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B ey v y motor bleycle with a heavy sack be- | UP " his power to do so. " ‘For that night there was no hurry. | ' NEW ILUSTRATED By R.W, SATTERFIELD » ) COPYRIGHT 1922 THE MEMILLAN ¢°fl"",% RELEASED BY NEA SERVICE INC., ARRGT,MET, NEWSP, 5VS. i BEGIN HERE TODAY eight when there came Jenny Pendean engages Mark Bren- | Maid to the door. don, famous criminal investigator, to There's a gentleman must see you solve the mysterious disappearance of | this instant moment, please, sir,” she her husband, Michael, from his home | $31d. He's by the name of Mr. on Dartmoor. Pendean is last scen | oria and he comes from Captain {n the company of Jenny's uncle, | Redmayne out over at Crow's Nest.” Robert Redmayne, when the two| Not sorry that his day's work might Visit Michael's new bungalow near | 'OV be simplified, Mark bade the girl Foggintor Quarry. summon his visitor, and in two Blood s found on the floor of the | minutes Giuseppe Dorla appeared. cottages and witnesses testify to hav- So Robert Redmayme, . the, mur. ing seen Robert ride away on his|derer of Michael Pendean, has turned 7" asked Brendon, finishing his a chamber- hind the saddle. Jenny goes to live with her uncle | Bendigo Redmayne and Brendon visits her there. Mark is introduced ! to Giuseppe Doria, who workas for | Bendigo. Brendon falls in love with Jepny and her uncle Bendigo tells| him that he fears that Doria is try-| ing to win her affections. | _NOW GO ON WITH THE ' appreciate the confidence and can return a confidence,” answered Brendon after a moment's reflection. 1 do admire Mrs. Pendean. She is. of course, amazingly beautiful, and has a gracious and charming nature. With such distinction of character you imay rest assured that nothing will happen yet a while. Your niece will " be faithful to her late husband’s| memory for many a long month, if not forever.” ] pelleve that,” answered Bendigo. We can mark time, T don't doubt, till the turn of the year or maybe longer. But there it is: they are thrown to- gether every day of their lives and, though Jenny would hide it very care- Pl .fully from me, and probably from THERE STOOD ROBERT RED- herself also as far as she could, I MAYNE. guess he's going to win out.” — A few minutes later a gong sound- | shavin ed from beneath and the two men ment. Q descended to their meal. It was, Corpo di Bacco* Gluseppe Doria who did the talking | know that?" he asked. while they ate a substantial dinner. “I saw him on my way home,” re- He chattered on and after d\nnt‘r‘r\!led Mark. “I had already seen lighted another of his Tuscan cigars, him, before the tragedy on Dartmoor, drank a liquor of some speclal brandy and I remembered him. What is Mr. Redmayne produced in honor of [more, I'm not sure that he didn't re- Brendon, and then left them. m?rnhp, me.” They drank tea at five o'clock and - 'We are in fear,” continued Doria. an hour later the detective went on | ‘“He ha; not been yet to his brother, ‘his way. A general invitation had | but he is near.” been extended to him and the old I “How can you tell that he is near, sailor expressly declared that it Would}xr he hf,q not yet been to his _give him pleasure to recelve Mark as i brother? a guest at any time. It was a Sug- | Thus we know it, l g0 every gestion that tempted Brendon not a morning early to Strete Farm on the little. | hills ‘above us for milk and butter, The moon had risen as he pursued |T go this morning and they have an his lonely road and it shone clear , . 4= ? Lt through a gathering scud that threat- st E—— ened soon to overwhelm the silver light. Clouds flew fast and, above Brendon's head, telegraph wires| hummed the song of a gathering| storm. The man's thoughts pro- " ceeded as irregularly as the fitful and shouting wind. Still deep In thought Brendon| tramped on; and then, where the road | fell between a high bank to the wind- ward side and a pine wood on the| other, he experienced one of the| ‘ m;c:}:: ;\;;rflues that life had yetj GUARD AT Tfllk DOOR | OF THE SICKROOM At.a gate, which hung parallel with the road and opened into the depth of a copse behind, there stood Robert | Redmayne. ' .. He appeared to recognize Mark, or at any rate regard him as an enemy, ' for instantly he turned, plunged into the woods behind him, and dis- and Doria showed astonish- How did you Sylpho-Nathol makes pure and clean whatever goes into the sick-room. It also kills germs that may come out of that room to make you ill. It purifies hands, nails, utensils, bed clothing—the whole home, Busy dealers sell it—15c, 35¢, 65c, and $1.25. THESULPHO-NAPTHOL CO. Boston, Mass. CHAPTER VI, The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay, Stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in clear liquid and in thin plasters. The action is the same. Bifiu;};y ugly story. Last night a man en- tered Strete Farm and took food and drink. The farmer hears him and comes upon him sitting eating in the kitchen—a big man with a red head | and a red mustache and a red waist- coat. The man, when he sees Mr. | Brook—that is the farmer—he bolts through the back kitchen by which | he has come. Mr. Brook knows nothing of the man and he tells me | | of his adventure, and then I go home to tell padron mio—my master, “When I describe this man, Mr.| Redmayne and Madonna nearly have a fit between them. They recognize him-—he is the assassin! They think instantly of you and bid me take my | | bicycle and ride here at my best speed to catch you, if it may be done before you go.” By 9 o'clock .the Italian had started homeward, and as soon as he was gone, Brendon went to the pollce" station, borrowed a révolver and a pair of handcuffs, hinted at his busi- | ness, and ordered a police car to be | ready as quickly as possible. A con- stable drove him and before setting out he told the local chief of police, Jone Inspector Damarell, to await a | message over the telephone in the course of the morning. He enjoined strictest secrecy for the present. | Mark, who had studied Mr. Red-| mayne's large government survey map | of the district, suggested an immedi- ate search over the most likely re- { gions §n the neighborhaad. | He inclined to the belief that the hunted man might sooner trust the woods than the coast. “If Mrs. Pendean doesn't mind the | weather and there is no shadow of danger to the launch, then I advise that your niece goes down the coast and has a look into the caves as you propose,” he said. “No doubt Doria can be trusted to see sharply after her. Meantime we will quarter the wood. If we could only get into| touch with the man, it might be! possible to secure him without mak- | ing any noise.” | BRITAIN DAILY VHER.I‘LLD,‘ MONDAY, JU |1s the first plcture of the busy brides- | watch. !no clue of the man. they sought, and Doria prepared for the coming voy- | age of discovery and, within half an| hour, the motor boat danced out {rom‘ beneath “Crow's Nest.” After they | had gone, Bendigo, in a sailor's pea- | jacket and cap, lighted a pipe, took a big black-thorn stick, and set off be- side Mark. The police car still stood | on the road and, both entering it/ they soon reached the gate beside | which Robert Redmayne had ap- peared on the previous night, There they left the motor and entered Black Woods together. Bendigo still talked of his niece | | and continued to do so. It was a gubject on which the other proved | very willing to listen. “She's at the parfing of the ways row,"” declared Jenny's uncle. “I can see her mind working. I grant she loved her husband dearly enough and he made a pretty deep mark on her character, for she's different from what she was as a girl."” Mark asked a question. “When you say that her husband altered his wife's character, in what way did he do so?" “Well—he taught her sense I reckon. You'd never think now, | would you, that she was a red Red- mayne—one of us—short of temper, peppery, flery? But she was, as a youngster. . Her father had the Red- | c—— e Busy Bridesmaid L Muwr Cambridge, wiu was a bridesmald at Princess Mary's wed- ding and also at that of the Duke of York to Lady Bowes-Lyon, has de- clded that she is quite grown up and should wear her hair up, too. This mald with her new hair mode. mayne qualities more developed than any of us and he handed 'em down. | She was a wilful thing—plucky and fond of mischief. That was the girl I remembered when Jenny came back to me a widow, And so I see that Michael Pendean, what ever else he was, evidently had the trick character to learn her a bit of sense and pa- tience,"” b They tramped the wood and fell in with a gamekeeper, who. greeted the trespassers none too amiably. But on learning their errand and recefv- ing a description of the fugitive, he bade therh go where they pleased and himself promised to keep a sharp Their hunt produced neither sign after three hours of steady tramping, they returned in the motor car to| “Crow’'s Nest." News of direct importance awalted them, Jenny had not Robert Redmayne but had reached | him; and she returned very distressed | and somewhat hysterical, while Doria, having done great things in the mat- ter, was prepared to brag about them. “We saw him,” said Jnny, “about two miles down the coast, sitting not fifty yards from the sea. Then Giu- seppe suggested landing and so ap- rroaching him. The thing was to let me reach him, if possible. “We ran by, as though we had not observed him; then, getting round a| little bluff, so that we were hidden, | we went ashore, made fast the boat and regularly stalked him, The poor wretch saw us and leaped up, but it was too late and Giuseppe reached him in a moment and ex- plained that I came as a friend. Doria was prepared to detain him if he endeavored to escape, but he did | not."” “Is he sane?” asked Bendigo. ! (Continued in Our Next Issue) STOP CATARRH! OPEN NOSTRILS AND HEAD Says Cream Applied in Nostrils elieves Head-Colds at Once. o { | It your nostrils are clogged and | your head is stuffed and you can't| breathe freely because of a cold or catarrh, just get a small bottle of| Ely's Cream Ralm at any drug store. Apply a little of this fragrant, anti- septic eream into your nostrils and let| it penetrate through every air pas-| sage of your head, soothing and heal- | ing the inflamed, swollen mucous membrane and you get instant relief. Ah!*how good it feels, Your nos- trils are open, your head is clear, no more hawking, snuffling, blowing; no| more headache, dryness or struggling for breath. Ely's Cream Balm is just what sufferers from head colds and catarrh need. It's a delight. ] raiapeure T —— LY 2, 1923, | folks by the dreamtime lady. | by Elinor Barton, of the Joseph Horne only seen | jliam McIntosh, 0 IR ] UI_O_ICES INTHE A KDKA (Westinghouse—East Pittsburgh). Monday, July 2, 1923 6 p. m.—Ball scores. 6:15 p. m. — Dinner concert by KDKA Little Symphony orchestra un~ der the direction of Victor Saudek, continued until 7:30 p. m, with ball scores at 7 p. m. . 7:30 'p. m.—"What Shall I Read During the S8ummer Hours,'” prepared by the Cornegie Library, Pittsburgh, Pa. 7:45 p. m.—The visit to the little \ 8 p. m.—Ball scores. ' Fashion talk company, Pittsburgh, Pa. 8:16 p. m.—Concert by the KDKA Little Symphony orchestra under the direction of Victor Saudek; Mrs. Marie Shaner, soprano; Mrs. Brabazon Rutherford, contralto; Arthur C, Scott, tenor; Arthur Ray Davis, tenor; Joseph Rogers, bass; Clair Anderson, bass; Lyman Almy Perkins, planist and director. 9:45 p. m.—Ball scores. The Na- tional Stockman and Farmer market reports. wi po! WBZ (Westinghouse—Springfield). 7:30 p. m.—Baseball scores of the Eastern, American and National leagues. Bedtime story. 7:45 p. m.—"Fourth of July Acci- dents,” by Stephen A.'Mahoney, M. D. of Holyoke, Mass. 8 p. m.—A few vacation hints. 8:16 p. m.—"“What Men Are Wear- ing."” 8:30 p. m.—Baseball scores. §:35 p. m.—Concert by Elsie John- son, soprano of New York city; plano’| recital by Mrs., Mirlam Munyan Thomson. | 9:16 p. m. — Bedtime story for grownups prepared by Orison 8. Mar- den, 9:25 p, m.—A few minutes Benjamin Franklin, D 9:30 p. m.—Baseball scores. WHAZ Polytechnic Troy, N. Y.) 10 p. m.—Concert program by ar- tists from Machanicsville, N. Y. WGY Electric Co., N. Y.) 6 p. m.—Produce and stock mar- ket report and quotations; news bul- letins; baseball results.’ 8:40 p. m.—Baseball scores. 8:45 p. m.—Musical program. WEAF (American Tel and Tel. Co.. N. Y.) 7:30 p. m.—Stories and songs for children by John Martin. Bianca | Randall, lyric soprano. ‘“The Out- lawry of War,” by Raymond Robins. Piano recital by Helen Hulsman. “The | Cheerful Philosopher” by Burr Wil- well-known actor. Brooklyn Lodge of Elks' band, under direction of Thomas Sherman. WGI (American Radio & Research Corp, | Medford Hillside, Mass.) | 6 p. m.—Late news flashes—Early sports news, 6:15 p. m.—Code practice, No. 70. 1 '6:30 p. m.—Boston DPolice reports. | Amrad bulletin board. Wool market news furnished by the Commercial of Boston. “Just Boy" a broadcast from the American Boy Magazine, WIZ (Aeolian Hall—New York City) 6 p. m.—Thornton . Burgess’ bed- time story. 7:30 p. m.—Bong recital Catherine Kimmel, soprano. 7:45 p. m.—Harper's Bazaar Fash- lon talk. 8 p. m.—Song recital by Miss Cath- erine Kimmel, soprano. 8:15 p. m.—The Outlook talk. yel co! of en with (Rensselaer Institute, (General Schenectady, lesson by Miss| literary Anik, well-known pianist. ers,”” an editorlal written and read | by Hy. 8. Watson, editor of Field and Stream, Strand theater. Henry Morans’, 365 Main street, op- Former Congressman From Stevens, the fourtk Minnesota district, | Roosevelt's administration. was a graduate of Bowdoin college. Sunburn VEN the most severe cases of sunburn are speedily E selieved by the use of Resinol Ointment. Its cool- ing touch quickly allays the pain, and reduces inflamms tion and soreness as it hastens the return of the skir to its normal condition. Resinol Ointment is also invaluable for bites, ivy or oak poisoning, heat rash, ete. Easy and pleasant to apply and so nearly flesh colored it can be used on exposed surfaces without at. tracting undue attention. It is even more effective if aided by Resinol Soap. Your druggist sells the Resinol products. Keep them or ~hand for skin ills of summer. B Plano recital by Harry {Hundred Thousand Dollar | Prize for Peace Plan New York, July 2, — A prize of $1u0,000 1 open today to the Am- erfcan with the best practicable plan for the co-operation of the United States with other nations for the at- tainment and preservation of world peace. Edward W. Bok of Philadel- phia, former editor of the Ladles’ Home Journal is the donor of the prize—to be known as the American peace award—and said to be one of the most princely ever offered as a reward for‘a non-commercial idea. The award will be given in two parts. The first $60,000 will be paid for the idea itself while the second will be given when the practicability of the idea is proved. 9:15 p. m~—"Dogs and their own- | 9:30 p. m.—Music direct from the 10:15 p. m.—Address by Mr. Asko- th. Complete radib sets and supplies at site Myrtle street.—advt. Minnesota Died Sunday Minneapolis, July 2. — Fred C. former congressman from died He served 18 years in ngress. He was one of the authors the pure food act put through in Mr. Stev- He Sugar has been made at Liverpool University by means or the action. of light on carbolic acid. sterday. Among many African races there | are no words to indicate time. s was born in Boston in 1861, SNAP FAST- O'E'Z ENER Never cuts the thread or wears loose. 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Yet collusion | ' mesmed impossible, for Mark had given no notice to Bendigo Redmayne of his coming. not Jenny or her Uncle Bendigo or any- body on earth should prevent him " from securing Robert Redmayne on the following dayjif it came within Indeed he felt Brendon, for it argued much beyond - SYLPHO- the wanted man should suddenly re- He swiftly dgtermined that little .doubt that this would happen. N\ THis oveHT To N\ APRETTY SWE F1eé slept well after an unusual amount of exercise and emotion; and he rose late. He was dressing at half past CALL ON ME FO SPEECH - D0 YOU FEEL TIRED OUT AND RUN DOWN BANQUET TONIGHT- | HOPE THEY DON'T DOINGS OF THE DUFFS BE LL RA Bo you wake up as tired as when | you went to bed? are you st 0 neasncnes JALESMAN $AM Auto-Intoxication (Self-poisoning) Dizziness or Stomach any kind? Disorders of (EAM - '™ BOUND FOR . These are Nature's signs that your ATLANTIC systems need toning up and it is dan- gerous to neglact these symptoms. 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