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iV53rTl! "SI ttHM ' ijffrt . 4f rf. ...,. 'fMajanj -3- -." 'JT OlA l V 4 ri 'TEe Button Br WILL IRWIN Author of The Gly That Wat Etc Cnstrstircs by Hirry GrUiIsjtr A A Coyirfeht igtt, Tio lklb-UerriU Ccuctw Rosalie's .heart save a little jump. But she controlled her expreefcion. He was willing to argue the case the first skirmish was uon The law!" exclaimed Rosulkkr -That .. t I rll.. 1 . rtttlil MI1TV a lor wir uwi uouj. -. - - , . Votes for Women' banner wnen - thlnk about It! You men haro been znaktn' the law all these years. An you've run It on rules nothln but rules. Diagrams. Did be do it? All right, hang him. You can't look at things except oa the outside. I wish jeu did have a few women to look at "ora inside an' out Once In a while one of your cussed Jurl-J uses its common sense an' lets a man go when the police, evidence Is against him But they don't do it themselves. No. sir! It's their mothers in 'em" -That will UO." Bnanea ..i.-m. ""- suffragette dope has nothing to do Tht ivilt iln Bnarled MCJee: -tnie . ih, men Where's 5'erei? "Now this I'erez." pursued Rosalie, treating the Inspector's anger as though It had cot been, "was a darn foolworst fool I ever saw as those cute little men generally are. But what was he dote when Hanska died? Gettln" his own from a crook, the prop erty that belonged to him, in the only way he knew. Suppose It's tree he killed Captain Hanska did vou ever KS if you spend as fast as you earn you have nothing left if you save a little weekly it keeps adding up! Isn't a bank account at our Savings Department and 4 per cent interest the logical thing for you? THE BANK OF BISBEE is a good motto for you to follow in the choosing of your bank as well as in your work. It is our aim to give our depositors this safety first, last, and all the time. Miners & Merchants Bank The Conservative Bank Your Private Papers, surplus Jewelry, Family Silver, etc more people are taking this precaution yearly! Safe Deposit Boxes may be ranted yearly and additional space May be engaged for Valuable Packages. Today is a good tlaie to attend to this. Citizens Bank and Trust Company Main Street BIsbee Arizona Will E. McKee. President C. A. McDonald, Cashier o;,W. Wolf, Assistant Cashier. ' " he tHihit." "Yo aren't allow log that yarn about apoplexy, are you?" asked In spector MeOee. "In toe first place." eald Rosalie, "ho knowe Margarita Perez better, you that puniped her yesterday after noon or uio that watched her for a month Me that heard her talk her goal out to her mother an' her lover? 1 tell you, she told the truth." "Yes, and how did she know he died of apoplexy? She wasn't there" "She didn't know except on hear say. But 1 do." -How?" "Because, Martin McGee, Just be cause. You know Cleary I don't mean tins sergeant, I mean the Coro ner's physician that made the Hanska autopsy There's some Coroner's doe tors I'd trust my lite with as soon as .,.. v,r,t rinarv Dolltlcal ' appoint ment you know. Do jou think that .Cleary. when they nanaeo. mm over a ,n .tohhori In the heart, looked any further into the cause? I'm betting, though, that even Cleary must have seen one thing which "would hare Keant something to anybody but a p lltleal doctor. I saw it that night A d this I'erei Estrllla fellow saw Oh. you've talked to him then?" "That'll come In later If you're still llstenln' to me. "Well, before he knew what I knew, this Estrella told me that Captain Hanska. after he fell, was bleeding at the nose. I'd seen that, too when I came Into the house ahead of the doctor. Now here's the thing to do," eho added. "You call up that Dr. Cleary right now. You see If he didn't notice It an Just walk away from it " Inspector McGee. with the air of one who punctures bubbles, opened his telephone prJug Iprlug double O," he said; and then to Rosalie: "You can listen on th extension If vou want to." His voice was formal, and he averted his eyes. "Dr Cleary?" inquired the Inspector, "Inspector McGee. Doctor have you your notes on the Hanska case? The autopsy I mean. In your pocket note book? Well, Just one little thing. Did you find any blood on the nostrils?" "Here's the record," came back Dr IGURE IT OUT FOR YOURSELF y First For Safely eenino4 I CWarW joke afl- a Ml ..: f i "slljlit bleeding from th nostril !caued probably by the fall" , -That win do." said McCee "wait a second you didn't perform any au-! ; topsy on hU head? You didn't look Into hi brain T "What raa the use'" camo 1)ack Clearv s voice, a little defiantly, lie . -qhm igtt,.1 In Jh heart u ain't he?"! I was stabbed 'V. ....... ,f iiY ' , "Now hO lyjn'?" said Rosalie Le Grange, as ehe hung up the telephone. But there was still a snarl In Mo Gee's voice as he spoke: "You think you can monkey with the law! You! You think you can set crooks loose just as you please and get away with It! It's all very well for you, but look at the fix you're leav ing for me. The Hanska case Is cleared up Wade Is Innocent We've, had the wrong man all the time. That's Joke enough on ue. But when we find the right one, he gives us the slip. The Big Commissioner will get roasted by the papers and hand It to the Deputy Cornish, and the Deputy will pass the buck down to me, and I'll have to report how It happened. Yes. and I will, .too!" he burst out "I'll tell, all right! Conniving at es- cape. You know what that meana?" "Is It a felony or a misdemeanor?" aked Rosalie. "I sort of forgot which it wae at the time I committed It" "Look here," said SIcGee, "you can't bluff me." "I know I can't" said Rosalie, "an' you can't me, either." "Come, out with it then what have you done and why did you do it?" "As for what I've done," said Ros alie, "tellin you would be spollln' It Why did I do it? I've answered that I couldn't trust you or any man alive to let that poor boy off. Apoplexy? Vn.i cnr.rtoA k.n hla .!... 1J l I .1 v Vi . "'" owu 11. an' you'd be snortln' now if you had, him here In front of yoc They'd, laugh him to tha chair. I've saved you t the .necessity of klllln an Innocent 1 man. An I ought to be thanked, not ' kicked." -rou'll get woree," said Mama sic-( Gee; "you'll go up that's what will t happen to you!" j "Now will I," mocked Rosalie, break ing out her dimples, full-blazon, forj :e nrst ume in to days, -wnai an awful trick on a lady! Especially when you'll have to do it yourself. ' You'ro the only witness the only per sou who knows that I promised to leliver Estrllla. You're the only per son that's beard me confess I let him ' jet away. So you'll be put on the' (vltness-6tand, an' then I'll be put ori' the stand. An' I'll testify how thej Kb York police were baffled with the real criminals passln' right under their adses twenty times a day, an' how t poor boardln'-housckeeper that used so be a medium Jest a plain, good old loul took a hairpin an' a thimbleful )f common sense an' got a confession in" made you all fools. My lawyertl jet It In; an' If he don", the papers will, because I'll tell 'em. -"Marty McGee," she added, "let's git down to cases. You can't do a thing to me that'll help your position at all. I'll go to Jail for life an" never tel where Juan Perez has gone. But If you'll listen, I'll show you Just how to fix this without trouble for any body." Inspector McGee was now playing with a flexible paper-knife, his down' cast eyes fixed upon it as he twisted it - back and forth. I "How?" he asked In a voice from which the bluster had cone. Rosalie established herself .comfort ably In her chair. "Well, It's a funny thing for us to do you an' me tell the truth. Nof. aulte the truth, either: the truth fixed ! jup a little, which Is the best kind of a' lie. that Is. Give out what happened 6"iy, nor mm in a manner but say your own smartness cleared of speaking I had to hand them a up the case, not mine. Get Dr. Cleary sl"are deal Jnst like the rest I'd to certify that he found apoplexy atl done everything I could think of, Mar a more pareful autopsy, made after I tm McGee but I couldn't kill a man UieCoroner's Inquest, but that he sup- ! llked and sympathized with. Just to prwssed the report at the request of1 the rjollee. You can force him to do1 that to save his skin;, his work is get tin" careless enough so's one more slip 'Would make his political backers drop him. Say the theory that a man died .of. apoplexy Just when a knlfo was held, at his breast ready for him to (all on It was so strange as' un usual that you couldn't believe It in the beglnnln". So you held Lawrence Wade until you made sure. Say you puspected Miss Estrllla Miss Perez 'from the first, an' learnln' that sho was superstitious, had her worked by a police stool-pigeon who played at bein' 'a professional medium. Say your men listened to the seances, an' broko In at the end an" pulled tho whole story out-of her. An'tlf that ain't awful near the truth, I never I made up a He that was." j "I fall to see how that excuses ua I tor letting Estrllla Perez go," said I Inspector McGee, with a stir of sar! casm. "That point" said Rosalie, "is the! best thing I've thought out the very i best Up to the confession that's our story you hadn't tho least Idea but) Mlsa Estrllla done it all herself. We'd I never thocght arvut their changln'l clothes. An' when you got the con fession. you sent out to arrest him.' but he vraa n-nmh.)ir Hnr-d off but he waa gone probably tipped off somehow. How, search me! I haven't .thought out a good lie there. Maybe oull have to invent that yourself. uinerwiso lni just be ono of the mys teries of the New York Police De partment Reprimand you! Why, they'll give you a medal!" McGee still looked down at the paper-knife. That ain't all," he said; fooled me, that' what you did, "you You made a, fool out of me." At this Rosalie fired. A light came Into ,her eyes that rolled ten .years from her agt tnq light of anger. A j color came into her cheeks that took 1 off another ten the pink of -contempt "Make a fool of you, Martin McGee! " -t -. , i '" . .i SOME DON'TS r pp Stomach and Liver ror iomacn ana uiver SUftererS ja raed)oio. fof voaj. S(omch ,,, m mnriainK noun and ntjlit ax uMallr aorh raailleuionlriv temporal reli.l and faplr t)ont wlai a u,,i,.u otwraiwi Tfcrrr alrayiuilanriiioiratiHi.aBtiiiianr a-of btomarh Uver aod lntertmal Ailmnu the kntfe ran t avuMled d ttaa risht remedy n takn m .ie. Uoo't so around with a foul smelling; breath m,12jv a diuortiered bttnriach and LIrer. o the 1 dMcomfort of thoid yu come In contact wits. If you are a Stomal h bufferrr don t think you oannot be helped -probably wrw caaes than roure have beeQ restored by Mayr's WoadeHul Stootacb Remedy Moot im ailment are mainly caused by a catarrhal conaition. Mayr Wonderful Stomach Kemedy not only remove the catarrhal mucuu.. but aHays the chronic tallamtnatvm ami atwit!i In rendennir tha entire oilmen taf v and mtestlnal trart antnrptlc. and tbia it tiw aecret of its mor- vefcH acce. Don't afler contttst rvaln and agony and aHon your atomach ailments to physically under rnrneyonr health. No matter how severe your case may be or how lone ou have ftufTered one dox of Mavr'a Wonderful Stomach Kemedy fchould convince you that yon can be restored to health again. Marr'sWond erf alStomach Remedy ha) beea taken and n hlghtar recommended by Member of Conjjrevt. Jutke of the .supreme Cnurt.Educatore. Lawyer. Merchant. Hankers, Dtjctor. DrugKUtji. Nurse. Manufacturer. Prietu. Ministers. Farmers and people in all .WfJLs of life . Aliments t Geo. II. ilayr. IM-150 Whitinu ht.. h-na (or h KE1S valuable booklet on stomaen wnraaoi jii. roi Sale -In. Lowell, Arizona, by- the Ixwell Drug Company. I only maSe Jt fool oT one person. That's me, Rosalie Le Grange. Who , took 'all the risks In this Job? Yon? Not a bit of It! Me, Rosalie. And what's more, Martin" she paused and 1 gulped; and something came Into hor , face that reduced her to a girl "who did 1 do It for? Me, Rosalie? 1 guess not What was there in It for me? When this" thing broke, I was 1 InrT.MWtlrlpnt anil llvfnr .n. nn.n lln -" -- &. iuj unu IUC an a ciean self-respecting life. Do you tnlnk l waatedPt0 do it, VdT. you can bet nbt 1 started thU Job mainly 'cause I didn't want to see the fine young fellow Wade go to the chair an because I didn't want to see that beautiful young thing broken for life i mean wmuace iiansna. "But after I got Into It. I realized "You Wbn't Get Him." that I was workln' more for somebody else than I was for them. And that somebody else was you, Martin "Mc Gee. I'd a given it up long ago If I nadn't kept my mind on you. An' I'd become 'ond 0r that sick Estrllla worn- &a and of that ""le brother of hers. """ went snt on. llo you suppose I like to do what I did to them? Well, iyou never made a bigger mistake. I ain't what I used to be. When I u,u""" ""- "er laiaer uuu mum , t0 trick V&t Pr Iiss Estrllla. I Just . , ti. . ... . . B"eged. But after I found that she Ut-,P )ur career. An eo i cone me next best thing. 1 fixed it so nobody would be Involved In it but 'me. I could have told you, an' persuaded you, - maybe, that the right thing was to let Perez get away. But you'd have been my accomplice. You couldn't have gone on the stand an' sworn clean as you can now that you had ; nothln' to do with It I kept you ! out of It I'm sure to take my medl-j I cine. I never whimpered yet, an I I won't now. An' that, Martin McGee, is why I fooled you!" Never had words poured so fast from the llpB of Rosalie Le Grange. And & they poured, many expres sions chased across Inspector Mc- oee" clean-shaven police lace. this the truth, RoseT" he said and gulped. ''Is it the truth?" I "It's the truth If anybody ever told It" she replied. J He waa on his feet now; she rosaj al!,; . J ... ,. "You're a wonder of the world." he . 8a,J- I "I always maintained that!" ehe re- plied, her old self dancing in & dimples. ' Martin McGee never understood why his defenses fell all at once, why h! arms xrnrkfntf na thoash in deft.- ance of his will, encircled Rosalie Le , firing nL 5al r?!iyr-r PL 'K?.7 I l-Q nsJte i -y :v"li.-i j'wn. u, Ji 1 &MmwW4m ! When. a month before, Martin so ex- i ' "" ? tablespoonful in a glass ploded In her presence, Rosalie had f tor before breakfast and in a wrenched herself away. If sho lay,w dW rar ,Wdnes will act fine, unresisting in hia arms now, it was s "mous salts is made from the because she had seen his face. And ac,d of KraP?s and lemon juice, com-' Rosalie Le Grange knew abovo all things how to read faces. Sho. yielded her waist, but not yet her lips. -Martin." she asked softly, "is this on the level?" "It's on the level. Rose. Rose. J don't care for anything. I want you to marry me!" . . ,' To Be Continued Unmarried persons of both sexos In France are to be subject to an In crease of 20Ic income tax to be im posed by bill now' before Parliament You Can Use Gas If your kitchen requires a stove to heat it in winder the problem is solved by installing a modern Kitchen Heater in connection with your gas range, as shown in cut. Several years experience has proven this Kitchen Heater to be an unqualified success. ' .- It burns coal, coke, wood or refuse, and cooking may be done over the two eight-inch holes on top can be furnished with gas, kindler and water coil. il ee QUIT iWEAT WHEN DE3 BOTHER Take a glass of Salts before break fast if your Back hurts or Blad der is troubling you No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by f.ujhlng tho kidneys occasionally, says ai well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites tho kidneys, they become over-workrvl from the 3train. get sluggish and fall to Alter the wasto and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly ail rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness slecn- iessn0ss and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull achv lu the kidneys or your back hurts or If the urine is cloudy, offensive, full ' of Fedlrnenti Irre(S11,ar of pasBa or aUen(ed a P , .- . . vaiuiui PJ! jSJ ,f ' i'Jr ounces oi jad Salts from any phar- Blnea WUI "tnia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weak ness. Jad Salts Is Inexpensive and can not Injure; makes a delightful effer vescent lithla-water drink which everyone should take now and then tO kCeD tllQ kidneva -1mti nnrl artlva and the blood pure, thereby avoiding 1 serious kianey complications. Adv. I in II .r an - .. or Cooking m Year Round - $15.00 Gas Kindler Water Coil $1.50 $ i 50 Call at our store d allanow us the poiuts of advantage Improvement omi oanv Make it a complete Merry Xmas by making our boer part of the good cheer. A glass of it before tho Christmas dinner will het the app-tlto for the good things to come and Insure good digestion. Better have us send you a case while you have it in mind. Only $3.50 at your grocery or Phone 243. L. A. BROWN Successor to Boston and Brown, Agents for Copper City Brewery. FORTIFY YOURSELF ER FARM LANDS, UNDER GOVERNMENT IRRmAxfoS IN Ytt a1cVALEY AND Y0UR FUTURE INDEPENDENCE 13 ASSURED ASK FOR LITERATURE DESr.RlDTivr J: ... 'S AS.8.V.RED' 5c.aU XME EARTH" 5 ACRES 'JPr-S yEARS ...ns, wnwr-o will KAY FOR John a. SCHMID-SHATTUCK BUILDING Bane Sl -au-i r General Contractors Estimate and Sketches furnished free of charge Prospective Builders. Phone 485 BISBEE, ARIZONA. TRANSFER All kinds of transfer work. Coal delivered to any part of the district and a discount giv en for cash. J. J. QUILL, Transfer. Phone 50 and 616 THE SHATTUCK GENTS VNHEUSER UJSCH REEL OI'mitEL WHISKY ssgss: PHONE ? t m vSSkc 544'Read Review "Want Ads." Extra Extra to explain to you. - wr inia "RARnprj TO PAY. 2 THE LAND. Gampbell Tarrant to MX. HIGH Will Rent, Sell or dispose of your property in short time. - I List your property with him and get rwnlt. Piione 55 Op?. Depo TEL. 26 nnv im jr r yvi re r" wts- ' r'4. -..-