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HAZING HALTED TO SAVE -»"thorltee. I.aim.- of the damage

RARE PLANTS IN POND ¡?,!^*^^' "'** '"

tHlCAOO, O«««. IS. iiazlng of The undergraduate council antteshmen al Chicago t'nlveisity hy nounred tha« hazing would be.jacking them in ihe liotany ixjiul abated in deference to the botanywas decried .vests-iday hy university department·! wishes.

SAY "BAYER" when you buy. InsistiUnless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you arenot getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed byphysicians over 23 years and proved safe by millions for

Colds HeadacheToothache Rheumatism

s Neuritis LumbagoNeuralgia' Pain, Pain

?a.-

Accept only ¦"Bayer" package which contains proper directions.Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablet«.Also bottle« of 24 and 100.Druggista

Fallirti» li tke tnd· nun- of Bayer Mantsfact_. of MoDons-etlcarida.t-r of Saltrrlicaeld

Xeu-bro'sHerpieideBrings Out The Life andBeauty of Your HairFor bringing out the natural beauty and hix-

urUrioB of your hair and raretorint your acalp to ahealthy «-nrsdittV-i, nothin, will aqua] Herpieide.

If *rour hair ie not velvety, ooft and luxuriant.It meena that the natural ahmen ia hidden. Herps-cido will brine out the natural sheen and snakeyour hair fairly ? learn with Ufe and beauty. Theday« of your faded-out kxekinc liwr will havepaaaed and your appearance will be aso improved «hatIt will be a aurpriae to you and · revelation toyour friend·«.

Ne?bro'sHerpieideRemo*·» Dandruff · Stops Falling Hair

Ba-rpkid· will not only make your hair beaut¬iful but It quickly tmtaptmt all your unaichtly

Tir A

dandruff, atop« your itchiac «ealp and preventeyour hair from falline ont. Your acalp will ton«up and tsecosne healthy · a healthy acalp ia thaonly true hair grower.

Herpieide Isa« a moat dainty and e-quiaiteodor. Many lad seal uaa it aa a pertum·.

Herpieide la ruarentea-H to do all tha« iaclaimed for it or your dealer will refund purchaaepriée. · ««ay a tattle tStrnW turni Kmoa beautiful,lumariant hair.

Sold ?t AH Drug and Dept Store«Applicatk». At Baxter Shop.

Pyorrhea Strikes Four.Misses Only One

Nature warns with bleeding gumsFour persons out of every five past forty,andthousands younger, too, contract Pyorrhea.So be on your guard, «especially when thegums are tender and bleed easily.Play safe. Brush your teeth with Forhan'sFor the Gums. If used consistently and'used in time, it will prevent Pyorrhea orcheck its progress. Keeps the teeth whitesnd clean, as well, and the gums firm andhealthy. Pleasant to the taste

The formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. Atall druggists, 35c and »50c in tubes»

ForhansFOR THE GUMS

- Aipre than a tooth paute- it checkt Pyorrhea

.<-m.ltßf R. J. Formern, D. D. S.Forhan «Company, New York

Eortun'·. * *.***·*»** Montreal

OLD AGE WINSWhat a pity anyone should

."slack" because of "gettingold.'' A man may be as vig¬orous and healthy at 80 as at

pain in the back, possibly twingesof rheumatism.take Lathrop'sOold Medal haarlem oil capsules(the original and genuine) regu-

50, if he keeps hisstomach and kid¬neys in shape.When she steplogins to .«-g. thrjoints ache, occa-

,» , MmimI its. rei Acctt« MsiMsi·«· _,»

.tonal touches of ??W»em .«MSB» Tie, »l.SS fully guarantee»!

LATHROP'S

f\0Dlnmems\e>HAAR LFM OIL*·*-*«*

*S_-_È_-I-nA for the name Geld Medal am thaMmì-IhUI»i. Ai

larly and yourspirits will be en¬

livened, your stepspring and >ourmuscles snapwithlife. Sealed boxea,

Efficient Detective Bound toUncover Identity of Slayer,

Declaros Author.

By JOHN A. MOROSO.Novelist and playwright. , Author

of "The People Againat NancyPreston," "The City of SilentMen." eir.Written tor t eemopolltan New· KervlerNBW BRl'NSWICK. N. J., Oct.

19..Last night.and It was pitchblack enougti for any foul deed.I endeavored to put myself in Ihefootsteps of the Rev. K4wardWheeler Hall ss he trudged fromhis fine mansion to a lowly neigh¬borhood tor his tryst with Mrs.Eleanpr -Mills, and then onward tothe remote spot where their loveended In death.The Mall home, one of the opu¬

lent one· of a city of no mean do-aree bf wealth, «et· back from a

wide, smooth avenue In speciousgrounds heavily shaded. Solemnlytapering fir trees glowed likesilver in the dark.Solemnly tapering fir trees glow¬

ed Ulfe silver Jn the darkness nearthe driveway. Through lingeringfoliage and network of Imre twigsand IxHighs shone the lights of thefour gabled home of Mrs. Hall, «he ;former Mien Stevens, wealthy frombirth, who married the then youngpanto- of the Church of Saint Johnthe Evangelist.

Senior ef Ifnttband.Considerably the senior of her

murdered husband, and the choirsinger who died with him Mrs.Hall, with her wealth and her familyconnections, her spacious home,servants, two automobiles and suchphilanthropic activities as a womanof her class would Indulge In. seem¬ed to have everything but the onething most craved by high andlow, rich and poor.love. Thechoir singer, the wife of the parishodd-Jobs man, living In the humblestsurroundings, 15 minutes' walkfrom the mansion, judging by theecstacy of her letters to the min-lster. had it and paid for ita illicit·neap.The carriageway of tbe Hall

home rune from brightly lightedNichol avenue, between trees,around the house to the doublegarage, and then out paat m romaarbor to Redmond atreet, a broken,neglected highway behind the dor¬mitories of the New Vork Women'sCollege. A short distance to Jonesstreet, and then to College atreetmake« a wulk of about five minute«to the ivy-covered church.Answering a telephone call about

7:J0 the night of the murder, Mr.Hail, in all probability, used thisshort cut. At _ o'clock the nextmorning the co lege watchman t*awMrs. Hall return to her home bythis rogte, alone, as he nays, al¬though ehe declare« that ehe wasaccompanied by her brother. "Willie"Stevens, after seeking her husbandat the church.

Mrs. Milla was also called fromher home at the sain·.· time that theminister waa called from hie. Thiamuch ia amply eatab.iahed. Thenext trac· of the two. and tbe moatimportant bit ot evidence, waa hadaoon after on the Eastern avenu«turnpike, beyond th« end of th«trolley line, on tbe way to thedeserted Phillip· farm. There ha·been euch an Insistent revival ofthe theory that the minister andthe singer »rere lured to some spot,out of New Brunswick, murdered,and their bodies carried to thePhillip· farm in automobile·, that IImmediately looked up the witnesswho saw them on the turnpike, tobe sure that the identification waagood.

No Mistake.Tbe witness was Mra. L. Harklna,

a young woman who lives with herhusband and baby in a little two-family house on Richardson atreet,near the end of the trolley. Tbehusband, a young man of crisp, in¬telligent speech, spoke tor his »rife.There was no chance of her beingmistaken, he said. She knew boththe minister and the singer; hadbeen a member of their parish. Sh*was wheeling the baby along tbeturnpike when Mrs. Mill· passed.She Müd how-dy-do and waa an¬swered. The singer carried a smallpackage that might have been letters.

In a little while along came Mr.Hall, short and heavy, hi· priestlygarb conspicuous enough in the glareof an electric light on a lonely sub¬urban road. They were going in thedirection of the Phillip· farm.

I followed the phantom·, a longand hard stretch of travel. Inkyblack, save for widely separatedblobs of light from side road electricbulbs. The road was under repair,and needed it. Walking with diffi¬culty at all times, I am told, becauaeof hta weight and lack of structureto carry it will, there must havebeen some more imperative reasonfor the rector's Journey that nightthan such ardor as middle-aged lov¬ers of cumbersomeness might havesuffered. Was Mrs. Mills going to theold farmhouse to surrender the let¬tera to someone, he following, eitherto protect her or to try to preventthem changing hands? The lettorewere found torn to bits between theirdead bodies.

I came at about the hour they musthave arrived at the lane leading fromthe turnpike to the acene of the dou¬ble murder. The entrance of thelane would never be noticed by acasual pasaerby, but once In tt, atnight, its twiste and turns of hard-baked clay ruts, it« banks with Jut¬ting roots, all the fertile topaol! longwashed away-, a starved, dead treeher« and a rock there, have m sinis¬ter ugliness. Another such lane tothe left and I came out Into the open

I of the old tarn». Its decay feeding th·earth, »nd eeveral tall tree« .hroud-ing with shadow a squat, ancient anddecrepit house.

Walked Into Ambush.Unguarded, open to any prowler,

thia remnant of a home, whoaeechoe·, could they but spring tolife, would about the tale or a fear¬ful night'· work, waa an Ideal apotfor murder. Not a lighted windowcould be aeen from ita crumblingpiazza, not a road light, and onlyvery faintly any sound whatevercame from the distant pike. Victim·and murderer· could haye arguedfiercely end loudly, could h*vepleaded and curbed and ?.«cd.with no one to beai them.Here, in thia murder.spot, with

all Ita lonellneea. Its shadow· blackaa funeral palla. It· tangle and de-ray. Ite ruin and desolation. I be-

came convinced after a careful in¬spection that the minuter and thesinger had walked Into an ambushlaid there for them, and that handIn hand their hearts all but deadwith fear, they had made a wild dashin the hope of escaping the usauaslns.For them to have «ought the parti.'ular spot for a tryst, where theirbodies were found neatly composedby nome unknown natid, is out of therealm of the probability.

I am convinced that as theyreached ihe old house they wereconfronted by their murderers, real¬ized that their time had come, andtogether plunged through brpah andditch Into further darkne«·, only tobe run clown and killed.

Studied In Dark.The myatery of this double «Time,

studied In the dark, as the crime it¬self was committed, take« on fasci¬nations that the cleverest of fictionwriters would fail in providing a

waiting multitude of reader« for thistragedy of love, wealth, poverty animystery. So It will take .motherday to tell the rest of it. and theniwrhiip« «till another.No one ha« been eliminated in th-»

case so far. l)e«plte all the Incom¬petent·) shown in its handling andthe frightful amount of detail detec¬tive work utterly neglected, the ·>lutimi will be had when the rightman take« charge. As long as thereare lips to whisper and ears lo keen¬ly hear, watchful eyes and quickWits to respond at the right tlm.·,there Is a big chance of the law'sbit of iron clicking above the nandthai cut the throat of d»ad EleanorMills.

__

Gets 6 Cents for Wife's Love.MATS LANDINO, Oct. 19..Fratut

A. Voleker. Atlantic City baker, sued? red Nixon»Nlrdllnger, Philadelphiatheatrical man, for $150,000 foralienation of his wife's affections.After twenty-five minutes the Juryawarded Voleker ß centa damagea.

STREET LIGHTS

Squabble Between Factions in? City Council Ends After

. Dark Week.laONACONINO. Md.. Oct. ]»..

Five minute« after a contract hadbeen signed with the Home ElectricLight Company last night thestreet lights here were turned onand laonaconing emerged from a?,-eek of darkncH«.

Following failure to renew tl*a|contract last week, the electric Hunt'company cut off th»· service. Threecouncilmen opposed renewal be¬cause the lights would be regulatedby an automatic «witch controlledby the company, upon Instructionsfrom the town authorities. The ob¬jectors wanted the oontrol of the«witch put directly In hands of thetown bailiff. '

Finally the hu«ine«a men took a

hand, and arranged for a meetingwith town authorities and the ek-o»trie light company representative«last night, resulting In the contractbeing signed, after the matter hndbeen thoroughly discussed. The op¬position to the contract dwindleddown to Councilman McLarklealone, who endeavored to prove thatthe time «witch hnd not been satis¬factory. The renewal calls for fiveyears at (?? cents per kilowatthour, the minimum bill to *»e $1.800a year.

PLEDGED WEEDPROTECTEDR?

Marketing Association EntersProtest Against Auction at

Danville, Va.DANVILLE. Va., Oct. 1$..-Wha>t

is believed to have been the openinggun of a fight on the part of theCo-operative Marketing Associationlo prevent the sale of tobacco whichh» pledged to the "pool" on the auc¬tion floor has been recorded here.

E. L. Wallon, who has charge ofthe co-operative organization's, af¬faire here, entered Central auctionwarehouse, and picking out a pile Mtobacco, «topped the sale when tbepile was reached, and served noticeformally on Jumes lì. Wilson,manager of the warehouse, that thetobacco was pledged to the pool.A wordy war ensued after Walton

hud demanded that it be not sold.Wilson" said that he was selling to¬bacco and asking no question·, alsothat he Intended to continue the «aleof tobacco on that theory. Waltonwithdrew after the pile had sold at? price somewhat above that paidfor similar grades In other parts ofthe warehouse.Walton has written a full report

of the occurrence to the organiza¬tion's headquarters and is awsiting

instructions. Under the law recentlypassed by the general assembly, thewarehouaeman win, eel!« at auctiontobacco, knowing it to be under con¬tract with the Co-operative Market¬ing Association, is amenable underthe law.

CAM BRIDGE MYSTIFIEDAT WOUNDING OF GIRL

CAMBRIDGE, Md., Oct. 19.The mysterious injury to Miss EdithDill, stenographer for Harrington.Mace _ Harrington, attorney«, earlythis morning, has become the ta'.kof this town and many bizarre ex¬planations of the occurrence hav«:been .offered.

Mis« Dill occupies a room at thehome of Mr«. R. T. Wright, onlaocust etreet here. Shortly 'beforedawn this morning she wan heard

Just »ay

Blue-jayto your druggist

The simplest way to end a

corn it Blue-jay. A touch¦tops the pain instantly. Thenthe corn loosens and comesout. Made in a colorlessclear liquid (one drop doe·it!) and in extra thin plas¬ters. The action is the same.

Pain Stops Instanti jv.. ______ ? D.aim · '

?· naming and ruBhed Jnto tke«soni of Hubert Wright. 11 yttxr*sld, grandson of Mra. Wright, whoil««· lives at the houae. Blood »Uitreumitig from her head and ah«lad ugly gaahe« In her at-alp.The girl haa given only _· f«*ag

nentary account of what lookilare. She «aid «he waa aalee.p,ifter having «pent a reatles.« night,tnd that ahe wa« awakened «ud-lenly to find heraelf wounded Inthe head. Hhe nay« «he think« eh««aw a man in her room, but «he lalot aure.

Over Sii Hun¬dred ThousandNam-aus «ad Cltra»a·ly ftaaaltlva Patlsnt·.To bm «*ia«t »ii hwn.Jre.1 and tw«_|-«- lbou*hsn«i patletita ha vi· intnuUü tlwir dentalwork to mir «an

What bett-T esldetv^«an ? <»«i r^iul r * ? Ourr«-tiul»tion for rarefyln«^aa and rlaasjiltnaaa «ndfur <iMiii-.tr> that laat· la unquaallooftb-·*

.y Dr. Wy-t* aad Staff al f apart»-Caratili Dantisti That Hit 0»«a My«aeard tor «.· Paat 3· yaart.

Parfa*f ftu sitaiwm No« an»

or Drop.MM«.us--·!.Other Seta of Tooth, $5 UpFilling«. 80cto $1 up

Id gold, «¡Ivor,amalgam or

porcelain

Oold Caad Brsd.·

Work.$3.00.$4.00$8.00 ,'-" Tttarth

Ne tkane lar «alai·« s-lmtloa -»·¦.«her «art h «te··. AU s*·«, m·-*·»-»*«

DR. WYETHs Inc.,427-29 7tk St. N. W.

Oppoelte Larsaburgh * Bra., anil erarOrasi«! felon Tea Co. I-argee« aagmoat thorouatiiy equipped parlera la?.?_«????«??? Phone Masa »ltt.

\four workshould not unfityou for themYour hours of relaxation are

vitally importantAfter the million household tasks ate

done, after busy hours without a momentto «call her own,everywoman needs change.amusement.relaxation·Yetwhen that time comes.howoften

you're too tired for anything but test!Each morning, scientists tell us, every

normal person starts out with enough en¬

ergy to last all day. But all day long thissupply is constantly going down. Almosteverything you do puts some strain uponit. You can't avoid using your energy.but you can avoid wasting it needlessly.The strain of standing and walking on

hard heels is one of the worst wastes.

yet it's one of the easiest to stop !

Men found it out before women didMost men are on their feet no more than women.

But 8 out of 10 men save their energy by wearingrubber heels. Now, however, more and more women

are coming to realize that their energy, too, needsthis protection. Twenty-live years ago you couldhold in both hands all the rubber heels in theUnited States. Today the O'Sullivan idea has spreadthroughout the entire country.

Look at your heelsLike all good things, O'Sullivan'» have beenwidely imitated. Are yours O'Sullivan's ? It willpay you to find out !

If they're not.don't say ««rubber heels" nexttime. Tell your repairman to put on O'Sullivan's·.and notice the difference at the end ofeach day! Seehow much freer you are from tiredness and strain.

There is an O'Sullivan Heel for practically everystyle of women's shoe*. for the high cuban heelas well as for the various low heel types and the"in-between" styles. O'Sullivan's are always adaptedto the prevailing mode.

Furthermore, as millions of women are findingout, they preserve the original trim appearance ofthe heel and prevent the running-over that occurs

so*»quickly with ordinary heels.O'Sullivan's usually cost you no more than

ordinary rubber heels. But wear a pair.and you'llknow why millions always insist on them I

TU* élmsrem imswt hem theemarmsa pattern'» »matey fallt.Da ram go dmmm torn far emtkdey mmé emhenmUmm ?

O'Sullivan's HeelsAbsorb the skocks that tire you out

Your energy is limited.don't waste it

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