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taprs - m I? 'iinwfiwi^in.ugasaaita?wwrn^iiuvM '%^s>nw SYNOPSIS. | j ' Mary Page, actress, is accused of the murder of James Pollock and is defended by her lover, Philip Langdon. Pollock was intoxicated. At Mary's trial she admits she had the revolver. Her maid testifies that Mary threatened Pollock with it previously, and Mary's leading man implicates Langdon. How Mary disappeared from the scene of the crime is a mystery. Brandon tells of a strange hand pi i.HL tic CKXW UU iUO.4 J & . evidence shows that horror of drink produces temporary insanity in Mary. The defense is "repressed psychosis." Witnesses describe Mary's flight from her intoxicated father and her father's suicide. Nurse Walton describes the kidnaping of Mary by Pollock and Amy Barton tells of Mary's struggles to become an actress and Pollock's pursuit of her. There is evidence that Daniels, Mary's manager, threatened Pollock. Mary faints on the stand and again goes insane when a policeman offers her whisky. Daniels testi, fies that Pollock threatened to kill Mary and Langdon and actually attempted to kill the latter. Two witnesses describe Mary's flight to the street from the hotel and her abduction by men from a gamHHni? niace near by. Further evidence seems to incriminate Daniels. MAGGIE HALE *WT THAT is your name?" \X/ Haie-" YY *'And jour occupation?" For a fraction of a minute She hesitated and then answered lightly. "I am out of employment just at present- i was private secretary to Theodore Barker." A flicker of mutual amusement shot from Langdon's eyes to those of the Prosecutor, and the spectators with a whispering rustle of interest leaned forward to stare, for "Texas" Barker was a striking figure in the city. ' His millions amassed by the masculine lore of "taking a chance" would have made him notable anywhere, but "m ~y% J-'U^ Arvlo7*<rAi] " X'tJA-ttH I UK ^QJUiUiCi cuiaigvu ^ notability to the spectacular, though A Flicker of Amusement Shot From Langd on's Eyes to Those of v the Prosecutor. his constant clashes with the police 'had recently robbed him of some of his more exclusive patronage. To Mary Page alone the name Barker B>-eant nothing, and the sudden eagerness in her manner was due not to the expectation of a bit of sensational testimony, bvit because this was the woman she ha?l been supposed to be ion the night when the police dragged !her to jail. V javaatoaa. The Stran; MARY The Great McClure Myi ? ?*IifTC FRCDtKltlV LLVYio JOHN T. M'INTYRE, Kirk Detective Stories and See the Efjanc C c< Tnis new witness was. uu?t->tn, uui j ; a woman to bring from Mary anything I I but an uncontrollable shudder of averi sion. For she was of the hard-mouth- I i ed, bold-eyed type whose profession ! it is to make herself attractive to men. i I She was the decoy of the great gam- J J bling hell back of the Hotel Republic, j I and Marv wondered vacuelv what on ! * j earth she could possibly know of the i tragedy, that after so many weeks j ; seemed no nearer a solution. The Prosecutor wondered much the j same thing, and the Judge made a ISIir :.m' -: J . Igv ' <l|p^ "Somebody tipped me off that the air was fresher at a cabaret/' mental note to warn Langdon that witnesses whose characters were not { beyond reproach detracted from rather I than added to a oase Jjid Le uiixHi -liiai vesolution in the j face of the twinkle of amnsed re^og- j nition t?^at Maggie Hale had shot him when she took the stand. For all j ivlIlClS 31111 V11 inert ui Diinvvi ?->. 1 and it was with this famous place that | Langdon's first question dealt. "As secretary to Mr. Barker you must huve been frequently at his establishment back of the Hotel Republic, were you not?" "I was." the witness answered readily. "But mostly in the daytime. I had my evenings free." "There were evenings when you were there, though, were there not?" "Oh, lots!" Her tone was freighted with easy amusement "Sometimes ] met lip with a party for dinner or a show, and then we'd drift about to try and bank at The House." She smiled, and several men in the courtroom smiled too. ^ "Miss Hale, were you a friend of James Pollock?" "I knew him; knew him pretty well lie was at Barker's a good bit." "Were you at Barkers on the night that he was shot?" "Yes, but early. Somebody tipped me j on tuat tne an* avus utrsuei at. a uuuu- j I ret."* A sniper of repressed mirth filtered ! ! through the room at this hint of the I I big raid, but Langdon frowned. "Had you seen Mr. Pollock that i l day?" i "No. Not since the night before." "Miss Hale, isn't it true that you i ! wore Tinva ininpil thr? snDDPP mrtv I j for the company that Mr. Pollock and i Mr. Daniels wore giving?" "No. I wanted to, but he said it was purely theatrical. Then I bet him I would come anyway." "Why were you particularly anxious J to atten that party?on Mr. Pollock's I account;" "Not on your life.' I knew that there j ! was going to be some crooked work i ; pullcJ oi'f. but I couldn't prove it. I? I | I bad a grudjre against someone who | | was in on ir, anu I wanted to queer ! ; the deal." i "Will you tell is please what that j ! Ul'tti *?uo* The woman twisted her hands to- j ' aether nervously, and her eyes darted i i among the spectators as if searching ; : for a menacing face, then she said i ! slowly: "The?the deal wasn't pulled off. and I j I'd rather?tell it without any names, ; ; If I've got to tell it. I'm not keen ! , uboiit snitching on people." "I think you may tell it as you ! I please. Should it become necessary to ; reveal the name I will ask for if." tirm X\7*11 VTAM ;? J.LIUL S llitj ?T cu, ,vvu il I ; was this way." I [ Miss Halt settled back in tier eiiair, j I ge Case of i PAGE! stery Story, Written by In Collaboration With Author of the Ashton Head the Storv ly M.ox)in$ 'Pictures | apyright. 10IS, by McClure Publication as though she really enjoyed the inter- j est she was creatine:. "Barker knew* a fat lot of crooks of i all kinds, and he had one pal called ! Riulfrp Dndlev who?wasn't all he ; might have been, but Texas stuck to j him because he'd helped him once a j long time ago. It was the same with j Larry the Josh. Larry had a soft job ; at The House, and Texas kept him fwr j old time's sake. "Well, that's got nothing ro do with ; it. except that these fellers cooked up i a plant by which they were to get a | girl into Jim's party. This girl is . about the cleverest dip in New York. . and she was to lift the jewels and the watches and the money and everything she could get those swift hands of hers on. when* the party got warmed np. 4 "It was a part of the game for tier not to be seen going in or coming out of the hotel, so it was fixed to get the fire-escape down and let her go up it. When she came down again she was to be swung up into Barker's in a swing that is used sometimes to get important people out of the way if j unexpected visitors arrive." She smiled grimly. "And then she was to walk boldly out the front door. Now this girl?" "Sadie!" breathed Mary Page sud denly, and at the name the witness j paled and. swinging about stared at | Mary. "How do you know?" she began, but I Langdon interrupted quickly: "You say that the girl failed to carry -?ut her part of the plot. Will you tell ns why, please?" "Why? Why, because Jim wasn't at the banquet and she couldn't get In. j There wasn't anybody else there who j recognized ner, ana sue was cuumui^ , on Jim. It was fixed with him, but i I guess he forgot, so she was loft out j in the cold. She stuck around till j pretty late, hoping to have a chance ! to get in on the game anyway, and | then wlien she tried to go down the j fire-escape she found it about as quiet j as Broadway around eight o'clock. It i was full of bulls and people and lights, j so she had to go downstairs and out : the regular way with nothing to pay ! for a wrasted evening." "Were you in the hotel that night?" I "I was. But not at the bemque " j "Where were you?" "I:i ill" ladies' writing-room on ihe second floor." the witness answered j w_ " * "You say that the gir! failed to carry | out her part of the plot.'' without the slightest hesitation J That's around the corner from the j banquet room.'* "How near is that to what is known as the 'gray suite." do you know?'" "Of course I do. It's at the end of that corridor." "Can you reach the fire-escape from 'it?" "Xo. There's a fire tower at the vther ski'.- ol the building that you are supposed to use. But I didn't know that when I was seized with a desire to write letters in that room." "Wliiir tin:e did you Lro m tttere: "Oh. I don't know?round u'uoui j eleven o'clock or so." ''Did you lock out the window?" , "Pure I di 1, lots of time?. 1 had to do something to prevent dcnth from boredom with my own company." "It was ihen 11 :;r y< u found v<> . v. : reach the fne-esrui < . w;> it ' "Yes. But I could see it and that was just al><-\u as important for me. All 1 wanted was to have the ?? on a woman that had been blabbing too much about me." "Miss Hale, did you at any time when Aiif of f Ka fi i*rk_x^C/*'l 1\C* hoy r ?WTJ lUt/lVCVi UUl <11 lilt uil V.'VK!^ any conversation?" "Yes." "When?" "Well, I wasn't wearing my wrist watch that night so I can't tell y?u the exact time. It wag pretty late, after midnight I had about decided that James Pollock, Mary Page and Philip Langdon. the game was due to come off pretty quick or not at all, and bad leaned out of the window to take a last look when I saw the lights flash up in the next suite/' "Were the windows open r "Yes." "And you could hear talking?" 4,Yes." "Was it a man and a woman?'' *'No; two men. One w~as shouting pretty loudly and the other seemed to ha nrnrrnsirifT hiTn something OT Teas 0 jsuring him. One voice seemed kind of j familiar, but I didn't place it then because it was thick, like a man with an edge on. The other voice I didn't recognize. At any rate. I heard the lush say, " 'Now beat it. and don't you let anybody butt in this time. Stay where i told you to. and for the Lord's sake don't get run in as a sneak. Do you get me?' " 4I got you the first time,' growled the other fellow. 'What the dickens has got into you tonight, Jim? I believe you've got something up your sleeve you're i<ot tellinV "'Well,' says the drunken voice, you've been keepin' a few things up W i/ $ | M&Jfflk ' -? < : .< > ; ?> * >>; SXyZr *?<&yi < ? * Mary Page. yonr sleeve for a long time. I haven't had an accounting &r that money yet.' "At thar the other ?rrow;s something and they both came to the window." "Could you see tliemV" i.anplon s voice shook a Iittie in his excitement. "No. I couldn't see anything biit their shadows. . A lall one kind of wavering, and a shorter one.'" "Did you hear any more'.'" "No "Reoause iust then I heard F>in!f-n?.p lau^h in 'i:o corridor, find I know I he banquet must Le arriving, and I xvanted to keei? tats on the guest.s." "I>id you see the defendant, ManI'age. pass?" | "Yes." j "Was she alone?" "No; Daniels, the theatrical feller, 1 was with her." There was a sli?!it pause. "Now, Miss Ilale," Langdon's voice was serious, but deep with an emotion that stirred the bewildered spectators \ with the sense of something big and j important even though they could not j grasp it, "did Mr. Daniels show auy j A * ? ^ V? a thfi /lnr>r f\f j emotion \v at-ii iic ?.uc uvui v. I the gray suite?" "I don't know as you would call it : | emotion exactly. lie acted like a man ; that hears a familiar voice. To come [ ; down to facts, he stopped short and ! . listened, and it wasn't till he noticed ! that Miss Page had stopped too that 1 ; he laughed loudly as if to cover up i ! something and hurried her along to ' the banquet room." i *'I>id you sec Mr. Daniels again?" ; "Yes; a little liter. I went across to , the. window to get an eyeful of what ; was going on" out there, but couldn't | i see a thing, and after waiting a bit 1 I went back to the door." j "Was anyone in the corridor?" ? ... . . I "Yes. A kkl was waiKing aiong to- i i wards the stairs and Daniels was j | standing by the door of the gray suite with one band on the knob and with l his ear fiat against the panel." ! "Plow long did he stand there?" "Oh, a minute or so. At first I ! I thought he was going to open the door. I i Then he shragged his shoulders and | | walked a step away. Just then I j thought I heard the sound of a window j being closed and I ran towards my j window. Before I got there, though, ; there was a scream and a shot and I ran out into the hall instead. Old j Daniels was beating it down the cor- i ridor and Mr. Langdon here was j standing at the door of the gray room." j "Did you join the crowd about tb> J i door?" I . "Of course I did. I was one of the first to get into the room." "Was the window still open?" "No." The witness was very em- ' phatic. Her mouth shut in a tight, line. f "Now?be careful. Miss Hale?are j J you sure of that?" I "Sure? Of course I'm sure. One ! j window was open, yes. The one to the | left hand side of the room, but the j other one, the one through which I had j : heard the talk, was closed. I'm dead ; | sure of it?dead sure." j "Miss Hale, you say you were one of , i the first to enter the room. Will you | j ^ . & ' : 1 V X I i v? I j "Mr. Langdon was lifting her up in his arms." I j ! 1 describe exactly what you sawLangj don moved nearer to her, and himself ' I | listened attentively. "I saw the body of Jim Pollock ]yi ing face down on the floor with a drib- i ; ble of blood coming from under him, ! and a little ways off Mary Page lying I in a dead faint, with her face all twisti ed up. like a person with a stroke. Mr. ! Lamrdon was lifting her up in his ! arms. Dauiels was there, and the pretty boy that played the lead in the Page company. There was one of the hotel officials, too." The memory of tlie ghastly scene (lid not disturb her at all. She was as : calm as though she had been entertahiI ing visitors at home. I "Rut you did NOT see. did you, the ' short man whom Pollock had been ha; ran-tiing a few moments before?" The j question was sharp and direct, j "X.. Unless it was either you, Mr. i j Langdon. or Mr. Daniels. There was i no other man there whom it could have ! been." "Was the voice you heard mine? | j Speak frankly." ; "So. Unless you've changed your elocution teacher." There was a slight j litter. "It was kind of thick and na- j ! sal." I , j "Would you recognize it again if you ( : heard it?" "Yes. Hut 1 haven't lieard it since." "What did you do during the excitement:" "I was too horrified to do anything for a minute. Then people kept push !>. aii.i > > i and toolc t:i >tIit*r at the ii re-escape." "I'iii you sec anyone:" "Not on the fire-escape itself, but two men were in the alley staring up at the hotel. I could see their faces.*' "Two men?are you sure there were two'.-" "Yes. Of course I am, I could see them nlain. One was almost under the arc light." "Miss Hale." said Langdon. clearly and calmly, weighing every word, as though he knew the sensation his question would create, "was that man who stood under the arc light dressed in a light suit with a red tie?" "lie was!" [To be continued.] Avoid Catching Cold. Colds are catching mostly from others. Therefore avoid people who have colds. Avoid people who have recently had pneumonia (within two years). Avoid crowds. Avoid hot places. Avoid badly ventilated places. Colds can't be caught from oneself. Therefore keep the mouth, nose and tonsils clean. Avoid gorging with food "* * ? .a -i . 1...1* or anus, avoiu aicououcs. The jrerm is a factor, but the human body is also. Therefore avoid getting over warm or overcoid in the entire body or any part thereof. Colds cannot be caught when resistance is high. Therefore build up heat making powers by sleeping out. taking cold baths and eating moderately. Exercise daily in the open air. If you have contracted a cold do not spit carelessly. Do not sneeze or cough carelessly. Destroy all nose and mouth secretions. If the attack is accompanied by aches and fever avoid pneumonia by going to bed, decreasing eating and by taking a purge. Take medical coun sel Care of the Hands. ' To keep the hands smooth, soft and white wipe them until they are perfectly dry after washing them. The neglect to dry the hands is the commonest cause of the redness and chapping of the skin. If the hands have got into a condition where treatment is needed rub them thconghly at bedtime with a mixture composed of tincture of benzoin, oue teaspoonful glycerin, lour ounces, ana rosewaier. three ounces. A similar treatment is to rub a small portion of cold cream well into the skin. This may be done during the day several times. aDd it is protective treatment ag'inst chapping" when about to go out into the cold. Wear loose k|d gloves on the hands^ during the night after applying the lotion, as 't aids in the softening and I bleaching work. A teaspoonful of tfc lemon juice, two teaspoonfuls of ; glycerin and six teaspoonfuls of water. ! all mixed together, make a serviceable | daytime application for the hands I i after dishwashing, sweeping or scrubbing. Wear rubber gloves when doing this work. Nebraska !n Ancient Days. In late tertiary times what is now Nebraska was a low lying and swampy ; ror'Ow, Comoro'? vo^ot".f:on sfr^Tlar to that now growing in most ciin:;.;e3 much farther south. Camels and llamas were abundant, and during the pliocene epoch great ground sloths and glyptodonts. whose relatives now live in South America, inhabited western Nebraska. Mastodons with tusks on both the upper and lower jaws, much like those of the miocene epoch, still persisted. Short legged rhinoceroses remained abundant, and there was a great variety of wolflike carnivora. Saber toothed tigers and true cats, some of them considerably larger than the modern tigers, were also abundant. Three toed horses were still numerous, but the modern genus equus was not among them. One of the most curious animals of the time in Kansas and Nebraska was a gopher-like rodent that r *W/N hio nncn Tt"Q IJU.U t ^ U liil livxuo vii iiij - vw enormous claws indicate good burrowing powers, and its borns also may have been used in digging.?Argonaut. Professional Secret. Tramp?Thankee, mum. That is the best meal I've had for two days. But I knew I'd get a good feed here. Housekeeper?You did? Is there any mark on my fence? 4\NVm. Marks don't go any more. People rubs "em out or paints 'em over." "Then how do you know?'' "I hate to give aw way the secrets of the perfesh. mum." "Then I'll make you an offer. Tell me how you know you'd get a good meal here and I'll give you another every time you pas.s through the town." "That's f;iir. mum. I knew by the appearance of the yard." "The yard?" "Yes, mum. It has a mussed up, slipshod look, as if the folks was the .-1.4-Pfl/wo e/vi-f fliot'c tnn ln7v to XA Hiroo OU1 C WW -v?-k. - - ? 4themselves from bein' fooled by any vagabond that comes along. Good day, mum.'*? Pittsburgh Press. What Word Rirr.es With Slam? iTTnlU oitrnnfhflopf " ?-liH 'A VOlfP AS she took down the phone. "Is that you, honey?" she answered. "You bet U is. How are you?" "Just tine." "Well, you were looking mighty fine when I saw you last." "Now you're flattering." "No, I'm not" "Tell ine, Jim. what are you calling me for this time of day?" 1 "Jim! 1 ain't Jim! Aren't you Florence?" "No, I'm not." "Wrong number." "Well, 1 think so." SlaiD. Slam.?Indianapolis News.