New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 2, 1922, Page 10

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P Litlle, Boown and. Company ~ BEGIN HERE TODAY, Horror stricken by her fear that BARNEY LOUTRELLE, the young lleutenant, had been murdered, ETHEL CAREW to the un occupied house mysterions an ghostly R finds there e proof that a body under the fce of lLake At once she and relentle LUCAS CULI the murd ! had been filled when he learned t [ entered thes woods to h } Ethel and L« to-d ¥ ether by o interests. In |k ondon h A mssages been 1 eages instruct Resurrect| hoped wou parentage Lucas Cullen had been lent crimes in lays and fear was driving him to violence Lthel furi- ously accuses her grandfather of in- structing | KINCHELOE to shoot Loutrelle 1 \ 11 yrrectior idence o } ¥ suspects t gran SENIOR amitted has v 0ld Cull gan L oseance, 1 who had proceed to |} which he| obscure him to k—a t guilty of vio- I GO ON WITH THE STORY “Oh, I had K oe do something out there, did I L s demanded. Ethal could not answer him for the suffocation in her breast; muscles| seemed to be tugging tight through her “Barney Loutrelle’ away with! Killed!" s ““Hey? You saw him “No; but—" “Have you enough shame left realize what you have just been s ing to me?" he assailed her, rais his hand clenched but for his forefinger with which he threatened her. “Kincheloe has killed your fine friend of the train, Barney Loutrelle, you said. I had him do it! Eh? Eh? Say to me, do you mean that?’ been made cried. dead?" So Kincheloe—and I had killed your Barney Lou- trelle, you believe?” sYes!: | He jerked his wrist out of some after k d in C mes- | house," |asked ‘nnu-r Cullen, after his fifth or sixth attempt, succeeded in offering him- | self aright, John died and Ollver ‘the damned weakling” and his upstart wife, who had been a stenographer, claimed [from Lucas and his stronger, far more able sons, the control of the Cullen corporations which ownership old John's stock implied, Lucas fought and blustered; but Oliver asserted the control; or, rather, Agnes did, IPor ILiucas and his sons did not remain long in doubt regard- ing the force with which they had to deal; nor did outsiders remain ignorant 8o they grinned and hore it while you,” they watched Ollver gradually sink was |into invalldism and year follow year arrived at the Rock|with Agnes childless. had shut you out and There was an old contract, which wed him to Wheedon's," | Lucas, senior, had safely locked away, that's pretty clear,” by which he and his brother had ‘But who was he?" bound themselves that In the event of grandfather knows, of course,” |either of them or their sons dying withont issue, the holdings of the de- my uncle |ceased would pass to the survivor. Chieago, which Asa brought In September, 1918, those condi- rer were at dinner, told my tions seemed completely fulfilled; for wdfather who he was and what his | Agnes, who had gone heart and soul ce meant. You see, after that | into war work, sailed ahoard a ship vers and grandfather sent which was, torpedoed; and she was » out again, and grandfather lost. with his rifie The news reached Ollver on the sn’'t sure whether Kin- | cighteenth; and on the twenty-second, other man, was com- he died. . the Rock to his But Agnes, as though to torment Lucas ever after her death, had What are we in, you and 17" she passed on in the most annoying way suddenly shivering. possible. Though it was obvious that He put his hand steaylingly upon she had drowned, yet no one actually ser arm. I got you into it,” he ac- had seen her drown. Bt — o Since she was not legally dead, her home remained open. Mrs. Wain, her | housekeeper ,and her servants were |at the house, which they were keep- ing in order as though Mrs. Oliver Cullen were away merely on a visit. It was tc Cousin Agnhes’ home that Ethel went after an unsuccessful at- Itempt to discover any knowledgz of Bagley. Marcellus Clark, she learned, in Europe and no one at his office could disclose information of Bagley or the reasons why the frightened steward had been sent to the lone- some house on Resurrection Rock. But a shock awaited her when she entered her cousin's home and was greeted by the housekeeper. ormed Wheedon; that was ent of the explanation he vas going home to Chi arliest train "1 thought ithe the made, ago on ex- He the ad killed course they h said But it Bagley had foll Yes Jarney My thel “That t) 18Te telegram - from As iy we rese we had Kinek waited oaded house eloe the from ng bac was (To Be Continued) 'HERRIN SUSPECTS HOW 70 GET RO OF RHEUMATISH The Frult Medicine WIIl - Aiways Relieve You of This Torrible Disease “Fruit-a-tives” Is The Remady, DEeLmAR, NEW YoRK, “I have great pleasure in writing you about ‘‘Fruit-a-tives”. I have found great relief in them, I have had Rheumatism for six months and have suffered much pain, but not laid up with it. Have tried about everything I heard about without much relief. Then I took “Fruit-a. tives” and they gave me great relief. The swelling is almost gone and I feel good—like myself again. I can recommend ‘‘Fruit-a-tives’’—with a good heart—to anybody.” Mrs. EVALYN RADLIFF, In order to relieve Rheumatism, the blood must be purified. No other medicine in the world will purify the blood so promptly and | thoroughly as “Fruit-a-tives”. Thig fruit medicine acts on the three great eliminating organs—the bowels, kid- neys and skin—and is the most reliable and scientific remedy ever discovered for the relief and correc- tion of Rheumatism. *Fruit-a-tives”, o great medical dis- covery and made from fruit juices and tonics, is the greatest blood purifier in the world. 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N, Y, e aee——————————— HEALTH TRAINING IN PHILIPPINE 15, Frequently someone. claims to . find a new business that is easy to start, but cooking is a part of the business of living that no one has found a way to finish. We must cook to eat and live, but with a range like the STAMFORD it s an easy task. When you buy a STAMFORD range you are protected by nearly 90 years experience in manufac- turing cooking apparatus. C. A. HIERPE 73 ARCH ST. WHEN COUSIN'S HOME. l CLOSELY GUARDED AWAITED HE BUT A SHOCK R A b ENTERED HER Govt. Sleuths Taking No Chances on SHE Study of Medicine and Surgery to Be Brought Up to Standard Their Escaping—Hearing is her | grasp and stepped back, looking! down at her and laughing. “I must have Miss Platt hear you," |} he said, when he was through laugh- ing. “And your grandmother.” He stepped to the door and, opening it,| called for Miss Platt and then for his wife. “Now we will all hear opinions,” her grandfather said; and. before the others, he made her ac- cuse Kincheloe and himself again. Then he went once more to the door. “Lieutenant Loutrelle!" he called. “Mr. Barney Loutrelle, will you step in here!” He was not dead! She opened her eyes to see him in the doorway; he entered and came toward her, speak- ing to her. Everything wavered about him; but he did not waver in|! her sight. She cried out—or whis pered—something in reply to the words he was saying. She knew t nenner wnat she said nor how she said it. | Her grandfather was grabbing at her, saying something: and Miss Platt | was addressing her; but Ethel heeded | neither of them. t “1 thought you were dead!"” It was explaining to him. “You see, I| thought they had killed you." “I came to find you as early dared,” he told her. “I came just to see you. They told me you| would be down soon I had no idea you had gone out.” “1 went to the Rock for you see, I thought they had hurt and—" Her grandfather interrupted them | loudly; he ordered her to go at once; to .her room; but she disregarded| him. | “Leave her alone!” Barney Lou- | trelle broke in. ‘‘Leave her alone! he repeated, putting himself between her and her grandfather '8 has something to say to me; and I Mu»‘ much to tell her. I came to see h You can give us this room, or will go out; won't we, Miss Carew he agked her. ‘‘Yes,” she said ¥es." “What?" her grandfather threat- ened.’ “What? You think vou will g0 with this—this—" he stopped with a snort of contempt But he was not| feeling contempt, Ethel saw as she watched him. “I can forgive your imbecility and madness. God helping me, I can for- give my child's child even what she has said to me this day But dis- obey me agaln and I shall never for- give you. Now go; go to your room and go to your knees ,and later, when you are yourself, I shall: send for you.” She gazed only an instant longer at| her grandfather before looking up at| the friend at her side. “I #m ready to go with said. t your |! ) L 1 she 1 It ere i I You you I v | t we | you," she CHAPTER VIII She crossed the threshold, her grandfather had forbidden ! and went to the front door. Rarney which her, cused himself. have turned back vesterday. said when Ethel | nation “You know I'd no| ;oing On. dea what it would do to you, or I'd Gong Manila, P. I, Sept. 2. (By Associat- ed Press).—Bringing the college of medicine and surgery of the Univer- sity of the Philippines up to the rec- ognized standard of class “A" col- leges of this sort in the United States| Marion, Ill, Sept. 2. — (By Asso- | ciated Press)—All persons suspected stated her d,\[;,.m,,‘or being leaders of the mob that at- to go there at once Bag- | tacked non-union miners at the Les- “I think there's something 0 be found out in Chicago,” Barney surely DENMARK WORKERS \Danish Manufacturers Thus En and large deficits have been the rule for a number of years. Several com- | missions were appointed to bring ex- |penses dowr, and they have suc- j ceeded in saving the government 39,- TAKE B[}T IN WAEESJDM,MO groner annually. Superfluous | employes have been dismissed; over- ST | time pay reduced, and while the eight 1 hour day has not been abolished, it " | has been made more reasonable by {an effective utilization of working hours. The railroads and the tele- graph service now show surpluses. probably will be started in the very near future. LESS SUGAR PRODUCED Washington, Sept. 2. — Sugar pro- duction for the year 1923 will be nearly 500,000 tons less than for 1922 it was estimated today by the com- merce department in a survey of the world situation. Worid production for 1923 was put at 17,000,000 tons | as compared with 17,490,000 tons in o i |can help it." Resurrestion {mind the task which confronted cn her arrival as s ance from the were alive to aid her came to Chi Y. one—not she ordinary experience mendously s €y's back there; and Marcellus Clarke | ter strip mine near here June 22 and 188, his; office there | killed 22 persons, are being watched And my uncle Lucas z Le was when he sent that telegram |DY federal optratives to prevent their ast ni warning grandfather. But'escape, Attorney Gen. Edward J. Brundage announced. A grand jury f course, he'll be with grandfather; e thir from e i o L R e jivestigation of the affair is under way here. During yesterday's session of the grand jury two witnesses refused to testify on the ground that they might debated in her incriminate themselves. Later one her | of them, Noble Bell, a store manager “‘Fm,d{m Johnston City, Ill., reconsidered. there—or is She gave him her hand in good-by. CHAPTER IX. | As the train bore Ethel away from! Rock and from Barney | .outrelle, the girl and vaguely hat Cousin Agnes, Mrs. Oliver Cullen ghe had been known in Chicago before her tragic disappear- torpedoed Gallantic, Marion, Ill., Sept. —The Illinois chamber of dommerce which has been demanding that “blot of the Herrin massacre be wiped out,” today was in- vited by the convention bureau of the | greater Marion association to "Pass |on through” Marion on its official ! tour of southern Illinois, instead of | stopping here September 28, as plan- i ned This request was transmitted in a letter by E. B. Jackson, chairman of the convention bureau of the greater | Marion association which had planned had through extra- | to entertain the touring delegates. whi tre-{ “The printed matter that you have pped her v She ! put out on the subject has been very had endured some frightful ordeal|harsh,’” said Mr. Jackson's letter, which temporarily lowned her,do not believe the average business out had not beaten her. !man in Marion is in proper frame of Many men offered ti | mind to make a genial host for your ake up her battle for her. party.” ociety there had been some- an at- gnes first she told hose who asked her. Previously she 4 lived in a small town and no even the many newspaper | nterviewers—got ftu r than that. It was plain that, not long before her employment in the Cullen offices, About Agn hing of a mystery as well raction to Ethel. Cou go as a girl passed me to But only mselves by revision of the college curriculum, | { Plans have been perfected to ex-|1912, and the establishment of a central nursing school that wiil double the! number of trained nurses graduated annually in the Philippines, are two of the important measures regarding| public health and the control of dis- | | ease that have come about from the | jwork of Dr. Victor G. Heiser, far| eastern representative of the Rocke- | felier Foundation, since his arrival| here three months ago. Dr. Heiser summarized what has been done in a report to Governor | General Wood and the director of health. He invited attention to the fact that the health activities of the Philippines are no centralized under one department secretary, as he be- lfeves they should be, and he there- fore recommends that the legislation to do thls, which failed of passage in the last legislature, be brought up | again. The International Health Board has furnished the services of Dr. Charles N. Leach to the Philippine govern- ment for health work, of Dr. W. 8. Carter as assistant dean of the col- lege of medicine and surgery and professor of physiology, of Miss Alice | Fitzgerald as consultant in nursing| and of D. W. Tiedeman as sanitary| éngineer in charge of field studies in malaria which have been undertaken | in the province of Laguna. | | abled to Compete With Germans Ich\'ate Drogden, the Danish port on Washington, Sept. 2.—Business | the sound between the islands of conditions in Denmark are showing Amager and Saltholm, southeast of distinct signs of improvement and the | Copenhagen, to a depth of 24 feet expenses of government have been| with a width at the bottom of 800 materially reduced, according to a feet. This project is considered im- statement given out here by the! portant because it will enable large Danish legation. | freight steamers to pass through the| Mary Kitson, who is to be married By mutual agreement between em- | 80und and shorten their voyage to the|to Willlam J. Kerin at St. Mary's ployes and workers, wages have been | Baltic ports. Work on the excavation! church at 9 a. m. Sept. 6. reducd about 15 per cent, and Dan- ish manufacturers again are compet- | ing with Germany. There are today but 39,000 unemployed in Denmark, | as against 100,000 a year ago. | The shipping situation 1is better than it has been since the bottom fell out of the market. The idle tonnage | in Denmark is decreasing wiek by| week. According to the Danish Shflp-‘ owners' association, the number of ships laid up today is only 14, with a total tonnage of 33,413. In January| 95 Danish ships with a total ton-| nage of 258,300 were idle. i At the same time government ex- penses are being reduced. During and after the war the salaries of all| government employes were ralsed as! the cost of living increased. Now| they are going down, and the reduc-, tions already total 44,000,000 kroner. Wartime conditions made the gov- ernment railroads, postal and tele-| graph services highly unprofitable,’ MISS RINGROSE ENTERTAINS. Miss Olive J. Ringrose of Wooster street entertained at five tables of | bridge last evening in honor of Miss Help Pay Your Painter! Save in cost of Paint for painting your House, by using L & M SEMI-PASTE PAINT To illustrate: JONES paid $49 for 14 Gallons of “ready for use” Mixed P. - re Faint for ol y 8Gals. L&M Semi-Paste Paintand— 6 Gals, Linseed Oil to mix into it. MITH SAVED $14.40 Extensively used for 50 yeare imply adding L LM Somi-Paste Paint JOHN BOYLE CO., NEW BRITAIN PLAINVILLE LUMBER & COAL €O., PLAINVILLE BRISTOL HARDWARE CO., BRISTOL 'DOINGS OF DUFFS TOM, THERE'S A MILLER! CATCH HIM QuIcK ! WE'LL HAVE MoTHs! GET NOw WAIT,I* GET HIM 2 Wit |-\ Tom Is Quite a Help COME, YOUL LITTLE NUISANCE - I'LL ~You! | THINK HE WENT OUT NN BY ALLMAN PLL 5AY YOURE A g ] N WONDER - YOL OUGHT To GET A JOB CHASING FLIES IN THE CHINA DEPARTMENT OF SOME TRICKEY GUY ‘EH? THINK YoUL'LL FooL SOMEBODVY - I'LL ‘ GEY YOU YET OR MY NAME ISN'T DUFF! THERE HE |5‘ | gor "IM! followed and closed the door behind them. As briefly as possible, she told Dar- ney what followed her arrival at Florentin and she received in return fill report from Rarney He had stopped at Wheedon's the afternoon, and there had learned that the man named Bagley had ar- rived a day earlier and exhibited a Jetter from Marcellus Clark which au- thorized him to obtain the kevs to the house on Resurrection TRock Last night Bagley served a supper, and afterward Barney dered about the Rock while Bagley was still clearing up in the dining room. Barney came indoors and was trying again to read when he heard| a shot in the direction of the shore and, going to the door, he thought he also heard cries He went ashore and wandered about for nearly an hour before returning to find the Rock dark and the house shut.| After trying to arouse Bagley, he went [ ashore once more to find that Y?a14P3" slready had arrived at Wheedon’s and | determined to remain there | He had had “enough” he explained | t0 Barney as he pt “ausly had in-| in good wan- g HI SAM, THAT NEW STENO'S TAKING HER AFTERNOON NAP AGAIN- | WON'T STAND FOR \T!- G'WAN AN' FIRE WER OR sUMTHIN'!! OfELLo WateL- | THOUGHT D DROP IN AND SEE _HOW ALONG Just YOU ARE. GETTING ON YOUR NEW Joe WELL , YOU SEE , MR, ‘m’m GUZZLEM SAID |’ EITHER HAD TO TAKE AN INTEREST W THE busm;.as OR WHY, I'VE ALREMDY GOT AN INTEREST N THE BUSINESS

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