Newspaper Page Text
I IRDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1922.
taxnMd-Company »'•’<£>«
K begin here today
ML .. . -• :i kwi by her feat that
ity.B' p< lout.-lie, the young lieuten-
BR r , (! ■ n'uuiered. Ethel <a
gS ; h, unoccupied house on
Resin l ection Rock and
evidence of crime and
K'. , , i„..iv had been hidden
M', lb- sc “> Lake Huron. At
‘ - that her grim and
IRK tie-s grandfather, Lucas Cul
|W Senior, had the murder com-
Old Cullen had been filled
jW\nger and fear when he learned
R, lounelle had entered these nor
iLchirau woods to go to the
Ethel and Loutrelle were
sßwn together by close mutual m
» M In London he had received,
: Ra. ~i Wr . n i mages from Ethel’s
iHher "ho had been killed in
■ nf ’ These messages instructed
IK to proceed to Resurrection Rock
R n ip which he hoped would clear
! obscure parentage.
S . lCa . Cullen had been guilty of
I crimes in early days and
j'M r wa- driving him to violence.
S HEiel furiously accuses her grand
|Mh, n-c noting Kincheloe to
8 Wet Loutrelle.
■go on with the story.
* I had Kincheloe do some
- Ming out there, did 1?” Lucas de-
Mhthel could not answer him for the
in her breast; muscles
Hciiied to he tugging tight all
1 her.
. H'Barney Loutrelle’s been made
j Mvay with! Killed!” she cried,
i You saw him dead?”
3 M “No; but—”
J M 'Have you enough shame left to
5 Hahze what you have just been say-
*Hg to me -" he assailed her, raising
J Hi 11:111(1 clenched but for his huge
g Hn'efmger which he threatened
f M?n "Kincheloe has killed your fine
J ■lend of the train, Barney Loutrelle,
! said. I had him do it! Eh? Eh?
J to me, do you mean that?”
» H "Yes!"
I ,“Eh? So Kincheloe —and I had
| M 1 !" lln ‘’—killed your Barney Lou
f you believe?”
■ /Yes!”
1 ■ He jerked his wrist out of her
and stepped back, looking
■i6wn at her and laughing.
■"1 must have Miss Platt hear
•he said, when he was through
"And your grandmother.”
; stepped to the door and, opening
ITHESTANDARD
Monday and Tuesday big
sOIIMBER SALE
I The News of Each Department**
■» f acial Values is Briefly Told, But
■Every Line is Os Tremendous Signifi*
to Thrifty Shoppers.
Thousand Hats and
At Half Price.
The entire .'ample line of Roth-
Bios, at ;>oc on the dollar; new
, fresh goods. Hats and caps
H*I'* 1 '* an 'l boys, each one marked
|R n plain figures. Com,, and wait on
■ell. Prices range from 25c l.»
■SL!IH. Vallie 50c to $4.00.
Full Case of
Gingham at 19c
It I '* 111 'Ckular prit eof “5c and every
i- worth 25c, too, but just, for
tot Monday and Tuesday we
■ will give you your choice of about
'^l'' 111,11 y ai 'ds brand new Gingham in all
■ the new small plaids and checks in
K°od color. Monday ami
only, Yard ... 19e
■ 2000 Yards 29-Ihch
Bland at 11 1-2 c
I Fine smooth Sea Island worth
■ 1 1 2c at. the mill; sold in any reas-
■ nnablr quantity Monday and’ Tues-
| da y, Yard H l-2c
Mare of the Dollar Kid Gloves.
1,1 nothing unusual for a lady to
W rtx pairs of these gloves for her
mn use. She can buy the six pairs
tn about what two pairs would cost
tegularly. Drummer’s samples
I ‘' n < surplus stock of a large importer
I ’ere handed to us at about 40c on
•c dollar; the gloves are in perfect
otiddion and a complete run of sizes; 1
J'colors,. Per Pair SI . OO
Be -«‘du| Gingham Dresses,
‘II Models, at $2.50
M.ide of Amoskeag Gingham; ev.
I m . ft " e b ears bbe Amoskeag ticket;
aiu , .t, ( .(l fast colors; all fresh new
50c Al a S ‘ ZeS ’ Each >2 SO
*7 ® °“ me r Satteen at 35c
haau /'n " K ? es wide and fas t < , o>ort
L. 1 *' nished 5 regularly 50c;
All c-XX’ and Tuesda y. Yd .. 35c
**' Silk Jersey • •
e^° at ‘ $2.98
-
• • > a 1 coiors; all sizes; regularly
;-0’054.00. Monday and
C ‘" You Use Same ’ 2 “
r S |° V ° i,e ‘ al 25 ' Yard?
in? t * '■ exactly the way we are go
■’loml' , 1 ' C i he balance of our stock
al ~ )r an< l lUeSday - We had rather
them cv C r the,M than to ca rry
them.;;;*' t another season ; some
season ri S ' y es you have see »> this
Mondav f ° r the last time,
dd> and Tuesday, Yard 25c
Standard Dry Goods Co.
F ‘ r '’’b St. Next Bank ? f C* tom . re .
it, called fust for Miss Platt and then !
. for his wife.
“Now we will all hear your
opinions,” her grandfather said; and
before the others, he made her ac
cuse Kincheloe and himself again. ,
' Then he went once more to the door. 1
I
| ‘'Lieutenant Loutrelle!” he called, j
| “Mr. Barney Loutrelle, will you step
( I in here!” ‘
He was not ’ Aad! She opened j
her eyes to see him in the doorway; I
he entered and came toward her,
, speaking to her. Everything wav
ered about him; but he did not waver
in her sight. She cried out —or whis
pered something in reply to the
words he was saying. She knew
neither what she said nor how she
said it.
Her grandfather was grabbing at ‘
her, saying something; and Miss
Platt was addressing her; but Ethel
heeded neither of them.
“I thought you were dead!” she
was explaining to him. “You see
I thought they had killed you.”
“I came to find you as early as I
I dared,” he told her. “I came here
just to see you. • They told me yon
would be down soon. I had no idea
you had gon® out.”
“I went to the Rock for you. You
see, I thought they had hurt you
and—”
Her grandfather interrupted then
loudly; he ordered her to go at once
to her room. but. she disregarded
him.
“Leave her alone!” Barney Lou
trelle broke in. “Leave her alone!”
he repeated, putting himself between
her and her grandfather. “She has
something to say to me; and I have
much to tell her. I came to see her.
1 You can give us this room, or we will
go out; won’t we, Miss Carew?” he
asked her.
“Yes,” she said. “Yes.”
“What?” her gradfather threat
ened. “What? Y’ou think you will
go with this—this—” he stopped
with a snort of contempt. But he
was not feeling contempt, Ethel saw
as she watched him.
“I can forgive your imbecility and
madness. Gbd helping me, I can for
give my child’s child’even whaVshe
has said to uife this day. But dis-;
obey me again and I shall never for
give you. No go; go to your room
and go to your and later •
when you are yourself, I shall send |
for you.” 1
* * *
DOINGS OF THE DUFFS 1 om Is Quite a Help —BY ALLMAN
A TOM, THERE’S A GUV / ' rLL SAV YOU’RE ' A
CATCH HIM QUICK J OsSS '' / COME ' 700 L!TTk E \ WfljM - <V THINK YOO’IL FOOL pAAV / V/ONPER ~ YOU OUGHT )'
WE’LL HAVE MOTHS’ HW® ( NUISANCE. - |’LL f TNWm ( SOMEBODY I’LL )A J\ > To GET A JOB CHASING '
U , , T J . VOOI /Z' ,|g V GET YOU YET OR MV )\. '' ( FLIES IN THE CHINA J' '~A
'T |IV,IKIKHE r* „_ A NAME ISN’T DuFrJ 7 > /Z/X ( DEPARTMENT OF SOME J THERE HE IS
L ■ gZ™D| ( l « Ji \iAAr A
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Wf Wil SB >®L ®b O w\ :
al-a z/Mz I wkz j\ rvw) “Wri e .
I „„,,z^^,6-( V■ --x Lsa |S|iwW|
M W-i Wlwk -fzf -v W-
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Whitie Doesn’t Like Arithmetic BY BLOSSER
' Got ANY A L /NO-NsJE’DE ALL OUT OF ) BUT DIS'LETTER ) COULD*-—v O U PUT ) f ' 1 Z? P D ' “
Iwssciwr H? L SS E A2Z£b «KT» r- cmaT-oamda < r -— —, 7 t could-mebbf ) J
j stamps- aZMT°TT -t MBW. rwr u CTW-I. c '-’ y< / I could- but i awt ) //
L, ? f A
i / \ ofones 6 v focum*’pound t?yin? z
7 JtfoW m Kz=a - _. H UH u Li k lo '“ UP? u-aw
■ "RijSb l bJ z J I
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II J _L
SALESMAN SAM t Guzz Is a Regular Guy, Says Miss Seedy —BY SWAN
1 J). TAKING HUR AFteftNOON NAP j \ ™£ aG .-i T ?ROP (N AW) \ MATILDA ~ { WH7,I'VL
J A&AiN- I WONT STAND FOR J : VaIONGW?WOR new < GOT pN INTEREST > YOU LUCKY !' HAO T-dT<?kC? AM IMPREST a
/Z IT’.’.- G’WAN AN,’ FIRE HER / 'I ~Toe> PARTMPRS A 7 unSV" / . : v - BUSINESS OR -■
‘ ' . _ O7\ ACHIN’.'.' ‘ _-7Z<L, y <BOSINESS \ roMG •» / : m GET OUT ’ A'
IBBF v : JZwY z1 T, Vi L_ 7 7“' L.A fk?' /' r’, ’’' O
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■ y /s^k^AL- iriA T’ t■ 'H~~ — : Xili
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' i I ■’ ’ ■ • ’ . • z “ N£A ex
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■ - . ■•.._■■
She gazed only an instant longer;
at her grandfather before looking:
up at the friend at her side.
“1 am ready to go with you,” she i
said.
■ CHAPTER VIII.
She crossed the threshold, whicli ,
, her grandfather had forbidden her, ■
and went to the front door. Barney ;
| followed and closed the door behind
1 them.
! As briefly as possible, she told ;
I Barney what followed her arrival at. .
I St. Florenti.ll and she received in {
I return full report from Barney.
| He had stopped at Wheedon’s in 1
I the afternoon, and there had learned I
I that a man named Bagley ha 1
“1 thought they had killed you,”
Ethel said. “But of course it was
! some one who arrived at the Rock
alter Bagley had shut you out and
you had followed him to Wheedon’s”
‘Yes; I think that’s pretty clear,”
Barney agreed. “But who was he?”
• “My grandfather knows, of
course,” Ethel said.
“ 1 hat telegram from my uncle
Lucas in Chicago, which Asa
| brought when we were at dinner,
told my grandfather who he was
and what his presence meant. You
see, after that we had prayers and
grandfather sent Kincheloe out I
again, and grandfather waited in
his house with his rifle loaded. He
wasn’t sure whether Kincheloe, or
the other man, was coming iback
from the Rock to his house.”
"What are we in, you and 1?” she
asked, suddenly shivering.
He put his hands steadyingly upon
her arm. "I got you into it,” he ae- I
cused himself. "You know I’d no :
idea what it would do to you, or I’d 1
turned back yesterday.”
“I think there’s surely something 1
to be found out in Chicago,” Barney ;
said when Ethel stated her determni-1
nation to go there at once.. “Bag- !
ley’s back there; and Marcellus,
Clarke has his office there.”
“And my uncle Lucas is there ■
or he was when he sent that tele- ,
gram last night warning grand- I
father. But of course, he’ll be with j
grandfather; I’ll learn nothing from
him, if he can help it.”
She gave him her hand in good-by.
CHAPTER IX
-As the train bore Ethel away from ;
Resurrection Rock ant! from Barney |
Loutrelle, the girl debated in her,
mind the task which confronted her |
on her arrival and vaguelly wished
that cousin Agnes,-’Mrs. Oliver Cul
len as she had begn known in Chi
cago society before her tragic dis-|
! appearance from the torpedoed Gal- ;
lantic, were alive to aid her.
About Agnes there had been some- !
i thing of a my fery as well as an at- !
I traction to Ethel. Cous’n Agnes,
i first came to Chicago as a girl, she I
Ultt AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDEfc
• , •
; told those who ask? I her, Pr ".’ious-,
ly she had lived in a small town and i
1 no one—not even the many newspa- I
, pers interviewers-—got farther than !
I that.
It was plain that, not long before ,
■ her employment in the Cullen of- |
■ 1 ices, she had passed through some I
I extraordinary experience which had .
■ tremendously sapped her vitality. !
i She had endured some frightful or-
, deal which temporarily had downed I
1 her but had not beaten her.
, Many men offered themselves to 1
i take up her battle for her. But only [
| Oliver Cullen, after his fifth or sixth
I attempt, succeeded in offering him-1
| self aright.
John died and Oliver “the damned I
weakling” and his upstart wife, who ;
had been a stenographer, claimed '
from Lucas and his stronger, far'
more able sons, the control of the i
Culkla corporations which ownership
old John’s stock implied.
Lucas fought and blustered; but |
Oliver asserted the control; or |
rather, Agnes did. For Lucas and I
his sous did not remain long in doubt 1
regarding the force with which- they
had to deal; nor did outsiders re
main ignorant. ,
So they grinned and bore it while
they watched Oliver gradually sink
ALWAYS TIRED ~ !
NOAMBITION,
Nervous and Dizzy, Every- '
thing Seemed to Worry Me.
How I Got Well
Larwill, Indiana.—“My back was so ,
bad I could not do my washing. I was al- I
—
I »
1 ill
1 |
vertised so much'and it did so many peo- j ■
pie good that 1 began to take it myself. ; I
I am feeling fine now arid every one tells ;;
me they never saw me looking so well. I ' i
! live on a farm, do all my work, and have i i
three little girls to take care of. lam j j
recommending this medicine to my I
friends and know it will help them if 1
they use it like I do.” -* Mrs. Herbert I
Long, R. R. 3, Box 7, Larwill, Indiana. |
Many women keep about their work j
when it is a great effort. They are al- j 1
, ways tired but and- have no ambition, j
When you are in this condition give it ;
prompt attention.
Take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ■ I
Compound, for it is especially adapted ! i
; to correct such as it did for ;
1 Mrs. Long.
ways tired out and
had no ambition, was
nervous and dizzy
and everything
seeme d to worry me
and 1 had awful pains
in my right side. 1
felt badly about four 1
years and could not !
do my work as it j
should have been 1 ;
done. I saw Lydia E. ;;
Pinkham’s Vege- II
table Compound ad- :
. into invalidism and year follow year
; with Agnes childless.
; There was an old contract, which
\ Lucas, Senior, had safely locked
1 away, by which he and his brother
1 had bound themselves that in the
; event of either of them or their sons
I dying without issue, the holdings of
' the decesaed would pass to the sur
vivor.
In September, 1918, those condi
; tions seemred completely fulfilled;
s for Agnes, who had gone heart and
| soul into war work, sailed aboard a
j ship which was torpedoed; and she
was lost.
1 The news reached Oliver on the
| eighteenth; and on the tvventy-sec-
I ond, he died.
But Agnes, as though to torment
I Lucas even after her death, had
, passed on jn the most annoying way
I possible. Though it was obvious
I that she had drowned, yet no one ac
tually had seen her drown.
j Since she was not legally dead, her
j home remained open. Mrs. Wain,
1 her housekeeper, and her servants I
I
1
' ■■ ” r. ■ ~ ? —.•..-vr,.... ~ ll virr.-Miura*
»♦> *»»»>»»«>>»>»»>»>>»>»»»»»»»>>>» »*>»».s»»
e Special For a Few Days Only |
I BRUNSWICK FABRIC TIRES |
| 30x3 1-2 N. S. j
I -1
i (UQ OC
cpCSaCO I
i Other sizes in proportion. Brand new stock. Every Tire
and Tube fully guaranteed. Buy now before the advance
in price which is sure to come.
MOON AUTO SUPPLY CO.
h. w. Moon, Prop. AUTO PARTS AND
229 Lamar St P '''’Am«“ U ., Georgia ACCESSORIES |
wei* at the hou=e, which they were I
keepink in order as though. Mrs. i
Oliver Cullen were away merely on
a visit.
It was to cousin Agnes’ home that ,
Ethel went after an unsuccessful 1
attempt to discover any knowledge
of Bagley.
Marcellus Clark, she learned, was ;
:n Europe and no one at his office !
could disclose information of Bagley
<>r the reasons why the frightened
steward had been sent to the lone
some house on Resurrection Rock.
(To he continued.)
HAIR Y SUPm KS
f Write For Catalog and
1 r< e Booklet on
“ADVANTAGES OF
RICHER CREAM '
We Aho Sell
Butter Boxes
4 I
No. i Size 0.00
N«. 4 Sa. 12 75
t I .0.8. Atlairia
' DAIRY AND FARM SUPPLY CO.
j A fI.ANI A, GA. |
PAGE FIVE
.■ ■ —1 ... ——M—<
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
1 BALD'S CATARRH MEtHCINB hM
been used successfully in the treatment
of Catarrh.
HATED'S CATARRH MEDICINE con-
I sists ot an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which aett
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur
faces, thus reducing the inflammatien.
Sold by all druggists.
S’. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
When You Feel
fftrrEßSMinfs
W' Siu-Tonic
Will tone you up. For 50 yeara
a most successful remedy for
malarial fevers and a reliable
general invigorating Tonic.
It will help to keep you well.
. It not sold by your dtuggist, write
WiiriaSMlTß fttbMllAl co, L.lUtaraiU,Uabvioi Ly