The Congressman’s Family By EDWARD LAWSON WHAT HAS HAPPENED: Bent out to In terview 'ioprenentative Paul Lucas. Con gressman from Mississippi. I discover two persons working frantically over his dead body, removing it from an easy chair and placing it on a bed. One is a man named Hutchinson, the Congressman’s butler, and the other a middle-aged, white haired, fairly beautiful wom:.i who de scribed herself as Lucas’s housekeeper. I call the police to handle the case and give the ara&aing story to my paper. Hutshinson tries to escape by leaping through the window while the police are on the way, but I hold him until they Arrive. The two servants ascribe the man’s death to an attack of heart disease, but the police doctor, after examination, de clares that Lucas has been murdered by poisoning. A thorough search of tile apartment reveals only one clue, a typewritten note bearing no signature, written by some one obviously unfamiliar with a typewriter. The note says: "Better stick to your high society ladies or you’ll regret it." The author of this note cannot be found, but a detective establishes the fact that it was written on the dead man’s own type writer. The housekeeper then tells her story, disclosing that the Representative is a Negro and that she is his common-law wife. She also discloses the fact that he had been having an affair with a Wash ington woman, a white widow, since his Arrival In the capital city. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY: CHAPTER ni “So he threatened to kill you, did he?” Inspector Paine stroked his chin thoughtfully. "Well, that cer tainly makes the thing more inter esting. First of all we'll have to get hold of this mysterious white wo man, and then we’ll have to corral Lucas’s son. Is he in town, lady?” “Yes, he’s stopping at the White law." “All right. Jones and Wilson, you | Tty Lydia E. Plnktran's Veg«Ubt« Compound Cried Herself to Sleep All worn out . . . splitting headaches make life hideous every month. She needs a tonic . ■ . Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound relieves cramps, SWELLING REDUCED And Short Breathing relieved when caused by unnatural collection ol water in abdomen, feet and legs, and when pres sure above ankles leaves a dent. Trial package FREE. COLIAJM MEDICINE COMPANY , Dept. SOI, Atlanta, Ga. • get busy and bring this woman in. Hardy and Johnson, you dig up this woman’s son. Make it snappy, ail of you. I want to talk to both of them.” The four detectives left the room. Inspector Paine turned to Hutchin son, the butler. “What do you know about this— this murder?” he snapped. Hutchinson shook his head slow ly, sadly. “All I know,” he said, “is that we found Mr. Lucas here in his room this morning, seated in his easy chair, looking as though he were asleep. When he failed to wake up in time to get to his downtown office, I tried to aw^ren him, gently. But then I notioed that something was wrong. He didn't wake up. I became alarmed and called Miss Harmon here, the housekeeper. She said that it was a heart attack, and that he had them quite often. She said the bsst thing to do was to put him on his bed and loosen up his clothes. We did that, and then this man happened in.” He pointed at me. xvu naa xiexpea xix xus uxeax fast this morning?” “Yes, sir. I made the coffee in the percolator. Miss Harmon did the rest.” "I see. And what became of the coffee? Mr. Lucas drank it?”* “No sir, he didn’t. At least, not very much of it.” “Then what became of it?” “It was .pilled, sir.” He pointed silently to a spot on the floor. “Oh, I see.” The Inspector look ed at the butler quizzically. “Do you remember just who spilled it?” he asked suddenly. “I did, sir.” “Ummm. You just knocked it off the table, accidentally, to the floor?” “Yes sir, while we were transfer ring Mr. Lucas's body to the bed.” The Inspector turned to me, “Did you see him do that?” “Spill the coffee on the floor, you mean?” ‘'Yes." “Yes, sir, I saw him.” “Did it look like an accident to you?” “He just brushed against the table and the coffee cup slid off. That was all. He -didn’t knock it off.” “It wasn't necessary bo brush against the table in such a way as to knock the cup off, was it?” "No, but he just seemed to turn that way without thinking and the cup tumbled to the floor. But that’s all this got to do with the case?” “I have an idea,” the Inspector said, “there was something more “Just copy the words of the note down on this sheet of paper,” said the Inspector. in that cup than mere coffee.” “You mean—poison?" I gasped. “Exactly. ” “But how can you find out? The coffee’s all soaked into the rug now.” “The department has chemical ex perts who can smell poison a mile away. They'll get it out of the rug if there’s any there.” The Inspector beckoned to two patrolmen who had been standing behind him, listening to the proceedings. “Get this rug up off the floor and hustle it cut to the Bureau of Standards in a scout car just as fast as you can get it there. Have them examine it—es pecially that dark spot over there— for traces of poison. Call me here just as soon as they finish their analysis.” The two men saluted and went to work, rolling up the heavy rug. “Now,” said the Inspector, fac ing the housekeeper and the butler, who were sitting moodily together in a corner, “it looks to me as though this case of poisoning—this mur der—lies between the two of you. Miss Harmon, you say that you are in reality Paul Lucas’s wdfe, work ing as his housekeeper. 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Large can of Genuine Black and White Skin Whitener, only 25c, at your favorite drug store or toilet goods counter. -urn BLACKtEWHITE SKIN WHITENER that he refused to support you, and that he threatened at one time to kill you. Is all that true?” The woman twisted her hands to gether -in silence for a moment. “Yes,” she said quietly, “that’s all true. But I never held that against him. I've always been fair-minded. I could see his point of view as well as my own. I never hold anything against him. And I certainly wouldn't have killed him: You see, I still—still love him.” The Inspector fumbled in his pocket, and brought out a crumpled, typewritten note. “Were you the one who wrote this?” he asked. The woman took the sheet of pa per and read it quickly. “Better stick to your high society ladies or you’ll regret it,” the note said. She shook her head. “No, of course I didn't write this. I haven’t the slightest idea what it moans. I've never seen the thing before.” She handed it back to the Inspector. He turned to Hutchinson, the but ler, and handed the note to him. “Have you ever seen this before?” Hutchinson took in the contents of the scrap of paper at a glance. I noticed, and I suppose the Inspec tor noticed two, that his hand trembled ever so slightly as he held it. “No sir,” he cried, “I never wrote any such letter as that.” “Are you—sure?” “Absolutely sure.” The Inspector smiled wanly. “There is a way to tell,” he said slowly, “just who it was that wrote this note. You two come up into the front office. I want to give you a little test.” He led the way into the Repre sentative’s office room, followed by the woman and man and a coterie of detectives and reporters. “Now,” he said, “here’s what I want you to do. One of you. I be lieve, sent this note to Representa tive Lucas. It is very important to me to know which one of you it was. To discover that, therefore, I want you to do this for me—I want you to sit down here at this type writer and copy the note on a clean sheet of paper. Miss Harmon, you may go first. Just copy the words of the note down on this sheet of paper.” The woman seated herself at the desk, and with quivering hand in serted the sheet of paper into the typewriter. She glanced at the note, then began to type. In less than five seconds she had copied off the brief sentence, working expertly and without the slightest difficulty. "You see,” she said, “when I was very young I was a stenographer. That was bow I came to meet Paul.” The Inspector took the newly typewritten Sheet and compared It with the note which he had found cm Lucas's desk. The difference in typing was immediately apparent. The first note was poorly written, the letters were not spaced properly, the words were not aligned cor rectly. The copy which the woman had ir.fede was correctly done in ev ery detail, the work of an expert rather than that of an amateur. Immediately I saw through the Inspector's method. Having proved that the housekeeper could not have written the note which was the only clue so far unearthed to the mur derer, he would now turn to Hutch inson, the butler. The chances were 100 to 1 that Hutchinson would do a bungling job on the typewriter, perhaps making the same obvious errors which were contained in the original note. Would this not con nect him directly to the note as its author, and thus indirectly to the murder of the Congressman? “And now, Mr. Hutchinson,” the Inspector said, "I want you to do the same thing Miss Harmon—or BUCK-DRAUGHT mm>e FROM BEST UXRTIVE PUNTS Sunshine, Rain and Soil produce the foods you eat at every meal — that rebuild your body as you work, play, live. Sunshine, Rain and Soil also I produce plants that clear up trou ' ble in the digestive system of your body. 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