OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1928 J. D. Cronin LAMP of the V Utah Agricultural College Opens Monday December 3 J Arts and Science llrM mi. CHAPTER 15 (Continued from last week) ROBERTS RJNtHART listened carefully, trying to fit this new light on Gordon's Injury with the evidence as I knew It True, the weak link in our chain against him had been that he himself had heen attacked. And this was now solved In a manner. But perfectly matter-of-fa1 there was some discrepancy, something which eluded me until I had gone over In my mind the events of Catalogue the night of the 2Gth In their sequence. Then I found it "But what about the man the boy window V saw enter by the Are you looking for an easy time? "Pure Invention. I feel certain Had If you are, you picked the wrong he accused me he lew the matter of ptenet on which to be born. his night excursions would come out. That was the last thing he wanted." When evil desires are unsuccessful It was my next remark, however, In making us turn aside from the which has left us, as I wrote at the right way, we win true success. beginning of this entry, Just where we were before. You haven't said anything about the rope, Mr. Bethel That has alF q ways " "Rope!" he said slowly. "What I Winter Quarter Closes Friday, March gun-roo- SNOWVILLE LAND AND WATER COMPANY Principal nlace of business, Snow-TdllUtah. NOTICE There are delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment levied on the 13th day of October, 1928, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: e, No. No. Name Cert. Shares Amt. 11 47 William Buck $ 1.50 11 1.50 B. C. Call 26 And in accordance with law, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the secretary of the company at Snowville, Utah, on the 30th day of November, 1928, at the hour of 2 p. m., to pay delinquent assessments thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of sale. WM. HURD, Secretary Snowville, Utah. SUPERSTITIOUS SUE cwim 8-- When You Think LUMBER THINK WILSON "Everything to Build Anything" Phone 11. HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID for all kinds of HIDES, PELTS, FURS AND WOOL Yours For Business Garland Hide & Fur Co. J. W. GARRETT, Manager Bell Phones GARLAND, and 26 UTAH 146 SHE HAS HEARD THAT There is an old English belief that if you fall upstairs with a pot of tea in your hand don't growl, girlie, but gurgle for joy it's .an omen that cupid will play a wedding march in your house within six months. (&, bv McCIure Newspaper Syndicate o To cure a husband of wanting so nuii.y kinds of food at a meal let him wusli the dishes. FORCED TO SLEEP IN CITY SHOE REPAIR L. E. ALLRED, Prop. BOOTS AND SHOES MADE TO Tremonton ORDER Utah CHAIR GAS SO BAD "Nights I sat up in a chair, I had such stomach gas. I took Adlerika and nothing I eats hurts me now. 1 sleep fine." Mrs. Glenn Butler. Even the FIRST spoonful of Adlerika relieves gas on the stomach and removes astonishing amounts of old waste matter from the system. Makes you enjoy your meals and sleep better. No matter what you have tried for your stomach and bowels. Adlerika will surprise you. H. G. Scott Drug Co. Nave You a Good Understanding of Foot Dress and Foot (Comfort? You Answer VSHOM L "YCS if you are the wearer of THORGOOD SHOES that are built for farm use or for town wear. OUR SHOE BUSINESS IS KEEPING US ON OUR FEET They will do the same for you And remember, we are Headquarters for All Kinds of Leather Goods and Findings Tremonton Harness Accessories Co. Phone 48 & Tremonton I II 1 rope?" "He was tied hand and foot when I found him." He glanced at me, and then down at bis helpless hand. "It's a very long time since 1 have been able to tie a rope, Mr. Porter," he said quietly. I remained with him until an hour ir so after the last train from the city uad arrived, but there was no sign of Gordon. I offered to remain for the ttight with him, but he declined. He would not go to bed, however, and I left him ttiere at last, his revolver within reach. . - . . Of that later talk there Is one matter of real importance to record. I have a strange picture in my mind, bearing (n the relations of these two, the old man and the boy, and leading up to it; each watching the other, the old man terrified, the boy And on the surface, before deadly. Annie Cochran, all well enough between them ; dictation taken, and the book growing. Small surface differences, perhaps, but underneath suspicion on one side and revenge and hatred on the other. Then Gordon took to locking his room. It was Annie Cochran who told Bethel, and from that time on that locked room plqyed its own part between them; the old man asking himself what was hidden in it, the secretary with his sneering smile quietly carrying the key. It grew, I gathered, to have a peculiar place In the old man's imagination; he wandered down the passage to it more, than once; finally Annie Cochran caught him there, trying the knob, and he had made some excuse and gone away. But the night young Gordon flung out of the house, the same night I saw the figure at the foot of the stairs, Annie Cochran had come to him before leaving, with a key In her band. "I thought you might like this, sir," she said. "I find It fits Mr. door." Then she had gone, and he went to the room and entered. The knife and the rope were there, and he took them. "What was I to pay that night, when the constable came down and reported nothing there? In ten minutes, or an hour, you were going to leave me here with him. He was watching me; he kDew." No And I daresay he was right matter what statement had been made relative to the rope and the knife, there was no reason for Gordon's nr rest that night In ten minutes, or an hour, they would have been left together, and who knows what might have happened? Go'-don'- s August 18. Gordon came back early this morning. I Invented an errand to the house soon after breakfast, but found that Mr. Bethel was still sleeping as well he might and that preparations for tomorrow's departure were well under way. While Gordon was busy on the lower floor, Thomas and I made a tour of the house, with a view to closing It. I took advantage of my legitimate presence on the upper floor to examine the locked closet In which I had stored the red lamp. It Is still there, and apparently has not been disturbed. . . . Ilalliday today advised for me a period of masterly Inactivity. Not that he calls It so, but thai Is what he means. "I have an Idea, Skipper," he said, "that this calling Greenough off the case was sheer bluff. Every move he made was being w'.itched, and unless I miss my guess you'll And he's at Bass core, or some place nearby, under another name. I thought I saw bis car a night or so ago." What I finally gathered Is that wants to eliminate me from the case, for my nwjj sjl&c . Hal-lldn- ting very pretty. But one more bit of bad luck and he's ready to Jump." Although he smiled, I have an idea that be Is deadly serious; 'that he knows Greenough Is not far away, and that for some unknown reason he expects another bit of bad luck. His face Is thin and haggard these days, and from the fact that he sleeps a great deal In the daytime, I am Inclined to think that he sleeps very little at night Between him and Editb, too, 1 surmise some sort of mysterious understanding. At the same time, there Is a noticeable absence of those conferences In which, some little time ago, we were free to air our various theories. Willy nilly, I am consigned to Innocuous desuetude. Hayward started yesterday on his vacation. three-angle- d Bethel. Is It only necessary. to escape Justice, that a criminal' artfully dispose of his crime? And by how narrow a margin he did BeA matter of minutes. escape it tween my calling Ilalliday on the telephone and my meeting him at the terrace; perhaps even between that and our entrance Into that wrecked room. A matter of minutes. In one thing only did he make an error, and even that may not have been an error. lie , may coolly have abandoned his suitcase, packed and hidden In the shrubbery; may have stood there a second or so, considering It, and then decided to fet it lie. The most grievous thing to me is that 1 should have given him the And the most terrible picwarning. ture I have Is that, when I called Ilalliday, he stood listening in at the tele"Can I phone, craftily calculating: make it? Can I not?" With that behind him. . . . Crafty. As old In crime as crime is old, for all his youth. Out on the bay disposing of his horrible freight, and watching the lanterns as they searched for the boat ; seeing them scatter, looking for other boats with which to follow him out onto the water, and then quietly heading back, into the creek again, and escaping through the wood. Crafty, beyond words. (To be continued) There are at least 25 women holding responsible appointive offices In the United States government. The women of I.upland are among the smallest in the world, averaging only 4 feet 5) Inches In height CONSOLIDATED MINING AM) MILLING CO. 1903 North 15th St. Boise, Ada County, Idaho There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment levied October 3, 1928, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: No. Cert. Shares Amt. A. W Anderson A. W. Anderson E. B. Butler !E. B. Butler E. B. Butler H. B. Butler Geo. Bitanjra J. D. Cornin 341 373 57 58 156 155 127 15 1000 1000 600 500 900 100 120 5.00 5.00 2.50 2.50 4.50 .50 .6t. 5000 25.00 292 9-1- WE ARE NOW READY ! to serve our friends and patrons those .83 FAMOUS CHINESE CHICKEN 5.00 5.00 NOODLES 5O.00 50.00 2.50 every Saturday from 3 p.m. till 8 p.m. Otto's Cafe The Place with a Personality Give "HER" A BANK ACCOUNT r PEN A BANK ACCOUNT for your wife, or daughter and then encourage her to make regular deposits. She'll like to bank here, where everyone is so friendly. $1 opens an account. 4 per cent interest compounded semi-annuall- y. TREMONTON BANKING CO. The Bank Best Able to Serve the Bear River Valley The new Ford has a very simple and effective lubrication system 1 No. 358 . August 20. gone over, Inch by Inch, the scene of it. We have been spared no shock; the evidence of the struggle Is on the walls, the floor, the furniture; we have the very knife with which It was committed. We have even gone further than that We have followed It outside, along the drive to the garage, and from there by the car to the salt marsh beyond Robinson's point. And yet, according to Ilalliday, until we have gone still further, we have had no murder, according to the law. Ever since daylight, I have been struggling to see the Justice of a law where, when Gordon Is found and Greenough believes be will be found we cannot convict him unless we also find that hit of old flesh and blood and hone which was, once Simon SKORO 61 184 353 1000 500 500 500 2893 600 400 7250 1000 10000 10000 500 168 1000 1000 200 66 623 100 3000 10000 36.25 of advertising- - and the expenses of 10.00 sale. 10.00 R. D. JEFFERSON, Secretary 10.301 Office: 1903 N. 15th Street, Boise, 3.34 Ada County, Idaho. 0 10.00 2.50 2.50 8.00 in nn 5.00 2.50 2.501 2.50 14.47 3.00 2.00 36.25 5.00 Adam Simunic 25 Mrs. J. C. Tooth 257 1.00 Mrs. J. C. Tooth 275 .34 Mr. J. C. Tooth 257 3.12 Mr. J. C. Tooth 274 .50 Lee A. Wright 267 15.00 Mrs. A. F. Webb 343 50.00 And in accordance with law, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as mav he mvpssorv unit ha. sM the office of the company, below noiea, on tne loth day of December, 1928. at the hour nf twn nVlrwlr m m of such day, to pay delinquent assess ments inereon, together with the cost Bethel was murdered between eleven o'clock and midnight last night Gordon has escaped. . . . 7:00 a. m. Jane is at last asleep, and I have bad some coffee. Perhaps if I record the events of the night It will quiet me. After all, one cannot forget such things; the only possible course Is to bring them to the surface, to face them. But 1 will not face that room. Murder. The very word Is evil. But no one has ever known how evil until he lias seen it Such things cannot he written; they should not be seen. They should not be. We have had this murder. We have 4 :00 a. m. Mr. 252 J. A. Reed "Just now," be said, "you are sit Education Send for IT 117 204 208 262 273 351 355 329 Francis Hazer Francis Hazer Francis Hager D. D. Long N. P. Lundin N. P. Lundin Jos. McDonald D. F. Pierce Mary E. Randall Mary i,. Randall Marv E. Randall Mary E. Randall , WN.USER.ViCr: -- ici ouv Hurtle EJ. Hanzel COPYRIGHT by CEO.H.DORAN COMPANY - Agriculture Geo. MARY Numerous beginning courses are offered in the schools of: Home Economics Commerce 324 380 367 s Hig-gin- The Winter Quarter Engineering 7230 2000 2000 2057 255 666 379 2000 21 500 22 500 279 1600 331 John A. Dodge John A. Dodee Mrs. T. E. J. F. Devine J. F. Devine Margret M. Good Margret M. Good M. Z. W. Halverson As a matter of fact, the lubrication system for the new Ford Is so simple in dewater running down-hilsign and so carefully made it requires practically that A gear pump in the botno service attention. tom of the oil pan raises the There is just one thing oil to the valve chamber for you to do, but it is a very reservoir. From here it flows on to the main crankimportant thing . . . watch shaft bearings and the front the oil I Change the oil camshaft bearing. Overflow every 500 miles and be sure oil drops into the oil pan the indicator rod never regtray and runs into troughs isters below low (L). through which the connectIf the oil level is allowed ing rods pass. to fall below low, the supply As the ends of these rods becomes insufficient to oil strike the oil they scoop up all parts as they should be a supply for the connecting oiled. rod bearing. At the same To insure best performtime they set up a fine spray ance it is also advisable to that lubricates the pistons have the chases of your car and other moving parts. lubricated every 500 miles. From the tray the oil runs This lias been made easy into the bottom of the pan, in the new Ford through the and is again drawn up use of the high pressure through a fine mesh screen grease gun system. and pumped to 'the valve Proper oiling and greaschamber. ing mean so much to the life This system is so effective of your car that they should that the fivcMjuart contents not be neglected or careof the oil pan pass through lessly done. See your Ford dealer regthe pump twice in every mile when you are traveling ularly. He is especially well-fittat only 30 miles an hour. to lubricate tbe new Yet there is only one Ford and he will do movable part the a good, thorough oil pump. job at a fair price. lubrication system for the engine of the new Ford is as simple in principle as THE l. ed Ford Motor Cojipany |