BEGIN HERE TODAY Going up in the levator he was jous of a man staring at him. He Henry Rand, 556 a busi man, is found mysteriously murdered in a cheap hotel. The only clews are a woman's handkerchief and a yellow ticket stub from the Paragon Theatre in Buffalo. Jimmy, the murdered man's son, decides to go to Buffalo until the mys- tery is wie He and Detective Mooney trace the ticket to a Thomas Fogarty, who proves an alibi and says he gave it to a woman named Olga Maynard. Police search for her for days. Janet Rand, Jimmy's sister, breaks her engagement with Barry Colvin, and Jimmy meets and falls in love with Mary Lowell. While with Mary at a cafe he accidentally runs into Olga Maynard and makes an en- gagement with her for the next night. She breaks down 'under his questions and faints. He is lifting her into a taxi when Mary, who is with another man, sees him, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIL Jimmy fumbled helplessly {trying to revive the woman who slumped beside him in the taxicab seat. He.slapped her wrists, called to her, looked be- seechingly at the driver, but that wor- thy .was gazing imperturbably ahead and minding his own business. The @ugh jolting of the cab finally did what he was unable to do. She opened her eyes, looked at Lim and then began to cry. He was sorry he had been so brutal vith her, and angry that he had been unable to get any satisfactory ex- planation from her. Tears had streaked her rouge. Her hair--bleached, Jimmy concluded,-- was in disarray. "What are you going to do?" she asked. Her handkerchief was pressed closely to her mouth. Jimmy barely heard her. "1 don't know. Perhaps it would be better for you to give yourself up to the police They'll find you anyway in time." "How can I explain to them? I can't tell them any more than I've told you. If you don't believe me, they wont." She was erying again. "Do some thinking. Try to remem- ber what could have happ:ned to the theatre stub after you used it." He was trying to be kind to hes. He felt uncomfortable, self-reproachful, ir the face of her tears. "If 1 thought you wouldn* try to run away," he continued, "I'd leave you here"--the eab had stopped in front of her apartment building--"and count on seeing you hers again tomor- row night. Believe me, I don't like to see you in this trouble." "Where would I go? I go?" she asked. morrow night. Where could "I'll be here to- I promise you." "I believe you," he said, and helped 3 ler out of the cab. * » » Ld His first thought when he reached the office the following morning was to find Mary and try to explain. When he did encounter her, however, along toward noon, the speech froze on his lips. He was about to speak, but she gave him a cuct nod and turned on her heel. . . . He thought of writing her a note and sending it through the office boy. - "She'd probably tear it up," he re- flected. He brought his worries along with him when he went out to lunch. +... He toyed with his food and pushed it back uneaten. FLavoR "made of pure chicle and other ingredients of the highest quality was a man of perhaps 40, with black hair, gray around the temples, and a sharp, pointed nose. He was broad- shouldered and bulky of chest but un- commonly slender from his waist down. There was something familiar looking about him. Jimmy kpew he had seen him before, A half smile played about his lips as he contemplated Jimmy. He seem- ed amused. It irritated Jimmy. He felt like asking to be let 'mn on the i joke. He resented being stared at like a monkey in a zoo. He was even an- noyed by the other's fine grooming and obviously expensive attire. They went in the office together, and Jimmy realized where he had seen him. It was the man who had been with Mary last night when he was helping Olga Maynard into the taxi. The man opened the door of the chief clerk's office and walked in, leav- ing it ¢pen. Jimmy could see Mary smile at his greeting. They talked and Mary laughed heartily at something he was saying. Jimmy wondered whe- ther they were laughing at the recol- lection of the spectacle he and Olga Maynard must have made in front of the hotel. "Who is that, Mac?" he asked the young fellow at the next desk. "Who? Oh, that's Church--Sam Church. He's one of the attorneys for the Q. and R. Handles a lot of death and accident claims. Comes in here quite a lot and makes it a point to give a little dictation once in a while to the boss' stenographer. I think he's pretty sweet on her mysell." "I see--thanks." "As ~ matter of fact," Mas contin- ued, "I have a sneaking suspicion that Miss Lowell doesn't exactly hate Sam Church. Good looking dog. Built like a bull in the upper storey--chest and shoulders--and like a greyhound be- low. Got a lot of money, too, I hear. That's all you need to get along in this world, Rand--money. It'll buy anything." "You think, Mac," Jimmy asked, "that money can buy love?" Mac was slow insanswering. "Rand," he said, "it'll buy anything. There's nothing in this sentimental love in a cottage stuff. I know. I was engaged once. Then war came along and I went away, with her crying and every- body promising wonderful things for the boys when we came back." He cursed. "And then what happen- ed? My girl marries one of these fat profiteers that stayed safe at home and made a pile of money while they were digging machine gun bullets out of me in France. "Rats!" he said. "Give rie a mil- lion and I'll have everything I want and do everything I want. And if 1] overstep the law I can buy myself off. John Law doesn't bother the guy with dough. But he makes us poor fish | step." "Mac," said iJmmy, "I think you're wrong. I hope you're wrong." He bent Mary's office, talking in low tones to the chief clerk, Hilton. The same amused smile was playing over his features as he passed Jimmy and walked out of the main office door. * Ld . Ld "Mary--" he stood in front of the water eooler, making 'a pretense of drinking, and blocking" her path-- "Mary, I know it looked rotten. Just' give me a chance to explain." "Mr. Rand--please!" She was lock- ing through him rather than at him, her dark eyes cold as ice. "Let me explain, Mary--after five o'clock. Give me a chance," he plead- ed "It is not necessary, Mr. Rand. I am able to understand what I see without the aid of an interpreter." She stepped past him and was gone He breathed again that subtle frag- rance of her hair, as he had done the night he danced with her... . He stood staring after her retreating fig- ure with hunger in his eyes. . . . * » *. * Shortly before five o'clock Hilton called him into his private office and told him he was discharged. "We're giving you a week's salary tead of the t y two weeks that we allow our discharged em- ployes. Consldéring the short length of your stay here, I think that is fairly generous." Jimmy took it calmly, without so much as raising an eyebrow. "Any- thing wrong with my work?" he asked. "I at least did my best while I was here." "No, Rand, not a thing. In fact, I thought you were doing very well, It's just a case of cutting expenses, 'and, as you're the last man to be taken on, you're naturally the first to go. Sorry." Jimmy felt like saying: "You're lying, Mr. Hilton. As soon as I go you'll hire someone in my place. 1 know why I'm fired. Mary Lowell did it. She had me hired and she had me fired." Instead, he turned silently and walk- ed out of Hilton's office back to his desk. "Macy" he said, "I'm fired." Mac said nothing, but gazed ob- stractedly toward Hilton's office and clicked his pen against his teeth. "Mac," said Jimmy a little later, "blast them all. Do you hear?" He was clearing his desk when Mac's hand fell on his shoulder. He could feel the grip gradually tighten until the flesh ached under the pres- sure of Mac's fingers. Mac stood like that for some time. Then he turned silently and hobbled away. . . His bullet-shattered leg was stiff as a ramrod from ankle Yo hip. Inside the chief clerk's office, Mr. Hilton was dictating to his secretary. "A memorandum to the cashier, Miss Lowell, to the effect that Mr. Rand has been taken off the payroll." Her flying pencil stopped and slip- ped from hor fingers. The shorthand characters in her notebook became sud- denly a meaningless array of hiero- glyphies. "Another memorandum, Miss Tow- ell, to the auditor." She recovered her pencil. It began again to move swiftly over the page, in rhythm to his voice. . . . . When he had finished dictating she ran to the outer office and looked to- ward Jimmy's desk. He had left. The office was empty. . . She gazed for a over his desk as Church came out of | po- "THRILLING" . hen the unsophisticated "buggy-ride" was providing trans- portation thrills a quarter of a century ago, men were getting their first real smoke thrill from Wilsons Bachelor--100%, Havana § ges Bugsy vides ate tow 4 thing of the past but, today, foil wrapped to preserve freshness, Wilson's Bachelor is stoked more extensively and better liked than any other ten cent cigar. © = - WiLson's B Still mo 2 SIAL ES st for t JES ETT SY IVR FR BEA Y vei | €e mone i / Gb hunias Va . long time at the door through which Me had gone. > . -. Ld Jimmy walked to his room through Streets crowded with home-going workers. He walked without seeing, unmindful of the way he was jostled in the crowds. He said aloud: "Why was I fired? She condemned me without hearing me, She judged me without a trial." He said again and again: "Why was 1 fired? Why was I fired?" He climbed the stairs to his room and found a telegram on the dresser. Absently he opened the yellow envel- ope and noticed that it was from De- tective Mooney. He heard the shrill: voice of Mrs, King, the landlady, calling up the stairs, "Teleph.ne, Mr. Rand." He picked up the receiver. "HeHo," he said. A man's voice answered. Rand?" "Yes, this is Rand." "Rand, this is Lieutenant 0'Day at headquarters. Come down here right away." "Hello-- (To be continued.) ------ en "Intuition alone, not reflectign, can foresée the future."--Count Herman Keyserling, -- Inhale Minard's Liniment for Asthma. Homesickness--And a Cure! NATIONAL AIR TRANSPORT MAKES 99.8 P.C. PERFORMANCE Chicago.--During July the National Air Transport planes, contract car- riers of the air mail between New York and Chicago and operators of the lines into the Southwest, completed 214,092 miles, a performance of 99.8 per cent, according to E. P. Lott, operation manager of the line. ---- A Coward In general that man is a'coward who shapes his course of action on his fears; and he alone is a man with real courage who dares to do right. mar --p faa Frenchmen are taking to making and drinking beer instead of wines; last year they consumed 1,800,000,000 quarts, of which only 3,500,000 quarts were imported, 1,000,000 quarts com- ing from England, HEADACHES Needless pains like headaches are quickly relieved by Aspirin tablets as millions of people know. 'And no matter how suddenly a headache may come upon you, you can always be prepared. Carry the pocket tin of Aspirin tablets with you.' Keep the larger size at home. Read the proven directions for pain, headaches, neuralgia, ete, OLD COVERED BRIDGES Various reasons have been advanced as to why New England built so many covered bridges fifty to a hundred years 'ago. The real reason was be- cause lumber was very cheap and be cause the roof saved th» bridges from becoming piled dangerougly high with snow in Winter. These bridges had to be "snowed" for sledding. = That meant shoveling on a thin coating so that the sled-runners would not drag. AC Mrs. Cayenne: "That new hat makes your face look short." Mrs. Fashion- ette: "That's strange. It made my hus- band's face look long." "Many people, always ready to go where they are told the mass is go- ing are adapting their minds to a God- 'less future."--Abbe Ernest Dimnet. Perfect dyeing so easily done! " DIAMOND DYES contain the highest Juality anilines money can buy! at's why they give such true, bright, new colors to dresses, drapes, lingerie. The" anilines in Diamond Dyes mals | them so Sasy to uss. [] or streaking. clear, ne colors, that hold through wear and washing. x .._ Diamond Dies never give things that re-dyed look. They are just 16¢ at all drug stores. hen per- fect dyeing costs no more--is so Saige why experiment with make- shifts? Diamond-Dyes Highest Quality for 50 Years It's your "Mother Your pride prompts you ; i hot Re then for the Add HP "soup bunch." : | added to what the meat was cooked no thickening in this. When nearly ready to serve, remove some of the stock to another pan and thicken it, to use when serving meat and vege- tables. _ Shepherd's Pie Next day take meat and vegetables that are left, put into round baking dish; add about 2 cups of stock and bring to the boiling point. Make a crust of 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder, 1 teaspoonful sugar and % salt, 1 tables) soft shortening and milk enough to make a stiff dough. Roll out to size of bak- ing pan and bake in a quick oven for about fifteen minutes. Can be pre- pared early and reheated at meal time, '| This makes a delicious Shepherd's ple. Baked Corn Two tablespoons butter, 1% table corn, 1 sugar, 1 salt, 1-8 t . pepper, 2 eggs. Melt butter, add four and mix well; add milk gradually and bring i6 the boiling point stirring constantly, add corn, sugar, salt, peppe. and heat thoroughly. Remove from fire, add well beaten eggs -* d pour into greased. baking dish. Bake in moderate oven about 25 minutes or until corn is firm, Serve this for luncheon with a green salad and graham muffin., Shoulder Steak When buying shoulder steak get two slices. Take the tender part from both slices and broil or fry for your steak dinner. The tenderest parts are dark parts around the bone. Gingerbread One-half cup sugar, 3% cup butter, 1 egg, %% cup molasses, % cup sour 'milk, 1 even teaspoon soda dissolved in the milk, 1 teaspoon ginger, a little salt and 1% cups flour, Mix in the usual way. . Lemon Sauce Mix % cup sugar and 1 tablespoon cornstarch; add 1 cup boiling water, stirring constantly. Boil 5 minutes, remove from fire, add 2 tablespoons butter, 1% tablespoons lemon juice and a little nutmeg. Serve hot. < Ribbon Jelly Do you ever prepare two different flavors of gelatin and place in lay- ers? 'Place one layer with half the amount of strawberry, whip the other half, and when first has set, place on, and one of whipped cream. Pine- apple may be added to lemon gelatin you wish to do so. Walnut Cakes Two eggs, a pinch of salt, 1 cup su- gar, 3% cup butter, 3% cup sweet milk, 2 scant cups pastry flour, 1 teaspoon cream of tartar, % cup chopped wal- nuts, This recipe makes two dozen. > MAKING |A HERO Everybody will gather round and cheer when a brave man risks his life at the seaside in order to save a bather in distress or when anyone dis- tinguishes himself in a moment of dan- ger. But nobody dreams of cheering when a cat puts up her back and spits at a dog. Essentially, however, scientists say that there is no difference between the two. Both the act of heroism and the spitfire fury of the cat are due to the same cause--a substance called adrenalin, which flows into the blood from the adrenal gland. , According to Mrs. Adams, lecturer on biology at Cambridge University, heroes are just people with enlarged adrenal glands. But it is doubtful if a dose of adrenalin, which can now be made in the laboratory from coal tar, would produce the desired results if it were administered, say, to soldiers before a battle. According to another authority, the adrenals, which are ductless glands situated above the kidneys, mobilize the resources of the body for exertions like struggle or flight when under the influence of fear or anger. So if you gave adrenalin to a man who was already afraid, its ef- fect might. only be to make him run away more quickly. . The adrenal glands seem to be er to lite, "If both of them are. removed, death follows in about orty-eight hours. goons. om a Try Mustard Rub a little dry mustard over the hands after peeling onions, then wash in the usual way. This removes the disagreeabla odour. Ip) There will, be prepared mus! placed fa the er night. | | In the morning remove the layer of fat. _| spoons flour, 1 cup milk, 2 cups cooked OF d whipped on top. Then a layer of lem- and strawberries to the strawberry it danger of_cooked beetroot becoming mouldy it 'a ie | in; season '7ith salt and pepper. Use