The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. [17], No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 12, 1927 Page: 3 of 8
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NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW
TEXAS
By GERALDINE BONNER
WNU Service
(Copyright by The Bobbs-Merrill Co,)
you doing
here?”
went
thing and I didn’t hear
you suppose made you
w
years ago by noted art-
is a
I CHILD’S BEST LAXATIVE !
clos-
IS CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Ancient Mirrors
Records of History
over
from us you’d get
very uncomfortable
and a
Vigorous
let it go.
dark. I
Pessimism is merely a case of in-
tellectual indigestion.
and
felt
and
She
Courtney
the auto-
with the
different
go a shower of
laces in south-
. It is signifi-
of popular en-
''thdugh the event
now
She
return
did so
rather
to an-
STORY FROM THE START
CHAPTER VII—Continued
see anything—anythin;
Increases the Pep an<J Vigor
by relieving Auto-Intoxication
A SAFE. DEPENDABLE LAXATIVE
the door
seemed no
opened so
resuming,
“I upset the
didn’t see it,
graves. In Japan, the mirror was
one of the three objects of the im-
perial insignia, the other two being
the sword and the jewel. The oldest
mirrors that exist today are the Egyp-
tian.—International Studio.
was.
was
While despondent over the en-
forced hiding- of her fiance, Jim
Dallas, slayer in self-defense of
Homer Parkinson, Sybil Saunders,
popular actress, is engaged to
play Viola in a charity perform-
ance of “Twelfth Night” on Gull
island, on the Maine coast. After
the play Hugh Bassett, Anne
Tracy’s fiance, tells Joe he has
heard he is spying on Sybil to
learn the whereabouts of Jim
Dallas and earn the reward of-
fered by the Parkinson family.
The boy denies it. To Anne he
betrays his enmity toward Sybil.
Stokes tells Sybil he has news
of Dallas, and to secure privacy
they arrange to meet in a small
summer house. Flora Stokes tells
Bassett she saw Sybil shot but
did not see her murderer. Bassett
notified the sheriff, Abel Wil-
liams. The latter suspects Flora
Stokes. Anne Tracy discovers Joe
hiding on the island, which he
was supposed to have left, and
warns him against attempting to
escape.
Quite a Gadabout
Boston.—-Having just crossed
The Loving Shepherd
A young and nervous curate was an
nouncing that the rector would
on the following
in the following
confusing words:
nounce that your
be with you next
cupy the pulpit
The Churchman.
Tsukiyama of Osaka, the
modern swordmaker of
forging with
Priests stewed
into the kitchen
door in the world
slowly—creaking,
dying away. She
wouldn’t,” she
would have been heard
This, when Miss Saun-
return, would have sug-
play. And she, Mrs.
Vitaglass in Greenhouse
To force an earlier sta.rt of his gar-
den this year, W. Kerr Russell, M? B.
D. S. of Edinburgh, planted seedlings
under vitaglass in his greenhouse. He
reported that the vitaglass plants ger-
minated before the others and showed
much taller and sturdier growth. Mr.
Russell is part author of “Ultra-Violet
Radiation and Actinotherapy.” He’
suggests that greenhouses be equipped
with vitaglass and that the glass would
be especially adaptable in the raising
of early strawberries.
Overpopulated Island
The island of Java is probably the
most. crowded country in the worlds
Thirty-six millions of people are
massed together in a space no larger
than the state of New York.
Alabama Man Taken
Confidence Men.
Sunday. He
flowery but
“I am happy
shoving leopard will
Sunday and will oc-
at both services.”—
reasons. A
i, frantic with jeai-
was enough. But
been the only mem-
who at the time of
been some distance
She had taken the
it if
The occasion had
Miss Saunders, unable to re-
beauty of the evening, had
the Point alone. He set
by Rawson’s opinion that the
state of mind was too gen-
uinely distracted. He considered it
as part of a premeditated plan car-
ried through with nerve and skill.
She would have known that the report
of the pistol
at the house,
ders did not
gested foul
Stokes, was the only person out on the
island. A later entrance, with an as-
sumption of ignorance, would have
turned suspicion on her like a point-
ing finger. She was too intelligent
for that.
It was at this juncture that he sud-
denly cocked his head and let his
hands drop softly to the arms of the
chair. From the stairs outside came
a faint creak, a pause and then again,
step by step a bare or stockinged foot
in gradual descent.
The big man arose as noiselessly as
he could and made for the hall. But
his bulk and his boots were not
adapted t-o rapid movements or silent
surprise. As he reached the hall he
heard the pattering flight of light feet
and cursed under his breath as he felt
for the electric button. Her room—
the one he had seen Miss Pinkney put
her in—was just beyond the stair-
head to the right. And her husband’s
—he turned and faced the secretive
panels of its closed door.
Williams dropped his head and trod
thoughtfully back to the library, but
this time he left the hall lights on.
Also he lit the library ones and al-
lowed himself the solace of a cigar.
“She won’t try that again tonight,” he
said to himself and dropped into an
easy chair.
Then Stokes must know. They had
had opportunity for private confer-
ence in that hour after the murder
when the others were out of the
house. She had either told him or he
had accused her; for all they knew
he might have seen her do it. Any-
way she wanted to get speech^ with
him and it might be support, counsel,
the matching up of their stories—but
whatever it was she must have been
in dire straights to take such a risk.
Williams smoked on, comfortably
sprawled in the deep chair, thinking
out a line of attack on the Stokeses.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
With that knowledge her outlook
changed. Her passive role was over.
If Joe had done it and if he was on
the island he would try to get off at
low tide. It was safe to assume that
he was outside, hidden till the cause-
way was open. To go out to find him
would be useless, he would never re-
yeal. himself to her, and if she was
seen suspicion would instantly be
aroused. She must get somewhere that
would command the causeway and its
approaches. The best place—the only
place—was the living room entrance.
From there she could see in all direc-
tions, the balcony end, the kitchen
wing, the pine grove. She would try
to wave him back, possibly get to him
—she had to take her chances and
trust to Heaven. .
The tide was at full ebb at mid-
night. At a quarter before she made
ready. She took from the bureau a
book she had been reading—if she
met anyone she could say she had
come down to find it—rand opened her
door with the stealth of a burglar. £
dead silence reigned as she stoje flxnvn
the stairs and into^the liyiag room.
At the entrance, pressed against the
door, she looked out. It was a world
-af—enchantment, breathlessly
still, i She could see the patterned
surfaces of leaves, the cracks and
fissures of the rocks. Below, the
channel lay almost bare, pools glis-
tening like dropped mirrors, mounds of
mud casting inky shadows.
She could hear the murmur of the
men’s voices from the open library
windows, and like the throbbing of a
muffled engine, the beating of her own
heart.
Into that deep enveloping quietude
came a sound, so faint, so infinitely
small and hushed, that only expectant
ears could have caught it. It came
from the room behind her, and turn-
ing, she slid back against the wall, her
body black against its blackness. The
.sound continued, the opening of a door
opposite,
wing. It
had ever
stopping,
could see nothing, for the darkness of
the gallery lay impenetrable over that
furtive entrance.
There was a footstep, light as the
fall of a leaf, and she saw him coming
towanj her in that high luminous
pallot from the windows. He was like
a shadow, so evenly dark, a shape
without detail, moving with a shadow’s
..noiseless passage. She saw the out-
line of the cap on his head and that he
carried his shoes in one hand.
She came forward with a hand
raised for caution, sending her voice
before her in an agonized whisper:
“Go back, Joe. The causeway’s
watched. You can’t get over that way.
Go!"
He was gone, a fleet flying, vanish-
ing back into the darkness under the
gallery. Out of it came the soft
ing of ■ the door.
The room swayed, pale light
darkness swam and coalesced,
knew she was near a table and put
out her hand to steady herself by it,
something solid to hold to for one
minute. The polished surface slid un-
der her fingers and she groped out
with the hand that held the book.
The book slipped from her clasp, fell
with a thud like a thunderclap, and
a grasping snatch to save it swept a
lamp crashing to the floor. Panic dis-
pelled her faintness and she made a
rush for the door. She had gained it.
Her fingers clutched round the knob,
as she heard the steps of the men in
the hall and knew it was too late to
escape.
They burst in, thrust into the room’s
dim quiet as if shot by a blast.
“It’s nothing,” she called, hearing
her voice thin and hoarse. “Nothing’s
happened. It’s only Anne Tracy.”
The lights leaped out and she saw
them, Bassett with his hand on the
1 electric button, stricken still, looking
’ this way and that. His eye found her
first, backed against the door, a small
green-clad figure with an ashen face.
“What’s this mean?” said Rawson.
“Nothing.” She was afraid the han-
dle would rattle with the shaking of
MOTHER! Even constipated, bil-
ious, feverish, or sick, colic Babies and
Children love to take genuine “Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup.” No other laxative
regulates the tender little bowels so
nicely. It sweetens the stomach and
starts the liver and bowels without]
griping. Contains no narcotics oil
soothing drugs. Say “California” tJ
your druggist and avoid' counterfeit®
Insist upon genuine “California ufl
Syrup” which contains directions. B
Ban Planes, Too
Princeton, N. J.—An airplane
motor vehicle in the official view at
Princeton university. Therefore, like
automobiles, planes will be forbidden
to students after July 1.
Powder Liquid
10c and 25c 50c and 75c
50c and $1.00 $1.25
30c......Spray Gun......35c
which enormous
quantities of solid matter have been
carried great distances by the winds
have formed the subject of elaborate
investigations on the part of meteorol-
ogists.
Thus during the three days, March
8 to 10, 1901, heavy dust storms oc-
curred in the deserts of southern Al-
geria, and the sequel of these storms
was carefully studied by Hellmann
and Meinardus. A widespread cy-
clonic storm, centered over Tunis at
the time, sucked up the dust, which
was carried northward by the winds
at high altitudes.
Deposits from this dust cloud oc-
curred over an area extending as far
as 2,500 miles from the place of origin.
Reports collected from hundreds of ob-
servers indicated that 1,800,000 tons of
dust fell over the continent of Europe,
and one-third of this fell north of the
Alps.
As much more is believed to have
fallen over the Mediterranean, while
on the African coast itself the deposit
is supposed to have amounted to 150,-
000,000 tons.
the
Atlantic for the one hundred and sixth
time, Philip G. Peabody of Boston,
seventy, wealthy retired lawyer, is to
remain in this country only two weeks,
then start his one hundred and sev-
enth.
PhenomenoA N<
Cause of /
three years and she could no more
say what wasn’t true than—well, she
couldn’t, that’s all.”
“I don’t think she did. It sounded
to me a perfectly straight story.”
“It was. You can take my word for
that.”
They were back In the library when
Ijawson reappeared with Shine. Shine,
unable to sleep, had been sitting by his
window when Rawson, scouting, had
stopped to inquire if he had seen any-
one. Shine had not, but had volun-
teered to join in a hunt and the two
had been about the house and the im-
mediate vicinity. Nothing had been
discovered and Patrick had seen no
sign of life or heard no sound. Now
they had come back for the electric
torch and were going to extend their
search. A person concealed on the
seaward side of the island might be
moving’at this hour when the cause-
way was free. Bassett said he would
go with them and the three men left
the room by one of the long windows.
Williams opened the library door
and turned off the lights. The noise
of the departing trio would suggest to
anyone on the watch that the bouse
was free of police supervision} and
there might be developments. He
took the desk chair as easier/to rise
from than the deep-seated leather ones
and settled himself to a, rtsume of
what they had so far g:rtliered.
He was convinced-- of Mrs. Stokes’
guilt and ran over the
hysterical woman
ousy—that aX>ne
that woman had
ber of ,.tne party
they shooting had
fl/om the house.
pistol with the intention of usin;
an occasion offered.
offered,
sist the
gone to
no store
woman’s
‘SUCKER’ WINS BET
BUT LOSES $5,000
In the days when a mirror was
a piece of burnished, unframed metal
it was in many countries a work of
art. The chemistry of years have ren-
dered these ancient mirrors no longer
fit for the purpose for which they
were made, but antiquarians still con-
sult them for a glimpse into the past.
Etruscan mirrors, for example, covered
with pictures of gods and heroes, have
been called the “figurative diction-
ary of Etruscan mythology,” and this
would apply to the Greek mirrors as
well. Chinese mirrors also are in ac-
cord with the ideas of Oriental phil-
osophy, and the Egyptian, while less
ornate than the others, are deeply
indicative of racial thought. With the
Egyptions the very form of the mir-
ror had a significance. It was gen-
erally in the shape of the solar disk,
indicating the connection between the
mirror and the sun god. In China, mir-
rors were placed in great numbers in
BLOOD RAINS’ FAIL
TO FRIGHTEN FRENCH
Dick Whittington’s Cat
Called Myth by Mayor
London.—History won’t vouch for a
cat that has charmed children for cen-
turies, Sir Rowland Blades, lord
mayor of London, shocked traditional-
ists by announcing in a speech here.
The cat which is supposed to have
brought his predecessor, Sir Richard
Whittington, fame and fortune never
existed, Blades declared.
The lord mayor said he had been
seaching the records and had failed
to find any contemporary reference to
the cat. The story of Dick Whitting-
ton’s cat, he added, has been traced
to an Austrian source two centuries
later and truth must prevail
sentiment.
DOAN’S
STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS
fbster-Milbum Co. Mlg.CkeaLButfalo.NY
New Sword for Mikado
Being Cast With Rites
Tokyo.—Forged with ceremonial
solemnity, the new state sword of Em-
peror Hirohito is in the hands of the
most famous craftsmen in Japan.
When the new mikado goes to join his
fathers the weapon will be lowered
into the imperial sarcophagus with his
body.
In having a sword specially cast for
him, Hirohito has departed from the
custom of his father, the late Emper-
or. Yoshihito, and his grandfather,
Emperor Meiji, who used only swords
made many
isans.
Sadakatsu
most noted
Japan, started the
prayers and ceremony,
incense and Tuskiyama, with two as-
sistants all in white ceremonial gar-
ments, solemnly placed the iron ore
in the furnace and a ‘.new scepter for
a new mikado was begun.
After being treated to the expert-
ness of Tsukiyama, the weapon will
be turned over to Riko Hishida, the
leading sword polisher, who will give
it the finishing touches.
Slowing Up?
OVERWORK, worry and lack of
rest, all put extra burdens on the
kidneys. When the kidneys slow up,
waste poisons remain in the blood
and are apt to make one languid,
tired and achy, with dull headaches,
dizziness and often a nagging back-
ache.
A common warning of imperfect
kidney action is scanty or burning
secretions. Doan's Pills assist the
kidneys in their eliminative work.
Are endorsed by users everywhere.
Ask your neighbor!
50,000 Users Endorse Doan's :
Mrs. F. E.JVation, 7 High St., Lynn,
Mass., says: “The time came when I found
myself in bad health. The kidney secretions
were scalding and caused me much annoy-
ance. My back ached constantly and I had
attacks of dizziness. Doan's Pills were prompt
in helping me and 1 shall never cease to be
Inventor Risks Life in
Test of Autogiro Plane
Southampton, England.—Frank B.
Courtney, an experimental air pilot,
deliberately risked his life to prove
the principle of his windmill plane
was right.
The experiment ended in a crash in
which Courtney was slightly hurt.
One wing of the plane had come off
while 60 feet in the air and another
came off when within 15 feet of the
ground, letting the machine fall like a
stone.
“I am still convinced,”
said, “that the principle of
giro is right. I shall go on
experiments, though in a
way. I knew that the breakage was
inevitable and I had put in a report
previously to that effect. But as no
one would believe me the only way to
test my theories was to break the ma-
chine in the air.”
cen-
in most cases, to
blown up from
moth1
I should be killed/
Bee Brand Powder or
Liquid kills Flies, Fleas,
Mosquitoes, Roaches,
Ants, Water Bugs, Bed
Bugs, Moths, Crickets,
Poultry Lice and many
other insects.
Cost of Education
New Haven, Conn.—The cost to
parents of the average Yale educa-
tion is $7,200, a questionnaire shows.
Student expenses average $1,800 a
year.
Longer Is
irror.
Birmingham, Ala.—Birmingham de-
tectives are looking for two confi-
dence men, said to be from New York,
who swindled Alexander B. Lischkoff,
Birmingham real estate broker, out of
$5,000 cash.
The game played by these men Is
a new one in this section of the coun-
try. The two men met Lischkoff ac-
cidentally on the street. They talked
of a business deal. An engagement
was made for the three to meet at a
downtown hotel that afternoon.
At the time stated all three sat in
a hotel room and talked business.
“The two men bet me $100 I could not
raise $5,000 in several minutes,”
Lischkoff said. ^“Well, I went down to
the bank to prove it to them. I got
the money and was back at the room
In less than ten minutes. ‘Well, you
win," said one of the men. ‘Now you
ought to buy the cigars.’
“Sure, I’ll buy a whole box,” replied
Lischkoff with glee as he jumped up
and left his $5,000 on the table in the
room and ran for the smokes.
A few minutes later Lischkoff re-
turned with the cigars. His two
friends were gone. So was his
$5,000.
A checkup at the bank revealed that
Lischkoff made a note for the $5,000,
giving as security his savings account.
The two confidence men were regis-
tered at the hotel as Joe Singer and
S. Rosen, New York city.
When asked what he would do if
he had his $5,000 back Lischkoff said:
“I’d buy $3,000 worth of locks and
lock the other $2,000 up and throw
away the key.”
■Write for free booklet on
killing house and garden
insects.
McCormick 8s Co.
/ Baltimore, Md.
Bee
\ Brand
INSECT
■4 POWDERpEBR
. OR RAJ
Paris.—A few dads
red rain fell at mqi/y
ern and central FrtYN
cant of the progress
lightenment that;
was generally described in the French
press as a “shower of blood,” this
phrase was used in 'a conventional and
not a literal sens,A No attempt ap-
pears to have been made in any quar-
ter to invest the phenomenon with a
miraculous or mysterious character,
and no superstitious fears appear to
have been aroused by its occurrence.
Times have changed. Among the so-
called prodigies recorded in ancient
and medieval chronicles, none are
more frequently mentioned than
strange showers, of one sort or an-
other, which alarmed mankind not
only on account of their apparently
supernatural character, but also be-
cause they were regarded as portents
of coming wars and other calamities.
The catalogue of things alleged to
have fallen in these showers is a long
one. It includes fishes, frogs, rats,
mice, serpents, insects, grain, honey,
manna, sulphur, ink, inilk and—most
frequently of all—blood.
Homer and Virgil Mention Them.
Stories of bloody rain are related by
Homer, Virgil and several Roman his-
torians. Plutarch speaks of showers of
blood following great battles and as-
serts that bloody vapors, distilled from
the '•bodies of the slain, impregnated
the clouds, from which they were sub-
sequently shed on the earth.
Gregory of Tours declared that a
shower of blood fell over Paris in the
year 482 A. D„ when “many people
had their clothes stained with it and
cast them off in terror.” The same
phenomenon was observed at Brescia
for three days and three nights before
the death of Pope Adrian II in the
year 872. Another three-day shower
of blood is said to have occurred in
France and Germany in March, 1181.
In 1669 one of these “blood rains”
took place at Chatillon-sur-Seine.
“There fell in various parts of the
town,” says the “History of the Acad-
emy of Sciences,” “a sort of rain, or
reddish liquid, thick, viscous, and foul
smelling, which resembled a rain of
blood. The prints of great drops of it
were observed on walls; it was this
fact that led to the belief that this rain
was made of stagnant, muddy water
raised by a whirlwind from some pond
in the neighborhood.”
Although the nonmiraculous nature
of red rains was thus suspected at a
comparatively early date, they contin-
ued to be a sources of terror to the
ignorant majority of Europeans until
a generation or so ago, while even in
scientific circles some curiously er-
roneous notions concerning them pre-
vailed down to the middle cr latter
part of the Nineteenth century.
Wind-borne Material.
Microscopic examination showed
that the rain was reddened with earth,
or mineral material, but the source of
this material remained for a long time
uncertain. It is now well recognized
that the falls of colored rain and also
of dry dust that occur at rather fre-
quent intervals in southern and
i tral Europe are due,
I wind-borne material
the Sahara desert.
Several cases in
her hand so
lamp in the
that’s all.”
“What are
“I came down to get my book,
forgot and left it when I
stairs.”
She could get her breath
her voice was under control,
strength oozing back into her body
and with it courage.
“You’re as white as a sheet,” Wil-
liams blurted out.
. “Did something frighten you?” de-
manded Bassett.
- “No, but a sort of faintness came
over me, there by the table, and I
grabbed at it and upset the lamp.”
Rawson looked at the table with the
shattered fragments of the lamp be-
side it. It was not far from the en-
trance door.
“Did you
outside?”
“No, not a
a sound.”
“What do
feel faint?”
“Oh 1” She dared to make a ges-
ture, upraised hands that dropped
limply. “Hasn’t there been enough
here to make anybody faint?”
“You’ve got to remember, Rawson,”
said Bassett who thought the man’s
insistence unnecessary, “what a shock
this has been—especially to Miss Tracy
who was Miss Saunders’ friend.”
“I remember.” Then to Anne:
“Miss Tracy, if you should withhold
any information
yourself into a
position.”
“I wouldn’t,
breathed.
Rawson’s glance remained on her,
dubiously intent. Bassett noted Mt
with a resentment he found it difficult
to hide. /'
“You can absolutely rel/ on Miss
Tracy,” he said. “She/tvould be per-
fectly frank with you/if she had any-
thing to tell.” •
“No doubt,doubt,” said the other,
and walkgfi<to the entrance. “I’m go-
ing ojatf to have a look around.” On
tztke<sill he turned and addressed Anne.
“I gave some instructions to you ladies
and I expected to have them followed.
You’ll please remember them in the
future.”
He passed out into the brilliancy of
the moonlight. Now that he was gone
Bassett felt he must make her under-
stand. He had been astonished at
what she had done. It was so unlike
her, a disobedience of orders at such
a time as this.
“You must do what they tell you,
Anne. They have to make these rules
and it’s up to us to keep them.”
“I will now, you can trust me.
Mr. Williams, you can see how it
I couldn’t sleep and my mind
full of this awful thing, and I
thought if I could put it on something
else—get free from my thoughts even
for a few moments 1”
Williams grunted his comprehension.
He felt rather tenderly toward her,
she looked so small and wan and her
voice was so pleading.
“Where was your book?” he asked.
“On the table behind you. I was
feeling round for it and I think I
pushed it off with the lamp.”
„ “What was the name of it?”
“ ‘Victory,’ ” by Joseph Conrad.”
He went to the table. His back
turned, she and Bassett exchanged a
long look. Williams picked up the
book- and came back with it.
“Here it is,” he said, giving it to
her. “And just make a note of the
fact that you’re not to go round the
house at night after books or any-
thing else.”
She assuted him she would not, she
would give them no more trouble, and
opening the door she slipped away.
They remained without speaking till
she came out on the gallery and
walked to her room.
“Well,” said Williams, “her book
was there.”
Bassett stared at him:
“Was there! Why shouldn’t it be?
Good God! You have any idea she
was lying? If you have, get it out of
your head. I’ve known Miss Tracy for
^************************^_
* Lighting of Airways J
Heavy Expense Item *
Washington. — Establishment £
* and operation of lighting sys- *
£ terns to permit night flying is £
* the chief item of expense in the, *
J maintenance of airways. £
* W. P. McCracken, Jr., assis- *
* tant secretary of commerce in *
* charge of the government’s ef- *
* forts to assist development of *
* commercial aviation, has ascer- *
:£ tained that the required num- *
* ber of lights can be installed at
£ a cost of $337 a mile, and main- *
$ tained at an annual expense of *
* $197.30. *
His figures are based on the *
4; cost of lighting parts of the 1,- *
195-mile airway from Chicago *
* to Dallas^ Air mail contractors *
* who are operating on the route *
* are taking in about $800 a day *
* and McCracken expects the busi- *
* ness to double during the year. *
* *
Enjoy GOOD HEALTH
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. [17], No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 12, 1927, newspaper, May 12, 1927; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1200383/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.