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Show S THE SUNDAY HERALD, OCTOBER 28, 1923. PAGE FOUR.' Vanaemeytf, 20 Soott f mil mansions. ' Miss Wheeler, Hd-ie- y ahd ITs eyes, small and Shifted unceasingly. ClaplDgtoD road, Battersea. Ehs's crafty, Whfttlngton ordered a substanfar ai I' remema lady 'i maid, lunch for himself and bis comber, ao probably won't be there, tial with. panion; then, as the waitress and, anyway, she's not likely." his chair a little Then the Mayfalr lady la dear- drew, he e moved table and bgan to ly Indicated ss the first imrt of closer talk earnestly in a low volce-Th- e la. Listen as he South Aucl!ejrjnanskni wan an other man joined catch a k of flats Jost would, Tommy oeould, ; only the gist It Park lane. No. 20 was' m the word here and there bat of It seemed to be some directions ; second floorl or orders which the big man was Tommy had by this time tne gi re impressing on. nis companion,, ana which" the latter aesme&froin time to time, to, disagree. Whining an, looking more like a noueneer ss Boris. than a servant,, who opened tbe ton addressed the other Tommy caught the word "Iredoor to him.' 4 land." several timearrtBoy"propa-ganda,- " "ChrtsilamisHey but of Jane Finn titers was "Margaret" no mention. Suddenly, in a lull In Tommy spelt it,' but the other " in- the clatter of the room, he got one terrupted him. phrase entire. Wblttlngton was i "No. c a e." - "Oh, Marguerite rFtench way. I speaking. "Ab but you dont know marvel. An arch. see." He paused, then plunged Flossie. She's a would swear she was his boldly. "We bad her down as Rita bishop own mother. She gets the voice Vandemeyer, but I suppose that's right every time, and that's really Incorrect?" ' "She's mostly called that, sir, but the principal thing." Tommy did not near Boris reply, Marguerite's her name." in response to It Whltlngton -Thank you- .- That's 11 Good but said something that sounded llke: morning." "Of course only in an emer- -' Hardly able to contain his ex gency . . ." the down hurried citement, Tommy Then , he lost the thread again. waiting at But stairs, TuDPene-wa- s presently the phrases, became ', he t of turn. the ungle distinct "again whether because the "You beard?" ; other two bad insensibly raised "Yes. Oh, Tommy Her hand was still in Tommy's, their voices, or because Tommy's They had reached the entrance hall, ears were getting more attuned, he There were footsteps on the stairs could not tell, - But two words cerabove them, and voices. tainly had 's most stimulating efSuddenly, to Tommy's complete fect upon the listener. They were sum rise. Tuppence dragged htm uttered by Boris and they were; Into the little space iy jhe side of i"Mr. Brown.": Whtttlngton seemed to remon-merethe lift where the shadow was strata with him, but he deepest :: Wharthe-"- laughed- ."Hushr Why not, my friend? It is a Two men came down the stairs name most respectable most cornand passed out thmngh the en-- mon... Did henot clioose lWof4hat trance. Tuppence's hand closed reason? Ah, I should like tomeet him Mr. Brown." tighter on Tommy's arm. There was a steely ring in Whlt- "Quick follow them. I daren't. L He might . he jreplledi recognlieijne, I Jon't Uhgton'i; voice iwal-Yomow wftn ma ompr , man is. m may hftv&.met. tne Digger or tne two was umtting- 43 talked, PRAISES AUTO Oil HADEJI to-th- XSifr&'iW- aChristie eTEe oil ami itnTplle It UpVBe went Into otl. and hewent Into teeljjmd he played a bit with railroads, and I can tell you tirraad 1 Wall Street sit op!" He. paiwei "Then he died Inst fiO and I got the dollars. Well, would you be--' lleve If, iHy conscience got Bnsyl Kept knocking me up and saying: kWlmt about your Aunt Jane, ..way out west? It worried me some. Too see, I figured It out that Amos Finn would never mnke good. He wasn't that sort. End of It was, I hired a man to hunt her down, Result, she was dead, and Amos Finnwas dead, hot they'd left a dangh1 ter Jane who'd been torpedoed In the Lusltanla on her way to Paris. She was saved all right, but ' they, didn't seem able to hear of her over this side. I. guessed 'they weren't hustling any, so I thought Ti come along over, and speed . things on. I phoned Scotland lard and the Admiralty firstrtlilnp-Th- ff AararraltyraQier choked me oi 1 tot ScothrndYard wer every ,one Is bound to turn up sooner of "laterT Piccadilly circus, for Instance. One of my Ideas was to take up my stand tberevery day." - "jlonestly, I don't think much of the Idea. : Whlttlngfon mayn't be In - ' London at all." "That's true. Anyway, 1 think clue No, 2 Is more promising." "Let's hear it. "It's nothing much. Oftjy a Christian trame Rita. Whlttington mentioned It that day." "Are you proposing a third Wanted, female crook, answering to the hame of KltaT . "I am not I propose to reason In a-- logical manner. Thg Danvers, was shadowed on the way over, wasn't he? And It's more a woman-th- an likely to have-be-- V en a man" . "I don't see that at all." T am absolutely certain that It would be a woman, and a eood- Tnnnonoo mnpd calmly. "Now, obviously, this worn- was saved. an, --whoever she-wa"How do yon make that out? ' "If she wasn't how lKpuid; they eald they would make Inquiries, even senta man round this morn--fnto get her photograph. I'm off -- to Parts tomorrow. Just to see what the Prefecture Is doing. I guess If 1 go to and fro bustling them, they Kmght to get busy 1" The energy of Mr. Hershelmmer wat tremendous. They bowed- be--. fore It. v "But say, now," he ended, "you're tot after her for anything! Contempt of court, or something Brit-ish J A young Amert-can girl might find your rules and regulations In war times rather Irk some, and get up against It. If. that's the case, and there's such a thing at graft In this country, 111 buy her off." Tuppence reassured him. ' n wort1 arrgom together. What about some lunch Wir Oysters had Just .given place to Sole Colbert when a card was brought to Hershelmmer. "Inspector Japp, C. L UT Swt-- land Tard again. Another man this time. What does be expect I can . tell him that I didn't' tell the flrst chapT I hope they haven't lost That western . that- photograph. photographers place was burned down and all his negatives destroyed this Is the only copy In existence, I got It from tbe principal of the college there." An unformulated dread swept "How Would They Have Known over Tuppence. Jane Finn Had the Papers?" "Yon you don't know the name " have known" Jane Finn had got tbe of the. man who came this papers?" Half a "Yes. t do. Ko. I don "Correct." second. It was on his card. Oh, I "Now, there's Just a chance, I ad' know I Inspector Brown. Quiet, mit it's only a chance, that this woman may have been 'Rita.'" unassuming sort of chap." A veil might with profit be drawn "And If so?" over the events of the next balf-"If so, we've got to hunt through Lusltanla-till-- we Suffice it to say that no such : hour. find her." person as "Inspector Brown" was to Scotland Tard, The, - known "Tli en thfr flrsthlng Is to get a photograph of Jane Finn, which list of the survivors." ;irouldLave..been.of.the. utmost wrote a long list "I've got value to the police In tracing her, of things I wanted to know, nnd 1 t -was lost beyond recovery. Once sent It to Mr. Carter. I i i I' got his gala ."Mr. Brown" had triumphed. reply this morning, and among ' The Immediate result of, this set-- , other things It Incloses the official back was to effect a rapproche- - statement of those saved from the " ; merit "Between" Julius llerslielmmer ."' Lusltanla." and the' Young Adventurers. All "But the great point Is, Is there barriers went down with a crash, a 'Rita' on the list?" " and Tommy nnd Tuppence felt they "That's Just what-- 1 don't know," had known the young American all confessed Tuppence. "You see, their lives. They abandoned the- very few Christian nnmes are discreet retlcMiic of "private In- T,'ri Ve lK'"ly "n Mf8' r qulry agents." and revealed to him MIks." the. whole hlstorv of the 1lnt von. "That compll-h- e Tommy nodded ture, whereat the young man Ce-- rates matters," murmured dared himself "tickled to death." 'He turned to Tuppence at the thoughtfully. "Well, we've Just got to get down close of the narration. ta It, thafs all. We'll start with "I've always had a kind of Idea the London' area. Just note down '. that EnglM"gTrl8 were Just a mite the addresses of any of the fernd males who live' In London or roundsweet, you know, but scared to move around without a footman or about while I put oa tuy. hat" Five minutes later the young ! ji maiden aunt I gueee Tm abit , couple emerged Into Piccadilly, and . behind the times !" afew sec0n.d4Jatera.taxI was bearrelations wu that Tommy and Tup- - ing them to The Laurels, Glen- penes took up their abode forth-- j dower road, N.7. the residence of 4 r with at the Rrtt In onkr, as Tup- Mrs. Edgar Keith, whose --tame figpence put It, to keep In touch with ured first In a Hsrof seven repos In Tommy's pocketbook. Jane-flnn- 's only living rslitlon. ing The Laurels was a dilapidated "And put like that." she added confidentially to Tommy, "nobody house, standing back from the road few grimy bushes to support could boggle at tbe expense I Sth afiction of a front garden. Nobody did, whkh was the great Tommy paid off the taxi, and ac . .. thing. companied Tuppenco to the front now,", said ths young lady doorbell. He pressed the bell. Tw on the morning after their Installapenoo withdrew to a suitable spot slatternly-lookin- g A tion, "to work) We should map . servant out a plan of campaign." with an extremely dirty faoa and a I" , bear pair of eyes that did Dot match, 'Well, let's do It Tdegln with, answered the door. what hate we to go uponr had produced a notebook Somoy W'Arlutely-ryothlng- ," said; ;. :.. . . 1 . 1 Tommy cheerily. AonAat," U soi briskly "Wrong I" Xnpnw!e wagged aa (Ed cheerfully.' "From the H amp-steenergetic finger. "We have two dls- borough. council. The new Voting Register. Mrs, Edgar Kslth lives hero, does sho notT thtyrkaov-of tb .Tint clusrv "Yaas," said the aervant "Christian name?" asked Tommy, ' "whittinstoir pencil poised.. "Yea. rd lecogslM him any. "Missus'! Eleanor Jane." here." , Tommy. s 'Uxm," said Tommy doubtfully, sms or danghtera - over twenty "I don't call that much of a doe, oper , You dont know wbere to look for "Naow." him, and it's about a thousand to Thank you." Tommy closed the one against your running against notebook with a brisk snap, "tiood him by seddent" . " morning." Tin not so sure about that- - rs "Good wheesa, wasn't It? Ad tiled Tuppenco thoughtfully. There we can repeat it ad lib, Where's ftre Jlacef In Londoa where simply the next drawt" , g ly -- js i ton.' raw i4 r YtwjFSkHh. ri makK - morn-tog?- I . lit .ill him to gain upon them, and by tbe time be, In his turn, reached the corner the distance between them was sensibly lessened. Their course was a algxag one designed to bring them as quickly as possible to Oxford street When at length they turned' Into' It proceeding In an easterly direction, Tommy slightly teTeaae&4rig paee. Little by Httrc1 he gained upon them. Just before the Bond Street tube station they crossed' the road, Tommy, unpercelved, faithfully at their heels, und entered the big Lyons'. There they went up to the flrst floor, and sat at a small table tn the window. It was late, and the place was thinning out. Tommy took a seat at the table next to them, sitting directly behind tn case of recognition. On the other hand, he had a full View of the second man and studied him He was fair, with a attentively. weak, unpleasant face, and Tommy put him down as being either a Russian or a Pole. He was prob--i ably about fifty years of age, his shoulders cringed a little as he -- - Whit-tlngto- n I s 27-2- 3 author of Phllllmore, Road Transport" and an authority of motor cars in wrote the following articles which appwre'Tecently Tn The Financial Times, London,. 'England. Mr. Ehllllmore, with the usuat distaste of the British automobile John ' AnHTfarsn-mad- spare himself fa criticising automobiles made in the United States. This article was devoted to one of the more popular makes of American cars which has been in big demand in England this year. Excerpts follow: "Paige cars have always been well turned out, and the latest of phaeton power is undoubtedly an attractive model. Let it be said at the outset that the power- - denomination need not frighten the timid, for although the car will do its 65 miles an hour full load on a level road, or " . . Gas, Oils, Greases er : h driven at moderate speeds with ' ease and comfor To ha ve power in reserve is not extravagant, rather the reverse. Tbe model with all its complete equipment Is not expensive, and for the motorist'who likes smooth swiftness, a goodly margin of power always ready to the touch,' and an occasional burst of Joyous speed when an open and free road Is entered, this car has an undoubted appeal. The engine, clutch and gear box are assembled as a unit and the whole is suspended In the chassis at three points. The general de-filcrn nf ih rat fa vHtV b ton . heirtionsreaf, "and affords accessq ibilitr. The eneine has a bore and srmlrA- at SSi - nnil ft- - infana btiA both head and cylinder block are " l - " Phone 237.: I The " ". '" U " " , .. CffA 1 ,'V CI i t '. .. d " l ' - lt On the Finest Heretofore a moderate-price- d doted car haa meant an inferiorchattis. : Now at a savins of hundreds of dollan you buy in HUDSON car of positive reliability, chassis excellence and finest performance; ..: . More Than 70,000 Coaches in Service . - Super-Si- x u ., - , At practically open car cost, the Coach combines all closed car comforts with famous chassis quality. Increasing thousands find it meets every .... U. need, at a big saving in cost. . Prices at the Lowest Level in History nYcvtN I frfix Utah County PaIcE Penrod BUILT 4 TtM Extrt , H r ni 1 V ' I - "- -'-'- - 'rr3-,t -- d Then You Will KNOW Jewett Six Has More Power "boulevard JOTS climb! That's out-shini- First West Try to Pass It On a Hill ANNOUNCEMENT I V-- - It-ha- s er 3x5 lesser-power- h fHr, H 67 North Provo, Utah. I bauties"are"dud8"when asked where real ability shows. And to that's where the new Jewett Six Is daily . light sixes and cars costing lar more than Jewett The new Jewett Six outclasses all cars its size. a full 50 h.p. motor Paige-buil- t, inches which means 249 cuCylinders are bic inches o! piston displacement. Check those figures against anylight"six. Form your own opinion of perionnancpossibilities of cart. Having such power, Jewett Six need not be skimped in an effort to attain performance. Nor is it oeepfranhuskvPalge-Timke- n axles, front and r Vnlversal joints; springs 80 of wheelbase, The new Jewett weighs 2805 pounds from 200 to 400 pounds more than ""llght'six cars of the tame size, And with all this husky strength and weieht Jewett drives from 2 to 60 mile an hour ia highi passes mo any car oa any hill; accelerates from 5 to 25 miles aa how in 7 ieconds in high. Try that with . my other car!) -- - . ' Yet Jewett Six costs only $1065 Ct Detroit. Old- ilme motorists are amazed at Its penccmance,stsmint' and astounding value. Drive It yourself, Call us up, Have ride, any time. Youll agree that Jewett out. performs most any ether cat you've ever driven- particularly when compared with "light" sixes of lest arjd dursiility I power, lass weight, ksrjer & ul ar b ey ' 1 ad car in Chassis Ever Built Super-Si- x Scho field Auto Company thae-fon(Wen- tlal JJtod best low America today. FrtitktaniTxExtr4 Frtiiht moss-grow- - 4i priced DETROIT. Mich., Oct.,- 27 Tbe new factory of the Motor Car company, to be devoted exclusively to thejroductlpn of the Jewett Six Is being rapidly rushed to completion, according to officials of the Dlant With the exception of Installation of mncrlnery which is now undet. way, only the depressed railroad trucks for which the excavation has been made beside the receiving plat form remain to be laid. All of the concrete flooring has been laid. The entire drlveaway the freight p1h tform. adjoining loading dix'kx has been surfaced and niade ready to receive great quan ta ties of machinery which will later be plnced In the new plant. The building proper which Aas had three acres of glass used in its construction has' been divided into In the its various departments. finished car department the rollers for testiug completed Jewetts have lieen Installed. It is expected that all machinery will be Installed In order that pro duction may start in the new factory before the first of January, If r I is "the Palge-Detro- " it canje if 1f n Overland WUlys-Knig- ht Tubes', A ccessories, Tires H.F The-upeho- iUys-Knight (.....-,- - K -W- ." ,. t . ht Oferiand We Serve You ats a Willys-Knig- 3 Eng-glan- expertlot does not Overland Dealers L . . of average 1 in 8 gradient in waa run up On second with 30 miles per hour as a minimum. "In fact my impression of the 0 Paige was that the car la built to last, capable of being worked hard without complaint and at tbe same time' of giving employment by reason "of Its 'Jole 35 Tivre.' " Sus-jex- , "Motor I WHTTTINGTON and his at a eood paoe. Tommy started In pursuit at once, and was In time to see them turn the comer of the street. His vigorous strides soon enabled d Tf-w- r , s, " proud-spirite- . ' "Hills have few' terrors for the car. With a full load, tbe lowest rate recorded on aecond, on Wester-hawas" an hour. 'On miles per Titsey a steady hour was maintained en the. steep section and the climb finished on top at 43. Kidd'g hiil,''a nifle pull m . tniposlng-lmiklng'Moc- ' detacbable. -- thearrival of a f Wrle?,s f 5 ihis season,s wear and cw! you and inspect them. . This is a de- ISnin from samples, an advancement in T 1?" plea,sw.4 difflte to announce the tailoring business in Proyo. Hi!8 ?yAbelief that fhe men of Provo who appre- iate better sort of .tailoring wUl welcome this im-; ferovement Assuredly I wfll appreciate your calling. . - . v: ; Overaland WUlys-Knig- ht ' Cordially yours, - ErArr,IITCIlELL ' Overaland : WUlys-Knig- ht 101 North University Avenue. - Overaland Superior Motor Co. Willys-Knig- ht |