The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1930, Page 4

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nates Ap independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Biss Company. Marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs @s second class mai) matter. George D. Mann ...... . Subscription Kates Payable tn At Daily by carrier. per year ........... Daily by mail. per year «in Bismarck) . Dahy by mau. per year ‘(Qn state. outside Bismarck) ....... Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota . President and Publishe: ‘Weekly by mail. in state. per year ....... Weekly by mail in state, three years for Weekly by mail outs'* of North Dako Member Audit Bureao Member of The Associated Press Phe Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled io the use for republication of al) news dispatches creditea to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and isc the loca! news of spontaneous origin pubtiched herein Au rights of republication of all other matter hereir arr ‘also reserved (Official City, State and County Newspaper) foreign Representatives SMALL. SPENCER & LEVINGS «Incorporated Wormerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Hoover Business Elixir Succeeds ‘That is a fine vindication of President Hoover's plan for taking the slack out of unemployment and of off- setting the psychology of pessimism which the stock market debacle induced—the announcement that pledges of utility, public and industrial improvements so far total $4,700,000,000 for 1920. ; To get the real significance of this expenditure it mus? be realized that this vast sum represents far more than $4,700,000,000. It will circulate through the nation, Thus each dollar will perform multiple functions as it passes from hand to hand. It will pass to the wage earner, to the retailer, to the wholesaler, to the factory producer, to the labor employed there and then back to the retailer again on its circulatory journeys. This will mean a volume of stimulation many fold the original sum and it will set up a current of business which will draw in side currents. Of interest locally is the fact that of this total of billions, $1,008,000 will be spent in this district by the North Dakota Power and Light company in increasing the efficiency of its transmission system. North Dakota also is certain to get a share out of the improvement budgets of the several railroad companies traversing the state. The erection of the new memorial community building will be the first step in what probably will be another extensive building program right here in the city. And if the Montana-Dakota Power company’s pro- gram for laying a natural gas lihe across the state to link up the Baker fields in southeastern Montana goes through this summer, as it is proposed after an unavoid- able holdup last year, probably 750 men will find employ- ment in that project, with Bismarck as headquarters. A better feature even of the Hoover system just going into effect is that while the $4,700,000,000 program of pledges is a temporary expedient to offset the psychology of depression by its publicity, this instance is the launch- Ing of a permanent method of handling slack employ- ment and keeping public improvement on an even keel by which the people will know that the nation is riding the industrial and business situation safely. Eventually the Hoover innovation of having 400 lead- “Ming business and industrial men serve as an advisory commission to stabilize employment, expenditure on pub- lic and industrial projects and to supervise this side of the economic situation against such depressing effects as the recent stock speculation slump may prove equal in its wisdom and results with the accomplishments of the Farm board, just pluggiixg in on its vast task of re- leving agriculture. Incidentally it looks as though 1930, once it gets started on public improvements, may become one of the big industrial years of the period. Weather conditions may hold back the tide of prosperity till more favorable days, but an employment boom shortly is not beyond the bounds of possibility. That would mean a revived volume of business, although the United States chamber of com- merce reports there has been no slackening of momen- tum, according to reports to the national business survey conference committee. Time Gilds Failure Into Success Success and failure can be joined in a paradox. That ls, they, too, succeed who fail—in some peculiar instances. Our cult of success has not been recognizing this. 1% has been putting all its emphasis on immediate achieve- ment. There is a posthumous success, however, which requires perspective to perceive. The world alters the judgments and appraisals it puts on men and movements when in after years it sees these in a new light, perhaps accepts principles and philosophies an earlier generation rejected. But the world need not revise its judgments on prin- ciples or philosophies or movements to see success where before it had seen only failure in cases when the failure concerns a misunderstood or unappreciated personality. In that way losers in great causes may in the end come to share honors with the victors. There is the case of General Robert E. Lec. A nation- wide campaign now is on to raise funds to purchase his Virginia birthplace and turn it into a national shrine similar to Washington's Mount Vernon, Lincoln's Ken- tucky birthplace cabin, Jeiferson’s Monticello and other memorials to the great men of the nation. There is this difference, however. The other Amert- cans honored by memorials were successes, while Lee, by ordinary appraisal of what he didn’t achieve was a failure. Lee dedicated himself to a definite plan—establishing the independence of the Southern Confederacy. He failed. For four dreadful years he did everything that a man could do to gain his end, and did it super- latively well. But it was no use. Success simply wasn't in the cards. At the end the Confederacy had become enly a bright dream, and Lee—on the surface of things— “vos a beaten man, with everything that he had fought {oz battered down in the dust. Yet today, more than half a century later, the Ameri- ean pecple are buying Lee's very birthplace for a national shrine indicating. thereby, that by common consent we hove enrolled him among our immortals. ap exception of him? 8 a & i é £ é z ! i if ‘4 : The Bismarck Tribune How docs this happen? We don't ordinarily, erect ‘mamorials to failures. ‘What was there about Lee that T. China Ends Extraterritoriality i China has thrown down a challenge to the nations | enjoying extraterritorial rights heretofore, that is ths) privilege of conducting courts of their own on China's territory for the trial of their nationals in that country. In accordance with notice served earlier in the year cn the various countries, of which the United States is one extraterritoriality has been declared abolished by th: Chinese government, treaties to the contrary notwith- standing. | ‘The abolition of a treaty of such significance as the | extraterritorial compacts would constitute a grave dip- | lomatic breach ordinarily, But in the case of Chins it is a breach difficult for outside powers to handie Political conditions in China are so chaotic that the ques- tion before the nations treated so summarily is whom to hold to responsibility. There is not that stability of gov- ernment which would make the situation debatab‘e. Japan looked at the matter in that way and when China deprived it of its extraterritoriality, the Nippon} government went placidly on maintaining its consula) | extraterritorial courts. The tendency om the part of the United States ha: been toward meeting the desires of China, and with a stable modern regime in authority at Peiping there is no doubt that this government would have renounced its judicial rights in China in favor of proper native tribu- nals. The long period of unrest and civil war has co far made it impossible for the United States to forego the protection of the special rights accorded in the old days So it looks as though this country would have to follow in the footsteps of Japan and continue its special courts until such time as peace and stability shall have become permanent in the Celestial republic. ! Anyhow, the Chinese government hasn't completed its | Withdrawal of extraterritoriality. Its decree calls for ap- propriate officials to devise means for giving effect to the new policy. That is likely to take considerable time, dur- jing which many things might happen. It has even been suggested that China, as a signatory to the Kellogg-Briand peace pact, cannot afford to be precipitate in measures to enforce its edict. That is. it cannot resort to force in any way approaching the status of war measures. New York Takes Up Prison Reform New York state, in its planning of prison reform, forced | on it by the recent outbreaks at Dannemora and Auburn. of the system of outdoor confinement maintained in Ontario. In his message to the legislature on this subject, Gov- ernor Roosevelt advances a proposal to relieve over- crowding by providing cantonments where the more re- liable and better behaved convicts can engage in out- door work. It is proposed to put this plan into effect by supplying prison labor for the excavation and grading for @ new prison at New Attica. What further steps in this experiment should be taken will be left to the outcome of the New Attica venture to determine. There is nothing striking in the other measures pro- posed by the New York governor. As one remedy toward discouraging and controlling mutinies he proposes more guards. Other prison reformers are proposing an independent guard corps freed from civil service control and the separation of the parole function from the disciplinary by the establishment of a new parole board of three com- missioners to serve full time at substantial salaries. A temporary problem which the New York lawmakers | face is that of prison industry, the shops at Auburn hav- ing been burned in the summer mutiny. Help from Darkest Russia There is a strange irony below the surface of current events sometimes, if you care to look for it. A certain large manufacturing city in the middle’ west found the close of 1929 a slow period industrially. Pur- chases of machinery and parts by the automobile industry fell off, and the city’s factories faced a stretch of very lean days. But there was one factor that saved the day and enabled the city’s industries to keep going without a Orders for several millions of dollars worth of factory | equipment were placed with the city’s industries by Soviet Russia. American industry, providing the orders that kept hard times from descending on a great American manufac- turing city! | Editoria} Comment Still Fighting the St. Lawrence (Detroit News) In the national rivers and harbors congress, held in ‘Washington, a resolution was introduced by opponents of | the St. Lawrence waterway condemning the expenditure of governments funds for waterway development outside the United States. It was directed at the plan under which the United States would improve the international section of the St. Lawrence, leaving for Canada the work of improving the all-Canadian section. It is rather late in the day to raise that issue, for right here at our doors there is an example of the cxpendi- | ture of American government money on a Canadian im- | | provement, against which no word of criticism has been | raised. Nearly all of the Livingstone channel lies within the Dominion of Canada. It was built by the United | States at a cost of $13,000,000, in round numbers. It is | used by American and Canadian boats alike, and no questions asked; just as the Amherstburg channel, als? in Canadian waters, but dredged by Canada, is used by | Sine. OF Boe ALOR ew np Segpaen foe theo BOARS aTy ie. A country that will get as much benefit from the com- | pletion of the St. Lawrence waterway as will the United States should have no disposition to quibble about whose money is spent, and where, so long as there is an equitable division of expenses. The resolution introduced | at the rivers and harbors congress should be recognized | for exactly what it is—an attempt to put a quibbling | obstacle in the way of a much-desired international im- provement. Alaska Rail Critics Overlook Benefits (Seattle Daily Times) newspapers have shown some concern over the increase in the annual deficit of the Alaska iting loss for the fiscal year of 1929 Eastern moderate it. There was a substantial increase in the number of rail line passengers during the year, but freight i “ i F é i é E é i l 3 z } E i Hy : is turning its thoughts toward a partial or modified form | @ shutdown. \z ‘There's a smile in that. Soviet Russia, the bugaboo of | & an iumate of the house when the two crimes were committed, others besides Griffin had both motive and opportunity to kill Mrs, Hogarth— the motive being greed. No, his case was not complete by any means, would not be complete even if he proved that Henry Dowd was Dan Griffin, Dundee told him- self ruefully as he took his seat at the dinner table. But he liked a hard job... . KS He was late. The soup plates had been removed and Tilda, red- eyed and nervous, was serving the well-filled plates of roast and vege- tables. The dining room was crowded aa: work on Grimin, whoever he in three women. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLIII ONNIE DUNDEE'S sudden exit from Lieutenant Strawn's office on the heels of his promise to pro- duce the “had penny” by Monday night was due not so much to 8 boyish love of a dramatic exit as to an almost panicky desire to evade questioning by his astute; chief. For Strawn Id inevitably have demanded: “If you believe Dan Griffin is a boarder at the] with « co Rhodes House, ‘wha else coula bel ttn emeee a the a tien ee be but Henry Dowd? He ts the! overtiowing the inquest room at only member of the household who! the morgue. These transients has given a false name and false| shuddered delightedly over thelr address. Better let me put him oD! qaring in actually coming to the the grill. I'll soon find out if he’s|~jturder Mansion” for a meal, ex- Dan Griffin!” ged theories in thrilled whis- And Wundee did not want) pers, and quite ppenly studied the Strawn or anyone else to “grill”| group of Teaniae boarders with Henry Dowd just yet. For he sin cerely belleved that such tactics would get them nowhere, at least for a long and tedious time. . For it Henry Vowd was indeed Dan Griffin, murderer of three women, he was a consummately clever villain. For tive years Gan Griffin had lived under some jas or other, in perhaps a score of cities. And if Henry Dowd was Griffin, he had undoubtedly covered his tracks well, had built up a story of bis “past” which would necessitate endless police investigations before fits falsity could ve proved, and his heory that killed the speculative eyes. But upon that large table in the center of the room a blight had fallen. Mrs. Rhodes had consid: erately rearranged the chairs and removed one so that the horror of gazing upon Cora Barker's empty ‘chair was spared the remaining boarders. “There almost no conversation. "On every face were the marks of strain and terror. As clearly as if it were spoken aloud @ dread question made itself heard above the faint tinkle of silver and glass and china—“Who next?” “Have you heard the news, Mr. Dowd? Not that I have the slightest appetite, but we must all try to keep up our strength—” As Henry Dowd complied silently with the request, Dundee studied him covertly but keenly. With Lieutenant Strawn’s meager de scription of the Dan Griffin of five years ago in mind, the young de tective noted and cataloguedeevery. feature and characteristic of the man seated opposite bim. “I finally doped it out that Dan Griffin must have been so ordinary looking a young man that his face made no deep impression on any- one,” Strawn had said. And that), characterization could aptly be ap- plied to Henry Dowd. {f—before this moment—Dundee had been called upon t. describe Henry Dowd for a police dossier, he would bave been hard put to it to achieve even a fair degree of accuracy. For Dowd’s was one of those faces you simply cannot recall vividly to mind. “What color are his eyes any- way?” Dundee puzzled. “I. would have sworn they were blue-gray and now, in this light, and behind those glasses of bis, they look gray-green. Hair—thio, light brown mixed with gray. Forehead very high, but that may be because he's growing bald. Age?—Say 34 to 38, and I'd defy anyone to hit it closer than that. Grifin would be about 35, so that checks. A gold eye-tooth on the right side, but that dental job could have been done any time during the last five years, as a@ tiny item toward creat- ing a subtle Gisguise.... But I'll it real identity pinned upon him. Not tamely would a man who had the brains and tte cold-blooded cour- age to kill three women confess that he was not only a bank ab- sconder but a murderer. Moreover, Dan Griffin, whoever he was, had been amply assured by the newspapers both in Hamil ton and New York that he had not tcft @ single clue upon the actual scene of any of his three crimes. With this assurance, Henry Vowd,}there until her train I Dundee?” Lawrence Sharp broke the heavy silence at last. I hope it’s good news this swered quietly. mother arrived before swered, at having news to impart. “She's having a tray in het roomt, poor old soul . . . Cora’s room, that ts. She asked to be permitted to stay : | i & if he was really Van Griffin, could} midnight. Getting Cor simply deny all knowledge of the | ‘together, 1 understand.” pleased in epite of his depression | fi be eternally confounded if Henry fe or whoever he is looks sub’ Mentally, Dundee ticked off the other items-of preva description clined to be slender rather than heavy. Regular features—nothing odd-about them; neither handsome nor homely.” So far so good! The meek little man across the table fitted those qualifications. exactly. “But Dan Griffin did not wear |, gotten that the next day would be ‘a holiday and that his operations as a detective would te hampered by the presence of the boarders, But funeral— “I'm afraid not, Miss Paige,” he answered regretfully. told you, I'm trying to do some work in my room. and having lost today on account of the inquests } think I'd better buckle down to it tomorrow, ever if it is a holiday.” “Everyone in the house is going except you.” Norma answered with faint reproach, and Mr. Magnus, who never met tle collecti course since you hardly knew Mrs. Hogarth—" “Please let me have the pleas- ure,” Bonnie interrupted hastily, and slipped a five dollar bill along the edge of the table. “I've been wondering about the funeral. Since Mrs. Hogarth was robbed of all her money—" “Mrs, Rhodes’ teered today to pay the funeral expenses.” tears springing into her dark eyes. “Mrs. Rhodes was going to pay everything herself, but ber pastor said it wasn’t fair—Ob!” she broke off, with a little cry of pain and srief. Dundee wanted to tell her then Mrs. Hogarth knowing shi BO ome, not even Norma Paige, must know yet that there had been Later, when the three murder mys- teries had been solved, and Norma had come into ber smal! inheri- tance under the terms of Mrs, Ho- garth’s will, the girl could reim- penses, But tomorrow. while others were paying tribute to the dead woman, Dundee would be another way. For he still believed that the key to both the Hogarth apd the Barker murders was con- cealed in the Rhodes house, they were all going to the “But ast “Even Mr. Dowd 've been taking up a lit- for flowers, but of church _volun- the girl whispered, the $2000 life insurance which id died without id a claim to. But daughter who was murdered. church for the old lady's bi ‘ving ber in (To Be Continued) [our HOARDING HOUSE ___% Ae! (HEALTH@DIET ADVICE} * > Z = Zz Af WHAT Nou “wo MEN AA NourRE WRONG, BERT, Ga LD SN Dr Frank Mc Coy ‘ i eee to Go ob 4 Vines wet tt ZA uce 502 She Sast Hay. 10 Meal ~ DIET. FOR A MoNTH at FIRST GLANCE,AA oc | Ath 4 ‘ HAN TAKE A LoT OF A person micht SAY AMY Seema IM REGARD TO HEALTH ¢ DIET WILL BE ANSWERED ‘ | [3 EXERCISE To REDUCE / quar I WAS Stout FE} conpurenice is Z WHO CAN GE ADDRESSED Itt CARE. OF THES PAPER, { About FIFTY PouNDS! | ~~. BOT IT'S ALL WHAT You So GNCLOSE STAMPED SAELOP ER an You HAVE WHAT 4 BRAWA fu. I'm DUST | RUDELY REFER“ = ny have been GWA its le * i ! aps you TD CALL EASE-FAT A MASS OF MUSCLE! ] AS FAT, EH Qu! pi Rulolabaattied ae is wed peas Fue ving, thoughtlessly wee TH? THICK KIND w]e BUT YoU “TAKE aw WELL « WITHOUT] ted staying out late tor many nights, =, > . . 7 out as the one day you reform be- sania i mM WHICH 1S TH” WORST} -TH? MADOR ~ HE'S ; ARISING , I cause of the fact that so many on |/(—" >To ain gladly answer Gee eee iat PURE LEAF LARD { CHALLENGE You this day are dejected and melancholy onal questions on health and TH” CASE OF ~~ WHY SHOULDN'T HE 1) a WRESTLING after their night's hilarious celetow || det addressed to tim, care of HAMS ? BE FAT? ~JusT LIKE MATCH, DAKE ¢ Year’s eve seems to be the one holi- Fa IO onc stamped addressed THEM CHINESE IDOLS : ’ i day celebration in the year where all ||. velope for reply. fs «I'LL SHow restraint is thrown aside and somany ~~ ALWAYS SITTIN seem to think it is absolutely neces _ Nou “THE sary to celebrate dangerously. going to too many parties, and cating DIFFERENCE ‘Those of my readers who awaken | and drinking too much. sleepy-eyed this morning may have| If you are ever going to make any BETWEEN FAT good reason for having thoughts of | serious change for the better, you 4 ' AND BRAWA ! reform, but would it not be better for | must not put off making tis change ‘ is all of us today to stop meditating | until tomorrow or any other time, but upon the bad habits of yesterday,and| do it at once, even though your determine to do some positive think- | habits of living undergo a very radi- A r ing in creating new habits which will | cal change even this very day—the y é make for health and happiness? The j first day of the year 1930! + eternal NOW is the only time really! Lay out a pian for yourself today worth considering. ‘The only time we | and follow it today. At the same are ever’ really conscious of is the time, it is also wise to make plans .ever-present now. If there is any | for each succeeding day. Determine time ever best for starting | good | how many hours you should spend at habit, it is now. The one who can | your work, how many hours for sleep expect no future of happiness or/and how many for recreation and health is the one who always thinks | study. Most people can do well with of the future as tomorrow, and does | eight hours for work and cight hours not consider the all importance of| for slecp. Most of the harm froin the present moment. bad habits comes from those which ‘As you lay your paper down after | are practiced the other eight hours reading this article, think of the first | of the day. Determine how you can good thing you can do. Perhaps it is | use those eight hours to the best ad- some immediate act of kindness or | vantage. ‘There will be plenty of generosity. It may be that you are/|time for outdoor exercises or indoor ye 4 just about to sit down to the table. | calisthenics, plenty of time for going If that is so, you will never have a | occasionally to tne theatre, and many better time in your life for starting | hours when you can study, cithet Z the good habit of eating a sensible | with private teachers or from the a) = Rae ie Po meal for your health’s sake. aoe thousands of hiisatied bese Ali ° @|any movement of such traffic.” Oh,|of defying even-the taboo of caste.”—| Will be enough things on the table | record the thoughts and deeds of bie | BARB: | well, maybe they can pick up those|Berta Ruck, (Harper’s Bazaar.) that you can use which you know | greatest minds in history. Try spand- rates and use them on the Detroit aes to be healthful foods. Refuse those | ing an hour or more each day with So Ne Ye ut! rote |river. other foods in front of you about!such thinkers as Shakespeare and A NEY eae aetna aes eae “Men are afraid in the dark because which there can be the slightest sus- | Emerson. \ ably will be kept. . . For one thing, ; A. schooner containing $180,000 in the darkness they cannot see what | picion. % Create your new constructive habits you can't play the stock market with- worth of whisky was stized-off Bos- their brains have accomplished.”—Isa| Perhaps you have not been out for | for health and efficiency so that each — ‘ton when coast guards found it run-|@lenn. a long walk today. If not, now is|day of this year you will be full of ental vithout lights. ‘ xe 8 a god time to start. Go out and walk | increasing happiness and satisfac- Many a man who prides himself on |ing without lights. We ‘would have permits, | tion. ze being a liberal thinker is pretty slow | thought Bete beds Bho bea on doo nen fo 3 eee < ’ much w ound woul @ power comes to enable us to SWE! . ’ in reaching for the dinner check. | erough lit to satisfy anybody. form it.—Calvin mpilpebi lA ul booed Educator tells the scientists at Des{ (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) xe ® Question: ‘Mrs. E. 8. writes: “My an i Moines that youth begins to “revolt” ATS RRNA ERT HS “The faiths, hopes, dreams case has been diagnosed as ulcer of at the age of 12. If that man had|® + ® |heroisms of man tell us more about the stomach. My nose, which has ever tried to get a bowl of spinach || Quotations [|nim than his muddy origins."—Dr.| either an’ old friend or ® new one|been red for a long time, has be- rel kent diene elt othe lf |W te Bpecry, whose friendliness will be helpfully | come more so, and sore to the touch want it, he'd: know it begins a lot| “The glitter of modern living fades | stimulating. Maybe you have been| within the last two weeks. Mighi earlier than that. in the light of simple things.”—Nelia RENOVATED TRUNKS Old friends whose counsel | this indicate cancer of the stomach?” ‘ xe OK Gardner White. Old trunks can have their looks im- | would help you the most, and care-| Answer: Red nose would not be The Union Pacific railroad is to xe * proved and themselves made water- | lessly getting into » rut with friends / an indication of cancer of the stom- cancel its carload rates on beer ship-| “Nature, that unscrupulous and re-| proof if you paint and finish them | whose habits or ideals are not con-jach. You may have some local in- ments, “because there is no longer !lentless old match-maker, has a way] with automobile varnish. structive. fection of the skin, such as erysipelas, <a but a red nose is usually a sign of Gs as aia extreme intestinal poisoning from ene auto-intoxication and constipation. (Silicon) Question: K. I. G. writes: “Kind- ly tell me, is there any difference in x silica and silicon? Also, do whole id y . rye products contain a worthwhile 3 p f amount of silicon?” € = Answer: Silica is the English word } ©.1929 by NEA Service, Ince . OL ANIE AT, NT See ote for silicon dioxid. Whole rye docs not contain a very large amount of THIS HAS HAPPENED. three crimes, as, before the cor-) “Are the police permitting bet|glasses,” he remind himself. silicon. a pi oner’s jury and upon first being|to remove Cora’s belongings?” Dun: | “Glasses are, howe! the first (Dangerous Fumes) den questioned, he had denied, all) dee asked innocently. thought of the a: r criminal Question: Mrs. A. M. asks: “Would z dee knowledge of or complicity in the} “I believe so, Mrs. Barker has|trying to disguise himself. Effec- @ coaloil stove affect one’s health? STRAWN. ESL ee eee Hogarth afd Barker murders. As) just telephoned police headquarters |tive, too, for glasses have been T use it for cooking and there is con- boarder whom Mrs, Hogarth ac- |for his alias, if it was challenged,|and Lieutenant Strawn is coming|known not only to change the stantly an odor from the burnt oil” cused of trying to rob ker, ts | he could stick to his story or pre-|over shortly to be here while she|facial appearance of a man but his Answer: It is always dangerous to A BA sent the police with an intricate| packs. But I understand that noth-| personality as well. But if Henry use a coaloil, gas or gasoline stove thought to be: new one which would keep them|ing has been found ig the poor| Dowd {s Dan Griffin, he was clever which does not have the proper vent. busy for days or weeks before they | girl’s room to ald the police in any!enough aot to adopt any of the At times carbon monoxide is thrown could prove its falsity. way. It was the sad privilege of the| other obvious methods of disguis- off ‘which is highly poisonous and And even it its falsity was) wife and me to have a short talkjing his looks—dyeing his hair or dangerous. This gas has no odor, so 4 ¢ proved, where would the police be! with Mrs. Barker, and to tell her| Wearing a wig, growing a beard, you cannot detect it. The odor from then? In five years Dan Griffin| bow much all of us had loved her|@ffecting a limp, scarring his gas is usyally not dangerous, but the had had ample opportunity to/ daughter.” cheek.” gas may also contain the carbon : : change his appearance and person- as eee mmonoxie, which you cannot tell ® ¢ ality so that an identification by &| 4¢y WISH I hadn't come back last|'[HE youns detective was jerked aii pee.abe aihenied tas At, Belton ecquaintance would be 1 night,” Mye. “Sharp broke in|“ out of bis reverie by a soft. ———— practically an impossibility. But|teartully. “I wish I'd stayed out |Mesitant voice at his elbow. Posal- RUBBER ARTICLES Granted that Henry Dowd could be|the week with Larry. He wanted| DIY Mrs. Rhodes had guessed that ‘The new dainty shoe gloves, rubber Proved to be Dan Griffin, just how | me to,” a Bonnie Dundee would appreciate house gloves and other rubber articles near a conviction would the police} «1 presume Mrs. Barker wili|the honor, but at any rate his lige be kept fresh and new by giving be then? The district attorney |taxe Cora home with her for—for|Cbair was now on Norma Paige's em a “bath” of talcum powder, could prove opportunity and m0-j burial” Dundee asked with a|'ett. On her right sat Walter when dry, after use. tive, but of actual evidence con- fleeting glance of sympathy for Styles—of course! een thr ee necting Henry Dowd with the port Magnus, who was not eating| “Are you going to Mrs, Hogarth's OXER-FATIGHE crimes there was none. ” Housewives who find themselves * but whose eyes had not left his|funeral tomorrow, Mr. Dundee? very tired in the after be odie de untouched food since Dundee had|Norma asked. “Mrs. Rhodes baad noite e me men gen Pe S for the two murdef¢ at thelentered the room. thought tomorrow was the best igh niswaga at ey : try sipping a glass of hot milk and Rhodes House, a cleter:defense| + 6 ” day, since it is the Fourth, and ‘ ‘On the one o'clock train,” Mr ” resting @ half hour afterwards. attorney cou'd convince any jury| Sharp replied ‘heavily. “Will you|202¢ of us will be working.’ .{that, no matter if Dan, Griffin was| pass me the catsup, please, Mr,|_ Dundee hesitated. He had for. GLYCERINE RINSE Sd 4 To give washable gloves that glossy, soft new look, add a teaspoon- | ful of glycerine ard a few soap flakes to the last rinse water. DIRT RINGS When cleaning spots with gasoline, but a little salt into the mixture end it will be less likely to leave rings. WON'T BE BOTHERED WITH COUGHS THIS WINTER 7 From 651 East 46th St.. Chicz ‘Last winter a stubborn cough w tied me, kept me awake nights. It re- sisted other cough medicines, but quickly disappeared when I started taking your good Foley's Honey end Tar. Coughing won't bother me this winter as I keep a botile on han. I like the smooth and pleasant fecling it leaves in the throat.” Your drug- gist sells and recommends Foley's Honey and Tar. Ask tor it. Sold everywhere. —Ady. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 9 Done ant 1 heap dh ques, by . 4 lng baby im the teliiias peopis is when there's @ sled} ie rf ops. hous, te

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