Evening Star Newspaper, November 5, 1929, Page 31

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. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C., TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5. 1929. 3_1 | “Dia Marling know you surmised? m‘g‘ml:s ;Mm g:‘h :'.:I:i Two FLYERS K".LED mr:‘w&-mn:'mammog; :’f,’: that he returned to the cabin. Whea Death Treasure INVEST IN First Trust Notes Yielding 67 Interest “How can I tell you how much he|carry on where I leave off, and we’ ngled in an opsned parachute. guessed? It looks as if he may, have tear the whole thing ope: double-crossed everybody."h Tll save you the trouble 2«”:&?..’.”'"?5 WHEN PLANE FALI.S | how Marli had | Miss Vandenessen. Here's the lddru!’ bt \ 2 PR T T T R N —————— possible arrest. I thought Laxton would | MCCare Sy i Rogler, 39.bis. TR ad Been Test e- | Money o Loan on Real Estats have exploded. T s0t mmare out of Mrs. Fairfax than | fore and Found to Be | 2 * | o les it!" he cried. "N ~ got mo ‘tomorro J. LEO KoLB | By R. A. ]J. Walling i o e iy e ahan mave | o, dht T mas'gcing thers tomerion, | © T pir worehy, Psmonein, s S, ity 01 | Matiing ke ehis e’ sausesea, hit | 1%, VA S e Retter ot 11 i . relieved 3 ways umb o sy ] is associates. 2 | | therell be no more mystery about Pell. | Bell sou .‘V"“e‘m“’f'fm;“du’,‘,fnd S als | By the Associated Press. l d { I hot one min- | | Are you on?" that we haven't found yet. When we| MONTREAL, Quebec, November 5.— *=| na Iy- ute and eold 923 New York Ave. District 5027 . W ed. 4 Tw i ) S | reclied, striding up and down again. Vo odded. . somerfeld, “to clear | §et him. . . well, you may gt him or | Two government test plots were KIS | o iF you knewa dread esld o i B e B Hem o dces | He pulled up in front of me. everything up, we ought to tell you we | I may. Well see. Is it a deal? |t A+ e z s oM Tk i e Rot" arrest Tom Grenofen. andSomerseid, | “Whatll you bet Marling's not a!saw you shadowing Miss Vandenessen| Ve sald it wat o ooy i | Pilot Officer Paul Garton Stantey, 23, | Chpr - For the detective’ (s anzious to make d |padre at all? He's not in the registry, | across the Square.” dera e e a robbery. B0 part of | of Toronto, and Flying Officer John Mc- | lief—3 ways at once hence in one- O entroR e jcharce against Grenoien | but 1 'put nothing on that—till now, | A You two've got sharp eves. Andferer mor to bide 8 PPN, KO, RITLL | Laughlan, '35, of ‘Montreal, were deed | third the usual time. Take Hill's . .. ot TCpange for the contents of the Back | Marling—Fotherbury—Pell . . . and one | no doubt you saw she wasn't alone. Did when their bodies - e know o7 the. sesweiry ircamres "The. inyee | other. . . Three years ago. . . . It SUg- | you happen to know the man?” [ Bomtemeid o b wark: aut | neath the wreakager | | (sChechs fever... 2 Operis bowels, men apree to work together to solve the ts nothing to you? You two have | wpg g | a2 iping 3: Tones system, re. mystery of R Pell’ A and Veronica's | 8658 nothing s ‘No.” said I. “He was walking away p McLaughlan was a test inspsctor no griping ; | gnicelementty'ene n:s’%i.‘:..; p‘.‘.fieo:"y’:uifixivbe;inuulun: gandiar from us. We couldn't see his face." s — 3nd Staniey was fiying the seaplane. | gtores pep . So stops cold without 2 ction w e Pell case—the 0o} s. Laxton's 1| 'y . | The made a e " " 2ab ¢ ‘.':re"o.:.flpm r’»‘l‘a fli’;fiaa’.:"o ‘vxn;l::hfi:‘u:! ';Yes." sald Somerfield, * "’( py‘;r | !m:‘( n's eyes penetrated me as | (Continued in Tomorrow's Star) | in tfie day '"m“'m’-vtw; m‘mc::l;ho“ the slightest dm«rln;n.c'a. H.":h;: Ask any dfll“l‘t tain date, o o | haven You made a mystery of Pell, . " " 5 th mishap. Off i for g . gertein date, and for'this service he way to | 'Ah, well, leave that,” said he. “Now, | e Canadian Vickers factory, where Thorough. Good ks, bot 3 for the red box of* money. but it seems vou knew all about him. |so jon . A GBI ANy, Mgt e el . 7 ' ; ; g as ‘you don't compromise Miss and-oarved 3 | the plane was manufactured, said it had 4 Eele. - | ilaiing” on' publication. of the Fotntrbury ! For instance, that he'd been in prison. i g to, this country following expulsion of | been flown several times and bhad | i . | Seabroke, are you willing to Join up in | . No,” Laxton exclaimed. ~“I knew | real search for the murderes of Pell?” | members of the Precious Blood Order | proved airworthy. | 3 othing certain. I surmised. We were. from Germany more than 50 years ago, | It wasAbelieved that the plane had - Suddenly I recalled Marling’s last | “Right! Then I wash out the war-|stands in the St. Mary's Institute at | gone into a tailspin A low altitude, coveries. CHAPTER XXXI1V, LTS, 3 % 1 4 ‘ | k | where th h ‘ ! PELL'S TRAIL. islt to warn me against Laxton. rant. You're free. I want to go to! O'Fallon, Mo. ert e pilot was unable to recover. that pain EYED Laston epeculatively while RRRURRIN A T 1 O N A LARRRRARL ks LS = 3 % " Somerfie! red questions a & Those terrible “rheumatie® 1t he had heard of Pel pefore the | 1 ——— E— x pains! What agony they causel tragedy he must have made in- 2 % ) quiries. But Laxton would g0 no One thing eases them all. Ask |\ Q" [ er stated theoriss 0 your doctor. Ask your drug- |they worked. gist. Ask your friends. idi e nnuxn: ;:II":M u: “SLOAN'S LINIMENT.” Get | e’ shall never know how or why ‘pell a fresh bottle today, 35¢. | was killed?” | ol | “You see, Grenofen?—he's got the | . 3 ’ |idea!” cried’ Somerfield. | “What idea?” Laxton asked. 3 % ‘ “We worried it out” said I, “that it \ Pell was shot through the keyhole he : “) E 4 e couldn’t have been aimed at." \ T" X . 185\ o nirf 929 1 /7 7. ‘HL; el ik A zf;!‘m\é@ NESGIVING v “Ah.” said Laxton, sitting up, “you o Linismen b, o e ™ counted for the seemingly inexplicable fact that the ghost Pell was going to produce so proudly to Seabroke and Marling and the rest shot Pell himself.” “Ah!” sald Laxton again. “That is, if the shot was fired by Pell's ghost.” “By the man who inocnfl you out, at any rate.” “If Pell aceidently got in the way of & shot, it must have been meant for somebody else. That the idea?” asked Laxton, “Yes. Somerfield worked out the po- sitions. A shot fired through the key- hole could only have hit Marling.” Laxton sat bolt upright with his hands on the chair-arms for a full | minute, looking intently in front of him. | “Marling!” "he repeated. “That's & light—if you're right, we add one to the people concernéd in Pell's past.” “But you knew Marling was ac- | quainted with Pell's past,” said I. | “Ye-es." Laxton looked speculatively at me. “I knew:just what Wayne told me and you told him about Pell de Stubborn Coughs | Endedby Recipe, Mixed at Home ere is the famous oid recipe which millions of housewives have found to be the most depend- able meaus of breaking up a stub- born, lingering cough. It takes but a moment to prepare and costs little, but it gives relief even for those dreaded coughs that follow severe cold epidemics. From any druggist, get 215 ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granu- lated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of better remedy than you could buy ready- SET OF DISHES WITH .| . VERY DINING ROOM SUITE : ol 4 made for three times the cost. It g::‘&'{&.’" Marling at the momént of his fi Table and never apoils and tastes 50 good that 2k a1, “there was a Uit mors [T Mirror G i gis than that.” ated wi arling _— Ni finlshed Not only does this simple mix. had said” aboat Poll Daving been 18 W n ..".'.',’.,..,, A ture soothe and heal the inflamed throat membranes with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood, and acts directly upon the bronchial tubes, thus aid n& the whole system in throwing off the cough, It loosens the germ.laden phlegm and eases chest soreness in & way that is really astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of ereo- sote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine is more helpful in eases of distres- aing coughw, chest colds, and bronchial troubles. prison. The effect on Laxton was extraordi- nary. He jumped to his feet. “The dam’ scoundrel!” he cried. “Who—Pell?” said Somerfield, “No—Marling! Don't talk for a séce ond. Let me think.” Laxton paced the room. looking from one to the other of us with sharp excitement. “Does anybody know how Marling came to Blackwater?” he asked. Somerfield said he had heard that Fotherbury brought him down as chaplain when he opened up Newplace and restored the church. Don’t Overlook This I s = L i A, : 10-Piece Group This Dining Room Suite In good taste, and well Is Made of Selected Do not accept a substitute “Was it shut up when Fotherbury " Pinex, Tt i it bought?” 00! Ten pieces: Large { o e o it o M aid Somertila, “The st Bafier, China. Closet, Extep: Walnut Veneers s . Redslade was so poor he couldn't live in it. When he was at Blackwater— which wasn't often—he lived in grena- One of the most striking you've ever seen, at a price that sounds sion-Table, five Side Chairs §§ Mahogany 7 fen's house, at W Then and one Armchair and Buffet Finished almost unbelievable. Here are for Coughs ‘3}5 R R Mirror. The suite is made of Shbker the picces that miake this an out- ~ ‘Marling—Fotherbury—Pell,” Laxton gumwood and nicely finished standing value in this Furniture T walnut $ _98 Show: Buffet, Table, China Closet, m . o Bhiasice Server, five Side Chairs and one Mail Orders Armchair. $5.00 Delivers Any Suite 15-pc. Aluminum Set, $4.95 Easy Terms = 2-Jacquard Velour Serpentine=Front Suite of 3 Pieces Exactly as ‘pictured here, and con- sists of armchair, wing chair and settee. $ Each piece splendidly upholstered with selected good quality covering, and has spring-filled, reversible cushions over spring bottoms. An outfit of quality at a low price. Consists of a dresser, poster bed, chest $ of drawers, vanity, chair and bench of gumwood, finished in walnut. It's an amazing value at this low price. $5.00 Down’ Z 3-Pc. Bed-Davenport Suite With Loose Cushions Three massive pieces, with loose spring cushions, upholstered in beautiful velour. Enhances the appearance of your living réom and st the same time provides additional Cedar Chests 3 W TourYYy B i | bed space. Davenport, Armchair and Wing |}l Priced as 38.11 . | | ! Ot - TRl T U ko N R ew s i 4 ‘ 73 | R | . 1o California LEHEED/ 100 | b | Come, take the adventure trail on your / - way to California. See the America no’ other route can show you .. .Glacier Park and the Blackfeet Indian country; the eight-mile Cascade Tunnel, longest intheWesternworld...followlong,casy grades along ten historic rivers...travel the path that intrepid explorers made! Ride the new Empire Builder (sixty-three hours to Pacific Northwest cities) or the luxurious Oriental Limited to Puget Sound, or Portland, then choice of steamship or railroad to San Francisco and Southern California. Hundreds of The NEW yrnia MmE clean, cinderless, scenic miles, through the h reat green American Northwest . . + the BUILDER reat Northern way! Tune in on the Great Northern Empire Ve LUXURIOUS Builder's program over the NB C chain ORIENTAL every Monday evening. Your mearest stations are WJZ, New York, and Mhogany-Finished 1 Spinet Desk $1595 | $14.75 Just as sketched—metal bed, Well construeted and nicely ‘:lronbg link spring and a mml; finished. ¥ ortabe mattress covered witl splendid quality ticking. $1.00 Down Egg Coal Heater $6.95 | i o el b g':n“.'dmu. | $3.98 80c a Metal Crib, Spring and Mattress Complete $10.75 Pay 50c « Week Nicely Decorated Breakfast Set Finished in pleasing color combina-, tions, the dropside table and four | 75 chairs of this enticing breakfast set . | are finished with a hard enameled A 2 : surface. Easy Terms HMITED KDKA, Pittsburgh—10:30 P. M. e P e e ————— MAIL COUPON TODAY~===comememe——a Chalr %lh:‘o?ozf 5 | 3 ™" Edmund H. Whitlock, Disttict Passenger Ageat waa. ] Stand & Stool $16-75 || Bridge Lomp Coal Range | Gas Stove With | ' o4 Finance Bldg., Philadelphis, Pa. [ $2.49 Upholstered in beau- et With Warmer High Shelf Heater 1 h 3275 S i . As s 1 S tiful jacquard velour, (f made with | | Complete | 9 5 T am planning a trip to California [ Hawaii 0 Orient O Cities of the Pacific Mahogany Finish Loose, reversibie, ;"'.":‘m Complete ple 5 i Northwest 0. Will leave on or about____________ Therewillbe_ spring - filled cushion er shade. " th J“ W | | $ 1 9 5 | stronsiy made ot in our party. Please send me estimated cost of trip 2nd other information. No Phava or::. [} seats . $2 9 ME COI' nel = & £ VA $ i SrensTh A e i e e D R e et P e s epep———L N 11 1 Y| T LR R R R R YR YRR A R R ARY Y Ry

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