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IF YOU WANT RELIEF FROM HEMORRHOIDS Apply healing Resinol Ointment. Seothes at once. Safe for most Inflamed skin. sihol others,Mix This| at Home for Saves $2. SoEasy! No Cooking! You'll be pleasantly surprised when you make up this simple home mixture and try it for a dis- tressiig cough. It's no trouble to mix, and costs but a trifle, yet it can 'be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water for a fow moments until dis- solved. No cooking needed. Get 2 ounces of Pinex from any druggist, put it into a pint bottle, and fill up with your sugar syrup. The pint thus made costs no more than a small bottle of ready-made medicine, yet it is the most effective remedy that money can buy. Keeps perfect- ly and tastes fine, This simple remedy has a remark- able three-fold action. It soothes and heals the inflamed membranes, loosens the phlegm, and clears theair passages. Thus it makes breath- ing easy, and lets you sleep. Pinex is a compound of Nor- way Pine,inconcentratedform, famous as a healing agent for throat membranes. It is guar- anteed to give prompt re- lief or money refunded. S iz FROM THE THOUSAND WINDOW BAKERIES OF LOOSE-WILES 4 FRAUD IN PUZZLE CONTESTS CHARGED Factory Indicted After | | | Publishers and Officials of \ Ten-Year Probe. | | By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, February 2.—It appeared today that Federal Court juries may | have to wrinkle brows over puzzles al- | 1egedly put out by the veteran publish- {ing firm of W. D. Boyce & Co.. and | the Helen Dawn Co., cosmetic manu- facture | Indictments were obtained yesterday | by Government prosecutors, who charged | that the concerns us e mails_to defraud by misrepresenting the puzzles. The indictments were the culmina- | tion of a 10-year investization. It was arged that the publishing firm print- advertising as prizes money, automobiles, homes and similar inducements for solving the puzzles. The rules of the puzzle con- tests, the indictments said, failed to neention that to win the prizes it was necessary to particinate in pericdical subscription campaigns. The Government 2lleged that to win nrizes from the puzzles, assertedly pub- liched at the instance of the cosmetics necessary to buy cos- <ale and earn “votes” by elling the products. The indictments charged that as a sult of the puzzle campaigns the ce con nv o ined $2,500.000 in . and that the Dawn ompany obtained more than $25,000- 100 since 191 Seven officials firms were named in the indictments and bond was set at $5,000 for each. of the Forty thousand marriages were cele- brated in London year S Sunshine KRIS PY Cracters | BISCUIT - THE KVENING STAR, WASHINGYON, D. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1933, INSTALLMENT XVIL ARROLL reagsured herself with the . thought .that Theresa would report if anything were really wrong or if her riother was overworking. ‘Theresa wrote refiul rly and for Jersey as well as herself. Writing letters did some- thing strange to Jersey’s head and she had often said that she’d rather work th;n to sweat over something to say in ink. | Turning from the telephone, Carroll | sought Theresa’s last letter. | Ii began “Dear Friend” and contin- |ued with the statement that Theresa was well and hoped this found her | (Carroll) the same. The letter then |abandoned set form to grow warmly {human. Carroll never ree” a letter from Theresa without seeing resa. | “Your mother got a eag; on last night she hadn’t et no lunch to speak | ot and it crep up on her. she feels real good now and business is good but I never seen no sicker and you know her. ‘v.cll they ain't no news to speak of | aside of a roach {1 found under the sink end some chow dogs that moved in with |some new folks and 1 never heard no | worse barking than the pack does. jer- sey certainly bawls them out. she hopes mayte you can get home one of these | here coming Sundays soon because she |says she feels like a cow without her colf. she misses you maybe more than | you could do not being a mother. she | was awful tickled with the negligy you | made and sent her and she thanks you. | she sends love. 1 send love. i am your | obedient servant, theres: | “No, nothing was really wrong, Car- | roll decided, and she would get home socn. She stood for a few moments, | hesitating; something had drawn her | toward the telephone, where she would call her mother again and say, “I'll be home next Sunday, darling; I want to see yot 50 much!” . | But she did not do it. “Oh," she thought and the thought hurt, “love is brutal! It pulls you every way!” She o didn’t want to hurt her mother; she loved her mother; but, too, she loved Arch, she loved him so much. She could telephone her mother, of course, later in the week, she decided.. But on the following Saturday Arch telephoned to say he must see her for some very special reason and. instead of going home, she waited his coming with a tension that made her tremulous. She felt that his message could mean but one thing—he had told his mother. But, with her, he failed to chart what “Perhaps,” he had con- , “I'll have something pretty nice to tell you this next Sunday or the one that follows it.” And he drove back to New York smiling over the simplicity of manag- ing women. The meaningless promise cheered her entirely and she had kind of gone flat; Arch liked 'em smil- ing. But nothing was divulged on the Fextdsundny nor on the one that fol- owed. ‘With the passing of the third Sunday Jersey telephoned to say a rasping, unste2dy, “Say, kid, ain't you ever com- ing home?” and that made a bad day, which was, with time, to be followed by _hundreds of its kind in bad days. For some reason waiting to hear what Arch had told his mother, she thought very steadily of Michael and she waited —and so hard that the waiting hurt—a post card with a foreign stamp. Michael had always before sent her letters, post cards. When October was closed with- out word from Michael she ceased wait- ing and that hurt more deeply than had waiting. Michael, meantime; was eating his heart out from denying_the impulse to send her some word. He always had, but he knew she didn't want to be both- ered (he could still see Theresa as she | sald Carroll was not at home) and Michael didn't want to bother her, of course. Joyce, feeling that Michael badly | needed diversion, action, suggested that they hire a really good car to weave | around France and to stop where they ' Q would. Michael thought the idea to be good and that explains why the news of a massacre, which did not seem to gach him, but did, reached Michael It began in New York in early De- cember, when Big Bill Killroy was found, 'shot through the heart, in the apartment where he and Jersey O'Grady | bacl had been meeting. Pictures were taken and they blossomed in papers that lean to big headlines. But this time neither Big Bill nor Jersey turned the page quickly with ardent wish that “things was different” for them. A little girl awaited Big Bill Killroy in an apsrtment house hallway that evening—the little girl who lived across the hall from Big Bill’s home. He had said he was coming in at =about 6 o'cleck; that he would bring her some- thing nice. She waited, however, not for the something, but because she loved him. At 7 o'clock her mother told her she must come into the ap2riment and that Big Bill wasn't coming that night, any- way. The little girl went to slezp after crying a few tears and she waited agein the next day. There ere few humans who pass from this world without leav- ing some one who waits and that, cruel as it is, 1s a happy fact. ‘The affair was continued in the Lansingham Arms apartment of Jersey O'Grady. Jersey, in her wiping cold cream from her cheeks with a paper kerchief, heard a row out back, | “Tressa talkin’ awful loud-voiced” and\ then silence. She bawled, “Hey, Tressa, eatin’ yuh, anyway?” ‘Theresa did not answer and Jersev, what's pulling a kimono with a soiled neck | band closer around her zmple figure, went chap-clapping back in her mul:sé to see what was going on. ‘Theresa, who had been rescued from serfdom by Jersey, had often said she would dic for her; she had been put to the test and she h2d not failed. She had died for Jersey. Jersey saw two swarthy men stand- ing near the rear door, but she gave cnly a glance before she knelt by The- resa. Jersey had never had room for personal fear when anything else needed her. and it looked to her as if ‘Theresa “was hurt bad.” “Theresa,” she whispered unsteadily, “it’s Jersey calling yuh——" ‘Theresa had always answered her every hail, but now she did not. bed room, | Per- | v haps she was busy answering another ; summons; who knows? i laid a hand on Theresa’s| shoulder, marked and wet with blood. “Say,” she went on, a little more loud- ly, “this can’t be real, you was my pal!” But it was extremely real. Jersey was found, shot through the k, her body lying across Theresa's. And that night, too, Molly Heuter, a chambermaid in the house where Car: roll had a room, took a note and newspaper to Carroll. Molly closed the door carefully after herself, having en- tered Carroll's room, ani standing back to it, she spoke in a whisper. H “I got a paper for you,” she gasped. d I got a note. I'll help you get out when it's dark: he says—to wait illl— it was dark. They're after you.” “He” was a boy who had been drawn ' into the racket by an early crime that assured those who knew of it that he was “good.” And he couldn't stand it, the thought of their getting her, Jersey O'Grady’s kid. So he covered his tracks as best he could, to take the risk—a great one. “What, Molly?” asked Carroll. She raised her questioning face from a drawing she was making for a traveling ' costume, design was very apt. Molly gasped again and then she shoved the paper at Carroll. | . Carroll took it and she read a head- line; she blinked and -ead it egain, and | she put her hand against her forehead: then she rubbed her eyes. When she spoke it was to say, “Molly—I didn't—go home and now— | T can't—I can't reach her.” Molly, a flaxen-haired girl with one! of the mild, round vacant faces that offers perfect reflecting space for the, least emotion, stood white, trembling and sagged against the closed door. With' stupid, slowed fingers Carroll | opened the note. It had been printed by fingers that had not held too many pens or pencils, and it was signed | “Well Wisher.” Carroll read: “Kid they bump off your mother be- | cause she kncwed too much about boss killroy and who put him on the spot. they think you know more than you do | mabe. anyway their after you so make | yourself scarce and for gods sake burn | this note. this girl will put you up for the night and then get out.” (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) —e Six men are now employed in keep- ing London’s 90 statues in condition. ...here’s economy without sacrificing quality/ Sunshine Krispy Crackers are helping women all over the country cut down food bills these budget- slashing days. That’s the reason you find the familiar, big, blue and white Krispy package sitting proudly on millions of pantry shelves. These dainty, slightly salted squares do delicious things to appetites all through meals. .. especially with soups and salads, with jellies and cheese. And hungry, healthy youngsters have a habit of racing home right after school when they know they’re going to get Krispy Crackers spread with jam or peanut butter. Why such popularity? . .. They're crisper! Extra flaky! And they have a delicate flavor that comes from specially plump, sun-ripened wheat used by Sunshine Bakers in their Full Grain Process . . . That's why! Careful housewives insist on Krispy Crackers at their grocers’ because they know that Sunshine Bakers have never allowed quality to pay toll to unwise economy. . | Y, BILL! ST/LL,4 WORE LEFT I ’?5'// Also sold, for your convenience, in larger and smaller size packages. COMPANY a | the system had a deficit of about $10,- and that the matter was one for the grand jury’s attention. President Joseph said that because of limited time he had not yet been able to determine how bad the condition of the park system was, but that he esti- | mated it was “ten million in the red.” CHILD IS SCALDED Willle Bowers, jr., colored, 4 years old, was critically scalded yesterday, when he fell into a tub of boiling water while watching his mother do washing |in their home at 1443 Q street. The child, burned about the face and body, was taken to Children’s Hospital in the Fire Rescue Squad ambulance. Doctors 'said his condition was undetermined. PARK DEFICIT $10,000,000 Chicago ‘System’s President Issues Estimate After Audit. CHICAGO, February 2 (#).—Harry Joseph, president of Chicago's West Park system, yesterday estimated that 000,000. His estimate was made following pres- entation of an audit of conditions un- der & former administration, which was prepared for a Citizens' Committee whose members said it showed that the park system was hopelessly insolvent Years of SINUS PAIN Can Now Be Avoided Any person affiicted with severe sinus | washes away the fetid matter cone trouble cen tell you there is no human | gested in the passages. pain so terr'bly unendurable. Even Everywhere there are people who now surgical operations bring no reli>f from | prevent colds and other respiratory the excruciating torture in many cases. ases, have a clear head, and Be warned by frequent head colds, | breathe freely, since using Sinasiptec catarrh. mouth breathing, <noring, | for a twice-daily nasal bath. It's so pressure at the bridge of the nose, con- | easy and pleasant! The Sinasiptec gested nasal passcges, headaches above | treatment soon becomes a fine health the eyes, spells of temporary deafness, | habit. Sinasiptec is sold by all drug- inflamed and phlegm-ccated throat,|gsts and unless you are pleased with bad odor from nasal mucus throat dis- | i.ie results the small amount you pay charges. will be refunded. Tear this out so Thousards today use Sinasiptec, a|you remember the name, pronounced St. Louis doctor’s discovery, for safe|Sina-siptec. protection against threatened sinus trouble. A little Sinasiptec in warm S I N A s l P T E C water quickly clears the nose and There IS a Difference in Sugar You can be certain that the brown sugar you buy is PURE CANESUGAR and rich in mineral § salts so good for youngsters if you insist on Jack Frost Brown Sugar. Packaged for prop- er protection in dis- finctive brown car- tons, the Jack Frost - trade mark is your ° guarantee of purity. Refined by The National Sugar Refining Co. of N.J. 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