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All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. 2.00 Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER rated) ncorpot CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON History Repeats Itself Proposal to investigate the con. struction of North Dakota's capitol building is, among other things, evi- dence that history does repeat itself, for nearly every structure of this kind in the history of the nation and its various states has been built to the accompaniment of an investiga- tional obligato of some character. The present investigation should be a relatively casy matter, for the persons to be investigated have in-/ Gicated their willingness to submit to the legislative probers and to fur- nish all the data at their command. This, of course, if the investiga- tion is to be a real one, would hardly satisfy those who instigated the established system which is claim- ed to make the jury system what the founders intended it to be. In his bearing on the bench and decisions of law, Judge Pugh was what the public expected him to be. Every lawyer in the state respected and ad- ‘mired him. ‘ The ailment against which he fought was &n incurable ens, but jJudge Pugh battled bravely to the end. The agony of almost unendur- able pain could not quench his magnificent spirit. And so he died 20;in the harness, a fine judge and a splendid citizen with a real passion for justice. Of Real Benefit Showing of 400 birds in the Slope Poultry Show, which closed here Fri- day, coupled with the current price of wheat and other products, demon- strates the importance which the so- called auxiliary crops have assumed in the present economic structure. Bismarck wheat quotations Satur- day were 31 cents a bushel, less than the going preie of any bird exhibited in the show. The price of poultry is down, also, but hardly as much as is the price of grain. Any farmer can tell you that much of the cash he has had during the last year has been provided by his cows and chickens, pin-money enter- prises in better years. The cream check and returns from produce sold have bought as many shoes and stockings during the last year in this district as has money received from grain sales. In promoting the poultry industry the Slope show has had an important Part. It has helped to raise the stan- Gard of chickens and turkeys in this area, resulting in better birds which take on weight more rapidly and lay more eggs. In this manner it has contributed directly to the promotion of poultry profits. It costs no more to produce a poor- ly-bred, slow-growing and scrawny chicken than a good gne, and the difference in price is material. By Stressing this fact to the producer, the poultry show performs a worth- while service for us all. , By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygienc, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conformigg to instruc- tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. INCUBATION OF THE CRI Right now, writes a diehard, “I{hear so much about .. have a bad code in the head which . @. BE) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE ,catching this disease tularemia we Answer—Tularemia is an infectious fi | | \ | | | they go, ury Department. It’s a wonder they last that long, considering how fast ee * Before laying barber shop blasts to racketeers someone should exam. ine the razors. ee # Sir Hubert Wilkins plans another| Yet Were brought in suffering from: attempt to reach the North Pole. Of wider interest, however, in the field of polar exploration seems to be the search of neighbors’ refrigerators for more ice cubes. x % % Now ilbert Swan KEEPER OF THE BOOK New York, Jan. 17—You might call him the keeper of Manhattan's “book of the night.” : His entries, to be sure, are blunt and impersonal; direct and un- dramatic matters of record. Yet he knows all the plots; a thousand-and- one nights when terror stalked half- lit, streets; when a nerve-shattering shriek came suddenly from a dark, dank dwelling place; when white faces seemed to walk toward the river, clutching hopeless tragedy to their hearts; when the figure of a broken man dropped like a limp’ meteor from some high peak— e * * NEW YORK NIGHTS I speak of Edward Volz, who re- cords the cases coming out of the night into Bellevue Hospital. Belle- vue is New York's clearing house for men found starving in, the streets, or frozen in doorways; for women found in gas-filled rooms and gun-men top- pled into the street. It is New York's central public hospital. As might be expected of such a metropolitan clearing house, it eventually: hears the echoes, of poverty, heartbreak, sudden rage, pistol shots, sling-shot thuds, the crash-of motors on a slippery street. Volz has been on hand many years. As “keeper of the book” he will someday be taken aside by some- one and he will tell tales such as Gorky or Chekov told; such as are hidden in newspaper paragraphs and front page stories. They are endless and part and parcel of New York. Many of his favorites concern dere. licts who hid fortunes in their rags, 7 riding with my hands off the handle-/ exposure or hunger. One such, bars. My ambition is to swing under|eral years ago, carried some $10,000 the stomach of the steed like a Cos-/in a twisted bandana. Yet he plodded sack and pick up a handkerchief.—/the streets and haunted park Marie Dressler, 63-year-old" movie|es in the midst of winter. Any fellow ae who has taken up bicycle sev- bench- vagrant could have snatched the for- tune from his hand, had the secret been known. But who would have dreamed of comfort, food and warm- th, hidden in a beggar’s bandana. * % 4% A BROADWAY CHARACTER Not since the lurid exit from this life of Arnold Rothstein, has Broad- way “had so much material for chat- ter and legend as at the moment— with Larry Fay as the subject. And, as usual, the old Broaway moraliza- tions come out. Fay, who rose from @ petty race track plunger to a bright lights character of wide renown, died with his dress suit on—but with lit. jtle money for his burial. Most of them go the same way. Fay’s rise and fall started on a cer- tain day when he put over a 100 to1 Shot on the tracks, From that mom- ent he was a corvert to the “easy money” notion. Soon he was using gambling as a mere side-line and plunging in the night club business. Broadway = ceds that he was.a pioneer, if not J —______. Ff Rules Prices Dr. Otto Heintze, above, is Germany’ new price dictator, appointed by Pres: ident von Hindenburg. the father, of the “mixed society” night life as it now obtains. His firat ventures werea bit too young for the ultra-ultra speakeasy clubs. which come and go with the moon. ‘Tex Guinan and the El spot found the Blue Book mixing very questionable. He grad- @ $75,000 place and another on the Florida sands. He jumped . racket to racket; from taxis to But he had learned to strut his stuff on Broadway; to put on the big gesture. Few of them ever escape— and that’s the way the easy money goes. They plunge in fiash ang show when the “easy money” starte Tolling. dodging gaming debts on the very night he was “taken.” Fay was said to be arguing bana Nast atta end be- fore the shooting began. rT barons, gaming kings, night club gents— alike. the hearse arrives, the fortunes have evaporated in varied gestures. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS that technocracy is being made the theme of a dance tune, the term needs only be applied to a Pull- man car, a sandwich and a collar to become firmly entrenched in the English language. ee # probe. They will want more infor- Fun for the Kiddies mation than appears on the surface} skating rinks placed in different and, if anything is wrong in the] sections of the city have been a fine nether depths, it should be brought! investment for the youth of Bis- to light and exposed to public view. | marck, If, on the other hand, every thing} This city should develop the winter I acquired while roughing it alone in| disease that prevails among rabbits a shack in the North Wisconsin; and other game, but is rarely if ever Woods. Had been there four days/found in tame rabbits or domestic when I felt ity coming on, The|animals. The transmission of tu- closest I had come to conversational | laremia to man is almost always thru spray in that time was via radio—lis- | scratch, cut or puncture of the hands tening to football and other broad-/| while skinning or dressing the game. Down in the Congo, they've dis- CHAPTER XLI. ad ba r turns out to be fair and regular, the | carnival spirit more. The season is|°®StS + - 1 nee Mee ieee ipiovon tad eps shel Lect ead t od cel ecah ded leeds) Y ici the’ Hise ee Bt rgatchnt weir} Rody capitol commission should be given My friend the diehard is not at all| heavy rubber gloves, ani Particu- | leap to a height of over seven feet. 66 suspicions were not wAiSe ” 1 cold enough in this section to develop | sarcastic or patronizing about it. He|lar about washing the hands with| Tf loyal alumni groups are up to thelr ‘deeply founded at this terrupted | Natalie,/had been in the grave for ae, fa clean bill in the matter. sports which can be promoted at a|mergly reports the case and suggests | soap and hot water after every hand-| stuff we should see these dark boys early stage of the| Humpheny wan volentoy ie the we, torte nciestin tivcms | In the meantime the public, which| very small expenditure. that a symposium on the cri question ling of game. Thoro cooking kills | in college football lineups next fall. was selected ag the vic-/given me a clue, wi le autopsy decides all of these questions in the would be enlightening. the germ and makes the meat safe | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Bervice, Inc.) | S2m¢. Now I can tell you withtim of this mysterious ‘X.’ substantiated. The girl had been The country club offers - facilities fi . ° definite assurance that by this/all these devilish preparations?” jin the grave thirty-six hours but Oh, I don’t know. It might en-jto eat in any case. A rabbit or other vy end, will reserve its judgment. The! or toboganning and skiing which at| lighten a few of our younger readers,| game that falls to iry to get out of elaborate and fantastic genealog-| | Thatcher Colt smiled mysterl- Bi as ed on create attitude of both the investigators and) some future time, when conditions |if any of them still take any stock harm’s way in the natural manner ical device, ‘X’ had obtained co-|°™S'7- » he lit. seem that Geraldine had been “investigates” appears to have been! permit, should be utilized. in the quaint old superstition of tak-‘ should be regarded with suspicion. pious samples of the writing of “That will p ” he killed on January 3, when Doctor fair up to this point and it is de-| There is no bette: ing cold from exposure to cold air or Little white spots on or in the liver Geraldine Foster. For what pur- said. “Doctor was the ‘Maskell could not account for his voutly to be wished that it will re- : tT exercise than! dampness, But I have a vague feel-' are characteristic signs of tularemia. pose? Obviously in preparation | OMY possible victim in this ease.|oovements. Here great cleverness a ‘ skating and its kindred sports. More | ing that I am the only person of ma- Good Riddance ‘ for a foi . ¥ do not have to| x. had also been out | came into play. : main s0. Irregularities have oc-|and more are the children of Bis-|ture age who has been.enlightened by| Prom your articles I infer that a = tell any of you here—with the pos- Lehhod on Leet faire of the | weg? ¢: that the doctor i curred or wrong has been done, the|marck participating in this clean|the symposiums we have held about| person who has had his gall bladder A sible exception of Doctor Maskell Ye mag ring the gerber nits could be lured to some place where } public is entitled to know the truth,| sport, Thi ra this question in the past. What I|removed may hope to attain as good i forgery is by no means the| Hii7e wen been dean ous hi — Ihe had no means of that ut {t wants no bear-hunting expe- . ere can be no better anti-| have learned is that all these old fo-|health as anybody else. I hope this} We are no nearer peace 15 years rare and delicate accomplishment | @¢en ‘XH o been ‘tollowed lhe then the police would be- we dote to the modern tendencies which | gies who jest know they catch cold {is true, for both my gall-bladder and|after the armistice of the great war | gen supposed, Expert forg-|Po¥ ine house on Peddler’s Rosa, |Heve that he was lying, and the Gitions at the public's expense. If ®/ corrupt youth than a winter sports| from every draft, wetting of the feet|my appendix were removed... How|than we were the day before the ery mean no more than the|i0 i his secret love. affair waz {fall result would be accomplished. bear hunt is staged it behooves the| program. or whatnot, are going to die uncon-|long should a person remain on a diet | armistice was signed.—Dr. Albert Ein- power to draw accurately. I know|fno yn. ly, on Ji 4, he re- after his, gall-bladder is removed? (A. T. W.) Answer—Certainly, and good rid- verted to any crazy notion like mine. Suppose our diehard friend's al- leged “cold” turned out to be measles’ Stein, noted German physicist. * *e * I should like to see every man, wo- According] hunters .not to come back empty- ceived a telephone call. handed. that it was Geraldine Foster it—and he feetty gue can — ber any ‘ture at e Airst trial. I have since aia a “I learned that ‘X’ had bur- One night off for bridge is not un- jlarized the house on Peddler’s roved that the e Regardless of the attitude of prob- Teasonable declares Judge Vivian or poliomyelltis—of course I don't|dance to both of them. Follow the| man and child dressed in gay colors.| Person whom I had begun to sus-| Road, got inside and studied the|was further told that if he would ers or “probees” one fact is clearlx/ Frank Gable in a Philadelphia do.|know and neither did our diehard] diet as long as your physician directs.| Color is life—Prof. Henry Edward pee igor) i ieee evant st tony mae for ie [repos esived = age — evident. It is obvious that this should) mestic relations court. She refused | friend know what it might turn out/Man without a gall-bladder ordinar-| Armstrong, distinguished British| (ary, dimples of X's work. smith and had a private key made sac conay, Oe pe . bean easy matter about which to get nis to be—but it might very well have|ily eats the same things anybody else | chemist. | “Between Au; d Di ber | for the front door. The —— a d get/ to punish a mother of nine children been one of these illnesses. I ask,|does. = eee 24, BR hed sper fecember hy the was, 10 now. enaer this doctor was rap ayy ep man an i all the facts at small expense. {who sought surcease from maternal | would our diehard friend have ascrib-| (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) The horse is coming back—thistime,| the ieaeriting i Br saan same roof with us. ‘X could eome beep he was to meet her reo At the committee's command is the | duties at the bridge table once ajed his illness to exposure to cold or a | I believe, to stay. The American farm- Foster. and go in the house at wi 80/Pelham entrance to Bronx Park. staff of the attorney general's office,| week. Sessions lasted until 3 a, m.,| Wetting or draft or sudden change of Barb: ® er is past the “hurry” stage. He's “Meanwhile, luck favored the|long as the doctor and his friend|He went there and waited two eee, een! irection of A.|uut_ here the fudge. held with the) Memuses © Yunrever nt Mus Ja rf RN GF ape SEF EK gg was his lolated ‘position’ that ‘ne vise ii ” . same’ 5 '. rse . es wot ve - er was it J. Gronna, to advise it regarding le-|woman and ruled that her “bridging”| "In measles the incubation period America, len if chance had not smiled upon pasta r. gal matters. The state auditing board employs accountants who should be able to Golf widow's worries are never over. free access to the on which}one who knew him saw him there. Just now they're trying to restrain’ their mates from digging divots in the came under the head of strictly rea- sonable. (time elapsing from moment of in- fection to beginning of illness) is from a week to more than two weeks. So ne j those dark Men are timid. A woman is much | i lans, Geraldine Fos- ter was about to be parsed. e more reckless, particularly when she! Therefore she was eed that house, ‘ Seige rite grag opera id stress on it make a speedy and accurate report|) .... a em “ ae clahartopse not arolnten Lalacn living room ne: oa | a saree abet eomeeing— Bains. Po ig er we maeaieeite te fein see Bester 's Frey just as intended he should. * A | jong enoug! co Fi | St. Vincent lay, t. i" | ‘The Fraud Discovered. 1 of the financial phases and there isi] Editorial Comment |} the requirements of that eventuality.| Dollér bills ‘wear out in eight or! ee te taller quarters for herself. The] tor this unding crime were not Fraud Dipcevered. | also the state bank examiner's office | raitorials printed below show the || It is impossible to get any definite | nine months, says the U. 8. Treas-| After a couple more weeks I'll try Bea done the tay Ang] complete. “X’ must add a finall““But the tannic acid ruse had | with a staff of men experienced in|} trend of thought by other editors. ||statement or even an opinion upon by called to look pf og e| tu of horror, to seal the doc-l 14+ worked. It never does. The By matters of this nature. They are published without regard |/ the incubation period of the so-called oe partment | tor’s doom. By now, you must be- to whether they agree or disagree ||«common cold” from any physician e . during the day. gin to see that Ge! Foster| Medical Examiners, when they As long as the question has been with The Tribune's pollcles || 5 health authority of scientific stand- River uestion [An Tmportant Detail. ~ 1) was only an incident inthe scheme.|make the autopsy, are certain Taised and ugly rumors have been| ——--— ———----—| ing. Just as it is impossible to ma- “For what e? On the| he doctor was to be the real vic-|sooner or later to discover the | spread, it is only fair that the issue A “Bad Press” neuver one of these shrewd authori- first occasion, 'X’ stole stationery Hire. ‘His was the danke tos wae 20 frame. And tet, the snails in the | should be settled. The public will (New York Times) bles ADL Doe oer Pee rt HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Puzzle 21 Tree. genus and a pen—but overlooked one| would do the killing, ‘K’ wouldloreciusive, Ie might have looked | want it decided definitely and fairly| Friends of Governor Roosevelt are | have to commit himself on & defith: 1 Products tor Ulmus. important detail. All purple inks| commit the marder of the girl. Nolas if all this magnificent plot of [| and at the smallest possible expense, |ComPiaining. and Republican oppon- Hen Tn Ee Ee ents whtch Russla 22 Having pre not the same That aroused my | one would see, Then ‘X’ must pre-|‘X’ had failed, or at least the pre- G ‘They are spending approximately that he aioe, Annes ae assume our own limitations. I sug- a crest. note which demanded blackmail aos a dane Nasty, ible a soy pened ny ES ae f} $2,000,000 of good money in the cap-| newspaper criticism during the past|Sest that minimum | incubation 10 Epochs. 23 Onager. money from Dr. Maskell was alto entangle Doctor Maskel}, That|the alice almost instantly found We tol construction. They are entitled |two weeks. They speak of his having | Petiod is 2¢ hours. We know o 14 1n what conti. 24 Battering ma forged note. It was brought back| might be days—even a week—yet| out the exact time of the murder. ft know that it is being expended | 8d. in the French sense, a “bad | <lsease that has a shorter incubation nent ie Chine? RINT TASTE ROREETT Hetzits bo tks wher aft eines ag | wae the body was found, it mast] “But here that strange elemen i Droperly and that value is being te-!By the phrase is about tie beat teins (ev, well If that is fair, then) 6 tenominy, REPT ER AC the living | room, tore it across Froshly killed” annie. acid reall th chee! killer nom changed idee ceived. that could happen to the President- | Tight away a great majority of al- NE BE SOMIAIRIMEEU| and thrust the pieces into do that. The idea was fi helped in the plot. kn i On the other hand, if everything is /elect at the present time. Since he |!¢eed “colds” attributed to drafts, wet | © 17'To apportion [F) at te. leve. drawer, that later on they | from an old murder in New Jersey. |that Geraldine Foster had been i “to1 | describes himself li fect, insufficient room heat, or wear- cards. q would be found. If they had not| with which I am, as well as killed on Christmas Eve. B } -shipshape and regular, the capitol PS ae te tener | ing insufficient clothing, ate exclud-| 18 Therefore. 30 Overseer. been found, 'X’ would have planted| was, famili clear- “" le AH | ante should not be raised by a costly | 404 & learner, he ought to consider| 018 (OSUIeIen foes ar running at} 19 Consumed. 31 Armadillo the fragmenta of a second note.|Iy defined kill, pur the body, in| 2cq20e, Belp the, doctor, for his | y YY lit a good press that lays facts and| €4, for the stuffiness or ig al neumed. its of a second not na |, eat e alibi was just as | investigation. public impressions before him with; the nose or increase of cough or 20 Calves’ meat, 32 Sky toy. No was to be left tub, soak it in defective as the one of Jan | Whatever happens, further devel.|friendly candor. It is not whole-| Whatever the victim of Shrpuic Fy To stuff one eee pened ae the ache bing Pat pes] goats iva ‘The killer had first meant to S| opments «vill be observed with inter-| Some for a man who is soon to take| thinitis, chronic bronchitis or other) 24 Angurgent, 4 VERTICAL “42 Nourishing. Again it was lucky that Betty Can-| tor with a difficulty in proving his| ture hm there directly, in which es over what will probably prove to be| Chronic respiratory trouble. feels in 27 Organ of pilepsy 12 Nourishing. gai was ¥ 24 4 case no tannic acid would. have (, est. No other building in the history | the hardest job in all this world of|SUCh circumstances, begins within a hearing. symptom. 1 Fashion 43 Food con- field saw Geraldine half-finish a|movements. But he must not get/been necessary. After Mrs. | of the state has been watched so/hard jobs to be told that everything | fe¥ minutes if at all—sufficient 29Furtive move, 51 Wayside 2 Custom. tainer. note men see y Se ito the Ronse, echennzes Be would | Westock delivered the message, the »| Closely as the structure now rising on| which he thinks or says or does is| Proof, to my mind, that the trouble] 33 Constellation. __ hotels 3 Inlet. 44 Dye. pp A ES notify the police perj| doctor called Mra. Morgan —' be- | capitol nin. | the are OF spollieet. waedon. Heine urther a of this prey Lin a ae a4 Taimert. peekey of both notes, It was also on the| thus rub off some of the sheen of ad phy ety age pe ar. jand that all the big problems w c + e 5 . . fe 7g care- ” HGuininaaiae Gili | melt before him when he finally has | 's the fact that the discomfort ceases “Father of 55Thick slice. 6 Sell goods in 52 Tidy Brean vie dies Road was lett fully polishing in all the contrived jZetummed Boe Mra. n Outstanding Citizen jto take them up one by one. Mr. | 85 soon as the hypersensitive invalid Waters"? 58 Natural power quantities’ - 54 Poems. * Geraldine’s coat. circumstances. Here was a» real|“0Ts8® could not leave her apart- In the death of Thomas H. Pugh, | Roosevelt might well feel that, while | &¢ts out of the draft, changes to dry 37Cur 59 Ore launders.- 7 Minor note. 65 Bashful. “We know that this was not the| problem, unique in crime, I be- aig pe Mabel, in an.auc- of the sixth judicial district,|hne is facing and will have to face - 38 Sun god er world. §& Standard type jeat only note by ‘X.’ Another was] lieve, yet ‘X’ met it with consum- . ” judge he sixth judicial di clothes or otherwise returns to his 8 Si 63 Neth id 56 Meadow y note by col ery BOs bi, and he North Dakota loses not only an able|™any difficulties and even miseries, | US¥al environment, 39 Southeast 64 Conscious. measure 57 Every completed and instead of being} mate ac. ve Gerona hea ey when furist but an outstanding citizen, |e 18 at least escaping one “wor."| oie sons AND ANSWERS 40 Headgear @7Garden tool. To lacerate. 6 Sweet potato. torn up was sent directly to Felise |7 Well Laid | |had to find her through the piling rage f the state he! it, is the one thus defined in the oe Rabbit 41 Affects with 68 Famous col- 10 College gradu: 61 To piece out. Morgan, the mother of Doris. The case which had been deliberately Among wyers 0: Scriptures with which Mr. Roosevelt rst, Catch Your gangrene lege in USA ates 62 Measure. of this was manifest. It|““Accordingly, the murder was|put over the head of the ‘wes held in high repute. There were} is so well acquainted: “Woe unto you| - pees tails, snowshoes ae pines 46 Native metal. 69 Words 11 Aeriform fuel. 65 You and J. was to create even in the mind of | committed on Eve in the killer cememberrd tet some who regarded him as one of the an all I men shall speak well of ou. same ogee oy eee tren | 47 Tissue 70 Last word of 12 Night before. 66 Measure of De, Moskel's Dearest Cog ies the ly as scheduled. | Anna Aumuller case and knew ex- ablest men on the North Dakota/ {or in th ue rains Doomeote Nie after: thems Aare of 48 Prophet & prayer 13 Sorrowtu). area O eee the police the sobencthio! ia ere + yon the éotae ot as actly phat the police would do beneh. It is certainly not Mr. Roosevelt's PEP PPE | od Ul oll dll motive for the deed. Further, the ahead for a moment. A few wie nm fault that the work cut out for him, . i note also showed us where to look | after Chststnns, Dector nimaitiea Clie ge her and even now piling up on him, is aeee a for the t gave us our first| leaves town 4 eee ine with s Peay Tat gy had BaP ae ervng tro ny See eee Be | dele ine aang when’ the pacioal Govacccwet at | bie waspoese.” eret trip to Reno prometetory to| t a Washington s made for the time be- atalie Maskell smiled in ad-) getting @ divorce. It was thie ro-|Po "Niwa that Doctor Meck tes ing almost impotent, and when un- miration. Teanee which hestemed the Sim. | ried to. fix ‘alibi wal mands ae ade, on vied marten eooas Mare] Al of these plana, claaldenal ot ancat‘bo Seng ashame wor! ‘. se fice apne te Ss ta etl | cee ate "|r as" eh asked to act as if he had it. the very datohse we have been pre-| seized the opportunity because tt| Wiser 5 The druggist looking paring, and which absolutely clears| was necessary. If and the) 78s that Doctor MODERN BATTLESHID ? my brother-in-law.’ doctor were married, Fs coed wiahed three bottles or tan. “But your husband does not| for the crime itself conse and must be de- moun Bo contest,” Seated Dates to be. livered before two o'clock in the urn on A por A Thatcher Colt reconstruction of lime ne one i vig the| the doctor office, were found in the ease., And in this house on Peddler’s Road. 1% brush | _ house on Woo weore THs? Denghert# had ly. |fore; “all that time the of loreover, a wit- George Hl, the lion of|Geraldine Foster lay in the court rooms of New York,|the tub of tannic acid. But on the office carrying Hip Sree were ithe sight of danuaey %, seme one own em- Se ett ele teen banee je mark of Dougherty directly and|house. That was the it ‘X’ re-| almost unbelievable, Mr. is- forcetul! ye tu ere and buried the body, | sioner,” said Nat . ’ Tm ning to all that isis bey a _. | (Te Temerrew.) ten cemrney rrp me