New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 9, 1924, Page 4

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€ essional 0 Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Why is Dicky Troubled Aboat Money? “Leila s on the wire Mother, and wishes to speak to you. Il hang up. 1 waited for no further word from my doughty mother-in-law, 1 was too thankful that she bhad put the downstairs receiver to her ecars atter Leila had finished her gleeful triumphant announcement, to visk any further complications, and hanging up ‘the recelver, I turned back to smile at Dicky's anxious fac “It's all right,” I reassured him. “I don't think she heard a thing she shouldn't.,” “She ought whole thing,"” he growled & crust, listening in that way. “Don't you realize that deesn't consider she {s ping?" 1 soothe “She simply lleves that she has a royal right to know everything that is going on in the house, and considers any means justified which procures her the in- formation.” Dicky shot a glance half admiring. You sure have her doped out correctly,” he sald succinctly. “What did Teila allow?" hat they anged things hy wire with Aunt Dora Paige, and she has sent a cordial telegraphic invi- tation to mother, which Le relaying to her." “Well! that certainly up fAne!” Dicky said In a tone. “Unless"—alarmedly—"mother doesn’t want to go.” His mother's voice punctuated his sentence with an excited call of: “Richard! Margaret! Come down here. 1 have something to tell you.” There was an ex ple ure and triumph i and Dicky and T looked significantly. Dickey's Dilemma “I think vour question is an- swered,” I sald, and he grinned assentingly as he followed me down- stairs, where Mother Graham waved us regally into the library and pro- ceeded to relay the story of her in- to have heard he has she be- at me, half fixes things ement, her voice, vitation which we already knew so well. “Leila’s going in a week.” she said. “hut she wants me to come in to Marvin right away, for she saye if T want to do any shopping in New York before T go, it Will be so much handier to go from there, and then lhe’ eavesdrop- | relieved | And of have some Edith can go with me. course I simply must new things." She looked at her son expectantly, and I saw an embarrassed flush on | Dicky's face. He always s gener | osity personified with his mother, and 1 never have known her to give |him so broad a hint before, for Dicky always has kept her purse well supplied. But evidently she had no funds in hand, and it was equally | patent that Dicky did not know just how to grant her implied request, | “You're Fond of the Farm | “Of course you must,” Dicky sald |at last. “Just let me know how much money you nced, and T'll get —I'll give it to you." I'll go right now and figure it all out,” she said, as happy as a child, and went rapidly from the room with no sign whatever of the bitter anger she had evinced toward both Dicky and me only a few moments before. 1 stole a furtive glance at my hus-\ band. 1f T was not mistaken, he had started to say “I'll get it for | you,” Instead of “I'll give it to you.” Was it possible that Dicky was | | financially embarrassed, and if so. | why | There was no possible reason of which T knew which would warrant | his confueion at his mother's need | for a wardrobe of any reasonable extent “Well, that's that!" he said, as the | door closed behind his mother, and | I realized that whatever his dilem- | ma, Dicky did not mean me to share | it. “Mother going south with Leila and Ede, little me to the studio. Where do you want to go for this vest from each other I'm planning? Dicky's eyes were full of mis- «hief, but T felt anything but mirth- ful. The very fact that he was rest- less enough to wish family for even a few days, prese aged trouble of some kind for me. I told myself this dolefully, even as | T aaliantly tried to answer him with the same mischievous carelessness he had displayed. “I'm going nowhere while you're | gone.” 1 said. “It will be all the rest T need to stay here on the farm | without anybody to bother me/ “Whe Dicky whistled and | |locked at me curlously. Then, | thoughtfully he put a startling | query: | | “You're mighty fond of the farm, laren’t yon? Suppose I ask you to {leave 1t7" Mo Tanglen Letter from John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton, Continued. I put him up on the bed beside Leslie and what do you think that biessed child said, Sydne; As it an uncanny intuition come to him from out of the Cos~ mos, he put his up and Jaid them on her Soft breast, and with never a quiver of the brave little mouth he sald: “Zackie going to 't with you always. I yuve you best had d to hers and tion he snug- His molst lips were h with a sigh of satis! gled close. Then the malign witches that st | all! Muvver yove Za:kie best of all.” | i the cauldron, eceing that we were too happy, tinkled a little telephone at the side of the bed. Naturally I picked it up, heard the voice of Karl Whitney and saw red. 1 immedi- ately said: “Mrs. Prescott is too 11l to talk to anyone.” That would have satisfied the man at the other end but I ought to have known it would not satisfy Lesiie. She asked me who it was, and when I did not nswer, she snatched the from me, and eaid: “Tell s furious, Syd. talking to that you tion next very very se was a brave, had time to show i going to.” Agai dron, and I b tave to sho e going home on tonig Leslte said: “Goodt Four letter tomc “I'll say _sacr tirred the “You'll soon, for I'm s tra 3 answer row. on't,” was my you v ugly THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY 2-v he asked, | remark; then my wife showed equal temper to mine. 1l say I will. I'm tired of your sudden tempers, John. I'm going to be a frec-born white woman from now on, I've made all concessions possible. [Either you let me explain and you accept my explanation at its | face value, or we would better agree to disagree.” | “I'd bette say goodby, then,” I At that moment Mother Hamilton came to the door. k, your father wants to see and I strode away. > whole thing was on agaln. As I etumbled into Mr. Hamilton's room 1 said to myself that I would take the first train back to Albany. Again the fates scemed to con- spire against me, and it looks now as| | though I would soon be moving to | Pitteburgh. I do not think, Syd, that Father Hamilton will ever again get | up from his bed. Before I left | room he told me that he doesn’t xpect to get well, and you know brave a man as he says he 2 up, he has practically lost w | I wae greatly shocked when T saw | him, and was not able to keep all of | my concern out of my face. He could hardly hold out a trembling to me, and spoke fn a very voice as though to confirm y face. I have come to the | T am inex-| | pressibly ong sleep comes with an appealing gesture | at short was al- most more than e could manag. ‘.\’H he gather speech nowever, r my. id, “yoa must isiness and carry on Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) GOOD MANNERS Lack of People lic highway leaving a greasy paper and garbage people to drive or walk past choose |a disgusting way to repay the iand- |owner for (he liberty they took in llempnurn)’ occupying his property who picnic along the pub- clutter of for other to scatter the | | old Wizard to hurry DATLY FASI N SERVIOR. COMBINATION POPULAR and matching coat is responsible for somé of the most carefully thought out costumes. Here is a gown of black wool trimmed with heavy stitching in white silk, coupled with a coat of the same material that is lined with heavy white crepe de chine trimmed with stitching of heavy black silk. Nearly all coat linings this season We trimmed In some unique way. Gossip’s Corner Dandy Desscrt Gingerbread served with jelly or | whipped cream makes a very accept- able dessert, Use Glass Jars . ver keep vinegar in stone crocks, as the acid is apt to attack the glazing and make the liguid | unfit for use, Glags jars are best, Luncheon Dish Escalloped squash served with bacon makes a very good luncheon dish Brings Health Every family would be healthier for a green salad served daily with a dressing of oil and lemon juice rather than a mayonnaise sauce. Add Some Milk Milk may be added to any soup except meat stock and it makes the soup richer in value. Soup Too Heavy Cream soups are too heavy for a first course unless the second be of vegetables, Soaked in Borax Fabrics that are soaked in borax water will come out clean and spot- less without cloth or color having been injured, FABLEr CLOSET F Anyone who oan forage a little | lumber can have a fresh air closet for foods, and this is an excellent | method for keeping them fresh and at the same time Kkeeping smells from the pantry. All that Ifi.nl»ul"d are a few lath, ome nails and a little wire gauz with a shelf or two struck in. Al- most anyone who can drive a nall should be ahle to make one. Place it in a cool spot, within handy reach and, unless the weath- a by Johwy Walter's mama did not recognize Walter's daddy, for you the mean old Wizard had workel magic changed her ‘nto knew the 330, on her and hal and old woman and she Wizard rad changed Walt r's duddy irto a Wi “We & have brought the Wizard o the magic he worked Raggedy Ann wld the nice old lady. So Walter's daddy told the mean and change the old lady into a youang lady again, or else he would give tha Wizard &!x- teen hard thum And, as Wizard did not care io have Waltc dadcdy give him even one hard thump, he got out his magic charms and in a few minutes changed the old lady into a pretly young lady. Then Walter and his daddy and his mama were all very happy and “Well! No wonde cried. Raggedy Ann they s0 Rag- hugzged each other ever many times and thanked the | gedys for heiping them. "It is a shame for the work snch unkind magic | Ann eaid. “Maybe it 14 be a | plan for us to.take all the y from him so that he do mean magic Wizard to * Raggedy rms aw can mever any again!” | you do not take my ay from me, 1 wil unkind told maglc prom- magic Raggedy e never to work | again!” the Wizard | Ann \ 1 ow can we really and truly e that you will do as you say Ann asked the Wizard. don't know!" the Wizard re But if yon take my charms away from me then I can’t have any ] ' plied dy ON The popular combination of dress Can Use Fat ¥at from lamb and mutton will lose its objectionable featuyes if mixed in the proportion of one-third lamb or mutton fat and two-thirds | beef or pork fat, and it may bg used i for cooking and frying. HEALTH: OR FOODS —e |er is hot, this is a hetter place for food than any ice chest. | Clean earthen dishes should be used to hold the food and never in lany sort of metal. Cheesecloth |bags can casily be made and into these slip the plate and food. It ants should find the place put a coat of eamphor around the box |every two weeks or 8o, 1 About every six months take the |box down and scald it thoroughly I\\llh boiling soda water. The Adventures f RaggedyAun gedy Andy Gruelle fun at all “*Juet charms, Raggedy her hand. The Wizard turned his bag in which he kept his magic charms up- elde down in Raggedy Ann's hand. “Well! No wonder!” Raggedy Ann cried whenYshe saw the charms. “Just you look at thal, Raggedy Andy!” Walter and his mama and daddy as well as Raggedy Andy and the two wooden hobby horses all crowd-. v Ann to look at the magic charms. There was a car- pet tack, the cork out of a little pill bottle, two grains of corn and a hair pin. “Just see that!” Raggedy Ann said. “How can anyone spect work nice kindly magic when one of the charms is a carpet tack Which is crooked and a hair pin which is 60 twisted? Just you tell me that, Mister Wizard! How do you spect to do it?" “I do not khow!" rd re- plied, and he punched his big toe in the sand and hung his head. “I just picked up the charms along the path here in the woods and spected they were magic charms and when I tried them, sure nuff, k Raggedy Ann asked Walte to straighten out th the hair pinsand done, Raggedy Ann charms to the Wizard. “Now you try i them, Mister Wizard," Raggedy Ann said, “and I'll bet a nickel they work nice, kind magic!” when the Wizard tried straightened charms he and everyone eise was de- lighted to see a patch of cream puffs growing right heside a soda Jet me mee your magic Mister Wizard, please! Ann sald as she held out the Wiz B carpet tack and when this was anded the So, ind c Raggedy Andy a soda, "It is much it laughed as she pusse puffs to all while handed everyons nicer giving happiness making people unhappy! Wizard knew that ¥ right, for he felt very happ pleasur had give than And the Ann was at the othérs he B the | Glycerine Mixture for Gas on Stomach Simple ete. glyc buckthorn bark as mixed in Adlerika, helps any case gas on the stomach in TEN min- utes. Most dicine act only lower how! but Adlerika acts BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes r and poisons. Brings out #at ever thought was in your Excelient obstinate Guards Drug on on r yon system for constipation against Store, appendicitis. 457 Main street, City to| X s daddy|J | em——————— CHAPTER I. Finley's Roturn Dusk is in itself sinister. Bright noonday or black midnight are definite, positive, even tangible, but dusk s uncertain, mysterious, eerle. And once it begins its creeping, in- sidious progress, it comes faster and ‘| more Inexorably with every moment, until its first gray, wavering sha- dows turn to dense and menacing shapes. At ¥ower Acres, the beautiful Long Island home of the Raynors, a September dusk was stretching shadows across the terraces and massed flower beds. Through the falling darkness rang out a single shot, In the wide doorway between the house and the sun parlor the gilm- mer of a white-clad figure pierced the gloom, and a door facing east and a door facing west, both swung on thelr hingés, And on the floor, crumpled into an ungainly heap, lay the inert form of Douglas Raynor, s outlinein- distinguishable In the sudden com- plete darkness, till a click of a switch button sounded and the bright lights flashed out. Three days before, Malcolm Finley had returned from Japan. The quickly successive sensations incident to landing and reaching a hotel all pleased him, and in sheer | delight he noted or missed old lond- marks until alone in his room at the Waldorf, he began to feel a “SUFFERING YOU TO COME, BUT CHARMED!" longing for human companionship. Accordingly he reached for the telephone and confided his wishes l‘ Ezra Goddard. During dinner, Finley Jearned all that he wanted to know about business, politics and friends. God- dard was a storehouse of informa- tion on these points, and guided by an occasional question, he placidly poured forth his torrents of news. “All right, Goddard, I'm fed up with Wall Street details. So now— what about-—Nancy?” Ezra Goddard looked at | thoughttully, “Yoy went away when she mar- ried, dfdn’t you?" “Yes—when she married that un- speakable man!” “Because she married him?" “Partly. What about the girl? Do you ever see her?" “Oh, often. They live Long Island—fine, niflcent. really.” “Then he has donesher well 2" “As to setting—yes."” “Is she—is she happy? good to her?" “Can’t answer either question. | You know Naney—if she weren't happy she'd never let anybody know As to his being good to her— is and he isn't.” “How-—isn't2" “Hard to put it into words. | he’s—oh' he’s impossible!” “A bounder?” “No—not that. But he's & tryant, a despot—an overseer!” ! 1y God! Does he tyrannize over no his host out on big estate, mag- Is he But, “Does he? It makes my blood boil—but what can one do when she resents the slightest comment on his actions, or even allusions to them?" “Then she loves him?"* “She can't No woman could. But—oh, there are 80 many sides to it all—so many complications—" “Tell m# all about’it. If that man |ig unkind to little Nan—" | "You can’t do anything. The best thing you can do Mal, is to keep awa Raynor's always been a bit ous of you—"" “Of me? What nonscnse! Why, Nan and 1 were the merest friends | —so far as any one knew- “Including Nan herself ? I “Why, yes—I should say | There was nothing between ‘us—" | “But you loved her?" “And do still. But I'm man enough to realize she's the wite of | another—only—if that other. | “Why did she marry him? Malcolm 2" I don't know, Goddard, But mind conjecture—give me What does that brute do to 0. Why, never facts. her?" “Nothing tangible—nothing you could lay your hand on. But he teases her, irritates her, eriticizes her unjustly, and in a mean way— until sometimes 1 should think she would kil him?" | “Not Nancy—she's the gentliest of girls—" “Was.. Rut of late she seems to be getting to the end of her rope, ithe limit of her patlence. 1If ft weren't, for Orry—T almost thing she might rebel openly.” JWhy Orry ™ His influence is good over They mdore each other—I knew a more devoted brother when Raynor stirs endurance, Orry who pours ofl on the vategs.” He never seemed to me much go—" “No, he hash't. he! never and Nan is the troubled sister—and up beyond to have Orville Kent is .| Members of the board of publi- dreamer, an artist. But hé has a fine nature, and he also has a good sense of proportion—a real knowl-\ edge of relative values. And so he quiets Nan now and thens—but truly it's seldom necessary, for the girl is |80 well poised herself, If she ever| 're‘retl her marriage, no one I8 al- lowed to guess it from her words or actions.” “Bless her heart! Perhaps it isn’t so very bad. Raynor had big qualities—" * “Yes, but also some mighty small ones! He can jab the iron into his wife's soul, and then twist it around in the wound with a diabolical cleverness.” “Is she alone with him, except for Orville?” ord, no. ‘There's quite a house- hold, Raynor's sister, Miss Mattie, is there—also a nurse.” “A nurse? “Not exactly—that is, she's what they cail a dietitian—yon see, Ray- nor has developed a hippy concern as to his héaith, and he lives on calories or carbohydrates or some- thing—anyway, they have to bs weighed and counted by a trained dietary person, hence the nurse.” “H'm—an old man, apprehensive about about his health, is a fine| mate for lovely Nancy Kent!"” “Exactly,. Why did she marry him “I'd like to go down there, God- dard. Would it be taking my life in my hands?” “Unless Raynor invites you, yes.” Many people do not realize that the most, exhausting of all work is housework and the care of children. Many a woman her s gone, her nerves unnrunfi and is , worn out gnd run down wit| pale, thin, watery blood from the strain of housework. ; ’ In such cases, wirat you need is some- thing to put more iron into your blood. Nuxated Iron contains iron like the iron . NUXATED IRO Rreakfast—Orange juice, cereal with thin cyeam, scrambled eggs with mushrooms, potato puifs, gra- ham bread toast, prescrved grapes, milk, coffee, Luncheon—Beef broth with vege- tables, croutons, hearts of lettuce, chocolate rice, milk, tea, Dinn®t—Roast beef, scalloped potatoes and omions, succotash, en- dive with bacon dressing, anta- loupe fllled with fruit, whole wheat rolls, milk, coffee. Children three or four years of age may be allowed to ¢ the ten- der hearts of lettuce occaslonall |1f any a bit of olive oil and lemon slightly seasoned with salt, | The cut of beef known as “English :1‘ | eut” makes a deliclous roast that is | {not expensive. The roast should be well cooked in a slow oven after searing the surface to preserve the juices, Serambled Tiggs With Mushrooms Bix eggs, 6 tablespoons milk, 1 tea- spoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, tablespoons butter, 1-2 cup mush- room caps. Beat cggs slightly with fork. Beat in milk, { pepper. indd fresh mushroom caps and cook {five minutes. The i should he broken in small pieces. | Skim out of butter and turn in eggs. Juice a salt silver and ressing 1s used it should be | Melt butter in frying [\;m.+s mushrooms | Housewife? in spinach, lentils and apples, and like the iron in your blood. ~You will be astonished at how much better you feel who should be in the prime of life finds | often in eyen a fow days, Try taking Nuxated Iron for two weeks, and you wilflee color come back to your lips and checks, you will not be so easil 1 d upeet by trifles, and best, of all, you find that you have new strength an energy and endurance for your daily tasks, At all good druggists, ENRICHES THE'BLOOD-GIVES YOU NEW STRENGTH AND ENERGY Cook, lifting with fork until ereamy all through, Add mushrooms and ook two or three minutes longer, Prestryved Grapes Wash grapes well and pick from stemns. Separate pulp and skins, Put pulp in preserving lettle and | bring to the bolling point. Simmer {until seeds are scparated from pulp, | Rub through a stralner fine enough to remove secds. Combine pulp and skins to measure. #Add three cups | of sugar to every four cups of fruit, Bring to the boiling point and sim- mer until a spoonful tricd on a cold saucer forms jglly. Pour into steril- ized jelly giasses and cover with paraffin when cold. Chocolate Rice Oue square bitter chocolate, cups milk, 1 teaspoon sait, ar, % cup rice, 1§ 3 cup teaspoon Melt chocolate over hot water in top of double bholler, Add sugar and slowly stir in milk heated to the alding point. When all the milk used and the mixture smooth and at the boiling point, add the rice slowly. Stir with a fork ogcasional- ly while cooking and cook over hot water for two hours. The sait hould be mised with the sugar hen the misture s Soft and creamy, remove from heat, add vanilla and let coo) hefore serving. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Serviee, Tne.) . 1 COULD "HAVE UNDERSTOOD— DEFENSE HOVES I POTHIER TRIAL 15eeks fo Have Alleged Confes- sions Excluded Tacoma, Wash, Oct. “ounsel showed a suapicion of waviness as it for former Sergeant-Bugler Orland tossed back from his wide brow, |H: Fothier, accused of murder as His eyes were gray and deep set and | the result of the death of Major his mouth showed swectness as well | Alexander Cronkhite, who was shot a8 Armness in its sensitive corves | Vhile on & practice march at Camp A most casual glance at him gave | 1/0W18 in 1918, was prepared today to open-the defense by moving for the impressi I flflc!engy esion ;’rfdor‘:i?::l“;“yfl':;nrd' the withdrawal of all confessions mination and persistence. More- | *XCePtng the first one offered by over, he usually spoke with a de- |th® Prosecution. cisjon that cut oft possible ohjec-| Maurice Langhorne, defense at- torney, based his motion on the tions. Wherefore Goddard obediently grounds that the purported confes- sions were inadmissible through went to a telephone and returned | not much later with a mystified ex- pression on his face. | “I don't quite understand it,” he said, resuming his scat at the table | and lighting a fresh cigar, “but old | {Raynor says he will be charmed to see you, Buffering you to come, 1 could have understood — but | charmed! Looks tricky to me.” “Meaning?" “That he expects to get some fun | out of your visit, somehow. 1 told | him you were home, and that I was | dining . with you, and that you wanted to run down to his piace “Wonit he? Can't you make him? You seem to be on an intimate foot- ing down there.” “I'll* ask him, gladly.” “Do it now," ’ Goddard stared at the determined face before him, Ta]l, strong and thirty, Malcolm Finley was the sort of man who |. gives instructions in the full expec- tation of their being carried out. His rather fair hair was thick, and 9 tion to the prisoner and that undue drawn was made to Thomas J. Cal- Jaghan, department of justice agent at Providence, R. I, March 19, 1921, and admitted Pothief killed the major accidentally while unioading his pisto). Langhorne moved yesterday after the government rested, for dismissal of the case on the ground that there had been mo evidence before the jury which would corroborate any with me and renew old acquaintance, | ©f the alleged confessions of Pothier, |and he fell for it so quickly and| The expected legal battle over |80 cordlally that T can't see through | the question of jurisdiction will not it. T thought he'd have conscien- |come until the conclusion of the tious objections of some soft . Bt | case, Langhorne announced. he was positively urgent. Said for| James S. Lee, a department of you to come with me on Friday for | justice agent in New Haven, Conn., the week-end, and ay much longer | testified yesterday ‘of obtaining as you could content yourself there, | confession from Pothier that the t's an enormous place, you know— | defendant had killed Major Cronk- big as & hotel, full of servaits and | hite. guests and neighbors—" | While he was questioning Pothier, “Neighbors? Thought was | Lec testified, Pothier suddenly sai | country.” | “Let's get down ta brass tacks “Oh, big adjoining estatcs—almost | killed Major Cronkhite and C: like an English countryside. Now,‘linsrnhlulh put me up to it. look here, Mal, you must be careful. Robert Rosenbluth, a capfain at |I'm sure the old brute has some. |the time the major was killed, is |thing up his sleave, and it's most | awaiting trial on a charge of mur- likely to be a wicked hope of catch. [ der growing out of Major Cronk- ing you making love to his wife, | hite's death. which will give him a chance for| Tanghorne in cross deviltry of some sort. So carry|lee trled to get him to admit that yourself with great circumspection,” jthe confession %as obtained only “Circumspection be hanged! 1'1|after Pothier had been ruthlessly |adopt whatever attitude toward |cross examined for several hours. Nancy 1 see fit! Ol4 friend, for| TLanghorne produced the official choice—but it he gets funny- report of Lee to the government “He won't get funny—but—he'll|and he read from it a statement in {take it out of her.” which Lee said: “Oh, will he! If he does, he'll| “Tt will require much have to settle with me. Look here, | rather than ingenuity induce |Goddard, that's why 1 want to go! Pothier fo tell the truth. He is a there, to see what that girl is up|type of man whose mind fs abso- against I'm not going to please | lutely blank at times.” myself—TLord knows it's u dangerous| Langhorne. using this statement, matter, anyway. For when 1 see questioned Lee regarding Nan—dear little Nan. again—I] sb.“inphflnn concerning Pothier's mental |have all 1 can do to hold myself in | condition Lee refused to admit leasfi. But—if that man is bother~|more than that he considered ing her— Pothier “below par.” The last witness heard was J & Lyle, Tacoma attorncy and mer president of the chamber | commeree, His testimony was Iy {in an effort to determinc Camp {.ewis, where Major Cronk- < i hite was was under federal cation of E ass, | ca eryman's Dible class. | ;. i.4ictioh on the date of the shoot- 1 generals and adjutants of the three | ng. it 1 ptain patience | to T. (Continued in Our Next Issue) for- NNER rd TO MEET FOR shot Tevel With Knife To measnre a cupful of dry terlal, fill the cup with a at jscoop, and level off with, a * knife, armves, the president and secretary {of the class and the chairman of | the publicity committee will for a mock duck dinner at the Bur- ritt hotel tomorrow aftermoon 130 o'clock. me ma case 1 having been obtained with no cau- ! influence had been used over him. The confession not wished with- | | examining his of whether | spoon or Believe Lincoln, Slayer Of Two, Demented Beneva. 11l Frank Mich- els, the Aurora, Ill, chief of police to whom Warren §. Lincoln, the lawyer and horticulturist, confeksed that he slew his wife, Lina, and her brother, Byron Shoup, has told, the Kane county jury which is to pass | upon Lincoln’s mental * condition, |that he was ain “Lin- { coin is'insane. Lincoln made no less than eight confessions, the chief. said, before he finally told that the heads could be found at a city dum in a block of conercte. BREWSTER IN N. Y. %% 2 Ku Klux Governor-elect of Maine Makes Plans For Speaking Tour In Empire State. PR | New York, Oct. 8.—Importance-s attached by some political spoles- men to the announcemnet today that Ralph O. Brewster; Ku Klux Klan endorsed - governer-elect of Maine, will invade New York state for a series of speeches on behalf of the republican state and national tickets during the closing days of the pres« ent campaign. Only two actual speaking engagos ments have been arranged, these bes ing at Tarrytown and White Plains, |in Westchester county. Mr. Brewster, according to advices received from Portland, Me,, is com« ing to New York state at the invitas tion of Representative John O, Till« son, eastern district superintendent of the speakers’ bureau of the repsh lican national committee. He has announced that the subject of his addresses will be “Return to Party, | Government.” WARRIEDTWELVE . YEARS BEFORE BABY CAME! | Gladly Recommends Lydia § E. Pinkham’s Vegetable & Compound ; f o Louisville, Nebraska, — ‘I was mar- ried twelve yeara before my hoy was born. I hadalot of female trou- bles and had been | treated by a phy- || sician for thembut they concinued much the same, Then I read your advertisement in the newspapers and thou fl'z 1 would give Lydia EPinkham'sVeg- etable Compotind trial, for if it had helped others, iy not me? I have taken 36 bottlea of the medicine and am never with- out it in the house. My baby boy is three years old now and I sure am | bappy since I got relief from my troue bles.. When any one has troubles like mine, or any ways like mine, | amel« ways glad to recommend the Vegetas | ble Compound so that they will get the it kind of medicine.’’ —Mrs. JOB (OVAK, Box 662, Louisville, Neb. Tn a recent country-wide canvass of purthasers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, 98 out of every 100 report they were benefited by its use, For sale by druggists everywhera, % l

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