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Show ( THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE. UTAH Why Sleeper Emits Noises That Annoy A writer ln the weekly bulletin of the Chicago dPpartment of health, ~ays that snoring seems to be partJ<ularly 11 human attribute, und say!! that there Is little In medical litera· ture relating to lt. He says snoring Is due to vibration of the soft palate 11nd uvula, produced by deep lnsplra· tlon and expiration through the nose and open mout!J. The sleeper, lf normal, sleep!!! with hill mouth closed, breathing naturally through the nostrils, which prevents the vibration r,f the loose tissues of the throat. Snoring, as a rule, in· dlcates a disturbance of the breath. lng apparatus, especially obstruction In the nose, that prevents the sleeper trom keeping the month closed. In children. the writer ~ays, snorIng Is commonly an lndif'atlon of en· larged adenoids and tonsils. EIGHT-HOUR WORKDAY GAINS DUE TO ORGANIZED LABOR I / ... A Sequel to Bulldog Drummond. C:O!"i'.EUGUT ff'f' GEORG£ H. DORAN co. BYCYN/l McAf£11£ SAPPER Why Burroughs Was Happy I am In love with this world; by my constitution I have uestled lovIngly In lt. It has been home. It has been my point of outlook into the universe. I have not bruised myself against It, nor tried to use It Ignobly. I have tlllPd Its f:Oil, r h:we gathered Its harvests, I have waited upon Its ePason~. and always have I renpecl what T havE' sown. While I delved I did not lose sight of the sky overhead. While I g-athered Its bread and meat for my body, I did not neglect to gather Its bread and' mt.>at for my I!OUI. I have cllmhed Its mountains, roumed Its forests, snlied Its waters. cros~ed Its de~erts, felt thP sting or Its frosts, the OJlpre~lon of Its hents, and always have heauty and joy waited upon my goings anrl comings. -John llurroughs, • 'aturalist. Rosin Is used In the munuiacture of paper to make It "water resistant" so that It will be resistant to writin~t Ink. For this purpose common rosin Is treated with soda, a rosin sonp helng formed which Is a combination of sodium reslnate and free rosin and which I!! I!Oluhle In water. This material Is added to the paper stock In the form ot n dilute solution in water. Aluminum sulphate Is then ndderl to the paper stock, this prt>clpltatlng the rosin tn very finely d!Yided form, the precipitate consisting of a mixture of aluminum reslnate and free resin which, when the paper shPet Is dried, form~ o water-proof film over the paper filler. FVhy Sounds Vary Syllables &nding In "ng" ar!' the most dlflicult for l.nman ears to grnsp, while those with "s," "w," and "y" These apparl'ntly are the easie~t. conclu!<lons have been reached through reeent scientific Investigation~. says In tests Popular Science Monthly. with n large audience in an acoustically poor auditorium, only 48 per cent canght sounds such as "tlng" and ''bong," while trom 90 to 100 per cent were right on ~(nmds !Ike "wls" nnd "yox." The sounds "d," "b" and "th" made ll poor score. Why Shadows Form A shadow Is formed whPn rays of light are obstructed hv an opnque body. nays of light radiate In strnlght lines In all directions. As a man ap· proaches a street lamp the light shines on his fare, and therefore his hody casts a shadow behind. In passing the lamp the shadow naturally moves wltb the mnn, so that when he Is In front of the lamp the ray~ or light strike hl11 back, and thererore cause the shadow to fall before him. Home Collection During 11 recent rain~· Run•lay a devout mPmher of the ~.rotor cluh, who wna attending ehureh over his rarllo1, lnadvPrtmtly l<'nned forward an•l dropped n coin In his hat when th& minister hroadeast "Let Your Light So Shlne."-The Road. Justice Great Virtue As to he perfer·tly just Is an attrttute of t!•e divine nature, to be so to the utmost of our abilities Is the glory of rnan.-Acldlson. --~~---quick return! To assure prompt service and when answering these advertisements, mentioc tht name of this paper. BARm~tt AND BUTCHER SUPPLIES Glllett.e Ra?.or Blad"" Pkg. 35c; German Gil· lettcs ¥.. dozen 26c; Tree Brand & Sheffield Hazors $3.00 up; Novelty catalog lOc. Moab Cn., 13!1-37 Regont St., Salt Lake City, Utah. AGENTS WANTED For Style Center Made to Measure Clothes. $23.50 up. Big monoy for right men. Write 515 Mcintyre Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. RADIO MAGAZI;';R RADIO FANS :~~:~yc~;:~in~~:i~~ Programs, l1rne Tnble~. Radio Topics, Questions, Jo:xchanges, etc. 26 iA.iue• $1.00. Write fClr Free Copy, 71 West Broadway, Salt L:~kc City, Utilll. TI>L~:GRAPII SCHOOL Sl45to $225 Monthly. I.eam 1'ele,::r:qJhy, Grt~nt o}JJJOrtunilics CJt"an t.nrn while you e~y work. Pnsit..wn"' st-lllrcrl. les-rn, J lund reds of aruduatcs. Old!'st and be. t schnnl. Write for frt.c J("atalogue. American Telegraph Coll~gc. W~ S. l\l;oin. Salt Lake. -Best Heat Under the Sun" The most modem and economical home heating plant (Pipe or Pipeless). Can he installed in practically any house. Wn'1e for FREE booklet on "Scientific Home Heating." Attractive proposition for every town. de~.len "IT'S A BOMB!" SYNOPS!S.-To a gathering or anarchists In I3arklng, London s u bu1·b, Za bol<>ff, foro!gn agitator, tel's of the operations of a body of men who have become a rrenace to their activities. He says they are mask<,d and wear long blnck cloaks and are acting without the law. He Is interrupted by the men he is describIng (the I3laclt Gang), who break up the meeting, sentencing some of the participants to condlgn pun!,hment and carryin~ a way A memorandum found othHs. on Zabolel'f gl ,·es an nddress in Hoxto·1, which the l~ader of the attacking party considers of importance. in GRANITE LUMBER & HARDWARE CO. 1084 E. Zlst So., Salt Lake City '----------- -----J Sir Bryan Johnstone, director of criminal invesll!:'atlun, h~ars from In,pector 1\lch•er. s<"nt to arrest Zabold'l'. the night befflre, of his discomfiture. He had been seized and chloroformed and his raid frustrated. Hugh Drummond. man of lei"ure, tells ohnstone of seeing the kidnapers and their victims. He hecomes an unvafd ag-ent <~f the 'VIlllam pollee, undPr ~!elver. Atl<tnson, ostP.nslbly pawnbroker and !'llo'nl)y lender, really Count WILLIAM GREEN, PRESIDENT AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR Why Rosin in Paper Tt wa.s tr11e: be could see the tight of u street lamp shining through a great jagged hole. "Some bomb," he muttered. "Let's clear." He gave a final flash of his torch round the fioor, as they moved toward the shattered wall, and then suddenly stopped. "What's that?" Right In the renter of the beam, lying in the middle of the floor, was a small chamois leather !Jag. It seemed affords unhurt, and, without thinking, Hugh benefit as wen picked it up and put it In his pocket. as pleasure. 'l.'hf'n SWitching oiT the torch, they both tlamhered through the holP, dropped Healthful exercise for the teeth on to a lean-to roof, and reached the and a spur to diReldon. A long.. grounrl. lastina refreshment, soothing to nerves and atomach. They were at the back of the house in some rlPsPrted mews, and rapidity The Great Americu ~m~ of movernPnt was clParly indic-ated. Sweetmeat, untouched Alre:11ly a C'rowd was hurrying to the by hands, full of );Cene of tl•e Pxplnsinn, nul slipping flavor. quietly out of the dark alley, they joiner! in themselvPs. ''Go home, 'l'Pll,'' l'<nid Drummond. "I must get the othen-;.'' "Hight, olcl man." Be made no demur, hut ju~t vanished f]nietly, while his lender slouf'lrl'll on townrd the front rtonr of :'i GrPeu strPet. The poliCl' wPre alrPady heating on It, whilE' a lar~e knot of lntereste1l spectators g-lvln~ gratuitous advi<'e stnn•l n round thPm. And In tho erowd Drummond could i'ee six of his gun.~:, Rix :mxious mpn who hnrl dPtermine,J-poliC'e or no poli('l'- -to get upstairs and see w'~nt hurl happened. Tn one nnd nll tt:cir minds was a sirkPning fPnr, that the m'ln they follower! had at lnst blttPn off nwrp than he r-ould chew- We have 75 automobiles that that they'rl find him htown to pie~·e-s must be sold NOW without In the mysterlom; room upstairs. 1, regard to profit. Any make you r used. Trucks t- n clistlnC't anti clear .And thl'll, quite eW 0 , nboYe the t'X"Cited COIOinPDtl" of the Wan Pnced to sell on crowd, eamP the hooting of an owl. of all kinds. today for com• us Write A strange sounrl to hPar in a Lon- sight. don :strel't, hut no one puid nny ntten· plete details of my make tlon. OtllPr more engrossing mnttPrS were on hanrl. morf.' eng-rossing that you want. is to all Pxcept the six nH•n who Instantaneonsly S\Vlll'g half round ll!J they lward it. Y. or just a second tllPy Ogden, Utah !lad a glimpse of a hu_ge figure stand· I Box 326 ~---~Sji~~~ in~ in thP light of a lamp post on the otla•r sidP of the ;;tret t-tlwn it dis· appeared. An1l with astonishing celer- I lty they follow!'u its example. Wl>o- 1 ever had been hurt it wns not Drum- 1 monel; an1l that, at the moment, was : all they wne coneerned with. : • the left they By devious routes scPIH~ of the t•xpl osion-each with the 1 same goal in hls mind. And within an hour six young men, shorn of all dis· guise and <'lml in immaculate evening elothes, were admitted to Drummond's house in llrook street by a :;;omewhat sleepy Denny. '!'hey found Hugh arrayed In a gorgeous dressing gown with a lar::!:e You're right! Oil doesn't IW1 up tankard of lwer beside him, and his "h wife sitting- on the arrn of his chair. hla But poor oil does evaporate ng t "What llappened, old latl ?" asked up and out of a hot motor. Peter DatTPll. MonaMotot Oil has the body and "I got han<le<l the frozen mitten. I backbone to withstand n;.otor heat Buy asked for bread, ant! they put acro!'ts w i t h out fatal evaporation. a half·hri('k. To be a.hRolutely accur- ~ Oil and keep your motol ate we got Into the room all right, nnd new. ManaMotor Qil @mpany huvinJ:: got in we found we eouldn't Los Angeles, Cal ~et out. Then some one switched on ) San Francisco, Cal, • us at bomb a the li;.:ht nnd IJunged Quite 1 tllrou~h a hole in the door. 0. K., old girl''-he put a reassurin~ arm round Phyllis' "·aist-"I think wc'1! he still th 're If thev hadn't." "Is Ted all right 'I" asl~ed 'fohy SinI clair. "Yes. Ted's nll right. Got a young IOU(! of llrirks in his bn('k when the \Vayne County with Its wonderful SQI' clim.tte, long seasons, mild wlnt rs, l'eiling came clown-hut he's ull right. and cheap lands, splendid churches ana lt'::; the otlrer poor cl£'vil Ginger :liar- schools, anrl excellent transportation facflitie•, Invites you to locate here. A tin." llb fnee was grim and stern, nn<l great !Jo0tn Is headed our way, Act at tile othPrs waited in silence for him to once. Write BO.~HD Ole' TRADE, JI~<;UP, GA. <·ontinue. "There wns a hlg desk In the room, unrl the bomb fplJ on nnr• sith~ cf it. SCHOOL Of Efi'ICiENC\' Tell anrl I gave our WPil-known imperAU commercial branches. Catalog free. of an earthworm on the ~onatiun &ALl LlU\1! CITY UTAU oth!'r, whieh tiU\'HJ US. Un~ortunnte!y 60 N. Mala SL Gin~r .:\lartin electPd to run round in ~ After A Bath small <'ln·!Ps and curse. And be will With "''tY' cur~e no I!IOl'P.'' Cuticura Soap "Dent!?" Peter Darrell's voice was Dust With low. CuticuraTalcum "Yery," answered D11ummond quietly. "'l'he poor hllg-hter was IJiown to pieces. If he'cl done what I told him I 0~e~1.,a,::;~11 l\}~~~~ ed hP wouldn't have la•en, hut that's be- I ~;:========:;=~=:::;~ side the point. lie was working for , - - Candy Slab Tombston me, and he was killed while he was l\I. Ft·andsco was horn in Italy f!lld doing so. And I don't like that havcame to tllis country in 1~60. HP 1\-n~ pening.'' "\\'hat d.o you propose to do?'' de- a f'andy·lnaker and mad!' his t,ome In Danville, Ya. He die1l tl ere recent'y. mmHied Jerry Seymour. In his will he stipulated that tltP .three marhle R!abs oo whirh he coolptl his bl' used for his tom~~tone. products esWell, that was a narrow So now the cnnd)' slabs contain hit Evidently Zadowa is a cape. Ppltaph !nsten1l of his tnffy. dangerous man. What's Drummond's next move? I N NO country In the world has there been greater progress in establishing 1 the eight-hour day than in the United States. The momentum of the progresa has not been fully appreciated even by our labor movement. An index to the sweep of the movement is the following contrast from census j figures: Of the 6,615,046 wage earners covered by the census of manufacturers Z.adowa, director of anarchy in In 1909 only 523,652, or 7.9 per cent, worked 48 hours or less. ln 1919, England, do')s business In anA mysotlH•t London •uburb. 4,418,393 o~.:t of 9,096,372, or 48.6 per cent, had established that standard. A terious stranger Invades the survey of Industrial undertakings employing one hundred thousand workers J>rurnmond attempts premises. showed tht• 74.1 had a work week of 54 or less hours per week. to burglarize the premises to get Tremendous gains in establishing the eight-hour day were made during evidence. Zadowa lays a trap for Drummond and his burglars. the World war. Eight hours was made a fundamental objective by the trade policy. social into unions and was written To the wartime gains which have been pretty generally held, has since CHAPTER IV-Continued been added the majority of the workers in the steel industry. -8Corroborating data are to be found in reports from industrial states 0nee agnln the three men stood moshowing trend toward eight hours: In 1921 the industrial commission of New York reported a survey of representative firms employing more than one-third tlnniP:>s. listening intently, but the of the industrial workers of the state shewed that 60.2 per cent of the men sound was not repeated. Ahi'olute :,;iand 61.9 per cent of the women had a work week of 48 hours or less; in lem·e reigned, broken only by the noise Massachusetts the percentage is 85.7; In Ohio, 75; in Missouri, 55 for men of their own hreathlng. And at last, after what sPeme1l an lntermlnahle and 85 for wcmen; and in California, 91 per cent. justly proud, In addition 1 pausP. Drummond switcherl on his This is a record of which organized labor social service of the torr•h nguin. 'rlw paRsagP was empty; to the benefits accruing individually this achievement most fundamental nature. No practice is so transforming and so potential the door of the inner otliee was just for human betterment as the maintenance of a workday fitted to the utiliza- In front of them. Almost he was per· suaded that he must have made a mistion of highest surtained creative work. take-that it had been his Imagination. He peered through the keyhole: "Labor Is rapirtly becoming capital· the room was ln dnrknPss. HP turnell con,;ciom; and Is heginnlng to set aside ' the handlP cautiously; the door gave ib saYings .for the good of the com- to him ; and stil! with his torch held nn:nity, with the ultimate idea of ob well in front of him, he stepped into taining !I share In controlling the cred the room, turnin~ the light into every it of the nation, the bulk of it sup· corner. Not a trace of anyone; the vi ie!l by tile producers. Inner ofl1ce was absolutely empty. He "IL deYelotling this bank, however, {lashed the light all round the walls, we have never lost sight of the e senfar as he could see thPre was no Workers Have Given Insti- tlnls-sounrlness of our investments us other door-not t>ven a win1low Conand thC' liquid condition of the lnsti· sequently the only way out was hy tution Enthusiastic tution so that an ahundnnre of cash the door throu;;h whH·h they had just Support. will a! ways be a vallabie to our entered, which was obviously hn]JOS· patron·. sible for anyone to have done without "Utu· steady 1-.'l'Owth, at a rate of ap- his knowledge. '!'he Federution Bank of :'\Pw York, Thirty-fourth ;,tre"t and Eighth av~ pro:>imately half a million dollars ·a "It is all right!" be muttered, turnmre, renchpd its fir:<t anniver~ary, mnntll, ha~ made the l<'ederatiou Bank ing romld to the otl!Pr two. ":\lust prPss atcounts accentuating the fart of .:'\ew York the largest lahor bank havf' been my mistake. Now tl1en, that this hank accumulate!! ~'i,:'i:iO,OOU, In the city nnd the second largest In Ginger, let's taekle the big dPsk first." more thnn 10 times its capital o nd sur- the nation, although we are among the A:; Ire SJ•oke he moved into the cenyoungest. plus, In one year. ter of the room, his torch lighting up "It Is a big job to launch a labor the big roll·top desk. This Is declared to be just the hesucce~sfully but we have not bank ginning of a movement to marshal the "Right·ho, guv'nor. Keep the beam enormous savings of workers, not found it rliflicult, with more than 400 on the keyhole--" large individuully hut imposin;:; In th2 union~ and many civic, political lmd The crook bent over his task. only relll;'il'UH or;.:anizatlOilS ·tn which work· aggt·pg-nte, and to IPnrl It to the ('\Jill to straighter! up suddenly us all the munlty and to indil'illuals for projects ers predominate (lartieiputing. lights went on. "In one year we have aceurnulatcd tllat haYe a social purpose. entll Ia• "Yer d-d fool !" he snarled. "Switch hor banks bC'gan to svrout up In many In depo,;;its 10 times our capital and 'em off! It ain't snfe." plnres within the la~t four sears, •;;urplus, our record showing a volume "I didn't put 'ern on!" snapp'ed Pet(•r J. nrarly, president of this hanb' of business not equalert by the a v- Drummond. points out, work rs, fannNs, and nth· ernge hank in flv~ years. There can "Nor I," said .Terningham. er woducers put the ~;;O,OOO,Ot)O,OOO no lon~er be any doubt that we are For a moment or two no one spoke; doll:rrs they deposited in hauk:;; every here io stay. tb(•n <iinger Martin made a wild dive "..\s the result of our achievement for the doo1·. But t4e door which year entil·ely at the <li~posai of capitalwe begin the second year of our ex- hud opened so em;ily a f~w moments istic banks and banl,ers. Much of the Federation bnnl,'s suc- istence on a profit-making basts. Near· before now refused to hudge, though cess is admitted to be due to the en· Jy tive hundred labor unions are now he tugged at it, eursing IHlrribly. And terprlse and Initiative of its president. u<;ing the l<'ederation Bank of New 1 after a while he gave It up, and turned who is a veteran In the labor move· York for all or part of their financial on Drummond like a wlld beast. ment. Its complete strength Is that transactions. Added power and prPS· I "You've trapped me, yer - - swine. of the enti1·e labor movement and a tige \\'ill come to the labor move-J I'll get even with you over this if I divPrl>ified bom·d of diJ'P<'torH, c·om- ment as the result of our future suc· swing fot• It!" • posed of a photo engraver, a pattern cesses." presthe whom to Hut Drummond, maker, a carpenter, a textile worker, meat as was ence of actual danger HOME OF ••LABOR" a steamfitter, a fireman, an upholster· and drink, took not the slightest noer, a longshoreman, a b1·ewery worker. tice. His bruin, lee-cold and clear, and sevt•ral lawyers, bankers and bus! wns moving rapidly. It bad not been nei"s men who gladly otfered to sen. a mistake, he had hf'ard voices-voices a labor bank. which came from that very room In gxpunsioo of the bank Is looked for which they now were. Men had been ward to. It is already serving a na there-men who had got out by some tionnl and local clientage. other way. And Ginger Mnrtin was Among services offprpd Is the pay· trapped-all of them. lllore out of ment of four per cent intPrest on sa,. thoughtlPssness than anything else, he ings accounts from the rlate of de brushed the swearing crook nsi!le with po.,!t to the date of wlth!lrawal-a the hal'k of his hand-much as one return for use of dPpositor~· mom·~ \!rushes away a troublesome fly. Anrl not otl'ered hy a commercialized hall!, Martin, feeling as If he'd been kicked - safe~uanling In vaults of record~> In the mouth by a horse, ceased to :mri securitie~ for organization,; au<l swear. indivi1luals, a !ll.ernl lenrling policy t11 It was uncanny-dey!Jfsh. The room those who want to build homes, trnn~ empty, :;;ave for them, suddenly ftooderl mission of funds abroad, and finall~ with IJght. Bnt by \\hom? Drumto l;eep wn11 h of the tinaneial hot·! mond felt they were being watched. zon to de•<'"' """ ·'' •· ·tt might af But hy whom? And then suddenly he fert the labor movep1ent. heard Ted Jel'Dingham's voice, low and Wh;l<! havin;; w 1, ' ' the ideal of tense. buil1llng up a sociully controlle1l rrcd· "'There's a man watching us, Hugh. It structure that will provide for th·' I can see his eyes. In that big safe diverting of the nation's cash into use4oor." ful and hmuar.itarian enterprises, Like a tlash, Drummond swung President Brady in his statement on round, and looke~ at the safe. Ted the bank's anniversary stressed the -..u ngnt; be coma see the eyes hlmuc>cd for prudence and fOJ-eslght In the llelf, and they were fixcrl: on him with !leveloptrJent ot the lubor banking Organ of the Railway Broth•rh•odll, an expression M malignant fury, at Waahlngton. •oovewent. He said: throw;h a lctnd ot opening that looked I is is lV N. V: .f'<>rv.lc?e like the slit in a letter box. For a moment or two they remained there, staring nt him, then they disappeared also, anrl seemed to become part of the door. And It was just as he was moviug toward this myst!'rlous sufe to examine it closer that with a sudden clang, another opening nppc•nt·ecl-one much larger than the tir:;t. IJP stopved Involuntarily as something was thrown through into the room-something which his>ied and spluttered. For u moment he g-azed at it uucomprPhendin~ly as it lay on the floor; then he gave a sudden, tensr order. "On your faces-for your lives!" His Yoke cut through the room like a knife. "Behind the desk, you fools! It's a bomb!" CHAPTER V In Which the Bag of Nuts Is Found by Accident It was th~ desk that savP1l nrumrnond, and ''llh him Tecl ,Jprningharn. Flat on thPir faces, their arms co~ er· lng their hPnds, tllPy lny on t'IJe 1loor waiti:lg, ns In days gone hy tlll'Y had waited for the bursting of a too-near rrump. 'l'hpy heard Ginger l\Iartln, as he blundHecl ronnel the room, and then-suddeuly It mme. There was a deafeniag roar, and a sheet of ftnme wbic:h seemeu to ftll the room. Great ltl'nps of the ceiling rained down and the big roll-top dPsk erucked In pieces and splintered Into matelm'Qod, fell over on top of them. But it had done Its work; It had horne the full force of the explo~ion in their direction. As u I!Psk Its rlay was past; it had become a series of holes roughly held together hy fragml'nts of wood. So much Drummond could see hy the aid of his torch. With the explosion all the lights had gone out, FEDERATION BANK IS HUGE SUCCESS Buy Your Car Now Save Money car c Inland Finance o. . ~ 1IJA11I'S wrong witA tAis pi ture.P I j I Fartne r tten ion! otor I I -- Oils & Greases Trockers r)~~y Farmers 1.. D. S. Business College There Was a Deafening Roar, and a Sheet of Flame Seemed to Fill the Room. and for a while he lay pressed against Ted .Jerningham trying to rPCOYcr his wits. His hrad was :singing 111-:e a bursting kettle: his bacl' felt ns If it was IJroken where a vast I ump of <"eiling had hit him. llnt after moving his legs cautiously and tht>n his arms. he decided that he was still alive. And having arrived at that momentous con· elusion the necessity for prompt af'tinn IJecume evident. A bomb bnrstin~ in London Is not exactly a private atialr. "Are you all right, Ted?" he muttered hoarsely, Ills mouth full of plaster and dust. "I think so, old man," answered Jerlngham, and Drununonu heu ved a sigh of relief. "I got a whack on the back of the head from something." Drummond scrambled to his feet, The and switched on his torch. wreckage was complete, but It was for the third member of the party that he was looking. And ufl(~r a moment or two he found him, and cursed with a vigorous fury that bodPcl Ill for the person who had thrown the bomb, If he ever met him. For Ginger Martin, bPing either too frightened or too ignonmt, !Jacl not done us he was tolrl. 'l'here had heen no desk between him ami the horuh when it hur~t. and what wus left of hlm adorned a corner. There was nothing to be done: the unfortunate crook would never again burg-le a safe. And the only comfort to Drummond was that death must have been absolutely Instantaneous. "Poor devil," he. muttc>red. "Some one is ~oing to pay for this." And then he felt Jernlughom clutchIng his arm. "It's blo"'n a hole In the wall, man. Look." . (TO BE CONTINUED.) Had Learned Something A wornun called ut a studio for a sitting. The photographer made two negatives and promised proofs for the I following duy. \ for The next clay her hu~band called the proofs, hut the photographer f'howP..J him only one. The husband I said: ":\Iy un1lerstnnding was that there were to he two 11roofs." "I <lid ma l'e two sittings of your wife," replied the photographer, "hut in one ~he hPld her lips apart and showed the end of her tongue." ":lfy goorlne~s." gusped the hu~bnn•l. "let me SPe that one. 1 uidn't know there was an end to it.'' Explaining the Booster• "OHP thing l can't utHlf rstaud,'' remarked Jones to his neighbor, Smith, as they walked home one evening, "Is what has happPned to all the boosters that used to Infest this town." Smith laughed. "That's easy to explain,'' he "It's !Ike this. All the boost r~plled. ers who ha<Ven't sold their real e.state have bourht some." Ptomote good Health Take care of your stomach. It is the best friend you have. HOSTETTERS Celebrated Stomach Bitb~rs taken before meals-improves the appetite, aidl digestion and imp:~rts a feelio~t ol robust health. At All Druggist• |