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Gt the Habit Drinking Hot Water * Before Breakfast Says we can't look or feel right with the system full of poisons. Millions of folks bathe Internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaranteed to per. form miracles if you coul4. believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and women who, immediately upon-arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of lime. stone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure. It is in. tended to flush the stomach, liver, kid neys and the thirty feet of intestines -of the previous day's waste, #our bile and indigestible material left over in the body which, if not eliminated every day, become food for the millions of bacteria which infest the bowels, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood causing headache, bilious at tacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery, 'sleep lessness, impure blood and all sorts -of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not get feeling right are Urged to ob tain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any druggist or store keeper. This will cost very little- bt Is sufficient to make anyone a real crank on the subject of internal sani tation. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vast ly more important to bathe on the in side than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities in to the blood, while the bowel poies do. --Adv. Mean. "Jack proposed three times before I aqcepted him." "To whom, dear?" GAS, DYSPEPSIA AND INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" settles sour, gassy stomachs in five minutes-Time itI YoU.don't want a slow remedy when our stomach is bad-or an uncertain one-r a harmful one-your stomach is too valuable; you mustn't injure It. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmless ness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble has made it famous the world over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your home-keep it handy-get a large fifty-cent case from any dealer and then if anyone should eat something which doesn't agree with them; if what they eat lays like lead, ferments and sours and forms gas; causes head - sche, dizziness and nausea; eructa tions of acid and undigested food remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. Its prompt ness, certainty and ease in overcoming the worst stomach disorders is a reve lation to those who try it.-Adv. The tensile strength of a paper fly wheel is far greater than one made of iron. B EATERS HAVE BAD KIDNEYS AND BACKACHE Take a Glass of Salts at Once If Your Back Is HurtIng or Kidneys and Bladder Trouble You. The American men and women must guard constantly against Kidne$' trou ble, because we eat toQ much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the elimi native tissues clog and the result is j'-dney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps is cloudy, full of sediment or you are * obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous ) spells, acid stomach, or you have rheu matism when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your~kid * neys will then act fine. This famous \salts is made from.the, acid of grapes 1 nd lemon juice, combined-with iithia, ~nd has lbeen used for generations to hsl~h and stimulate clogged kidneys; to youtralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of 1gritation, thus ending bladder disordeys. Jad:fialts is inexpendiv*; o@nnot in jure, makes a delightfuil eftervescent lithia-water beverage, and belorige in every home, because nobody oah inake a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any timer-Ady. Mle bore of the New York fl' e part ent are given iniliitary r AI~ia D~ikf P Avc ail COPYP6IM2rl'T '1934- 4WP V SYNOPSIS. .A etirlous crowd of neighbors invade the mysterious home of Judge Ostrander. county judge and eccentric recluse, fol lowing a veiled woman who proves to be the widow of a man tried before the judge nd electrocuted for murder years before. *er daughter is engaged to the judge's .;n. from whom lie is estranged, but the murder Is between the lovers. She plans to clear her hudband's memory and asks the judge's 4id. Deborah Scoville reads the newspaper clippings telling the story of the murder of Algernon Etheridge by John Scoville in Dark Hollow, twelve years before. The judge and Mrs. Sco ville meet at Spencer's Folly and she shows him how, on the day of the nur der, she saw.the shadow of a man, whit tling a stick and wearing a long peaked cap. The judge engages her and her daughter Reuther to live with him in his mysterious home. Deborah and her law yer, Black, go to the police station and see the stick used to murder Etheridge. She discovers a broken knife-blade point embedded in it. Deborah and Reuther go to live with the judge. Deborah sees a ortrait of Oliver, the judge's son. with a black band painted across the eybs. That night site finds, in Oliver's' room, a cap with a peak like the shadowed one, and a knife with a broken blade-point. Anon ymous letters and a talk with Miss Weeks increase her suspiclons and fears. She finds that -Oliver was in the ravine on the murder night. Black warns tier and shows her other anonymous letters hinting at Oliver's guilt. In the court roont the Judge is handed an anonymous note. The notv Is picked up and rondl utloud. A mob follows tihe judge to his home. Deborah tells him why suspicion has been aroused against Oliver. CHAPTER Xill-Continued. Once within the room, he became his courteous self once more. "Be Eeat ed," he begged, indicating a chair in the half gloom. As she took it. the room sprang into sudden light. He had Pulled the string which regulated the curtains over the glazed panes in the ceiling. Then as quickly all was gloom again; he had let the string es cape from his hand. "Half light is better," he muttered in vague apology. It was a weird beginning to an In terview whose object was as yet in comprehensible to her. One minute a blinding glimpse of the room whose details were so varied that many of them 6till remained unknown to her the next, everything swept again into shadow through which the tall form of the genius of the place loomed with melancholy suggestion! She was relieved when he spoke. "Mrs. Scoville (not Deborah now) have you any confidence in Oliver's word? Has there ever been anything in his conversation as you knew it in Detroit to make you hesitate to re ply?" the judge persisted, as she con tinued speechless. "No; nothing. I have every con fidence in his assertions. I should have yet, if it were not for this horror." "Forget it for a moment. Recall his effect upon you as a man, a prospec tive son-in-law--for you meant him to marry Reuther." "I trusted him. I would trust him in many ways yet." "Would you trust' him enough to be lieve that he would tell you the truth if you asked him point-blank whether his hands were clean of crime?" "Yea." The wvord came in a wvhls per; but there was no wavering in it. She had felt the conviction dart like an arrow through her mind that Oli ver might slay a man in. his hate might even conceal his guilt for year's -but that he could not lie about it when brought face to face with an ac cuser like herself. "Then I will let you read something he wrote at my retiuest these many years ago: An experience-the tale of one awful night, the horrors of which, locked within his mind and mine, have never been revealed to a third person. That you should share our secret now, is not only necessary, but fitting. It becomes the widow of John Scoville to know what sort of a man she per'sists in regarding inno cent. Wait for me." With a quick step) he ivound his way among the various encumbering pieces of furniture to his bedroom. Here he lingered so long that, without any conscious volition of her own she found, herself on her feet, but she had not had time to reseat herself when she beheld him approaching with the bundle of loose sheets clutched in1 his hand. "I want you'sit here and r'ead," said he, laying the manuscript down on a small table near the wall under a gas Jet wvhich he immediately lighted. "I altn going back to my own desk. If you want to speak, you may; I shall not bie working." And she hoard his foot Stopls retreating again in andi. out among the furniture till he reached his own chair and sat before his own table. This ended all sound in the room ex HAVE RESERVE TO DRAW ON New York Newspaper Gives Good Ad. vice to Those Who Must Fight (or a Living. A bank account is 'the ammunition needed by every worker in the battle for a iiveillhood. And this kind of pro paredness can have no opponents. Those who are At the frout of the fight for a livin must have further suipjelis to depei d on than'dust those 0 th persons resh. hr Ilme Ciree C D Rhoxes OD, MrAP a COMPANr cepting the beating of her own heart, which had become tumultuous. Thank Godl the manuscript was legible. Oliver's hanbwriting pos. sessed the learness of print. She had begun to read before she knew it, and having begun, ,she never paused till she reached the end. I was fifteen. It was my birthday and I had my own ideas of how I want ed to spend it. My hobby was model ling. Aly father had no sympathy with this hoLby. To him it was a waste of time better spent in study or such sports as would fit me for study. When on the day I mention I had a few hours of freedom, I de cided to begin the remodeling in clay of an exquisite statue which had great ly aroused my admiration. This statue stood in a forbidden place. It was one of the art treasures of the great house on the bluff com monly called Spencer's Folly. I had seen this maWble once, when dining there with father, and was so im pressed by its beauty that it haunted me night and day. The boy of fifteen would attempt the impossible. I pro cured my clay and then awaited my opportunity. It came, as I have said, on my birthday. There was no one living in the'house at this time. Mr. Spencer had gone \Vest for the winter. The servants had been dismissed, and the place closed. What to every other person in town would have seemed an insuperable ob stacle to this undertaking, was no ob stacle to ie. I knew how to get in. " a o S H a a Sa1d He, move Wasth wYd tokit.r andhe he, loc ha gienSayid Hadnobe Orng ly my odreatlee wnderings nebot ah plegeseparating smthin hof frthe atreofpacehrineato I fe1 thad niceud teatche th windows (eve mo sthe intyor it. Eithe te proerly fn;astenhd. If I coul oni.y brin myself o- diread the-andromm dnaes ofound ledg saning therhout fro th spacebarrow I couldtc that walcouln reachthis indoItwa a clsee thad vinered sopcennityrm ody tog prin in; hand, hre I dihat nighst. be lie mysl go-Ie a then mmea diatey lfoudmsletadn.pih I hadentmered thatnroo inot hge matde a gr-eat impression upon me, and some light finding its wvay through the panes of uncurtainedl glass which topped each of the three wvindows over looking the ravine, I soon was able to find the (leer leading into the drawing room. I had brought a small lantern in the bag slung to my shoulders, but I had not hitherto dared to use it on ac count of the transparency of the panes I have mentioned; but once in the iier fectly dark recesses of the room be yondI, I drew it out, and without the least fear of detection boldly turned it upon the small alcove where stood the object of my adoration. I knelt munst be a source of supply to be drnawn on in case of need. Workers, you shouldi prepare your solves toward the time of need. Whatever may be the national policy, preparedness should be your personal policy 'Safety first" must be your motto, and there is no safety in liv ing fromh week to week, just wvaiting from one day to another, Your only safety lies in 'having some money put by for that rainy day, which may come at eny time--New York 10ve ningr Telaeagn . before the glimmering 0arble and un rolled my bundle of neblay. I began my wqrk then" I began to realize a' little thi iAatute of the task I had undertaken And to ask myself whether if I stayed all night I. could finish It to my mind. It was during one of these moments of hesitation that I heard the first growl of distant thunder. But the thunder. growled again and my head rose, this time in real alarm A man-two men were enitering by Lhe great front door. I hoard a loud lapgh, and the tipsy exclamation of a voice I knew: "There! shut the door, can't you, before it's blown from its hinges? You'll find -verything jolly I.ere. Wine, lights, solitude in which to finish our game and a roaring good opportunity to sleep afterwards." . The answer I failed to catch. I was simply paralyzed by terror. As the door of the room opened to admit them, I succeeded in shutting that of the closet into which I had flung my self-or almost- so. I did not dare to latch it, for they were already in the room and might hear me. "This is the spot for us," came in Spencer's most jovial tones. "Big! table, whisky handy, cards right here in my pocket. Wait,- till I strike a light!" ' A gas jet shot up, then two, then all that the room contained. "How's that? What's a flash more or less now!" I heard no answer, only the slap of the cards as they were flung onto the table; then the clatter of a key as it turned in some distant lock. The bottles were brought forward and they sat down one on each side of the dusty mahogany table. The man facing .me was Spencer, the other sat with his back my way. "We'll play till the hands point to three," announced Spencer, taking out his watch and laying It down where both could see it. "Do you agree to that?-unless I win and your funds go a-begging before that hour." "I agree." The tone was harsh; It was almost smothered. The'tuan was staring at the watch; there was a strange set look to his figure; a paus. ing as of thought-of sinister thought, I should now say: then I never stopped to characterize it; it was fol lowed too quickly by a loud laugh and a sudden grab at the cards "You'll win! I feel it in my bones," came in encouraging tones from the rich man. "If you do"-here the storm lulled and his voice sank to an en couraging whisper-"you can buy the old tavern up the road. It's going for a song; and then we'll be neighbors and can play-play-" . . . The bills had all gone one way. They fell within Spencer's grasp. Sud denly hard upon a rattling peal which seemed to unite heaven and earth I heard shouted out: "Half-past two! The game stops at three." "Damn your greedy eyes!" cahie back in a growl. Then alh was still, fearfully still, both in the atmosphere outside and in that within, during which I caught sight of the stranger's hand moving slowly around to his back and returning as slowly forward, all under cover of the table-top and a stack of half-empty bottles. "I can buy the (Ilaymore tavern, can I? Well, I'm going to." rang out into the air as the speaker leaped to his feet. "TIake that, you cheat! And that! And that!" And the shots rang out---one, two, three! Spencer was dead in his Folly. had seen him rise, throw up his hands and then fall in a heal) among the cards and glasses. Then the man who stood there alone turned slightly and I saw his face. I have seen it many times since; I have seen it at Claymnore tav' era, ie put the weapon back in his pocket and began gatherinig up the money. WVhen every bill was in his plockets lie reachedl out his hand for the watch. Then I saw him smile, lie smiled as lhe shut the case, he smiled as he plunged it in after the bills. Next moment I woke to a realiza tion of myself and all the danger of my own position. I had the instinct to make a leap for the window over my head and clutch at its narrow sill in a wild attempt at escape. But the effort ended precipitately. H~e was coming towardl me-a strain lag, panting figure-half carrying, half dragging, the dead man who flopped aside from hi.s arms. My senses blurred and I knowv nothing till on a sudden they clearedl again, andl I woke to the blessed realization that the door1 had been pushed against my slen. decr figure, hidilng it comletely fr'om his sight, anid that this door' wats now closedi again andl this time tightly, and I was safe-safe! The relief sent the perspiration in a reek from every pore; but the icy revulsion came (quickly. As I drew uIp knees to get a better purchase on the sill, heaven's -torch was suddenly lit up, the closet became a lilt of dazzling wvhiteness amid wvhich I saw the blot of that dead .body, with heed propped against the wall and eyes Remtembe'r, I was but fifteeni. TPhe legs wvere huniched up and almost touched mine. Trho door-tihe dooer there was my way--the only way LEEKS FOR REGIME The ofilcial adoption of the leek as th various Welsh traditions concern i national emblem. According to some ing the le:k took its rise int (onsequet king of Owynedd, over Edwini, king ( the Welsh, to distinguish themnselves. MSS. it is stated that ait ('reer, "the brave achievements in supp~ort of l'~v tinr.o that Capt. Cadwgan Vo~el called t in their helmets, the battle ther'e bei looked about they wer-e all Welshamen fror.: this circumstance that th~e \e: lshakespear-e se'ams to allude whens did grood 50erico a n i-dcn Wii,' 'Which woul. rid me instantly of aMy proximity to..tlo, hideous oblect. I flung my'self at it--found the knob turned it and yelled aloud-my toot had brushed against him. I knew the difference and it 'sent me palpitating over the threshold; but no farther. Imore of life had returned with my es cape from that awful prison house, ana I halted in the semidarkness Into which I had plunged, thanking heaven for the thunder peal Whleh had drowned my loud cry. For I was not yet safe. lie was still there. le had turned out all lights but one.. le had not seen me and was going. I could hear the sound of his feet as he went stum bling in his zigzag course towards the door. Then every sound both on liis part and on mine was lost in a swoop of down-falling rain and i remember nothing more till out of the blackness before me, he started again into view, within the open doorway where in the glare of what he- called heaven's can. dies he stood, poising himself to meet the gale which seemed ready to catch him up and whirl him with other in consequent things into the void of nothingness. Then darkness settled again and I was left alone with Mur der-all the innocence of my youth He Had Not Seen Me and Was Going, gone, and my soul a very charnel house. I had to re-enter that closet; had t( take the only means of escape prof fered. But I went through it as we g< through the horrors of nightmare. I simply did it and escaped all lightning flash and falling limb. amt the lasso of swirling winds-to ln( myself at last lying my full lengtl along the bridge 'amid a shock of ele Inents such as nature seldom sportE with. Here I clung, for I was breath less, waiting with head buried in my arm for the rain to abate before I at templted a furthter escape from the place which held sucht htorror for me! hlut no abatement- cante, and feeling thte bridge shaking under me almost to cr'acking, I began to crawl, inch by inch, along its gaping boards till I reached its mIddle. There God stopped me. For, with a clangor as of rending wor-lds, a bolt hot from the zenith, sped( dlown upon01 the bluff behind me, throwing me down again upon my face anid enigumling sensie and understand lng for one wild moment. Then I 51prantg upright aind with a yell of terror sped across the rocking boards beneath me to the road, no longer battling with my desire to look back; no longer asking myself whent and how that deaidt nmn would be found; no longer event askIng my own duty in the case; for Spenicer's, Folly wvas on fire and the crime I had just seen per. petr'ated there would soon be a crime stricken fromt the sight of men for. ever. in the flare of its tremendous burn. ing I found my way up through the forest road to my home anid into m) father's presence. Hie like everybody else was up thant night, and already alarmied at my continluedl absence "Spencer's Folly is on fire," I cried, as he cast dismayed eyes at my pallid and dripping figure. "If you go to the (loor', you cant see it!" I ut I told hium nothing more. Perhaps other boys of my age can untderstantd my silence. ('rO liE c'ONTINUN~D.) Skunks Enemies of Caterpllars. A ntew fheld of usefulness has been found for the much-ridiculed skunk in the faict that it is a vigorous enemy o1 the full-grown range caterpillars. Birds arc or noe service whatever in destroy ing these large caterpillars, but skunks devour qtuntities of them, and this is another reason why these little crea, turtes should meceive more considera, tioni than they now do. NTS OF WELSHMEN. th .' hadge of the Welsh Guards recalls na the first adioption of tho look as a of1 the tradlitionts the practice of wear e of a victory ob~tained by Cadwallon, f Northumbria. In the year 633, whten 'aoro leeks in their hats. In the lo10 Weolsh ar-<iuiredl great fame for their vard,(. te ilacirk Pincei('. It was at this cl, h'eesh dlesit'ing thtenm to put leoks Sin a lieU, of ieeks, and when they a that lolttty exceplt 130i, ahd it wa tooktI( 10 waring leeks." To th't 'c& e F'letlhn say.."'The Welshn" MedicneW geons Work Uan Astoria N. Fort was feeling i e d took ' Ik topice.. wors e alw st not walk a because of 0 Iki ybak a Paain Ili' 10Y. ach. I;e~q doctor agi1hes: ust 6,l opera on,'- u not g., the gape" 1 Lydia E. Plnkham's9Vee pound and told my husbad , tout said 'J know nothing will- ,p me ut will try this.' I found,myself Imp Ing from the very first bottl and weeks time I was able to sit d eat a hearty breakfast with my hus bandwhich I had not done for two yesy* I am now in the best of - health and did not have the operatiop.'" - Mrs, JoHN A. KoENIG, 602 Flushing Avenu%, Astoria, N. Y. Every one dreads the surgeon's knife, and the operating table. Sometimes nothing else will do; but many times doctors say they are necessary when they are not. Letter after letter e)mes to e Pinkham Labbratory, telling how operations were advised and wel'e not performed or~f performed,didno good,.Im ut L a inkh am's Vege oN poundwas used and good health followed, If you want advice write to Lydia E4. Pinkhan Medicin o (confidential), Lynn, Mass, Plenty of Material. "Do you think that society belle will make muth noise when she goes on the stage?" "Sne ought to; she'll have a lot of clappers.'' RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add I os Bay Rum, a small box of liarbo Compound, and M oz. of glycerino. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomos the desired shade Any drug. gist can put this up or you can mix I6 at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair. and re moves dandruff. It is excellent for falling hair and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not color the scalp, Is not stioky or greasy, and does not rub ol.-Adv. His Specialty. "Jimson doesn't cut much ice as a skater, does he?" "No, but he breaks a lot of it." Whenever You Need a General Afbnlc Take Grove's f The Old Standard Grove's Tsteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen. eral Tonic because it contains t~p well, known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Ddi94" out Malaria, Enriches the Blood apdoftilds I up the Whole System. SO ce Deliter us from the man o. ens up only when tight. am When Housework s Keeping house is . QA9 A h when well. The wo te~u a a bad back, blue, nrsrrvous spells, and dizzy headacheflrwerard lot, for the family'thek%,ney eset up. Probably it's $t ir'gj4 'qjd. ney trouble and n~tth c4ed the kidneys w ''i 4M Pills. They are~ 5s harmless as they are effectivd andmayjbesed for children WitblwtMI la ney go. A Nor . i4 ~ ~ Mrsa.n $C. M Af~pl 1 * N. C., say: "M syS-w~ Iacid and ieny fet. IJJA I) . tr hands pl r ** J f) tight and' purplb.v'mdl nonthi' n' 1W' a 'o up. At tmes, there p oet retention, ofcthe kIiney ( top to h tmr an td ~.)ye)1J3 aySek JeJn hilam FOSTEhiWImUIIJa LIIIWU For Hum1ai~dg Yager'slinimentis asTie necessit for spavin, galls, i6oMi(~taiWko'ra hed ligaments, Bweeny, w94yf "Boat Lininment pps fQ *~ had aIorse go lame fiKP r. fur diferent kinds of lnimenti bttr I got a botl eo Yager's Liniment and he is better ai bea linimentsk on the market -3 taldealrs-An eisht ounce GILBERT BROS. &i CO., ino. Baltimore, Md. OUAN (l I FRbS A14CU ca, by asitin Iexpp Ias so $3 TO $10 GA