12 THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1919. ARREST KELLY'S BROTHER 6 TIMES IN BUT SIX DAYS South Side Police Judge Says v Men Sent to His Court Won't Be "Rail roaded." Arrested six times in six days Tom Kelly, 1606 Laird street, brother of the muchly sought Roy Kelly, appeared in South. Side po lice court Wednesday morning along with Jimmy Cosgrove, 1808 Grace street, charged with vagrancy. The pair were arrested while leaving the Central station Tuesday and taken to the South Side jail to be tried before Judge Foster. "It's all spite work," the two de clared. "They think we've got whisky. Captain Heitfeld told Of ficers Kane and Trapp that Judge roster would send us up for VU days." Kelly was arrested Thursday at the Central station. Wednesday he was arrested by Officer Croft for operating an auto without a license. Tuesday he was charged with shooting with intent to kill, re sisting an officer and speeding. Ac cording to Kelly, the complaints were sworn out in succession after he had been discharged on each previous count. He was fined $12.50 for speeding and then rearrested i and taken to the south bide 'sta tion as a "vag." Cosgrove was arrested while tak ing ice to a prisoner in the city jail. He asserts he has been arrested four times in the last week. Because of lack of evidence the case was continued until Thursday. "If those people up there think they can send a man down here and have me 'railroad' him to jail, they're off," said Judge Foster when the arresting officers failed to produce evidence of vagrancy. THE WOMAN IN BLACK By EDMUND CLERIHEW BENTLEY Copyright. 1919, by the Century Company. Pickp i . r i ocKet relieves Traveler of $119 as He Waits for Train Pickpockets, taking advantage of Phillip Stein's interest in the com ing and outgoing trains at the Union station, relieved him of more than $11(a Mr. Stein resides at Pickrel, Neb., and was awaiting the arrival of his train. He reported his loss to the police. Miss Hazel Du Bois suffered a loss of $12.50 through the activities of the thieves. Her purse contain ing that amount was stolen from the cloakroom of a candy store at Sixteenth street and Capitol avenue, according to her report to police. , A forged order for $27 on Albert Clayton, an employe of the Hanni gan Plumbing company, was cashed at the company offices by a man giv ing him name as George Hawkins. T. Hannigan, jr., reported the forgery to the police. Belgian King and Queen to Be Guests at White Houss Washington, July 30. King Al bert and Queen Elizabeth of Bel gium will be guests at the White House during their visit to the United States this fall, probably in October. . Elaborate plans for their enter tainment are being prepared by the State department. , "BAXER CROSS" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN CHAPTER XXXVII. Manufacturing the Alibi. "As you found out for yourself, Mr. Trent, I have a natural gift of mimicry. I had imitated Mander son's voice many times so success fully as to deceive even Bunner, who had been much more in his company than his own wife. It was, you remember," Marlowe turned to Mr. Cupples "a strong, metallic voice, of great carrying power, so unusual as to make it a very fas cinating voice to imitate, and at the same time very easy. I said the words carefully to myself again, like this " he uttered them, and Mr. Cupples opened his eyes in amazement "and then I struck my hand upon the low wall beside me. 'Manderson never returned alive?' 1 said aloud. 'But Manderson shall return alive I' "In thirty seconds the bare out line of the plan was complete in my mind. I did not wait to think over details. Every instant was precious now; I lifted the body and laid it on the floor of the car, coy- 1 : 1 T . !. . A ereu wuu a rug. x iuuk uic uai aim the revolver. Not one trace - re mained on the green, I believe, of that night's work. As I drove back to White Gables my design took shape before me with a rapidity and ease that filled me with a wild ex citement. I should escape yetl It was all so easy if I kept my pluck. Putting aside the unusual and un likely, I should not fail. I wanted to shout, to scream! Nearing the house I slackened speed, and care fully reconnoitered the road. Noth ing was moving. I turned the car into the open field on the other side of the road, about 20 paces short of the little door at the extreme corner of the grounds. I brought it to rest behind a sack. When, with Manderson's hat on my head and the pistol in my pocket, I had staggered with the body across the moonlit road and through that door, I left much of my apprehension be hind me. With swift action and an unbroken nerve, I thought I ought to succeed." With a long sigh Marlowe threw himself into one, of the deep chairs at the fireside, and passed his hand kerchief over his damp forehead. Each of his hearers, too, drew a deep breath, but not audibly. "Everything else you know," he said. He took a cigarette from a box beside him and lighted it. Trent watched the very slight quiver of the hand that held the match, and privately noted that his own at the moment was not so steady. "The shoes that betrayed me to you," pursued Marlowe after a short silence, "were painful all the time I wore them, but I never dreamed that they had given anywhere. I knew that no footstep of mine must appear by any accident in the soft ground about the hut where I laid the body, or between the hut and the house, so I took the shoes off and crammed my feet into them as soon as I was inside the little door. I left my own shoes, with my own jacket and overcoat, near the body, ready to be resumed later. I made a clear footmark on the soft gravel outside the French window, and sev eral on the drugget round the car pet. The stripping off of the outer clothing of the body and the dress ing of it afterwards in the brown suit and shoes, and putting the things into the pockets, was a hor rible business; and getting the teeth out of the mouth was worse. The head . . . but you don't want to hear about it. I didn't feel it much at the time. I was wriggling my own head out of a noose, you see. I wish I had thought of pulling down the cuffs, and had tied the shoes more neatly. And putting the watch in the wrong pocket was a bad mistake. It had all to be done so hurriedly. "You were wrong, by the way, about the whisky. After one stiffish drink I had no more; but I filled up a flask that was in the cupboard, and pocketed it. I had a night of peculiar anxiety and effort in front of me, and I didn't know how 1 should stand it. I had to take some once or twice during the drive. Speaking of that, you give rather a generous allowance of time in your document for doing that run by night. You say that to get to South ampton by half-past six in that car under the conditions, a man must, even if he drove like a demon, have left Marlstone by 12 at latest. I had not got the body dressed in the other suit, with tie and watch-chain and so forth, until nearly 10 min utes past; and then I had to get to the car and start it going. . . . But then I don't suppose any demon would have taken the risks I did in that car at night, without a head light. It turns me cold to think of it now. "There's nothing much to say about, what I did in the house. I spent the time after Martin had left me in carefully thinking over the remaining steps in my plan, while I unloaded and thoroughly cleaned the revolver, using my hand kerchief and a penholder from the desk. I also placed the packets of notes, the note case and the dia monds in the roll-top desk, which I opened and re-locked with Man derson's key. When I went up stairs it was a trying moment, for though I was safe from the eyes of Martin as he sat in his pantry, there was a faint possibility of somebody being about on the bedroom floor. I had sometimes found the French maid wandering about there when the other servants were in bed. Bun ner, I knew, was a deep sleeper. Mrs. Manderson, I had gathered from things I had heard her say, was usually asleep by 11; I had thought it possible that her gift of sleep had helped her to retain all her beauty and vitality in spite of a marriage which we all knew was an unhappy one. Still, it was un easy work mounting the stairs and holding myself ready to retreat to the library again at the least sound from above. But nothing happened. "The first thing I did on reaching the corridor was to enter my room and put the revolver and cartridges back in the case. Then I turned off the light and went quietly into Manderson's room. "What f I had to do there you know. I had to take off the shoes and put them outside the door, leave Manderson's jacket, waistcoat, trousers and black tie, after taking everything out of the pockets, select a suit and tie and shoes for the body, and place the dental plate in the bowl, which I moved from the washing stand to the bedside, leav ing those ruinous finger-marks as I did so. The marks on the drawer musrhave been made when I shut it after taking out the tie. Then I had to lie down in the bed and tumble it. You know all about it all except my state of mind, which you couldn't imagine, and I couldn't describe. "The worst came when I had hardly begun my operations; the moment when Mrs. Manderson spoke from the room where I sup posed her asleep. I was prepared for it happening; it was a possibili ty; but I nearly lost my nerve all the same. However. . . . (Continued Tomorrow.) VICTIM OF AUTO ACCIDENT DIES OF HIS INJURIES Harry Bierbower, Struck by Car Last Friday, Succumbs In Hospital From Internal Hurts. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to be genuine must be marked with the safety "Bayer Cross." Always buy an unbroken Bayer package which contains proper directions to safely relieve Headache, Toothache, Ear ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents at drug stores larger packages also. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manu facture of Monoaceticacidester of ' Salicylicaoid. Adv. Bad Sickness Caused by Acid-Stomach . Hpeopleonjtreallxed thebeaWj-deatroTtac werol an leM-etomsco-ol the many kinds ot sickness and misery it cause ol tbe Hvea it literally wreck lUcy would guard a ainsl H carefully a the do acainal deadly plague. Ton know in an instant the flrataymp toma ot aoid-stomacb-palns ot indlgestioa: diMreMlDt;. painful bloat; aour. gamy stom ach: bdebing: food repeating; heartburn, ttc. WheDerei your atomacn feels this way you should lose no time in putting it to right If yon don't, serious coneeqntncea are almost lore to follow, such as Intestinal fermentation, aato-tatoifcatlon, impairment of the entire nervous system, headache, biliousness, cir rhosis of the liver; sometimes even catarrh of tbe stomach and intestinal utoera and cancer. It you are not feeling right, see if it isn't cld-stomsch that is the causa of your 111 health. Take EATON IC, the wonderful mod ern stomach remedy. BATON 10 Tablets quickly and surely relieve the pain, bloat, belching, and beartbnrn that Indicate acid stomach. Make the stomach strong, clean ndsweet By keepingthestomachtnhealtfay condition so that you can get full strength from your food, your general health steadily Improves. Result are marvelously quick. J oat try EATON 1C and you will be a enthu siastic a the thousand who have used it and who ay they never dreamed anything could . bring such marvelous relief. So get a big SO-ceot box ol EATON IC from your druggist today. It not satisfactory r torn it and he will refund your money. ATONIC ( irOH TOPR ACm-STOMAOQ IF njRUISES-CUTS I KL. Cleans thoroughly H JJ reduce in flam - nation by cold wt .'compress apply lightly, without friction VICICS VAP0R1 mm 20 Opening of Specialty Shop Realizes Life Dream of Omaha Man With the opening of Sommer's Specialty Shop in the Brandeis thea ter building at least one Omaha man's life dream has come true. About 20 years ago a young emi grant landed in Omaha. He was broke, could not speak the Amer ican language and friendless. As soon as he learned to pronounce a few words he qualified as a delivery boy, and from that time on applied himself to the retail food business until he had the finest grocery store in Omaha. When his Dundee store had been made a part of the aristocratic su burban life his eyes turned to thei heart of Omaha's shopping district, and as a result Sommer's Specialty Shop is Omaha's newest venture. It has long been Louis Sommer's dream to have a specialty food shop second to none in the middle west, and he has achieved his object, as the world's markets have been searched for delicacies which appeal to epicureans who have been unable to satisfy their desires in Omaha. The Sommer's Specialty Shop is in a class bv itself, as no other Omaha merchant has attempted to Former Chancellor of Huns to Start Suit Against Erzberger Berlin, July 30. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Dr. Karl Helfferich, the former vice chancellor, announc ed today that, having failed to induce Mathias Erzberger to sue him, he will enter suit against Erzberger "to prove him a liar and traitor and bring the truth to light." A Berlin dispatch July 2 reported that Dr. Helfferich, writing in the Kreuz Zeitung, blamed the Reich stag's peace program of July, 1917, fathered by Erzberger, for the moral collapse of the German people. Dr. Helfferich charged that Erz berger had staged a parliamentary revolution without informing the government and added that Erz berger's action was undertaken at the instigation of Count Czernin, then Austro-Hungarian foreign minister. Harry Bierbower, 35 years old, 1101 North Eighteenth street, died at St. Joseph s hospital yesterday morning of internal injuries suffered when he was struck by an automo bile last Friday night. The automo bile was driven by R. A. Carrington, 4808 Dodge street, advertising man ager of The Bee. Bierbower was struck as he alight ed from a street car between Far nam and Dodge streets, on Tenth, where the street car tracks intersect a railroad line. Mr. Carrington at once took him in his auto to the home of his father-in-law, Patrick Riordam, 805 North Twentieth street, and he walked into the house. A later and fuller examination dis covered internal injuries. A report of the accident was made to the police by Mr. Carrington and also by the crew of the street car. The car men said Bierbower, alighted from the car while it was in motion, after the conductor had gone on ahead to flag the crossing. He stepped backward into the path of Carrington's automobile Mr. Carrington left for New York Saturday on a business trip that had been arranged for some time before with no idea the accident would prove serious. He is to be gone ten days. Funeral services will be held at the home of Patrick Riordan, 805 North Twentieth street, Friday morning at 8:30, and at the Holy Family church at 9. Burial will be in Holy Sepulcher cemetery. A coroner's inquest will be held when Mr. Carrington returns from the east. Limit Iowa Land Loans to $100 Per Acre On All Farms George Messenger, superintendent of the Iowa state banking board, has advised that all Iowa state banks hold their farm loans down to not exceed $100 an acre, regardless of location of lands and improvements thereon. It is said that in many portions of Iowa within the last six months im proved farms have jumped to $350 and $400 an acre and at these prices, many sales have been made. In many instances" it is said that the sales have been made on a cash pay ment of $5,000 to $8,000 on a 160 acre tract and that banks have car ried the mortgages for the balance. According to Omaha bankers and loan and trust companies, no sug gestion has been made by the state banking board of Nebraska relative to the amount per acre of loans that should be carried back on farm sales. My HEART and My HUSBAND Adele Garrison's New Phase of Revelations of a Wife Creighton U. Student Falls Part Heir to Large Estate Richard Collins, 22-year-old fresh man at the Creighton Medical col lege, has fallen part heir to the $150,000 estate of his uncle, Richard T. Shea, wealthy New York bachelor, who died last summer, ac cording to word received here yes terday. Young Collins is now spending the summer vacation at the home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Col lins, 406 West Nevada street, Mar shalltown, la. While in Omaha he lives at the home of Miss N. Ken ney, 506 North Thirtieth street. He came to Omaha three years ago from Marshalltown. He is a graduate of the high school of that city and attended the Creighton College of Arts and Sciences two years preparatory to entering the medical college. Fremonters Buy Plane Here; Will Fly It Home Tuesday A party of Fremont men, headed by Frank Koss, well known Dodge county sportsman, Tuesday pur chased a Canadian army airplane from the J. T. Stewart Motor Co., of this city. This plane will be used for exhibition flights in Fremont and nearby towns. Mr. Koss will arrive in Omaha today with a former aviation lieutenant, E. J. Robins, to take over the plane and fly it back to Fremont. 200 Yanks Ask Leave to Bring Home Hun Wives Washington, July 30. Two hun dred American soldiers have filed requests to bring home German : r - x . ir i i j, i . i- . . wives, ivcpiescniauvc rving, rcpuo- ' 2l3 thC hlg;h.eSt grade.of!lican. Illinois, declared today on his food products, regardless of price. The new shop is to be a one-price venture. No seconds will be carried or sold, Louis Sommer staking his reputation and investment on the theory that Omaha has now reached that stage in development when enough of its people have been edu cated to the point where the best is none too good for them. The new shop is the last word in high grade food products, much of the stock being imported. It has been named the Specialty Shop for the reason that the one specialty featured in its stock is the absolute high grade products brought to Omaha for the first time. return from a six weeks tour of European countries and the war zone. Representative King ex plained an injury to his left wrist by saying that he and some other con gressmen were stoned at Brest "by a bolshevik." New York Price of Eggs 1911 to 1918 Klt-lov. ISe. blfh. Ut mi-law. lie bith. 43c lllV-Uw. lie bith. 5c Ult-Loa. lie kith. 40 HU-low. to. htth. 45e IMS-Low. 22c. bits, SZe l917-.Lov. 91c. bifli. Ste 111! Low, Mc. klh. 7M Put op erft now.wljlf they are ebtmpmt No matter what th pne u at priant. It wih ooacioMxt winter. EGG-O-LATCM kwp rn perfect frail fret pro or rummer thraagb the following winter at cost of one cent doxen. Easilr end quickly applied Efs ere kept in box or egg case in cellar. warae. ra rreen Two alio SOe lar for M doten ergs, and aH W fcv. eaoogh for 100 dose We mail postpaid. GEO. H. LEE CO.. mriei'st OMAHA. NEB. fa sale at Drag. Poultry ouppur and Eeed Stores Strike Demoralizes Hog . Market; Shipments Light Chicago, July 30. Big reductions i in receipts of live stock hre today reflected knowledge by rural ship- ! pers that owing to race riots and la- j bor difficulties the narWinc rioiispc ! would be greatly hampered. Ar-' rivals of hogs totaled only 13,000. about one-third of a normal supply. ! Owing to this curtailment, prices which yesterday were cut $1.25 a 1 hundredweight in some cases began ! to rally this morning. j War Department Orders. Washington, July 30. (Special Tele- I gram.) Capt Richard J. Gurvine. air ! service, Is relieved from his present duties at San Francisco, and will proceed to Omaha. Col. Herman Hall. Infantry, la relieved from his present duties at Camp Dodge and will proceed to Camp Travis. Texas. Upon the expiration of his sick leave. Col. Erie D. Luce, infantry, will proceed I to Des Moines and report for discharge. Capt William S. McWade. Infantry, is j relieved from his present duties at th , Minneapolis high school. Minneapolis, and I wlU proceed to camp for discharge. i LA ARMIDA 0 Cigars Are Made tentet Hands K Sanitary FaCl0ry" Havana f Taste Tells SIMON BROS. Distributors Why Madge Kept Her News to Herself. Alice Holcomb took the school re ports from me with hands that trembled visibly. Her eyes were full of tortured auestioning which I knew, of course, she could not voice. How I longed to tell her what I had just discovered that she, herself, none other was the woman me mentos of whom Kenneth Stock bridge cherished in his desk. But my lips were sealed not only by the prohibitive inscription the principal had left in his desk, but by the conviction that the general situation surrounding the principal of the Bayview school, resembled a highly inflammable pile of wood, which needed only a light. And I had no intention whatever of apply ing a match to it. One question, entirely legitimate, left her lips. "Had Milly donemuch damage?" "I don't think so," I returned promptly. "She stirred things up considerably, evidently in the hunt for something nersonal among tne pile of school papers. But none of I the reports or other papers were missing, that I could see. 1 straight ened things out as well as I could and locked the desk again. There were few personal belongings of Mr. Stockbridge. The drawers were nearly filled with school papers. Here are the keys." Alice Holcombe Troubled. She took them mechanically and stood silent, evidently in deep, trou bled thought for a minute or two. I had purposely made my voice and words as matter-of-fact and reassur ing as I could, but I could not tell how much weight she had given to them. "I'm afraid she has taken papers away with her," she said at last. "I don't think so," I returned. "She had nothing in her hands when she went down the walk that day. AMFSEMENTS Many Clean Amusement BATHING DANCING-RIDES THRILLS PICNIC GROUNDS FREE ATTRACTION THIS WEEK Aronty Brothers m Their Awe-inspiring Novelty Act on the High Double Perch at 9 o'clock. By the way, have you heard anything from her? "Not a word. And that worries me more than an outburst of some kind from her. I know she is well, for I met Christine this morning on my way to school, and she had just come on an errand from there. If Milly had been sick, she would have told' me. No, she is plotting some devilment. If only Mr. Stockbridge could stay for a week or two, she would wear her temper-all out plan ning, and be quite tractable by the time he gets home." "Do you know when he will be back?" I asked. "Probably tomorrow, perhaps not until the day after. And when he comes, look out for trouble. I only wish I could foresee what form it would take. But here come our wards. How I'd like to be Herod for about an hour or two! You and I would have a vacation." "Yes, until the sheriff got here," I answered, smiling at her absurdity, trying to meet her ironical mood. "How bloodthirsty you arel" Positively cannibalistic, she re torted, as she turned to go into her classroom. I noted the tired droop of her head, the languid gait, the listless attitude, so different from her usual appearance, knew that the emotions which had been swaying her for the last day or two had woefully sapped the springs of her wonderful vitality. Fear of what jealous-crazed Milly Stockbridge might do was mingled with her own emotional speculation as to the mysterious tokens in the desk' of the man for whom she cared so deeply. I could take away one part of her burden with a word. I took a step toward her, opened my lips to call her, then sternly sup pressed the impulse. I must not let myself be affected by the tempestu ous emotional atmosphere in which I was moving. There must be one sane, unaffected mind, I told myself grimly, in this bizarre drama which Milly Stockbridge was staging. But whatever was in the mind of the principal's wife, she gave no sign of making any disturbance through this second day of Mr. Stockbridge's absence. And when I left the school house late in the afternoon, after working with Alice Holcombe to clear up all the work possible, she had made no sign. (Continued tomorrow.) Divorce Courts Emilie Genho asks the district court for a divorce from Elias Genho on the erounds of cruelty. She also asks for the custody of her five ch'il dren. They were married at Hast ings, Neb., in 1889. Desertion is the grounds on which Theresa Zimmerman petitions the district court for a divorce fro n El bert Zimmerman. They were mar ried in Omaha on July 7, PJ13. Blanch Casev savs Stephen J. Ca sey deserted her in a petition for di vorce filed in district court, liiey were married in Memphis, lenn., m 1912. Lenora M. Shipley was given a di vorce from Allen H. Shipley on the grounds of desertion and her maiden name, Lenora M. McCartney, was restored. A Hivnrri from Daniel M. Wil liams and the custody of one child was given Lily b. Williams oi. tne grounds of cruelty. A decree giving George R. Wyrick PHOTOPLAYS. PHOTOPLAYS. Everybody Come! COLUMBIA THEATER (10th and Hickory Sts.) - Thursday, July Slat, 1919 Irene CaatI in "GIRL FROM BOHEMIA" Saturday, Aug. 2nd, 1919 William S. Hrt in "The Square-Deal Man" and Comedy Florence Reed in "The Woman Under Oath" A Story of New York's First Woman Jurist. It Thrill and Grips, and Then a Great Surprise. w La Constance Talmadge in "Betsy' Burglar" New' Show Today NELL ELSING & COMPANY: DELMORE FISHER . DELMORE; STONE & MANNING: BILLY KELGARD. Photoplay Attraction BESSIE BARRI8BALE In "The Womsn Michael Man-Its'" BASE BALL ROURKE PARK July 29, 30, 31. Game called at 3:30 p. m. OMAHA vt. SIOUX CITY Box aeata on sale at Barkalow Bros. Cigar Store, 16th and Farnam. TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY THE NEW ART FILM COMPANY PRESENTS fj r .A. ir fiOROTHy t "T WChuimxmLQktuj "- CpammounlCpklurv A Burlesque Trayesty on "Wild and Movie West" Chicago Balloon Disaster in which 12 people in bank are killed as a big blimp balloon explodes and falls flaming through the roof shown in Pathe News. a divorce from Philomena E. Wy rick was awarded in district court. Jennie L. Stewart charges Wil liam J. Stewart with nonsupport and being a professional gambler in a petition filed in district court for a divorce. They were married in Omaha in 1912. Aged Woman Dies Miss Eliza J. Anderson, 77 years old, died yesterday at the Old People's Home on Fontenelle boulevard. Miss Anderson was born January 25, 1842, at Burling ton, la. She came to the home No vember IS, 1913. The funeral will be held Thursday at 10 a. m. at the home. She leaves no relatives. PHOTOPLAYS. THE G TUT DFV 14th and I Ilk lm aU Douglas EVERY SUNDAY R comfort t,::4 EVERY TUESDAY E ORPIIEUM 2s;r.A EVERY WEDNESDAY A CUD HDD AN 24th and tfUUVIIUnil Amea EVERY WEDNESDAY T MARYLAND EVERY THURSDAY G RAM nADI. 33d and HVWhhlfl II aW Leavenworth EVERY FRIDAY A PARK ut"' EVERY MONDAY M ALIIAMBRA EVERY WEDNESDAY B i voir i6th nd ! I H I W Vinlon EVERY SUNDAY L COLUMBIA 'Jt? EVERY WEDNESDAY E Pathe Distributors L0THR0P 24th and Lothrop Last Times Todays BRYANT WASHBURN in "VENUS IN THE EAST." Bill Paraona in "Bill Settles Down." Thursday, Friday and Saturday H loin N nvmiPAn in "The Avalanche" She hated the sight of a card or a roulette wheel as she hated the sight of a venomous snake, yet she could make no effort to resist their call. Born with gambler's blood, it seemed that she was doomed to the force of heredity. Then the avalanche of gambling debts engulfed her, and crushed her life and the whole world con demned her and made existence a torture. But there was one too fine and true to desert her. No! You're not right! It wasn't the man! Come to see, won't you? WJUBAiLIlllJ JA '1 AH. Blank 1 CI fjfi 4 I II the man! Come to see, won t you? y m & v WJ sas '' Christie Comedy. Rialto News.