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For Prope: Glasses for the Proper Occasion CLAFLIN 922 14th St. FIVE ARE KILLED IN PLANE WRECKS REPAIR PARTS For Furnaces and Hot-Water Boilers FRIES, BEALL & SHARP 734 10th St. N.W. Three Flyers and Two Pas- sengers Die in Ohio Snowstorm. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio.,, November 26. Special | Excursion Sat.—~Sun. Dec. 1st-2nd to AKRON CLEVELAND . {Ohio} *10% Round Trip* Tickets good incoaches on trainleaving WASHINGTON . . . . 7.35M Saturday, December 1st . AKRON . . 655 S&EVELAND: D110 slom Returning tickets good in coaches on train leaving . CLEVELAND . . . 845 AKRON . . « « « « o « 955/ Sunday, December 2nd Phone the Travel Bureau, Woodward * Bldg., 15th & H Sts., N.W.—Maln 3300 for full particula ': Best Remedy for Obstinate Cough Made at Home | You'll never know how quick- ly & stubborn cough or chest cold can be conquered, until you try this famous recipe. It is used in millions of homes, because it gives more prompt, positive relief than anything else. It's no trouble at all to mix and costs but a trifle. Into a pint bottle, pour 214 ounces of Pinex ; then add plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey to make a full pint. This saves two- thirds of the money usually spent for cough medicines, and gives you a purer, better remedy. It never spoils, and tastes good—children like it. ou can actually feel its pene- trating, soothing action on the in- flamed throat membranes. It also promptly loosens the germ-laden phlegm, and at the same time, it is absorbed into the blood, where it acts directly on the bronchial tubes. This three-fold action explains why it brings such quick relief even in bronchial coughs and “fu” coughs. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creo- sote, in a refined, palatable form, and known as one of the great- est healing agents for severe coughs, chest colds and bron- chial troubles, > Do not accept a substitute o for Pinex. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. Three aviators and two passengers were killed in week end plane crashes, | probably victims of blinding snow flur- | ries in Ohlo's first storm of the season. Edwin H. Basset, a pilot for the Uni- versal Air Lines of Chicago; Mrs. Basset and Glen R. Butt of Cleveland were found dead in the wreckage of an eight-passenger monoplane near Edger- ton, Ohio., The ill-fated landing ended Mr. and Mrs. Basset's plans to celebrate | their eighth wedding anniversary in | Chicago. | Pilot’s Body Found. | . Boy trappers found the body of Tilden Johnson, a novice pilot, in a marsh near West Lebanon yesterday. John- son, an employe of the Continental Air Lines, was en route to Cincinnati from Cleveland with 100 pounds of mail when his plane crashed. Lawrence H. Garrison, a veteran pilot for the National Air Transport Co., was found burned almost beyond recognition near Bristolville, ORio., after fire en- veloped his plane. He was en route to Cleveland from Bellefonte, Pa. Garrison’s mail cargo was not found. It was believed he threw it overboard when his plane became unmanageable in the storm. Johnson's mail, however, was found intact. Johnson, who had nearly 2,000 flying hours to his credit, learned aviation at St. Louis, where he was a student of Col. Charles Lindbergh. He hal been carrying the mail for the Con- tinenttal Line about three months. Garrison has flown approximately 419,000 miles. ‘The severity of the storm forced most air mail planes to remain in their hangars yesterday. aecy LA YMAN CONVICTED OF MURDERING WOMAN Life Sentence Recommended for Slayer of Neighbor Tri-Family Feud. By the Associated Press. TWIN FALLS, Idaho, November 26.— Ward Otis Tharp, dairyman, who killed his neighbor, Mrs. May Bowen, Septem- ber 26, was convicted of first-degree murder by a jury here yesterday. Life imprisonment was recommended. Evidence brought out at the six-day trial was to the effect that Tharp Killed Mrs. Bowen in .her dooryard when she remonstrated against a beating Tharp and his two sons were alleged to have administered to her 14-year-old daugh- ter and four other children. feeling existed between the Tharp and Bowen families and another family as the result of a long-standing quarrel over use of a private road near the Twin Falls city limits. in WILL ATTEND SESSIONS. Washington Will Send Delegates to Luther League Meeting. Delegates and lay members from Washington will attend the annual con- vention in Baltimore, beginning Thurs- day, of the General Luther League of the any strong cathartic—don’t. stead, take a little cascara. That's not a vicious drug, but the bark of a tree. cascara couldn’t harm a child. It (Continued From Yesterday's Star.) THE STORY THUS FAR. Don Ellsworth's wife, formerly the famous aciress Sheila O'Shay, disappears. leaving no trace. Dr. Cavanaugh, the great crimi- pal paychologist, learns that thelr married lite has been very unhappy. Peler Piper. reporter on_the Herald, tries see Dr. Cavanaugh. Instead he meets Barbara Cavanaugh, the attractive daugh- ter. and finds that she was engaged to Don Ellsworth before his marriage. to A body, found in the tule marsh outside the city. 'is identified by Dr. Cavanaugh as that of Sheila O’Shay. Barbara faints when she hears him tell this to Peter. The Iatter, already half in love with her. is con- d that she knows something about the murder, and his instinct is to protect her. Mrs. ‘Kane, Sheila O'Shay's waiting wom- an, is arrested and admits that her mistress forced Don Ellsworth to marry her. Peter and Dr. Cavanaugh find in the boudoir of the murdered woman a threat- eninie “David Orme.” ~ Peter trails Orme and finds hi; he is an irresponsible _artist. who does not seem capable of the de Dr. Cavanaugh agrees to examine Orme. Peter learns that Barbara's car was used in the murder. He determines to save her &t any cost. They discover their great love for each other, but Barbara will not let him help her, and he realizes she is protecting some one else. of Orme for the murder of The - trial Sheils O'Shay begins. Mrs. Kane, on the w , states’ that Orme is Sheila Q 1 husband, H-» disappeared and CHAPTER XLIL never divorced hita. ON'T take it so hard.” Peter tilted his chair back against the wall at an acute angle, which left his long legs dangling in space. “God knows I don’t want you to get him off if he’s guilty. You're putting on a good show, and that's all that’s to be ex- pected.” Graham stabbed the .desk blotter be- fore him with the point of an unused pen, as if he found some satisfaction 'in impaling a series of minute "invisible objects. “The heck of it is,” he said, “I don't believe he is guilty.” Dr. Cavanaugh, who had eased his large bulk into a comfortable chair by the window, turned a serene gaze upon the worried lawyer. “That gives you a certain rather im- pressive sincerity,” he said blandly, “but GO LIGHT ON LAXATIVES! Everyone needs a laxative AT TIMES. But there’s no need for making it a HABIT. If you have the habit, you can be rid of it in thirty days. Or less! And this is how: The next time you go to take In- The laxative made with is, in fact, the one cathartic many physicians will approve for chil- dren. Gentle as it is, cascarizing is just as thorough in cleansing the colon as the more powerful purges that actually sap a per-|worse than ever, the bowels are son’s strength. Proof that there’s no habit from cascara begins the very day after Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod, to be held in St.-Mark’s Lutheran Chureh, Broadway and Fairmont avenue. Rev. E. H. Meuser of Washington will | take part in the convention program | Friday afternoon. Delegates from most | of the States in the Union will attend | | the gathering, with the largest groups | coming from the District, Detroit, | ow-land, New York City_and Pitte- | burgh. 411 PeS TTEEN | B as by Manaciarsd by For nutritious and economical baked foods — CASCARETS They Work While You Sleep! Delicious Hot Breads are easy tomake UT you must be sure to use a uniform, fully efficient baking powder. . i And Rumford is just that. It is a wonderful aid to perfect baking by the inexperienced as well the expert cook. Every spoonful in a can of Rumford Baking Pow- der is absolutely uniform and raises batters and- - -+ - -+ -[{ doughs just right. The raising process begins in the mixing and is completed perfectly in the oven heat. Rumford produce. even-textured, fine-flavored hot breads and cakes. Rumford is the original phosphate baking pow- der. Because of the phosphates you add extra food value to your baking every time you bake with Rumford. For Rumford restores valu- able bone and tissue building elements that are lost in the process of refining flour. MARSH MURDER Copyright, 1928, by Bell Syndicate, Ine 4 A DOCTOR'’S ADCE: this highest quali‘t)ly' l'ea‘\.r.cvpér.—. RUMFOR The Wholesome BAKING POWDER e will send you—if you ask us—a new, but unusual Fruit Cook Book. Write to Rumrorp Company, Providence, R. L ¥ it may not weigh heavily with the jury. Juries are likely to have a general idea that lawyers are an unscrupulous lof It's partly, of course, because legal pro- cedure seems to them a very elaborate game whose rules are too complicated for them to understand—and human nature has a way of being suspicious of what is beyond it's comprehension. “Whatever makes people ill at ease is likely to make them hostile. The aver- age man would assume you to an honest person,. my dear Graham. You have an open countenance, if I may say so—not at all the sort of person who would misrepresent the value of a stock, for example, or cheat at a bridge game. And yet, because you are a law- yer, they will suspect you of working a magic hocus-pocus to try to throw dust in their eyes, even if you know your client to be guilty.” The three men were gathered for an evening conference in the office of the defense attorney, at Graham's request. ‘The young lawyer's round, cherubi¢ face seemed to have lost some of its roseate chubbiness. There were puffy circles of fatigue under his eyes and his ‘mouth sagged in a_discouraged droop. Peter's long face looked even longer than usual, and his cheekbones stood out sharply. His brows were drawn to- gether in an anxious frown, that frown had become so habitual of late that it had etched two lines in parallel grooves above his eyes. Since the adjournment of court at 5:30 Peter had gone back to the office and written his lead for the next morn- ing’s city edition and had stopped only for a cup of coffee on his way to the lawyer's office. Graham had come di rectly from the courthouse; the calf- bound books marked with slips of blue paper which strewed the desk, and the pyramid of ashes in the brass bowl at his elbow indicated that he had taken no time for dinner. Dr. Cavanaugh had stopped downtown for an early and leisurely repast. Of the three, he alone shewed no sign of perturbation. “You know,” Peter brought the front legs of his chair to the floor with a thump, “I believe Ellsworth and the Kane woman were telling the absolute iking. Instead of being clogged more inclined to move OF THEIR OWN ACCORD. You may have to take cascara several times to establish regularity.. But® the times you need this gentle stimu- lus grow further apart. And you {NEVER find you must increase the ‘amount. { Cascara’s ideal form is the gandy Cascaret that pleases any palate, and you'll find them at the Iflrst drug store you ask. truth, queer as their storles were.” “Their testimony was a good deal ily; “it was devastating. And yet, when you go over it in cold blood, dislike of publicity and fear of scandal—espe- clally somebody else’s scandal—sound like mighty feeble motives for trying to cover up the facts of a murder.” “That's the trouble with motives.” The doctor examined his cigar with |calm detachment before lighting it. “The strongest of them so often do seem feeble—to the other fellow. There’s the familiar notion, for instance, that all murcers are committed from jeal- ousy, anger, fear or greed. And yet there was the woman who took a ham- mer to her husband because he did not want her to go to a bridge party. A tient not long ago came to me suf- fering from what we call a compulsion neurosis. He was obsessed by the homi- cidal impulse to kill his wife because for 20 years she had sipped her coffee audibly from a spoon. Perhaps if one of us had to listen to that sound for 20 years we'd be inclined to call it justifi- able homicide.” “At any rate,” Graham interrupted, “today’s testimony brought out a per- fectly good, recognizable motive—two of them, in fact—for Orme to kill Mrs. Ellsworth. It might have been jealousy and it might have beéen revenge. You may call him a psychopathic case, doc+ ginge 'THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, KOVEMBER 26, 1928. tor, but those are going to look like mighty sane human motives to the " worse than queer,” Graham said gloom- | jury. “Psychopathic or not,” Dr. Cavanaugh asserted, “Orme is not the type of per- sonality to be moved powerfully by either of those two particular emotions, If he did kill her, it was for some other reason.” “Well, just try to convince the jury that, regardless of motive and oppor- | pi tunity, he simply hasn't the right kind of face for it!” Graham snorted. “I will, my lad, I will,” Dr. Cava- naugh said cheerfully. “I've convinced juries of much queerer things than that. They've almost got into the habit of believing me.” “You've examined him, doctor? What did you get out of him?” Peter's chair was once again poised at its precarious angle. “‘As to actual events, no more than you already know. You are in as good position to judge as I am. What do you think?" “I honestly don't know,” Peter said slowly. “I've seen a good many mur- derers, but I've never seen one like him. Circumstantially, it's a strong case: but a\rcumsumces take funny quirks some- mes. “Well, I don't believe he did it!” Graham stabbed at the blotter so vi- ciously that the pen stood erect and Not'a quivering. “A guilty man would either r ale try to get out of it or throw up_the game. weren't for that belief I'd never have kept on with the case, not even for you, Peter. adopted an attitude of—of passive non- co-operation. And if you'd ever had a client like that, I guess you'd get a few But that's not evidence. If it He's absolutely no help. He's homicidal impulses yourself!” “You're wearing yourself out to no urposé.” Dr. Cavanaugh's calm au- thority had its effect. Graham phicked the pen out of the blotter and leaned back in his chair. “You leave the evi- dence to me. “That’s what I'm here “Is Orme going to take the stand?” Peter inquired. “He says he s, and I can't very well stop him. But I haven't a ghost of an idea what he’s going to say. That's a pleasant position for a man's lawyer to be in, isn't it? I suppose if he's as cracked as Dr. Cavanaugh says he s, he might say almost anything.” “I didn't say he was as ‘cracked’ as all that,” Dr. Cavanaugh -corrected mildly. “I haven't a notion in the world but that he’ll tell the exact truth. Perhaps that's what he's afraid you'll argue him out of, if he lets you know about it beforehand.” “Look here, doctor!” Graham half rose, his face flushing angrily. “Just a moment,” the doctor waved g B him back with a placating gesture. generation. ever tasted. rfll“not sound convincing. And since It might not look very favorably upon that particular brand of truth. It mighs telling exactly what he knows—and that he is afrald he might weaken und-r our combined persuasion if he gave us the chance to argue with him. Mind you, I knov no more about it than you do! But there is nothing more stub- on combating its own instability.” “Well, I've done my best to keep him off the stand,” Graham sald wearily, “You remain our one white hope, doce tor. I was afraid even you would slide out from under, after today's testie | mon; “Neither Ellsworth nor Mrs. Kane could possibly alter the facts relative to David Orme,” Dr. Cavanaugh said. “I am willing to stake my professional reputation on that. In fact, I am hereby wagering a nickel”—and he pra= duced the coin and balanced it on the tip of his finger, “that I shall acquit David Orme. And it won't affect the verdict one particle if you two come out and have the dinner you should have eaten two or three hours ago.” s New=Time Drink is Here! ERE at last is a new thirst-quencher. 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ALEXANDRIA, VA, TONY FIERMONT 1522 King St. CHERRYDALE, VA, SHREVE'S MARKET IFFERENT, ” ot “Orme may have the idea that the truth your job to be convincing, you -; need a good deal of varnishing. It is Just ble that Orme is holding with all his strength of will to his purpose of born than an unstable personality, set