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The Ideal
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Write Cree A Chef fey
* CALIFORNIA §prmgl| ^
PARKER’S
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Lost His English
After being knocked down by an
automobile in Rochester, N. Y., Senor
Jose AV. Kelly, once a Mexican labor
attache, was rushed to a hospital,
where he was disturbed by the dis¬
covery that he had lost his ability to
speak English. In Spanish he ex¬
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automobile he could speak English
well, and that he had been graduated
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in all his classes.
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Bit Forward
Her Father—Young man, you’ve
been courting rny daughter for six
years. What are you going to do
about it?
Youth—W-wliy? Ought X to ask
her for a k-kiss?—Weekly Telegraph
(Sheffield).
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“So your wife is going in for poli¬
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“Yes,” sighed the meek one, “she's
gone downtown now to get a new hat
to throw into the ring.”—Cincinnati
Enquirer.
COLDS,
Put Mentholatum in
nostrils to open them,
rub on chest to
reduce congestion.
MENTHOLATUM
Self-Convicted
“How fast was this man going?”
“Easily forty miles an hour.”
“What makes you think so?”
“He admitted that he was doing
twenty.”
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W. N. U-, ATLANTA, NO. 48-1932.
The l Black Box 0 f Silence
By Francis Lynde
Illustrations by
O, Irwin Myers
(WNU Service)
'(Copyright by William Gerard Chapman.)
SYNOPSIS
Owen Landis, young: inventor, has
developed lencer,” an extraordinary “si¬
which is stolen from a safe
in his laboratory. Landis tells Wal¬
ly Markham, his chum, the only
person, beside himself, knowing: the
combination of the safe, is Betty
Lawson, with whom the inventor is
in love. A plaster cast’ of a wom¬
an’s footprint, found beneath the
window* of the laboratory, fits one
of Betty’s shoes. Betty tells Mark¬
ham Herbert Canby, posing as a
“promoter,” had driven her home
the previous night, and that she had
dozed in the car. The safe in the
bank at Perthdale is blown open
and looted, the noise of the explo¬
sion being unheard. Satisfied that
his “black box” is in the hands of
crooks, Landis, with Markham, goes
to Perthdale. Three strangers,
claiming to be business men of
Louisville, are the only possible
suspects. Markham and Landis de¬
cide to follow them. At St. Joseph
Markham learns Canby is driving
west, with Betty Lawson and her
father as guests in the car. Mark¬
ham’s car is stolen and wrecked. He
buys another, and they go on. At
Copah they meet Betty who ex¬
plains the reason for her and her
father’s journey. A conversation
between Canby and the three Louis¬
ville men convinces Markham and
Landis they are on the right track.
The commissary of the Cinnabar
mine is robbed and two men killed.
Again there was no sound. At
Brewster they learn of the arrival
of Canby and his party. William
Starbuck, mine owner, tells them
of Canby’s crookedness.
CHAPTER VIII
—10—
A Lost Trail
“Some man—that!” said Landis
praise fully, after Starbuck had gone.
“What do you think of the glimpse
tie gave us of Canby’s record?”
“What I think will be embodied in a
wire tip to dad. Don’t you want to
wire your folks—just to let them know
you are still on earth?”
“I will, now that we seem to have
landed somewhere.”
After they had sent their respec¬
tive messages, they set out on a tour
of inquiry, hoping to get some trace
of the Fleetwing Eight and its pas¬
sengers, taking the entire afternoon
for it. It was an afternoon wasted.
The three men, seen last as they were
leaving Copah. had vanished as com¬
pletely as if the earth had opened and
swallowed them, And not only the
men, but the car, ns well.
In the round of inquiry only one
circumstance developed which might
have some bearing upon the mystery.
This was in the public garage where
Canby was keeping his Nordyke.
When they questioned the proprietor
about the Fleetwing, he said he had
put up only one ear that had come from
the east that morning, namely, Can
by’s limousine. Landis asked if he
could fix the time of the limousine's
arrival.
“Why, yes,” was the reply, “it was
just about five o’clock.”
“More mystery,” said Landis, as
they left the place. “You remember
what the hotel clerk said this morn¬
ing when we got in—which was a
little after five o'clock?”
“Don’t know as I do. I was pretty
tired and sleepy.”
“You asked him if he had anybody
else from the east and he said, ‘Yes,’
a party of three—came in a couple of
hours ago. Then he told us who the
three people were.”
“I see now what you are getting at.
That leaves two hours unaccounted
for between the time Canby reached
Brewster and the time he put his car
up in the garage. Question: can we
find out what he did in those two
hours?”
“That’s it. If we can, I have a no¬
tion that we shall find out what has
become of the Fleetwing bunch.”
Returning to the hotel, they were
fully agreed that the only remaining
chance of tracing the missing three
was through Canby, since his connec¬
tion with them had been conclusively
proved. Markham went up to shave,
while Landis went to the desk- to have
his card sent up to the Lawsons.
“The professor and his daughter
checked out this forenoon,” was the
information given him. “They have
friends here—the Stillings—and Mr.
Stillings came after them.”
“Did Mr. Canby go with them?”
“Oh, no, he's still with us.”
As Landis was turning away he
came face to face with Starbuck.
“I was hoping I might run across
one or both of you,” said the mine
owner, hospitably. “Whereabouts is
Walter?”
“He has gone up to shave; he said
he was too sleepy to do it when we
came in this morning. Shall we hunt
up a couple of chairs and wait for
him?”
When they found chairs, Starbuck
said, “I've just been reading in the
evening paper of another showdown
by the bandits—at the Cinnabar mine,
over on the other side of the range.
Maybe you heard of it as you came
along? Or did you come in by the
Led Horse Pass road?”
“No; we came the other way—by
the mine. We got there pretty soon
after the fact.”
“Did you see Broughton?”
“Yes. We’d met him earlier. He
was down at the railroad station with
a truck and an armed guard, waiting
for his payroll money, when we
stopped to ask our way.”
“The paper says there's a mystery;
that there was a gun fight in which
the two commissary guards were
killed, and that nobody in the camp
CLEVELAND COURIER
heard the firing or the explosion that
wrecked the safe and the building. Is
tiiat so?”
“It is what Mr. Broughton told us.”
“I can't sabe that,” was Star
buck’s comment. “I know the mine
layout; been there any number of
times. The commissary site isn’t
much over a hundred yards from
Broughton’s bungalow. Don't seem be¬
lievable that nobody heard the racket.”
Landis was surprised into saying,
“It would have been not only unbe¬
lievable, hut impossible, a few weeks
ago, Mr. Starbuck.”
“Why—what do you moan by that?”
I.amii.s realized that he had said
either too much or too little, and for
the moment he saw no way out but by
a relation of the black-box facts. And
it was only the incredibility of the
facts, as they must appear if given to
a comparative stranger, that made him
say, “Within a short time Wally and
I have known of three other bank rob¬
beries which have been pulled off in
exactly the same way; by dynamiting
that nobody heard. The general belief
seems to he that some new and abso¬
lutely noiseless explosive has been
discovered.”
"Pretty hard to make an old mining
man swallow anything like that,
Starbuck smiled. “Where were these
bank robberies?”
“One in Indiana, one in Illinois, and
the third in Missouri.”
“Lately.”
“Within the past week.”
“Any clew to the robbers?”
Before Landis could reply, Mark¬
ham stepped out of a descending ele¬
vator, much to the inventor’s relief.
Keen as was his admiration for Star
S'
Markham Was Doing His Best, as a
Skillful Amateur Boxer, to Keep
From Sharing His Companion’s
Fate.
buck, he was not quite ready to tell
him—or anybody—that he himself, and
Wally Markham, held Hie only clew
that might lead to the Identification
of the robbers.
“I was hoping we might eat with
you, Cousin William,” said Markham.
Then, “Been digging into Owen a bit
to find out what he is made of?”
“We’ve been talking about this ruc¬
tion over at Stan Broughton’s mine.
Mr. Landis tells me you just missed
being in the thick of it.”
“We did. Shall we go in to din¬
ner?”
As was roost natural, the table talk
centered upon the crime of the night
before, and the mystery which seemed
to be the chief feature of it. But
there was no mention made of the
three men who had so unaccountably
disappeared somewhere on the east¬
ward road.
It was after coffee had been served
that Landis saw a man rise from his
seat at a table on the other side of
the room and come across in their di¬
rection, though he did not recognize
the man as Canby until the promoter
was beside them, and saying, “Well,
well! See who’s here! Betty was
telling me last night that you two
were in Copah, but she didn’t say any¬
thing about your coming on to Brew¬
ster.” Then, "How do, Mr. Starbuck.”
The three who were finishing their
dinner reacted to the intrusion, each
after his kind, Landis said nothing;
Starbuck nodded, said, “How!” and
went on sipping his coffee. Markham
bridged the gap, chatting easily for a
moment or two with the intruder, ac¬
counting for himself and Landis as
vacation runaways from the home
town, with no particular object in
view, and expressing, in his turn, sur¬
prise that Canby could tear himself
away from the Carthage promotion
scheme, even for the pleasure of a
motor trip In such good company as
the professor and his pretty daughter.
At this last, the good-looking young
promoter laughed and said, "Good
company Is right. But it so happened
that I could combine business with
pleasure. As you will testify, Mr.
Starbuck, I still have a stake in the
Timanyoni, in the Quavapai.”
“I'm,” said the elderly mine owner.
“Thought I’d take a few days off and
run out to see how we are getting
along,” Canby went on glibly; then,
to the two Carthaginians, “We'll have
to get together and do a bit of sight¬
seeing. I assure you the Timanyoni is
worth it.”
As Canby returned to his table. Star
buck closed one eye slowly and said,
“Did you two young fellows follow
that crook out here?”
Markham answered truthfully. “No;
we are both inclined to think it was
the other way round—that he fol¬
lowed us. Anyhow, he was behind
us for a good part of the way. And
his surprise just now at seeing us
here was a fake. He knew, three
days ago, tiiat we were headed this
way.”
Silence for a minute, and then
Starbuck spoke again.
“Tell me, Walter, have you got any¬
thing on Canby?”
“No; but now lie is here, and we’re
here, we’ll try to keep cases on him,
if only for the sake of enlightening
some of our good friends in the home
town. As I told you, he is trying tc
put over a deal something like the one
he engineered here last summer, with
—so my father thinks—just about as
much profit to the investors in it.”
“In tiiat case—just a word to the
wise, Walter. Slip a gun in your
jeans if you’re going to keep tab on
that rooster. There were some queer
doings here in connection with the
bauxite mine deal that never did
get out into daylight”
That night, as they were returning
to file hotel after an evening spent
with Starbuck in the all-but-deserted
mansion in the mesa suburb, Landis
said, “Your cousin gives Canby a
worse name than the one we’ve been
giving him back home.” Then, “It
hurts me savagely when 1 think of the
hold he's got upon Betty.”
“Oh, I don’t know—” Markham was
beginning; blit before he could en¬
large upon whatever doubt he had in
mind, there were other things to think
of. They had turned a corner, when
three dark figures darted across the
street in their rear. Before they
could face about, Landis was stagger¬
ing from a blow on the head, and
Markham was doing his best as a skill¬
ful amateur boxer to keep from shar¬
ing his companion’s fate.
Fortunately the best was fairly good.
A jab to the solar plexus sent one o£
the assailants groaning, in the gutter,
and a hook to the jaw discouraged
another. But the third man hit Mark¬
ham’s guarding arm a paralyzing blow
with some heavy weapon and was
swinging for a second when help came
in the shape of a night patrolman
turning the corner. “Hey—officer!”
Markham shouted. As the policeman
came on the run, the two wlio were
still afoot darted away, and the third
man scrambled to his feet and bolted
before the officer could come up.
“Now then—what’s all this?” de¬
manded the majesty of the law. “Was
them fellies tryin’ to hold ye up?
Which way did they go?”
“Down that alley,” and as the patrol¬
man gave chase, Markham turned to
Landis, who was holding his head in
iiis hands.
“Bad hurt, Owen?”
“Sandbagged—knocked the senses
out of me for a minute. What did
they do to you?”
“Nothing much. Can you navigate?”
“I can walk all right. Sudden,
wasn’t it? What are they? Stick-up
men?”
“I’m wondering. There was no
‘hands-up!’ about it. They acted more
like hired killers. The first one I hit
had his knife out. There it is now,
in the gutter,” and he stooped and
picked up ft vicious weapon with an
eight-inch blade and a hone handle.
“We’ll keep this for a souvenir.”
In their rooms at the hotel they took
account of their casualties. They were
not serious. Then they examined the
knife Wally had picked up.
It was plainly of foreign manufac¬
ture, and on the smooth bone handle
was carved a Spanish word which
neither of them could translate.
“Mexicans,” said Markham; “1
thought they were. H’m; so they kill
first and rob afterward, do they? And
we had two perfectly good guns which
we were careful to leave locked up
safely here in the room! Never again,
Owen, my hoy. We go heeled after
this. Let’s turn in and forget it.”
CHAPTER IX
In the Gulch
Going down to breakfast the next
morning they found Starbuck waiting
for them, and Markham told the mine
owner what had befallen them after
leaving his house.
“You say these fellows were Mex¬
icans?”
“That’s only a guess, I couldn't see
them very well. I’m hanging the
guess upon the butcher knife one of
them dropped. It has a Spanish word
carved on the handle,” and he spelled
out the word, “S-a-n-g-r-e.”
“Huh: Goes well with what he
meant to use it for; means ‘to bleed.'
Have you notified the police?”
“No; the policeman who chased
them doubtless reported it. It’s all
over now, and isn't likely to happen
again.” Then,
“Maybe not; we’ll hope not.”
out of a clear sky. “But just one
word. Are you both sure the man we
were talking about yesterday wouldn’t
be sorry to see you two laid out on
an undertaker’s cooling board?'
This appeared to be the proper time
to make a full statement of the facts
precedent to a man who would un¬
questionably prove a friendly and pow¬
erful ally; hut a well-filled dining
room was hardly the place for confi¬
dences.
“That would be rather far-fetched,
wouldn't it? The man you refer to Is
barely on speaking terms with Owen; |
and the only grudge he can hold j
against his promotion me is my schemes.” refusal to buy stock j
in
This ended the holdup talk and the j
conversation drifted to other tilings, j
Later, when Starbuck asked what they j
were going to do with their day, Mark¬
ham said they were intending to drive
about and have a look at Brewster
and its surroundings. This brought
forth an invitation from the mine
owner.
(TO BE COSTlSUED.)
.
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XT J-'1 ORE than three thousand
births without a single loss
of either mother or child! That is
the official Piatt County record of
Dr. W. B. Caldwell, in fifty years'
family practise in Illinois.
No wonder mothers have such
entire confidence .in giving little
ones Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin 1
If you have a baby, you have
constant need of this wonderful
preparation of pure pepsin, active
senna, and fresh herbs. A child who
gets this gentle stimulant for the
stomach, liver and bowels is always
healthier. It keeps children’s
delicate systems from clogging. It
will overcome the most stubborn
Eastern Railroad Just
Succession of Curves
One of the longest crooked rail¬
roads in the United States is the
New York, Ontario & Western, which
runs up through the central part of
New York state and over into tile
anthracite coal regions of Pennsyl¬
vania. It is believed that the road
lias not a single stretch of its entire
length which extends straightway
for as much ns a mile. Much of the
main line extend^ through crooked
alleys, curving along between paral¬
Quicker Relief
For Headaches
Because of Quick Dissolving Property Bayer Aspirln Starts
“Taking Hold” 3 or 4 Minutes After Taking
Due to important, scientific, de¬
velopments in the world-famous
Bayer laboratories, almost IN¬
STANT relief from headaches,
neuralgia and rheumatic pains is
being afforded millions.
Because of a unique process in
making and tableting, Genuine
Bayer Aspirin is made to dissolve
almost INSTANTLY in the stom¬
ach. Hence it starts to work almost
instantly. And thus “takes hold”
of the average pain or headache in
as little as three or four minutes
after taking. The fastest, safe relief,
it is said, ever known for pain.
SV\. BAYER I THIS CROSS
NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE ASPIRIN WITHOUT
E y/ ,
p Copr. 1932, The Bayer Co., Inc.
Plant Follow* White Man
The common plantain weed springs
up wherever the white roan goes. The
seeds are too heavy to float in the
air, and just why it goes witii the
white man is unknown. The North
American Indians called it “White
Man’s Footsteps” because of this
peculiar circumstance. It Is a genus
FOR DAILY USE
Buy from Your Nearest Chemist
Know That You Are Getting
The Best
in Toilet Preparations
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c.
Proprietors: Potter Drug & Chemical Corp.,
Malden, Mass.
Try Cuticura Shaving Cream
FOR SKIN ILLS
condition of constipation. It builds
them up, and is nothing like the
strong cathartics that sap their
strength and energy.
A coated tongue or bad breath is
the signal for a spoonful of Syrup
Pepsin. Children take it readily, for
it is really delicious in flavor. Taste
it! Take Syrup Pepsin yourself,,
when sluggish or bilious, or you
are troubled with sick headaches i
and no appetite. Take some for
several days when run-down, and
see how it picks you up.
It is a prescription preparation
which every drug store has ready;
in big bottles, just ask anywhere
for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
lel ranges of mountains. In soma
places the rear coaches of long pas¬
senger trains can be seen from the
front as the train makes its sinuous
way along.
Young's gap, the highest point on
the main line, is reached by so steep
a grade that.coal trains require two
engines to pull and a third to push
to get up over the hump.—Washing¬
ton Star.
Plenty of money will buy you
more care and attention when you
are old than you need.
Remember, it is Genuine Bayer
Aspirin which provides this unique,
quick-acting properly. So be sura
you get the Real Article—GEN¬
UINE BAYER Aspirin when you.
buy. Naturally you want the fast¬
est, possible relief—and that’s the
way to get it.
To identify the genuine, see that
any box or bottle of aspirin you buy
is clearly marked “Genuine Bayer
Aspirin.” And that any tablet you
take is stamped clearly with the
name “Bayer” in the form of a
cross. Remember—Genuine Bayer
Aspirin cannot harm the heart.
of the herbaceus plants, which
clude five British species, and Is
native to this continent.—Grit.
A Start
“What would you do if you
all the money in the world?”
“Pay my debts—as far as
money would go.”—Modern Radio.