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(Continued from Yesterday's Star.) *“I didn’t know there was any man blown up.” His tone appeared to min- gle the rage and antagonism that he had first exhibited with a new and suddenly awakened curiosity. “I 't know there was any man blown he repeated. “That's too bad" said Barjan with mock resignation—and settied him- self deliberately in a chair at the bed- side. “I guess, then, you're the only man in San Francisco who doesn’ “You fool!” Nicolo Capriano rasped in rage again. “I've been bedridden for three years—and I wish to God you ha¢ been, too!” He choked and coughed a little. He eyed Barjan malevolently. “I tell you this is the first T've heard of it. I don't hang bout the street corners picking up ithe news! Don't sit there with your silly, smirking police face, trying to see how smart you can be! What in- i formation do_you expect to get out ot me like that? When I know nothing, 1 can tell nothing, can I? Who was the man?” v ‘That's what we want to know isaid Barjan pleasantly nd, - look here. Nicolo, 'm not here to rile you. All that was left was a few fragments of park bench. man, arc-light stand- ard and a plece or two of what was evidently a bomb." 1 ‘What time was this?” Nicolo Capri- ano’s eyes were on the foot of the bed. “Three o'clock this morning,” Bar- jan answered. The old bomb king's fingers began !to pluck at the coverlet. A minute passed. His eves, from the foot of the fixed for an instant moodily on jan's iz and sought the foot ¢ - “bed again. n broke the silence. ou do know something about it, eh, Nicolo?’ he prodded softly. “I didn't know anything had hap- pened until you said so” returned | Nicolo Capriano curtly. “But seeing it has happened, maybe 1— He {cut his words oft short, and eyed the plain-clothesman_again. “Is the man d-aa?" he demanded, with well-stimu- lated sudden suspicion. “You aren’ {1ying to me—eh? 1 trust none of you! { ejaculated Barjan almost { hysterically. “Good God—dead! Didn't {1 tell you he was blown into unrecog- | nizable atoms | The sharp, black eyes lingered a lit- tle longer on Barjan's face. The resuit appeared finally to allay Nicolo Capri- ano’s suspicions. {he sad. but there was a grudging note still in the old bomb king's voice. “It can't do the man any harm if he's dead. I guess you'll know who it is. lIt's the fellow” who pulled that hun- jdred thousand dollar robbery about five years ago on old man Tydeman— i the fellow that went by the name of Tave Henderson. I don't know whether that's his real name or not.” { *““What!” shouted Barjai He had lost (h(s composure. He was up from his chair. and staring wildly at the old man on the bed. 'You're craz: he jerked cut suddenly. “Either you're lying to me, or you're off your nut! You—"" Nicolo Capriano was in a rage in an instant. ‘‘You get out of here! {“You get to hell out of here! 1 didn't {ask you to come, and T don't give a damn whether it was Dave Henderson or a polecat! I's nothing to do wiih jme! It's your hunt—so go and hunt jsomewhere else! I'm lying, or I'm off"| my nut, am I? Well, you get to hell {out of here: Go on! He shook a frantic fist at Barjan, and, choking, coughing, pulled himself up in bed {again and pointed to the door. “Do you hear? Get out!” Barjan shifted uneasily in alarm. olo Capriano’s coughing spell had developed into a paroxysm that was genuine enough. “Look here,” said Barjan, in a paci- fying tone, “don’t excite yourself like that. I take back what I sald. You igave me a joit for a minute, that’s all. But you've got the wrong dope Some- how, Nicolo. Whoever it was, it | wasn't Dave Henderson. The man was i t00 badly smashed up to be recogned, ibut there was at least some of his {clothing left. Dave Henderson was fol {lowed all day yesterday by the police from the minute he left the peni- tentiary, and he didn’t buy any clothes. Dave Henderson had on a black prison suit—and this man hadn’t.”” Nicolo Capriano shrugged his shoul- de in angry contempt. Tm satisfled if you are!” | “Go on—get out!" Barjan frowned a little helplessly now. | ““But I'm not satisfied,”” he admitted | earnestly. “Look here, Nicolo, for the {love of Mike, keep your temper and “Iel's get to the bottom of this. “or some Teason you seem to think it was Dave Henderson. I know it wasn’t, but :I've got to know what started you off Qun that track. Those clothes—" |,1-You're a damn fool?” Nicolo Cap riano, apparently slightly mollified, wa jeering now. ‘Those clothes—ha, ha' 1t is like the police! And so old Nicolo is off his nut—eh? Well, I will show o He raised his voice and callec his daughter. “Teresa, my little on !he sald, as the door opened and she ap- peared, “bring me the clothes that young man had on last night.”” “What's that you say!" exclaimed ! Barjan in sudden excitement. | “Wait!” said Nicolo Capriano un- | graciously. Teresa was back in a moment with ;an armful of clothing, which, at her {fnther's direction. she deposited on i the foot of the bed. i Nicolo Capriano waved her from the | towe he screamed. he snarled. room. He leered at Barjan. ‘““WeH, are those the clothes there - that you and your police are using to blindfold your eyes with, or are they not—eh? Are those Dave Hender- son’s clothes?” Barjan had already pounced upon the clothing, and was pawing it over feverishly. “Good God—yes he rply. “And the clothes that the dead man had on—let me see"—Nicolo Capriano’s voice was tauntingly { triumphant, as, with eyes half closed, | visualizing” for himself the attire of jone Isnace Ferroni. he slowly { enumerated the various articles of dress worn by the actual victim of the explosion. He looked at Barja { maliciously, as he finished. “Wel he demanded, *was there enough left of what the man had on to identify | any of those things? If so—" Nicolo | Capriano_shrugged his shoulders by ! way of fnality. “Yes, yes!” Barjan's excitement was | almost beyond his control. “Yes, that iis what he wore, but—good Lord, | Capriano!—what does this mean? I ! don’t understand!” 3 | “About the clothes induired | Nicolo Capriano_caustically. “But 1 { should know what he had on since they were my clothes—eh? And you have ‘only to look at the ones there burst out ugar syrup. Either way, it tastes on the bed:to find out for yourself | why I gave him some that, though I do mot say they were new, for 1 | have not bought any clothes in the | three damnable and cursed years that T have lain here, were at least not | | anl torn to pieces—eh?" Barjan was pacing up and down the | ! room” now. When the other's back was turned Nicolo Capriano per- | mitted a sinister and mocking smile to hover on his lips; when Barjan faced the bed Nicolo Capriano eyed the officer with a sour contempt, into which- he injected a sort of viciously triumphant self-vindication. ‘Come across with the rest!” said . Barjan abruptly. “How did Dave Henderson come here to you? And what about that bomb? Did you give it_to him? cibility was instantly &t his com- mand ggain iand his scrawny flst was flourished under Barjan's nose. ! ‘No, I didn’t!” he snarled . “And you | | know well enough that 1 didn’t. You will try to make me out the gulilty | “Well, all right, then, I'll tell you,” | Nicolo Capriano’s convenient lras»' He scowled at Barjan. | HOME ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. 1 know that youre on the -square lall right, and that you have been ever since your gang was broken up and Tony Lomazzi was caught. That's good enough, isn't it? Now, come When food is burned, either by the gln' d(;we e the dope about Dave -body processes or by fire, it is changed | endersol ! e oa into water. organic matter in the | ullenly at the coverlet. form of gaseous or volatile products | passed b || and ash residue. The organic matter e grunted finally, “A IIMte| 1o 2 mechanical mixture of ocom- | “Bah honey ! i thing from old Nicolo! Well, then,|bounds made up of carbon, hydrogen, ' listen! Dave Henderson came here: 0Xygen, nitrogen and sulphur. and it last night in those torn clothes, and'i8 composed of various individual or- with his face badly cut from a fight§anio ~compounds; that is, these that he said he had been in. I don't,chemical substances are variously | | know whether his story is true or not combined into cellulose, or woody Zyou can find that out for yourself.|fiber: starch, sugar, albumin and fat. {1 don’t know anything about him, but ' The amount of organic matter in fool i this is what he told me. He said that IS determincd by subtracting the ash Lhis cell in the prison was next to!and water content from a hundred. | Tony Lomazzi's; that he and Tony|Organic matter is largely starch | were friends; that Tony died a little|in some foods, as potatoes and ric | While ago; and that on the night|While in others, as wheat, cellulos: Tony died he told this fellow Hen-|Predominates. —The nature of the derson to ny | prevailing organic compound, as sugar flerson to come to me If he needed any | {187, 1ol ®dotermines the mutritive “Ye: Barjan's volce was eager. | Value of the food. < | He dropped into the chair again, and For purposes of study, organic compounds are divided into clisses {leaned attentively over the bed to- ward Nicolo Caprano, “So he camelon the basis of the element nitrogen. |to vou through Tony Lomazzi, eh?|Those which ocontaln it are called { Well, so far, I gu the ~sfory's | nitrogenous, the others, non-nitro- straight. I happen to know thal Hen- | Eenous. The nitrogenous compounds derson’s cell was next to Lomazzi's. 8¢ composed of the clements nitro- But where did he get the bomb? He(&en. hydrogen, carbon, oxygen and cortainly didn’t have it when he left | Sulphur, the others of carbon, hydro- ! the prison, and he was shadowed——>|Etn and oyxgen. In vegetable foods “So “you' said be S hterrupted | the mest are non-nitrogenous, there col0" ICADEIRNG -6 ally, | “Well, | being usually from six to twelve in that case. you It to know | PATtS non-nitrogenous to every one whether the rest of the story is true, | Pary nitrogenous; in animal foods the !too, or not. He said he met a|mMOSL are nitrogenous. stranger in a saloon last night, and | ANy one who wishes to deal intelli- that they chummed up together, and| ently with food and understands | started In to make & might of it | what she reads in advertisements and food articles should make up her They went from one saloon to an- other. Their spree ended in a fight at ?;'r';:f&“’ learn these elementary food Vinetto's place up the block here. where Henderson and his friend were attacked by some of Baldy Vickers'| gang. Henderson said his friend was | | knocked out, and that he himself! {had a narrow squeak of it. and just| | fingers plucked | A minute | | (Copyright, 1921.) Things You'll Like te Make. | managed to escape through the back | door. and ran down the lane, and gof in here. I asked him how he knew where I lived. and he said that during | the afternoon he had located the house because he meant to come here | last night anyway. only he was! afraid the police might be watching him, and he intended to_wait un til after darl Nicolo riano’s | RIS | !evelids drooped to hide sudden | { cunning and mocking gleam that was | creeping into them. “You ought to bo able to trace this friend of Hen- - o derson’s if the man_was knocked out : | 1and unconsclous at Vinetto's as Hen- derson claimed—and if Henderson | | was telling the trath the other would | feorroborate it. ! 2 “We've already got him.” said Bar-! jan. with a hint of savagery in his| PP i voice. The “friend,” allas a plain-| A very useful and attractive hat| {clothesman. had proved anvthing but! % i jan inspiration from the standpoint of | basket can be made from your dis- {the police! “Go on! The storv is|carded braided basket-weave or | still straight. You say that " e p A ™ e I ra et You SN APat 7% !rough straw hat. Cut the outer edge | here anyway, quite apart from i nto |nrlge scallo 4;;:: lnchesflucro: i ! o 16 jthe widest part makes a good size). [iing; nisieacape from Vinetto's. W Wire these scallops with fairly soft s wire. Then bind them with bias bands of silk, cretonne or satin; or with velvet or ribbon. If You {handy with paints and brush, paint | "Nicolo Capriane shrugged his | shoulders. )} “Money, T dare say.” he said tersely. “The usual thing! At least. I suppose | I'that's what he had originally intend- | the flowers on the outside as shown. Qidnt ot ae Otherwise applique them in 1t Vinettos cut them from cretonne; or lscemed to have left him with but|even embroider them |one idea. When he wot here he was Linc the hat w th silk or cretonne. in a devil's rage. The only thing ke a three-inch heading at the that seemed to be tn his mind was!top. Run ribbon through a casing. to get some clothes that wouldn't at- Bend the hat into the shape you want tract attention i ones he had on. and to get out again | beautiful hat basket. FLORA. | as foon as he could, with the object (Copyright, 1921.) X of ge ”I‘l; e\'@;‘fl ‘l;‘(th this gang of Bald e sa they were the ones ] Crown Roast of Pork. Tie a dozen pork chops so as to| |ed to come for—but | far as that. The fight ' that ‘sent him up’ on account of their n\'ldenr{n at his trial. and h!ha( thevl were after him again now because of L a fhe Sfolen monev fhat they helieved (000 2 oW, WL (e TO8 MTESS B R o i s tho| Pl ithe center of the erown with and evervbody foretham | some small onions, or with sausage Tvhodv else In NIl before the | meat mixed with one-third its quan- got that money. and he swore h"a:ti v of bread crumbs. Put the roast zet every Inst one of that mansc=and jna dr'pping pan with a cup of hot get them in a huncl n't know what he meant then. T tried to quiet | water and roast until thoroughly him down but T mizht as well have |done, at least three hours, basting talked to a wild beast. T tried to met, it frequently with the drippings. | | him fo stav here and go to bed—in- | | stead he laughed at me in a queer| 3 z Sort of way. and snid he'd wine every Soft Ginger Cookies. | ‘Ohfi of that crowd o_fl‘ the face of the! put one and one-half cups of sugar i | earth before morning. T began t0|into a dish, add one cup of molasses, | think he was really crazy. He put on ! one cup of lard, or lard and butter | the clothes I gave him, and went out| mixed, one cup of hot water, two! jagain.” teaspoonfuls of powdered ginger, two | 1 rian nodded. | teaspoonfuls of soda and sumvlent! | o dont know ft” he said quietly| four to make a soft dough. Rell| hut that's where the bolice 125and cut out with a cutter. Place tie e oA ‘ cookies on buttered tins bake | (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) in a moderate oven 3 Quick and Nippy : describes the man who is '\ in top-notch physical condi- tion. That keen alertness that distinguishes the man of action from the ‘“dead ones” comes from eating the right food. > | i ! .is the right food for the “men and women who do things.”” It is rich in body-building nutriment and easily digested, giving a clear brain in a supple body—no excess fat, no excess muscle, just a perfectly bal- anced human machine, ready for ) work or play. For a warm, nourishing meal heat two ! Biscuits in the oven to restore their i crispness and pour hot milk over them, adding a little cream and a dash of ' salt. othing so strengthening and satisfying—and the cost is only a few cents. Delicious with fresh or stewed fruits. 1 L b ! people are | make people cr | Brown’s Boy t {children are in danger, even the most ol Sl i inid of mothers. Bravery, you kuow b ae sinplyaadasie fresh hucter EeMphs s _part of mother lov ater your Now it all but Mother o e 3 - plece Bear's nerves were had * srate. auce a New _ Woof-Woof silently ed el to pple S: ay. Parlor her heels. Boxer shuffled ulong after | Apple sinc ed in the Suite like Woof-Woof, but he wasu't silent. No, ! H d the casies new—far lent. He was whinip in a = ing softl had had a hard day, had Another way the smal Boxer. e had been stune by the + four la et Ycllow-Jackets. frightened almost out cass {of his wits by his fathe ter Bear; |Juice of + little cinnamon « ot Labor Only ightened again when Le had discov |nutmeg and cup of s Velours, Tapestries, Vel in worsteds. | ¢ instead of the tobn|and you will be delighted with 5 FEATURE PAGE. 17 | Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BPADY, M. D A Noted Physic:an and Author (8igned letters pertaining to personal heaith avd hygiene. uot to disesse diagnosis or treat- ment. wlil be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope v inclosed Letters should be brief and written in ink. OWwing to'the large number of letters received only n few can be answered here. No reply can be made to querics not conforming to instruc. tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of The Star.) almost abstainers as com- Oxygen and the Hair. pared with the modern custom. But When a man grows bald he grows|the outdoor life and physical activity philosophical, like 2 woman who grows the Indian compensated for his to- Mother Bear's nerves could stand. She S stopped suddenly. “What are you cry- ing for?" she demanded. *I don't know,” whined Boxer. Boxer Is Spanked. By THORNTON W. BURGESS. ek e e L AR L S fat. In stating that I am merely voicing | for physical activity incroases Ts 8008 Tor eabe an little b declared Mother Bear. “People who|® theoty. { ation in the body. Our modern I Mother Bear. |Cry should have something to cry for. riefly, my idea is that the recason |smoking woman does not have this And with that Mother Bear spanked |$0 Many more men than women go|compensation; she is lazy. Perhaps if Mother Bear was: badly upset. Yes. Boxer. Yes sir, she' did so. She Duld eadly 1s jthatimen smoke “more did indulge in a reasonable amount i ) spankes 3 Vi 5 amon i of physical activity— play— sir, she was badly vpset. It was a SPank SDE:;;‘;E 3“‘,’,,‘.:1‘":1“53;‘(] 89 | women the smoking habit is already df;n)!. e o i long time since she had been ¥0 UD- ) “You've made rouble enough for one | WOrking havoc with the hair. = As a|effect of tobacco to help her forget her general rule, the cigarette-smoking woman has pretty poor hair, if she has her own hair ugelexcness, day and I don’t want to hear another The falling of hair following such set. Her nerves were all on edge, | sound from you.” as the saying is. She was jumpy. “Yes'm,” sall x all severe illness as typhold fever or in- Timid Whitefoot the Wood Mousela sob. d Boxer, choking down | “peoyle who smoke suffer from under- | fuenza may be ascribed to the slowed never was more jumpy than was| Mother Bear went on, Woof-Woof at [0Xysenation, for two reasons: First, | oxygenhtion or lowered metabolism that her heels and Boxer siiently following. | PCause the act of smoking induces | follows such strains on the life process Mother Bear as she led the way down Somehow every hing stemed o have | Skallow breathing and slowed breath- ' Fortunately, this effect of such discas: from the foot of the Great Mountail oene wrong. “I wasn't to blame, he | and, sccond, because there IS js generally of limited duration, and in the course of a year or thereabouts cpt saying over and over to h = ‘he hair comes in again—and whatever wasn’t to blame. It was all the fault self. arbon dioxide (ordinary {of those ¥Zllow Jacieis’ carbonic acid gas) in thesmoke and|ienic or treatment happens to be in i o el air ‘mixturc to crow xygen from |nse at the time gets the credit for Lthe tormn ot u|u.=|mrr(o':h;fledh£mh:.§ the inspired air and from the blood | restoring” the haie, yearly that morning. The memory of corp}gscleg. which ecarry oxygen. Any Take reasonable amount of exer {how good they. ad tasted ‘made i | PLysiologist or chemist knows this is | cise dafly if you want to save your hair { smacl Dt Lt 7 A ers L awould g0 through | “Singers are noted for luxurious hair = that,” he suddenly decided, and lfi;‘:‘;"lr: Singers get their full share of | Ham in Currant Jelly. [y Eniway forgot his troubles. 8o that | *Vigliists arc \noted for their bril- | Melt a tumblerful of currant jelly Uy, the time ey reached home in|jjant’ domes. Fiddicrs breathe i a|and warm in it some thin slices of dering f they would vislt the berry {Siovy shallow manner while playing (€014 hom, peel and sore several ap, patch again and hoping they would., ~ | “Mptional or diticult nie plee dnd ot inemiintoieoinisals sl S Most men who retain a_heavy growth (an_inch thick. Grease the broiler (Copyright. 1921, by T. W. Burgess.) of hair well along in life are non- |and broil the apples until soft: place smokers. them around the edge of the dish in Even the Indians were moderate |which the ham is served. Butter on the Table. | Considerable more sweet or fresh butter is used now thaun was the cise in this country a few years ago. | Perhups many Americans first ne acquainted with it when co during war days; at 2 fair-sized ~omm-ni v one or two ehops whe {iL is carried, and women in the cour {try often make fresh butter for their | own use. When sold in the stores it is not mueh more expensive than or- dinary salted butter. whereas some time “ago it w verv much more exnensive by comparison. This butter may be shaved with a | ch butter shaver to form those finffy curls of butter that we te get in France. The butter sh he verv cold before vou begin the curls shou'd be kept in the r frigerator until you want them. Sav in very warm wa‘er ‘hov need not Its Sale is Phenomenal Its Quality is Irreproachable "SALADA TEA s apt to be cross when| OFf sider | they are in pain, espe When that | IL hetter Torm nof b hav wacr) Js the Purest and Most Cleanly Prepared Tea pain Is of the smarting kind. |ter on the table for dinner. is in the World Then had come th Enropean form. ana < . one of her cubs was los the most of our dinner customs from | member that Boxer had run from those | Furope nerhaps it is natural that we should adopt this. Then. too. dinner > apt, to|contains potatoes or other starches | . and Mother Bear|enough to make bread unnecessar: ions as She hunted | So_bread. save for a single dinner Boxer. Last of all| r¢ll. which many persons do mnot Giscovery ~ of - Farmer | teste. 8 all that is couventiona ‘Ing to catch Boxer. For | Served at formal dinner. the moment Mother Bear had forgotten | Futte r"‘[' S hportant ;Hlace] all her fear of those two-legged a- ;lk aotand 1 Drl‘\lt\_nlrl-zr\_ = called men and had rushed to|Sntial at luncheon. A well-trained e o tema Titae %om. | waitress or waiter never permits a Hothers are always brave when thelr | DUTLCE Plate to lack butter, nor does be- | in | “WHAT /ARE YOU CRYING FOR?" SHE DEMANDED. to theé Green Forest. sound made her start. The rustle of a dry leaf by a Merry Little Breeze made her turn suspiciou And it was all because of what had happened in the berry patch that day. in the first place, she had been cheated out of a feast of blueberrie She had eaten only about half enoug when the angry Yellow-Jackets, aroused by Boxer, had driven h from the berry patch. She had heen stung by them just enough times to! make her dread any more. The smart of them made her cross. You know.|he served with cracked Every litt had been in vain for had come very al the BEFORE FATL CLEANING LET US UPHOLSTER YOUR FURNITURE We w %0 made ma ed through cloth and a drink. It will make delicious dessert masheéd to a paste and beaten | up with the white of an egg little more avoring. If the are quarte und cooked and the sugar put in first they W keep their shape and make a tempt- himpering was more than, ing garnish for other d that he was lost and frightened | Apple suuc most of all when he had come face to wce with Farmer Brown' he had wandered about he was very ther Bear was trav s he was having hard work to keep up. | So Boxer whimpered as he shuffied along. Now. that vets, Silk Coverings very moderate prices. American Upholstery Co. 627 F St. N.W. Fhone, Write or Call _ Phone Ma'n 8139 Man Will Bring Samples at The makers of Carter’s Knit Underwear [Yash baby woolens in / The William Carter Company is one of the leading manufac- tarers who have recently made a thorough investigation of the safe way to wash fine fabrics. For their own protection as well a3 their customers’, these manufacturers are urging that their products be laundered in Lux. Complete laundering directions in booklet form sent free on request. Lever Bros. Co., Cam- bridge, Mass. . \ | man now—eh—just because I was | fool enough to help you out of your | muddle = Barjan became diplomatic agein. | “Nothing of the kind!” he said ap- peasingly. “You're too touchy, Nicplo! yith directions, and don’t accept| nything else. Guaranteed to give bsolute satisfaction or money re- inded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne,