When patriotic 701101 an ( Mobil do- ' Bated a growing field ol cotton to tko Cross the daughters of stvoral of the' city's .beet families volunteered to pick the cotton. . THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, .DECEMBER 27. 1918. Who can prove, that tho heroin ol X the "beat seller who awept bach th raven ringlets from her classic brow did not use broom. -I) SOCIETY r Pretty Weddin'gs Give Holidays a More than Ever Romantic Flavor i Brimming over with joy is this Victory Christmas, for added lo the joy ol family reunions and the good wishes of friends is the ringing of Jhe wedding bells. Mistletoe and holly have supplanted the brde's roses and range blossoms, for thje pretty girls have chosen nowy De cember for ihcir nuptials rather than rosy May. The beautiful new church of "Our I-jJy of Lourdfs" parish was the " scene" of a pretty holiday wedding early this morning, when Miss Florence-- i-opg. daughter Vf Mr. and Mrs. WT VV. Long, became the bride of James W. Arnold.. Ropes of Christmas green and masses Qf brilliant holly were banked about the altar, the tall cathedral candles shedding their soft light over the holiday greens and silver vases fille '. with red roses. The Rev. Father, Borer read the marriage service. The bride was attended by bet sister, Miss Muriel Long, who wore a" smart model in dark blue georg ette with a brown satin hat and cor sage bouquet of sweet wtas. Mr. Joseph Curtis was best man. ;In a midnight blue satin gown tin bride was most attractive, a'Jargc black satin hat and corsage bouquet f bride's roses completing Iter coi tiime. Following .the ceremony a wed ding breakfast was scried at the Hotel Loyal for the members of the wedding party This evening a reception, will be given at the home of the bride' parents, when about 100 friends will call to extend their congratulations. ' Mr. and Mrs. At uoldi. will not take a wedding trip at . this time, , but will remain in Omaha to 'make their home. , i - , Hamilton-Murdock. Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Murtlock an-'- ttflunee We marriage of their daugh ter, Anna Maurine. to Charles Wil liam Hamilton, jr.. December 22, in JSVa'shingttdli; D. C. The ceremonv was performed at the home of Mr. and. Mrs.? C. D. Stapleton. . The bride was most attractive m . a'silk velvet taupe suit, with a car 's. sage bouquet of orchids. Mr. and k' . Mrs. Hamilton will make their home .. V in,Vasliiirgton until his. war work' is completed. ' i Christmas Dinner Party. - lr," and Mrs. Charles T. Kountre eutertained.at a family dinner party at their liome, Christmas day. In cluded in the party were Mr. and Mrs.' Osgood F.astnian, Miss Helen . F.astmau, Mr. Sherman Kuxton of Chicago, Miss Margaret F.astnian. Mrs. Robert, T. Burns and Mr. and Mrs Sam Burns. Mr. Ruxton, who 7 is artiest at the Eastman home, wHl remain until after New Year's. . For School Set. Small tables, cozily set for four dotted the oriental room at the Blackstone today, when Mrs. Ellen Coad Jensen entertawed at luncheon for her daughter, Miss Mercedes Jensen. Each tabk'was Hiost ar tistically decorated with baskets of holly and rose shaded candles and holiday favors marked 'the places of the following guests: mirsms Blouse and Hat That Are New ! Elizabeth Barker, Kleanor Burkeley, Dorothy Ar-ter, Katherine. Tartan, Pauline CobiI, Louise Clarke, Josephine Marple, Charlotte Todd, Heji-n Roger", Virginia t'rofoot, Margaret Wattles, Mary Wattles, Margaret Kiistman, Misses Kathryn Gardner, Katherine Davis, Virginia Tlxley, Rowena Plxley, Horothy Judson, Mildred Walker, De Weenta Conrad, Katherine Squires, Claire Daugherty, Helen Hdagland, Onnolee Mann, Klorice Shaw, Peggy Reed. For Red Cross Workejs. " Mrs Duffy, who was major of the thirH ward in the recent Red Cross Christmas roll call, will entertain the captains of her ward at luncheon at the Chamber of Commerce, Friday. Personals Omahans who spent the holidays in New Yorkstopping at the Hotel McAlpiu included: Mr. Ross Phil lips. Lt. J. J. Schmidt, Mr. G. F. Jennings,and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Rising. Capt. E.' A.' Van Fleet, now sta tioned at Austin, Tax., was to have received his majority Avhen pro motions were suspended, hut has now been made chief of the medical staff. Capt. L. C. Adcck of Waco, Tex., formerly a physician of Omaha, spent Christmas with Dr. and Mrs. A. A. Holtman. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fercior spent Christmas with relatives ,in Balti more. While in the east they will visit in Philadelphia spending New Year's day in New York;', Mrs. Josephfjcrinan, Miss Bcatta Drahos and Mr. Frank Drahos of West Point, 'Neb., were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Louis Horton on Christmas day. Mr. E. T. Riley of the radio serv ice, Ut this morning for Hampton Roads, where he is stationed, after spending Christmas with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Riley. Mr. and Mrs. 'Boyd Lawrence of Chicago and Ensign Jay Wallace Hughes of the naval aviation, sta tioned at Miami, Fla., are spending the week at thejionic qf Mr. and Mrs. J. a. tfcnucr, eurouie to ron land. Mrs. Lawrence was formerly Miss Florence Hughes, well known in musical circles here.y v DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY. By GERTRUDE BERESFORD. An exquisite shade of rose crepe de chine makes this smart peplum blouse, which is designed for wear beneath a topcoat or. long suit coat. The oblong vest is f.tgotted with heavy rope silk. This fagotting is an attractive method of fastening -4he vest to the blouse. A roll collar of ivory white clirmcuse makes a be coming "V" neck finish. The sides of this blouse are laid in pleats. The sleeves are fagotted above the narrow cuffs. The navy blue velour hat, which is worn with this blouse, is extremely new. The crown is copied from our soldiers' hats. It is embroidered with rose chenille. chenille pompom tops the crown. A Women's Hearts Hold Strange and Secret Chambers Where Queer Longings Find Encouragement i. 4 By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. t,t1",vO you beheve there is one ill great loye m a woman J- life?" a girl correspondent asks inc. Lovers and sceptics alike have for centuric9 demanded the answer ' to this question. Have the ages Turnisjied it? ' " ' So far, I think, only conditionally. Passionate; ringing answers there -, have been in plenty, but they vc been cries from individual hearts - And one 'heart's truth llyn't hy any means been truth for another. Many wise men have argued that '' t s lova is too vast and sublime a thin?! ' - to be limited by any single persou- ality. Love. is the reality, they say. ' - The man or .woman who is loved is merely the excuse for setting love ' free. Love once? Yes, by all means, if you've, a heart big enough for lov v "-. jg at all." Hut by same token, ieep on loving, even though you lose your beloved. Love twice, thrice.,. Love is as cxhaustlcss as sunshine. - ' ;. , And doubtless there are enough ' happy second marriages, 4or even ;- "" third marriages, to seem to fcstab- lish" the truth of this view. - And yet iliere are countless lov er who agree with Elizabeth Bar rett Browning, the great woman ' ioet. whose own love for her poet , husband ranks among the . great loves of history, that "love strikes one hour" and only one. If love is real, inists Mrs. Browning, .neither time nor separation nor deth can lossen it. and to speak of second love is, blasphemy. "Those never loved , , Who dream that they loved once, is her final challenge. And this i wtt the. unhappy girl ' who has written to me is herself ' inclined to believe. Listen to her ... s'ory. . ... "Three years ago, because of my parents disapproval, I broke with voung man. We were not engaged because mv people thought it was ' merelv a silly affair, as we were only IS and 191 years old. However, he married in a few months after our " - separation. I have traveled a great ' dear and have thought that I had forgotten himi 'I have, had Thsuty .- f;,iH anfl several suitors ap parently Much more desirable than he, and have been engaged to one man.- ' f "But as the time for our marriage drew near, a great fear came over me.athd I broke the engagement. I believe I was afraid rshould find out I really cared for the first one after I married. I am still afraid to take that -step.: : ' "Why can i know inrougn him'" w'heit he is anywhere near-ad how. after three long years, can I still tell his step anywhere? "I do know that he has a feeling for hie, but he is a man of high ideals and does not try to exercise 'any influence oyer me. i "Do you believe..-! love him, u there is one love only forN every . woman? Do you not believe I n right in remaining single? And yet, it isao loneiy. hasn't so far been successfully dis placed. And yet she is, of course, quite right in remaining single, how ever lonely it may be, until she finds a new love that is stronger than the old. 1 do not believe that she surren deed her only chance of a happy life when, to please licr parents, she re sisted her love for that 19-year-ohl boy. 'On the contrary, it seems to me that, with her capacity for love, she will undoubtedly in time meet some mail to whom she can give her whole heart. It is, I know, a temptation to be lieve that a thwarted love, or an un happily ended love, is the only love of one's life. It's a danger that I think women have especially to guard against. Sometimes it affords a not unpleasant kind of melancholy to believe that the man we shall never see again is the one man in the world we could ever have com pletely loved or been happy with. It helps us to dramatize our own experience, td be a greatjleal more interesting to 'ourselves' than wc should be otherwise. Once we be come convinced, of this, ,we can play betore our own mirrar, a nowncic LOVELORN By BEATRICE FAIRFAX My Hat Diary Carita Herzog THE CLOUD GIANTS. (Peggy goes to Cloudland, where Queen Crystal ak her to tame two lilanle. Blooey and BIIze.v, who are planning to start a billiard that win do great narm on earth.) w CHAPTER IV. y The Giants' Dungeon. TTTHAT will I do to stop YY them?" 'cried Peggy, ' when Queen Crystal told her she must prevent Blooey and Blizzy sweeping down upon the busycarth. "You know better than. I," tin kled the queen, "but be quick, quick-!" Saying that she and Freezer picked Peggy up and pushed Jier right into the periscope. "Whish-sh-shl" went Pegglhrough the tube before she could open her mouth to pro test. And in a second there she was in the dungeon with the two Giants. They were so busy that they did not see her. Blooey was blowing himself up with a bellows, just as if he were a balloon. Blizzy had in his mouth a tube from a tank mark ed "Liquid Air" aqd was filling himself just like an automobile get ting gasoline. "Oh, ho!" roared Blooey. "'11 tangle up the whole United States with swirling .snowdrifts. The peo ple will be a week digging them selves out. What fun!" "Whee-:e!"- wheezed Blizzy. "I'll nip every living" thing until it hides in terror from my blast or freezes up solid! What fun!" , ' "I'll stop all the coal trains first," roared Blooey. "That will smash business all to pieces." "And I'llNiip along with a cold wave that will 'curl their toes. Then we'll go down south and sweep the orchards bare. HVhat funPWhee ce!" whistled Blizzy. , Peggy grew indignant as she heard their boasts. She forgot that The Abandoned Room By Wadsworth Cam Not for a moment would I advise t.u idealistic vounsr eirl to remain tmmarried ; indefinitely merely be cause, the image of ner boj-Jover else, .the role.of unhappy heroine Bolh the happy married woman and the disappointed unmarried one incline to this belief that there can lie but one love in a lifetime.. But they speak only from their own ex-perience.-which has held "but one full sized love. How cau they speak for all the other women of thrtVorld?( for the wolneit who have large heartedly loved twice, or even-more, and who glory in it? And there are cases, I believe. ...I - ..-I 1, .,,-,,, Irvv. Inc WI1CIC A IHJIIiiai Human been touched by the magic wand of imagination. There, I think, is the secret of the whole matter, lt s tne highly imaginative worftan whose one great love lasts undiuimed to the day of her death. lt is the imaginative woman in whom a love of this sort comes to glem like, a golden thread winding through the plain-colored tapestry of a life that is actually filled with a calmly con tented marriage and happy mother hood. In the heart and mind of an im aginative woman her one great love becomes so rarefied and transformed that it doesn't really conflict with anv other human emotion: Do you remember the story, that Mark Twain teJlS about his mother? Itavinrr married voiinc. she snent a long life apparently j. perfect con-. tentment and neacerBoth as wife . and mother'' she seemed to have achieved unusually happy relation ships.' '-" ' And yet when she was a. very old lady she persuaded her grand daughter to take a long journey with her to a city where she had read that a youthful-lovtr of hers was to be seen. They missed him but the inci dent servedo reveal the fact Jhat this child-love, so delicate, so un dowered, thathe boy and girl had never even srwken of it to eath other, had throughout fourscore years dominated the imagipation of this irreproachable wife and mother. Women's hearts hold strange and secret chambers. It won t do to be too dogmatic as to what finds lodg ment, there. . . ' " ' :' ' : How Do You Know ? . Dear Misa Knit-fax, Omaha, Bee: T love a hoy" rind 1 know, that ho loves me, but ho ts too bashful to go with me. Should I go with differ ent boys, or should 1 not? Hoping to have an answer in the paper in the near future! I am 18 and he is 20 years uld. I'. K. How can you be sure that he loves you if he does, not tell youfo? 1 should certainly wast,e no time on a young man 20 years old who rould not take care of ltis own heart. A Sympathetic tiirl. Dear Miss Fairfax, Omaha Bee: I read about that "worried mother" this morning ind it sure set my hearf1 aching Tor the girl. I think that the mother certainly shows too much partiality toward the other children, don't you ? She said that my other daughters a"t)e quiet and very modest girls, the type of girl I admire." I know just such girls, and I know thaUstill water runs deep, doesn't it? Why shouldn t the girl t'link about having a good time? Everybody ought to. Doen that 'Iworried moth;" think the girl should work. sit around thinking of evil things, or o,f the dark and gloomy past, all hor life? Just think, a girl of 17, and only allowed owe night out a week! n hat harm would it do to go out al least twice a week, or even three times? If tho mother mistrusts the girl, once is enough, but she surely don't. T hated school, too, but I loyed college and I went there, and sure made good. Why don't that worried mother let the girl keep at hey draw ing: sue win niaite gooo. vvny should the girl complain while at home? I think I would act and be crazy, too, if I eouldn t have any enjoyment of life, especially when I am young. That mother sliould remember we're only young once, and when wa're old we're old a loug time. film said she had to "drive" the gin to her lessons. I've heard of driving cattle, sheep anc" horses, but never lieard of driving a child. Some mother! Just think': -our mothers are the dearest and nearest friends we've got. I don't blame the girl. 1 would never forgive a mother, either, if she punished me in front of my girl and boy friends. Why are you so strict with the girl? You must want to see how inhuman you can be to her She ought to ei joy your punishment, if .hat's all you've 'done all her life, punish hfer. Aren't you ashamed of yourself? I thought my mother was strict, and she certainly wps, but not to that extent. I should be very proud if I had daughter that popular. It Isn't everybody that has a very pop ular girl. WTiy shouldn't the girl Ijaye a word for everybody? . Do you expect her to stick her nose up and snicker at everybody? -'I don't blame the girl for doing only Red Cross work. I certainly ould, too, if I nan tne time ana op- I wouldn t turn my hand over to do anything else but Red Cross work. God bless the Red Crota workers. Iidon't-th-ink that worried mother hasa thing to worry about, do you? what has drawing and, painting done for Harol Brett, Millet and hundreds of others that have that great .talent? When tht worried mother knows it provokes the girl for reading- her letters, why doea.she do it? What harm is it for the girl to receive her own mail? It would be different if the girl was only 12 or 1 3 years old. i ,. Some day this will all come back, to that "worried mother," and it will be too late to ak,forgivenesa,-s per haps it already isS. . Why shouhr'the girl feel bad; when her brother left? I know wat it is. because my brother has gone, too, and we all sent him away with a smile and a cheer, the way very they were Giants. To her they now appeared as two monster, prankish boys, setting out on a mischieyous raid. "It will be a cruel, nieato trick," she cried. "You two lazy Giantsi ought to be ashamed of yourselves talking of such pranks when every one is so busy." ' Blooey and Blizzy looked around in astonishment. At first they couldn't see her and their eyes swept the dungeon up and dpwn jnd all about her before they found her. Then Blooey let out a roar that shnrrR '.the walls, while Blizzy whistled like a fire siren. "Ho, ho. whom have we here?" blustered Blooey. "She looks like a human. I'll freeze her," threatened Blizzy. "You're big enough to know bet ter than to rush around destroying things. It's a lot more fun build ing things up," argued Peggy. "Think how much suffering and loss you'll cause sending a blizzard down upon the earth." "You're an impudent meddler," and I know he felt better than if we all cried and grieved over him, and I'll wager your boy would have felt the same. Some clay you won't have your jewel, as Beatrice Fairfax called her, and you 11 be sorry you have pun ished her so much. A SYMPATHIZER. The girl's mother is not altogether to blame. She merely doesn't un derstand "the girl. I am sure she doesn'()nean to be cruel to her. Has a Fickle Lover. Pear Miss Fairfax: t have been going about with a young man for a year. As he was a college student 1 did not "expect him to spend any money on ..ie. Nowthis young man tells my girl friend that there can never be anything between us. I Move liinf very dearly and it breaks my heart to give him up. tfte is al ways telling me of his good times, but never takes me any place. s 4Ve were going be married when he had finished college. HEARTBROKEN REG. You should not accept any go-between in a matter of this sort.' Have a thorough-going talk with v the young man himself and find but whether he does not intend to keep his promise to you, and why. If he lids beeM -insincere and inconstant I am deeply sorry for the pain thi will cause you, but I can give you no other advice, in that case, than to put him out of your mind as prompt ly as possible. ( An, Employer's Attentions. Dear MJss Fairfax: I am a girl of 20 and considered good-looking. I have a fine position as a stenog rapher. My smployer is unmarried and aBqut 40. Irately he hs begun to mak"e me little presents. .1 shouldn't think anything about this if I hadn't heard so much about girls having to be careful in regard to their employers. .We don't have much .conversation except on busi ness, but I know he likes me. What sharfl I do? I don't want him to think me old-maidish, i E. F. G. It Is quite1 true that you must be onsyour guard in a case like this. I suppose you understand . that you must not accept presents of any value, either from your employer or from any other man to -whom you are not engaged. But if these gifts are of merely trifling value it is prob ably not wortlv while to take a stand In regard to them. Discourage him indirectly, instead, in such a way that neither of you will become self conscious. A girl Is, of course, at You krlow, just mad aboit rat time. Since the war soMiiany clever pieces have been writtenand I'm qu.ite wild about them. Last evening a crowd of us went over to GraceBowen's. She plays wonder fully" on the piano and her brother Ralph is rather clever with t ie ban jo, so between the two we had a regular "jazz" band. , We danced un til Nancy Hippie came over and we coaxed her to sing some funny songs for us. She hasvsuch a charming manner and is rathet attractive, too. Last evening she wore a fetching little hat. it was realjy a tain, made of black chiffon velvet. It was high on the right side and pulled way over on the left. Two large silk tassels hung from underneath the side that came over. I cotnd view the hat so well as Nancy sang her songs. w . whistled Blizzy. He blew an icy breath at Peggy and instantly the the misty air of which she was com posed turned to frost. But it didn't hurt Peggy a bit, and the ef fect was simply to make her more visible something like ,a ghost of Tier own self, but a very pretty ghost of dazzling whiteness. "Oh, 'hoL Isn't s'lc a beauty!" roared Blooey. With that he puffed out his cheeks and blew. And he blew so strongly that his breath burst the walls of the dungeon asun der and sent Peggy flying far, far out into space. As she whirled along she fcTlmd herself amid a multitude of Snow Elves jovfullv dancing toward the earth. But the joy of the Elves turned into fear as tliev saw her. "It's Princess Peggy," they chor used. ' "She fran't tame the Cloud Giants. Woe, woe to the earth." "Ho, ho! This blizzard is going to be a record-breaker," roared the voice' of Blooey far above. ' "Whee-ce! Wliee-ee! 1111 make the bottom drop out of Vic ther mometer, shrieked Blizzy. PcggjY looking hack, saw the two Giants tear out of their dlungeon and hurl themselves against one of the Cloud 'storehouses.. lhy burst h to pieces and with mighty blasts sent the stored up ( Snow Imps sweeping in a blind, swirling mass toward the earth. "Stop the. Giants, Princess Peg gy I Save your fellow humans!" cried (Jucrn Crystal, appearing amid the ruins of the storehouse. Peggy gave one look toward the busy world below, with its heaped tip trains of coal and food and sup plies that would be quickly snowed under if the Giafcts were not halted; then she darted swift as an arrow upward to where Blooey and Bnzzy were turning their prankish frenzy towatManothcr of the many cloud storehouses. She was determined now to tame them. ' (Tomorrow will be told how foggy trips to conquer Blooey and Bltay. ) Industrial Training is Welcomed in Chicago The scope of the industrial train ing school established in the Wash burn School building in Chicago has been greatly increased, even during the period of its inauguration, ac cording to reports, reaching tli training and dilution service of the United States Department of Labor. Everything is re.ady for the recep tion of s tudenlsxon a larger scale even than at first Contemplated, and a considerable number already has registered. "The Chicago Board of Education, which originally a.greed to con tribute $5,000 to the school, has bc conie Sonuchimpressed . witli its possibilities that it lias spent $20, 000 on it. The ciry furnishes the teachers. he manufacturers have greatly increased the amount of machinery introduced for use in the courses, which iuclude all the modem equip ment of a machine shop, such as screw and milling machines, shan ers, lathes and all the other work ing apparatus of the practical ma chinist, t v The training and dilution seryice has supplied one pf its assistant superintendents, an experienced pro duction engineer, to get the school started property.'- The students, instead of acquiring merelv a. facility in one operation. learn the mechaiical theory involved in their work", and also its practical aspect from every angle. When they leave it they will be not only good machine operators, but on the road to. become exper. machjjists. CHAPTER XXXVIII. The Search is Rewarded. "I may witness this outrage?" Bobby asKed. - "I'd rather you didn't speak of it 1n such harsh terms," Robinson smiled. Bobby didn't know what to ex pect. The whole thing might be a trick of Parades', in line with his h'nts the night of Howells' death, to involve Katherine. The quiet confidence of the two officials was disturbing. What had Kawiins seen? After a long ime Graham de fended the private staircase carry ing a lighted candle. He beckoned and they followed him back through the private hall into the wide and mournful bedroom. It en couraged Bobby to see the district attorney and the detective hurry across it. After all, they were really without confidence of solving its ghostly riddle. What they were about to, do, he argued, was a last chance. They would acknowledge rhcmselve&vbcaten. When they entered the farther wing he noticed that Karflerine's door stood wide. "When I called her," Graham ex plained, "she thought something bad happened to her grandfather. She ran out." "And forgot all about the door," Robinson grinned: "That's lucky. Now, Rawlins." Bobby couldn't bring himself to cross- the threshold, but from corridor lie could-ece the interior of the room and all that went on there during the next few moments. A candle burned on the bureau, expos ing the feminine neatness and deli cacy of the furnishings. The pres ence of the three men. was a dese cration; what they were about to do an unforgivable act of vandalism. Rawlins went to a work table while Robinson rummaged in the closet. Graham, meantime, bent against the footboard of the bed, watching with anxious eyes. Bobby's anger was increased by this picture, lie resisted an impulse to run to the stairs and tall Katherine up. That would simply increase Robinson's suspicions. There was nothing she could do, nothing he could do. Rawlins had clearlybcen unsuc cessful at the work table. He glided to the bureau. One after the other he opened the drawers, tumbling within, lifting the contents out, re placing them with a rough haste while Bobby's futile rage increased. Suddenly he saw Graham's atti tude alter. Rawlins' back stiffened. "Conic here, Mr.' Robinson," he said softly. RobinVon left the closet .and stooped beside the detective. Nlc exclaimed. Graham went closer, looking over their backs. "You'd better sec, Bobby," he said, without turning. "Yes," Robinson said, "Let tne show you how wrong you were, Mr. Blackburn. Let me ask if you knfiw you wereAvrong." Bobby entered with a quicker pulse. He, stooped and looked in (be opening. Abruptly everything altered for him. He wondered that his physical surroundings should re main the same, that the eager faces beside him should retain their fa miliar lines. Against the back-board of the Ju rc'au. where it would lit neatly when the drawer was in place, lay a pms tcr cast of a footmark. Near by v as a rumbled handkerchief that Bobby recognized as his own. and the enve one containinar Howells rc- p.ort which they had told Jenkins to hide. Well?" Robinson grinned. 'I swear I didn't know they were there," -Bobby ausWercd. "You II never make me believe that Katli ci ine knows it." 'I've guessed, Rawlins said, that the stuff was hidden here ever since this afternoon when I saw a small bundle sneaked in." 'Who brought it. Bobby look him up. Robinson s grin expanded. "Leave us one or two surprises to spring in court. , i lien, Bobby said, "my cousin vvasn t in the room wiien mis evi dence was brought here" "I'll admit that. Rawlins an swered, Out sue wasuj lai aw.iy, and she got here before I could in vestigate, and she s kept the door locked ever since until just now." tie lift cd the exhibits out. I he shape of the cast, the monogram on the handkerchief cried out tne ir testiniony. t Robinson grasped llowclls report uul glanced over the line handwrit ing. Alter a tunc he lgoked up. "There's the case against you, Mr. Blackburn, and at the least your cousin's an accessory. But why the devil did yon come to me and make a clean breast of it? "Because," Bobby cried, "I didn't know anything about these things being here. Can't you see that?" "That's the trouble," Robinson answered uncertainly, "I think I do see it." "Besides," Graham said, "you're still without the instrument that caused death." "1 expect to land it in this room," Rawlins answered grimly. He replaced the Jrawer and con tinued to fumble aindng the clothing it contained. All at once he called out and raised his hand. On the ore Minger a tiny red stain showed. "How did you do that?" Robinson asked. x "Something pricked iiie," the de tective answered. "Maybe it was only a pin, but it might .have been " Excitedly he resumed his search. He took the clothing from the draw- WARL PUZZLES er and threw it" to one side. Noth ing remained in the drawer. "1 guess rt must have been a pin," f Robinson laitk disappointed. , ; But Rawlins took up each article if ot clothing and examined it mi-; nutely. His face brightened. ; "Here's something stiff. " By gad,. I believe I've got it!" Concealed in a woolen sack, witl: i the sltNider shaft thrust through anc . through the folds, was a peculiarly lone, stout, and sharivJiat pin. Raw lins drew it out. He held it up tn uumhantlv. ! ....: i t,1 . fe IV UHllllUtU lUILIUIlun; "Vj i Guests of Queen. Quests of Queen Alexandra, vis iting Marlborough llouse for ti;e first time, are always shown the iamous treasure reom, wnere arc ,ri displayed the great array of gold ) and silver and other works oi art ;,J presented from time to timejo the JJ late King Edward VII. The value h of the contents ol this room ha! jj been roughly estimated at $10,000,- jl. 000. It is difficult to convey in words y I any idea of the wealth of treasure jl here revealed, and all of which was !jf bequeathed to Queen Alexandra as t her personl property. J ne wans oi the room are lined with immense glass, ebony-bound cases, crammer) with gold and 'silver treasures hugt Pilgrim bottles, immense gold'' and silver drinking cups,, shields ol Oriental designs, ornaments ot every sort. . One case alone con tains 24 silver tea services, 20 din ner services, .one a thousand mas sive silver candlesticks. And this is one of the smallest cases. Many banks areN now employ'inji women department heads to look at" ter the needs of their women clients. THE ENEMY LEFT MANY DEAD On the battlefield in Verdun sector after two unsuccessful attacks, one year ago today, December 27, 1917. Fnd another wounded soldier. YESTERDAY'S ANSWER Upside down at left shoulder. The Trade Mark here shown is on every-. wrapper of genuine l tmtm immm kmwxitomxi) MANAVrSTA, . The Grapefruit of.' ' Superior Flavor. Trimble Brothers Oroafck Wholesale Distributors. body should send-their dear ones, I a,j candy. v- . , v sliwHttfs WliLx:- THEBES! MACAR0I!l WEST LAWN CEMETERY -' Beautiful, modern park plan ceme tery aeceaibl to Omaha'a best resi-' dencc taction, ' family lota on partial payment at time of burial. Telephone Walnut 820 and Douglaa 829. Our free automobile is at your service. west LAWN CEMETERY,' S8tb and Center. Office 15th & Harney. The Master Salesman' Is in the" Goods v 4 That's why dealers find Charter Oaks easily sold. v . -' . It's their 70 years' record of perfect operation, economy in fuel and long service that creates the demand. - r !f3000 dealers inlU. . ld5 dealers m fr St. u i s sell . them. ' li your dealer tries , to talk you int6' . buying another'.' kind write to us. FOR COAL, WOOD OR GAS Charter Oak Stove & Range Co., ST. LOUIS, MO. j mm STRENGTH FOR THE DAYS WORK ini these times of food consei? vnisnoloiraproblem for the man or woman who knows SlhireddedMiieat r It is the whole wheaf-nothingwas-fed.The most real Rod for the . least money-and it is reacfywoked andreadyrto-eatNo siigaf jsre- quired-sjmply milk and adashofsalf. ua" Y 1 (i