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Show ITAI! LEHI FRESS PRESS. 1 Dress for You, and An Outfit for Dolly rpmnnirnrn nJ are coining -- yoj BUSY days 1 1 I W I I I I I ' want to undertake laborious sewing tasks, and these designs have been greatly simplified, so that you can quickly and easily make them. The house dress is one of the prettiest princess styles you ever put on very flattering to the figure. The outfit Ben Ames Williams for your little girl's little girl is l grand and glorious beyond deArthur had lied. And if he had lied SYNOPSIS scription, from the point of vieu. Her thoughts recoiled, refused to of childhood. Each design is acanswer the hideous, damning to tuber up her Barbara Sentry companied by a complete and deay home escort Johnnie Bo(1. on tt.e tailed sew chart. from a party, slaps him. and attiacts the Princess Home Frock. attention of a policeman, whom the boy CHAPTER IV This simple design has truly knocks down As he arrests him. Professor Brace of Harvard comes to the rescue and lovely lints, very shin and youthdrives Barbara home On the way they see Mrs. Sentry slept not at all till a You can zip it down the Barbara's fattier driving from tfte direction ful. of his office at 12 45. but when he (rets home before dawn; she woke to face with little buttons. front, or fasten it tells his wife it Is 11:15 and that he's a naked sun The necklir.e and sleeve edges are he just rising in a raw at been playing bridge the club Net day and been lobbed office has his aching glare above the eastern Sentry reports and a M:ss Wines, former temporary emhorizon, leering at her through the The evening papers luridly ployee. Killed trees whose foliage had thinned even confirm the story, and Sentry takes It hard Mary, elder daughter, m love with Nell Kay, during the night and now would youni; interne at the hospital where she soon be gone. Her eyes opened, but works, goes off to dinner at Gus Lorari's. not to full consciousness; she lay for Sentry's partner, with Mrs Loran't brother. on a while, turning her head sidewise Jimmy Endle Mr. and Mrs Sentry call reold Mrs Sentry, and Barbara, alune, small ceives Dan Fisher, reporter, who advises to avoid the glare, watching shadows shift and change on the her not to talk Phil Sentrv. son at Yale. Is disturbed at the possible implications rough plastered wall. and suspicion of Miss Wines' absence from Then she tun ed to look toward her rooms for three days during August He goes home to help Sentry is arrested Arthur's bed, and saw the spread Dan Fisher exand booked for murder the and pillow cover rumpled as though plains the evidence against him that one someone had lain there; and she robbery was a fake, the safe opened by who knew the combination, changed since remembered that Mary had come in Miss Wines' employment there that a back to her last night, weeping in furidoor key. a duplicate of Sentry's, was found In the girl s purse, and that Sentry, too, had ous and passionate revolt, in hurt, been aay those thiee days In August. tormented pride. And little by little she remembered all the rest, picking up this CHAPTER III Continued fact and that circumstance, and set8 Flood rubbed the knuckles of his ting them in their proper relation to left hand with the palm of his right. one another. I'm glad I'm alone, Then he said gravely, "Your hus- can be alone for a while, she thought; and she decided that if anyband suggested that I come and one came to wake her she would tell you the situation, Mrs. Sentry." to be asleep. Mary had He added, "Ex officio, you might pretend seemed to blame her father, with a say." No one spoke, and he added, raging bitterness; had been filled "I regret to say that Inspector Irons with anger more than grief, like a has booked Mr. Sentry on a charge mother robbed of her child, a girl unusually attractive and becoming. of murder." He hesitated, ex- of her lover. Make it for home wear of gingto find Thinking of Mary, Mrs. Sentry ham, linen or percale. Make it plained, "The Inspector tried of Neil Ray. Mary had not I but and was me thought beforehand: out, of challis, wool crepe or velvethim last night; yet there mentioned een (without the pockets) for a he thought it best to act without had been something like terror as useful runabout dress. delay." an undercurrent to her wrath. Mrs. The Doll's Outfit. "Didn't he exceed his authori- Sentry wondered what Neil Ray Just look at all the pretty things ty?" Mrs. Sentry asked in dull would do or say to all this. Reyou can make from this one pat- tones. his membering anxiety to escape tern, for the Christmas joy of "No," he admitted. "And-I- 'm from the house the other night, she some little girl! A bound to say that I should have actthought there might be something playsuit that becomes a dirndl ed as he did, in his place." of the prig in that young man, a frock when you add the shirred "You mean you would have ar- tendency to deplore A A a and kerchief! skirtl cape rested Arthur?" She seemed to Deplore? The District Attorney, housecoat just like the grown-u"You im she remembered, had deplored choke, then added ones for real ladies, and a dream ply he is guilty? coldly, something last night. "Deplored the of a party dress! In just a short evithere's afraid "I'm enough necessity 1" That was it. He had time, with a few scraps left over dence to hold him." asked her to promise that the chilfrom your own clothes, you can would all remain available as dren decent Have "That's outrageous! make this gift. if needed; and he had witnesses no citizens rights?" The Patterns. His color rose at her tone. "You admitted that he could not require No. 1642 is designed for sizes 32, her to but she had said of 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 must understand that your husband course testify, would she stay near Arthur. is accused of murder," he retorted. marequires 4 yards of "Near my husband," she had, said, and 1 let closed Mrs. her of eyes Sentry terial; yards trimming. and remembered now that when ArNo. 1645 is designed for 12, 14, her head rest against the back of thur gave her the new ring, the 16, 18, 20, 22 and dolls; the chair; and he added, more gen- emerald, on her birthday three or to I want do of "But course, doll requires, for the party tly: four weeks before, he had signed dress, and housecoat Vi yard each everything possible to protect you, the enclosed card "Your Husband," litas see are to that you of t, annoyed for play-suithe material; and she had felt a sense of strangeskirt and kerchief, 'a yard; tle as possible. There will ness at the time, because he usually for the cape, V's yard. Barbara, who had been in a deep used his name, just Arthur. And now as cried Fall and Winter Fashion Book. abstraction, though also the ring had been a lavish presThe new Fall and Win- suddenly remembering: "Oh, wait ent, without in recent ter Pattern Book which shows a minute! Father didn't do it. Fa- years, so thatprecedent she had smilingly I he know kill her. photographs of the dresses being ther didn't accused him of a guilty conscience. worn is now out. (One pattern didn't!" Her birthday in September! Miss and the Fall and Winter Pattern She leaned forward sharply, and Wines had worked for her husband's Book 25 cents.) You can order Mrs. Sentry's eyes opened in swift firm the summer; and that during the book separately for 15 cents. hope. The District Attorney said absence of which the paSend your order to The Sewing sympathetically, "I know it must mysterious when the spoke, girl was supCircle Pattern Dept., 140 New seem incredible to you all. as it pers to have gone to New Hampposed Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, docs to me! I've known Mr. Sent- shire, was in August; and then Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) ry-" when they all came home from York each. "No, no!" Barbara cried. "I don't Harbor for Mrs. Sentry's birthday, Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. mean that. I mean, I really do in September, Mr. Sentry gave her know he didn't. I just realized that that beautiful emerald and signed he couldn't have. It said in the pa- himself "Your Husband." per that she was killed a little after A She understood now. He must Days' Cough one oclock. A night watchman have sought to ease his conscience the shot. Don't you remem- so, and she Is Your thought with more tenSignal heard Mr. Flood?" ber. derness than she had felt toward No matter how many medicines "That was in the paper," he as- him for years how unhappy he must you have tried for your common sented. "But" cough, chest cold, or bronchial Irrihave been since then, playing a tation, you may get relief now with She interrupted him. "But father part, suffering thrcugh sleepless Creomulsion. Serious trouble may was home before then!" she cried nights. Insomnia. I wonder, she be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy triumphantly. "We saw him! Pro- thought, whether I'll have insomless potent than Creomulsion, which fessor Brace and I came up from nia now. I slept last night, a little. goes rlpht to the seat of the trouble Essex through the East Boston TunI'm still half asleep. It doesn't hurt, and aids nature to soothe and heal nel, and father passed us in his car so I must be. Why am I so sure the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel Arthur did it? If I were a young right outside the entrance. We fol phlegm. lowed his car, stayed behind him all girl, his bride, I should be loyally, Even If other remedies have failed, the way out here." She appealed blindly sure of his innocence; but don't be discouraged, try Creomulto Professor Brace "You remem- I'm an old woman, old, old. Barsion. Your druggist Is authorized to refund your money If you are not bara is sure he is innocent. Does ber, don't you?" thoroughly satisfied with the bene looked at Mary know, I wonder? And Phil? I The District Attorney one Is fits obtained. Creomulsion the other man. He asked in a curi- wonder whether I shall see Arthur word, ask for It plainly, see that the name on the bottle Is Creomulsion, ously quiet tone, "Is that right, Pro- today. I can't help him. It's the and you'll get the genuine product children who need me now. I wonfessor Brace?" and the relief you want. (Adv.) Brace, after a moment, said: der if they're awake. What time is it? I ought to keep my traveling "Yes. Yes, that's correct." clock on the bedside table here, so "And what time was that?" The Easier Way "That was before one o'clock!" that if Mr. Flood asks me how I Men willingly believe what they Barbara said eagerly. "I looked at knew it was quarter past eleven, wish. Caesar. my watch as I came in the house, when Arthur came home that night, I needn't say Arthur told me. and it was quarter of one. So faI ther couldn't have, don't you see? needn't actually lie. I can say, He was already at home before she "There was a clock on the table between our beds." I needn't say I was killed!" l to nervous you wntit to seres ro? TV) you The girl's eyes were shining, her looked at it. Ar you cross and irritable? Do you scold She rose at the thought and went cheeks bright with triumph. But than dssrust to you? II your ntrvH sr on rdi and you feel Mrs. Sentry, while Barbara spoke, to fetch the clock from her dressing-you ami a food gvnrrml system tonic, try and set it on the table here felt all her muscles slowly contract. room Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound, made 0tptiaU$ far womn. her beside bed, but she did not lie like an was Her shell, body empty ttss told For over 60 year on woman down again. The household, the to fo "atnUinc thru" with reliable and her ears rang. 1'inkham'l Compound. It help nature build She heard, as though at a great servants, would be excited when up more physical resistant and thua helpa the morning papers. She calm quivering nerves and lessen discomfort distance. District Attorney Flood tell they saw from annoying symptoms which often acthe situation. She Barbara in an even tone that this must control company tenuis functional disorders. and rang, and when Nellie W ay not give It a chance to Mp YOU? dressed, was and be would very interesting Over one million women have written in and shaking, she asked considered: but more real to her came, pale reporting wonderful benefits from Pinkham'a the children down "Are crisply, Compound. than Mr. Flood's words were other Nellie?" words, spoken that night when Ar"Philip is." thur came home from his bridge "Neither of the girls?" game, and she half woke to greet "No." asked and him, him, murmurning Will you ask Oscar and Emma to drowsily, "What time is it?" come up here, please, and you come And she remembered with a terwith them." rible and conclusive certainty he Car, B, CONSISTENTLY AJvtrtisea Five minutes later they filed in had replied, "Quarter past eleven." and faced her. Oscar stood stolidBUY ADVERTISED GOODS Out if Barbara told the truth, then ly. Nellie wrung her wretched III I. II RP g p 35-in- 24-in- 14-in- ch 35-in- be" 32-pa- Three Danger germ-lad- en NERVOUS? Good Merchandise I " Come " Sunny California ' to i.r.ie..n ODitits. farms. CnMtoraU OwWr IMtim BU BEn nmss iminnms : was hands, B.g Emma, the cook, mumbling her hps ouenlv. crying nervous tjiuDoenns necMrs. Sentry said, "That s rot added: ashe And essary. Emmun- "We are ail going to have an . iuu..-pleas;.: t time !'T a wnue. wi I sha! not be surprise!, or blame to leave any of you. f vou w". quick ex- She felt gn. fi.'l for therr f Tiir ..totn i... pressions ot myar.y. the loyaltv of set ants? Was sne re alreadv brought so low? "You stiif-ly- . insisted she quite free to go," "But please understand, if you norstay, I shall expect a perfectly had if nothing mal household as """"" happened." She hesitated, then went on' "You of course, help the police in must, every possible way, be completely frank, truthful, hide nothing!" It was useless and dangerous to try to drill the servants in lies or de- nials; and there was nothing they could really know, or tell. She added: "That is all. I count on you." Emma wiped her eyes, and they filed out. Later, after she was came in and said, Phil dressed, " 'Morning, mother." He kissed her awkwardly, an unaccustomed gesture. "Dean Hare's downstairs. I wasn't sure you were awake." "Perhaps he will have breakfast with us," Mrs. Sentry suggested. "Is Mrs. Hare with him?" Mrs. Hare was a cheerful, chuckling, loyal friend, but Mrs. Sentry hoped she was not here just now. Phil said, "No, he's alone." They Dean went downstairs together. and Hare was in the living-rooMrs. Sentry greeted him almost with a smile. "Good morning, Dean," she said. "I hoped you would come." "I came last night, after I he explained, "but the houso was dark. I thought, if you were asleep, better not to wake you; left-Art- hur," so I 9' i townf-rnr- OPPORTUNITIES I t doll-lovin- 1 didn't ring." "How is Arthur?" He said slowly, "Shocked and shaken, but all right." He added, "I arranged about the telephone at once, after Phil called me, so you won't be bothered." He told her the new number. "You can give it to your friends," he said, and continued, "Then I went to him, to Arthur." He hesitated, said thoughtfully, "You know, Bob Flood and Arthur and I played bridge together that night, Thursday night." Mrs. Sentry started to speak, then said to her son, "Phil, tell Nellie Mr. Hare will have breakfast with us." "I've had .breakfast," the lawyer replied. "A cup of coffee, at least," Mrs. Sentry insisted. "And you may change your mind. Go on, Phil." Phil went toward the kitchen, and Mrs. Sentry said, in a lower tone, as soon as he was out of hearing: "Yes, Arthur told me. He got home a little after eleven." Phil last ninM had heard Barbara tell the District Attorney that her father had come home just before one; he must not hear her say this now. Hare nodded. "Yes, he told me he came straight home; and that of course makes it impossible that he could have done this. He couldn't have left the Club when he did, and gone to the office, and still got home so soon." She said, "You don't need to convince me. Dean!" But she was thinking: So Arthur has lied to Dean Hare as he lied to me. I suppose he thinks hopes no one saw him come home. Then Phil returned to say breakfast was ready. They went into the dining-room- , sat down. "I must see Arthur today," she said. The lawyer hesitated. "It might be as well to wait," he advised. "In fact he told me to ask you to wait; that he wouldn't be there long, for you ti it it would be unpleasant 1 no umiu m "Nonsense! at Will you I shall see him today. fins Buriju, 'Make Your Mark In Easy Stitches b-- 1 ar.ge ii: I'll Phil said, er. go with you, mothr Vnt this time. it Ttn.n i:n must she had to say to Arthur none o-,- l hear. 1 said tentatively: hear to don't know whether you care the police give for the tne news- Of course, arrest Dean Hare the-rea- : I sor.s papers She thought of Fisher, the report'but-- let Dean tell her if he could think while he She wished. talked. She said, "I don't read newspaer- pers!" M Hare nodded. "I suppose not. And, choosing his words, he went on: "You see, the girl had a key to the back door. Inspector Irons came Sunday morning to ask Arthur where" she could have got it, and Arthur suggested that Miss Randall might have given it to her; but Irons found that Miss Randall didn't have a key to the back door herself. There was a new lock put on two or three years ago. Ike Tory, the janitor down there, put it on, and gave Arthur and Gus Loran keys. "The Inspector took Arthur's key, and he went out to get Gus Lor-an'- s. Gus was in New York, went over Thursday and didn't get back till late last night; but Mrs. Loran found his key book and Irons picked out the key. He found that the key Gus had was different from Arthur's, and from the one in Miss Wines' bag. But hers was a duplicate of Arthur's; and her key seemed pretty new, but Arthur's was older than the other two, more worn. "The Inspector went back to try the keys. They all worked in the lock. He asked Ike Tory why they were different. It turned out that when Ike put the new lock on, a year or so ago, only two keys came with it; so he took an old key that was something like these, and filed it down himself till it fitted the lock. Ike takes pride in saving money for the firm; did it to save having a new key made, to save 75 cents or whatever it was. And he gave Arthur the key he made, kept one of the originals himself, gave the other to Gus Loran." He hesitated, and Mrs. Sentry said automatically, "I don't see anything in that." Hare was uncomfortable. "Well, Irons believed," he told her, "that the dead girl's key must have been made from Arthur's, because they matched perfectly, while her key didn't match Loran's; so he had all the locksmiths canvassed, and late yesterday afternoon they found a man who Pattern 6158 You'll be delighted with the eyou can achieve with these initials. They're just and outline stitch with a french knot for the flower center. The initials dress up linens or any personal accessories whether you conservatively use one color, a color and black or a variety of colors. Pattern 6158 contains a ffects lazy-dais- y transfer pattern of two alphabets, two l1, 214-inc- h alphabets, and 4 motifs 2V by 23i inches; information for placing initials; illustrations of stitches. Send 15 cents in coins for this pattern to The Sewing Circle, Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York. Please write your name, address and pattern number plainly. ft ra fuss RELIEVING COLD DISCOMFORT THIS WAY! Just Follow Simple Directions Below and Use Fast Acting Bayer Aspirii -- y sm. 3 1. To easa pain and ."N discomfort and re-(' duce fever take 2 JJ.L k n.. lainois uiiiia 'rrfl 'Oejw a glass of water. ,," peal in Re l nouns. remembered making the key. He remembered it, because he noticed on the key that was given him for a pattern that parts of it had been filed off later than other parts; so he knew it had been made out of a key originally meant for another lock. He asked the customer whether he wanted an exact duplicate; and the customer said Yes." He hesitated; but no one spoke, and he concluded: "They brought this chap to Headquarters last night. He picked your father out of a lineup as the man who had the key made." Mrs. Sentry said nothing; but Phil cried, "Probably the police tipped him who to pick!" Mrs. Sentry thought: Phil is so young. Mr. Fisher told us all this. Phil must remember. Hare said regretfully: "Well, Arthur admitted last night at Headquarters that he did have the duplicate key made. He said he it in his desk in case he lost kept th other. He thinks Miss Wines must have stolen it." (TO HE COTlWi;)) Lightning Strokes Are Preceded by "Feelers" Which Guide the Main Bolt Strokes of lightning are preceded by "feelers" which guide the main bolt to its objective, according to Karl B. McEachron, high voltage 'fi'tm.. 2. If Throat Is raw from cold, crush and dissolve 3 Bayar Tablets In o! water. '3 glass Mi It's the Way Thousands Know to Ease Discomfort of Colds and Sore Throat Accompanying Colds The simple way pictured above often brings amazingly fast relief from discomfort and sore throat accompanying colds. see your doctor. Try it. Then He probably will tell you to continue with the Bayer Aspirin because it acts so fast to relieve discomforts of a cold. And to reduce fever. This simple way, backed by scientific authority, has largely supplanted the use of strong medicines in easing cold symptoms. Pcrhnps the easiest, most effective way yet discovered. But make sure you get BAYJbU Aspirin. 15. I 12 TABLETS 2 FULL DOZEN 25c Camera aimed at ?nopefd tower from the another skyDivision of Time scraper displayed strange phenomena in lightning conduction Method in study, with a proper electrical engineer, writes a Sche"We learned that leader' strokes division of time, will give us time nectady (N. Y.) United Press cor- which precede all lightning flashes for leisure and recreation. Nevin. respondent. move toward the ground in a series The lightning stroke which ap- o hesitating steps of approximately relieves pears to be a single dis200 feet in length," McEachron excharge is met part way by a small plained. "The streamers progress flash originating from the srst earth, he this short distance, substantially said. This preliminary out and after a wait of a discharge mil" few attracts the main stroke and draws honths of a second proceed in a and toFever it to the ground. second Colds LIQUID. TABLETS due thev SALVE, In some cases the leader stroke reach thestep, NOSE DROPS In 80 minutes. Succeeding earth. flashes Try shoots upward to a cloud, to be imWonderful Llnlmfrt m1?0"1 heSitatl0n at mediately followed by several suc- ? or n! tS faster." pTerosec0nI cessive flashes over its exact path n 38 Schonld in South WNU W from the sky downward, McEachAfrica, a camera similar to using ron said. the one used in the New York The discoveries of lightning habits also discovered were made through a three-yea- r obusual lightning discharge that the consisted of servation the Empire State build- of a leader which was ing in New York city, the best and lowed by a stroke, mam stroke most frequently struck lightning ground upward to cause tteTib conductor that could be found. Haye you anything around The study was conducted the house you would h the by General Electric company to solve to trade or sell? Try a Man 70 Million Years sified ad. The cost is only the problem of better Old to " few cents and there aretransmission lines andprotection b?ck other elec- years" 7.0,000 probablyalotoffolkslook, trical apparatus. known "link" ust whatever it ' Hundreds of pictures taken R tSUltg log for Ion theAad Monlana '"est by a youno ger have use fofSmithsonian institution! one-wa- y COLDS 48-- fCLASSIFIEPfc3 ADVERTISING Thf'r - - |