Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1931, Page 36

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stand pat. Neilsen would be the first one to crow if we showed signs of turn- | ing tail” | That night Fritz acquired two assist- { b’ ant janitors—day assistant and night : e he Express clar- ; | i A By JANE DIXON 2 The next morning the Expr > i ioned to the world the news that the I don’t care how fat you are or| AMERICAN SECURITTY 1S " THECBEEST 'S HLURITY mysterious shooting in Washington how much you hate to get out and Square, for which six men were how :’ne custody awaiting trial, was about to cleared up by that newspaper. Nothing short of a three-alarm sensation was promised. walk & couple of miles. If you will| take one-half teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water every morning for 4 weeks and cut out pestries, sugar and fatty meats— You will feel so good—so energetic and the urge for activity will be so | great that you will immensely en- | joy a daily walk of several miles— and lose fat. | While you are losing fat you will | be gaining in energy—in endurance | —in ambition. Just try one 85¢ bottle of Kruschen | Salts; it will last you 4 weeks. After |vou have taken one bottle the old |arm chair won't hold you any more —you’'ll want to be ‘up and doing— you'll enjoy work—you'll sleep like & top and by reducing surpits fat ought to live years longer. Get Kruschen at Peoples Drug Stores or any live druggist in America with the understanding that you must be })oyfully satisfied or money back. | __W. R. Daniels of Richmond Hill, |N. Y., writes: “After 2 bottles of | ! Kruschen, I've removed 3 inches from my belt, feel 25% more active, || mind is clearer, eruptions have dis- || appeared. Am 46 yrs. old and feel 20 yrs. younger. I get up feeling {{100%. Kruschen sure is great!"— Advertisement. " Best Remedyfor Cough Is Easily Mixed at Home ) You'll never know how qui 1y a severe cough due to a cold can be conquered, until you tr 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 granu- lated sugar syrup or strained honey to make a full pint. This saves two-thirds of the money usually spent for cough medicine, and gives you a purer, better remedy. It never spoils, and tastes good—chil- dren like it. g You can actually feel its pene- trating, soothing action on the in- flamed throat membranes. It is also absorbed into the blood, where it acts directly on the bronchial tubes. At the same time, it promptly loos- ens the !erm-lnden phlegm. ~ This threefold action explains wby it brings such quick relief even in those severe coughs which follow cold epidemics. Pinex is a_highly concentrated compound of Norway Pine, contain- ing the active agent of ecreosote, in & refined, palatable form, and known as one of the greatest me- dicinal agents for severe coughs ang bronchial irritations. o mot accept a substitute for Pinex. It is gnaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. DI FORTY-FIRST INSTALLMENT. next day Cathleen and Julis met again for lunch. “If the Daily Express bomb doesn't force Neilsen's hand,” Julia said, “we’ll take the matter |to_the authorities.” “We might strike one of the men in league with Neilsen,” Cathleen said. “There’s a way to avoid that. | won't bother with small fry. I know |the Governor. He's an intimate friend |of father's.” | “Do you suppose the Governor would | bother? It's a local matter, you know.” | “Hell have to. Or, if he himself doesn't bother, he’ll find the proper party to bother for him. Never go to | underlings when you want anything, | Kit. They're afraid of those higher up.” That evening Cathleen and Julia en- school. They bought such equipment | as was required and spent the evening in Julia’s studio going over their text books. ‘The trials of the six men ac- cused of felonious assault on Neil Neil- sen, son of Joe Neilsen, prominent con- | tractor, would begin in a few days. | Cathleen was finishing her work at | Drew & Co. the next day when Miss | Mdpes called her to tell her she was | wanted on the phone. It was the Daily Express. The editor wanted to see her as soon as she could get to his office. | Cathleen started downtown immedi- | ately. The editor was pacing the floor, | his pugnacious jaw thrust forward, his square shoulders hunched, when she | was shown into his office. “We've looked into your story, Miss | Carroll,” he said. “Sent our star man to Nelisen with it.” Cathleen dropped into a chair. “What bt will he do?” she asked breath- essly. “Plenty. He says the story is a who can swear you spent the night with |them in their home on the date you | say you were in the park.” | Cathleen half rose, then settled back | to grasp the arms of her chair. | “But he's lying,” she said evenly. “He | couldn’t possibly have two witnesses who | can swear to that. How could there be, when I spent the night on the park bench?” The editor was watching her nar- |rowly, saw the indignant flush that chased away the paleness his words had | | brought to her cheeks. Now he came to | her, placed his hand reassuringly on her shculder. | “Don’t let it upset you, Miss Carroll,” | he advised kindly. “You've got to keep your head. Bribed witnesses are not hard to break. We figured that Neilsen had probably dug himself in in some way or he'd never have spilled the beans | at the Nook. He's got his witnesses, all right. Have you any idea who they | might be?” | Cathleen, in her mind, raced through | the list of girls and women she knew. Who in that list would be cowardly | enough, greedy enough, to bear witness against her? Not a name suggested itself. She had no enemies so far as | she knew—except Neilsen himself. “I haven't the remotest idea,”" she |said. “I'm sure it can’t be any one I | know. They'd have no reason.” “Money is & mighty powerful reason.” | The editor resumed his pacing. “Money and a whip hand. You'll find people who will do anything for money and others who will do even worse to save their own skins.” “I—suppose—so. But—not any wom- | rolled for a night course in a business | fake—that he has two witnesses, women, | “That's where ycu're due for a big surprise. Anyhow, you'd better be pre- pared for one. What you have on Neil- sen threatens his pocketbook and it threatens his power. If we can prove it on him, he won't be able to show his face. His own crcwd will be the first to turn on him. They'll figure he's to bl}l-;i,! Yé);lul:;lnzllhr tdhehgenl” e stoppe ing and seated himself at his deflhw . “Another little point,” he said, lean- ing to look straight into Cathleen's troubled brown eyes. “We think you're nct any too safe, living alone in that Toom of yours, We're sending a couple of detectives to make sure no one tries any rough stuff. Just watch your step whenever you go out. Say nothing. And if any one anncys you, let us know."” “Joe Neilsen wouldn't dare!” Cath- leen returned the straight look. ‘The editor shook his head, gravely. “My dear young lady,” he said, ‘“you must get it into your head that this is a fight, not a tea party. Everything goes, from bribery to brass knuckles. We're cut to get Neilsen. Soones or later we'll get him. He knows it and he'll fight like a rat to get out of the hole he’s let himself into. I don't want to frighten you, but I want you to be on your guard.” = ,” Cathleen sald. Her teeth clicked. “I shall be.” “We'll send you out of town if you say so—some g‘leace where not even the ‘dicks’ from adquarters could find you, much less the Neilsen rats. You could stay in hiding until we're ready to use you.” Cathleen rose and came to the desk. There was much of Dan Carroll in his daughter as she stood there looking down into the eyes of the man who was out to get her arch enemy. Dan Carroll's firm jaw. His stubborness. “I'll stay where I am,” she said. “Good.” The editor smiled at her rovingly. “When wcmen have the right stuff in them, they have it,” he was thinking. “This Carroll girl's a beauty. And she's as square as she is beautiful. Neilsen's in for it this time, or I miss my {u!uf’ Aloud he said: “I think myself it's better for you to ONLY §3.50 LOW-FARE Pares shown are Round Trip $§1.25 BALTIMORE Every Saturday and Sundsy Tickets gaed only in coaches on all $2.50 PHILADELPHIA $2.50 CHESTER $2.25 WILMINGTON Thanksgi: Da; " (To be continued). TURKEY THEFT ATTEMPT 1S CHARGED TO TWO MEN Farmer Shoots One in Hip—TFlee- ing Pair Are Arrested on Boulevard. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md., November 24.— Two men, sald to have attempted to steal sorhe turkeys from Harry Gusman of Beltsville, Md., were arrested by Prince Georges County police yesterday after one of them had been shot in the hip. p’rhe men, Roy Neff of Cumberland and Marlow Brett of Washington, were arrested on the boulevard while in an alleged attempt to make a getaway toward Baltimore. Policeman Ralph Brown took Neff to Sibley Hospital, while Brett was arrested on three traf- fic_charges. Gusman said he noticed the men at- tempting to steal his turkeys and fired upon them. He then called police. Gusman, however, trailed them in his own machine and pointed them out te Policeman Brown, when the officer overtook both cars on the boulevard. Brown said both men would be charged with attempted larceny. Unemployed Grows. LYNCHBURG, Va., November 24 (Special) —The Unemployment Com- mittee here has added 25 names to the list of unemployed here, bringing the list to 756. In the list are 392 heads of families who have 1,525 dependents. There are 350 white men and 187 col- ored men, 117 white women and 102 colored women. NEW YORK OUTINGS Eastern Standard Time Ch-Nw» November 26 10.00 A M. L. lon - - 7.{‘ A 'CiADELFHIA SIGHTSCEING TOURS orning 75c ‘Aftecnoon $1.60 Over Wesk-End Tickets ATLANTIC CITY e $16.00 _f_:l‘"CAGO. JUI N $12.00 peTROIT, Mich. $8.30 NEW YORK Goed going every Saturday, all day, until Decomber 26, inclusive Retumning until 12 CONSULT AGENTS $3.50 NEW YORK Returnis Su ber 13 e ‘Woodland Aveiue and Twelve Mile Roa Detroit. SATURDAY, December 12 P R by -y ngt: 05 P. M. PENNSYLVANIA LlLtAlLllflAD “How good is it?” That’s it! BOUT anything and everything they buy, smart shoppers like to ask one ques- Central— 7th and Mass. Ave. N.W. Southwest— 3 7th and E Sts. S.W. Capital, $3,400,000 WASHINGTON?'S tion—““How good is it?” Chesterfield welcomes smokers who buy their cigarettes that way. UR tobacco buyers are smart shoppers, too. They “shop” for the ripest, mild- est, sweetest-tasting leaf that grows. Aad they won't take anything else. ““How good” are Chesterficlds? Well, con- sider their blending. Blended and cross-blended . ..not merely mixed together. Blended first by crops and countries . . . then cross-blended again and in...to produce a flavor and aroma that are Chesterficld’s alone. That’s how we get that better taste ... that’s why Chesterfields are milder. Even the paper they’re rolled in is the whitest, cleanest and purest that moncy can buy. § o And the package . . . clean, bright, fresh-look- ing . . . see how easily it opens, yet how tightly it’s sealed. o ket Ahiy OPEN a package. Note the aroma. . . delicious foretaste of pleasure ahead. Now—pull out a Chesterfield . . . round, firm, well-filled. “Sine 9 shop (9] g OW good is it2” Light up . « « theo you tell us! Milder? Right! Taste better? You bet they do! They’re pure, too—and they certainly do satisfy! Good . .. they've gof to be good! There’s value here. 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