PAGE FOUR I The f I RED I LAMP [ . T" |: I ** ;!: MARY ROBERTS RINEHART Copyright br Geo. H. Dora* Coapaaf WNU Serrlco August 26. All along, I have been impressed by the attitude of at least the summer public to our tragedies; as ope came it brought with it its tempota'iy thrill; for a moment, one might say, the dancing stopped and a . bit of drama was enacted on the stage. Then the curtain fell, the band, struck up, and the whirl began again, with some inconsiderable of the dancers missing. Poor Carroway’s widow is working at one of the shore hotels, and has bobbed her hair. And a small boy with adenoids delivers our milk and chickens; I caught him this morning chalking up a triangle within a circle on one of the pillars of the gate. The main house shut and empty,* a new assistant keeper at the lighthouse, and perhaps a closed room and grief at the Morrison farmhouse —these are the only apparent scars left, to mark our summer’s wounding. I saw Larkin this morning. He be lieves that we may be able to sell the property as a hotel site; as this would insure destroying the house, it seems the best thing. But one other change 1 have not recorded. Watching Halliday as I do, affection ately and not too openly, I jan see a very considerable change in him. He is like a man lit from within by some flame, of vengeance perhaps, or reso lution certainly. And he is moody at times; his old gayety is gone. He has put me out of his confidence, not be cause he does not trust me, but be cause for some reason he is afraid of me. And the same, I think, is largely true of Edith in the last day' or two. It is as though he said, in effect: “Keep out It is dangerous. I am willing to take a chance, but I want to know that the rest of you are safe.” Now and then, however, I gather something. Thus yesterday he said: “You have to remember this; we are not dealing with a criminal, but with an idea.” * FARM FOR RENT I have a farm which I desire to rent for the year 1930. There are two good resident houses on the place, good barn and pastures. There are 75 to 100 acres of land ready for cultivation, suitable for cotton, tobacco, corn and wheat. The place is located about one mile north of Highway No. 90 and is known as “The Buck Campbell Place.” For further particulars see me. MRS. R. H. HAYES Pittsboro, N. C. (Aug 29, Sep 5) fiSlW'* FOR QUICK* HARMLESS COMFORT Children Cry for It «0R CONSTIPATION, DIARRHEA, FEVERISHNESS 111 ly/IOST people depend on Bayer Aspirin to make short work of headaches, but did you know it’s just as effective in the worse pains from neuralgia or neuritis? Rheu matic pains, too. Don’t suffer when Bayer Aspirin can bring complete comfort without delay, and .wisent j. harm; it does not affect the.,hearts ■ In every package of genuine Bayer; Aspirin are proven directions,.with which everyone should be familiar;! for they can spare much needlfess suffering. . i , Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mariufactura of Mouoaceticacidester of bahcylicacid Again, he has asked me for Cucle Horace’s letter, and has been appar ently making a study of it. Only along the lines of what I call the supernormal nnenomena of the summer does he show his old open ness, and there he is frankly puzzled. My decision not to cali in Cameron has, I think, disappointed him. But my reasons are sound. Cameron’s coming might result in unpleasant press publicity for us, and more than that, puts me where I do not intend to be placed, among the believers in spiritism. He accepted that decision without comment. But shortly after he asked Edith for the letter from Evanston, and sat thinking over it for some time. “Os course, ith a little Imagina tion,” he said, “you might figure that these people were somehow let in on what happened here last year. But why Evanston?” And after a pause, following a train of thought: “Os course I suppose, if you grant a spirit world, you have to grant that where time and space do not exist and only vibration counts —whatever that may mean —you; could tune in Evanston as well as-7-well, as easily as you can on the radio.” But he got up soon after, saying that we were all cfazy and* he himself was the maddest of the lot, and went away. August 27. Livingstone is a curious chap; dap per, fastidious and taciturn. He Is al most too much of a gentleman; I have had the feeling, and I think Jane has also, that a part of his reticence is caution, that he is always watchful, subconsciously at least, lest the ve neer crack, and something secretly vulgar be exposed. I am still wondering why he came to see me today; he was sitting, gloved and spatted, in our small liv ing room when Clara brought his card to me in the garage and 1 hurried in. Sitting, too, staring at our ridiculous parlor organ, with an odd look on his face. “Haven’t seen one for years,” he said, in his clipped and yet deliberate manner. “Where’d you happen on that one?” “It was here when we came,” 1 ex plained. He gave It another glance before we sat down, aud then apparently dis missed it. But not entirely. Now and then he looked toward it, and once I saw a slight smile, as though back in his mind was some equally faint humorous memory. But he came to the point with a certain directness. “You’re a man c.f sense,” he said. “I came because you’ve got a head on yon.” “I used to have,” I admitted mod estly. “Lately, of course —” He bint forward. “Use it,” he said. “Don’t let this spirit bunk get you. Easiest stuff in the world to fake.” “I don’t Intend to let it get me.” He brushed that aside, and glanced once more at the organ. “Yqt} take a thing like that,” he said, “and start it in the dark. It gets you creepy In no time. They all use it; It used to be organs like that; now its phonographs. They say It starts the vibrations! Well, I’ll tell you what it does; it gets you worked up. Some times it covers something the medium wants to do.” “So I Imagine,” l agreed. His volubility suddenly left him then, and he seemed rather at a loss.” “Let It alore,” he said. “Let well enough alone” After a pause: “There may be something, but let It alone.” And that, so far as I can make out, was the purpose of his visit. He showed a certain relief, as if he had got rid of something momentous to him, and soon after he took an abrupt departure. Thomas tells me that another at tempt was made to get into the house last night. He had left his pruning ladder outside under a tree, and found it upright against Gordon’s window this morning. . . . Later: Halliday corroborates Thom as’ story, with further details. He was on the lower floor, reading, when he was disturbed by the crash of a pane of glass above. He ran upstairs, but was evidently heard. There was no one on the ladder when he got there, and a thorough search showed no'one in the bouse. The window was the one through which we had watched Gordon leave the house by the rope. August 28. It la impossible for me tonight to draw any conclusion * from last eve- I ning’s discovery; I have not my old faith in circumstantial evidence. I can only ask myself if an innocent man hides in his own house. . . . Jane had one of her bad headaches last night, and at eleven o’clock I took the car and went in to the village * pharmacy. It * was closed, however, and I was at a loss to know what to do. In the emergency I thought of Hayward’s office; like most country doctors he keeps a medicine cabinet, and fills many of his own prescrip tions. I went there, therefore, and' rang the bell. It took some time and several rings to rouse the housekeeper, an elderly and taciturn woman, vand when she finally opened the door.it to say that the doctor ,was away, and to atv tempt to close ft again. } I prevented < this, however, and. managed to 'get! past her and the hall. * “I only want to get some, medicine,” l explained. “The cabinet is In fcber back office, isn’t It?” “Fm not allowed to let anybody, into the office.” , J”,I said sharply. “Any-s how, you are not allowing me. I’m going.” seemed completely at a loss, and THE CHATHAM RECORD, PITTSBORO, N. C. 1 thought too that she was listening, j With my hand on the knob of the wait- , ing room, J caught the attentive look I on her face, and found myself listen- | ing also. It seemed to me that ihere was somebody moving In th back of- | lice, and immediately after I caught j the stealtliy closing of a door some where. With that she appeared to relax. “You are sure you know what you want?” she asked. “Quite sure,” 1 said, and went through the waiting room to the con sulting office. Sim followed me and turned on the light, and stood there watching me Intently. The room was filled with tobacco smoke, and she saw that I noticed it, for she said: “My husband was sitting in here. I’d be glad if you don’t say anything about it.” I am not suspicious, and the con fession satisfied my faint feeling that something was not quite right in the house. I got the tablets from the cab inet, and being nervous about un labeled bottles went to the desk; there, neatly piled np, were tlie month’s bills for Hayward’s profes sional services, written in his own nh tidy hand, and one not finished on the pad. \ The woman was still watching me, and I managed to write my label, glue It to the bottle, and make my depar ture without, I think, showing that I had made any discovery whatever. But nothing can alter my conviction that Hayward is hiding in his own i house, and that he was in that bade 1 room when 7 rang the doorbell at something before midnight. Not even Halliday’s opinion that, since Hay ward is officially at heme today, he had the right to be “not at home” last night. “After all,” he said, “give the poor devil his due, Skipper. He works i “After All/' He Said, “Give the Poor Devil His Due.” hard, and why shouldn’t he get back a day earlier than he is expected and steal a few hours to get out his bills? He has to live.” But he seems to me to be a trifle too casual about it. I admit that he puz zles me, these days. (CONTINUED NEXT WEEK) <*> sharpens his phonogragh needles. The stingiest man on earth re- NOTICE OF DEED OF TRUST SALE Under and by virtue of a certain deed of trust executed to the under signed Trustees by A. B. Riddle and wife, Lita Riddle, on the 19th day of June, 1926. to secure the payment of a certain bond therein described, which deed of trust is recorded in the Registry of Chatham County in Book GN, page 203, et seq., default having been made in the payment of said bond and the holder thereof having requested a sale of the prop erty described and conveyed in said deed of trust, the undersigned will sell for cash, at public auction, at the Court House door in Pittsboro, North Carolina, on Saturday, the 7th day of September, 1929, at twelve (12) o’clock noon, that certain lot or parcel of land lying and being in Baldwin Town ship, in the village of Bynum, Chat ham County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as fol lows: Beginning at a stake in A. T.‘ Ward’s corner, Chapel Hill road, and running thence northwest with said road 21 poles to a stake; thence South 66 degrees East 14 poles to stake and a ditch; thence up said ditch 8 and 2-5 poles to a stake in said ditch; thence about North 26 and 2-5 poles to the beginning; con taining 2 and 67-120 acres, more or less, same being the home place of the late A. B. Riddle. This the 6th day of August, 1929. WALTER D. SILER and WADE BARBER, Trustees NOTICE! I will on Friday, the 6th day of September, 1929, offer, for sale at .Public Auction, the property of W. A. N. Glenn, late, of Chatham!* County; Hadley Township, N. C., at • I , Bring your auto repair work to us. j ' '7-' '' Every job is guaranteed. V »• •. v . ' Pittsboro, N. C. ; , , ” I - - .v ■ R- H. Mills, Manager V’\ ‘'* ‘ * •• r • .. - 1 . • , 1 • * . -4 4'• * .. ‘ ‘ i j I Farm News | Edited by N. C. SHIVER, County Agt. Frank Farmer says;“ Wet spots on my farm proved costly luxuries this year; I mean to drain them.” One reason the farmer is still de pendent is that he insists on being too independent to join worthy coopera tive associations. Chatham County September Farm Calender Agronomy Pick cotton as rapidly as it opens, but not when it is wet with dew or rain. Do not leave. cotton on ground in field over night. Plant winter cover crops last of month. Field select seed corn • for next year. Leaving legume hay too long in the swath results in poor color and loss in feed value. , ; . Animal Husbandry Sow rape and small grains for win ter and early spring grazing. , Treat sheep for stomach worms; dip for external parasites. Cull out and market all surplus hogs on the high fall market. Give farrowing sows and show hogs especial attention. Keep salt or mineral mixtures be fore all livestock. Dairying Sow rye for winter grazing; it in creases the milk flow. Feed some grain daily. Dry fall pastures lack nutrients. Dry up cows due to freshen in October, to allow six weeks rest. Cull boarders that wont make money for you this winter. Poultry Clean and disinfect laying houses well before putting pullets in. Plow the chicken runs and seed to suitable green crops for winter. Keep pullets in good flesh by heavy feeding of grain and much of the neck molt may be avoided. Go over the flock and keep only the laying hens. Buy next season’s breeding cock erels now to get first choice. VALUE OF HERD DETERMINED BY FEEDING AND BREEDING The feeding and breeding of the cattle on your farm decides wheither you keep cattle, or cattle keep you. The use of a carefully selected pure bred sire is the most economical way to develop a profitable dairy herd, as the parent determines the value of the calves born in the herd. The calf herd of today will be the milking herd of to-morrow, and it pays to raise your own heifers rather than buy the other fellows castoffs. I HEADQUARTERS FOR j| CANNING GOODS LEE HARDWARE CO. “The Winchester Store” «' SANFORD, N. C. 5 W. c BWKmiEE. M. D. Bick,l especially want you to write for my booklet, j Mrs. J. D. Collett, Route No. 4, High Point, N. C., 1 whose picture appears here, writes: “During the j winter of 1927-28 I took your treatments, and lam I glad to say that my family doctor says I have no I symptoms now. I look, feel, and am a different I person altogether. I cannot thank you and your 1 medicine enough”. | FO.R FREE DIAGNOSIS AND LITERATURE J WRITE: V. C. Rountree, M. D., Austin, Texas. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1929, j * DOINGS OF I 1 CHATHAM I FARMERS STOCK FARMING i POULTRY, ’ ETC. v North Carolina dairy cows are so small because heifers are not fei properly during the growing period and because most heifers are bred for their first calf when they are en tirely too small. A heifer will grow fast until she starts milking with her first calf, but giving milk slows un growth. Heifers should be bred so that they will calve for the first time when 25 months of age. Heifers should be kept growing by adjusting the amount of grain hay fed to the other available feeds The calf should be. fed grain and le gume hay in about equal amounts when on skim milk. Chatham Boys Show Jerseys At First Annual Chatham County Calf Club Show Pitsboro, N. C. Aug. 30, 1929 Soane , twenty-one pure-bred Jerseys were exhibited on the courthouse lawn at Pittsboro last Friday by Chatham County 4-H Calf Club mem bers. These cattle were shown and judged before a crowd of some 200 farmers and business men of the county. It was the first affair of its kind to be held in Chatham county, and it was enjoyed by all who at tended it. The cattle were judged by Prof. F. M. Haig of the Dairy Department of State College, and a judging dem onstration was given before the show. Mr. Ward C. Snarr of the American Jersey Cattle Club was also at Pitts foro for the occasion, and made a talk to the farmers present on the im portance of selecting good pure-bred dairy sires for our dairy cattle. The cattle were judged in the fol lowing six clases; 1, Calves, 2, Year ’ lings, 3, Bred Heifers, 4, Bulls, 5, Cows, 6, Grand Champion. The fol lowing are the winners in the follow ing classes; Grand Champion: Raymon Culberson, Bonlee, N. C. Calves; Ist. Guy Dark; 2nd, Addison Burns; 3rd, Paul Calrk; 4th, Elzie Connell, sth, Elmer Con nnell. Yearlings; Ist, Raymon Cluberson, 2nd, Frank Cluberson; 3rd, Chas. W. ( Lutterloh; 4th, Burt Dark, sth, Leon 1 Gilmore. Bred Heifers; Ist, T. C. Justive, , 2nd, Palmer Foushee; 3rd, Ike Bland; 4th, Billie Harrington, sth, Jesse Harrington. Cows; Ist, Lee Harmon. Bulls; Ist, White and Clapp, 2nd, Lee Harmon. PAGE KINSTON Bryce Poe, Friday evening while ; driving a truck down to the old Poe home in New Hope township, ran over an old grey fox and killed him. If you have any of the following symptom s I have the remedy no matter what vour trouble has been diagnosed: Nervousness, stomach trouble, loss of weight, loss of sleep, sore mouth, pains in the back and shoulders, peculiar swimming in the head frothy like phlegm in throat, passing mucous from the bowels, especially after taking purgative, burn ing feet, brown, rough or yellow skin, burning or itching skin, rash on the hands, face and arms resembling sunburn, habitual constipation, (sometimes alternating with diarrhoea) copper or metallic taste, skin sensative to sunheat, forget fulness, despondency and thoughts that you might lose your mind, gums a fiery red and falling away from the teeth, general weakness with loss of energy. ' If you have these 1 symptoms and have j taken all kinds of j medicine and still S Wm J* mbs. j. n. rni.f.ETT