TAGS FCUH -v- - a a a 9 - am j aww a tu - ay m. a w Vf awm. - . It aV . ivs- r, - - llll W : 111 hfdf'q Hftw ! n. rncnw rll nm n n -; ' r i ! d a.. .1:. I tui'iHiuii it v-.r- -t ? o o I iii- VI isirTV rr 1 ti F-r; in in - "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Aws" From First SUtesma. March 28. 1851 ! ' THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. HChaeles A. Snucuc, Shixdon F. Sacjh.ii, Publitkert i Chauxs A. Spiaccs - Editor-Manager Shixdon F. Sackett - - - . Managing Editor ' - . Member of U Associated Pres Tb AMOcUtel Pr- Is sxchistrwly cnUtted to th P; tioa of mil Dews disrate be credited to U or not sthsrwlss credKt4 l thU pspfc - mL Pacific Coast AdTrtisia EepresenUUTes: j Arthur W. BlTV. Ine, PortUa4. Wit. Bn Frsjieiscsv Sbaroa BW.: Los Ancel. W. Pso. Bid. . Eastern Advertising Representative ; . Ford-Parsons-Stecher, ' Ine, Kir Tork. 171 ICsdUoa Ats. Entered at t PtetoffUe at Salem, Oregon, a Secon4-Clas Matter. Published ever morning except Monday. Baetneaa office. tIS S. Commercial Street. , ! SUBSCRIPTION RATES: I Uaa Subscrtptlos lUt Advre Within Orjtn I DjUlr Gn Crazy Legislafaon THELexUtinn imjiuwe between the counties of Oregon and the state government over payment for the care of non violent insane affords adequate illustration of hasty, care leSi legislation. In an impassioned desire to lower state taxes the 1931 legislature hurried through a law which loads onto the counties a $20 monthly charge for its insane pa tients in the state hospital, unless the uggS in passing the charge along to the relatives of the afflicted The legislature overlooked two major considerations. First at the same time it was unloading its costs on the counties, it appropriated funds for running the state hospi tal as in former bienniums. Second, it strengthened exist ing budget laws which forbid county courts to spend money except as budgeted. By these two circumstances the un- ... j lt A. is, oaf nn tnH nf T Vl P RflTTlft time I aim ess 01 aouuie wawu o r . . - . no legal means is provided to the counties for paying the taxation, even were it not double. ' . J . , The result will be litigation to test the new law and probably a decision that it is invalid. Ben Wing, who did the North End work in Portland for Meier, before election, may find himself out of a job, at least until a succeeding legislature can unravel the snarls in this latest piece of new legislative yarn. it' . ! The idea of making relatives of insane' patients bear the cost whenever possible has been worked with success in other states and has merit. Passing the ost3 along to the counties is false economy. It is another of those moves like free high school transportation and free texts; they are without cost to the state government and appease the lob byists at the legislature but the county budget is swelled and the tax bird of passage comes home to roost on the already over-burdened county budget. Woodward Again I WILLIAM F. "GRANDPA" WOODWARD has just cauce to complain about the H. C. of Running Circuit Courts. In his latest half-column protest to a Portland paper he tells of long vacations, of a year's sick leave enjoyed on fun pay of clogged dockets and inactive bailiffs and clerks, and lays the blame at the feet of Multnomah j county's circuit judges. j . . - Any observer of judicial practice knows that the circuit judge is the favored son of the jurists. He has regular terms of court but postponements, settlements and non suits cut the average docket into less than half of its an nounced length. . The intervals between court terms are long. Much of the matter which comes to his attention be tween the terms is of routine, quickly handled nature. In actual work handled the county judge, and in Marion county the justice of the peace, has more demands upon his time. The county judge is head of the county court, ad ministering a 1,081,000 annual budget. He is head of all probate work in the county. He administers the poor relief . law and is juvenile court judge. The justice of the peace gets the great bulk of the everyday offenders; the drunk ards, speeders, small thieves and the men who will not sup port their families. He turns out a grist of petty civil cases. - Yet the compensation of these classes of judicial officers is widely dissimilar. Circuit judges with all the prerequisites of extended vacations and irregular hours in this district receive $6500 annually. In certain districts in the state the compensation is higher. I The county judge, with his responsibility, draws the sal ary of a good clerk $150 a month. The justice of the peace Van Hailv rmirt for $200 a month. I ! Of course there's a reason. organized. In the 1929 legislature Deiore tne slump came, they had a lawyer's lobby to push , up the ' salary schedule. wit tawvpr denendincr so much . UDon his circuit Judge, could afford to oppose the judgeship to most attorneys is legal paradise, the possible climax to a career at the bar. If it should be achieved the higher salary would not go amiss. We want good courts and we want good circuit judges. To obtain them, laziness or inefficiency need not be tol erated nor need salaries be kept so far out of line with other responsible, judicial positions. I r Stars m the Summer Sky TTfTHILE a fog of gloom encompasses the! economic firma- ft ment ine wona axouna, in oaiem me sun auu sutn jire both shining. Were there complete protection from the . nrtvorca rotvirta -fi-Am oxtrnl tvint this rftv And CAffl. munity might feel comparatively untouched by bad times. But it appears fashionable to talk depression, just as op ! erations, bridge, the weather and new styles are favorites of i many a social gathering. Salem should ban1 the fashion. For example, Salem's industries are in1 good shape. Its larrest industry, the Oregon Puly & Paper -company, grinds on steadily, with one added machine from a year ago' and a total payroll almost up to 1930 totals. Each cannery just now is operating and while the pack will not be a bumper one or the prices high, there is a pack, a large one, and thousands of workers are busy on pears- and peaches, soon to be followed by prunes. ! i That old stalwart of Salem's income, the state payroll, has been httle untouched and the addition of departments formerly in Portland has easfly compensated for any slight reductions made by the present administration. Willamette university faces the largest enrollment in its history wJH?e liaJ whJat-i3Jow hay cheap and hogs and JFnnT64 Vy1 But dT highland onions are .f??' l hfs gone P markedly.! Hops are not bad SLrftf nd 5 walnuts and filberts, both in q if Md f to write cast about. . Salem dare not be a naive PoDyanna thinking the sky is not a whit pvercast-not with the worst famin? in genera! tions in China, or real distress in our own Industrial east and cotton i growing: and wheat raising middlewest. On the other hand Salem would n nnr. o Y i . ... . ZJST' w.. in me nation. The circuit judges are better raise? Moreover, jthe circuit v"& .iui tiuuiro to Tail ta h "i" "rit .bin. i By C. C. DATJER. M. D. Marios Commty Heahh rp. ThU is not lateaded to bo aa article oa moral but to point out the Importance of training tho feet, la other word to walk wlta the. t o o e straight ahead, to4as; neither out nor In. A alight amount of tho latter la to be preferred to tho former. Turning ' tho toe - oat In walk! as throws tho weight oa tho inner side - of tho .foot and r. a o. orasr often tends to produce the condition known as rut foot. The foot Is not really flattened nor hare tho archee ac tually broken down, but the mus cle of the lot have been . so strained that they are no longer able to hold tho foot in an an right position. t Toeing out even when there Is a high arch 1 very apt to lead to some. breaking down of the norm al structures of the toot and con sequent pain In tho legs or feet. A person may have a very low arch and still hare a normal foot that gives rise to no discomfort. Such people should not bo misled by ill-ad vised suggestions that they wear arch supports. i Children Should Learn Right Children when learninr to walk should bo watched to see that they do not toe out. Soft nllable shoes or better still, no shoe st all, will make It mack easier for tho child to walk correctly. En couraging the baby to walk straight and also to walk on the toes will cause tho muscles of the foot to develop correctly. Many parents are often con cerned about tho absence of a well developed arch In the child's foot when it begins to walk. Tear old babies have not. devel oped an arch but If they are aught to walk correctly and are not hampered by improper shoes, the arch will develop in due time. "Straight" Shoes Bet ; Children should wear only shoes that are "straight" on the Inside, that Is so that the Inside of tho heel is directly back of tho great toe. Both sole and upper should be flexible enough to per mit the foot to bend easily for walking. The heel, if any, should bo low and wide. Another essential for straight walking Is to see that the child's health and general condition In every way Is normal, made so by proper food, a sufficient number of hours spent In sleep and out of door and other health habits. What baattti pro'bleau bsts yout If ! sbTt srticls rsiMS say qnrattoa is yaar mine, writs that a,ati est sod m it sitkar ts Tbs Stataasass ar taa atari aoBty dpartairt of kamlta. Tka aaawve arill appear is this eolnmn. Kama ahI4 V atfnad. bat will set ba sae ia FOUR PER GENT OF SALES HERE Salem .Retail Stores Have That Portion of State Total Says Census Four hundred and forty retail store la . Salem make approxi mately one twenty-fifth of. tho l4t0.170.C47 In total sales hand led by the 14.C40 stores In Ore gon,, according to a summary of tho 1930 retail distribution in Oregon released by tbo federal bureau of census. Tho 440 Salem stores report an animal business of $17,959,907. x . Retail sale per capita for ' the state in 1930 totaled 4 8 2.50, as compared to an approximate per capita o,l82 retail sales by Sa lem merchants. In tho state, the automotive group leads all, other store groups with 22.5 per cent of the total re tali business; and the same group leads ia Salem with S3 establish ments reporting 2J pr cent of the total retail business. Tho food group does tho same percentage, 22, of business In the stat as In Salem. Ther are IS kinds of food business la Ore gon with J.944 store soiling X101.75S.200 to consumers, as compared to 115 food stores In Sslem doing a business of 32, 941.69S. MerrhAndislnjr t State Ranks Third In the state, the ceneral mer chandise business ranked thtrd with 551 store. .Fifteen general nerchandiso houses la Salem to ported $1,71,S in sales. ; Four per cent of the state's re tall business, or lS,ltf.9SS, is don by tho furniture and house hold group of store, which num ber 4 21. In Salem, there ar 1C such stores , doing a business of 3i.043.7is. : .: Oregon has S2S apparel stores, including 18 kinds which do a business of 317.C92.5S9. Salem has 44 of these stores, handling 31,537.284 worth of business and employing 141 people full time. Of tho 5S7 drug stores over tho state, 311 bar fountains. Beside stores already mentioned in Oregon there ar 815 lumber and building yards and store with totsl sales nearly thirty mil lion dollars; 231 feed stores; 159 coal and wood yards. 14 9 cigar stands. Si eigar'stores with foun tains, 1S8 cigar store without fountains, 234 jewelry stores and 144 radio stores and 94 florists. Ther are 283 second hand stores in tho state., - ;.. -.;; . " Ah, hsnoryears! Ones more Who WOUld nt ha tutvf" Byron. - -4 ; , V : . fe Daily Thouglit r f 1 -I , Tests SHow-vf HOustWtVf.5 tM A CERTAIN ILAS.CC CITY- saOHiMC Co . TRft- CITY AAMUSJ4.Y. Tomorrow: Loop BITS for BREAKFAST By It. J. HENDRICKS Mistakes of history: In th course of his "Recollec tions" reprinted in tho new book, "Th Oregon Trail,' of Maude Applegate Rucker, Jesse A. Applegate, nephew of tho original Jesse Applegate, made this state ment: "Th town of Oervais now stands on th sit of the old mis sion." Of course, it does not. It stands several miles east of th site of the old mission. Gervals was not started, until 1870, after tho completion of th Oregon & California railroad, (now th Southern Pacifle) to that point; and it was built on the land of the father of State Senator Sam Brown. It was named Gervais only because that nam was his toric. The bouse of Joseph Ger vais, two miles belcr tho old mis sion, was on tho Willamette riv er. The Nervals hous figured largely In the events of tho Ore gon country of tho early days. Th famous "wolf meeting" was held there, and at that gathering was appointed th committee that called tho Cbampoeg meeting that authorised tho formation of the provisional government. B It Is strange that Jess A. Applegate should hat mad such a mistake. As a boy, he spent the wlLter of 1843-4 at tho old mission, with the wnoio Ap plegate clan, attended school for several months there, and remain ed ther with his peopl until after harvest In 1844, when they moved to the Salt creek district. Polk county, northeast of tho site of Dallas, thence a few years later to southern Oregon. More than that. Jess A. Applegate cam back from south ern Oregon, to the Willamett val ley, after he had grown to man hood, studied law, and practiced at Dallas and in Salem. In th sevenUes he lived with his family on the south side of Court street, west of Front. His residenc was near th historic tall tower of th water works, a wood frame atrue tur lifting the 170.000 gallon tank 80 feet above tho ground. In times of high?" vine', the frame work of the tower creaked and the tank swayed, scaring the householder. In that block almost out of their wits. R. P. Boise of Salem remembers one night in tho seventies when Jesse A. Apple gate fled from his home and took refuge in a hotel room. Later, ho moved with his family from the house by the tall tower and they afterwards lived In tho east ern section of Salem. He con tinued a galemlte until about 18SJ. W But Jesso A. Applegate was not the only man writing early Oregon history, who made a mistake. All made them. Some mad many. Bancroft, usually reliable, was In th latter class. There is not a single record or history ; written up to the past few years in ref erence to th old mission, th Ger vals house, and the formation of the provisional- government, that is without mistakes. m S . Ther were really three provi sional governments. Th first, under Rev. David Leslie, appoint ed justice ef tho peaco by Jason? Le In 133S. Lesllo -ordered ar rests, held trials, gav Judgments. The second -a tho one organized -Feb. IS. .1841, with Dr. Ira L. Babcock as supremo judge, and with a coterie of trader officers. That government settled the es tate of Ewing Toung, provided tho money to build the first Jail, out of the estate funds, and gen erally carried on la a satisfactory and orderly manner, until what is now known as tho Oregon provi sional government was authorised at Chsmbpojg Msy 2, 1341 set in motion at tho same place July 5 of the same year, and all of its acts' and 'those that fIloed ra tified by a vote of tho people tho last Saturday In July, 1845. : Bancroft wrote: A committee of arrangements called a mass meeting of tho settlers to bo held at the Methodist mission th 17th and 18th of : February, 1841." That Is not what happened. Ther was an informal meeting at that mission Feb. 7, to talk over a provisional government. Eight days later Ewing Toung died, at nis home on the Chehalem. Two days Ister, tho 17th, the funeral was held, at the grave side, a few (f if Mi A 77- CoAa. caKMe4a . ; wu (pwwReK.! W r tf-vww jy. . - - Aft S aa SB3 - octMasi ikert sasm HCHnTATIMt na ca.TMM rrt( O MIAMI PC !OmU Front the Ground. yards from tho Toung house. Ja son Leo conducted th 'funeral services. The rites over, ho In vited those present to tarry and consider th formation of a gov ernment, because Young . left a large property and there were no known heirs. Preliminary work towards forming a- civil govern ment was done there, the ' pro ceedings reduced to writing, and the meeting adjourned until tho next morning at tho old mission: Jason Lee being entrusted with the written record, to report at the meeting the next day. At that meeting, Feb. 18, a provisional government was formed, with Dr. I. L. Babcock tho supremo judge. a set of officers chosen to act under him. and he Instructed to proceed under the laws of New Tork. m Bishop James W. Bashford, one of tho most reliable and par ticular of all the writers of early Oregon history, said: "At the close of the funeral all present were asked to tarry and complete the plans discussed Feb. T. The meeting, like tho funeral, wss held at tho Methodist church, and Jason Leo was again chosen to preside." There was no Metho dist church in tho Oregon coun try then; unless tho Methodist mission (the old mission) might be called a church; which it really was. But the funeral was at th Young grave side, many miles away (six miles northeast of the presnt JJewberg.) s. V ia Bashford gives a correct record of the meeting of tho next day. Feb. IS. But he does not name the place. He evidently did not know; els h would hav been sure to giv it. Bashford also gives The meet ing that set the provisional gov ernment in motion as May S (1843). Instead of July 5. Ho was badly mixed on 'that point. Dr. C. H. Chapman, president of tho University of Oregon, write a fairly good short history of Ore gon, published In 1909. Here are a few words from it: "In; the winter of 1811-2 . . . Ewing Young died, . . . leaving a consid erable estate with no heirs pres ent la Oregon to claim it. . . . At Young's funeral a call was issued for a general meeting on Feb. 14, 1841," etc., etc. He evidently did not know tho date of Young's death. It surely was not "in the winter of 1841-2." And there had been no call for tho Feb. 17 meet ing at tho funeral. - Throughout his account of those proceedings. Dr. Chapman was i confused as to dates, plaees and events. la V But they all did it; even the best of them. Do you favor enforcement of present prohibition - statutes? If not. what do you favor Instead of so-called prohibition?" Statesman reporters - yesterday asked this question. ,, Lowi Laclunand. hop aaxl stor age business: "I believe in - the enforcement of all laws. But I would like to see the present pro hibition laws repealed, tho Vol stead act modified to permit' us of beer and light wines." . Mrs. John F. Shlppv boose wife: "Why. I certainly do favor enforcement. In some ways. I'd like to so th law modified." Mr. Ores rWrmUo. 90O3 Mar ket street t "Yes, X favor it, but it is not. intensive enough. No doubt much better work could be don If enough people favored it. It needs to bo worked harder." O. Smith, rajM-her: "I don't favor th presentNf jsiem, or lack of system. It X knew what would solve tho problem I wouldn't be on a farm.": C Fleckler, snacbinist: "The present plan 1 all wrong. More peopl are drinking now than ev er before partly because of the laws." . j K. Wlgsnaa, laborer: "It prop erly enforced they might work. but tho present law is too len- lent." s M IV: urn x . w m a M aSBBSSa . bspbv -ir5y r New Views CH APTER XLIX "At a little attar t o'clock that afternoon, X arrived at th of fice of Doctor Mask!!. I do not know what paased -between tho two. but It la not hard to guess. A woman cam to Geraldjno Foo ter with a pretended message, a summons from Doctor Maskeu. She accompanied that woman. bringing tho bottles which tho doctor had requested and thus was lured to her plac of execu tlon. It must have been some thing, argent to Impress tho mind of Geraldlno Foster so much so that she agreed to go . with this stranger, carrying those bottle with her. In a private ear they drove uptown. So. much wo know. Now wo have to draw' again upon our telepathic or deductive pow ers. 'X and Gsraldine entered th house. No sooner was the door closed than tie woman bade Geraldlno sit down and wait. Th woman went upstairs, taking the bottles. - There she emptied them Into th tab and turned th spig ot oa. But no identifiable thumb prints or finger prints show -on the highly polished spigot. Tho woman had clearly put on gloves. "now. this mysterious woman did an apalllng thing and for a highly practical reason. She took oft every stitch of clothing and came downstairs naked, axe in hand. "Perhaps you have guessed why th murderess elected to do her awful deed while she herself was naked. - There was a lot of blood flying through tho dark air of that little house. Her clothes must not bo spattered. So she was nude, and afterward she stood in tho shower and washed herself." "Good God!" breathed Dough Yesterdays ... Of Old Salem Towa Talk front The States man of Rarlter Days Anrnt 23, 1BOO LONDON, Aug. 24 President Roosevelt's decision to adopt re formed spelling in his messages and executive correspondence Is commented -on by London news papers thjs morning in anything but a sympathetic spirit. W. F. Hodges, Silverton .cob bler, found notes and valuable papers to the amount of 3425 ia a pair of old shoes which were brought to him to be repaired. Reports from pretty reliable sources indicate that within -an other year Salem will lose ono of its most valuable industries, the Oregon Nursery company. The plant and business is to be moved to a 700 aere ranch in Washing ton county. I August S3. 1921 At 1 o'clock. yesterday tho last spoonrul of concrete was laid completing tho . south-of-Salem section of the Pacifie highway leading towards Jefferson. It Is 8.57 miles long. 18 feet wide. The famous Lake Labish vege table loam has become limited from burning brush and all ef- lorts to extinguish it with loose dirt hare proven unavailing. Washington, Aug. 24 Con gress took a recess tonlzht until September 21. without a rote by me senate on a bill prohibiting manufacture and sale of beer to the sick. HOME ISSIOflHf Auxiliaries of District Gather at First M. Church Here Friday Will E. The auxiliaries of. the Salem district. Woman's Home Mis sionary society, will hold a dis trict rally Friday, from 10 a. m.. to 4 p. m., in tho First M. E. church hero. . 0 Several out of town speakers will be present. All women Inter ested in the work of the W. H. M. S. aro invited to attend. The pro gram follows: 10:00 a. m. DeTotions. Mrs. Hugh Fouke. .- 10:30 a. m. Finance round table. "To Do or Not To Do. That is the Question", Mrs. E. J. Maple. 11:00 a. m. Department con ferences. , 11:45 a. m. New literature. Mrs. A. F. Jack. , 12:00 m. Our plans at Man- ley Community center. Miss Mable Keech. - j r 12:30 p.'m.-r-Lunch. 1:30 song. Prayer. Mrs. B. E. Parker. 1:45.- Demonstration. W. H. M. Work among children and T. P., Jason Leo auxiliary. . 2: 15?--What tho auxiliary can do tohelp in Y. P. work . this year Mrs. Mason Bishop. 1 10 What the 'Anxillarr Can Do to Help ltf Children's Work this Year, Mrs. E. C. Miller, z: a lesson from "Th Challenge of Change", Mrs. H. L. Reed. 3:00 Dos and Don'ts in Home Missionary. Problems Round Ta ble Discussion and Question Box. Mrs. H. Peterson. J:45 Closing devotions. Mrs. Ratcliff. Song. "I shall Not Pass This Way Again", , Mrs. Arlio Walker. Hymn. Miss Baird Now At City Library Miss Helen Baird yesterday took over her duties as the new children's librarian at the city li brary, filling tho vacancy left by Miss Nellie Roe. who left August 15 to be married. . Miss Baird has just, completed a course in Ibrary methods at Western Re serve university, Cleveland, O. She is a graduate of Willamette university and last summer stu died at the University of Wash e p RALLY SOON ington. . . . rty, crossing himself. - A Fiendish Crime "At th time exactly fixed by tho battered wrist-watch, X the blood-thirsty '. woman, without warning fell upon poor Geraldine Foster with tho axe. The girl was literally hacked to . death prob ably not until after .many blows was her skull crushed In. Her screams were unheard. There was a furious . struggle. Tho room showed that plainly enough when at last wo got there. But the deed Was done. Geraldine was killed, "Lifting tho still warm and bloody body. ' the .naked murder ess carried it upstairs and laid it on tho bathroom floor. Crossing then to the upstairs bedroom be cause she heard a noise. JC' en countered an apparition. A boy was looking In at her' from the hail window. The room was dark, Identification was hardly possible Nevertheless, someone had seen Instantly the clever mind of this mad creatdre worked out tho so lution. The boy turned and fled but tho woman tell to work. The body would bo stripped anyhow, for the soaking In tho tub. But before burial X would have dressed it again, had It not. been tor this accident. Instead, the body was buried nude, and If that boy over testified, ho would be lieve it was Geraldine he saw and not the murderess. "That was the reason" Geral dine Foster was found nude, and her blood-soaked clothes found In the dark corner of the closet in Doctor Haskell's suite. The mur deress put them there. She drove back to Washington square ana ODened that office with Gerald ine's key. She carried the clothes Inside and planted them - where they wbuld eventually be found and nunr tne coat ana purse con soicuously on a hook. Then she came out of 'he office, locked the door and was about to leave when suddenly and here I guess she remembered having left something Inside. She had to wait until the doctor came before she came in and she' ran a fearful risk of recognition. The doctor, however, did not recognize her it was dark and there was .. an other reason, too. . . "But,, my friends, the woman will bo rocognised. I found traces which led .me to her bys devious but certain steps. The first clue was a hair from a rvman s head I have it here." j From his desk drawer Thatch er Colt drew out two envelopes both marked with the word "Hair". We watched with fascin ated Interest. The tale he told us had stirred us all deeply. Dough erty was the first to' Vend over the desk, his face washed free of all cheapness of jealousy almost of all doubt. Indeed, as he leaned on his elbows to see what Thatch er Colt had now to show. Natalie Maskell and her husband were keen and alert. Even Doctor Mas kell stirred from his . deep leth argy, leaned forward . ana watched. "This first envelope." said Colt, holding it up. "contains hair I took from the hair-net of Geraldine Foster the night 1 first visited' her apartment. I kept It because I might need It if her body were found and identifica tion proved difficult. This other hair I found on tbo floor, where it had fallen from the head of the murderess,, probably during the struggle." Opening the second envelope. Colt drew out a long almost in visible strand of hair. It was of a medium blonde. The Murderer "I may tell you." added the commissioner, "that the murder ess has sine had her hair dyed If - you -look among all tho pos sible suspects, you will not find the counterpart of this hair. But now I will show you a third ex hlbit." ' . The silence was almost deaf ening in Its effect as .Thatcher Colt drew out a third envelope Then-from a lower, deeper draw er, ho took out a long, thin glass tube on a low pedestal, a hydro static tub such as 'Is used by chemists. It was. filled with a colorless liquid. "Recently", explained Colt. managed by stealth to obtain sev eral hairs from the head of the woman I suspect of killing Geraldlno Foster. I took a leaf from the brown book I went to her own beauty -parlor, and bribed girl there just as she had gone to .Doctor Maskell's barber. and obtained a cutting for an equally deadly purpose. Here is one of her hairs a dark and lovely auburn. But Observe when I drop it into this chemical that the dye talis away." Wo watched that demonstra tion in utter silence. Th tiny strand of hair fell almost unseen into the chemical, and then the water became discolored. After a moment Thatcher. Colt drew out thehair and dropped it across his sleeve and beside it he laid the one found on the scene of the Lerime. They were a perfect match. "Good God!" cried .Dougherty again. "Who is the . woman, Colt?" Th ' police commissioner shrugged his shoulders. "Even . such an identification as this might not convince a ury," 1 ho . temporised, "but for tunately I found "another. In the bathroom, of the murder-house was a face cloth. It had scarlet stains on it. They .might have been taken for blood stains, but they were not.". They were the Hand Ringworm, AthJotsr'a Foot ..TOir uffr. from the queer skit elseas causinr severe Itching ol Joes and feet, cracking, peeling; akin blisters. Ring wona. Trench- Foot ei Crotch Itch, when you can arold in faction end quickly neaj your a kit with Dr. Nixon' NlxodermT Beset o th famous English Hospital for mula. isovere by a leadtar Loo den ski specialist. Dr. Nixon7 Nix derm ecte with a mart a pood. ba. " mdror thla parties Lai kin diaaaaa. Nlxoderm la ajuaran teed. It BBUst stop itch end quickly beal your skla or th small cost Of b refunded. . PERRY'S DRUG STORE 113 S. Commercial , tains of a lipstick. At some cost to th department, I had those stains analysed a delicate and lengthy task and I compared them with tho dried pieces of lip stick taken from the lips of Geraldine Foster they lad been fixed there in a crust by the tan nic add. I found that the lipstick used by Geraldine Foster was a Corday product, but the one used by th murderess -was from Coty. George MaskeH nodded bis head tragically. "And you have found tho Coty lipstick on the woman yon sus pect?" he asked in a strange voice. , , "I " have," said Thatcher Colt. "I observed her stick one day when he dropped it In this very room." . Natalie J Maskell, rising, was pale as snow and smiling strangely, ;. "Do you accuse mo of murder ing Geraldine Foster?" she cried. "I do." said Thatcher Colt. "And you did it with an axo be cause no one would connect a wo man with such a weapon i" Georgo Maskell struggled pa thetically to his feet, an old and beaten man, and tried to take his stand beside his wife. Dougherty, too, stood up, staring unbeliev ingly Into the face of this calm woman, this banshee., scorning the rest of us. even in this hour of terrible disclosure. Doctor Maskell stared up at her in hor ror, but she had eyes only for Thatcher Colt. "I have saf'hero and listened, divining! to what you were lead ing," she mocked. "But I have yet to hear the motive." "Your! father-in-law has not long to live. He will bequeath millions of dollsrs to each of his two sons. But If one son dies, th other gets all. You wanted all. You are! mad money-mad." said Thatcher Colt, In solemn and ac cusing tones, j She. laughed balefully. "You are very clever, Mr. Colt." she cried, "but you must admit it was a pretty plan." "To have the state kill the man you wanted to get rid off It is a clever, but not arnew device." "Indeed? 9ut you have not won, yet. Mr. Colt." ' And Natalie Maskell sat down and hegan to laugh, most hor ribly, shaking her shoulders and quivering. Divining her terrible meaning, Thatcher Colt rushed to themediclne cabinet in his dres sing room. while Humphrey Maskell sprang to the side of the woman who would have de stroyed him. But she was already beyond the need of a doctor and notoneiof us had noticed when she swallowed the poison tablet, half-way through Colt's explana tion. 1 1 By the time Thatcher Colt had returned, the murderess of Geral-. dine Foster lay. beautiful and un conscious; on the floor. An hour later she was dead. . To the astonishment of all New York, on the following day Doctor i Humphrey Maskell wa's suddenly released from the Tombs. The Indictment against him was squashed, the case set tled. and Dougherty made a handsome statement fn -arfcfoh hm completely exonerated the laughw ing physician of Washington Square. "Then, who did kill Geraldine Foster?" howled t newspapers. "What Is going n behind th scenes of tho district i attorney's and the police commissioner's of fices ?" They never knew. The- facts were rigidly withheld. They are given here now because the prin cipals who would have suffered needlessly from the publication of the facts are beyond all harm. George ' Maskell, a broken man, has at last been laid In his grave, solaced until, the last by the knowledge that the terrible' crime of the woman he had trusted was never revealed. - . The Next Ylctim ! 1 As he went to her funeral. 1 could see by the look he f iied oa the' coffin that he realized the truth. If Natalie Maskell had suc ceeded in her "terrible desisra. it would have been only a little while before her own husband would have leen the next victim. Then all the money would have oeen hers. As it was, she was the first to be buried. Doctor Hu-nphrey Maskell and the, beautiful women he loved are - thousands of leagues from Wash ington Square today, married and happy, having obtained divorces in South America. With them are the old mother-in-law that'Felise would not desert, and little Doris not so little any more. The hus band of Fellse and the wife of Maskell, who had stood between them and happiness. live on. without , the power to molest tbem. ; Bat all this lay In the future . that night. When all the others had gone and Thatcher Colt and Iremained alone in the library of the police commissioner, I con gratulated my chief, and he smiled a little sadly. "Tony." he confessed- "1 feel - lonesome tonight Everybody hag gon home except you and me and a little girl waiting down stairs Betty." -Really?- - , -"Will you two join me In a lit tle supper or would you rather be by yourselves?" - Wo at our supper, Betty and I, as the guests of Thatcher Colt in his little house on 70th street, and Betty would let me have only two glasses ef that priceless port. She eald that from then -on she Intended to manage me. And I've always found her a girl of her word. (The End) FOR BARGAINS in FURNITURE Visit our Used Furniture . Department - 467 Court St. V i I- --IN . t S