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¥ Léttisu Returns the Picture to 4 . Dicky What'Lillian said to Dicky when #he gave him ‘the uumounted pho- tograph of Edith Fairfax which he Bad;dropped 1" do not know for she #poke. in a voice which'was inaud- ible to me-in the hall below from which I had not had time to retreat before the two met. But Teply could have been heard on the yerandi. “Oh! can the comedy, Lil!" he ad- Sured her. “As usual you're exag gerating a very ordinary thing' Thers'was another murmur from Lillian accompanied by a derisive little laugh of the kind she herself calls-her “Brand. No. 1. warranted to remove the skin” That it hag seccomplished its purpose. T knew when Dicky exploded into a profaus efaculation” which would have Tor rified ‘his mother but at wlich Tn- Han only laugh=1 gleetully. Thon 1 his hal heard the violent and knew that he gomplétely worsted | From the viranda, where Mother | Braham had gone direcily from ti par. came a nervous call *“Margaret! Margaret! $hat noise? Did anyboly fall ™" *No, a. door ned upsta $eia her, hurrving out on weranda. As ] passed Katherie ated where she could command a §dew of the hall she gave me a litt! $od, patently a reassurance that « wras mindful of her promise to ees that Dicky had no cha 0 me alons until after dinn pasily 1 wondered if she had e pick up Edith Fairfax geaph, but prempt ponjecturs with th on th ghe could rot have known what the r was if she had scen me pick what va the !?m'r Graham's velce held & Bstinetly crabbed note as she gvered my explanation got lke to be startled. g the tremulovsness of due to her advancing age 1 :::‘:hleu her from sudden noises ## much #a Y can. But it is no easy sk with Junfor's emall-boy ex- @erance, Dicky’s masculine obtuse- d realiz- her : “R‘evelatio.ns of a W Dicky's | retreated | o does | Sequel To . it e” a New Serial - ~ nnnna ness and the tempestuotis tempera- [ RIEAD THIS FIRSTY ment of my faithful - but- poisy Katie. “Richard, of course, mother commented. “I haven't heard {him shut a door decently in years. When he was at home I used to punish him when he did it, but he !is not under my control now." | Her tones expressed the convie- | f1on that T alone was responsible for | Dicky's breaches of goed breeding. Heroically I repressed a smile which would have been fatal to a peacefus the while 1 wondered st asures ot discipline she | would approve of niv using in deal- with ler son. With a whimsical m of y at the receiving end terule held by me, 1 shot & | furtive glance at Katherine. Bue e had walked to the railing and standing with her back to us, e tly revelin in the view of and meadow dipping to ths distant ocean. There however, which told me that 5 a picture similar was Vistoni saling of the dinnér gong anoih=r epportunity for cap- comment, “That gl strikes {hat gong is if | | | down an irem qnor,” she lo anything with her. Margare The criticism ~vas justified. Katie tou encrgetic in her of {he delicate sound- | tek Tt omy mether-in-law 3 Sl ae T do that Katic nust be taken “as e It i3 im- | bl fo ehanse her, and leng ation ~ith her has taught us | that the good qualities of our little ! maid outwelgh the others, However. 11 wa cxperienced to attempt | any defense of her to my mother- 1 plarated her with a vague < to Katie. and was Dicky's descent of almost coincident far too King Features ndicate, Tne Deapite its- worries, fears and strite There's nothing quite so dear as life, ~—O0ld Mother } ature, Chatterer the Red Squirrel was it. & position to appreciate thi Nothing mattered to Chatterer it could but save his life. He was en the ground, under a little pile ot brush, gt-the foot of & tree. Just & little way from him Spite the Martén and Terror the. Goshawk wers quarreling over him. Chatterer wasted no.time whatever As soon a8 he'had fairly recovered his breath:Ne began to look arcund and consjder what the should do next. It wouldn't do to remain there Spite the Marten would be almost eertain to come and eniff at thas pile of brush. Then he would tear 4§t all apart. No, Chatterer must get away from there as quickly as he oould and as far as he could while e had the chance. His first thought was to run up @ tres and continue on wav in the treetops to the certain tree wherein was & hole in which he would be absoluely safe. That tree oouldn't’ be far. But to climb the tres wonld be to run the risk of sBowing himself to Spite and Ter- . Jt was bad enough te have one | these enemies after hi ve txo of them after ¥as too ch. So Ch T ed to look about en the ground of a tree down under th hed no means of know ¢ it went, but anything was bet- Jp than his present posifion. Eo thout more ade Chatterer slipped wn into that little hele. He found ;:’\".I‘, gallery running alo: nder und. It was a small #€ was a gallery buiit b 2r Wood Mouse. But aged to squeeze alor branch tunnel. He t followed this He discovered upward. Pres opening. Very poked his hecad way snd he loo 1 t1 could gee nothing of tem nor Terror the Grosha} N that made D 1t was ti he saw somethins heart beat with jo trees he had hoped to reach i and looked up. T ofs that meant. g1 ty snd rest and comfort Chatteres laoked this =av ani lo that way and look=d the other ¥e gerambled out of that hole ground and flashed uy “At the enfrance tn that Tale which was et oig enouzh fo fp ‘pass through eastly, n ke did a foolish sir, he did a foolish thir o4 that tongie of lis barked his &corn of for Terror tha Goshawk aud =oite the Marten. Then he whisked info the holec and down to a soff, com- fortablc bed at the bottom Tt was only a few minuies later yose, He ntempt 1 that. Chatterer heard claws rattling o on the bark of the tree. He knew Iy whose claws they were, but fhey didn't frighten him a2 bif. A lzter Epite the Marten = ittie round doorvay He ould ::-I paw in, but that was all. He|mouth, He tried to tesr the entrance larger with his great claws ltried (o tear t entrarce larger He fried to 04 wae tough for it was an old knothole. Finally ite zave up And that Chatterer won in the race for life, off to hunt fo 0 it was | mice (Copyright. 1925, by T T Burgess) The next Terror the Your Health How. To Keep It— Causes of Illness Goshawk " | | i | BY PR MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Ass tion and of Hy- | a, thy Health Magazine e atial stimulating prineiple {of both tea and coffee is caffein | of coffee enth of a gram atfein In addi- and rchiorogenic n and theo- Tea Not a Fopd | Prof. B 2 & AMcDowall of ¢ len points sidered The the out as in amount of the tea de- mlating action rticularly as relatek bram centers and to | the heart. Tt sometimes eanses m the blood pressure and wecidentail pover of - es of the authority nrestigators © cups of tea a person. might exentation, dia- headach Astringent nfused ton long, e considerabie. The tanuin and bring, digestion. moderite uitics with consumption of has no serious 15 an exceediugs An wnusnal in the tes property 1 tages vleasant, hifterness tea, and amount of that the © house gave my mother- | “The Escape of | » Dicky'a ] Jilts Staley Drummend, : ‘a’ wealthy slight quivering of her shoul- | | By Beatrice Burton of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Etc. Lily.. Lexington, ' epoilad - ohly daughter of the Cyrus Lexingtons, bachelor riuch older than herself, to marry” ber. . mother's chauffeur, | Pat France. Her parcuta and friends drop. her and she_goes to. live with Pat in a cheap little'flat and do her own housework. Pat- has invented a new kind of | piston ring, and he and Roy Jetter- son ' rent--a tiny machine shop where they intend to make it-and market it. - Pat works three or four nights a week, and'he and Lily have little to spend, for he has put every- thing fnto the piston ring.: So Lily has a very dull time of it, and be- gins to regret her hasty marriage. However, she still is ‘in love with Pat and wildly jealous of his former sweetheart. Elizabeth Ertz. One day she meets her chum, Sue Cain, down town, and Sue invites her to a cara party. LiJy nesds some new clothes for it, and has no money to buy them, and when Sue tells her ‘that | Staley is still in Jove with ler, it | occurs to her to telephone him. ta- | ley pays for the clothes with his own. check, which is later seen by | Florence France, Pat's eister, vwho is bookkeeper in the shep where Lily_buys them. Lily keeps on see- ing Staley, Wity urges lhier to leave Pat, and one day bumps into Roy Jetterson, whose wife, Sadye 15 a great friend of beth Ertz. Sadye hears about Lily's carrying-on, oo, but none of these people tells Pat amything. He finds out sbout the affair between his wife and Sta- ley when he discovers a jeweled watch that he sent her for a Christ- | b present. Pat and Laly quarrel, and ¢he goes home. Affer a menth She tapped on it Lightly and -Pat Don't ‘you take her home in my car'” Sadve called softly -from the He seemed to be looking the depths of ler heart sout way inte and her “You just don't know how to n &pent in her father's house, which |doorway, as the two-went down the |tell the truth, do yon?” he asked. 1S not £o luxurious as it Was, owing |steps. *“That woman can’t ride in | "I wonder §f you ever will™ fo Mr. Lexington's business re-|my car, Pat'" And then ne turced away from verses, Lily pays a visit to Pat and | Behind it a few sto0d Roy's |her and went out of the little finds Elizabeth in his apartment. [own car. and as Pat started cown | bright untidy store and down the helping him to clean it. She goes | the sidewalk towards it, Lily pulled |ctreet. Lily coald hear him whistling home, congents to see Etaley's | him back. "I won't ride in either of | Sue's favorite piece, “Blue Hea- lawyer about a divorce. Then Staley backs a company that buys Fat out their cars"” decared. “You take me to a drug store or some place ven,” as he went. She stood at the door, watching for next to mnothing, and. filled |where I can felephone Gtaley. He'll [for Staley, and thinking how ehe | with eympahty for him, she goes |come and get me would have liked to follow Fat into to see him again. §he finds MM 8t | @no g2iq fhat to hurt Fat, Fut | the darkness " her chin the Jettersons’, and with hiM 18| ,¢ 4t 414 hurt him, he gave no cen | “He's going back te The Ertz” Elizabeth. The sight of her enrages | or 1o “An vight " he apewered. fo. |she told herself, wretchedly. “He's Lily, and she .oeging to,shake her | aiieerartsy: ara awans sround. o |in love with her now, and eo he and acold her and threaten her 3¢ [y SOHERRT A SRRE hates me Flie duscit. leane Faly alons In ence they walked down to | NOW GO ON WITH THE SIORY |the corner wher> a red vase'and a | On a warm March day. tome three CHAPTER LVIIT blue vase shone out from a drug | Weeks later, a plain, cheap little 1t Mrs Cyrus Lexington had be.n |store window white envelope with her name writ- told that her daughter,” Lily, could “Pat, T really came to let vou |fen. acr it in verv beautiful claw ar another woman and shake |know how sorry I am about the pis- | handwriting, came to Lily in the her and ecream at' her like a fish- | ton ring floppinz,” Lily said, when (Morning'’s mail wits, she mever would have be- |{héy were near the corner. “I am | 'The writing had a familiar leck, Yeveq it sorry—terribly, terribly sorry " nd suddenly she remembereq where e had scen 1t before—on the gro- cery slips from Mrs. France's gro- cery store. It was Pat's mother's, writing . The letter within had no heading. It started right off with a sentence that went sraight-te the point “Pat 15 getting ready to give up 1 his flat, and there are two or three ¢ re in it A pale-pink iffon elip, a lavender silk cushion, and a box of things that vou used 1o make up vour face with. Also a k and a silver cigarét box. T sup- s the ' cigaret ‘box 1s yours. I cannot imagine a woman owning & She would have sald “Impossible!” Hadn't she brought Lily ‘up to' be a lady” Hadn't she sent her to the very best day schools? Hadn't she He did not answer. He seemed to have nothing to say to her, this man who had once cared for no other person in the whole wide been taught to be polite and Well | gorg but her. He just walked along bred? She certainly had’ .| as it she had.not spoken i And 1t anyons had told Staley | yoire not very volite, ave vou?” | Drummond that the lovely, tlower- iy, o a abcolutely for | like girl he was going to marry Just | p oy extremely impolite, not to say as soop as she was free from her | gie <% RO HIPR AN et ] unfortunate marriage, could behave | een in the Jettorsons' houce o e ey WP AN che remembered—an ehe : ? Pkt wanted to remeaber of that ecene ' Lils, hereelf, could gcarchly be- /| WaRted to remegber of that ecene lisve that she’was doing what ehe |—Was the way EHzabeth Extz ha was doing—shaking The Ertz until | t2ken hold of Pat's arm, as if he r v her clal property. She | whiskey flask, but if it yours, her teeth fairly rattled, and shriek- |Were her spe sk, b t is yours, ing-at her to let Pat alone or she'd |8round her'small"even ~tecth @5 lplease let me know. And please know the reason why! she thought of it come after the things " “This 15 a torrible thing to de.”.| “Pat, ARE you crazy about that | Tt was eigned esimply “Mrs. &he thought vy down deep in her | Ertz?” ghe asked. “You know, Pat. France mind, under the rage and the jeal- |we once loved each other ‘a very| Lily leaned back in her chair and ousy that were shaking her just as |great deal. T love you more than I |blew a long plume of cigaret smoke was ehaking the little nurse |ever shail love anybody again—and 1at the ceiling, Both tha flask nd then, in the midet of her |it makes me wildly jealous to think and the cigaret cace belonged to furv, ehe felt Pat's hands on her,(of her daring to lav her hand on [her. They had belonged to Staley and his touch was like magic. In- [your arm like th Drummond and he had given them stantly all the anger and madness | Then Pat did answer her. “You're | to her on one of their secret lunch- went ont of her and she turned to [What people call ‘a dog in the man- |eon parfies him and buried her face against|ger, if you'll excuse me for saving | She remembered that his initials his shirt. She stayed there, trembling | such a thing to you,” he eaid, in a [were on them, too, and that she had and sobbing, clinging to him until | flat, level tone. “You don't want[net smcked all of the cigarets in the | he pyshed her very gently away anyone else to have me. You want |case or touched any of the liquor in from him, to go through with this divorce and |the flask €he gaw then that Sadye and Roy |marry Drummond, and then have | 5he had seen them when he took Jetterson had come into the hall by |the satisfaction of knowing that I'ra [them out of his pocket one day at of the dining room, and were [#till unhappy about you. You want the Park Lane restaurant, and had | standing in the doorway, taking in|me to promis: not to gce Elizabeth | 2dmired them. “The case is too the scene witn wide-open eyee, &s again, don't you’ lsmall for 2 man's case,” Staley h.d they might hive taken in an excit- | That was exactly what Lily would |told her, and pushed them across ing motion picture. Sadye was |have liked to have him promise But |the table to her. “Keep them both— chewing something that she had in ehe was ashamed to confess it, o | like fo think that vou have some- her mouth and there was greass on 'she just tossed her head and van |thing of mine” Sadye aiways “tasted” |ahead of him into the drug store While ehe was thinking about him when ehe was cooking He stood outside the booth while | the telephone 1ang, and running to Pat's eyes went from her to them, | she telephoned Staley and asked |answer if, she found him waiting and then back to her and Elizabeth [ him to come for her for her on the wire. It was a mar- L Ertz. “Have you lost vour fnind,| Then she went cut into the emall |Velous day for a drive, he said, and Lily’’ he asked “You'd no right to| cluttercd, brightly - lighted store, j he was going to take the whole day {touch her. Shes never done a thing [ where ghe had always traded when | 0ff and go out into the country if H ou™ she was a housewife in this ordinary 2 certain beautiful young lady The nurse had not said a word, | neighborhood of nice, pleasant or 1. | would go with him. He had eome- bur she was breathing hard, as if | nary folks thing to show her, he added. The druggist epoke pleasantly to | “Something T 'had made for you,” her now, and then elanced sharply | ¥ , and Lily, always thrilled at from her to Pat. Evidently he had |the thought of getting sqme new heard bits of the gessip about them. | piece of jewelry from him, fairly ‘Don't wait with me.” Lily €a1q | tmlled as she answered = that she to Pat. wishing that she had tele- | would adore to spend the day in the yhoned for a cab instead of Staley. | country—which was certainly not For one thing, she was not cazer to | her 1dea of the place to apend any £2e him that night, and for another, | time at all ever. She hated the coun- e did not want him to find Pat | trv. Especiallv at this time of the here with her when he arrived in | vear, when 1t waz all mud and bare she had be:n running a race, and for onee her hair was rough and tumbled where Lily had shaken it loose frem its pins. Her white uni- form was rumpled, and from it came a faint smell that was like the odor of the hospitals, where ghe spent so much of her time Lilv giggled through her tears “How can vou itke a girl who uses antiseptics for perfume?” che asked, locking up at Pat with her lovely | Lis car. He would wonder what ghe | wet bushes. 1 the way in which | eyes wide and wet, but crinkled with | had come to zec Pat tor. and &he | “I hope you're not planning a laughter at the corners. would not know what fo fell him. | pienie anywhere” she greeted Sta- Fat's lips tightened and hls face to vour Ertz and vour | 1oy, when he came driving up to the | hecame more white and grim than Settursmae, T st hecs | ouss i Wiz open e & it kons “Let's |and read a movie magazine.” late it bad been 3. second before canze the ground is too for example | tringent | his profile. 1t seemed more sharp- | “T'll stav here until vou're gafe in | that fhat talex's favorita form the ear he £214 stabhornle, and | of vinic—the kind where he could ctay he Aid cook a lot of food over a smoky chow, 1in Please don't 15t Sfalev pee vou' " | fire rugged | Bhe had to plead with at 12zt | Al pizht wedl find @ tavern h h s nd “pep.” |'H wonder what on earth 1 c:ms 4 then, or & ng,’ he agreed, a “Rov, could T borrow vour car t0 (fn see vou for—and I don't want |23 he leane ard to start run Lily home asked. and | him to know that T did 2ee you { motor he slipped a2 box into her without a word, Fov nodded Fat looked ¢ her with solemn | hand Within 3= the most beavutifue Beside him, Sadve i her bun eves “Listen 1o me,” he €214 | sapphire and diamond bracelet ghe low apron, and holding a vellow don't vou be straight with | had ever eeen | mixing bowl and I n? Why don't vou tell him “And yon desizned it, T know!™ ple bosam, 10oked Lily up and down | vou eame down hiere 10 tell me vou | <he cried, looking at him with eyes ith great diafavor in her eves. She | were sorry, aho it 1 on ring he- | tliat e e | seemed to want Lily to know how i ing a failur? Not thal it was a fail- | darli RAally 1o wae Svot T | thoroughly ske disiked her at that | ure, exactly. But it sasicl any bet- | tul, said to herself. slipping it morent. ter than the one his company have, {over lier gloved hand. He was al- “Never had a scene like that in {and they have the money fo adver- | ways ing of her. Alw LMY Hoise Barorer T heard ner | fise {hei push it —and Roy and | thinking of vways to spend m#ey on say to The Erfz as she followed Pat ([ haven't. We hit ot more fhan we | her And he hest of if was out of fthe housc wito the early [ conld chew, thal'z 211 ihat he had so much of it to spend! ‘smmg darknes. |‘ “All Tight—but please don't let | Bl | Sadye's antomebile wwas standing | him s> von. w0 Lily hegged And =0 it happened that it was not i front of the house—the one that | “T don't want, him to he i#h | umtil the next day that Lily remem | Rov had baught for her i the 4 me—and 1f vonre out T bered Trance's note agam ¢ | =hen the La France piston ving had | can think of sor fotell him * | “he rememired 3t late g the Jooked like & sure-fige gucces: ml Fat zave her @ gtill decper Jook, | morninz whea she vas making the not talk all this over right now,” he But, although she bo t one and | wet and cold fo sit on—or even to | caid auetly, and then he turned to | climbed up on 2 hizh staol and pre. | stand on while we boil steaks and 2o that Lily had a swift look | tended to read 1. he did not stir | make coffec and- things ™ £he knew bed 1o her room..4nd abe did Lot get dressed to go down to the - Derdy. SR 1. Bhould the' guest be ‘miet at the. train? : - 2. It is necessary for the hostess to be there in perwon?. - - 3: If unable to go, what is.cour, teous? s ‘ The Answers 1. Yes. . 5 3. 'If the guest is a woman, yes. 3. Send some other womau of the family. BEAUTY How and Why By 'Ann“Alysis fhe fingernails are horny. -plates similar in substance, though not in | s=m——— appearance, to the hair and out- side layer of the skin: The.nalls may be beantitul or not, according. to their shape, color.and the quality of care we give fhem., i Though we can- not alter the general - gtructure of the hand it- self, by deft mapipulation of the nail we may do much to offset-ap- parent defects of ill-shaped fingers. A broad, flat nail, emphasizing broad. cetubby, short fingers, .by careful training .may be.made to assume an interesting length and shape 20 that | the fingers seem longer and slenderer. However. one must be careful not to ‘overdo this shaping proceas, for, if the nail departs too far from the line of the tip, 1t is not so good Allow long, then with a fine file, shape it to a rounded ‘oval or filbert out- line, if you wish to camouflage a too-square finger tip. A . more pointed oval adds apparent length to some types of fingers, while a rather blunt finish is more becom- ing to others | Menus for the Family BREAKFAST — Sliced bananas with ready to serve cereal, cream, plain omelet with! tomato eauce, eggless muffing, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Vegetable chowder, toasted crackers,. cress and -orange salad, old-fashioned bréad pudding, milk, tea * DINNER—Pot: roast: of fish steamed potatoes in: parsley butter, creamed cabbage, ‘lémon meringue pie, milk, coffee ye ‘Any thick fist stéw can’ be used for the pot ropet.‘Cod, halibut, sal- mon or’ haddock are ususlly well- known while swordfish, tuna end 1urbot are delicious when available. ‘Pot Raast 'of Fish Two pounds halibut steak, ¢ table- spoons bacon fat,|1 onion, 2 cups tomato puree, 1 tiblespoon minced parsley, 2 teaspoons sugar, 1.2 tea- spoon galt, 1 bunch leeks, ¢ pepper- corne. s Melt bacon fat in heavy jron ket- tle or pot-roaster. Add onion finely rainced and cooked until brown. Sear tish on both #ides in hot fat and onion. Add-pargley, sugar, salt, peppercorns and leeks finely minced to tomato pulp and bring to the bolling point. Pour over tish in ket- tle, cover closely and cook over w low tire for one and one-half hours. Serve on a hot platter surroundea by the sauce, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS| 666 13 & Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. the nullito grow. quite - 1. . 12. 14. 15. 16. 18, 9. 20. 28. 27. 28 30, 34. 36. 37. &8, 89, 4. 42 43. 45.: 46 47. It Kills the germs. I 1. “There ‘15 & hint of climbing . waistlines. in i the method Doucet uses in attaching ‘the fared bottom partto the ‘top portion of this wrap- around coat. The mates rial {s mauve colored crepe romain- and thp fur collar and cuffs are dyed mauve.to match. The collar .is a smdll rounded shawl afair tied .with a bow ‘of-the coat material. The full sleeves -are ' gathered into the fur cuffs. All the questions in the puzle r efer to Biblical facts. Your famil- larity with the Bible, or lack of it, will be the deciding factor in deter- mllnlnz whether it is easy or diffi- cult, HORIZONTAL ‘Who interpreted the dreams of Nebuchadnezzar and the hand- writing on the wall for Bel- shazzar? | Who was the favorite wife of Jacob? Ope in cards (p!) Age. Genus of roses To emulate. Genus of grasses including the oat ’ 'To knock lightly. Hypthothetical structural unit. Having the power of union You and me. To 'make amende Vehicle, Betore. . Father. At the foot of what mountain di4 the Jews celebrate the festival of the golden calf? Who led the Israelites cut of Egypt? To draw by corroding lines on metal. Venomous snake. Davenport. Part of verb to be, Upon. Preposition of place Egg of a louse. Seventh note in scale Who was the favorite King David? Point. of compaex. Dross or slag. Lent. son of VERTICAL “Who slew the Philistine giant West Toonerville News Item. (“Fontaine Fox. 1928, The Bell Syndicate, luc Goliath? A . 2. Sour. 3. Born 4. Exists 5. What tribe took care of the tabernacle and . helped the priests? 8. Pertaining to the region be- neath the tip of the tongue. 7. Abbreviation for credit. 2. Opposite of cold. 7 2. Who &0ld his birthright for a mess of pottage? 10. A failing in duty. 13. Answers. 16, Collectio! 17. Farewell! 22. To glide rhythmically 24. Stoneworker. 25. Pertaining to an acid cbtained from lemons, 26. Hurrah! 28. Dower property 29. To explain, 30. Chairs 32 Fatiated 34. Looplike structure 35. Coffin cloth 38. Kimono sash of facte 40. Also. 43. Measure of area 44. Mother Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle [RIEHIAIBI LT [TVIAITIEID] [EILIOIPIEISIMT]I [RIAIDIE] [TICIAIRTNIGIEIS] MEDARRER . By Fontaine Fox. . THE MYSTERY OF SLIM EVAKTS GOING AROUND ALL WINTER WITK NO ©VERCOAT AND FINALLY BEEN EXPLAINED ; A COLD so HE: COULD SPRING “THAT HEARD DOWN “To “THE Bla CITY. BARE HKEADED MAS HE WANTED “To CATCH WISECRACK HE — e