Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, May 23, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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MAyruimn
cormamm
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V.L.EAKNES
SYNOPSIS.
•eft orphan*. ^Thelr'jregjrty
K«t »nd they are compelled to cx*t about
for soma maana to earn a living. I-ou-
anawara an advertlaamant of an Inva-
IHd who wanta a companion. She decline,
the position. Lou lie advartlaea for a po-
lalnon aa companion, and Mra. Haiard
(replies. She oltara Loulta a poaltlon aa
her "secretary of frivolous affairs. Her
ichlef work la 1
and daughter
jpath. Loulle talks basal
;ard and also gains
ra Hazard
J^eved^to^
meets many peopTe high In tha social
world. Natalie Agassis, to whom Hap
has been paying attention, loses an em-
erald bracelet during tha reoeptlon. She
declares there la not another like It In
tha world, tt develops that Natalie has
■ere! pieces of Jewelry under stm-
sumatancea. Hap takas Loulle to,
the baseball game. He tella her he la
not engaged to Natalie and has bean
loured of hla Infatuation. Tha acene
changes to tha Haaard country place,
where many notables have been Invited
the summer, loulle and I aura visit
ar Iou
>rty ha
sat Due de Trouvllle
ard place. loulle hears Wlnthr
tor boat out lata at night. Next
tha papers announce the robbery of as
*ral nearby homes. Natalis accuses Io
lie of stealing her ruby pendant. M
Haaard assures loulle of her conflder
In har. Hap declares hla love for I *
.....admit
d will
nc#
Sap declares hla love for Loulle
She reciprocates, but will not admit It as
ra what M
rclary of frivolous mn«»- —-
work la to steer Mra. Haaard s son
lighter In the right matrlmoulal
oulle talks baseball to Hap Has-
also gains the confidence of Lau-
----rd. The Duo da Trouvllle Is be-
hoved to be Interested In lour a Mrs.
Haaard gives a big reception and Loulle
♦or the
the turn
In «
eat
ulle and
______.» Abbott, an author,
takas considerable Intar-
uvlllo arrives at the Hi
the
op’s mo
ornlng
>f aev-
•he fears what Mra. Hazard will say;
loulle la excused from dinner on account
of a headache. Bhe la bombarded with
notes from Hap Imploring her to see him
Wlnthrop la arrested In the presence of
Hap amf loulle. charged with robbing
General Schuyler's home and shooting tha
general. A hex of Jewels la found In Wln-
throp'e aafe, among them an emerald
bracelet exactly like the one lost by Na-
talie. Natalie apologlxes to loulle for ac-
cusing her of theft. Loulle la awakened
at midnight and finds Hap In her room.
Next morning Hap explains that he was
In pursuit of a mysterious woman he had
seen In the corridor and who eluded him
by passing through Loulle’s room. Na-
talie Ident” is tha emerald bracelet found
In Wlnttv p'a aafe aa her own. Loulle a
slater, Jc arrives for a week’s stay. John
Crowntnshleld pays marked attention to
Jo. Loulle watches all night with Natalia.
She sees Wlnthrop oroaa the lawn In the
early morning, shadowed by Thomas, a
footman. Loulle hears a noise In the gal-
lery end goes to Investigate. She slips
Into the card room and stumbles over a
bag. She starts to carry It to her room
and la surprised by someone In the hall
falls downstairs. She breaks her
The hag belongs to John. Lsrulls
again find* herself under suspicion. I-ou-
lle overhears Hap tell his mother that ha
intends to marry Loulle even If she Is a
thief, which he doesn’t believe T-oulle
declares that she will not marry him. but
Mrs. He sard says Hap can hav# her If he
wants her. Detective Adams la found
bound and gagged. Jo Is missing. The
live says she was carried off by
detec'
three men.
CHASTEN XXIV.—Continued.
At the and of an hour we knew
Ithat Jo's abductor* had crossed the
I wire fence to the pasture, a mile
idown the shore, for a piece of the
(dark blue dressing-gown that was
: ml suing from her wardrobe waa found
|on the win* where, evidently, It had
teaught. A ltttfe farther on, one of
jber slippers was found. But thare
tail trace of the thieves and Jo andad.
Wa telephoned for Wlnthrop and he
Icame Immediately. He knew more
iabout that part of the country In a
jmlnute than any of tha rest of us
jin a year. But noontime brought
; nothing more, and afternoon still
nothing. Then the police were noti-
fied and that brought also newspaper
men and photographer*. The police
and the newspapers seemed the end
of our desperate hoping.
Doctor Graham came and barricaded
Ime In my sitting-room when the re-
porters began to arrive, with Celle as
Xetrtlnoi. He said It would not do for
Ime to aee them; that I would be 111.
•Then the attempted Jewel robbery
Peaked out—reporter* Just scent such
things—embellished with my having
beard suspicious noises, dramatically
{rushing out and saving the Jewels,
nod plunging down the steps and
breaking my arm aa a fitting climax.
[An artlat sketched one of the maids
land added a broken arm, as they
couldn't enap me; and the newspaper*
that afternoon came out with extras
that elsxled.
But out of that eptaode Mr. Samuel
Dick, of the Evening Columbian, con-
eooted a vary plaualbla story of Jo'a
disappearance. She had beard a
nolee. Just as I had; sha bad Investi-
gated, which accounted for her having
as much as she had; she had per-
haps recognised the thieves, which
made it necessary for thsm to carry
her away until thay had made good
their eeeape. They had left the de-
fective behind beoause ha had not
learned who thay were. Mr. Dick con-
jectured that wa would find Jo allva,
because If the thieves had Intended to
jttlll her they would not have taken
/the trouble to carry her off. The big
'question, of course. If we accepted
jthls theery, waa: Whom had the
(recognised ? And that was a chance
Ho display Mr. Dick's ability as a re-
porter. He wrote a lot and bald noth-
ng, but ended With a olaver allusion
the emerald bracelet and Wlnthrop.
be story breathed hope In every
Ine, but it did not find Jo; and that’*
t wanted—to find her!
The thieves bad gone away empty-
[handed. Plainly thay had come back
dor tha Jewals, not knowing, of course,
he Jewel* had been conveyed to
Itown and locked In good strong
xe* In varic Ju banka But Jo knaw
and «h* did not follow In the hop*
getttog back anything. Just where
ktsw they had made her prisoner
!»ng
k
we could only conjecture. After all,
I couldu’t see that It made any dif-
ference where, for our only Idea waa
to get her back, to know the had not
been harmed, but the polios and tha
reporters gave a great deal of thought
and space to this matter. I told John
of the pistol when he earns once dur-
ing the afternoon to aay there was
nothing new, but he only groaned. She
had not defended herself.
When the dinner-gong sounded,
Lone Oak, for once, was demoralized.
John bad not come back; Hap waa
disheveled and tired and refused to
drees. He dined on coffee and sand-
wiches which Mrs. Hazard directed
Burrowe to serve in the smoking-
room to anybody who wanted to eat.
I was In my room, dry-eyed and hope-
less, with Laura consoling me; and
poor, dear Mrs. Hazard was trying
to be everywhere and see everybody,
while an Immaculate, muchly-etarched
nurse from town only got In every-
body’s way and added to the con-
fusion. No one would let her nurse.
Natalie constituted herself hostess.
I don’t think anybody gave
thought to His Grace or cared how
he amused himself. He came upon
the terrace once daring the afternoon,
and a photographer snapped him, not
for any particular reason, but Just
because he was a duke and waa lying
around loose. It was an awkward
situation for a house-party. The din-
ner must have been a hideous affair.
The women were left alone after din-
ner, for all the men, except His
Grace, changed to rough clothes and
went to see what could be done to
help. Not that they bad any partic-
ular hope, but they chafed at being
Idle In such a crlais. The bllllard-
room waa deserted, the card-room
dark, and one by one lanterns began
to flit In the direction of the ninth
bole, where Jo’s slipper had beeh
found.
It waa quite dark when John came,
and besides the horror of its being
dark, thare was no news. He knocked
softly, came in, spread out his bands
helplessly. He was tired and dusty,
and his clothea were ^torn where evi-
dently he had struggled through gaps
In wire fences. When I met his clear
gray eyes and the look in them I
moaned. Then he gave way, too, and
sat down, burying bis face in his
hands. I knew the truth; he loved
her! He had waited a long time to
love, then had tumbled In pell-mell,
and the woman was Jo. I obeyed an
Impulse and put my hand on his bowed
head.
''We'll find her." I whispered brok-
enly.
‘‘Yes, we’ll find her!" he repeated
grimly.
"One of the newspapers suggests
that perhapa she waa abducted and
la being held for ransom. In that case
there's a chance—”
He came to bis feet with an excla-
mation and eagerly scanned the paper
I gave him.
"If they are holding her—if only
they will demand a ranson," he said
hoarsely. “Great God! if only they
wllll'L^ •
"X0i think they havo killed her?”
I cried.
"No. not" be denied. “She’s allva.
She must be alive. Why. she’s got
to live, live!”
It was an Awful thing to see him
mm
Ply
Just Bscaust He Waa a Duke and Was
Lying Around Loose.
go to pieces, and he had gone com-
pletely. The effort he made to con-
trol himself made It all the more
pitiful. His lips were white; he could
not hold the paper steady, and when
he spoke hla words, try as he did to
keep them from being so, were tragic.
I didn’t know what had happened be-
tween him and j'o tha evening be-
fore, but I knew what was going to
happen If she ever came back alive;
and no dressmaking nonsanse and
false pride were going to hare any-
thing to do with It. When a man
waits for naarly forty years to fall
In love, a tornado—and that’s the
most strenuous thing I car thtnt. gg._
eonldn’t stop him. Be folded the
paper and put It dowu gently.
“If the damned eooundrela are after
ransom.” he aald, “they will Uka care
of har. It’# growing oold’’—he shiv-
ered, but the brecse that came In waa
hot and sultry—"and ah« baa only one
shoe. Loulle, does she know how to
use that revolver?”
"She can plug a dime at fifty
yards,” I replied, remembering that
somebody at the club once said he
would like to see her plug a dime at
fifty yards.
“Then why didn't she ihootr he
demanded suddenly.
■'it’s an awful thing to shoot a
man, now. Isn’t it?” I demanded in
turn. "Even if be is a thief?”
“Orest Lord, no, whan aha’* in
danger; It's self-defense."
"Well, that’e the way I’d feat about
IL and that's the way aha weuld, too.
Perhapa when she realised there waa
danger it was too late.” -
He was exasperated with me. He
couldn’t see that a woman's mind
works differently from a man's. He
came close to me after a moment,
drew me into his arms and placed a
very brotherly Use upon my fore-
head.
“Women,” be aald softly, “women
are angels.”
The worst continued to happen.
Just at that particular Instant Hap
banged on the door and, without wait-
ing. suddenly opened IL It was an
awfully awkward situation. There
waa John with me In hla arms—John,
who never looked twice at a woman
In his life—and I practically engaged
to Hap, and Hap looking aa if some-
thing had exploded Just under hla
nose. 1 know I went red, and I’m
sure I would have done something
foolish if John’s beautiful self-posses-
sion bad not saved us. He continued
to hold me In his arms.
"Women,” he remarked over my
shoulder to Hap, “women are angels.”
Hap blinked.
“You bet they are!” he aald. But
he was trying to readjust hlmsalf.
I went to him.
“Don't you see it's Jo, you goose,
not me,” I whispered. “Get him a
drink; be needs It.”
“Scotch or rye, John r Hap asked
from pure force of habit.”
"Neither,” John replied.
"Scotch,” I said firmly. "Make It
a long one”—I think that's the way
to aay It, and I Illustrated as the men
do—“and1—and put a ch,jrry in it!"
CHAPTER XXV.
The Man at the Bridge.
It's a strange thing that the first
definite clue we had to Jo after the
slipper and the torn piece of her
dressing-gown, came from Charlie
Ayer. There had been no demand for
ranaom on the following morning and
we were In despair. Mr. Partridge
arrived, but be could only bring me
consolation. A rumor that some
strange men had been seen at the
railroad station came to naught, and
finally Charlie had taken the run-
about and gone away, no one knew
where and had not bothered. He came
back late that afternoon, grimy, with
two men in the car, one a milk man,
the other a stable boy, and held up
to the shocked gaze of everybody
present Jo’a other slipper.
While the detectives Jbhn had had
sent down from towD, and the local
police, were following up clues that
led nowhere. Charlie had stumbled
upon one that seemed to be good,
through pure unadultered chance, and
a puncture. He had started to town,
I don't think he himself knew why,
and he got the puncture on a stretch
of roadway that didn’t boast a tree
for a mile. It's a thirsty Job fixing
a puncture, more so when the sun
Isn’t particular Just how hot it shines,
and It’s the first time the shoe has
been off and has rusted on the rim.
When Charlie finally threw the
pump and the jack into the tonneau
thg only thing In sight was a milk-
wagon. Now, I don’t thick Charlie
ever took a drink of milk In hla life,
hut milk is better than nothing and
Charlie hailed the wagon. While he
was drinking the milk, the milkman
began reading a morning paper.
Charlie gaxed at the back page, know-
ing that on the front page, Just under
the milkman's eyes, was a story,
capped by a two-column head, to the
effect that Miss Codman was still
missing. He asked a perfectly silly
question, with startling results:
“You don’t happen to have seen a
young woman, In a dark-blue dressing-
gown, looking lost, strayed or stolen V
/‘No, sir,” the milkman answered,
"but Bill, the stable boy where we
keep the wagons"—he Jerked hla head
toward the Interior of the wagon—
“say* ha thinks he know* about this
here young woman who Vaa stolen
from I<on* Oak. Ar* you e-looklng
for her?”
"Yes,” admitted Charll*, "I'm a-
looklng for her."
The milkman whistled, then held
up two fingers and dexterously ex-
pectorated between them.
"Well, Bill eays he thlnke he picked
up them three men and the young
woman on this here very road about
four o’clock In the morning, and
drove ’em about two miles. He ain’t
sure; he don’t remember nothing
about the dressing gown, for It was
dark and he didn’t aee It, but he
said this morning that It did seem to
him as if it must have been them.”
A greenback changed hands, and
the result was that the milkman
agreed to take Charlie to the stable
and Introduce him to BUI
BlU’e story was that he had driven
a couple who had missed the last train
up, to a stable that bgasted an auto
mobile, and there he had turned back
toward home It was late then, or
rather, early—somewhere between
which h# did not erectly remember,
three men accosted blbi and asked
if they might ride with him. He didn’t
consider this unusual, beoause It bed
happened to him before. The men
were supporting a young woman be-
tween them. Bill concluded ebe bad
had too muoh. He was paid in ad-
tanoe, a bill whleb, in the light of a
smoky kerosene stable lamp later,
turned out to be tea dollars, but that,
too, bad happened to Bill before when
be bad given a lift to • “souse.”
They rode what Bill Judged to bo
about two miles, and got out at a path
evidently leading to a boose. Just be-
fore coming to a small bridge. He
rememberwd the bridge distinctly.
They had called "good-night” to him.
One of them, be thought, spoke in
German. Ha had seated te think of
the incident until he eaw the row the
newspapers had kicked up about a
young woman having been, presuma-
bly, abduetpd from a place in that
vicinity on that very morning. He
had hesitated about informing the
pollco, beoause be didn’t want to get
mixed up ’bout nothing when he
wasn’t sure 'bout nothing, and didn’t
know nobody; and be oouldn’t be
spared from the stable to go to court
‘bout nothing.
But when he had been promised full
pay for any time lost and a guarantee
of his Job from the owner of the
stable, he consented to accompany
Charlie to Lone Oak, if the milkman
would go also, and piles himself and
his Information at the disposal of
whoever wanted it He gave Charlie
a slipper which he had found in the
cairlage. It was Jo’s.
The terrace became a newspaper
office, and at the rustic tables where
we usually had tea in the late after-
noon reporters were frantically writ-
ing. The photographers snapped Bill
and the milkman every time they
looked up.
It was quite a procession that went
down the driveway to take Bill to
the spot near the small bridge where
the men and their victim had alighted.
Wlnthrop said be knew the path and
Automobile Party Had
Unconacioua Man Beside
tha bridge—It was perhaps four miles
or more below Lone Oak—and if Jo’a
abductors bad left the carriage there
he waa certain it was not to follow
the path. He knew it led to a little
houae and a celery farm, owned by
an old German couple named Hlngel-
muller, simple, honest folk who cer-
tainly had no hand In an abduction
or In concealing any one who had.
But everybody went. Just the same,
and rather eagerly when It was re-
membered that Bill said be thought
one of the men spoke In German.
The little old couple were aston-
ished at the Intrusion, but answered
questions straightforwardly, and be
cause Wlnthrop, who kne# them well,
requested It, allowed a search of their
house Bnd premises. Absolutely no
trace of any person wes found. The
detectives and—more to the point—
the newspaper men were finally con-
vinced that the Hlngelmullers knew
nothing, if It had not been for the
slipper, It Is probable Bill’s story
would have been entirely discredited.
The bridge spanned a small brook
that ran through the Hlngelmullers’
celery farm on one side t>f the road,
coming through an estate on the other
belonging to a family who had been
abroad for three years. This astute
was vacant. The house was some
distance from the stream, and stood
on a knoll that gave a view of the
ocean. It wax surrounded by weeds
and overgrowth.
The detectives decided to Inspect
this house. A careful search, how-
ever, proved conclusively that no one
had been near the place. The house
waa securely shuttered, Its shutters
and porches thick with dust. There
was no Indication anywhere of the
weeds having been trampled. It was
reasonably certain that the house
neither waa nor had been occupied
for some time. But the police too*
the responsibility of tearing off a shut-
ter and searching, inside waa the
earns coating or duet, no footprints
tnywhere, no signs of anything hav-
ing been disturbed.
The se*rch from that time on
seemed to stand still. BUI and the
milkman were sent back to the stable
handsomely rewarded, but the story
came to naught, Just as everything
else had We were no nearer finding
Jo than we had been the morning of
her disappearance.
John still expected a demand for
ranaom, so ^ld Mr. Partridge, who
broke two pairs of glasses the morn-
ing he came, rubbing them. I had
ceased to hope. I nursed my broken
arm and crlod every time l looked—
and I looked often—at, Jo’s long, slim
half-past three and four. At a point / gowns hanging on their pegs. Just
now « happened the newepapeer
hadn’t discovered Jo’s connection
with Mme. Gautier. Robe* el Man-
teaux. I do not know. It’s a fact that
all the stories referred to her aa
Mrs. Hazard’s guest, ’ the beautiful
Mies Codmkn. Perhaps it made a bet-
ter story.
We dragged through I Sunday. Wln-
throp had taken the reporters into
his home, for there was no such thing
as a hotel near ue. We discovered
that Sam Dick was an ’07, and Sun-
day evening Mrs. Hasard brought him
In to see me—she’s soft-hearted about
reporters anyhow. He told me he
wouldn’t print anything I said it I
didn't wish It, but he simply had to
be able to tell his city editor that ho
had aeon me; that he would like to
take a message to the other boys. 1
told him I’d stand for what he chose
to tell them. He’s n dandy chap.
Monday morning Mra. Hazard au-
thorized the newspaper men to say
that twenty-five thousand dollars
would be paid for Jo returned allva
I didn’t haw to be told who had
offered to pay IL
Monday noon something happened
that wo could not see had any bearing
on Jo’s disappearance, but which took
the newspaper men and photographer*
to the rustic bridge on the -run. ▲
passing automobile party had found
an unconacioua man beside the road
Just at the rustic bridge. He had
been shot in the throat. How he
came there no one knew. He could
not epeak and no one could identify
him. Afterward e trail of blood wa*
found leading into the woods along
the stream, but before It had been
followed many things had happened.
The wounded man was taken to Dr.
Graham’s, where It wes not thought
he could live, as he was terribly ex-
hausted from lose of blood, and he
evidently had dragged himself from
the place where he had been shot, te
the road for assistance.
While w* were digesting this ’ new
horror, John, who wak paotng up and
down Mrs. Hazard’s sitting room, sud-
denly gave a short, sharp cry, and
tbs next Instant he was tearing madly
—tearing madly Is exactly what be
wa* doing—down the steps and across
the lawn. Coming from the direction
of the beach, stumbling, weary, ex-
hausted, was Jo!
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
THOUGHT HE GAVE THE SIGN
But Old Gentleman Naturally Wa* In-
dignant at Mistake of
Drug Clerk.
A well-dressed old man walked Into
a corner drug store the other day.
mopped his brow with a handkerchief
and took a seat at the soda fountain.
The clerk faced him expectantly.
"I am very thirsty,” he remarked as
he drummed on the counter. ”1 don’t
know what I want. Well, I believe I
will take a phosphate.” he concluded,
still drumming on the marble with hie
fingers. The clerk emlled, picked up
a stein and went to the rear of the
store. He came back, set tt In front
of the old man and rang up lfi cents
out of the half dollar which was given
him. The old man, without looking In
the stein, thirstily raised It to hie
Ups and took a long draught. Then
he quickly set the stein down, sput-
tered a moment and then exploded
between hla coughs.
"What do you mean? I never took
a drop of liquor, sir, In my Ufa. But I
know It, sir, the rotten stuff, when I
smell It I’ll not stand for it. sir. I
called for a cherry phosphato. What
do you mean, sir, by giving me
whisky?” And the old man stopped
for breath as he glared at the amazed
clerk.
"Well, I—I er—I guess I made a
mistake. I thought you wanted It for
medicine.” stammered the clerk.
"Blr, I am a teetotaler. I wouldn’t
touch the etuff for love nor money."
And the old man marched out Indip
nantly.
"Well, for the love of Mike!" ex-
claimed the clerk to a man at the
counter who had been served a stela
In the same way, but who made n*
kick. “That old duffer came in her*
and certainly gave me the correct
high sign. And he drank nearly half
of It, too.” The clerk laughed at Cl*
looked Into the stein.—Kansas City
Journal.
Car* of Your Umbrella.
A soft silk wears the best In an um-
brella. A steel frame Is lighter to
carry and admits of a closer rod.
When carrying your umbrella os Iff*
street not In uee, keep It furled; M
hanging In your oloaet keep Its case
on. In fact, It presents a very nee I
appearance If the case I* on when It
Is carried. To furl, grasp the still
In the right hand, shake out the folds,
wrap them closely around the stick,
beginning at the lower end, and
smooth as they are wragped around
tha stick, then fasten with the cliff
band on the ellk cover.
When coming lu with a wet une
brella. wipe off the handle and fern
rule, and furl the silk sections, if the
silk gets a spot on It. remove It with
a silk cloth, warm water and soa»
Clean a gold or silver handle Iff
warm soapsuds, ndb up a wooden hg»
die with a verjr slightly oily cloth.
Up In Chemistry.
"Thomas." said the professor to g
pupil in th\ Junior class in chemists*
“mention an oxide.”
“Leather,” replied Thomas.
“What la leather *flh oxide el*”
naked the professor.
"An ox’lde of beef,” answered da
blight youngster.
What Happened.
•till a Chance.
•What’* the matter?” "She hag itol
looted me again. She say* this ls|
final.” "Did she say how final?”
qulred the older and more experienced
man.—Washington Herald.
Misnamed.
"This Is a court* dinner.”
"Coarse, is Itf I thought
fine.”
Proposing by mall le as unsatlsfao-
•tory as kissing s girl through a knob-
hole in a board fence.
Mealtime
is Near
Are you smiling? Look*
ing forward with pleasure
and a keen appetite—or
is your stomach so bad
you * ‘just don’t care”?
Then you should try
Hosteller’s
Stomach Bitters
It assists digestion and
makes you "forget" all
about stomach ills.
wm
INGLE
S
ssaS
INDER
levs muaiu
Texas Directory
DIAMONDS
fij to ti.500. Write for (election package
lent prepaid without obligation to purchase.
Jewelry catalog free.
Arthur A. Everts Co., Hc„X£?"t3L
Doe of the rteeet Jewelry Btoiws la Aznertee
Health insurincs $20 SS’JJ
O. E. HOFFMAN COMPANY .
BARBERS’ SUPPLIES & FURNITURE
whits rou oca tmw oataloods
iroe main murr Dallas. Texas
HOTEL WALDORF
DALLAS'
Priced, Eu
Corner J«
STORM CELLARS
Tornado Proof. Sere your family from death
9r.‘_0.)-u V 1 ,or prtcee.JIW PMCIU
(00RM A Himv COMPANY, 112 CA0I7 STIffT. MLLAS.TCL
MAnufaotu rers Clatorn*, Hoofing, Oulrorta, Ms,
SODA FOUNTAIN
and *0 foot latent lcele
He went to aek her deer oM god
Te l«
He got home later. *nt as sea
An ambulance te »dW Mnl
>t Me daughter Tsmevy Ml
home later, bet he bed
Wa hare made
ready (i
meat,*,
is pump i
new and slightly need, at a earing ta price, on
easy monthly
without an;
payment*.
le up,
ready (or prompt ehlpr
lent, 4, R, 10, IS, ILK, IS
lump *y*tem outfit..
hly payments. Let ue ship you now,
iy cash payments, then eaay monthly
THE QROSMAN CO. (lee.). Dalle*. Tea.
The Keeley Institut*
OFTKXA8. N lngtean years In Dali**. After 8>
year*’ «u«*ceRi*ful treatment of Drank*nnsas.
Drug and Tobacco unlnf needs no rsoommsn4a»
tlon further than ths thousands of sura4
batlsnts. Don’t oonfuss Ths Only Oenuts*
Keels/ Institute with any of ths many r*put*4
— for pjtrtluulara. All c
anas A*
•nee strictly confidential. Address, J. KL
KHIITH, Mgr.. 151 i Uughea Circle. Dallas. Tea
Auto Tires and Supplits
Wo save you from 1-3 to i-a.
Forinstznco, Gasoline Vulcanize*^
Regular price £3, our price't 1.50.
Write for catalog full of bargaing.
Consumed’ Auto Supply House, Dallas, Texas
T HEAD O L P HIJS
DALLAS, TEXAS
Where the rates for accommodation* and
service are not aa high as expected and
everything ie the bast European Plaa.
Fireproof and tallest hotel in Texas,
•a.00 a day and upwards
ALVAH WILSON, MANAGER
Rural Home Lamp
A Lamp of wonderful
brilliency, beautiful in
design and perfect in
construction. Absolute-
ly non-explosive, odor*
less and smokelaaa.
Write for free circular
and prices.
Hydro Carbon Light Co.
Kzeluatve Dealer*
DALLAS, TEXAS
HARRY’S'']
■ leMBTSADI MARK Mmatol
r,= STEEL TANKS
Cisterns, Storm Cellars, Culverts, Stock
Tanks, Wagon Tanks, etc. We want ac-
tive and reliable agents in every city sad
town in Texas. We can help your sales.
Writs ns today.
HARRY BROTHERS COMPANY
SOS Southwestern Lite Bldg. Dallas. Te*
ruuee MBKTiun tu Paras
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Risien, John T. Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, May 23, 1913, newspaper, May 23, 1913; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth556235/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carrollton Public Library.