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Love’s Embers “Revelations of a Wife” ‘Adele Garrison”s Absorbing Sequel To Beginning a New Serial Madge Calmly Reccives Outburst Dicky's Curjously enough, 1 foit at Dicky's wrathful breakfast was not 1 was afraid he appointment with Instead ther. relief Tusban time, or wonl most welcorr strain of ity with wh tntreque forbear 100 good a 1t light “I am not sec sorry.” T how T ¢ going 1o from the it for you 3 \ man Dicky glared at my frigid more irritating to him t temperary lash-out at I have been Yes, vou conld:” 1 “Fat chance T had telling anything last night—yoi were g0 busy listening to the haas of that old zoat Veritzen. And whe finally got away vou and Lil rushed up- stairs like girls at a boarding school crazy to talk over the evening.” 1 felt a treacherons i thrill of triumph—his jeal resentment ainst my emplo vas €0 patent bed bit th oon as he tray from m il not extend set it down s erown ad old dear? 1sted comfor- tahly Copy By Thornton W. Burgess Peter's Suspicions Are Confirmed To truth is jealousy most blind; The thing it seeks 'tis bound to find. —O01d Mother Nature How long Peter sat watching the | strange young rabbit, who looked | like, yet wasn't Mrs. Peter, he never rew. He didn't want to make him- self known and this modest young | rabbit seemed quite satisficd to do nothing. The fact is, she presently closed her eyes for a nap. Peter | wanted to go on anl he didn’ want to go on. H airly burn- ing up with curiosi know who she was | At last something happened that for the time being put this young | stranger out of his head co lete- | Iv. His long ears caught the sound of a faint thump. It was so far away that he could only hear it faintly. Perhaps it was Old Jed Thumper. Peter strained his He heard anoth thump. This time it was from another dircction “That,” said Peter, Thumper. And that can bramble-tangle wl Thumper lives, N hat other thump Once more he | too faint for him to rec Right away he started in fhat « tion. He proposed to find out right there thumping ) A he hurried along he he or thump. He stoppe his thump was was o KL Stewed cereal namon It was little Peter who was touching noses with that hand- somc stranger You know that proven well q to, he were confirmi means that they were ounded. Much had to belicve his own Ther r tc this Mrs. was filled witl e didn't another not very far a But the reard it tly find ou Menus for tlle Famzly who Ol iumper, nor ump he had h iper's thu thump. T} 5 t ar ncheon—: b e as little Mr 1 him wit loped sauce thump signale with outs, ding, biplomatic Pkl Deep Chest Colds or a Raw Sore Thro_at END QUICKLY WHEN YOU t CAMPHOROL minut app ramblie-ta touched no: o saw it all ttle Mra. Pefer Dr.Brigadells this Beware It was just what hi of expeeted, Yet, now that he saw it i he couldn't believe it. His suspicions | T2 noses with Oragputs “hut Vanc a lie to = tell us exactly Janxious to have you arrcst NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1927, The = ENS‘U@VMIUIQID]HQ (ASE by s.s CHARACTERS OF THE STORY | up: ‘rhn ’AN DINE © cuarues scrisyees sovs How do you know the hoy is re now 2" objected Markham. ‘phoned a PHILO VANCE out.” JOHN F.-X. MARKHAM ...... District Attorney of New York (.oun\} ALVIN }( BENSON g0 o i the Well-known Wall Street broker and man-about-town, who was mysteriously murdered in his home bk Brother of the mt dered man A PLATZ ..... Housekeeper for Alvin Benson \l' RIEL ST, CLAIR ... s.eneeeses.. A young singer CAPTAIN PHILIP LEACOCK .... Miss St. Clair’s fiance LEANDER PFYFE ... Intimate of Alvin Benson’s I ”I AULA B ANNING . . A friend of Pfyfe’s LLSIL [ Na s § LC‘L((“\ of the firm of Benson and Benson got COLONEL BIGSBY OSTRANDER A retired army officer | | WILLIAM H. MORTARTY ... «eeee.. An alderman | | GEORGE G. STITT .. Of the firm of Stitt and \IcCo‘ ’ MAURICE DINWIDDIE . Assistant District Attorney ERNEST HEATH .... \cvgeant of the Homicide Bureau BURKE, SNITKIN, EMERY ... e o ... Detectives of the Homicide ‘Bureau e Commanding Officer of Detectives assigned tn District Attorney’s office PHELPS, TRACY, SPRI HIGGINBOTHAM Detectives as mnvd tn District Attorney’s office | ! CAPT -\I\ C \_RL HAGEDORN . Fire-arms expert | Ba DR. DOREM . Medical Examiner | |y Ll YANK SWAC KE R ¢ to District Attorney CURRIE - ... Vance's valet 3. S. VAN DINE ...... The Narrator public accountants BEN HANLON e hecneta | |are THIS HAS HAPPENED jone—he didn't seem to care who; | me Teacock confesses to the murder (and he even ‘phoned you to inquire confession as Clair. Vanee “He promises mystery on a persons in the world whom Benson |dre certain date. He Markham pro- have admitte tired as he | P. duce the alibis of all the people sus- | was, He'd known Benson int'mate- | cal and then phones Alderman 'ly for 15 years, and Mrs. Moriarty in order to check up on Benson take the alibi 'of Colonel Ostrander, |show it to him.—Morcover, he bee NOW BEGIN THI STORY |would have known all about the | Ell CHAPTER LIT domestic ararngements of Fifteen minutes later Mr. Mori- |liouse: he no doubt had slep! there i e zood- | many a time when showing his ol lookin his | pal the wonders of New TR all my iden of | Hight life, . How in alderman—and he spoke clear |appeal 1o you?” { and precise English with almost no | Markham had risen, and was pac- trace of the Bronx accent ing the floor, his cyes almost closed. Markham introdueed “So that was why you were &0 in- briefly explained why he n | terested in the Colonel—asking peo- quested to call ple if they knew him, and inviting “One of the men from the lomi- i him to lunch? . What gave you nswered Moriarty. | the idea, in the first place, that he | out the matter | was guilty ? | | “Guittyt” exclaimed Vance. pricefess old dunderhead guilty! Really, Markham, the notion’s pre- | pie | post'rous. I'm sure he went to the | o wash-room that . night to comb his | cyebrows and arrange his ti~. iting, as he was, n a Box. the gels on the stage could sce hm, Y d. U bknow. | Pic- | =y where we s exposes th 14 Miss St to solve the was one of the pected saw serions well-dressed youth in enties——not at s him, and | of had beo dre o bureau,” king me “That report id Vance, “but it's a bit too general. Will you what you did -that fter you met Colonel night rander 'he Colonel had invited me to dinner and the Follies. 1 met him it the Marseilles at 10, We hac dinner there, and went to the adilly a litile before 12, mained until about I walked to the Colonel's apurt- ment with him, had a drink and a chat, and then took the subway home about 3:3 “You told the detective you sat in a hox at the Kham: halted ugly color crept into his cheek: C and his cyes blazed. But before hie | Th could speak Vance went on, serene indifference to liis anger. “And T played in th lishin’ luck. Still, he of arfcient popinjay who'd wash-room and dandify | aue most aston- | the just the kind go to the |in himsélf, But I've MAJOR ANTHONY BENSON .. | vou take life much Mark n | held engage his | after “I'm about FORRMAN S R o e s Various ibout it | mind very few |vears, Platz once [the subject should place off hiis toupec and | phasis on the the lers the World of casonable York's | tensive dors all that |tion of dreams For certain parently The dream he events like Most dreams are visual Sit- | sions of pictures related to dents that have oc | senses of motion, abruptly. An | fiying or falling. “But this is damned rornsense!” Vance arm, had Mar urging now playfully door. »h. undoubtedly,” he agreed. often told yau, old dear. 100 Keriously protesting vigorous and endeavored to dis- arm from the othe ham by the him toward 1 back, determined; and nheated dispute, 3ut Vane a somewhat rkham gave in through with this " he growled, as we icah through into a 1'm already,” #aid Vance (TO BE CONTINUED) Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Iliness BY DR. MORRIS Journal of the American Association and of H the Health Magaine FISHB itor dical Superstitious persons are likely to thave dream {in times of emergency books for consultation These 1hings of course, absolutely hokum and rit not-the slightest consideration. | students of the human particularly in recent serions study to significant that Dr. Harvard Medi- review of most em- that has en given to dreams by Havelock is and by Freud. He consid- Havelock Ellis hook, “The Dreams, much more than Freud's more ex- work on the interpreta- have, given R G. Stiles of the school in a recent attention many years Dr. Stiles kept record of his own d ms and, a result of this and his study the literature, he has reached definite cveryone s ams to his conscious true in his type of mind. Visual Tmpressions diference is that in the views the sequence of a s tator at a motion ture, and feels no responsibility the actions. tmpres- inei- urred during the involved also many including floating, There are )dors In dreams are o sensc of pain sometimes occurs, With | The sense of hearing is rather infre- nt, although music enters into dreams of many persons. Not infrequently the sounds heard dreams may be coordinated with while ago and found | conclusions. Ap- | infrequent. | sounds occurring in the vicinity of he sleeper which are heard in the |same rhythm when the sleeper |awakes. TFor instance a serles of ‘x.np.m: sounds heard in a dream were coordinated with sounds occur- |ving in the vicinity of the sleeper \\\\1 h are ard in the same rhythm when the sleeper awakes, For in- stance @ serics of rasping sounds I heard in dream were coordi- |nated with the sounds of a loco- motive leaving a neighboring rail- road statiofi. A slecpe tric car wa the motorman dreamed that an elec- bout to run over him. insistently ringing !the gong. When the sleeper awak- ened, he found a hoy in the same room coughing. heard with the same rhyvthm as that of the gong. It is significant of many dreams that pictures of onc type or an- other shade rapidly or merge into puent pictures. Sometimes the hunges take place by similarity or by analogy. lect State of Body is, as pointed out by s paid particular atten- ms which are reflections state of the hody of the Ircamer. In one case a sleeping person dreamed of an inflated cat bouncing on the floor. When he awakened, he found his own abdo- nien uncomfortably tense. Tt is part of the dream psychology to exag- te the actual conditions. merous cases are cited in which litions of digestion produced | hite dreams of a related charac- way, the function thing and its rhythm may be | reflected in dreams. Tn ons « a person dreamed of a s 11 fish, greenish yellow in color, Iving dead on a gravel drive- way, Its gill slits were placed in such position that it could not breathe. When the sleeper awaken- led he found that his own nose was stopped up and that he also could not hreathe, Almost cveryone dreams oceasion- | ally of mingling with a crowd while | seantily dressed. Sometimes such | |dreams are associated with lack of sufficient bed covering. The Freu-| dian interpreters are likely to as- sign other significances. Dr. Stiles does not believe with the Frendians that sex is the moti- vating factor in all or even in the majority of dreams. He is willing to grant that decent | living is a recent attainment of the | human race and that the normal| man has come fo regulate his con- | duct by self-diseipline, but he feels | that such primitive distinetions as | do exist are counter-balanced in waking ho by the best elements | of character and he is unwilling to | grant that similar counterbalancing does not oceur during sleep. Everyone recognizes, of conrse, the extremes to which analogies may | Lie carried in searching for sexual | | causes of dreams | — | tion to d of the o same Montevideo, Uru- | brought to port a weighing more than half a ton, and with a curious beak [full of sharp teeth. although sea | turtles as a species are toothle: | Fishermen at guay., recently | sea turtle 666 isa B Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It Kills the germs, escription for hat's correct.” “Did you and the in the box throughout the ance her counted on tha know. My word! “We've made amazin’ prog first et a friend | this morning, despite your - injured to the box, and the | feelings. You now have five differ- himself and went | €Nt People, any one of whom you After the second | can, with a little legal ingenuity, I stepped out- | convict of the crime.—in event, had a | YOu can get indictments against 1'4 m."” He leaned Dis h\!l\nl\ - : there's Colonel remain , don't y perform- | Vo. After of min: Colonel excused to the wash-room. aet, the Colonel and side into the ‘alley-way and £mok “What time, the first act over “Twelve-thirty or ther “aAnd where s this alley-wa situated 2” asked Vance. “As T r call, it runs along the side of the water to th “You're ri “And isnt very mear the into the alley-way’ “There s W o came would you say, was | head back medi- Miss St e quitc pos'tive she and you told the Major all ready to arrest ler | My demonstration of the mur- | derer's hipight could be thrown out ke v Gt Gl unds that it was intelli- which leads | 80t and conclusive, and therefore I Lad no place in a court of law. I'm (hat | sure the § would conen | *Secondly, 1 give you Captain I actu'lly had to use phys- 10 keep you from jailing Clair. | lid the you | cabouts. | deed, Iwere hoxes, used it Leacock “How long was the Colonel gonc 1 force fter the first act?” i “A few minutes—1 couldn’t say | the chap. You had a heautifil ¢ exaetly.” against him—to nothing of his SETR e enr- |delightrul confession. Amd 'if you | tain went met with any diffeulties, he'd help | Morlarty refle you out d adore having you con- | “I don't beile viet him came by “Thirdly, T act b Lovely You en minutes? t him “I couldn Fainly no 4Dy one of the others—a nore.” calth of circumst’ntial minute | an cmbarras de rich ., in fact. And any jury would delight in con- | him,—1 would, myself, if | PU dres: 2 of returned when the up on the sceond Leander the | hetter cage inst submit had a than almo perfect evidence— hien, allowing for a ten intermission, the ) away 20 it's possible victing only for the way h ended the in few: and “Fourthly, | with pride to p-on Moriarty Mrs. Platz. An perfect 1 Hils cumstntial casc, rly ghtrully hagl fh risin® T dilly T ¥ iy round house. You i The Colonel invites an timg | to the Midnight Follics, He paused, and gave Marklam a s Bt 1o of cynical affability hserve, please, cach minut point 1 gone, other chair and with clues vhatnots “Rifthly, T pr T have jus tnst him: and touchin'ly, giv more n exit ing little before half mem- | ¢ this quintette mects all the guilt: each requirements Ler of alley 1o | dem unipt is admitted, [one fulfills the 1 hurrics back |as to time, p opportunity, | nminutes | means, motive ind conduet The | ; only drawback, d° v 1 that all | quite innocent. A most n' fuct—bhut there you Now, i 11 the whom the the nds of pro up, but people slightest innocent, what's to Clair toid s Annoyin'. ain't it had lost heavily in . 1 up the akbi reports. ' pos'tively mothing to be hut to go on checking up these continued Vanes he indieat'ry e confirmat'ry 1inst i the spicion, ar Miss St done n's manipulation 1 him of crookedne could not im + what goal | 1< trying 1o reach by these ap parently ireclesant disgression and M was mygtified. t neither of us doubted for a mo there was method in his | rlicham, too originally he may walt until much Jater; | “Let's s ¥ before sneaking out | Ma do you say mused. “The | r's i the next in order. What | 1o tackli it? 1t shouldn’t take long iives near 10 Bere: and the entire alibi hinges on [ 13 the evidence, of the night-boy at his | 16 me!” He got|17 vy officor, e would have had a Colt 45: and he was probably a good shot.—He was most | some- |apartment-house.— Tt is one should be Give This a Whil | Here's the | “spot”’ Modes of the TWoment For winter sports Premet designs a three-quarter length coat for wear over knickers which button at the knee, The material is mauve tweed, col- lared with gray fox, A peach colored an- gora sweater goes with the costume. THIS MAKES 72; SEND IN YOUR SET OF ANSWERS Here is the last of the puzzles. 1t contains a number of faces are known in I3 pictur that trope cven better than in America. 1or instance, No, 72 is famous as kngland’s most eligible hachelor. W with the five p en you have filled in the answers helow, eding ones, to the Editor of The send this stp, Picture Puzzle Herald ember, until noon answers in to The Heraid tip of all, thic Now for the end of this contest. ke Wednesday you iuve 10 get your and the puzzle judge. most confidential judge, himselt could only about three every night, so if you do as good as that, you might of the ecasy While you may have a bit trouble with No. 7 vertical and e or two others, the balance exceedingly Horlzontal To accent Puffs up. Definite articl Ruilding mate To permit Measure of area Heroic. Therefore, To feel contrition. Short sleep at midday. To delive 0 put up a Lean-to. Very high mountain, Naked. “ine china. poker stake, Sells tn small quantitics to the consumer. Behold. To briag legal proccedings. Ethical. Evil, Biography. Marked with spots or lines. Dwarfs. Twisted together. Vertical Heavenly body To beat. econd note In scale o rest upon one's fect To scason. Diagonal. Brightly colored parrot fish, Morindin dyc. Examined. Portico. 31418, Merchant. Sport, variety of | ANSWER TO YE | [BTAILITTITC o AlBJA 160} G To chirp. To stupefy. Dim. Paroxysms. Performers. xible Destroyed by tion. "o send moncy in payment. To permit. lard fat. rdy. Bird similar to an ostrich. Curse, Upon. enth note in scale slow f— Picture Awards The first prize will be $10, the second $5 and the third and fourth prizes will be $2.50 each. Then there will be ten prizes of passes for two at the Capitol theater, good for any time during the week after the contest ends. | just as well hand in your answers and take | to you, it | the old radio stuff. | like them, or | This is a kind of a “Round Robin,” the $10 or the other $10 would be a burden you to Peter Crona who Now for « erack prizes. Of course, if you are in a position that can easily be arranged to introduce would greet the §10 and yourself with open arms, so to speak. “If you Lave tried these puzzies and like them, the nd write him a note.” matter, If vou don’t write about that, too. affair. The trusts that you will judge would be pleased to have you sit right down You see, he has to get the slant of the public on the o indificrent, please, please, pleasc get together word cama | that there was plenty of space today. so jndg tay with him for a few moments” while he will give you a few facts in order that the trunk line telephone calls might he relieved for the week= end football score rush. The pri 19th, nes of all winners will he announced Saturday, labeled. Just hetween ovember and the pictures will he Now, hunt™ in tonight's elassificd ads had fun? let’s have our little “hint you and me haven't we WRITE YOUR ANSWERS HERE disintegra- Submitted: by (Name) (Street Number) (City) Cretiiteeseseeseisteggeen lia da; du o m Ro to city insf intr Tar nis] clai wor one sec B Char Valog Lou e and Tows MON'