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q ' 1 t , f , i oe e Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday. October 3, 1911. WE MEER NNN NENN NESE AMPH OMAN NSU AMUN SMU WNP SR meget SENECA ASAP NENA APNE SAUNAS SAE SEDAN VENOMURNNENENEN I A Great Mystery Story That Has Excited All Paris And Is Now Printed in English for the First Time bib BR Bais al aii laa MD MRG RE RAM RERIRT RIAN NARITA DAO MND TARA ARATE AAA GMA RA TAPROOT BRR TOM RTA 1 in possession of | Would be necessary for your de- sions the gravest fears for her reason. nlably, in your gyes, and perhaps in Md to. their profes: (renee, atc ur Stephie . in order | This ia why the Magistrate cannot re-/ spite of appearances, really so, a per- 4 Komteuted (that I may assume ites ye 1 What ix plaualble ia her testimony! son of lofty «oul and upright character. Guinnitr thelr oma (iclendy, (hat you should show me, your | Without attacking the fantastic and un-| This last epithet has a very strong fave Gre oy Momen 3 ia fea) Copyright, 1911, by The Press Pvbitehing Co. m cepticism as ender, mact-and, £ venture | truthful thinge it conjcing.”” or of paradox!" (¢ A (The Now You Word. | aiesary bins oh b ito say, nd,—a litle more sine) “What do you mean by fantastic and! 7 wa, , Contound greatly disturbed and very | ' repeated tn {Cerity thay you dicptayed yesterday to |untrutuful’* I urged, eager for tnfor-) gad that my counsel had been able to! (7 iB} Lbvbco Gener | chorus, |the examit ng Magistrate commissioned | niattor | discover thy depths of my thoughts con- 4 The police officers minutely examine || {9 MVestigete your dificult case, at the | “She has stated that she left M. Gre-| cerning the charming Mme, Grenet! ’ or the @0td man's nech J ted with (time of the purely formal In watory net safe and A before taking her) Drawing a long breath, as if relleved ~ y Mnotsled wit bilyseos, then of a great burden, I asked with a touch | PWILIP & DILLON. [P @ (Ss 4 Ooo @PKOPSIS OF PRECEDING INsTALuENT. | tor, As da I | Eady, an Cag io fu L-} fe on the’ Rie Starnoruh An ¢ fi aid bluish spots stretch.| 0% the question of tity, concerning walk in the Champ ia iis “ ng | from the Acam'’s DI " , hich you would reveal nothing"——- hay < g ne to your rooms and re awest-| of eagerness | . i mig RS (esacte aren, on br ear ak | tide 2 Me Adanu's apple to the 2ata-| Mts tea vary eeankiy. ate Sfaltee ot yor fo hear hee Mesbund company'—| “Yen have’ qnen her Comet, 1911, ty Thx Pros Posie 9, (The New Yor Word f vy toyeh he, carenet avartment aud, tere | with ¢ vestigation bs &"\ Juinot, the iawyer appointed for my de- | That 1 said firn "No," he replied, “but the Magistrate, | No. 1—Gen. J. G. Wilson at Red River Dam. by Pe tery . tded the quien eps, “apltalt™ said the ehtef, in a Ge S yaN Ny wer t thar 1 ae ee eee ee SOHC be HARTIRIRK: we ‘actiemesels |i HEN the civtl war began there Ilved in Chicago a young iiterary man Eg Ag OE her tenants and guide Jaulet tone, “Wo wilt inform the Court] give sou my word of honor tha sel, “Searcely fait ay hour! portrait so flattering, so enthustasttc | a ¢ 8 : om oom: "A moment ‘tater, erie of. Mugiert’ | OMizers to Use Grenet Gining room. {and wait for the exer jam the most sincere mou in the world 5 Mme. Grenet's departure that T do not doubt the tnfluence such) | named James Grant Wilson, the publisher of the Chicago Record. His RET AG, th Rotel's fnmates “att rash um) The policeman had pustied me before! wo will tuto char when T tell you that I know abs 1 owful discovery made by) a woman might exert upon the reason father was Willlam Wilson, the Scotch poet and essayist, a kinsman pens PMc bas eee We in weal so oe | eee the Grenct SAULT Faget your Iaudiady Inquest. ix exact! of men | of James Wilson, who aligned the Declaration of Independence, Hit © been livid, for ho wai anny trange death, and cannot in the least folning—vo. CHAPTER I. Nag 9 (Continued) | “You're not going to be fil, 2 sup The Body of M. Grenet. |; | And tn the presence of Monsieur Gre- | ak a Upon this point, ‘The owner of the house) “He is convinced of her innocence?” Ul boyhood, at Poughkeepsie, N. ¥., was indelibly stamped by the per- be hors kf in the Rue Marboeut entered M. “He wouldn't arrest Mme, Grenet If onste raed Het lt) ponalities of his father’s intimate friends, Washington Irving, N, P. Wills and ns oe aad E aheGUY 15) ncchatio, eveh engaging. mherer tk xs BN eet aviar ti young Yeltra ae ee Ae oe oe aie can | William Cullen Bryant; and later his own intimates wero Fitz-Greene Malleck, sere hithen ® same offhand) s5¢ unpleasant to me to percelve that |dcvarture. Now, the medical examina-|iuct, we imight have beon vette: | Paulding, Dana and others of the famous later Knickerbocker writer NOW saw as tf through a vell, | net's body, which hung in the place of| “in 0%: Stephen I interested him greatly, and T think 1 tich showed indisputably that the un-! ands, but aiso dn far worse, He is @ Young Wilson laid aside the pen and belted on a sword and marched away Gusctiaes You unite ar EG winging lamp, tie amazed oMfcer] geese tee ae reek thay te yore | can boast that the tono of frankm fortunate man's death occurred at 9|sinpie-minded man, Who sees every-| to the front tn 1862 as Major of the Fifteenth Uhnois Cavairy, Later he com- Cination, these pairs of curious} said simply: | troublesome for you, even nese oe thay, | 84¥e the protestation of my Innocence | crcigck in the morniug. So Mme. Grenet| thing througn the medium of his @ei-|manded his regiment. He campaigned with Grant through the Shiloh and bed ofa ‘Wen een weal This could ‘hot compromise. bith Your landiady's depsaition—which you | Cwinced him at once, vq did not leave her husband rate and] ings! He is not at all a Parisian. Mo] Vicksburg campaigns, and then they sent him as aide to Gen. Nathaniel Banks, ; hat !s understood,” ho replled. “I sound when she rapped at your door.” to use _ snag a ved with | Were in | soun n & worthy person, who likes who commanded the Department of the Quit. 1 did not know—and I saw in the midst | ,,BUL he must have been endowed with) gt) & cory great hurry to contra:/nave Just giined a knowledgs of your "Mattre Juinot’s deductive loge un-|an automobile as they do tn the prov-| ‘They promotod him to Brixadier-General and he served until the end, and Of this hostile b vise Me dil llth lgy Whoa ate “Did = ‘ wait 1" | ease, and my conclusion ix this: That) doubtediy Influenced me, for I ans verybody Is and, improvised and] siinory and pajamas, for he made ex-| “Did —dtd—not—ha-ang — himself!" 1 stor | y " x, inces. He imagines that overyo0dy 18] thon wont back to his beloved lterature ‘ already almost dangerous, the courte i es < teing precisely | stammered, | the charges whieh over whelm you have ip the same tone, as if strengthenin noticing him when he arrives at the a kt N . We se 7 nance of my transt , LP A lst iol be Not ‘ been created by yourse!t-ONE WOULD | demonstration and drawing @ conelu-|jaw courts in his forty horse-power, Last week I sat with him in his New York home In West Seventy-ninth eee ay transformed landlady. Her same words tne ot rom all the evidence, the hang-| say VOLUNTARIL | pleat ladiay ae street. I picked up a framed cabinet photograph of Lincoln, and looking at tt Ind, fat, round face, which looked ike! “What aru you giving me with your]/!Ng was simulated, M, Grenet was first] “why voluntarily | ep, ir, it ts tmpos Setbe Woes: Ceciercive FOR “He | 1 asked: .& Wrinkled apple, had become the head| murder? This man has hung himeelf:" | strangled by powerful hands. I do not| « on whe | “Then, my dear alr, i. People were twenty-live years ago, He pas ay ii Methon hee rt t was you who at first gave ex-/that it could be I, Stephenson, who al 6f a fury. Her flashing eves, her hand| Th he police officer eS ed Naeviienuel at Wore the ones here," | clusive {mportance to your Jandlady’s|ten minutes of 11, as the-landlady’s depo- trembling with tndignation pointed in| SUPerlor were awkwardly tr Bee) Su Bane Rana nt taking possession of my | deposition. You arranged your first at-) sition seems to charge me, strangled and fwy direction as if to polut me out for| Move M. Grenet's body from ste| right hand, “but the moat elementary | tude at the time of the discovery of| hung M. Grenet from the ring in the p the sums hing of these hurrying | (errible situation, the owner, ° olu precaution requires me to arrest you at et ‘ |the corpse of M. Grenet, permit me to] o r m eyidiade ine {iE | trembithe with indisnation, was explain-/once. It is @ preventive moasure that |tell you, as if you had desired to as-| “Cine Of bis dining row notuing more of the| ing, in pictorial ; guage, under What} has nothing dishonoring about it, M.! 1 i} hav Matter than she and I did, sho |meyatoios conditions she had surprised | Stephenson MUMMERS AT “Murder! Murde: | ire eo mb OBEDE ergnbors' Ooms! While speaking he lightly slipped on hy ‘materially’? But," interposed a big man in al iow, from my embarrassed mannet:| 4 handeut. Fi “Recause medi MUPTiKd OMLATHNAL Whe tec e had jumped at the conclusion of MY, T submitted Ike an automaton with-| closed on the victim wouldn't strike a woman with a writ. ‘You knew him well?’ die has one jous fault; he believes “He gave mo that picture ten days before he died.” himself sagactous. At the bottom he ts] In this mood ho related the story of the great Red River Dam, which affair an excelient man, but an excellent Maa) was to hin ¥ Most memo: of his career as a soldier; ye] Who ie not suited to his office.” “The Red River movement in Loulsiana, where Gen, Banks was in command,” “Aha! That is precisaly the pointe “Phe regrettavie thing” 1 remarked,| saiq Gen, Wilson, “began In March, IMA, and ended about the middie of May, reer apiey arene ie cna | 28 that the office should have VEEN! isting about seven weeks, It was planned by Gen. Halleck and other authorities “M. Gi wi strangled and 7 ies byw powortul babe, waren lo.po|crves. (2 May ated, “that youl a Washington. Gen, Grant did not approve of Mt, nor did Gen, Banks, but it was more yours than Mme. Gren 1 We ‘1 wish,” the lawyer a! Lt “nevertheless atte: pte . neck the imprint | Are agreed?) ‘The question la to find out | Would not antagonize him by showing examinagion dis- to} : Ne cate fair. Mal: “Barly in April, 1861, Gen, Banks, with an army of 2,000 men, had reached ee Into the Crenet apartinent, “what | Complicity In so obscure an A ane | Ut, & will of a powerful han¢ " me, Gre-|tvo much confidence in your own inno- hfe li é eck : are you « us with your murder? |, “bet us walt for the head of the 4 With the same urbanity he asked “Ora man's hand?” T interrupted. ft : whet mysterien Ly lg tng hy |cence. Believe me, it would be better | Alexandria in central Louisiana, on his way to Shreveport, which was a fortified M. Grene iihie hemlet? purge? tective office,” replied tie comm edt s the landlady: “Yes, of a man's hand.” emphasized presetien OF hee fOabae's corpse! ‘The |to leave to him (he difficult task of and the objective point of the expedition, The army had followed the "know I'm talking wbout,” re.| “They have telephoned to him e (Where is Mme. Grenet?" M, Julnot, with a sarcastic smile that| Other point is to loarn for what reasons, | demonstrating it, ‘That is why L en: | of the Red River, and a fleet of ironclad ships and gunboats under Ad+ torted tie 1y, . | woutd not delay. jone to take her walk in the Champs |disturbed me; “a man's hand that 1s : nA: ma. and -etamhe | @ivuees: va no ieee obarure, vow have ao carefully | treated you not to play sharp, but ty miral David D. Porter had steamed up the river in company with the army. ne ra Me corns | eee 8s alle dues every morning.” [not yours! But listen to me carefully!| concealed your real Mentity under the|tell us who you are, M, Stephenson, CTCF OS AAI Heethaia? aii he must be informed!” he said, — |The anthropometrical department where | assumed name of Stephenson He has already found you a nickname ‘SeRaRiRaeaaahena FET BERS ITE CRAIGS | nate interest T retrained from bursting into a laugh, | you spent a disagreeable hour yester-!" 7 remained obstinately silent, though they aro somewhat out of fasi i A Defeat and a Victory. } |day has discovered something else. It] Maitre Juinot, with @ look of despair, | ion, He ca:ls you Z, The Strangler, on powr as sf you do not under-| the laugh of a madman, Ing—for these |found upon the water bottle and #195 | amented account of the unlucky sheet of initialled The of the policeman and com- missary guininoned to the Rue Marboeut | calmed tie nsitive women and th frightened children. The representatives of t! at ail about what has! T refrained from ra law forced people plunged tnto the dark ndentablo marks of your presence in ; “After leaving Alexandria the army left the banks of the river and pushed @ passage through th ave Desk nk he darkness of the|undentable marks of your presence “If you imagine that your defense will| paper found on your desk—which |s, vol it! T an-| suspleton y wer gy party ! da you imagine that your ~ 0 he pine forests to Sabine Cros ° he advance wa ac! that 1 was confronting like w trapped as weer i abel PL Ti no they were accumulating | M. Grenet’s apart ent! aoe ste te Waceeey WILh hich & hyateetaes aod that a very alight one—the only thtoush ¢ He f eats te § 7 u rons Re a whare eaaynnee yo attacked Bobst avalting the death how. + 4's that covered this enigma, oe eee yee nee eet frankness, which works | Then suddenly becoming inainuating: clio to enlighten hima dul by the way, )and defeated by Gen, Richard Taylor's Confederate army. We fe tisk 80 d the blow was dealt ateonce by ; nad’ Geo ine or y ck oF neh “Let us see! You were captivated by | Who is this Annie—'My " easan nat same night, where we joined ° next jovial little man Ms even bes | “And of course you deny Madamo's aeerntttat ned from denouncing Mme. > ear C ioentan, Wiieeaa as Ay Mmen Grenet?* “The accomplice of % the Strangler!” | day we turned on Taylor's army and beat them as badly as they had beaten hind his ned eyeglasses, | statements?” Be: POUT ads a SA thAY BY cals ine I answered, with an air of amusement. | us in the first day's batt! yewlass , sides, how aceus pObarite "| 1 paused an instant before replying. . ; at day , pee HH sd ag left me no Sb COUrUe Ail these Inquisitive peopte| Grenet of impossibte alent eh Horan pare rin Ae tdgtimony At that time I felt the same hesitation! "For the last time, don’t be aggres- “Because of losses tn this yattle and because the warships could no longer Oh! so You sare the Mutde es nel who know no more about this affair (!t not have been imitating my accusers |of Mme. Grenet herscit.”* that 1 showed toward the reader at the| sive, T entreat you go forward !t was decided to abandon the expedition and fall back to Alexandria, eaid, with ih orl 4 Deane : jo ourselves!” he sald to his|in thetr foolish presumptions? ‘ The amazement I showed at these| beginning of this story, I imposed a| The warden came to interrupt our) jug: above Alexandria are the rapids of the Red River, where the water is i : tt raheeertg! ; cttve bureau and | &ing Mme. Grenet wit! aI ‘ad: o appear neithe: 5 5 ir tPray 10 river had ° ow that it was impossible fo i . ° His grip was 40 heavy that 1 almost | The head of the dette ye are ae ee oe ny ot a Te edt the ere et would think that this dlactosure|too ridiculous, At last 1 enawered eva | thon, is walting for us in his oft tho river had fallen so low that it was imponsible for tho shipa to steam back fell on the floor. one of his inspectors soon arrived iible machinery of @ Justice whose ap- pe wouia ents Ethie staat nieale: ven now, at this distance of time, 1|40Wn the rapida, For twenty years the water had not been wo low. It was the With an excited gesture, the tandiady | the Rue Marboeut. oer encarene Pf making the most | eee ee te ag VA ae dah y t's not that at all! It is the con-| have not the courage to laugh! I have] Keneral beilef that the warships, worth several millions of dollars, would have to " av notin And it Wan Only at thet neat, the | Whole heant to me, Tentreat you! Yam | trary!” & foolish desire to render less grotesque | be destroyed to provent thelr capture by the Confederates, moment when I felt I waa caught ia be the slave of my duty. A lawyer like] Then the lawyer, too, made a long| than ho really was an braedrleeg tr teut.-Col, Joseph Bailey of Wisconsin, acting engineer of the Nineteenth | Machinery that would surely erush me, |¥selt 18 a confessor, M. Stephenson! ! paw He was trying to read in my Whose terrible end i# 4 perpetual | Corps, who was experienced in the loxging camps of his State, said to me: y, that through an outburst of recovered | What were your relations with Mme, | troubled gaze the depths of my thoughts. big hie ratviae that t going to “"Col, Wilson, I think I can bulld a dam and raise the water and save tho Senses, | “°8#!Ned full possession of my | Grenet” eat ee HEHE he divine nef mduet, | draw into the orbit of my extraordinary | Meet. Givo me six regiments of Infantry to cut down trees and do construction j sens nag Conauered the violent emotion that} really, did. ; | aim enture, in apite of myself, this littie| Work, and 1,000 horses, mules and oxen and 280 wagons.’ = Sinewnee UMawentie me, end ori C<Theh many things are expiainedt” | old man with Kers like rabbit trot. “That day a council of war was held and I submitted Col. Balley's proposi+ | CHAPTER 11, Meat TAN toe Reet. Mma; Geeastal (net wineat! tore, and a rom, smiling face? | tion: 1¢ was approved and %,000 men detailed for the work, I was assigned 4 m Py) le f danoeition" “Mme: ‘Grenet’a way of voluntarily | Let me not be accused of making al represen the commander-in-chiet offictally. Col. Batley, being subordinate, + . f ot cature o a + | ‘suggested’ orde o! —y e TY 0 Green Stoc ings She Who Is Expected Does| ‘Tt te not calculated, ala! to throw] creating the charges against her to clear |caricativ of (his DISMAGERE Bnet | susiested: tho crdurs witch I lasued—yea, army red tape would not allow tai Rath Light Not Come any light upon the affair, but rather tej yeu im advance’ ation” begin from the Brat to talk by | (0 the work directly, for ho was only a Meutenant-colonel, The credit for thy ‘4 | 5 omplicate 8 more and a . 4 elongs to him almost entirely. 8 y » ! m even beginning | fits and starts. uy, : ra atner ig NEE fair man sented opposite rsh waht it 18 impossible to believe it! © Moone Your made of action | “Aha! my fine fellow," he greeted me Wo began the tree dam at the foot of the falls. ‘The river here was 760 fest to mo tn the cell of the sta- tion where I had been held Material for Which ts chivalric, and that of a true) on the threshold, in the presence of | wido and the current ten miles an hour, Night and day the men worked, felling “She has been arrested his clerk of the court and my somewhat! gigantic oak, elm and pine trees that had stood since the days of De Sute; “ T gasped. 'No," Maitre Juinot assured me. “T/Kentleman, M. Stephenson. for tweny-four hours looked ” disconcerted lawyer, “Here you at | porge nules and oxen hauled them to the river bank. Nav 1 barge, repeat that it is mat “What modo of action? arent Navy coal barges, filled Margaret Anglin } At mo with a sort of compas-| that Mme, Grenet oni neve Tahea her | “The sate, precisely, which is to ac-| YO, Sonn eee ee down, keed | with stono and brick were sunk, Woe pulled down old mills and barns and used © curtosity, and said tn @ winning} husband, Mme, Grenet {s in bed, in a] cuse yourself voluntarily In advance, in| quiet an | the material to construct heavy cribs, and into these we tumbled railroad iron state of terrible prostration which occa-| order to clear tne woman who is unde- (To Be Continued.) and stone, Tho work was carried on from both sides of the river, . BY CHARLES DARNTON. | “At night the scene was wonderfully striking. ‘The thousand swarthy figures | from the colored regiments at work on land and water, the camp fires of tho army which surrounded us on every loud commands of the officers sup- ling to one right «6 | erintending the work, tho shouts of the teamsters, the sound of falling pani to one right Cheer Up, Cuthbert!’’ @ By Clarence L. Cullen | ey Pre ie aemed one et the seal titel areata T'S almost impossible to steer clear of puns in speaking of the new play at I the Thirty-ninth Street Theat » risk of ru off the jum ut Pe eee tea aie daikg nedeg ave Mais tan ace at ever witnessed, Mingled w these sounds we often heard the strains of ‘Asie ideale aaay on’s comedy and then ambles along easily and pleasantly to the| | Laurie’ and ‘Battle Cry of Preedom’, and then there would steal out a plantation A. EB, W, Mason's c y ; Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), melody of the South, Well do 1 remember a silvery headed negro who came inte end, i HERE'S a Will there's a Fray!,aro Never Locked—but Nobody ever) Plug up the Leak! try Sausage and Buckwheat C-'es! our Ines, and throwing up his hands in amazement, cried out: It was not until this excellent actor, as C Hane Smith, ve the second act TRIES to Break In! — fast night, naturally curious about the news of his deat y began Taking the Blame ts a Part of 5 + rectly Possitis ay Good “ , ” to move, Tho opening act, with its aimless chatter abou lish electio: 1!Playing the Gamo! Tho Pesaimist Judges the Doughnut by|,, Necess!tY 19 the Mother of Contene St het elaine ener rng ate al } ‘What Won't the. Vankese Ge Nextf other English things in which an American audience could scarcely be expected! the Hole Therein! eel Sight! : to be intere , promised an evening of tea table talk, for even Miss Angiin’'s) The Man who has to the Fiddler - é “Wem! What won't do Yankees do next? @elayed appearance as Cella, the eldest daug of William Faraday, brought “Now, the Confederates looked upon t ually j becomes Very ond cf the Mouth Or-| The Difference Between Despair| We'd rather be Broke from Too Little de and Desperation is that the Former | Wor", than to ireak Down from Too » wedding » dam as a huge joke, They contin as we heard from the prisoners we captured, that they would nothing eventful. There were three other daughters, and Celia, in o! an Irish custom, seemed destined te wear green stockings again at t It\they didn't Pay Off of the Pinishing Line the Quarter Horse would have a) wor ated | capture not only the fleet, but also our en army. We carried on constant j of the youngest. But! 1¢ you nave any Sour Grapes, make| Xemtins Inert while the Latter Gets panel eer skiemisiing with thom while the work went on, i ' her foolish pride tod her em into Preserves! a Move On! Wo are Pertectly Wing to accept a| Somo of us have to Make the Forty-| gtendiiy rose, Linfortumately, on the morning of May a. the cretaee ot the weve eanane erties 1e Doors o: jown-and-Out Club| While you're Abiding by the Mistake, | Bear Upon the Indigestibleness of Coun- |! unough to Try to be Witty! at the dam near t re of the river, nt niral, fearing Canela wo wa aah ie Pera : Rt ; i : DNR eee ee : veal break, seized the moment and ordered th pb Lexington to attempt with his regiment to Africa, She “At 6 o'clock tn th morning the Lexington got under way above the’ falls rtalniy looked old enough to iS} , a y = and went over safely, Then she was steered for the opening In the dam, Certain oS ee is Cl. OE. Oto eh tel \Gatren soon ic ee a oe as eee ee e e puree de Wal fot to Re y : ie) : a Niagara Rapids, Ten isand spectators breathlessly awalted the result, Enter- yap with a full head of steam, tho Lexington passed down the roarlag to say, Yq | ing the Happily M Anglin #' | torrent, made oral spasmodic roll, s for a moment w a harsh, grating cheerfully, She had } did I hear, before or since, such a cheer a’ went up from that mu Faso the won Was YES.5ON. Dony WHY LDGNT bse New Wau RUT sn ve ttt el UF even to the next aio, the Neosho. ho wae considerably weather side HANDLE IT * DIDNT YA THAT HAT Down THAT HAT Down, withou font. army commenced ther ction ‘of ¢he Emotionally she was as GET ONE THIS INSTANT Land after three days ; nlghte the ra t sundoats hufing’y ay a come. New STYLE oP > stowinie tie hive anina oO ey ; Gianna uhee aarti ao. following ining five s passed, white whole army enna Bae nen tae FLAT DERBYS | watched and cheered poiri | River while the e 1 4 ruof after them, intensely disappointed beeauso ek | they had 4 great priz and he evident | And #0 1 sha how a V nsin tumberman r ed the Federal determined to take his fleet b anning and ing of the et remarkable river dam time: quant 46 eve 1 Ani 1 Porter, 1 ort to the Secretary of ncerity, of co , iti : ui t ta . best agin t ’ ’ . of tho questio llemeibea clesusnath eamcane Feet re ton cied ic iene ‘iiss Anglin was left Degen is : x Wataa er a and ary on t Merce : J . aye my ared an 1 ground, She co ’ ithe vn tt oa Interesting Facts For Ourselves “te f tho imaginary You Turn - arin vel Bertin long and h t $17,600,0 a oe ee ea mera Your FACE AFTER Lo $80,00 Miele eecaee J Times, She went about this work a busi ens ke manner. 26 yea, All cult 6 THs Wis I ‘ 1 the n ‘ matter of fact, with tu lea ech mo rare are 8 seven ing health. : = AND IF You GET TyRoveHd ; wEBanen Mr. Reeves-siniih appeared and. there was light ; ASK AQUESTION Witt THIS \ t mo aa the friend ab the Bolngel wae ie elongings of CAN Taste Alas: ner herd w apr then Questions ; . SAAR nw RON a me ie ad her « es. Bilivinls was a sod Who, though o — s i on her guard, played rt ta game skilfully and n in her shirt led t ot Wearing green stock wt the three vy shade by the other th D p A Tet iave ately bat hie boo tockings that he would walk off with ia . herdn the end ui Mr, Reoves-Smith was always In command of tho situat ave 8 per Hong 681 Brit formance distinguished, for its ease, 1 sling and manifest enjoy of 2 vou & rene the mutiial dec ). Strangely enough, his English accent was marked tha | ; e $5,912,08 that of Miss Anglin and others of the cust who have acquired theirs on th ules , ‘ ndethe- aide of the wate: ts8 Maude , however, talked as a Woman from Chi Toainiea Ht taunt ¢ sani € > almos RKO fe likely to t fe indulg 1 hysterics to the delight of tue use, but $200, 000,04 ft was her drowsy jag, due to a terrific Wig of brandy, that put the flatshing hs Hohe touch on Ler ta form r must ralve our hats to American f @ctreases of the old schoo! re them pr AN INVI1ATION, ‘Mrs, Ruth Holt jeault, Miss Langford and M Dian fa ‘ dtave wh } Smith really overshadowed overybody f 18 as Indl. | er (calling oUt to girls in next Phe play is a wildly entertaining little comedy that offers Miss Anglin o} ators of ‘ room)-is there any one here who woukt Manited opportunitios. It's really rather |igit material for her, “Grewa sioskin, wn hardly Ceuen the Wayfaying man to atop, lovk and hasten, like to spend a day in the county Japan's new central raiiway i 25] Lite, re ven RL gE ITE —