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~OF GOTTEN MEN Eby Cdison Marshall > Released by NEA Serv ght. 1923 dy Little, Brow BEGIN HERB TODAY arson, Alaska the fact Dorothy from wh tragic launet river, Wh atrikes a ree darkness Dorothy home on taints, i NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Mrs. Peter Newhal Walton Way Augusta, Georgia pers found on dead picked up on b iden Peter Newhall of Augusta. tho known locally by another nam Death resulted from drown mutilation by reefs. He left tions for immediate burial that | the ble you be notified and personal effects | last. T be sent you. The re being for-| dragged ‘warded you. Body was embalmed and given decent burial by my crew near Place of finding. If I can be of any | did not other service please command me ould not Captain Johansen, | Ivan m, in these past mont Steamer Norwood. | she he gun to lean—was in high communion with the god: his vio. lin tucked under his clearcut chi vingly in his studio. at last by the phone bell and steps of Nora, the sec went to answer it. A he servant came to the 2 th and bh h he had h ride on the Savannah sing, the ship s hurled int at her gram then P Alaska, \ ad and around } ends w n The her brown cheeks y of man fy him as nauous mouth was ¢ Geor AKON nstruc als even o! nammy and th me to comfort her Just yesterday, It seemed to her | In girlhood, she had tried to imagi: how she would receive such news ax thia—the sudden taking-off of some-| She one she loved sharp ring of the She had loved this man who had/ the shuffling ied, No one dared deny that, It was|ond girl, wh true that he had often failed to un-| moment lat derstand her—that he was careless | doorway of her needs, that he had been in-| po; henitated, started sanely jealous without cause—but| struct Nora to repeat © menange, she had loved him and had continued | got up and went to the ‘phone her to love him thruout all those cold, | ett | hard weeks before the tragedy, after} ye. rae: bat me his drinking had ceased being a Joke| Rai 2 be a i re a meena to her and her friends and had be-| (00 0 atarting vole come a subject avoided in his pres.) ESOT tor eaa it, in the papers,” be ence. He had failed to understand] eeTi woahetee et Bes; to recognize the artist-eif'in het! ue seake you feel ay worse to| that demanded expression and com fs von teas her love, her hand, a few of her best | .', eared atmnly years—-indeed, all she had to give rh var iran Leng At present It did not occur to her| uid come out later just as we that she had perhaps falled to under ou can ‘phohe me when you want mee ies, 0. me,” he went on, in his instinctive, She read the message again st had} weil-bred effort to put her at been sent from Alaska, the far Besguebh> bc: irgy cana vated North, thousands of weary miles Sicmpdear soebed =o Rete ms distant from her and thousands of Doin Ay Wags Tan alveadal miles farther from the corner of the| . } earth where she had thought he had|° i, been hiding. She had not dreamed) 4,4 she heeumivaston i yen but that he had fled to South Amert-|\0) 1 think it. will hate: beak ca, as Ivan Ishmin had advised. Cer-| ja; + | tainly he had gone to Savannah and had boarded the disreputable trader of which Ivan had told him; but some adventure of the journey had fetched him up in the far North he p was aroused | to Ins then | othy on I her really want you to come | Ivan hung up, and as she walted! jfor him to come, she sent Nora after | the latest paper, She had not ex | pected that the news would be made | public so soon. She found the article rather than in Rio de Janeiro. The | on the first page and eaw with reliet| letters Ivan had given him to his| 0? age an sreat friends in the Brazilian capital|'" 508 Sharely tour secember 2 letters to facilitate his flight back | The boty ot Daler Newhall pj re to the frontier had evidently been) gusta, Georgia, was picked up dead Mo or monthe ast Dorothy had tivea | 0 the beach on the north coast. of | in constant fene of his capture. Such | 4!88Ka peninsula, He was a victim of news she had expected in the tele. | wreck of the cannery-boat Jupi. gram today, that in spite of Ivan's| tet that went to pleces on the rocks heroic efforts to cover up the fugi pi lg lay a ae sexi: tive's tr My Modo eda: VE gah amet alec nat ashe: | solved him at last. Ivan had with.) ‘ess | —_—_—_——————_ | ‘The above news ci FURNITURE OF WALNUT | shock HAS MANY ADVANTAGES One Is That Scratches Do Not Mar Its Beauty. pa “i By MARIAN MOORE ‘There's nary an excuse for un-/| tidiness when one has all the fa vorite toilet articles handily ar- | ranged In the spacious drawers of this extremely good looking dress- } | | me as a grea » the entire city today. Mr. | whall was a member of one of the outh’s most ancient and distin guished families; and altho the last part of his life had been overtake with tragedy, his friends reme him for the good friend, chivalrous gentleman, and social favarite that he was thruout the years of his young manhood. | Peter Newhall was born in this 13 § years ago, the son of Colonel New f jhall of Gettysburg fame. He was| ing table. Every feminine mem- | married two years ago to Miss Doro ber of the family from the little of Bavanns | flapper to Great Aunt Sue who Es sapeercpn ‘high Societe always keeps herself such a busy- | aeeeeeee ae Cowne body, would be proud to arrange | {ll occurred in a motor-boat party on her marcelled locks here, alded by |‘ Savannah river a year ago last | all the dresser has to offer. But |*U™™mer. According to testimony | supposing that mirror could reftect | Prousht out at the Inquiry, Peter had fn the picture all that {t really |22USht a bitter quarrel with Mr. Ivan | does reflect in the room, Directly | #8™in, a violinist of international opposite you would see a big chit. |£™e Who was spending the season | fonier with a tip mirror on top: at {St Aiken, South Carolina, When the | the left there would appeor twin MO” Were at the verge of blows, Paul | |Sarichef, Ishmin's secretary, inter-| | fered in Ishmin’s behalf, and turning on him in a fury, Newhall was heard | |to threaten to throw him out of the} | boat into the river | | Ishmin himself was the sole’ ob- | server of the tragic outcome of the | quarrel, and torn between grief at| the death of his secretary and loyal: | ty to his friend, Newhall, it was with | |the greatest difficulty that his testi. mony was drawn from him at the in- quiry. Later this same night, Ish- min wag aroused by angry voices, to his jand he left his stateroom to find his| Bunny and his wife, Mrs. Bunny, | |secretary, Paul Sarichet, and New-| | hall struggling on the deck; and be-| |fore he could Interfere, Newhall had | hurled the unfortunate, Russian into| the water. Ishmin immédiately dived | to rescue him, but he saw the man 0 down for the third time before he| could reach his side. Almost crazed | | with grief, Ishmin spent most of the |night in the river trying to rescue | his friend's body, but tho once he| saw it drifting, he lost it in the dark ness and it was never recovered Not even the officers of the law, tho making every effort to appre hend Newhall, believed that it was a wilful, premeditated murder, New- } | A Lovely Walnut Dre: beds separated only by a stand, and | jaround very, very slowly. The Tangle (Aw intimate « ry Of inmermost emotions reveuled by private betters) — LETTER FROM MIS. GRAVES HAMILTON LIE PRESCOTT ur marr Now ated them er wedding is to be much grander, and wer expensive society I am very mu mart fferent age. Sh since she Htable and Karl seems to returned home, She and nagging. uch a eads poor father gid t broke the engage that Ameri particu! 1 know his old } very h stayed an i he does afte itteburg and how Kari is to don’t think he was ever n England. He just here because he had e needed him. ome appy over that I suggested that Karl and she go to your anniversary party, and «he was quite impatient at t id she didn’t understand why . to ma n. § ho her appearance at party just because she hap. pened to be your sister—sald in a very nasty that Karl could go if he wanted to. your way Lesiie, I think Alice is making a | great mistake, because not only your father and I, but nearly every oni in Pittsburg where you girls grew up knew that Karl was very much in love with you before your mar riage. Now that he has transferred that affection she ought to be quite natiafied to let bygones be bygones Instead she is always bringing it up and making Karl uncomfortable. If look ovt she will suc ceed in turning his thoughts back to youfor, Leslie dartin; you were very sweet and charming while we she doesn’t eretly wondered if this were not, after all, an indication that what he had begged for was his at last—her heart the sugges | ummate of her much speaks of a ha y a to us are very often, ways been suc and we are 1 daughter #0 that you happ versary, Do with i th that will you the greatest 5 ure. It nt with all the love YOUR MOTHER AND FATHE Pr, 8—~You anked tht or bin but The check from father ou on what it ou please the aive her me » well 4 1 me ve pyright, 1934 B. A. Hervive, Ine.) Letter from James Atherton. TOMORROW; don to Sally CUTS EXPENSES {City Comptroller Reduces | Budget Appsopriation With steadily ingreasing dutle 4nd a growing clty, City Comptrol ler Harry W. arroll is again mak jing a reduction in his office force |this year, in his report to” the budget committee. | In 1923 the salary budget of the | comptroller’s office wan $62,32 | This was cut to $50,820 in 1924 and | he 1925 budget has been cut to $49,020. In 1911 } the comptrolier’s staff numbered 33 men, ‘Thia has been cut 29 in the 1926 budget enti mate | ‘The policy of this office is to} reduce the number of men, increase | efficiency and pay better salarie Comptroller Carroll said School Board Is. After Car Taxes The school board want« the $200,000 street railwa eat, it proclaimed to | a share of tax inter a resolution Al CAPPY RICKS Written for The ign t 4 being fired “Well, did the th, the maritime uired They did, Ed ng was too inf Star ship to carry yth je your hust ed rates ™ of it. t jelines what I w have moan you my word that in his increase tonnage one of th freight nolicitora entered the picture field! “Yes, air, he & raft of motion pletu: wh ne and che known would en “to dra motion ted to deliver e film) in Lon films? not.” nen do neems to filme in away from or the poop arr Had her love gone out to him in| Passed at ite regular meeting Friday./$15.000 Is Voted for Des these past, bleak, miserable months of mourning? He fascinated her, master violinist from the East. And thére was no barrier between them now. The divorce Ivan had urged upon her would not sary; the news from far Alaska had | made her free. {Continued in Our Next Issue) ADVEN OF THE Olive R “I declare!” said Daddy. Daddy Cracknuts and Mrs. Cracknuts, got on wheel in Mister Zip's amusement park where the Twins were work ing Daddy sat down and his wife sat down beside him and they put their feet on a little place below the seat and held on tight Then the wheel his wife to turn And the more the wheel turned the higher Daddy and Ma went There were 10 seats on the Ferris wheel and every one of the seats was full. Nancy had Turtle and his Into one of began helped Mosey Mud son, Mosey Junior, th seats, and Ben into,another of the seats with their nephew, Cutie Cottontail, between them, and Markie Muskrat and a friend into another seat, and Grand daddy Frog and six of his grand- children into another seat, and Mis. | ter Drake and his wife, Mra. Duck, into another seat, and the Ferris wheel was ag full as a can of corn. Really it did seem that if people eens now be necen: | the Ferris! at the right an overstuffed chair and a chaise longue, The chiffonier and the beds have thelr broad surfaces matching those of the dressers, that {s, matched panels of walnut. The exquisitely grained wood shows up to unusual advantage when trent- ed in this manner, and {8 all the more lovely when bordered by a contrast of darker wood, as has been placed around the drawer edges. Walnut, as you may or may not know, needs no stain to give ft a richer exterior color, for no matter In what shade It may hap: | pen to be, you cnn seratch It deep- ly and still see the same color. (Write to Marian Moore, care of this newapaper for advice or infor- mation about ‘home furnishing or decorating, dressed envelope for reply.) Question: 14 overstuffed ture good for small rooms7—H, 1, Anever: The heavy kind Is too massive, better have one or two lightweight overstuffed pieces. Copyright, American Homes Bureau, furnl- sending stamped ad. | hall was deeply under the influence of liquor at the time, and it is be- lieved that he committed the crime in a burst of drunken rage, Accord ing to Mra, Newhall's testimoriy Newhall had awakened from a drunk- én stupor the next morning with no memory whatever of elther threnten- ing Sarichef on the deck or of throw: jing him overboard. He fled to West. | ern Alaska—far out on the peninsu-| Ja toward Siberia—and the above telegraphic dispatch completes the tragle story | She read the plece thru, then washed her tear-reddened eyes and alted for the sound of Ivan‘s long, jlow roadster on the ¢ She ro. solved at once to keep a brave front jin his presence, mostly hecause of a great good-sportsamanship that Peter! had found nnd loved in her long ago, and partly, perhaps, for purely| ferninine that were-wby a long stretch of the imayination—al mout disloyalty to Poter's memory. Sho had always cured to appear at her best In ivan's presence, She se Tender Skins Need Cuticura Soap And Cuticura Ointinent, They do much to clear the face and hands of sunburn, eat rashes and summer eczernas and to anon eep the akin soft and clear under all conditions of exposure, “Ontte fold Tal rT asa {\ Rat fy tH haat i i School Attorney Henry W, Pe }wan instructed to consult with t jelty and state attorneys in an effort }to decide whether litigation be/ atarted | Contracts for science equipment were divided among nine bidders. | The total coat is to be $2,448.90, A two weeks’ adjournment was voted. | TURES Ww | ccuting | the | every family “This certainly is a fine view.” J kept dimes on th epending their nickels and way they were doing, | Mister “ip, the fairyman, would jcertainly’ make two fortune: Well, the wheel kept turning and} Daddy and Ma kept going on up| and up and up. | | Right over thelr heady were Mis. | ter and Mrs. Bunny and right over jthe Bunnys were the Mud Turtles, “My goodness, Pa,” Daddy Crack jnuts and his wife heard young Mosey Mud Turtle say, “where are we going? I'm getting nervous. I |was never high up in all my life —I'm getting a bit dizzy my-| |self, son, came old Mosey's voice, | “But we'll be all right. We've never | had such a chance before to see the} |world, and dear knows when we| ; will again! Just look! You can se clear over to the creek from here} and almost to the barnyard! We! |must bring your mother and let her | neo what a fine place the world is, | The next thing Daddy Cracknuts | and hia wife heard was Mrs. Bunny ying to her husband, “Oh, Ben, I do think traveling like this is so im. | proving! How could you ana I ever| have seen what the world looks like | if we hadn't come today? Look! You can see the sass-patch garden | from here, and over there is where the watercress grows, 'n' there's the cabbage patch 'n’ everything!’ And everybody on the ols wheef was oh-ing and ah-ing, and what a fine, grand view it was, 80 when Daddy Cracknuts and Ma got te the top, they thing. “T declare!" said “hia is certainly a fine viov mantha! I'm au ly glad you saved) 30 cents this week from th washing | #0 we could come." | “Well, Daddy, did you have a nice time?" asked N the squirrel gentleman wife were gong home. “Scrumptious! said Daddy. | and and Daddy that wheel, It's worth tho money." | When they got home to their} house in the maple tree, Mra, Crack: | nuts caught her husband's arm. | “Daddy! Look!” she cried. “We've | Kot 100 times the view hern £ om our | own window, and it’s free, We can | ae ever so much farther than wo! uld on that old wheel thing! | ‘So we can,’ wali Daddy soberly, | t's Just bockuse we pald for it| we liked it bette } ers | emerg | Des Motne | abandonment ‘nounced he M Kellersberger, |home of Philip laire ranch owner. father 35 years his junior clared said the same |berger in |step-daught {with a butcher knife, Ma |ting breakfast,” ek when | this y woman “That's a fine view from the top of |hand found my mother on the flour knif berger [Wealthy farmer and Mrs Moines Road Job The board of Friday yoted “cy om ravine county comminst 6,000 as an fi action of the board*was unant ne work on the fill must 1 this summer, to permit of t the winter rains Co Audit The be finish D. EB. ¥ no desire the work, but that he bilin out of it on advice attorney can on CATER FOR ROYALTY LONDON.—Trad British royal wants get official |r ition in the form of w sued annually, And the luck: nen are not slow to advertise fact that they In the la who with roe mil first nell goods to the Convicts Child’s Testimony Imprisons Woman <8) \ —=" Winifred Kellersberger SRIDIAN, Tex., July 12.—On the word of a little 7-yearold girl Mra, Nora Broche ts serving a 20 r term In prison for murder The child js Winifred Kellers. | bereger dna the milion She and her mother, Mrs were stayiu, Bosche, 65, Boscho ¥ orsberger. was his second of Mrs, Ke wife. Mrs. Kellersberger was shot to ying | death, Mrs. Bosche was arrested. she had killed Mrs, Kellers f-defense, insisting her had approached her she a Her defens emed impregnable untt! Winifred was put on the si “Mother was in the kitchen ge she testifiod, “when n came in and said, ‘Tam his }koing to kill you.’ “Mother tried to explain fired, hitting her on the “The woman-—-there she sits waked into the hall and mother fol. | lowed, still asking to plain, 1 heard another let her ex and 1 dead. buteher “My mother had no he jury heard a The prosecution Mrs, Bosche for 1 convicted contended — that blamed Mrs, Kellers trouble between the sche, But the | © by Peter B. Kyne—Another Com ane — Out he rock pile, ema th mat the bridge de uth mute into the same state teward. of the om and th most ed. cture COIN FOR FILL because some onion: ted from Bermuda thru bill! ugO we tra to the conc of everything and added. s the exceptions rame 1 thought to our Well, one of men sex our brilliant og shipment of « from Oregon t road company « th com shipment railroad «sued a thru bill of Iadin: nd guaranteed refr stina ‘Of course th tion In a Pickw minus of the the terminus ath idiot meant destina: ckian sense ter. nipment inste of of the entire journey, London. The Blue § company isn't operating frigerated steamers, so we jose dow goned New Y rail ar ples ordinary at ork and sailed ad no contract with the rail Nps to furnish refrigera. we didn't furnish it AS j luck we i have it, the appl aden jluck would e it, the apple-laden steamer kicked off her wheel in mid | an and banged around for three before she was found and road ¢ | tion and nwhile the apples had rotted. he minute the steamer t to | port the rescuing steamer libeled her }and sued for $200,000 worth of salv age, and then the apple shippers }eame down on us for the value of pples, We referred them to allroad company i the rail road company said it had furnished refrigeration and referred the apple shippers back to us. “Then the shippers sued us both and the judge has held that if we | failed to notice our copy of the thru bill of lading that refrigeration was promised, that is our funeral, because by pting the apples we ratified the contract made on our behalf by the railroad company,” let baby“scra Teethingrash, prickly heat, chaf- ing—these are a few of the tryin) skin ills which make baby fretful and keep anxious mothers busy try to soothe the tor:ient. RESINOL OINTM T is the very thing to give quick relief, Try | J it and note how soon baby’s fretful crying stops as this gentle, cooling ointment reduces the itching and burning. sinol Soap for baby’s hair keeps joltandsilky, Asaliad He Discusses Some Queer Decisions year? We've but something tells fed up with ap-| | M chairman nmmit: | ! of the b uu bor. row mone . © Bilg i the table ow -a-day« hings he can ing into nor forsee? us the new tax bill was | 1 before the president could old man Magruder, of the Packet line; made up his mind to beat it, He has more mor than » folks have hay and when he discovered he'd have to figure on “ frightful itance tax on y to get along on « the remainder of | ng, for his days j e his estate to fore the president J the new tax bill which would Imposed a tax of 40 per cent on gift s later the old man cau. turned to pneu- moni. days later he was| dead “And now the local collector of jn- | | ternal revenue is suing his h that big inheritance tax, on ground that the old man gay. estate anticipation of death. | Some beauracratic horsethief has eet | up a ruling, unsupported by law, that | if a man dies within two years after | giving away his ate it proves he} was trying to swindle the government | and the gift is declared null and void.” | | see 66C)H, that’s the new method of | confisca by law," Ulysses | Grubb declared. “Did you ever read | the Volstead act?” “No, I didn't have to,” Cappy re: | read the Volst nd it doesn’t give anybody permis. | sion to make 200 gallons of wine for | his own personal use, nor for sale or jfor the use of farm hands, But some- | | body in the internal revenue office | | says we can do this if we want-to. Just a beauracratic ruling, unsup-| ported by law. Two years ago every- body could make 200 gallons of wine, | but this year they've excluded bache- | lors." | pr the love of Mike, why?! ‘Cappy gasped |, “Why does a hen cross the street? | | Two years ago they used to give you | permission to transport it. This year | you can make it but you transport it at your own risk.” | | “They do not permit you to make| | | | / | A Dental Campaign Is On, | At 106 Columbia Street { i Tater] | DR. EDWIN J. BROWN'S DENTAL OFFICES are now putting jon. a campaign for dental business | | which will save you one-half on the cost of your dental work. More than one “hundred and sey: | nty thousand people have had their work done at Dr. Edwin JO} | Brown's Dental Offices in the past | twenty-three years. Many thousands of dollars have been saved to tho people, who come from far and neur to share in the fow prices for the best that modern dental science and art can produce for them, Liberal allowances are made on worn-out plates and bridgework, and extractions are without charge when new work is ordered, | We have mado good by making our guarantee to the peopio good, We shall save you money and give you tho best. EDWIN 'S DENTAL 106 Columbla St. No Stains to Climb PAMILE: Teeth as Low as Best Set of Red i wv Our EXTREMELY Low Teeth as low as 4 Best #0 teeth? Red Rubber (either set). Gold Crowns (22 Bridge Work Porcelain C Gold Fillings . Gold Inlays ....... Synthetic Porcelain Fillings Silver Fillings Cement. Fillings: Teeth Treated . Pyorrhea Treatment per tooth ..... Nerve ved (Palntons Teeth tracted (Paink No charge for painless ing and cleaning when work ‘s contracted for, = Old gold is valuable I or allow you full value fox} dental work , A PRIVATE, high-class, date, SANITARY dental with sterilized instrumer gentlemanly — operators, you will not be ashamed ommend to your frienda All work guaranteed for 15 Examination FREE Open 9to€ Dally—9 to 12 OHIO DENTIS 207 University Corne Over Mutual CANADIAN PAC +, RU Arrive Sidney . Leave Sidney Arrive Belli Leave Bell . Arrive Sidney - Leave Sidney 0p. Arrive Bellingham __ 30 Service effective July 3 te Sept 1, Spec TRAVEL BY STAGE Portlan Daily Fare _ 10:15m: $6 Information MOTOR BUS DEPO PHONE. EL ORTOh [pd Take Fast Passenger and fai Ferries From Colman ‘ 30, 7:15, . 1 8, 11:80 Ey Dally, exeent Se Pal Every trip a Ferry {| ing 7:15 a.m. FY Passenger fares to Port 0 y Pol Round Trip, LJ NAVY YARD ROUD LS Colman Dock MA In-888 "PUGET SOU STEAMER SCHEDULE Port Angeles, St Daily, 12:00 Does not call ing Seattle CLINGHAM, Daily, 10300 Fare $1.00 ca Fort Townse nections and MU! Kieamers and 6c} 0 change without y PUGET SOUND NAVICA AN DotK Main i COLMi PHONE