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Mower County news (Austin, Minn.) 1920-1947

July 24, 1922 · Page 2 of 8

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Z_£2E3I pi ss3S3S3jfc~a jt'- mm^ S" •Xf- «'\jf --i. Page Three MOWER COUNTY NEWS, AUSTIN, MINN* Monday, July. 24, 1922 imimmiiiiiiiiiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimimimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiii •i FRANCE BUILDS A say they catv quickly and accurately ridor window. moment later the LINGERIE IS LESS TRIMMED office door opened and a man came in. find the desired grave. We later met True True Byrnes, watching the gunman closely, WAR-TORN AREA an ex-soldier who ic connected with BUT IS MORE COLORFUL saw that he was barely able to suppress I Detective Stories the graves registration bureau and I Detective Stories 3 a start—for the visitor was the illllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllililiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll he said that their work is nearly $ pawnbroker with whom McGloin had completed. Originally there were pledged his revolver. Without saying (Continued from Page One) FOURTH DEGREE a word, the pawnbroker crossed the about two thousand people working OUT OF THE AIR room, laid McGloin's gun oh the inspector's on records, while now there are not in some aspect of the work, even the desk and walked out. children work. The temporary homes two hundred. When ever a body is Copyright by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. Copyright byi The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. "Neat little boy," remarked Byrnes^ THEREof are in many cases poor excuses for interred a service is held, giving full SOMEWHERE, was but little doubt in the picking up the revolver. "Ever see somehow, the Ger­ shelter. Perhaps rusty sheet metal military rites. The Chaplain's wife mind Thomas Byrnes, superintendent it before?" mans were getting messages never fails to be present to represent covering a dug-in hill has answered of police in New York "Never," growled McGloin. through from the United States all this time for a home. Many temporary the boy's rnother. Those connected city, that Louis Hanier had been murdered "I thought not," was the reply. "It's to the fatherland. That much was for the sake of the money that with this special cemetery are eager the gun that Hanier, the Frenchman, wooden structures look very certain. Washington knew It beyond he was carrying with him at the time. was shot with. We've finally got a that Americans know at home how the shadow of a doubt, but the way comfortable for summer use, but The little Frenchman had been the *ine on that case, after working on it in which the messages were transmitted well cared for the graves are, and hardly substantial enough for winter. proprietor of a cafe, and, having a for over a month. Found a man who was a mystery—dark and apparently that thogfe who have sons lying in Ducks, geese, and chickens are in evidence fear of the banks of America, had the was a witness of the shooting—" unfathomable. France may feel that they are in a around these homes. There is habit of carrying hundreds of dollars At this moment, by a prearranged was This in the days 1tefore America beautiful spot, and that there are always to be seen a well protected in his wallet until the opportunity presented signal, one of McGloin's partners was war, entered the in the days when suitable services Memorial Day. and well cultivated garden near each itself o£ purchasing an international marched past the corridor \^fndow, was, the United States theoretically dwelling. Some families have tame Battle-scared Verdun. money order. "Yes," continued Byrnes, appearing at least, a neutral nation. But Von not to notice the gunman's agitation, Farther on toward Verdun are One morning he was found dead in flowers growing* around their humble Bernstorff, Von Papen and the rest of liili "and we've also found a man who was the vestibule of his home, a .38 caliber Pepper Hill, Dead Man's Hill and places. Some of the villages will the embassy at Washington were doing present"—at which the second of the bullet through his heart, and his Death Valley, which names will give never be re-built, the destruction is everything they could to further quintet was ushered past the window— pocketbook missing. itheir schemes from this side of the so complete, so their remains will some idea of how cheap life was held "and two others who have confessed That was all Byrnes had to work Vtlantic. stand as a testimonial to the I'uthlessness around the forts of Verdun. Seventeen their part in the robbery but who upon, for there were no indications But not even the^ secret service of war. forts defend the ancient walled claim that the man who tired th^ shot whatever of the persons who had committed could penetrate the mystery of the city. The Germans felt if only they The actual battlegrounds, the aresas was ." the crime. The dispatch with messages. That these were flashed where trenches ai'e is likewise a could pass, Paris would be easy. The "Stop it, for God's sake, chief!" the which the matter had been handled, from the huge wireless towers on this cried the half-crazed man in the chair, Vegetation is creeping in French felt just as deeply the necessity appeared to point to a professional sad sight. side of the Atlantic, or relayed from his nerves shattered by the solitary .criminal, so Byrnes gave orders that of holding the place. The loss of flowers as cornflowers^.poppies, —such the German radio stations,. seemed confinement and the marshalling of all the pawnshops in New York were daisies, and many others I cannot life in this vicinity was terrible. It fairly obvious. But how evidence under his very eyes. "Stop to be closely watched, and reports tend to soften the austerity was on one of these hills that the soldiers name, "They must be sending the stuff it! I didn't mean to do it, but—I shot made to him of the pawning of any of the landscape. Great piles, of were ready to make a charge through the air," argued the chief of .38 caliber revolvers. him!" the secret service to Talbot,' one ofhis rusty barbed wire can be seen here when their trench caved in and only "Score one for the 'fourth degree,'" Investigation of the dozen or more best men, "for the simple reason and there where some attempt has their bayonets were visible. Those mused Byrnes, .38's pawned during the week which that we've closed all their other channels." been made to clean up the fields. One bodies were never disinterred. A followed the Hanier shooting, showed wonders how long it took to manufacture wealthy American has had a special that all but one of them had been "Any idea as to the code they are pledged by persons who very evidently the wire used along the monument erected over this trench all Some pw .. i, 1 1 THERE using?" asked Talbot. had no connection with the murder. trenches. It will have to be buried, as a memorial to "those who sleep up is conslderaDie news in tlie uiige dots different colors ol silk 'O so..'c !i :s o:i't 111 "None at all, but it's probably concealed The single exception was one Michael realm of underwear. It concerns are suggested. Envelope chemise in for there seems to be no other method right, bayonets in hand." i*o ir t]ii!ii,:i. Lo- is-.ii'( a..'car­ somewhere in the messages McGloin, whom the pawnbroker in chiefly the adoption of many colors pongee, with a band an inch wide in of destruction where the wire is We entered one of the forts which nal. which they send out to the ships at question identified by means of his in place of white and consequent lavender or other color of crepe de looks from a short distance away like still laced in zig-zag fashion the sea—press bulletins, stock quotations, photograph in the Rouges' gallery. changes in the matter of decorations. chine about the top, has shoulder The news twice a week in The a huge ugly rock on the hill. Tt is," and the like. We've studied them is dreadful. sight most McGloin's gun had been pawned on Little by little white has given way straps to match made up of a fold of News—less than 5c a week carefully, but Mveh't been able to find however, concrete with all the vaults, the morning after the murder, and, Save Historical Relics. before the encroachment of light tones the crepe, and the step-in drawers are a thing." The French government is saving passage-ways, out looks which are while the police had little difficulty of color, until colored underthings appear bordered in the same way.- "How about the outburst from in locating the man himself, there was necessary in such a structure. This to outnumber the white garments. Pretty and simple night dresses are some of the worst relics of the war Nauen every morning?" Chain not a shred of evidence to connect As the attention of designers made of cross bar dimity or batiste, particular fort fell before the Germans, for historical purposes. Some of the "The only explanation for that him with the Hanier case, beyond the is focused on' color, it turns away showing a bar in color on a white altho it seemed to be absolutely machine gun shelters will be saved, seems to be that it's an attempt to fact that he had been absent from from familiar types of trimmings, to ground. They are cut with square impregnable. The water supplyhad likewise Prince Rupert of Bavaria's 'fog the air' so that ships and other home on the night of the shooting in new ones, introducing color contrasts, neck and short sleeves and narrow, dug-out will be saved. Of this dugout been cut off, soldiers .were ill towers can't get anything through." the company of four of his boon companions. and* we have lingerie that is less wash ribbon, in the color of the crossbar, Stores from lack of food and 'drink, and all one must say that it is not a dugout "Yes, but in that case would the trimmed and more tailored in style, is applied in rows or lattice design at all, but a very luxuriant suite attempts to send aid had failed. Before Germans send it for an hour early Quietly, and without allowing a but nevertheless pretty and practical. about the neck and sleeves. Plisse every morning? Why. not all day long? *vord~~of his intentions to leak out, of rooms built of concrete and provided surrendering, the commanding Color will never usu*p the place of fine crepe is shown in many colors, as And why that hash of language that Byrnes rounded up the. quintet one hand made and hand docorated undergarments pink, orchid, yellow, blue, light green, officer blew up all the guns. Save with numerous underground doesn't mean a thing? If they were on which much expert lavender, and is especially liked for at a time, none of them knowing that The city of Verdun was about passages, ample lighting and heating needlework has been lavished It is night dresses and pajamas. Hemstitching trying to fog things they'd wireless the the others were being arrested. Each devices and servants' quarters. It half demolished. Many streets are without peer in refinement and beauty. and shirrings done in colored Bible or Nietzsche or excerpts from of them was lodged in a cell by himself still impassable, altho. clearing up is located deep in a beautiful woods threads, make the simplest decorations some other long book instead of that and questioned closely as to his The closest rival of this fine, white You and rebuilding are going on. The far from the maddening crowd. The mess of meaningless rot." actions and his whereabouts at the for garments of colored batiste. lingerie in sheer cottons, is flesh only draw back that I could discover thick walls filled with earth were no "All right," retorted the chief, "if time of the murder. In spite of the Several colors. are combined in this colored, and made of crepe de chine, protection, for the. guns on the surrounding fact that Byrnes had definite information in the whole arrangement is the step way,,as in a lavender chemise shirred you think there's a clue there, go to it." and the two pretty garments'-shown BOt Talbot didn't begin his investigations that the five men had been together, hills, of course, over shot at the neck line with three rows of down that one must take to enter. here vindicate its right to a place in Money shirrings, using rose, blue, and pale with a study of the Nauen each of them told a different the walls. the bride's trousseau. There is nothing The recent rains had wet up the earth green threads. "hast." lie made his way at first to story, and each claimed to have been unusual about them and the picture Friends and acquaintances returned so badly that we carried the horrible the laboratory of Charles E. Apgar, a alone, at a considerable distance from tells the story. For those who would the following days to Rheims mud on our shoes the rest of the day. deep student of wireless telegraphy. 1 ho Hanier house. like to add some up-to-the-minute by another route to see other evidences Probably during the royal gentleman's It was to Apgar that he told his troubles "It's no use, inspector," said one of pieces to their, collection, tailored 30*3* of war, but we felt that we had occupancy there were devices, and, when he had finished, the the policemen who had been working Btyles in pongee, trimmed with borders had quite enough. for keeping his pathways smooth and expert leaned forward and picked up on the case about a week after the of1 colored silli or embroidered in COPYKIOHT IV VtSTIRN NEWARK UNION. something from the table in front of dry. We were glad to know just five men had been picked up, "you him. can't get a thing out of 'em. They what trench mud was like, for our THE Guaranteed "See that?" Apgar asked. Talbot know, all right, but you can't convict soldiers surely had enough of it in THE HOME RADIO nodded. any of 'em without a confession—and 6.000 Miles KITCHEN their time. The observation tower of "Looks like an old-fashioned cylinjrical'phonograph we've tried everything, including the the Crown Prince of Germany is to record," he said. "Aird degree.'" CABINET be saved also. A fine home standing Make and Use By A. HYATT VERRILL "Just what it is," admitted the expert, "Very well," said Byrnes quietly, How to It c^? on a hill in the Argonne region had Copyright by Harper & Brothers "only you use it in connection "we'll have to try the fourth degree," been badly damaged and there it was Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union. n-ith a wireless phonograph." "Fourth degree? What's that?" "A wireless phonograph?" and the that the Prince established his observation "Just a little way of getting at the XXI. TRANSMISSION OR SENDING Just whistle a bit if the day is dark, government operative's voice showed truth when a man wants to hold out post. And the sky be overcast that he had never heard of such a on you," was Byrnes' answer. "You Of course we passed cemetery after I have already described the difference It must not be supposed, .however, If mute be the voice of the piping lark, contrivance. think there's no doubt-that McGloin's Why, pipe your osvn small blast. between interrupted waves and that an oscillator, a condenser, a coil cemetery. French soldiers' "Yes, a phonograph attached to the the man? Have him brought to this continuous waves and how the human and an aerial and ground are all graves are marked with white crosses, WHAT TO EAT receiving end of a radio station. I office tomorrow morning, promptly at voice, or other sounds, if transmitted that are necessary in order to send Germans with black. Sometimes finished working on it a few days ago, ten o'clock." by the ordinary interrupted waves of wireless telephone messages. In addition, There are so many delectable dishes one plot of ground would contain bo£li and I think it's just what you need At the time specified, McGloin, sullen a wireless telegraph sender, would be there are numerous appliances that may be made with a can of corn— kinds, but for the most part the for this job. It will record and keep broken up and unintelligible. I have for tuning or adjusting wave lengths and resentful at what he claimed for example corn soup. track of every sound that comes into Other Sizes—Low PricedE soldiers were buried separately. was an illegal detention, walked into also explained how continuous waves modulating, amplifying and other Cook the corn in a little the station, enabling you to 'listen in' Sometimes a single cross by the road are capable of carrying such sounds purposes and in a large station these the» inspector's office, alone. Had he 30x3 $ 7.95 milk and strain it, turn 31 4 .$14.60 on messages months after they have without breaking them up but while are very complicated and powerful. been interested in such details, he side will mark the grave of a soldier it back again into more 32 4 14.90 been sent. With a supply of these 30 Sy2 8.95 sounds of voices, mijsic, etc., cannot be For example, the Westinghouse station might have noted that Byrnes was whose remains have not yet been milk and strain again, 33 4 15.55 records and the necessary patience you properly transmitted over an interrupted at Newark uses five 250. watt seated so that he could watch the 32x3^ 11.55 34 4 15.75 then thicken with a little taken to the large national military ought to be able to figure out the system wave yet code signals or alternate tubes—two being used as oscillators window of hisyoffice which looked out flour and butter These are the famous Dunbar Fabrics cemeteries. In a few instances officers the Huns are using, without their dots and dashes may be transmitted and three as modulators—and which upon a corridor, and also keep an eye with a 6,000 mile guarantee. Come to cooked together, a, little wished to lie where they had being any the wiser. It may take over continuous waves by work in conjunction with two fifty upon the occupant of the only chair our sale and get the benefit of these savings. onion juice and season fallen, so detached graves are still weeks or evpn months, but it's just a means of instruments which break or watt speech amplifiers. The current in the room, bolted to the floor in We are part of a great chain of stores with salt and pepper. and operate on a big scale give you the question of being everlastingly at it." rather numerous. Near the dug out interrupt such waves, so that a radiophone used In lighting is ten volt A. C. front of the desk. But McGloin wasn't Fried corn is best of course prepared benefit of quantity prices. Apgar was right. Talbot found may be used to send both telegraphic with five amperes of radiation. For worrying about such trifles. He was of Prince Rupert is a large cemetery from the fresh corn, but a that it took him nearly four months sending the sounds, microphones are A CHAIN Of ST0RK$ COAST TO and telephonic messages and a there to denvind his release, and he GOUT of Bavarian soldiers who died during WORLD Tip STORES very good dish may be made from the to get on to the system—four months radio telephone receiver will receive used and to maintain an even cool told the inspector so in no measured the first years of the war. The canned corn. Corn in the omelet, corn of ceaseless listening-in at the end of both. temperature on the tubes a rotary terms. fritters, com baked alone as an escalloped French seem to respect such spots a De Forest audion detector which The principal item and most essential fan is employed. In this station the "That's all right, McGloin," replied dish or combined with fresh and permit no desecration. The size picks up sound waves from thousands C. C. LOMER part of the sending or transmission coil or inductance is a flat or pancake Byrnes. "Sit down a minute. I've mushrooms, adding seasoning and a and number of all these cemeteries of miles away, and even then he would apparatus, known as the radiophone, helix wound with half-inch copper ribbon several things to attend- to," and he bit of onion. gives the travellers some idea of the never have located the secret had it is the device by which the continuous while a special motor generator motioned to the chair, placed so that Veal Soup.—Take a two pound 112 E. Maple St. waves are produced. °The instrument furnishes rr 2,000 volt current for the not been for the wax cylinders. But it too commanded a view of the cor­ scale of the war. knuckle of veal, cover with cold water which was first devised for plate. The aerial is of the multipletuned with the aid of these automatic detectives and cook slowly until the meat falls At the Argonne. he was able to repeat each message this purpose was an ordinary arclight, type of six 150-foot wires at a from the bones, remove the bones. When an American alights in front but this has now given place to height of 210 feet above the ground until he had it almost by heart, Thefe should be five cupfuls, add two It's here Ti,mLaborhe, of the Argonne cemetery it is indeed Save trying out the various combinations a device known as a vacuum-tube oscillator with a counterpoise of twelve wires cupfuls of diced potatoes, one and hard ^xpress his feelings. This is to which is similar to an ordinary on thirty foot spreaders twenty feetabove and symbols until he stumbled acrqss one-half tablespoonfuls of mushroom the burial places for American incandescent light with "specially prepared the roof and below the aerial. one of the right one. ketchup added with the meat cut in and As a lead-in, a ten he "cage on hoops Then, one morning, when the chief soldiers. It is very large altho filament and other devices. The cubes, after the potatoes are tender. operation of the' arc-light was as follows: two inclie's in diameter is used. of the secret service least expected thousands of bodies have been sent Season well with salt and pepper. The New Perfecticm If a condenser and inductance This, however, is one of the laxgest him, he burst into the office with the home. Even in its temporary arrangement Pour over one cooked egg which has Oil Range and most powerful stations in the coil are shunted across the current to exclamation: been diced and chopped and lay thinly it is by far the Vest planned with SUPERFEX such a light, the current is lessened as world, and for amateurs nothing so "I've got it—the fifth, tenth and sliced»lemon top or add the juice best cared for p^ot that can Burners that and 011 complete, so large or so powerful is the condenser is charged, and the potential fifteenth flashes! Se&?" and he held if preferred. equals the cook- be seen this region. It is located in ever required. For ordinary purposes, a difference across the ajee increased. out a sheet of paper on which were JgH||jjgl[ ing speed of gas. Fast, Hot Flame Potato Pancakes.—Fill a cup witl: a beautiful slope, a wide path divides This still further charges the very small sending set is all "that is row iipon row of figures and letters, on grated raw potato, add one-hall' tea condenser which discharges through necessary and even for the smallest a it in the middle, and a flag commencing with "5—8—K—14—B." spoonful of salt, two well beaten eggs the coil and again becomes charged license is required for while there is the staff from which an American flag "T.oolcs interesting," admitted and one-half cupful of flour. Ileal in the reverse direction, the whole no'objection to any one operating a chief, '"but what does it mean?" at the end of the path. The thoroughly and cook on a hot griddle waves is operation being repeated over and over receiving set and listening-in to anything "Got a German dictionary here? One small grated onion may be addet1 can be seen from a great distance. Complete Line of flag* again with extreme rapidity—as many that is In the air, a multitude No—veil. I have. Luckily it's an old if the seasoning is liked. The graves are now being put as one million discharges a second of signals and sounds being sent is a jdition—just the one they're using for Buttered Potatoes.—I'eel one doze: in their final arrangement, for in the being usual. Diagrammatically this vgreat nuisance and interferes with Oil Stoves, the code. The letters give the numbers small even -sized potatoes and onehalf haste of war bodies were not buried arrangement is shown in Fig. 56, in every legitimate sending station" by of the pa-res. and the figures designate dozen onions, put them wi|h foil, systematically. Metal coffins are used confusing the sounds and creating interferences. which A represents the aerial, the the words, the big ones in bold Ovens, tablespoonfuls of fat, salt, and peppe In-- fact, the greatest ground, the coil,. the telephone for each body, and the white wooden type. Five and eight means the to season, in a casserole and bak trouble in deceiving is interference receiver, E~the condenser, the light, fifth and eighth words on page eleven, cross which heads the grave bears gently until tender. EtC and it is far more difficult to tune out the dynamo or other sourge of 14 means the fourteenth word ojj the military record of the soldier. Apples.—Selec Scotch Casseroled the we.ak waves-.from nearby amateur electricity. The vacuum-tube on the. page two, and so on. By spacing 'em medium sized apples, cut* in halves am These crosses are to be replaced by other hand, acts in a, very different sending instruments than to tune to 50 far apart in the meaningless wireless lay in a casserole. Pour into the dis! a polished stone marker of a permanent manner. When this is charged with the desired, signals from the. large messages-^or even in the press one cupful of hot water, sprinkle ove and ornamental nature. A chapel electricity the filament discharges ah stations, Visit Our Store Sales Room bulletins sent out from this side— one cupful of light brown sugar, too is to be erected, and an extensive Immense number of electrons upon a Also, it is far more difficult to construct they are able to fill in with lots of bit of salt, one-half teaspoonful-o a plate with incalculable rapidity Fig. and set up transmitting set park will surround the place. stuff to throw you off the. scent. But cinnamon and one-quarter teaspoon fu 57, and this, by means of various appliances, than a receiving set and hence I advise The French government gave our the code's simple enough—that's what of eloves. The sugar and spices mixer Let us show you how to do your cooking and baking produces the* oscillating currents aU amateurs to leave the sending makes it such a wondeH" government the land for the burial will be better. Just before placing ir with less work and worry. of extremely high frequency, or alone, or else make no attempt to install And it wasn't until Von Bernstorff the oven turn into the "dish the juict places and the land for the park and DECKER BROS. a continuous- waves. Unlike the arc or use transmitting set until received his sailing orders that he of lemon and one tablespoqnful of a chapel has already been acquired by light, moreovier, the vacuum tube is thoroughly familiar with the subject butter. Bake in a moderate oven for fcnew the secret service 'had beeh our government from the original employed ir/ receiving, the incoming and no longer, an amateur. But as no half an hour. Remove and increase the plucking his messages and his instructions owners. The chaplain and other officials waves varying the current through book on wireless telephony would be out of the air, through the Ingenious heat for fifteen minutes longer. a considered complete without description seemed very glad to see us. the filament and so altering the flow of wax use a phonograph LANSING AUSTIN as and instructions to rigging of electrons, thus transforming the They are requested daily to locate cylinder. sets, a few simple* directions up sending '--f vacuum-tube from an oscillator to the grave of some soldier, and they' figures are given. detector. andf «r