Show THE GARLAND 4 TlyTTnlfFnenMarnotF Illustrations by CHAPTER Irwin Myers Copyright WNU Servlet That her grandfather Jeft her the architectural inonstrosily known a “I’iQsmore'j Folly” Is for esthetic reasons by no means pleasing to Ethel Dinsmore “flapper'’ She would refuse the betjUest "but her father will not allow It Edith taits the place I'erkins the caretaker le he vlcuimof a matrimonial mishap hs wife having left him Fred James newspaper reporter comes Mr Paul Dinsmores man pioposes to Kdith and Is rejected He takes the rejection In a melodramatic manner Edith sees a connection between I’erkins' runaway wie and Mr puil Hiding with Fred James (Edith's hore holts The runaway Is stopped hy a stranger who does not gif hla name Kdith hereafter calls him M P (My Preserer) With her Bister Josephine and Fred James Kdith attends a prize fight Police laid the place The girl is saved from the indignity of arrest by the Batne man who had stopped her horse She learns his runaway name is Braxton and allows him to thindc she is a poor relation of the iinsrnores Telling her father Bhe is In love with Fred James the old gentleman arranges for and Edith to take a Josephine to Japan with their Aunt trip Candice On the pier as the shio Is about to nail the girls hear newsboys calling “All About the Dinsmore Indictment" Excited to sail the Tcsaefwithout them but with Aunt Candice IV— Continued My first hors unless neighbors Include every body In New York They seemed too angry dropped my veil and Ttiotioned to Josephine to do the Srtftie "1 don't know one of them" whls "But some of them may know pored us" the waiting people were Decidedly urgry— very angry They were like bees could not understand It at first "What the matter?" asked a woman In a shawl who stood waiting She glared at me "What’s the matter?" she echoed "What's the matter Is it? It's ruin and destruction that's the matter so It Is That thnfe of the world Pins more has stolen every cent had laid up for me old nge that's what's the matter” “Mr It's not Stolen? plnsmore? gusped “Not true Is it? It's tne that wishes to God it wasn't true! He’s stolen ull me savings and run away with them" She thrust a newspaper beneath my nose a It was another and apparently later paper than the one had bought on the steamer i'hut lmd been chit tiy and text that repeated the headlines saw at a glance conthis (leadlines I snatched tained columns of detail It from the woman's hands und down my eye it It wus awful The paper seemed to have thrown restraint to the winds to It Father had done According railroads robbed wrecked everything— hanks gambled In stocks ruined thousands of widows and children— and had then disappeared But he would be found soon the railroads and fer rles were all watched and— At least Father read no more wasn't In Jail I turned on the "I don't believe a word of It" cried “Father — ” true" rn Idea of course was to go to Father's office Hut on tlie way find Ve wouldn't changed my mind Fattier there of course and we would finds shoals of reporters who would make a headline of us: probably "Purling daughters dart to the defense of their dad" or something of that sort that would make Father mud Father hated the newspaiers except when he wanted to use them All we could do at the office would be to find out where Father had been taken and we could or so Josephine clutched my arm abruptly find that thought and I stopped It was the first time out Just as well over the telephone So I leaned forward and told the In nil her life that Josephine had done aiid I stopped and anything abruptly chauffeur to take us home was the matter see what to Josephine looked up at this Along turned about street she begun thought that perhaps she had seen Facouldn’t Imnglne to sniffle softly behind her veil and ther Approaching her clutching me for any less startling though she had ceased to pay atten cause tlon to anything But my changing matter?" "What's the gasped the orders roused her JiesItHled “Don't you Josephine "Aren't- we going to tho J Jail?” she " she began think — Po(rFVAithlnk— asked "The Jail Of course not” 'd?1 she" meant But Dinsmore "Why Josephine ' turned jffi&klng and You know perfectly well that Father — ” I began again wouldn’t stand for our coming to the hack to But she (iiTF not allow me to finish never dreamed of going there Jail "An’ vvhal does your father know?" Besides we don't know where the jail she broke in “It Is himself that knows Is—” more than the grit ml jury that Indicted “Can't Josephine glanced around It Is himself that knows Dinsmore? we ask somebody?" she faltered “The got the money to chauffeur looks as If he ought to where Plnsmore huild the folne house yonder nil fer ” know — The himself and his two daughters? Don't let film hiar “Ssh Do you their clothes It's tearing hussies! want to get Into Town Tattle? off'n Ihdi hacks I'd like tn he so It mutter sides it doesn’t would nev I'd — " would cr do for us to go to Jail I did mean And again “You — j on” spluttered t to go to the office hut I've thought clutched my arm over and I'm sure we’d better go home Josephine knew what she meant now nut and telephone from there” No one was too furious to listen Josephine considered this for a mo 'could call Father tin files tn my pres We can merit Then she brightened ence without my speaking up “You— send Father a bundle of underclothes ” “You—" raved you — and tilings and—” turned I bit n)j lips to keep from scream “Whist!" The Irishwoman "Yonder they come An' hope “Underclothes!” away gasped ing Yon talk of underclothes they’ve got him” She turned toward at a time like this You— Stop the cur the house — on unfit I forward followed and leaned hers for the and eyes My quick” arm “We want to get first time that moinlng the chauffeur's really looked scnice-lat the house Then I gasped out here” it The upper windows recognized Of course I oughtn’t to lone caught I know thut perfectly were nil blanked hy blinds that were well his arm and lulled down to the very bottom dldu wanted to get out and But windows and the door were lower the to think have time up any other nay hidden behind the flat wooden frames to stop him And he needn't have got that we always put up when we went He didn’t run Into any ten so mad Fabut away from town In the summer He came nour It of course body ther hnd said nothing about putting don't a miss Is as good as a mile them have been could up he had let us think that he think our chauffeur was going to live at home while we very brave for he turned quite white and didn’t speak for a minute— not till were gone And he must have set the servants to work on them as soon as he had brought the car up to the curb we started for the boat “Get out !” he grated But at the moment hud nu time to “What?” You wanted to get out "Get out think of that The small door In the didn’t get! And hig entrance frame was open and you? Well then thank your stars you don't have to through it three men were coning and one was— Two were policemen be carried” I sputtered “You— you— you— was —Thunk Heaven It wasn t u’a'her! So It was Harker the caretaker who ul got wus so mad I couldn’t talk wavs lived In the house while we were Instead Josephine followed more slowly She awuy He peered out and then dodged "I'm the mao a banknote hack and closed the door banded The two policemen came down to sorry" she said Thunk the pavement and to the putrid wagon The man took the money “No harm done As the that was wultlnu at the curb you miss" he suld you'll excuse cue saying so you'd beftter keep an eye fin He startthe other young lady Miss" And could find my voice ed before he didn't give JosepWne any change Josephine seemed to understand arm was a hustler she Grindstone for inv Samuel felt caught how f he'Jfthfr Motto All Right I GARLAND UTAH DINSMORB’S FOLLY SYNOPSIS ( TIMES "But why did you we?”' she asked stop a block from home Edie?" The question brought me hack to I" exclaimed "Good gracious earth Look?” Can't you pointed A block away In front of our house the at reel was black with people “Out dear oelghborq have read the pufiers on "and have come to stare I went would I knew Maybe we con theyget In without being noticed— much We couldn't have if wed arrived In a taxi" Josephine looked af me adtnirlnxiv have would never “I thought of that fishe cuunriired thought We were dose to the house nw and Could see the people who were They did not look like nelgb second one climbed In he tnrned end spoke to a man who questioned him “There “Nnwl’’ he said gruffly won't be nothin' doin’ Dinsmore ain’t here and It's a safe bet he won’t be somefor Bulled have Ills daughters where and there's nobody here hut a There’si no use waitin'" caretaker - He spoke to the one man but bU Idg voice boomed over the street bo he Then thut everybody heard It Jumped Into the wagon" and It rlat tered away for It The crowd seemed satisfied awBy hy began to disperse drifting ones and twos till no one waa left except Josephine und me and an officer whom had not noticed before who at the corner of the stood watching As Siam alley just beyond the house ns saw him I guessed that he had been stationed there to arrest or fol low any body who came to the house ami made up my mind thut lie should not see Josephine or me If the papers and the police thought that Josephine would and had sailed for Jttpun not undeceive them We could hide and wait till Father turned up I’er Imps I— even I — could do something toward clearing away the cloud that rested on Father’s Daine "Comer' turned to Josephine said turning away from the house stnred af me "Come Josephine where?" she asked "Aren't you going home?” ex “No!” Isald “We cun’L” dalned why we couldn’t “We can’t go home We’ve got to go to Dinsmore s Folly” looked so amazed that Josephine “1 did not wait for her to speak said don’t wonder you're surprised” “But we’ve gor to go there We’ve nowhere else to go Perhaps you’ve fortoo and the gotten’’— I had forgotten fact tunde me a little sarcastic — “perthat Aunt haps you have forgotten’ Candice carried the money and that are nearly busted — unless you and we go to the office and give ourselves dead away’ this for a moJosephine considered ment “Then” she said “w can’t afford to take a taxi out to Dinsmore” “That’s nothing” wasn’t going to admit that had forgotten anything “We don't need any taxi We’ll go In the subway Come on” I started followed and Josephine For three blocks she followed In lence Then Just at the subway entrance she halted “I’ve been thinking” she began stopped and faced tier I hud great respect for the result of Josephine's thoughts— when she reached them She was slow but she was sure — often painfully so “Well?' questioned her Josephine opened Idg eyes wider “I believe Father is on hoard the steamer’' she said ”1 believe that was why he sent us on her I believe lie expected-tmeet us on her ufter she got to sea” “Good Lord!" Mv eyes popped wide and my mouth fell oen "If—” But there was no time for "Ifs" JuM them “Come along” I cried clutching Jo arm “We’ll talk ull that seplilne’s over at Dinsmore” J CHAPTER V "Oh! b — 1" said the dmlie-who till then had taken no part In the conversation Fred says that any storj thut Is s story ought to start with some such as the above couldn’t expression work anything of the kind In lit lie But — If not beginning of this story at the beginning of a story why not utHie beginning of a chapter? Not thut there Is u tiy dm Mess In this chapter or even In this story But the slate of mind that the quotation connotes certainly docs portray the eveivlmdv feelings of pretty s nearly that appears In this" chapter and of u lot of people who do not pin r At least it portrays their feelings a little later when they lie of heard events that took (dace In this chaiter And If eventually why not now? It goes double for me' Anyway und for started Josephine anon we Folly on the subway took a trolley car some noire anon we wulked und finully we arrived ufter traveling for two hours wnlomt stopping except for ten minutes iiiit on spending in a Insisted Josephine drug store at the end of the simony while stood beside a trolley ear and not to star! till begged the conductor The conmy slter could Join me ductor wnuldtv’i— promise hut tie dd id wait And then ufter Josephine come lie waited for a good live onn ales longer Brute! TO BE CON INI tu but Staff Went Too Far the gospel id speeding lip Over every desk In his otltee he pluccd h large printed notice- reed It Now !" "I Ing : But a week later with tired fingers air he tore them nil and exhausted down "Hello" said a friend dashing In and seeing Hie ceremony of dost rue Itoesn’t hustling “What's up? tlon to the old leisurely pay? Going but methods?” “Yes atn" snorted Grindstone I gave ten doesn't pay "Hustling cents each for these notloes'thlnklnE they’d spur my slaff toward work” ’Well?" “Well the net result Is that 'hey ve all acted on the motto The cuief cashier has bolted with the cnainr youngest son four Juniors rume III yesterday to ask for n raise srrtl ttie office hoy got a betior tins gone off to It" mv -- Jaime Felix Tsohlffely on hs horse “Muncha" which he rode from Buenos Af r Argentine archeologist 2— Heck and gun turrets of the British to Washington buttleshlp Australia which made an official visit to New 3 —J ltiihen Clurk of Utah (right) being sworn In as undersecretary of state by William McXelr of tha State department York HEWS REVIEW OF CBRREKTEVENTS of Rockford Flyers Greenland— Zogu Now ICing of Albanian Rescue in By EDWARD paniplijeis' publishing news lid not up They ap pcarwlth any regularity yrCared when fhere wus something to tell For Inst jru-there was a Frem'h pamphlet published In 1492 telling ot the surrender of Gran Hda and Moors to Ferdinand hy live Isabella Possibly there was an uher whenedition Columbus disco"erel America hut no record has been found of that PICKARD nml Barker framer the Km kford (III) aviators set out on a lllglit to Stockholm were found alive and und disappeared safe in Greenland by the University of Michigan expedition and last week hy steamer In started for Denmark H Jlohlis cotnpuuy with I’rof 'Losing leader of the scientific group their way to Mount Evans their Greenland destination the flyers ran out of gas and landed on the Ice fields HX) For two weeks they miles inland tramped over mountains around fjords and across sand flats and finally attracted the attention of the scientists rescued hy snulke slgmals and were Their st bison plane was pnlnjured when ticy abandoned It hut was believed tit have been broken up by later storips r In making the Though unsuccessful flight tit Sweden the aviators lielieye they have established the fact that route Is the best for the Greenland flights to northern Europe and In this they are upheld hy Yilhjulniur the noted Arctic explorer who says that in Greenland there are tens of thousands of miles of perfectly level Ice on which planes can land safely said the Greenland Mr Stefunsson course in the future will he taken hy airplanes und dirigibles to the practical exclusion of the southern mutes 000 over miles of open water A direct route between Seattle and Bera lin he explained would combine rriii in of safety with a minimum run of ilistance arid would bring the west to const of America almost us near Europe lu hours as Is the eqst coast BERT HASSELL the federal departments and bureaus with Itonmn' Catholics In reply he called on Robert Moses a Republican nnd a Jew whom he appointed secretary of slate In 1927 to tell the religious and political nlllllathms of the tnemberg of his cabinet and appointees and of others whose appointments have been approved hy him The results of the Inquiry as given out at were A'llinny“Members of the governor's cabinet totaling 14 p Protestant 10 Catholic 3 Jewish 8 Republican 4 2 Democrat Independent “Other present) state department and major division heuds totullng 21 14 Protestant Catholic Demo8 crat 14 Republican Independent 3 "Other present state officials whose were approved by Govappointments ernor Smith totaling EiO: Protestant 10" Catholic 33 Jewish Ui uudeslg-nnte7 72 Democrat Republican lS Independent 0 undcslgnated 17" who 'ANTIC lost one of her lending FI statesmen last week In an airMaurice BokanowskI plane disnster nviatlon minister of commerce posts and telephones nnd youngest telegraph member of the cabinet was killed when a plane In which lie was flying from T'nil 1° Paris crashed just after Its stnrt Ills four companions also perished and the bodies were burned when the wreck took fire' Ope of the worst recent Amerlean airplane disasters occurred near Powhen a Fokker air Idaho catello Six mail plane crashed passengers and the pilot were Instunlly killed UltOI’E has a new king Alimeij Zogu who has been serving us President of A buna was elevated (o the throne by the national assembly without a dissenting vote und assumed the historic mime of Scatulerheg III a former This Mohammedan mountain chieftain took a'douhle oath nu king once on the Bible and once on the Korun lie has guaranteed the "otiutry complete freedom of worship tire Though the people of Tirana banian capitaleemeil Inippy to huvo Zogu as king the chiefs of the to u' suld haveeent are party protest to nil I!liroieaii liowc resort ng Hie Albanian pcoplelvould ’o arms to reslorethe republican form of governmen- t- Italy was the lrst power recognize the new me eg! audit was believed the exam pie would he followed by all the oth king's first official at was be rut fo it e kki jir ls n era u n d he second was tn give bonuses of one noulh'g salary to all stale employees rThp constantly trying to way to get the French irmy of occupation out of Hie K hi tie and has made a definite proposition n tlie subject to I ranee and last seek In Geneva Herr Mueller chan ellor of the reich laid a long private inference with M Rrlahd French linister of foreign affairs It wus ild that the German plan the niohilizitlon of h certain orthm of the lllXKUKHInoo gold 'asks $27YO(iOOX)0 In railway !e entures as provided under the Paves lan for the floating sf hh Interna ional loan and the liquidation of a GEUMANY Earliest Nejjtpapert It Is liard Hpsay Just news pu)en begpm for Hie first pners ul W large portion of France's war Indemnity claims It provider for the fixation of tlit1 total amount of reparations which Germany shall pay under the Dawes plan The Dawes' plan merely fixed the amount of annuities without stating how many years they should continue It was realized hy both Mueller tind Briand that the proposition cannot bo developed until ufter lit Presidential elections in the Lulled States und uu with the next administratagreement ion at Washington because the hulk of the releh railway debentures must he floated in the American market the League 7 of Natl mis as’ semhly opened lu Genevu the Sweden repieseiiLa lives of Tiulund and Boland stirred lip u wurtn debate by proposing that tin league undertake un Investigation aimed ul checkThe deleing the abuse of ulcoliol coungates from the tries of boullieru Europe protested and no decision wus reuched H J Hie Finland of of l'rocope president la Ills convening league council luuded the Kellogg as an Instrument of world treaty That pact Is still (lie subject peace of JJju'ly comment ull over the world more tuitions signify Mp leering 16 It l who vM committee out u warning treaty meunt ucy the curtallmcnrfhvfll Ainerlcun nuvul Lu building plan C’offgrohKiiiun of" New ioik ulao In tie French capital disputed this saying our program could not he continued without In the pact virtually repudiating Washington speculation was rife conwhich will he cerning the Hie senate proposed in hy those who profess to fear foreign entanglements It Is generally believed ot)e of these will he to make It clear reservations thut America will not permit Itself to mm he dL'vvn HERBERT HOOVER has been told advisers that the Middle West Is safe for him and so will not make any campaign speeches In that He vvll deliver hut one adregion dress In the Sotuli— fit an Industrial celebration at Ffilzahctliton Tenn on October 0 Senator Rrqokhart of Iowa was one of those whoHold Mr Hoover he wns certain to carry the states the only necesagricultural sary thing being "to let the farmers know Hoover’s real war record'— On the other hand the Republican! party In North Dakota hassipUt thd Independent wing Indorsing Hoover's candidacy nnd the nonpnrtlsnn wing- reThe latter 'faction fusing to do so controls the slate Central apparently committee ' Republican efforts to break into the solid South are resulting In some queer conditions Republican ' managers in Alubama and Ghorgia have enpented to the wlijidriiwd of J?g- - |