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borers' Unlon, Local 811, alleging that the union is withholding $150 accident benefits to which he {s entitled. One clause of the union's by-laws states that betefits will be paid only when the infury takes place while the mem- ber is working on a bullding and un- der & union foreman, At the time of Perrucel's accident he was on o bulld- ing with a union boss ‘but there was & non-union man also on the job and for this reason the union refuses to pay J. Anderson, the boss, olaims she union was not in a position to furnish men and he was obliged to hire non- union helpers, ILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1928. = bad conscience. My father and his| 8:00 p. m.—Joint recital by Mar-|Miss Ruth Rellly, planist of Troy, N. £ triends wallowed in this complaint. garet Atherton, soprano and Robert! Y, and Clarence A, MoManus, tenor I { At fitteen yearn of age I killed | Childe, planist, solist of Albany, N. Y, i man, and found, in a murder unders 8i16 p. m.~The Literary Outlook, By taken for very definite reasons, a| 8:80 p, m.—Special Radio Organ WGY EDEN PHILPOTTS thrill beyond expectation. That In-|concert on the auditorlum organ, | (General Eicotrio Co., Soheneotady, »ALUSTRATED cldent {8 unknaown; the death of my | program played by J. Thurston Noe, . N Y. By father's foreman, Job Trevose, has 9:15 p. m,—"Fishing,” a timely talk 6:00 p. took R.W, HATTERFIELD not been understood till now. He | by Ladd Plumley of Fl' d and Btr‘um. | market :.p::{_;:?%:::“:::., Snm %% ,xb iived at Paul, a village upon the| 9:80 p. m—Music direct from the | pulletins; baseball results, COPYRISHT 1422 THE MEMILLAN COMPANY heights nigh Penzance Among the | Mark Btrand Theater. t 8:40 .p. m~—Basoball scores, RILEASED BY N2A SERVICE 1K, ARRGT.MET, NEWSP, 3v8, fish-curing sheds one day, unseen, I| 10:30 p. m.—Jolnt recital by Rea| §:45 p. m~—~Musioal program by the Btella, contralto and Robert 8. Childe, | Troy Mumio Study Club orchestra. chanced to hear Trevose speak of my planist. Perrucef Sues Union for. mother to another man and declare that she did evil and dishonored my Polytechnic Institute, | . 3150 in Sick Benefits Troy, N. X.) | - Guiseppe Perrucc! has brought suit| Complets radio sets and supplies at father, From that moment I doomed Tre- 10:00 p. m.~—Concert program by |for $150 against the International Hod . Henry Morans', 366 Main street, op- Miss Kathryn E. Rellly, soprano and | Carriers’ Bullding and Comimnon L:-Ipe-m Myrtle street.—advt. GUARD THE BAREFOOT BOY Little feet will get hurt, Grown- ups, too, meet with accidents, When she skin is broken, apply Sylpho-Nethol at once. It kills gmn revents infection—puri- es all it touches, Keep it in the medicine cabinet —and in your kitchen too. Bus 'l-‘l;r- sell it—15c, 35c, 65¢ an THE SULPHO-NAPTHOL CO. Boston, Mass. SYLPHO~ NATHOL ——— ] e e . BEGIN HERE TODAY much time as she wants in her hus- WHAZ .Michael, husband of Jenny Pen-|band's arms all the same; and to- @e;n, disappears and FRobert Red-|B€Ether they plan to put out poor Ben. mayne, uncle to Jenny, i{s suspected [ He'd never seen Pendean, of course, of murder, Mark Brendon, criminal | Which made the Doria swindle pos- | investigator, has chargé of the case,|sible. 1 incline to think that Jenny goes to live with her uncle, | Michael meant to begin with the old Bendigo Redmayne. Robert, in hid- |®ailor and that, when Robert turned g, sends for Bendigo to come to a|up unexpectedly on Dartmoor, he al- #ecrét cave. Both men disappear |tered his plans, and’ there is evidence of terrible “Now we come to the breliminary qtrngg}e iu the cave. steps at ‘Crow’s Nest,” which ended in Jenny marries Giuseppe Doria, who |the death of the second brother. works for Bendigo, and they go to|You offered just the starting point; live it Italy where Jenny's uncle, Al-|and before you left on that rough, bert Redmayne, lives. moonlight night, Pendean had re- Peter Ganns, famous American de- |created the forgery of Robert Red- tective, assists Brendon in the inves- |mayne and appeared before you in tivations, that character. And not content with (Rensselaer vose to death and, some weeks later, after many fallures to win the right condition, caught him alone in a sea fog. 1 walked beside him for fifty paces, then fell behind, leaped at his neck and hurled him over the cliff in an instant. My lite proceeded orderly; I chose the profession of dentist, as being likely to introduce me to people of a more interesting type than my father's acquaintance; and I kept an open mind for myself, but a shut mind for others, . The brainless Robert Redmayne, brought his niece to spend her school holiday with him and I discovered in the seventeen-year-old school girl a a Ganns arranges an arrest of Doria. | — Jenny is killed when she throws her. self in front of her husband and re ceives the bullet meant for him when he tries to escape. i .NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY othing at present was positively known by me which made it out of | the question that Joseph Pendean’s | wife should be the mother of Giu- | seppe Doria. But none the less many | facts might exist as yet beyond my | knowledge, which would prove such a | suspicion vain. I considered how to | obtain these facts and naturally my thought turned to Giuseppe himself. “Having found out what Penzance could tell me, I beat it up to Dart- mouth, because I was exceedingly anxlous to learn, if possible, the exact | date when Giuseppe Dorla entered | the employment of Bendigo Red- mayne as motor boatman. Albert's brother hadn't any friends that 1 could find; but I traced his doctor and, though he was not in a position to enlighten me, he knew. another man—an innkeeper at Tor-croes, some miles away on the coast—who might be famillar with this vital date. “Mr. Noah Blades proved a very ghrewd and capable chap. Bendigo Redmayne had known him well, and it . was after spending a week at the Tor-cross hotel with Blades and go- ing fishing in his motor boat, that the old sailor had decided to start one himself at ‘Crow’'s Nest’ He did so and his first boatman was a fallure. Then he advertised for another and received a good many applications, He'd salled with Itallans and liked thém on a ship, and he decided for Giuseppe Doria, whose testimoniais appeared to be exceptional. The man came along and, two days after his arrival, ran Bendigo down to Tor- eross in his launch to see Blades. “Redmayne, of course, was full of the murder at Princetown, which had Just occurred, and the tragedy proved 80/ interesting that Tlades had little time to notice the new motor boat- man. But what mafters is that we know it' was on the day after the murder—on the very day Bendigc Leard what his brother, Robert, was | supposed to have done at Foggintor | Quarry—that his new man Giuseppe Poria, arrived at ‘Crow's Nest' and took on his new duties. #‘That meant that not Pendean, but his wife's uncie, Robert Redmayne, perished on Dartmoor. - And there | ke lies yet, my son!"” ~ Mr. Ganns took ceeded. -“Here, I think, we may tribute of admiration to Pendean’s hietrionics. Both he and his wife wwere heaven-born comedians as well as hell-born criminals. That he will leave a full statement before the end, I ventur to pro- ‘phesy. His egregious vanity demands ft. You may even expect something & 'little new in the suicide line if they give him a chance; for be sure he's thought of that “And now I'll. indlcate how 1 brought fact after fact to bombard my theory, and how the theory with- stood every assault until I was bound to accept it and act upon it. | “We start with the assumption that Pendean is living and Robert Redmayne dead. We next assume that Pendean, having laid out his wife's uncle at Foggintor, gets into Eis clothes, puts on a red mustache and a red wig and starts for Berry Head on Redmayne's motor bicycle. The sack supposed to contain the body is found, and that is all. His purpose is to indicate a hiding place for the corpse and lead search in a certain direction; but he is not going to stand the risk of Robert Red- mayne's corpse spoiling his game. No, his victim never left TFoggintor and probably Michael will presently tell us where to find the body. “Meanwhile a false atmosphere created under which he proceeds. to his engagement at ‘Crow's Nest.' And then what happens? The first | clue—the forged letter, purporting to come. from Robert Redmayne to his brother. Who sent it, Jenny Pen- | dean on her way through Plymouth to her Uncle Bendigo's home. | «*“Jenny plays widow but spends as | snuff and pro- spare a is | | | Althongh Resinol Ointment is pri- marily_intended for the treatment of ; skin affections and the control of itch- ing. 1t has such 4 strong healing action that it is highly and widely recom- mended as a cfvreninz for the most stubborn boils sores. wounds. etc. . tis mild. soothing and does not smart or . ating when applied. Many satisfied users ‘estify . st it has healed quickly and easily, sores that bave refused to yield to other trestments. Sold by all drugsists. | s —— digo all alone-—and he “I HURLED HIM OVER THE CLIFE."” this, he kept the part going for all it was worth. As Robert Redmayne, he broke into Strete Farm fwd was seen by Mr. Brook, the farmer, “Now we get tc blindman's ‘buff with the forgery. Follow each step. Bendigo never sees his supposed krother once; yvou never see him again. Your united search through the woods is futile; but Jenny and her husband in the motor boat bring news of him. Robert must see Ben- must have tood and a lamp in his secret hiding place. “Well, it's fixed ,up and Ben de- cides to meet his brother after mid- night, alone; but the old sailor's pluck weavers—who shall blame him? —and he arranged in secret with you that you should be hidden in his tower room when Robert Redmayne comes to keep the appointment, GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES Make this Lemon Cream and just see Tan, Freckles Disappear Mix the julce 6f two lemons ‘with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents, shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most - wonderful - freckle and tan cream, and complexion beautifier, Massage this = sweetly fragrant lemon cream into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes natu- rally bleach right out and how youth- fuly clear, soft and rosy-white the | skin becomes. “Now the next thing puzzled me for a moment; but I think I know what happened. Only Pendean's final statement, if he ever makes one, will serve to clear the point; but I can guess that at that first' interview with Ben he tumbled to the fact that you were hidden in the tower room. ““That being so, his own plans had to be modified pretty extensively. Whether he meant to finish ‘off Ben that night, you can’'t be sure; but there is very litle doubt of it. Every- thing was planned. ! “Now we get another lifellke re- port of runaway Robert; and finally Bendigo consents to visit him in his hiding place. The lamp is going to bturn and show the peculiar cave on that honeycombed coast where Ben- digo's brother is supposed to be con- cealed. Another night comes and Ben goes to his death. “Two Redmaynes have gone to their account and there remains but one. Meantime the course of true love runs smoothly and Doria marries his wife again.” CHAPTER XVIII, Confession During the autumn assizes, Michael Pendean was tried at Exeter and con- demned to death for the murders of Robert, Bendigo and Albert Red- mayne. He offered no defense and he was only impatient to return to his seclusion within the red walls of the county jail, where he occupied brief balance of his days with just toretold that he would seek to make. This extraordinary document was very characteristic of the criminal. Here is his statement, word word as he wrote it. MY APOLOGIA “Hearken, ye judges! There s another madness besides, and it is be- fore the deed. Ah! Ye have not gone deep enough into this soul! Thus speaketh the red judge: ‘Why did this criminal commit murder? He meant to rob.’ I teil you, how- ever, that his soul hungered for blood, ' not booty; he thirsted for the happi- ness of the knife!” And again: | “What is this man? A coil of wild faerpents at war against themselves— | 8o they are driven apart to seek their | prey in the world." | So wrote one whose art and wis- {dom are nought to this rabbit-brained | generation; but it was given ‘to me {to find my meat and drink within his pages and to see my own youth- ful impressions reflected and crystal- lized with the brilliance of genius in his stupendous mind. Remember, I, who thirty years old. As a young man without experi- |ence 1 sometimes asked myself if some spirit from another order of be- ings than my own had not been slipped into my human carcass. It | seemed to me that none with whom I came in contact was built on, or near, for write, am not such a statement as Peter Ganne had | my own pattern, for I had only met cne person as yet—my mother—who‘\ did not suffer from the malady of a | DOINGS OF THE DUFFS BOSS, | WANT You To MEET MY LITTLE DAUGHTER, BETTY JANE - THE BEST @/ED LITTLE GIRL IN THE WORLD -~ HELLO THERE, BABY - $ALESMAN $AM 7 oosTH-\E_ WONDER F | MADE A RD\ MNSTAKE. BY QUITTIN' MY LIFE GUA edalbdn o JoB INTH CONEN TAFFY SHOPPE. - GUESS MUH THEN TO TAKE A P02ITioN ~A° 1SLAND "L GO CAW UP_ | STORE- THAY GAEAT - HOW magnificent and pagan simplicity of mind, combined with a Greek loveli- ness of body that created in me a convulsion. We loved one another devotedly trom the first understanding. (Continued in Our Next Issue) e e LV_ CES [N THE AIR] KDKA (Westinghouse—East Pittsburgh. Monday, July 16, 1923 7:00 p. m.—Barseball scores. Dinner concert continued. 7:30 p. m.—Girls' evening. “The Colors of King Tut,” by Dorothy Hol- lander of the Color Harmony Associa- tion. -, 7:45 p. m.—The visit to the Little Folks of the Dreamtime Lady. §:00 p. m.—Baseball scores. “Fash- fon Talk” by Elinor Barton of the Joseph Horne Co. ‘“Reading During Vacation,” prepared by the Carnegie Library. 8:20 p. m.—Concert by the. KDKA Little Symphony Orchestra undeér the direction of Victor Saudek; assisted by W. A. Paul, baritone; Chas. L. Bil-} letter, tenor. 9:46 p. m.—Baseball scores. Na- the | tlonal Stockman and Farmer Market | report. . WBZ (Westinghouse—Springfield). 7:16 p. m.—Laughs from Life by special arrangement with Life Maga- zine. 7:30 p. m.—Bedtime story for the children. 7:46 p. m.—Talk by Chas. A. Frazer president of the Atlas Trust Co. 8:00 p. m.—Concert by Demetrius Zades, tenor; Antonia Bizizono, saxo- phone; Mrs. Francis H. Regal, ac- companist. Selections by the WBZ trio. 9:20 p. m.—Bedtime story grown-ups prepared by Orison 8. Mar- den. Baseball scores. WEAZ (American Tel and Tel. Co., N. Y.) 7:30 p. m.—John Martin stories for children. Concert by Belld Hecht Trio, composed by Bella Hecht, plano; Ben Gordon, tenor and Lilllan Grucker, soprano. “When thn Swallows Home- ward Fly,” by Dr. Frank M. Chapman under the auspices of the Museum of Natural History. Cencert by the Zim- | bler Ststers, cellist and violinista Burr Mclntosh, the “Cheerful Philosopher.” Mr. McIntosh is a celebrated actor, traveler, author and lecturer. WIZ (Aeolian Hall, N. Y. City) 7:30 p. m.—Joint recital by Mar- garet Atherton, soprano and Robert Childe, planist. 7:45 p. m.—Tashion talk by Har-; for | per's Bazaar. was head of the widespread TONG, or society, of Chinese criminals who dominated British North Borneo—the brain, the absolute ruler of the organi- Under This Name has written in fiction form the tale of Chai- Hung’s fight for mastery with “Chinese” Pen- nington, the white man who knew the orientals better than they know themselves—the cham- pion of law, order, civilization, in the strange, tropical land of Borneo. There never was a more thrilling - novel. Through it all runs the thread of zation. Such a TONG actually existed. Chai-Hung was a real character. His sign of death was the seven-spot of the Chinese pack of playing cards— “THE YELLOW SEVEN” EDMUND SNELL A FASCINATING LOVE PLOT Beginning in The HERALD July 19 SUMMER READING PAR EXCELLENT ZA<AN ZC X W TWELVE EPISODES In “The Yellow Seven’ 1. The Box Trick. 2. The Hut in the Clearing. 3. The Daughter of Chal-Hung, 4. The Bronze Jar. 5. Island “N.” 6. China Tea! 7. The Passing of Zara-Khan, 8. A Game of Chance 9. The Sil- ver Hand. 10. The Bartier of Fire. 11. The Wisdom of Rabat-Pilai. 12, Run ‘to Earth, Three Instalments to. Each Epis»le Betty Does Her Best HEY BETTV ! LAY OFF OF THAT NOTHING ToO CRY THERE IS 414 A WEEK AND ALL TH TAFFY | CAN ERAT PANNG SHE HAS A VERY GOOD SET OF LUNGS | WOLLD SAY, You'LL: PARDON MINUTES, BOSS -/ @ 4 A YOU’RE A FINE ONE To CARRY ON LIKE THAT - JUST WHEN | WANTED You To SHOW OFF FOR THE B0SS- HOW DID -1 HAPPEN TO LAND TH' JOB? -OH, THAT WAS SIMPLE ENOUGH—,