me?
16447Will you promise not to break it? 16447 Will you stay with me till he comes?"
16447With what idea?
16447With what?
16447With you? 16447 With your lofty notions, Ellis, how did you ever come to work on a sheet like the''Clarion''?"
16447Without any more advertising?
16447Wo n''t the courts do anything?
16447Wo n''t the old man back him up?
16447Wo n''t they?
16447Wo n''t you?
16447Wonder if it''d do any good to marry her?
16447Works out quite logically, does n''t it?
16447Would it be our affair if Pierce did n''t control advertising?
16447Would n''t it be a refreshing change,suggested Ellis,"to have one paper in Worthington that money wo n''t buy?"
16447Would this help at all?
16447Would you be sorry if I did?
16447Would you like to hear some facts about the news we do n''t print?
16447Would you obey it if it were?
16447Would you? 16447 Would_ you_ feel well if you''d been in to dinner three times in the last week with Will Douglas, and then had to go in to supper with him, too?"
16447Yes: but outside of that?
16447Yes?
16447Yes?
16447You ai n''t a government agent or a medical society investigator?
16447You among the number?
16447You can lend me some pajamas?
16447You can square that through your boy, ca n''t you?
16447You can trust Ellis, can you?
16447You did n''t bring it back with you, then?
16447You did n''t put Veltman in your story?
16447You do n''t care?
16447You do n''t like the''Clarion''?
16447You do the answering?
16447You find me amusing?
16447You have an appointment with him?
16447You have no concern for yourself?
16447You hold me to that?
16447You keep your promise, then, to the little girl?
16447You mean flirtation? 16447 You mean in Canadaga County?
16447You mean that is the basis of the newspaper business as it is to- day?
16447You mean that?
16447You mean the ad?
16447You say the sickness has been in there?
16447You think I''m crazy? 16447 You think it good medicine for all that long list of troubles?"
16447You think that''s swearing?
16447You want me to tell you?
16447You went and did it to Elias M., did n''t you?
16447You went in and saw''em?
16447You wo n''t help me to get justice for this woman?''
16447You wo n''t take me with you?
16447You''d resign first?
16447You''ll write the meeting?
16447You''re Harrington Surtaine? 16447 You''re going to stand by and see my boy turn traitor to his class?"
16447You''re not going away?
16447You''re returning it?
16447You''re sure of the facts?
16447You''ve come to see me about--?
16447You''ve got all the fake trimmings, have n''t you? 16447 You''ve had experience in this sort of thing before, I suppose?"
16447You''ve put new drugs in?
16447You-- can''t-- do-- it?
16447You-- you wo n''t gimme away to the Chief? 16447 You?
16447You?
16447You_ are_ a doctor?
16447Your father has dropped it?
16447Your shoulder?
16447Your wife? 16447 _ Are n''t_ you?"
16447_ Are_ they the facts? 16447 _ Are_ you certain?"
16447_ Are_ you? 16447 _ Do_ I know her?"
16447_ Going_ to?
16447_ Is_ it ruin to try and run a newspaper without taking a percentage of that kind of profits, Mac?
16447_ Or_ a principle?
16447_ Straight?_ Ladies and gents: the well- known Surtaine Family will now put on their screamin''farce entitled''Honesty is the Best Policy.''
16447_ What a paper to- morrow''s''Clarion''will be!_ But why? 16447 _ You_ will?
16447& Treas._|||+-----------------------------------------+"Any good?"
16447''Grandmother, what makes your teeth so white?''"
16447''What about the other nine thousand?''
16447--"Are they concealing it at the City Hall?"
16447--"Does he mean bubonic?"
16447--"What''s he want?"
16447--"Who says so?"
16447About finances, by the way, where do you stand?"
16447After a night''s rest--""In this house?
16447All idealism goes that way, does n''t it?"
16447And I''ve made you sit up--""What''s all this commotion?"
16447And Wayne, in the same language, inquired:"How much?"
16447And did n''t he think it quite professional of her to remember all about galleys and things?
16447And do you know where my girl is now, on this day when your sheet is smearing her name all over the town?"
16447And if you insist on knowing, I''ve been revisiting the pale glimpses of the moon-- at three o''clock P.M.""What do you mean, moon?"
16447And is there some suffering friend who you can lead to the light?"
16447And no other doctor gets in?"
16447And what about the chaps that were going to put it out of business?
16447And what harm are you doing by dropping the story, anyway?
16447And what is it?
16447And what will you make of it?
16447And when I came here and told your father he''d got to help me out of my trouble, what do you think he told me?
16447And wo n''t it take its hundreds of other lives unless warning is given?
16447And yet-- and yet-- why otherwise should she come with the marks of fierce misery in her face, demanding an interview at this time?
16447And you think with your little spewing demagoguery of newspaper filth, you can override me?
16447And you''ll see that the''Clarion''keeps out of it, too?"
16447And you''re going to begin at the bottom?
16447And you''ve seen a lot of him lately, have n''t you?"
16447And, Murtha, while you''re at the''phone, call up the''Clarion''office and tell McGuire Ellis to come up here on the jump, will you?"
16447And_ where_ did you learn that delightful swing after the dip?"
16447Andy Certain?"
16447Andy the Spieler?
16447Anything wrong at the shop, Milly?"
16447Anything?"
16447Anyway, it''s turned out well, has n''t it?"
16447Are n''t any?
16447Are n''t you sorry, sir, that you ever saw this room?"
16447Are you as good a dancer as you used to be?"
16447Are you engaged to Hal Surtaine?"
16447Are you going to help me out?"
16447Are you properly grateful?"
16447Are you putting it to me?"
16447Are you ready to take off your coat and work?"
16447Are you so blame sure what_ you''d_ do in those conditions?"
16447Are you staying here to- night?"
16447Are you sure you''re not denying it now?"
16447Arsenious acid, I suppose, to eat it out?"
16447As for the Rookeries epidemic upon which all this turned, what did he really know of it, anyway?
16447As well might one have asked,"What is the City Hall?"
16447Ask of every bit of news,''Is this going to get me an advertiser?
16447Below, in the same hand writing was the query:"_ What''s your percentage of the blood- money, Mr. Harrington Surtaine?
16447Besides, can he afford to be in it if there_ should_ be any serious trouble?
16447But did you notice him when he went?"
16447But do you know your own?
16447But do you think any paper in town touched it?
16447But how to introduce these noble and fortifying ideals into the mind of that flighty young bird, Hal?
16447But see here, Mr. Ellis, does n''t your contract hold you?"
16447But the boy-- look here, you knew all about this Milly Neal business, did n''t you?"
16447But the formula''s the vital thing, is n''t it?"
16447But was it chance?
16447But was the price so severe?
16447But what I wanta ask you is this: We fellows who have to_ write_ the facts behind the news; where do we get off?"
16447But what about my leaving, now?"
16447But what about the run of the medical profession?
16447But what does it cost to advertise?
16447But what has that to do with Veltman''s resignation?"
16447But what of Milly, taken on such poor terms?
16447But what''s the reason for it?"
16447But who was he to judge his father by such rigorous standards?
16447But why, in particular, should he know?"
16447But would the mere threat of firing suffice?
16447But would you have told the truth of your part in it?"
16447But you seem too-- too easy- going, too--""Too ornamental to be useful?"
16447But, Esmé--""Well?"
16447But, I guess, as father and son, pal and pal, we''re pretty well suited,--eh?"
16447But, say, Mr. Surtaine, you ai n''t going to get virtuous in your advertising columns, too, are you?"
16447By that same measure, what of Milly Neal?
16447By the way, if he had a galley proof of anything that had been written about Kathleen Pierce''s motor accident, would he bring that along?
16447By the way,"he added, becoming grave,"what was your game in cutting in on my''spiel''?"
16447Ca n''t you tell the man- killer type when you see it?"
16447Can I sell_ you_ a bottle?"
16447Can we stand another?"
16447Can you bang the big drum of righteousness in one column and promise falsely in the next to commit murder?
16447Can you be honest on one page and a crook on another?
16447Can you do it?"
16447Can you do the story of the meeting?"
16447Can you find O''Farrell?"
16447Can you judge me so harshly, with your own conscience to answer?"
16447Can you never learn to keep your hands off?"
16447Can you remember it?
16447Certina will do as much--""Is it true that alcohol simply hastens the course of the disease?"
16447Come, now,"he added, in a hard, businesslike voice,"what are we going to call the cause of death?"
16447Could any good come from such a stock?
16447Could anything be clearer?
16447Could he do that to them?
16447Could n''t you exert the power without actually owning the newspaper?"
16447Could she make a newspaper change its hue, as she could make men change color, with the power of a word or the incitement of a glance?
16447Could you get up a preparation of it that looks tasty and tastes good?"
16447D''yeh think it could be true?"
16447Denton?"
16447Did he not, at least, owe them a living?
16447Did it fetch''em?"
16447Did n''t I say I was scared?"
16447Did n''t I tell you he was unexpected?
16447Did n''t I tell you?
16447Did n''t he call me up this morning and raise the devil?"
16447Did n''t yeh hear whut he sayed?
16447Did n''t you?
16447Did you dance with him last night?"
16447Did you do it all on your own?"
16447Did you do it?"
16447Did you really care?
16447Did you tell Mac?"
16447Didn''chu hear me?"
16447Diphtheria?--Good enough for the present.--Ever see infectious meningitis?
16447Do I seem false and disloyal to you?
16447Do I?"
16447Do n''t be young.--What?
16447Do n''t you approve?"
16447Do n''t you care for me-- a little, Hal?"
16447Do n''t you know me?"
16447Do n''t you know your Lewis Carroll?
16447Do n''t you know, you say,''Aroint thee, witch,''when you want to get rid of her?
16447Do n''t you remember?"
16447Do n''t you think it''s fun having everything you want to buy, and having a leading citizen for a father?"
16447Do n''t you think''pumess''is a nice lady- word, Guardy?"
16447Do something for me, will you?"
16447Do those things pay?"
16447Do you believe the boy when he says that his father did n''t send him?"
16447Do you expect it to work all one way?"
16447Do you feel like a prince entering into his realm?"
16447Do you get that?
16447Do you know Pierce?"
16447Do you know a man named Veltman?"
16447Do you know how many bottles must be sold to any one patron before the profits begin to come in?
16447Do you know that the money that bought this paper for you was coined out of the blood of deceived girls?
16447Do you know that?"
16447Do you know we''re putting on circulation at the rate of nearly a thousand a week?"
16447Do you know what I took out of this town last night?
16447Do you know what it means to damn the soul of a paper?
16447Do you know what the great danger is now?"
16447Do you know why?"
16447Do you know why?"
16447Do you know you''ve got to make a speech in an hour?
16447Do you remember meeting me with Max Veltman the other night?"
16447Do you think you can make Worthington feel like home?"
16447Do you think you can?"
16447Do you?"
16447Does Mac know?"
16447Does anybody else but me give you page ads.?"
16447Does he still come to see you?"
16447Does that go?"
16447Does the name McQuiggan mean anything to you?"
16447Eat?
16447Eh?
16447Eh?"
16447Eh?"
16447Elliot?"
16447Elliot?"
16447Ellis, why does the''Clarion''carry such stuff as that?"
16447Esmé lifted up a very clear and sweet mezzo- soprano in a mocking lilt of song:--"How should my heart know What love may be?"
16447Esmé, did I ever tell you my creed?"
16447Esmé, did you notice how thin and worn he looks?"
16447Ever know any folks there, George?"
16447Every other paper in town gets his copy; why should n''t we?
16447Father, you saw the story in the''Clarion,''--the story of Milly''s death?"
16447For God''s sake, why?"
16447From near the speaker a voice piped thinly:--"Will it ease my cough?"
16447Get it?
16447Got this morning''s?"
16447Hale?"
16447Has he killed you?"
16447Have n''t you thrown it down?"
16447Have one?"
16447Have you a scar on your left shoulder?"
16447Have you heard anything from Esmé Elliot since she left?"
16447Have you heard of a single case outside of the Rookeries district, so far?"
16447Have you met Esmé yet?"
16447Have you seen the evening papers?"
16447Have you sent a man to see her?"
16447Have you?
16447He bristled forth to the rail to meet a tall and rather elegant young man whom he greeted with a growl to this effect:"Hoojer wanter see?"
16447He thought to interpret that taunt in the words which Veltman had used, aforetime:--"What''s_ your_ percentage?"
16447He''s been here only a few weeks, has n''t he?"
16447He''s in the printing- department, is n''t he?"
16447Hoss- stealin'', barn- burnin'', boot- leggin'', an''murder thrown in when--""Be you the doctor was to Corsica Village two years ago?"
16447How are you feeling, Hal?
16447How can it make profits and pay your dividends if that kind of thing keeps up?"
16447How can you know my motive?"
16447How can you live without business?"
16447How could he, their leader, recant his doctrine before these men?
16447How could you take money made that way?"
16447How do I know you''d print what I discovered-- supposing I discovered anything?"
16447How do you like it?
16447How do you like the results?"
16447How do_ I_ know what I''d do?"
16447How does the paper suit your tastes?"
16447How else will I find out?"
16447How is the boy?"
16447How long will it go on paying that if the newspapers keep stirring up trouble for it?
16447How long would you want me to stay?"
16447How many here are hiding that dreadful malady, cancer?
16447How many new victims?"
16447How many readers care whether E.M. Pierce''s daughter ran over a woman or not?
16447How many suicides do you suppose your''Boon to Womanhood''and its kind of hellishness causes in a year, thanks to the help of your honest journalism?"
16447How much did we give it?
16447How much of the news would he print?
16447How serious is this Surtaine matter?"
16447How soon is the epidemic likely to break, Doctor?"
16447How the devil did you get in here?"
16447How would you feel when Mac Ellis, and Wayne, and all the fellows that stuck by you found themselves out of a job because of your pig- headedness?
16447How would you like it if he undertook to interfere with Certina?"
16447How you call it?
16447How''s that?"
16447How''s that?"
16447How''s that?"
16447How?
16447I believe that''s the proper business phrase, is n''t it?"
16447I did n''t say?"
16447I like being a spoiled child, do n''t you?
16447I thought it might be that, maybe-- No?
16447I would n''t ask it if it were anything else; but--""Would you do it yourself?"
16447If one bottle cures--""Does_ what_?
16447If she went astray once, who are you to judge her?
16447If so, was n''t the whole affair a matter of selling shadow rather than substance?
16447If so, what is its nature?"
16447In other words, what do you want of me?"
16447Is all the wrong on my side?
16447Is it O.K.?"
16447Is it very serious?"
16447Is it your notion of a fair partnership to stay away and let your fellow toilers wither on the bough?
16447Is it, oh, is it, the Great American Pumess that I have the honor to address?"
16447Is n''t it likely to be serious for any of the unprotected young of your species when a Great American Pumess gets after him?"
16447Is n''t that matter enough?"
16447Is n''t that right?
16447Is n''t that true?"
16447Is n''t there anything else you''ve ever thought of turning to?"
16447Is that going to lose me an advertiser?''
16447Is that it?"
16447Is that plain?"
16447Is that plain?"
16447Is that some plan?
16447Is that the idea, Father?"
16447Is there any limit to the business that food could do?
16447It ca n''t cost so much to make as--""Make?
16447It is n''t too early to give it a start, is it?"
16447It was, for the moment, the Great American Pumess who spoke:--"Wo n''t you even say you''re glad to see me?"
16447It''s catching, ai n''t it?"
16447It''s some difference of definition, I suppose''?
16447It''s the finest bracer--""As a cure?"
16447It_ is_''Doctor,''ai n''t it?"
16447Journalistically, how can I?
16447Just for a test,--for the last time will you or will you not, Mr. Sterne, publish this apology?"
16447Just the same, if it was n''t for what you''ve done for Boyee--""Well, what about''Boyee''?"
16447Knight- errantry, eh?
16447Know anything about Worthington?"
16447Know what I mean?
16447Look here, Boyee; what''s the worst feature of an epidemic?
16447Mac?"
16447Mac?"
16447May I ask some questions?"
16447May I give you a lift in my car?"
16447Maybe some kind of hypophosphite, eh?"
16447McQuiggan?"
16447Me?
16447Meaning her_ fiancé_, Mr. William Douglas, with whom her mind and emotions should properly have been concerned?
16447Not falling in love?"
16447Not going?"
16447Notes?
16447Notice anything queer about the page?"
16447Now if you had some man whom you could turn over this news end to while you''re building up a sound advertising policy--""How about McGuire Ellis?"
16447Now where shall I begin?"
16447Now, how are you going to make money with the''Clarion''?"
16447Now, if I quit making Certina, what about them?
16447Now, then, what''s your answer?"
16447Now, what happens if you turn loose a newspaper scare?
16447Of course you wo n''t print anything about this affair?"
16447Oh, death, where is thy power?
16447Oh, grave, where is thy victory?
16447Oh, that''s Certina Charley, is n''t it?
16447On her return she made a frontal attack:--"Norrie, what made you break your engagement to Will Douglas?"
16447On the level?
16447Or drink?
16447Or give it away?
16447Or try to communicate with her?
16447Or would you take him out to the theater and feed him a fat cigar, and treat him the best you know how?
16447Ought you to be going there?"
16447Pierce?"
16447Pierce?"
16447Pistols?"
16447Please, may n''t I have it to play with?"
16447Poor Max has got a wife somewhere--""Max?
16447Pure Food Law scared you out of the dope, eh?
16447Revolvers?"
16447Roast Certina, will he?
16447See you at-- what time, by the way?"
16447See you to- night, Andy?"
16447See?
16447See?
16447Shall I tell Veltman to set it up in several styles so you may take your pick?"
16447Shall I turn them out on the street?"
16447Shearson?"
16447Should he accept it, or was it safer to ignore this pestilent disturber?
16447Since when?
16447Smallpox?"
16447So you know, do you?
16447Something like typhoid?"
16447Specifically, seats for shopgirls, and extra pay for extra work, as during Old Home Week, when the stores kept open until 10 P.M.?
16447Still holding his eyes to hers, she stretched out her hand to receive the strip of print,"Do you think I''d better read it?"
16447Suppose I should break all the rules of the office?
16447Sure you wo n''t have a drink?"
16447Sure you wo n''t let me hire a New York lawyer for the libel suit?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Surtaine?"
16447Tell me, who''s this Balzac?
16447The Grand Vizier said to the plagues,''How many of my people have you slain?''
16447The big thing now is, what''s the paper going to do about this meeting?"
16447The breakfast was my suggestion, was n''t it?
16447The department store advertising?"
16447The eminent savant removed his hat with a fine flourish, further reflected in his language as he said:--"What does Beauty so far afield?"
16447The question is, What am I going to do?"
16447The''Star''?
16447Then why are n''t we all dead?"
16447Then you''ve seen him lately?"
16447Then, in a pause, a young voice said:"Well, to bring the subject up to date, what about the deaths in the Rookeries?"
16447Then,"Esmé, I was pretty rotten about that, was n''t I?"
16447There was a pause: then,"You''ll come to see me-- when you can?"
16447Therefore, when Milly Neal appeared at the gate at 9.05 in the evening, the Cerberus greeted her professionally with a"How goes it, Miss Cutie?"
16447To Old Home Week?"
16447To take Certina?
16447Veltman?"
16447WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
16447Want any help?"
16447Want some advice from the Old Man?"
16447Was I wrong?
16447Was he really as unyielding in other tests of principle as he had shown himself with her?
16447Was he too busy to come up to Greenvale, Dr. Elliot''s place, at 8.30 sharp?
16447Was it fully come yet?
16447Was it him that told you it was typhus?"
16447Was it not, rather, as McGuire Ellis had suggested, the exemplification of an exact logic?
16447Was n''t it?
16447Was the advertising really of so much more import than the medicine itself?
16447Was there peril in his presence?
16447We''ve come to be real friends, have n''t we?
16447We-- I-- didn''t know-- Have you been asleep?"
16447Well, but, see here, dear, does Cousin Clarice approve of that sort of thing?"
16447Well, if a witch can be arointed, why should n''t she aroint other things?"
16447Well, not to go any farther, what about this for honesty?"
16447Well, then: how''s a paper going to live that turns against its own support?
16447Well, what did you do?"
16447Were his fish securely in the net?
16447Were there?"
16447Whaddye mean?"
16447What about her?"
16447What about him?
16447What about it?"
16447What about that name for the new laxative pills, Con?
16447What about your testimonials?
16447What are the Rookeries?
16447What are you giving for it?"
16447What are you going to do with it?"
16447What are_ we_ here for?"
16447What chance have we got to develop ideals when you outsiders control the whole business?"
16447What did it amount to, anyway?
16447What did it matter, anyway, a bit of news like that?
16447What did you have to drink?"
16447What did you pay for your M.D.?"
16447What difference does it make to them?
16447What do those men know about the ethics of journalism?
16447What do you know about it?"
16447What do you know about mining?"
16447What do you mean by the Death?"
16447What do you mean?
16447What do you suppose he''s doing down here?"
16447What do you think it is, Doctor?"
16447What do you think of that?
16447What do you think ought to be done about the Rookeries?"
16447What do you want to do with the''Clarion''?"
16447What do you want, anyway?"
16447What does he know of it?
16447What else can it mean?
16447What for?"
16447What good''s a reporter who ca n''t get news?
16447What have you been doing to yourself?
16447What if the engineer_ was_ worked overtime?
16447What is business?"
16447What is it?"
16447What is that?"
16447What is there to do?"
16447What is your Vitalizing Mixture?"
16447What kind of plague?"
16447What mattered his little pangs?
16447What of them?
16447What started you on that?"
16447What thanks does the public give a newspaper?
16447What was he doing there, with his keen face and worldly, confident carriage, amidst those clodhoppers?
16447What was it this time?"
16447What was the good?"
16447What woman does n''t?
16447What''ll the''Clarion''look like when its great sensation peters out into thin air?
16447What''ll they ever get him?
16447What''re you obliged to me for?"
16447What''s Merritt going to do about it?"
16447What''s a doctor''s fee?
16447What''s that worth in advertising to the year''s business?
16447What''s the newest thing in science?
16447What''s the result?"
16447What''s the use of scaring every one to death?
16447What''s the worst thing about doctors''doses?
16447What''s this,''Clarion''sensationalism?"
16447What''s this?"
16447What''s to hinder us from doing as we please?
16447What''s up?"
16447What''s your paper, by the way?"
16447What?
16447When do you start in work?"
16447When''ll the next Surtaine roast be ready?"
16447Whence had the knife leapt, to gleam so viciously in his hand?
16447Whence the wherewithal?"
16447Where are you off to this morning?"
16447Where did he get it?"
16447Where did you get it?"
16447Where did you get it?"
16447Where did you get on?"
16447Where do your profits come from?
16447Where does it come from?
16447Where is it?"
16447Where''s Dr. Merritt?
16447Where''s Ellis?"
16447Where''s all your glowing idealism now?"
16447Where''s the harm in protecting the store?"
16447Where?"
16447Which paper?"
16447While you''re looking around for your life- work, how about doing a little unpaid job for me?"
16447Who among you, dear friends, but has felt it?
16447Who are any of us to judge her?
16447Who are you, to join that noble company of martyrs?"
16447Who is it pays your salaries, do you think?
16447Who owns that pest- hole?"
16447Who owns the''Banner''?
16447Who owns the''News''?
16447Who pays for the running of a newspaper?
16447Who said she had it?
16447Who says you did?"
16447Who was harmed by leaving it out?
16447Who''s first?"
16447Who''s going to be any the worse for it?
16447Who''s we?"
16447Why are you speaking out in meeting to me, particularly?"
16447Why did he want to kill you?"
16447Why did n''t you tell me?"
16447Why does n''t the''Clarion''speak out, Mr. Surtaine?
16447Why not?
16447Why should I?
16447Why should I?
16447Why should n''t I take the money, when it''s there?"
16447Why should n''t they have?
16447Why should the papers help spread it by noticing it in their columns?"
16447Why should you after-- Do you mind telling me how it happened?"
16447Why the Neal story-- now?"
16447Why would n''t it be new?
16447Why, Boyee, what_ is_ a cure?"
16447Why, what''s the''Clarion,''anyway?
16447Why?
16447Why?"
16447Will Certina cure it?"
16447Will he do it?
16447Will it cure diabetes?"
16447Will it?"
16447Will the nurse die?"
16447Will you come to see me to- morrow?"
16447Will you come, and make Hal come, too?"
16447Will you help me in the Rookeries matter?"
16447Will you help?"
16447Willard?"
16447Work for the''Clarion''?"
16447Would I waste it on you, Dave Sterne?"
16447Would Kathleen write such a letter?
16447Would he come at all, now?
16447Would he dast swear to it if it was n''t true?"
16447Would he help the League to obtain certain reforms?
16447Would you fire me?"
16447Would you mind joining me in the college yell?
16447Yet if that were so, why had he sent word, the day after, that he could n''t keep his appointment?
16447Yet-- and the qualifying thought dashed cold upon his enthusiasm-- what did the alternative imply for them?
16447You agree with me in that, do n''t you?"
16447You did n''t have to, did you?"
16447You do n''t know much about what goes on in your town, do you?"
16447You gave me the material, did n''t you?"
16447You have n''t been making investments without my advice?"
16447You have n''t told us that yet?"
16447You liked the job, did n''t you?"
16447You think because you''ve got your father''s quack millions behind you, that you can stand up to me?"
16447You think it ai n''t genteel and high- toned, do n''t you?"
16447You understand?"
16447You understand?--What are you calling it?
16447You would n''t try to hear through one, would you?"
16447You''ll be going back to Washington?"
16447You''ll be sure that he''s there?"
16447You''ll be sure to do it, wo n''t you?"
16447You''ll believe that, wo n''t you?"
16447You''ll go, Boyee?"
16447You''ll take my word, I suppose?"
16447You''re ashamed of the proprietary medicine game, are n''t you, my dear?"
16447You''re isolating them, are n''t you?--Pest- house?
16447You''re not going back on me, now?"
16447You''re safe?"
16447You''re with me there, too, are n''t you?"
16447You_ did_ send for me, did n''t you?"
16447Young Surtaine, eh?
16447Your professional fixer?"
16447Yours and your father''s?"
16447Yours?"
16447_ All_ the facts?"
16447_ Do n''t_ you think it would be safer to go?"
16447_ Do you hear?_ Hurry!"
16447_ Does_ he?
16447_ Now_, will you shake?"
16447_ Were_ you?"
16447_ What''ll_ we be manufacturing?"
16447_ Why is that story ordered killed?_""Consideration of policy which--""Policy!
16447demanded Shearson pathetically,"before you went and mucksed everything up this way?
16447go?"
16447she cried with a sinking break of the voice,"do you think I''m_ bad_?"
16447that led Milly Neal to her death?
16447what have we here?"