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THE GEO R CRAM'S MAGAZIME RAGE
“Initials Only” By Anna Katherine Green
?! 'I hi tiling Mystery Story of Modern Innes
,C • , right, 1911, Street & Smith.)
(L -,: \ ght, 1911, by Dodd. Mead & Co.)
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
Mr Gryce Finds an Antidote for Old Age.
... thought I should make you sit up.
I ~e J; i? calculated upon doing so, sir.
y,-.< l I'.avc established the plain fact that
Brot i,er.'i.in was near it, if not in the ex
the scene of the crime in each
act iu -
. xtraordinary and baffling cases,
efl I• ■
v ver j ciid concider.ee, is it not?” was
,i, e . ■ i'inclusion of our eager young
detective. ■ • •
-iiju enough if you are correct in your
<tat(’inent. But 1 thought it was con
tliat the man Brotherson was not
personally near•—was not even in the
i'd.i _• at the time of the woman's death
ir street; that he was out, and had
i,een out for hours, according to the jan
itor
"Ai the janitor thought, but he did
r ot ; . know his man. I'm not sure
t l ; at I But I mean to make his ac
quaintance and make it thoroughly be
forc 1 let him go. The hero—well. I
will .-at the possible here of two such
res—deserves some attention from
~re so interested in the abnormal as
myself
"Sweetwater, how came you to discov
er tiia'. Mr. Dunn, of this ramshackle ten
ement in Hicks street, was Identic!)! with
;h e elegantly equipped admirer of Miss
Ci alloner?”
"Just this way: The night before Miss
ciiail. t.'-r's death I was brooding very
deeply over the Hicks street ease. It had
so posscsesd me that I had taken this
street "it my way from Flatbush; as If
staring at the house and its swarming
courtyard was going to settle any such
question as that! I W'alked by the place
»n<l looked up at the windows. No in
spiration. Then I sauntered back and en
tered the house with the fool intention of
crossing the courtyard and wandering
into the rear of the building where the
crime bad occurred. But my attention
was diverted and my mind changed by
seeing a man coming down the stairs be
fore me. of so line a figure that I invol
untarily stopped to look at him. Had he
moved a little less carelessly, bad he
worn bis workman’s clothes a little less
naturally. 1 should have thought him
some c’ l liege bred man out on a slumming
expedition. But he was entirely too much
at home where he was, and too encon
scions of his jeans for any such con
clusion on my part, and when he had
passed out I had' enough curiosity to ask
who he was.
"My interest, you may believe, was In
no wise abated when I learned that he
wa? that highly respectable tenant whose
window had been open at the time when
half the inmates of the two buildings
had rushed up to his door, only to find
i paper on it displaying these words;
Gone to New York. Will be back at 6:30.
Had he returned at that hour? I donht
think anybody had ever asked; and what
reason had I for such interference now?
But ar, Idea once planted in my brain
sticks tight, and I kept thinking of this
man all the way to the bridge Instinc
tively and quite against my will, I found
myself connecting him with some pre
vious remembrance in which I seemed to
we his tall form and strong features un
der the stress of some great excitement.
But there my’ memory stopped, till sud
denly as I was entering the subway, it all
came hack to me. I had met him the day
I went with the boys to investigate the
”■ Hicks street. Ho was coming
tl e staircase of the rear tene
then. very much as I had just seen
dug down the one in front. Only
inn of today seerped to have all his
"lit him, while the huge fellow
" > r-nhed so rudely by me on that oc-
had the peculiar look of a* man
Haggling with horror or some grave ag-
A CHANDLER
LADY TESTIFIES
Makes a Few Plain Stats-
ments Regarding Past
Troubles, Which Are
Very Interesting.
■ier, Okla.—“For six years l
with severe pains in the pit of I
mach, back and sides,” writes i
'a Flowers, from this place. "I I
verai different medicines, but
get any relief.
I first wrote you for advice I I
1 was past help, but can truth- 1
that Cardui, the woman's ton
ev ?d me at once. I gained at I
rounds, and everybody says I r
* K ? o much better.
"dly know how to thank you f<A
I k„
that Cardui has done me.
' i think that the publication of |
t will be the means of indue- ,
1 " f»
r suffering women to try Car
sh it by all means."
"re thousands of women today I
- from some form of womanly |
Are you of this number? If
you tried Cardui, as Mrs. j
nil? Have you read her symp- |
1,11 they seem similar to yours? (
ide her well, as it has made
■er ladies well. Why shouldn’t
you well, too? We think it
J'*’
sentie remedy, prepared from
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’if- t’t9.
'ttle of t 'ardul today,
nearest drug store.
Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dep* . !
wa Medicine Co.. Chattanooga '
I nstructlons. an< I 64 -
I "Home Treatment f •- Wum-
m i l.i .i wrapper, on request j
tAdvertisernent.)
itation. This was not surprising, of
course, under the circumstances. I had
met more than one man and woman in
those halls who had worn the same look:
but none of them had put up a sign on
their door that they had left for New
York and would not be back till 6:30.
and then changed their minds so suddenly
that they wore back in the tenement at
3, sharing the curiosity and the terrors
of its horrified inmat es.
But the discovery, while possibly sug
gestive. was not of so pressing a nature
as to demand instant action; and more
immediate duties coming up. I let the
matter slip from my mind, to be brought
up again the next day. you may well be
lieve, when all the circumstances of the
death at the Clermont came to light and
1 found myself confronted by a problem
very nearly the counterpart of the one
then occupying me.
"But I did not see any real connection
between the two cases until, in my
hunt for Mr. Brotherson, I came upon
the following tacts: that he was not al
ways the gentleman he appeared; that
the apartment in which he was supposed
to live was not his own, but a friend's;
that he was only there by spells. When
lie was there he dressed like a prince and
it was while so clothed he ate his meals
in the case of the Hotel Clermont. •
■'But there were times when lie had
been seen to leave this apartment in a
very different garb, and while there was
no one to Insinuate that he was slack
in paying his debts or was given to dis
sipation or any overt vice, it was general
ly conceded by such as casually knew
him that there was a mysterious side to
his life which no one understood. His
friend —a seemingly candid and open
minded gentleman—explained these con
tradictions by saying that Mr. Brotherson
was a humanitarian and spent much of
his time in the slums. That while so
engaged he naturally dressed to suit the
occasion, and if he was to be criticised
at all it was for his zeal, which often
led him to extremes and kept him to his
task for days, during which time none
of his uptown friends saw him. Tlien this
enthusiastic gentleman called him the ;
great intellectual' light of the day, anil j
—well, if ever 1 want a character 1 shall I
take pains to insinuate myself into the I
good graces of this Mr. Conway.
“Os Brotherson himself I saw nothing.
He had come to Mr. Conway’s apartment ■
the night before—the night of Miss Chal
loner’s death, you understand—but bad
remained only long enough to change his
clothes. Where he went afterwards is ,
unknown to Mr. Conway, nor can he ;
tell us when to look for his return. When I
he does show up, my nfessage will be
given him, etc. I have no fault to'find
with Mr. Conway.
"But I had an idea In regard to this
elusive Brotherson. I had heard enough
about him to be mighty sure that to
gether with his other accomplishments tie
possessed the golden tongue and easy
speech of an orator. Also, that his
tendencies were revolutionary and that
for all his fine clothes and hankering
after table luxuries and the like, he cher
ished a spite against wealth which made
his words under certain moods cut like a
knife. But there was another man, known
to us of the precinct, who had very
nearly these same gifts, and this man
was going to speak at a secret meeting
that very evening. This we had been told
by a disgruntled member of the Asso
ciated Brotherhood. Suspecting Brother
son. I had this prospective speaker de
scribed, and thought I recognized my
man. But I wanted to be positive in my
identification, so 1 took Anderson with
me and but I'll cut that short. We
didn’t see the orator and that 'go' went
for nothing: but 1 had another string to
my bow in the shape of the workman
I iunn. who also answered to the descrip
tion which had been given me; so f lugged
poor Anderson over into Hicks street.
"It was late for the visit I proposed,
but not too late, if Dunn was also the
orator who. surprised by a raid I had not
been let into, would be making for his
I home, if only to establish an alibi. The
I subway was near, ami I calculated on his
I using it. but we tool; a taxicab and so
I arrived in Hicks street some few min
utes before him The result you know.
" Anderson recognized the man us the one
■ whom he saw washing his hands in the
.now outside of the Clermont, and the
i man. seeing himself discovered, owned
j himself to be Brotherson and made no
' difficulty about accompanying us the next
; day to the coroner's office.
"You have heard how he bore himself:
- what his explanations were and how com
pletely they fitted in with the precon
ceived notions of the inspector and the
district attorney. In consequence, Miss
Cliallor.er's death is looked upon as a sul-
I eide the impulsive act of a woman who
I sees the man she may have scouted but
: whom she secretly loves turn away from
.her in all probability forever. A weapon
; was in her hand she impulsively used it.
.md another deplorable Suicide was added
Ito the melancholy list. Had I put in my
i oar ai the conference held in the coro-
I tier’s office: 'had I recalled to Dr. Heath
lhe curious case of Mrs. Spotts, and then
[ identified Brotherson as the man whose
| window fronted hers from the opposite
j tenement, a diversion might have been
| created and the outcome been different.
But 1 feared the experiment. I’m not
sufficiently in with the chief as yet. nor
■ with ti e inspector. They might not have
| called me a fool- you may, but that's
different —and they might have listened,
but it would doubtless have been with an
i air I could not have held up against,
with that fellow s eyes fixed mockingly
on 'mine. For he and I are pitted for a
struggle, and 1 do not want to give him
I the advantage of even a momentary
triumph. He's the most complete master
j of himself of any man I ever met, and it
i will take the united brain and resolu
tion of the whole force to bring him to
1 hook—if he ever is brought to book, which
l doubt. What do you think about it?”
"That you have given me an antidote
! against old age,” was the ringing and
unexpected reply, as the thoughtful, half
puzzled aspect of the old man yielded
I impulsively to a burst of his edrjy en
. husiasni. "If we can get a good grip
jon the thread you speak of, and can
work ourselves along by it. though it be
I by no more than an inch at a time, we
shall yet make our way through this
• labyrinth of undoubted crime and earn
: f, r ourselves a triumph which w ill make
some of these raw and inexperienced
■ young fellows about us stare. Sweetwa-
1 ter. coincidences are pessible. We run
j upon, them every day But coincidence
; in crime! that should make work for a de
l tective. and we are not afraid of work.
I There’s my hand for my end of the busi-
I cess.”
i "And here’s mine.”
Next minute the two heads were closer
an ever together, and the business had
i begun.
To Be Continued in Next Issue.
The Ten Ages of Beauty < Ir
Illustration from Good Housekeeping Magazine for September.
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■ 'Y' -a
Ibis Picture by Nell Brinkley Is Reproduced by Permission anil Accompanies an Article by Oc-
tave L'zanne on ‘’The Story of Furs and Muffs.” .'t '
By MARGARET HUBBARD AYER.
IS she your favorite type of feminine
beauty?
Anything that is mysterious at
tracts attention.
When all other lihes of advertising
fail, the would-be theatrical star
shrouds herself in some sort of a mys
tery. or is careful])' enveloped in one
by the fantasy of her press agent.
The mystery may be a weird tale of
tragedy and crime, or the more ob
vious one of being photographed
mask on. and only appearing on the
street heavily veiled.
These eccentricities set every one to
wondering, and that is what the mys
terious person is after. You don’t have
to admire her, you don’t have to love
her. but she must, occupy your thoughts,
and to that end she is carefully and
systematically mysterious in her ac
tions and her dress.
The famous prisoner in the iron mask
has occupied the mind of millions of
people, because of the mystery attach- ■
ed to him. And what every woman
knows is that she can keep all men and
Up-to-Date Jokes
Little Madge contracted appendicitis,
and had to be tent to the hospital to
have an operation performed. She bore
it all very coolly and plucklly.
When she became convalescent, the
«urgeon came to remove the stitches
that had been put in the wound. The
child’s idea of dignity was, very much
upset, and she demanded, indignantly:
"Do you s’pose I come here to be all
stitched up and then unpicked again '!"
Fond Parent—" What key do you
think suits my daughter’s voice best?"
Cruel Teacher—"My dear madam,
your daughter's voice is so thin I
should suggest a skeleton key."
The Singer (with feeling)—"Will you
miss me—”
Voice (from back of the hall)—
"Gimme a gun and I'll try not to!"
"I want you to tell me plainly, doc
tor." said the man with the fat govern
ment position, "what is the matter with
me."
"Well, sir,” answered the old doctor,
leaning back in his chair and looking at
his beefy, red'-faeed patient, "you are
suffering from underwork and over
pay.”
“It’s ridiculous for a youhg man to
get married as soon as he comes of
age!" said the elderly bachelor.
"Think so, do you?" said Henpeek,
languidly.
"Os course! Why. he's scarcely old
enough to be his own master.”
"Well, he Isn't if he gets married."
Salesman—“ Now, here, madam, is a
piece of goods that speaks for itself.
I—”
Customer (interrupting)—"Then sup
pose you keep quiet a moment and give
it a chance."' •
"What makes that fellow- so popu
lar?”
“He’ll listen to 3. funny story w ith
out Insisting on telling another."
"Father,” asked little Andy, “what’s
a leading woman?”
"Any woman," replied father, "who
is married."
women guessing if she will only shroud
herself in some kind of a mystery.
The girl in the picture wears a mask,
and I know you are crazy to see what
she looks like. As she trips on her
way. every man she passes is Ailed with
curiosity, with wondt r and interest. If
she were the greatest beauty in the
world she would not attract as much
attention as she does by hiding or veil
ing Tier charms.
The girl who can be mysterious, and '
lots of them are. has an extraordinary 1
power over people, for she lingers in
their thoughts and exercises their im- i
agination. I
Lots of girls cultivate this air of I
mystery, and you see in theh faces the s
deep, wonderful, brooding expression I
that makes you believe they are think- I
ing of unfathomable things. i
Mystery is the refuge of the stupid, i
If you try hard enough you can al- i
ways look and act as if there were
worlds of meanings behind your slm- i
pleat glance. >
Sometimes a girl Is born to look mys- i
■r l r— it—-- .. i— uni. ———— wiib— —l—l—_i— iuiumjul.
Spaghetti Night
is Guest Night
YOU cannot show your friends more
generous hospitality than to invite
them to join the family circle the night
you serve
FAUST
BRAND
SPAGHETTI
It’s a delightful dish —and so full of whole
some nourishment. Made from glutinous
Durum wheat, in clean, bright, sunny
kitchens. Make Faust Spaghetti the chief
dish for dinner once a week and invite
your friends to enjoy it.
All good grocers sell Faust Spaghetti—Sc
and 10c a package. Write for free book
of recipes.
Maull Bros., St. Louis, Mo.
terious; such a one was the fair Edna,
one of the most beautiful girls I have
ever seen. She had brown eyes as big
as teacups, and while she hardly ever
said anything, she looked unutterable
things. You would feel those big. brown
eyes gazing at you even when your back
was turned, and as if drawn by some
wonderful magic you would ask, “What
is it?" trying to fathom the mystery
behind that deep, searching glance of
hers. But she always answered, “Noth
ing."
Edna married a very rich man. She
is still marvelously beautiful and in
her face is the mystery of the Sphinx.
She never mars this impression, for
she seldom says anything. Her hus
band adored her until he found out that
behind this wall of mystery there was a
perfectly vacant brain, a thing which
we could have told him before his mar
riage.
They are divorced now. and she is
about to marry No. 2. who has also
succumbed to the charm of the silent,
mysterious looking beauty.
The Manicure Lady s e
Brother Wilfred's Idea of a Wedding Gift
By WILLIAM F. KIRK.
44TT T ILh’RED bought a dog the
V V other day,” said the Manicure
Lady. “It was, one of them
Boston bulls. The poor boy didn't have
no sugar to give Ills bride except that
gift, so he thought he might as well
make her a present of that, as long as
he got it for nothing from a gent that
he knew when he was a kid.
”1 don’t like the idea of dogs in the 1
city. George. They ain’t no good for
nothing. What’s the use of having
them for watch dogs when you ain't got
anything in the flat to watch? Th*
only place for a dog is the country,
anyway, and the more I see of a city
George, the more it seems to me that 1
the country is as good a place for hu
man beings as it is for dogs, and maybe i
better.
"This dog that Wilfred bought was
a kind of funny looking, sad little cur.
like one of Wilfred’s poems. It looked
kind of hopeless, I mean. The poor
boy thought that his bride would like
ii, but 1 knew better. Three days’ ac
quaintance with her taught me, Georgy
that she wasn’t in the mood to like
anything, and never would be in the ,
mood.
"That’s why I felt kind of sorry sos
poor brother when he asked me to go
over to his flat with him while he
made the presentation speech. He had [
a poem all wrote out to say when he 1
gave the mutt to the girl that he had
took for his wife, and between you and
me. George, the poem was as bad as
the dog. This is how it wSnt”—
"Don't start it. please," said the Head
Barber "The poems that your brother
writes gives a man the creeps. Lay off
on it. and let's talk about the weather.
I.et's talk about anything—but no poems
wrote by your brother.”
"But I must tell you this one. George.”
said the Manicure Lady. "The name of
it alone struck me kind of funny—’A
Poem to a Pup.’ Fancy that, George!
I have heard a lot about poems to
ladies and poems to their hats and their I
fans, and poems to dark eyes and to
blue eyes, but that was the first time 1
ever heard a poem to a pup. Listen.
George
! “Poor little pup that shiverest,
> Poor little pup, with nerves that
. quiverest;
> Poor little pup that needs my strong
> arm’s protection.
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“That is the cheesiest poem that I
ever heard," declared the Hhad Barber.
"What did the bride do when she heard
it?”
“She cried.” said the Manicure Lady.
“Well, it won't be the only time she
ever cried or ever will cry," said the
Head Barbe.-.
WHERE DOCTORS
FAILED TO HELF
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
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Mrs. Green’s Health —
Her Own Statement.
Covington, Mo. —“Your medicine has
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I had to stay in bed
four days because of
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my back was so weak
I could hardly walk.
I have been taking
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Vegetable Com
pound and now I can
stay up and do my
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Mrs. Jennie Green, Covington, Mo.
How Mrs. Cline Avoided
Operation.
Brownsville, Ind. —“I can say that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s V egetable Compound
has done me more good than anything
else. One doctor said I must be opera
ted upon for a serious female trouble
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“lam now in great deal better health
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