)' ,AmwmWMi,1 PwvW;,ytSiwF JH! '1 vv llV I. fi A ,-f 1 war " . ; V BER 7, 1922 .V.v t , m MURDER MYSTER Y CHANGES GAY LITTLE FLAPPER ,T WW, &K IF t mt.wi ?,, INTO NEMESIS OF SLAYER OF MOTHER AND RECTOR . ; w & RH1' 14. 'Charlette Mills Turns' Inte Weman Ov,er Night JVhen Bodies of Parent and New Brunswick Minister Disclose Crime if l - . .. i 1. .1.-.. 4,1,- -..l,..! -J i IE fTHIS is tne irugn; " " niunmueis ua n Happen $ a month titte she hed no real ambitien: leftv Ideas anneved her her 'I " . ... ' - li u... ..n... ' ' Interert In me was imcnst um mu-ive. Swcethearta she had, but they didn't inspire her; she loved rather te ve her bobbed chestnut hair e little mere of the enviable quality of flufflncss; she leved mera a newly bought gay frcck. hc loved rather her pendant earrings, jet (black or jade green as"the I 'spirit moved her or the color echeme required. She leved rather a bright ribbon te put te her hair. fc I She was such a little flapper, if weary of anything, weary of the drabness cf r.er neme, weary ei me moncteny of a small city and its small city ways. Today she is transformed. A bit ter tragedy has entered her life atd Bobbed -Haired Youngster Who Grumbled at "Dumbbells" of "Nine-O'Clock-Tewn" New Stalks Mysterious Murderer iwept out of it all its seeming in-.mu-nuence: swept out of the lit tle flapper's mind all the frivolous J nothings that swarmed it; sworn, cut of her heart much of its bright md lovely flapper ncntcnae; swept Ihe little flapper herself into womanhood! Today she has one ambition one 'determination. Everything che may rave hoped for, everything she may fcavc dreamed of, she new wltlingly ferfe'ts. She pledges hclself te one mevin? task: Te find the murderer cf her mother! Tragedy Swept Laughter Frem Her Girlish Days. Chailotte Mills, barely sixteen years old, doesn't laugh any mere tow. Within her tense little body la: been gathered the tears of trag edy, but they never rim her eyes. Today she is dry-eyed, a woman grown who cannot weep, obsessed trith her single idea te find who killed her mother, Mrs. Eleaner Reinhardt Mills, and the Rev. Ed ward Wheeler Hall, rector of the Church of St. Jehn the Evangelist, one dark night in September. v Today she is a woman of resource, Cf mental clarity, of some forceful ness. The little flapper, killed by tragedy, is dead. A woman with a heavy heart lives! And yet and this is most bitter fappeidem still clings te her. In her bobbed hair, in her chic little frocks, in her exotic pendant ear tiagB, in her girlish conceits, lives Ihe ghost of the little flapper who fldn't want te die, beckons faintly hke the fading memory of a well remembered day. The little ghost beckons and pleads for another brief moment of life. But it is only an incongruous little ghost, a pitiful intruder new tut from the world forever. "People point at me en the toads," says Charlette. "They whis per, 'There is the daughter of that murdered woman.' But I held my head high. My mother was the in nocent victim of a jealous woman, and I am going te find her!" In the little brown frame house a kind of duplex apartment en the itceml fleer. Charlette Is new mistress. Her father, .Tames Mills, stunned by trlef, (Iech her will. Grief nml the viuddenne8 of dentil have innde bin daughter the head of the household. It Isn't the man attractive of homes -but It Is very clcun. The kitchen. ith ltd tnble nnd ihecker beard In tie center, nnd it) stove, nnd Its cup board, and Its tnnumernblc bric-a-brac, b net only kitchen, but dining room and reception hall as well. Charlette, sitting by the tnblr. In I white middy blouse, nml a short i'mIc skirt, with her frizzled chestnut chestnut wenn hnlr. 1h n startling figure In that Wtchen. The ntmespherc of the house "heavy, drear, like n bereaved house with Its dead lying in another roem: Mmeliew. like nji empty heue, it Is mm, sinister. And ct, in the midst A It. by the table, with nn nnen Wk. sits the little girl, whose clothes Proclaim "flapper." who seems as If Hie ought te be tripping along the gay reeti In the sunshine, chnttlng non nen enec with sleek-haired boys en The cor cer ?rr'i?wins briKhtly out of the prison ei school, the dny's lessens ever. Her Face Shown Strain of Days Since Murder Only her face, (.trained nnd haunted, Any her c ethes. Her blue eyes leek rt. !? . room' aml 8ee nothing Vili' "' V ,n0K ,," etner eyes and see wthing there: they leek out Inte the 3fLc ,T of ,lu l"lRt' lnt0 t!'P bone ii, ft'Vlre' Rrlmly, constantly scorch scerch lem l ,lle 8ol"tlen of n terrllilc preb- bm1V ' '"vnm r cnimren, never Be"t for flnppers. til... I wnn,ed " set away from this M. in . .,hl8 fnur-roemed lint, from lire, before my mother my moth- I"T wl ' her hand, ns though the tr.i reu 1 net ,0,np t0 express the "J "ut new I must stny here. ?te!M Ks threuB'- A'l I fel'Z WnH ," "'"e-it's gene new C i, !;,;n,l '" "" ''"'"ey did their -"iiiiiiB. DeiiK'i nies i fpit ihe house, after mother went te bed. I wasn't Interested In puttering around the house. I don't like te cook or te fe housework or te Iren. And I iwildn't go le bed nt 7 o'clock. It was sm'Ii n dumb life. I wanted te be up nnd ti round, nnd Xcw llrunwiclc Is such a aenii nhce." "Dees It really eppnl you se much as thnt?" t'linrlettc wnaskrd. Iler lniht eyes moved te the spenk er m fnce. Her lip curled n little, re vca'inj; lier strong white teeth. "leu don't knew the half nbeut Nev Ilrunswiek! It's full of dumbbells!" .She pniiKPi nnd then, if ever the lit tle flapper glil looked like a woman, she looked it then, (irave and pur pur peieful i-henc her eyes. And her deli rate giillli jnw hardened a bit as slit added, mid without regret: "1 ran't go away new. 1 want te find the murderer. I must find the inuidcrer. It was a woman, nnd she was jealous of my mother's church work. My daddy wouldn't kill n fly. Toe much money, tee much politics have been used te hamper the investi gation. Ne matter what happens, it's all bunk about my daddy quarreling mer Interests for her all-engrossing pledge te find the murderer of her mother is brave enough, if somewhat inevitable. I)ut te continue her school work, te pore ever books, te force her attention upon mntters he trivial in the light of the great less and the Intlmntcd Ignominy she suffers, te de sums when her mind is alive with the little imps of an insistent pnln, Is mere or less in conceivable. But there Is no question In her mind about the advisnbllity of continuing her school work. It is perhaps the only ether interest which enn keep her snne. Kven the sharpest, most cynical rc- Krters who hnve gathered nt New unswiek te send out reports of the progress or lack of it of the Jenl nutlieritieH in the solution of the crime hnve come te realize Charlette's cour age and ber transformation. They say, after days of observation, thnt she is much elder nnd wiser than ber years or nppenrnnee would indiente. Troubled by the delay In the Inves tigation by dctertives, C'linrlette indited a number of tnctieal letters; one te Governer Edwards, petitioning assist- fore, I am appealing te you te come te New Ilrunswiek nt once'." If prosecution has been hushing up the ense, ns has been rumored, then this letter heaped coals of fire en the prosecution's bend. If prosecution hasn't been hushing up the case, the letter was n stimulating reminder te re newed or inereascd activity, Any way the letter is regarded. It la Ingenious nnd stnreely the work of n flnpper. It nnd the ether letters are pinduets of a sincere mind deeply stirred. At the kiteben tnble Charlette sits, cudgling her brains nnd she has them for n way out of the confusing maze thnt confronts her. Her friends used te sny of her that she was like a rnr going 100 miles nn hour nnd thnt she was the one girl who led while the ethers followed. It may or may net be true. Today her most visible characteristic Is a ser row thnt wenkens slowly but surely, thnt doesn't show itself in tenrs, along with a strong determination. "If they ever find the murderer," she premises herself, "maybe I will go nwny. Maybe I will see the big thlnfs I've always wanted te see." mft wream! I wanted te get nwav life. I the world went te bed -anl iml . ' ' reml lt tl M wanted te go out tell tarlv 10,ll?p ,,hvn'H went "Hi. Hernet hues ns nrlv D 7 di ,IT",nH ll W11H the sulld: Vr . S ihe eh I"'m,11,;l, : H " ' "ni. ly Sim ill '!ls1" Hl,,e lVfnt 'd Urn V ' thliiRH tlmt were get, g ,, Bfi-ffi" tnlke,,1' ' talki.1 ,,, " "i" -ereu't .,iivr (),, IfflteOSMiiii nnanaiiHaiaiaapHaaapK. vZ7''s1&M$QKBMfai''$-tWB mm IKKSJEUmm'' v -v -, r ; k KnHBBi l&$m Mm mmKKmmnp m. U'wmmmm&mkMMm m mimm ematmmmmmmmuamm" y'''--''i't.'-i&l?imammBmKimmi'aKmaMWm iteuij ei hv tne eeray in the nves- w&mvmHmmmmEmBmxm m: rw mmmssssamKimHmBKm mm mSmKmKUERmBKm : m ':: lMWBigim H mm mDBeBHHSSSi A t iiiiimB.lfMimwn IHwi !KBBmmfim&&mK LeijKil BSiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH siLm. JUMr wmlfmMmrllmm'mi 1-BLWiLLMBfTtitrlli I ''ill I vXXfmrmlA Ei WEKtKtUKfrVfBTjmtitwm w&wi&M. wmmmm m mr jmsmemBBSap'jissmmmsmBysmmm law mmmmmmBMSi- HMkbvM jmssmzSBmmBmmmnmm 'Bmr mMiwmmsWwWwmmm iHiHPCni' p ijBmHHLiHHl m -v mBmmSmmmjmlmm 4:I- & viBr H imr"-. - V4r,v?i, --fe mm w -WialMiteg'-i B J m m0; wm rFn mjjkx: '-'i""Siik. :SaL' KKKSBsSBSSSm. lABSBKy I w m!ri .mBm sn. - i ( - "diiiBiHPA m i-Hn ..iHHte' , S HBP v- ' . n i "ii 3MLJJWfM -- ft -inHKSIi ;'yKHH9BH-B-M' ":,-iH EBt wPsiHiaE''HEf " -'" "v--"-I A L RHHP-B 'IHBBBHHHi-Hll-v ":;- ''! : 'JQBr'-'' -feiHBi V' HBHHV T .' ..- w.i MHHHv'M'JliJI :vAH-Hii ';! Mr"!- MWmKisSW ,-h IIBV1I -c; . J m BHHBfiilrwl '" ---HH-B8--IDH- ,"v V'niH " WW W MHd CC MM Mn'Oia'wtaa jww 3jvm ,?3w' &"tS$Sb MR&9P bBw x' 4' ''.Hk flB MHHIHlV2tl'' ' A: "' WHrl&. , II .,,, , . ft. -: W !Bfe l - ;WJBI ' '' ' WRH9liliii ! nm n flapper just a flapper and I admire flap- ?' f KftVfCW ?Wi(' -,.. ' , v HSL!w 9BS9iSli! pers," said Charlctte Mills. But she isn't really a -- -, tmWV&WRk aW xS 'VWxMkJBHffi: T' Ba9ii flapper any mere, for flappers de net hae such a t -'f' tlmWbtp; kfr ' ' r ?- J8 mKKBFm 'AflHHK-H ed' w,stfuifnc ,.,.......- iijMM '3 -SpH ' - A'$-Mr ; WH 8H': f i'Wk r v'j( ' flHF' HHBB. 8SRiI'',' C'A B Rr B BH 'if fy is'1 i f B&tf tKuv v ' s- m I HI HI Hi Br ' Jv?E HI Hl Hl H - I I r H AWmKmw e fe:Sfe '.' 1 1 l ' V I Study is about the only pleasure BH F if MH HH lHKi M BMSnilil PHHI''' iWHHH Charlette .Mills has these days, I Br VHH BMH tllBKi 8Swv '' I I H BMi B k' cxm 'l-THBBBBBBBk I nnt' "- 'bnt a Pleasure BBBB HBfB BBBBI F-r iTm'i BBBFi . i iiii twr ' " II I BBBB;x' 1-TX 2 hP'BRmBIBBBBBB I bbbbbbw j IbbI bbh i'' Hi f MS:I 1 MbhBhI MP,'H I bbhbPV. fl-H fl-BH I T-VafHaf lES-ffiv;'H HbB .. l'-: ';::1HbbI ' HHHHHHTi v HT HHH VHHHHH1 aHHHHHT KKfnB3, vHKr J' HHHHHF jS .? AHH & :-. -w HHHI V -'' HH ' IV9k IiS l!l8i ;li-'i HH fJF?.: ;:t cMMHV HHH HT f - HHf 'HH1 '"HBfn ?' V HJt Hr iHMLjr w 'BI.' 'v MBH s-i;' !. .flpK MrJ. imKZMitmlti, H HHHHHHrHHHHHE if aMWHHTHHHHHi: jHHHHHI - -JliJBHHHHKS-wr JF . k rt yi rantB .l- .- ' .. ' V VjJ '. T. ,1,. r iiBBKV'iKBdCd 1B . " V S ! . V 1 . " X aaaHHHk flFMHr aaan.) jaaaa 112: -'VrMffilH9aHF IWf'" ' ( 'v'i-''.-' J Bh-HmW, SS9hO-IhI HH ' - '''rHHHlHfei': , J. HT HHHHHHHHHin - ' HHIHhHhHwJHHH d7fHHHHHrf, X - iV.H X hhhhhhBHH1hL .hhhHhhH tXsHHHHHfim!"Wi S lH HHiHHVHHHHm-HHWHHHnHH f$rVHHWHH-Hr:nW JjfV hHhHhhHhVHhhhHhhbHH M:'viiHHHHHHMift! rr"- aaaaa9aaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaHBirRaaaKaai w c: -t'n ; aaaaaaw r" -jlHHHnrHHHIHHHHHHHHM uHHftH 79HKitiv' BSBHPBHMHj KlLHWHWHVHWHHKi' ; ' Oa ? Eleaner the murder E8IIHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHjHJ fHHMHHHHB'' -U " vwed te I ' 1 nneraR SfL' HHHHHHHrr &'& I yiPH? ye-HHHHHK 7'''t In the silent house Charlette sits, when it "seema she ought te be W?HWHHWHWHlHKi in the silent J""" thc gay 8trCets In the sunshine MHhVC Mrs. Eleaner Heinhnrdt Mills, the mother, whose murder Charlette bm vowed te solve ...i.l .1... Alt- nuillier Willi lll.V IIUHIIUI. '; -- f,.n, much different kind of perse daddy; they didn't have much in ' ' ' ' ' men, but she never complained, iw-r never even talked much together'. ui tliey never iiuarreieu. If any ene questions her neiin. tin, L-U-l's e.ves llnsi mother's and the Indi strength of her resentmei ii -nation mnkiR her whole tab "l u WenlH tly te her 1 l-s, ' l , thoughtless person who Insinuutis iike glistening, keen steel. Knows What te Sau and Just Hew te Say H lf,n,ru, ';-. h..rv ,ii, T.i" . . n.,,,1 must III1VO urcii '-J gne i I"1-, ,.1,111i10il eiuresBes " - i he pathetic- vi " ally girlish conceits which linger and echo in it, coolly and clearly. "My mother," fehe insists, "was lured te her death. She wits the victim of u woman who was jealous of her In a church way." As n smnll girl, Charlette didn't like dells long, .lust ns seen ns she leuld read she threw nwny her toys. "When I thought I was going nwny I didn't nilnd leaving daddy and mother nnd brother Daniel. They could hnve kept things going. Daddy even can clean the house. I hate housework. And even new I knew thnt daddy or (Iraudiun Mills v ill tnku euro of the house. " DeIIh, dusting the furniture, rear ranging pictures, have never nppenleil te her. Hers was a "gaddlng-abeut" nature, that suffers under restraint. Hut today she lives under - restraint iiripe-ed net only by her tragedy but "Se drab, se monotonous," Charlette found life in this "9 o'clock town' that she often longed te run nway by her own deliberation, her own wish. She btill attends school the New nninswick High Scheel and will grad-1 unto this coming .luue. She still stud- Today she doesn't desire company. She Insists she neer desired it. Few people speak te her nn the street, net because they de net want te, but be cause they ure ditlident, the nre afraid of their own thoughts, afraid te let fall inadvertently something which will only awaken the ui) story whUlr dajs arc converting from nn excruciating pnln in her lienrt Inte n smeldeilng throb. Charlette, tee, is reluctant te tnlk with her pln.Mnntes because she understands they nre thinking of her mother mur dered. She Interprets their customary interest in her as an allusion te her Sercnveinent. Was "Wide-Awake Girl" in ."Nine O'clock Town' Conseeuontlv Charlette hns come te hate the neighborhood of her home mere than she eer did. Of late she lias been Ieh her lessens, perhaps mere than F,I,K i.,rei .- .. , I0frvn"V;' w,, lT ,., , , , ' . ' ,. . , " i In or In the vicinity of Nuw-Urunswlek. usual, because there is nothing else te te spend her nights. de but te remember, te watch and Ce And her courage is something t iar- "all. N0) ,it. Te have renounced nil he, for- ) And one leeks nt ber with a curious twitching of the heart strings. If she weie lijsterlcnl one might easily forget her. Hut she isn't One wants only te help her, te make her life happy and inconsequential again. "Have j en never lind boy friends? Couldn't they come new? Wouldn't they make these da.ia a whole let pleas nnter for jeu?" she un asked. Clinrlettc iliiln t smile, ns the tlener hoped she might. "They don't menu nm thing new. Of course, I've hnd benux. Plenty of them. Hut ihe don't mean any thing." "Wouldn't jeu like some day te be married?" Her replj te thnt wns rnther amazing but It was enlv the little imtlictlcallj gay tlanner-chest who squeezed In the answer. Admits She Is a Flapper and Glories in Title nnee from him: nnether te Kills Par- . ". ,l'"''t believe In marriage I am her. the famous detective of Mount i inclined toward the tre-leve idea." One deesir't smile nt that nerhnns a little smile, n wistful si n e It sounded 4 Helly. Famous Detective Gives Pledge of His Assistance And both letters hnve, brought re sults. Governer Edward immediately ordered the State troops te examine the mystery, nnd Kills Parker premised thnt as seen ns his present work is ended he would assist the little girl. The letters were simple and direct; the Inst was the most tragic, for it placed the local Prosecutor In a com promising position. Te Ellis Parker she wrete: "I am nppeallng te you te come te New Ilrunswiek te nrrest these respon sible for the murder of my mother. Mere than two weeks have elnpsed since the crime was discovered, jet nothing apparently hns been done te apprehend tile guilty person or person, I knew that you wlllnet lese any lime In clearing up the vvstery surrounding the cruel slaying of " dear mother There- iike rue long nrigiit leather leeks e;' a rain-soaked picture hat. That ; llttln tlnpper-ghest ! "If you met a real, nice man ns wouldn't mi think imivlu. if i,, tnviv him you'd be glad te marry him? " TheijK question wns besilnnt, as such u ques tion, under the circumstances, must be. Hut her reply came, clear nnd In cisive. "Ne, 1 wouldn't !" And the plnlnthe llnppcr-ghext held Ing out her slim white bunds made one last pica. "I nm a flnpper," said Charlette, almost violently. "I am just a Hepper. I ndinlie llappeis!" Hut, actually, she isn't u flapper any mine. One could see thnt with half an eje. rinppers de net hnve dry eyes which are mere heartrending than team. Fluptiers de net have such a haunted wistful face Flappers weep ensy tear this little girl cniiiiet weep ut nil. .i f $1 v. ; U J IJ,