IS THE SEMI-MONTHLY MAGAZINE SECTION bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbRT SlBkl P-BHHk 'sift fbbbbbbbbbbbbH III The Clearing House of Treason i Continued ftvm Page S ) b! Surprise Friends in This Way Mow often lias this been your experience? It is evening. Yon are not expecting cnllcrs. You are tired and you show it. Suddenly the doorbell rings! "Callers!" you exclaim to your husband, "and I look like a fright." But there's a way out. Surprise your friends, as have many women who know what Pompcian will do. Slip into your bedroom. Take a one-minute massage with Pom pcian. Into the skin the cream goes; in a moment out it comes and Presto! You are transformed, and by means of POMPEIAN Massage Cream The tired lines in your (ace ate lulnluril. 1 he invigorating Pompeian matsage has relaxed your tired muscles and refreshed you marvelouilv. Delightful, natural color has taken the place of your sallow or pale, wan look. The Pompcian massage has brought the rosy blood to your cheeks. Now go out to surprise your friends, for you look ten years younger. "Why, my dear, how well you look I" exclaims one of the callers. You ore pleased. Your husband smiles his proud approval. And, best ol all, you both know and everybody knows that it is your own honest complexion, and not a make-believe, rouge effect. (Rouge and like methods deceive the user only.) Nothing is left on ihe (see a(tn a Pompeian nwiMM bur a cleat. Iieth, youlMul glow. Um I'ompcun Masaaqe Cinn and have a com pletion thai i Benuineljf admired. "Don't envy a sood complexion: uie Pompcian and have one. Try the above plan and turpriie your InencU. Cup coupon tor I nil jar. WARNING! Cheaply maJe imitations ate orTetrd by certain dealers became ibey cod the dealer leu and he miVrs more -! your expense. Get ttie original and standard mauage cream. Gel Pom. prun 50.000 deatetiiell it -50c. 75c and$l Get Trial Jar mm Cat all, sia "i nod. Stamps accepted but colas preferred The Pompeian Mfg. Co. 175 Prospect St., Cleveland, O. Gentlemen: Enclosed find 6c (coin or stamps) for a tiial ar of Pompeian Maitaie Cream. Name AJJreia City Stale find you uufclinl this slim, fi'lrili "oinou. as slip Hat in tht' Huper-heati'd rnMtn w it h nmaic I'laiifjiii talking ii ti enmh of lis)iratt, criminal tliinp), von mld Imvi' moiiiIitoiI, n 1 did, what I'fV ilic had apart urul ulmt hIh thought iif ns sho lay nlono in tht dark. For mi'ii like Tliicsscn anil Schwartz can tako arc of tluuiisplvcs in a bandit way; but "lint shall Implicit to the little, nilkt'it "oiniin. who is caught and tangled in Ins lm p1 of life f Prison, now and linn, of onurwo; and in the end, what i;r.ti drafli? Rose did not know; Hose ld not think of it I daresay hi mild nut think nnd, imlo'd, in hi'Mwrii i niiii vwirs of lift, largely tumultuous, luiil ikmit thought at all. I'or hur life uh merely a jumble of riot and in 'rijruc spared by dark, exeitititf hours m this prison or that. And to her it ns n (Irnnin, amazing, fascinating as i hough she were watching it from a i In-liter box. A S I liuo intimated, the spy-servico of Oermany is admirably organized and its "I'learing-hou1" in Mrussols works with line precision. The KngliHh feerice is no less complete and is imite as far-reaching. It has to do with all the Ureal powers Uussia, llcriiiany, France, Austria, Italy though, of couVm', in the pieseiit political situation it is concerned chielly with its (ierman rival. Its chief is a detective who lives in Hrussels and nlio passes himself oil as a newspaper correspondent as such he is even ac ciedited to the Hritish embassy. (All Iheso spies are fond of calling themselves ''journalists," which is not at all amus ing for professional newspaper writers.) The Austrian spy-service is merely a pale shadow of the (ierman; indeed the work of Austria's spies is chielly in her own states and in Knstern Europe. The. Russian service in Hrusels is im portant and is directed mainly against (iermany. At times, however, the Urns sels agents are called upon to net against Ihe Russian levoliitionnries, who swarni about the lake of lieneva at Ouchy, Lausanne, Montreux, and in (ienevn it self. Thus a few years ago the chief of the French spies in Hrussels lent to his Russian emifrtrc a clever woman who is now in jail under the name possibly n true one of Therese Provost. With a young man who posed as her brother, t'luirles Provost, she was sent to Switzer land to run down certain Russian fugi Hm's and conspirators. It was a change I'toni the ups-nnd-downs of military es pionage and she set out gaily. These were her instructions. She was to go to Montreux and pose ns a young Canadian heiress. She was to make the niiuaiutiiiicc of the clan of revolution aries, notably of the chief, an old rebel, nolucholl'sky, who had a son twenty-two years of age. At the railway station in Itrussels a lady she had never seen her before gave her five thousand francs and wished her good-luck. And she nnd her "brother" reached Lau sanne, reached Montreux. The Cana dian heiress made a social hit. One of her first proposals of marriage came from the son of the hungry old revolu lionist, nnd she accepted him. Hy that t into she knew a great deal of what these exiles were plottiug. But whnt she had been sent to dis cover was their identity nud the names they were, using. (Her plan is spoken of with reverent admiration in tho spy world of Eurox) She and her "brother" Charles invited the family and friends of her Russian fiance to a pre-nuptinl luncheon. It was gien in the banquet room of the hotel and The rese had sent out invitations to all the revolutionary cohort; and as it was dif ficult for her to spell their exotic names, sho persuaded her husband-to-be to write out the list of guests. At dessert bhe announced gaily that she had a surprise for them all. She had engaged the liost photographer of Lausanne to take a group-picturo of them all, in commemo ration of the day. The guests looked askance. Sho turned to the photographer and said: "You will print three dozen copies nnd deliver them all to dear Mr. (lolu to lie my father give one to each choffsky, who is soon in-law. And he will ol us. ' And quite reassuted the guests filed out into the sunny garden of the hotel and posed. Within two hours proofs of the photograph and the list drawn up by the "fiance" were in the hands of the Russian agents in ienea. And Therese -and her brother were on their way back to Hrussels. A charming ex cursion; it had broken the monotony of military and political espionage After the Savoy and the Drill Room are closed when all the bars are shut down there is still one place in Hrus sels where the night-folk go, be thin criminals, apaches, wasters, gamblers, or simply bad-husbands. It is a sort of boutjr, a tavern kept open officially for the use of cab-drivers and chaull'eurs. It was here, over a table on which wen dishes of sauerkraut and five glasses of beer, that "brother" Charles related, in a husky, amused half-tone, his ad venture with Therese in the Russ haunted "resort" of Territet-Montreux. At a table a dozen feet away u fat Brit isher who should have been at home and abed five hours ngone, was playing cards with a fox-faced American, who once had some obscure connect ion with the American ministry in Hrussels- and since then leads an existence more nns terious than the lines in the palm of your hand. Out of-doors a winter dawn, humid nnd gray, should have been nun ing up over Hrabaut. As we sat there (Charles shaking dice against his left hand on behalf of his right, lest he get out of practice; for most spies are gamblers as well) there came in a blind man led by a little girl. Slung at hi side ho hail a huge bundle of papers Belgian, French, English, German, Ital inn, Dutch, Scandinavian and by some deftness of touch or fine quality of ar rangement he never deceived himself in pulling out exactly the paKr or review that one asked for. Notable figures these in Hrussels the blind man with his drooping mustache and pricked up ears; the thin pathetic girl in black on whose shoulders he leans for guidance; and the spies and gambler-spies with whom I sat at table, amused themselves by trying to confuse the old man clamoring at him for newspapers in all languages. Un vrai zwanze Bruxcllois quo!? MOT being a humorist of this sort, 1 lightened the blind man's load of il lustrated journals that cost as much as twelve and fifteen cents apiece, and I was looking at a picture in Simplicts simux which depicted a green lady nine feet high, staring down (with horror!) into a chasm three feet deep, when Charles swore. Being a Frenchman, and a Parisian at that, he sworo softly a long, low ripple of oaths through which cows and camels ami zebras and other animals went wickedly. He was read ing (while he swore) the Etoile Beige of that day January 23. Huskily to his elbow-mate he said: "They've got Winter at Nice both Winter and Horstmann! " "And Wesself" his neighbor asked. Charles studied the Etoile Beige. "It is a telegram from their specinl correspondent at Nice so it happened yesterday. Otto Winter, nged forty-two, born at Breslau he's arrested. And they got Horstmann of Amsterdam. Their chief lias escaped." "That is Weasel!" "Of course," said Charles, "and the paper says: 'Weasel, officer, deserter from the German army, who lias been implicated in many affairs of espionage in tho last few years, is believed to have succeeded in crossiug the Italian fron tier." One of the English agents spoke; lie said: "Good old Wessel! " Then Charles: "If he got to Venti tnille, he's all right. He'll come up by the Milan express and we'll see him in a few days." A squat little man, dark and sullen, had been nervously fumbling the dice laid aside bv Charles. He was Louis IH Every Pair Guaranteed Till Mi,.niit.'t kind u( a mone baik aurcernvn Arnl tie Atv Pupai..! In nuke Rood Kcil i: Sutprndrrt vmII nut mar thice pan nl the imlmjtv kind I nihtnei and durability combined. C.n('im to Hiv tligliteM motion ol tht human (urn, our patmtfd smooth running double action mtd and sntl hack and I ronl, are the n-jvoni. Made of the finest quality mercerized wbbin Samson woven ord. mil. le mf arced button holes. No rubUt to rot on the dealers' heles rxfore vou CUr put them on our back Similar) t-CooJ clean uebbiroerour shoulders instead ot dead rubber, lull ol peispiration. All metal paits heavily nukelcd. Made In'alt length and nidthi lor nun. vouths and iunioi. Ctt Suitvndcr uise, and Red Suiptndtr uill be your m spender (or all lime. SoU nh ui. it it, (ujumw ,n, ir(unJ.J il not utiHi r IM SO .! ai all fUr ur tiif d.mt Gco.'M. Eiliiurton Coinpnny, Mfrs. CamhrhUe Maui hinett $92.50 Our Price for 30 Days! We now otfer 4 lit l-.tt(v Met-1 cute larunp inntlel forty! i Hut to protrrt inirei w fmm nitvant ItiK lirtcen of teel we -ft h ttnir Hunt We KUurantef Oil rpoortl prti't f.r TO i1h miU Edwards Fireproof Garage An article fire proof tI tttnu'turt for private um-, llves fttinoliito protection f nun Kiifttk tlilevcK Jn rider, tire, HfEtitnliiK accident caret eiMiefi etc Save fi to 30 monthly In garage rent Save tnne. irtn k, tnn-rtt ami trimitir Come ready to tet op All part cut ami fitted. Simple, complete direction ftirnllied Alisolntelv runt proof. Joint and teaitm permanently, tlgiif Lock c ecu rely, l'rotnpt afe delivery and i-ntlnfaetlon gnu ran teed. Postal cent tmlav lirlntt r paiit lllutrated (ara?e Hook hy rvtttm nuul Ufl TheEdwaroUMfg. Co.,631-681 EiiItitonAvr.. Cincinnati, Ohio A COLLECTION OF ARTISTS' PROOFS is the next thing to owning the original drawing. All my proofs an- the first rriiitini; Imm tin- originals. This month's olfer is a two color prunl ol n drawini;, "The Treaty of I'eace." b Kcninii!tiicliU)ler,one ot the most popular artists of American fiction nnd literature. Start Your Collection Now Enclose ten cents (coin or stamps to coer "oslanu and packing) for this beautiful picture in its orit'inal colors, sue W,i x 14 inches, printed on hiijli finisli enamel paper A Beautiful Den Picture for Any Homo Many other reproductions by famous artists F. A. BARR, 1400 Kctner Building. Chicaao.lll. $200 A MONTH :ratlnK tl.e N. M(i:i. I'OMItl NATION AMi:it.. U lake and inUnt iv ie iiis eif i n rnmrj) mi frrnl -ulr. of n ti rr, in Iml twii -or and f ur st Irs r.vi'iiu I'ost c.itiN m tttlrs of lintpe li'ture. and It root h Piiturcs Hcipnrrs n ex lcricn e iliaten I irrbod ntntk tures I'Hf hiiimrrd i et ifnt rri Tin: Avnituvs iii(itiT. M().M:Y-.MAK1:1. Small invest mriit ite complete tint. In. hnim C .mcra, Tifpotl, and mierul for t ' ire Make itnmet the fir.t iaj . no mattn " irre wii or at are damu 1 ei.ied infor-iati'.n lire. Int 1 dlny ! Urn frt -i. pr sjer. ojratur tct where L LASCELLE, 627 W. 43d St., Dept. 46, New York i mjm Vnur rlU la (ImuII the tulvrrtlne r' freut. i AMAZING PROFITS INMlMlltlHmS. AuviH ilt iia.MM..iglr tvk (u their (u int , iuapar- tiuii, mlr jear Krtwlna tuusbruuina in ellan, Ueilt bartia, buxec. el' 1 11) jU when to sell at hlKheal )iira. Yn-e llluatraied (uairuitlon llooklel. II I Hi If lUUIO.V, 834 .4flb bL, ew vrL Motion Picture Playi Wanted 'ou can me them We ' teach yon b mml No ex perleace needed Uig demand it ttood pay letail free ASS'D M. P. SCHOOLS, 639 Shrldjn Rd., Chlciio