Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1928 | ADDITIONAL SPORTS Local Track Squads to Be Selected for May Festival Meet Coaches Roy D. Mc eod of Bis- mack High and Leonard McMahan of Mandan High are busily scanning their track and field material this week Ula ligar to selecting squads to represent the gia high schools in the annual May Festival track meet to be held at the North Dakota Agricultural College in Far- go this week-end. At try-outs tomorrow night at Hughes Field, McLeod will proba- bly name 10 men to carry th: colors of Bismarck to the Gate City carni- val. It is likely that Bismarck crack distance men and the relay team will be sent. McMahan will most likely pick his bunch of sprinting aces and his weight and jumping star. to make the journey. Mandan’s forte in con- trast to Bismarck’s is in the sprints and hurdles. Bismarck is strong in the distance events. Strength in the field events is evenly divided with Mandan having a slight edge. . Both Bismarck and Mandan should make their best showings in ycars at the Fargo meet on the bi of the individual performances at the Sea City meet here last Satur- jay. Coast Kids Watch Their Idol—O’Doul San Francisco, May 8.—()—The idol of San Francisco’s boyhood last year hasn’t lost his place, although he is now on the other side of the continent. He has only to hit a home run and every kid in the Golden Gate region knows that Frank (“Lefty”) O'Doul is clubbing the ball for the New York Giants like he did for the San Francisco Seals last season. Reared in the plain environment of the “Butchertown” section of San Francisco, “Lefty” has been the hero of poor boy and rich boy alike, united by the common bond of base- ball. The newsies knew “Lefty” and he ‘called them by their first names. Voted the most valuable player in the Coast league last year, the genial outfielder had another dis- tinction which meant fully as much to him. He was the honorary mem- ber of the “O’Doul Booster club,” an organization embracing thou- sands of boys in the bay region and whose insignia of membership was O’Doul’s grinning countenance on a lapel button. 1 David and exacts @ forget him. ted Van Horne Davia bolts. Van. Horse ices hes CHAPTER XLVII night clubs, Grant Proctor, whom Enid bi be announced from Palm Beach. telle Sally he Knows about her mother’s t NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY TIVE weeks later—it was in early January, just before the annual scurrying of self-coddling society folk from the rigors of a New York winter to the sunshine of Palm Beach and Nassau—Sally Barr, “one of the season's most beautiful debutantes,” as the society editors called her, sat at a table for six in one of New York's most exclusive hoped ‘she would marry, sat op posite her, Arthur Van Horne on her right. Beside Grant, twittering and. giggling, was Claire Bain- bridge, whose engagement to the heir of the Proctor millions would And yet Sally was conscious that Grant's nice, leaf-brown eyes fol: lowed her with a frustrated, dog- Uke devotion whenever she was ae ed Ul f Sharkey Shows | He Is the Boss When Fighting ¥ New York, May 8.—(AP)— It seems that Jack Sharkey will do -his own thinking and talk- ing when fighting from now on. He always has been doing his own talkitg, but when he fought and knocked out Delaney recently in One round Sharkey was boss of everything. He gave orders before the fight to his manager, and seconds that he didn’t want a word out of them. And he assigned duties to his seconds instead of receiviug orders from them. : His success with Delane probably will cause him to fol. low that order of things in all his future bouts. Yale Plays Britain’s Golfers on New Links New Haven, Conn., May 8.—(@)— The Yale golf course which is sea- soning for its second playing year is regarded by Ben Thomson, the course professional, as the finest in America and only excelled by Glen- eagles in Perthshire, Scotland. he course record of 70 was es- tablished a few days ago by Wil- liam K. Lanman, Jr., of Columbus, Ohio, captain of the Yale golf team. An Oxford-Cambridge team is ex- pected to meet Yale on the course during the summer. Olympic Stadium to Be Kept As Monument Amsterdam, Holland, May 8.—(#) —Finishing touches are being put jon the new stadium built for the }Olympic games. It is to stand per- manently as sports grounds which have been cre- ated on a site which less than two years ago was a swamp covering 40 acres, A high wall of Dutch red brick sweeps in an unbroken line round the arena, measuring 285 by 185 yards. At its foot, a wide moat gives the whole place somewhat the appearance of being on an island. In front and completely dwarfed by this great wall are two new low-roofed buildings, one for box- tuin ust Be nice to him, Sally! If—it he was in love with you dur- ing those awful carnival days, maybe—” She had hesitated, ashamed to put her hope into words. “Van is really a rather wonderful man, you know, darling. One of the most eligible bachelors in New York society. Old family, .no mother or father to dictate to him, a tremendous fortune, Of course, he’s cynical and blase, and rather more experienced than I'd like, but—just be nice to him, darling. Maybe—” That shamefaced “maybe” of Enid’s had kept thrusting itself upon Sally’s rebellious attention ever since. Enid, more frightened of Van's power over her than she would admit, even to Sally, threw the two together on every possible occasion, After Grant Proctor had retreated from the field, smarting under his refusal by Sally, Enid had almost feverishly concentrated on Van Horne. Sally had stub- bornly insisted to her mother that she would not marry any man to whom ghe could not tell the truth about her illegitimacy, and Enid hed just as stubbornly refused to consider the possibility of Sally's telling. “If Van really knows,” she had told Sally in desperation, “that is one too many. You could not pos- sibly harm any man by marrying him without telling. You're our daughter now—the legally adopted daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Barr. That is all that matters.” “What matters to me,” Sally had jonument to the new | + again, I'll kiss you right here on insisted wearily, “is that no man that you would like for me to marry would have me if he knew. I can't cheat. Of course I don't have to marry.” “Of course not,” Enid had agreed with assumed gayety. “But since Van does know—Of course, since he already knows, if you married him it would be as much to his interest to forget it and protect me —us—as it is ours, But I want you to be happy, darling.” Sally, her little round chin sup- fingers, her Ported on her laced eyes brooding upon the dancer whom she did not see, reflected with an unchildlike bitterness that there ‘was no question now of her “Dance, Sally? Or do you to Marre ies iatectey ed LT 4 IW, Yo! rupted, her bitter reverie. She made a sudden resolution, rose with sprightly vivacity from her chair, flung a sparkling glance her mother whose beautiful face was a little pinched ‘with the strain under which she had lived these last few weeks. “Dance, of course, s at him with s provocative moue. She saw her mother’s pinched face flush and bloom with hope, caught an austere but approving from Courtney Barr, with she had not yet reached the that should exist between er an if E g 38 Van!” she cried, wrinkling her nose | pressed SREES E {TT she perep-tenecearanneintemeipailis gineering Heads Athletic Group of Girls at Columbia’ NATIONAL LEAGUB j Boston ... Pittsburgh . Robertson, | Miljus and * Yeste: @ 2 Wer H 9 Philadelphia ... Chicago Walsh and J. Gonzales. New York . Cincinnati . Van Alstyne and Ruel. R H sees 4 9 2 1 ‘Cleveland Boston .... sell, Garrison and Berry. AMERICAN eee Toledo . St.: Poul Pfeffer, Polli and Gaston. D'YUH ever hear a hard-boiled male egg say that girl athletes might be good but they never had looks? If you did, take a look at this picture and change your mind. She is not a model for what the well-dressed girl will wear in sport clothes or out faced by a paved court nearly Willis as large as the Place de la Con- ind McMenemy. a « zday’s Games ————— 3 Stewart and O'Neill; Jones, Burke, sees 2 1 Miller and L. Sewell; Harris, Rus- 2 1| z and Taylor!| E. Smith. EI 3t Brooklyn .. 4 St. Louis ric iL 3 Elliott, Doak, Clark and Hav- greaves; Rhem, Haid and Muncuso, AMERICAN LEAGUE R H E Chicago ..... iL 1 New York . 11 1 A. Thomas, Barnabe and Crouse; Shealy, Pipgras and Grabowski. R H E Detroit ... » 0 5 0 Philadelphia . 10 13 1 Carroll, Smith, Holloway and ea; Grove and Cockrane. R H E St. Louis 15 17 1 ington ..... "7 1 E 0 0 an example of what clothes will do R H E for a cute girl. She is Olive Bush- | Columbu: ce TO 5 nell of’ New York, the president of| Minneapolis ...... 3 10 1 the Girls’ Athletic Association at Cc-| __ Lyons, Wykoff and: Ferrell, Bird; | lumbia University. Brillhcart, Hubbell and Kenna. R R H E ing, the other for fencing. Apart | Louisville .......... 0 4 0 from them and the ‘square-sided) Milwaukee a ? 1 marathon tower, the stadium stands} Moss, Wilkinson and Shinault; 1 corde in Paris. H From 40,000 to 50,000 spectators | Indianapolis . 9 will be able to witness the games.| Kansas City . ~7 i There is seating accommodation for Boone, tt and Spencer; about 20,000 persons, more than Warmouth, Schaack, half of which is under cover. Peters. Lalla?” His ardent, dark face was bending close, his black eyes free of mockery but lit by a fire that repelled her. “Did you really fall in love with ‘Princess Lalla’?” Sally forced her- self to ask coquettishly, fluttering her long lashes in the demure fashion which had proved so effec: tive during her short career as a debutante. “Absurd question!” Van Horne Jeered softly. “Didn't I convince you at the time? Listen, Sally, 1 never see you alone. Enid seems to have an antiquated lean- ing toward chaperonage.” “Chaperons are ‘coming in’ again,” Sally laughed at him, hid- ing her distaste. “You're so adorable tonight that I want to run away with you,” Van told her boldly. “But I'll try to be content if you'll promise me to come to my apartment alone -for tea tomorrow. Do, Sally! I've something to tell you. Can you guess?” She stiffened, every nerve on the defensive against him. But she re- membered her resolution, and nodded slowly, her head tucked on one side, her eyes granting him a ft, shy upward glance. ‘If you look at me like that breast. Only her head was free to weave from side to side as his flushed, laughing face came closer and closer. “The best kissing technique advocates the closing of the eyes, darling,” he gibed with tender mockery. “And there is a point at which maidenly coyness ceases to be charming. Now!” She submitted to his kiss then, but her lips were lax, unresponsive. When he released her, an angry glint in his eyes, she backed away, touching her lips involuntarily with her handkerchief. “Please don’t—kiss me again—like that, Van,” she quavered. “Not yet. I'll marry you, but you'll have to give me time to get used to—you.” The blank amazement in his eyes made her voice falter lamely. Then he laughed, a short bark that was utterly unlike the tenderly mock- ing laughter which she had always inspired in him. “You'll marry me?” His voice was staccato with contempt. “By heaven, your naivete is magnif- cent! You should be enshrined in @ museum! Thanks for your kind offer, Miss Barr, but I must con- fess, if your innocence will stand the strain, that my intentions in regard to you did not include mar- riage. They were strictly dishon- orable. When a Van Horne allows himself to be led to the altar, the successful huntress is a woman who is at least socially worthy to be the mother of future Van Hornes. There is as yet no bar sinister on our coat of arms. . “No, walk, not run, to the near- est exit.” He barked his new, usly laugh at her as Sally was backing hurriedly toward the door, her body bunched as if his words had been actual blows, her face ghastly white, “You are entirely free to ing! Iam rather lasing and I have just suffered a grievous disappoint- ment. At the risk of appearing ungallant, I am forced to admit that I am afraid you would have bored me intolerably {f you had con- sented to ‘trust me and give me all’ in exchange for my silence in regard to your birth, Goodby, Sally—and good luck.” . Somehow she made her way home, crept painfully, like a mor- tally wounded animal, up the cir- cular staircase to her room. Brac- ing her shaking hands on her dressing table, she stared at her reflection in the mirror as if she had never seen that white-faced, enormous-eyed, stricken girl before. ‘Then horror and loathing of her- self swept over her with such force that her knees buckled, and sho sank to the floor. As she fell her the dance floor!” Van threatened exultingly, as his arms tightened about her. Enid’s pathetic gratitude to her, for being “nice” to Van Horne atrengthened the girl's resolution to carry it through. She dressed with especial care for her tea date with Van the next afternoon, pin- ning the corsage of Parma violets which he had sent her on the full shawl collar of her Russian squirrel coat. But before she left her room she took the ring David had given her from the box in which she had hidden it because the sight of it hurt her so intolerably, and kissed the shallow, flawed little sapphire with passionate grief. “Goodby, David,” she whispered to the ring, but inconsistently she thrust it into her dark-blue and Gray leather handbag. No matter what sort of ring Van gave her, it could never be so precious to her as this cheap little ring that David had given her to mark their be trothal. She had visited Van Horne'’s apartment once before with Enid, gave the floor number the. elevator operator—it was one of the most exclusive and ex- pensive of the new Park Avenue apartment houses—she thought she saw a gleam of athusement in the was in- Sat Pia Re h hander pulled ber body {nto the room. “I think one reason I am so mad about you, Sally my darling, is that you are always fluttering out of my bi i: Ff E E es te : i : Morrison and Chi three ably full o' with her ee One Principle “You never take one of those hahics seriously and yet always Prove tough fights for yeu,” “If you beat them, you don't get much credit. them, your pres you never hear the last of much dough in taking ‘em on.” Women Rout Yeggs in Two Holdup Attempts attempt to hold up women again. One armed bandit, who had robbed the cash register of the Hotel Lillian in Naperville, TL, last night was confronted by the proprictor, Mrs. William Vandewerker. “Drop that money or I'll fill you jumped tov automobile. ; Des M er 3, 1s, Ci Mike McTigue Never Forgets e Los Angeles, May S—(AP) "| Carr and Merris Also onlare penisitde the fact that th Every nian in sport has some platform calls for more state-owned | cardinal priteiple to which he Program at Independent | Clevators and expresses renewed holds on with everything he has Raliy jconfidence in the industrial _ pro- | and ould Milk McTigue is no ex- os gram which he said, they admit has| ception, been far from successful. These, His pet principle is ‘never Carrington, D., May 8.—(@—|he said, are hopeful that their can- to fight a sucker.” And here's | Declaring that “we need and want aldidates have “too much sense to; why he's against such a fight. farmers’ program in North Dakota,| redeem these platform promises if they | wi he says. Uf you lose to pa ige suffers and “And finally, there's not joi Shi icago, May &.—(M)—At least gunmen at large today prob- will think twice before .the f holes,” she said. her, the weapon. The robber She struck him He fled in an | FARMERS’ PROGRAM IS NORTH DAKOTA'S but it should be a program which A. Nestos, Independent candidat position on issues of the state cam- Nestos was one of a group of In-| were candidate, town, candidate for lieutenant pov- ernor and James Morris, Carring- ton, Independent candidate for at- | torney general, Expressing confidence that et to the Independent ticket will be success-| “shifting policies of political elec. | ful if the facts regarding the opers-} tions” would impossible suc-{ tion of the Nonpartisan league's in-|cessful operation of enter- dustrial program can be brought S home to them, Nestos told Inde- speaker gave only passing pendent workers that Nonpartisans!notice to the national issues in- would “squirm” under the indict-| volved in his campaign, stating that ment which the facts present but vors legislation such as the that this should be no reason for NEED, NESTOS SAYS AT CARRINGTON earl Upaeaee 7 j ;| and statistics of each of those lines ratorial Candidate One of|of business will agree with that Speakers at Dinner Mcoting, Policy and will vote the Independ- There Last Night—Shafer, jent ticket this time no matter how he voted before.” \they are elected” but pointed out [that no Nonpartisan candidate has repudiated the platform on which he running end that, if elected, the] f candidates have Il help, not hurt, the farmer,” R. v 1 last night outlined 4 ign in an address here, i Many Nonpartisans, Nestos said | ¢ 1 expression of her prowess to fit into lighter characterizations. In “One Woman to Another,” having to do with a girl's blastea love affair and her plot to force the man to marry her, Miss Vidor has a part that perfectly suits her. This comedy comes to the Eltinge for | Wednesday and Thursday and serves to interrupt the pretty star’s as a powerful dramatic ac- The screen play by James c uress, Campbell was adapted from a stage j Success by Frances Nordstrom. In her last few pictures, iliss Vi- dor has played somewhat hvavy pai calling for many tense mo- ments. However, in “One Woman to Another” there isn’t a_ single highly dramatic scene. The pro- duction is fast action throughout and there’s a grin or a chuckie in every scene, according to those who have previewed it. An exceptional cast has been placed in support of Miss Vidor, the list being topped by Theodor von y | Eltz, who personifies the handsome would unquestionabl in | dependent speakers who came here|their power to carry out the | for a dinner meeting of Independ-j promises of their platform no; ent workers from Foster*and ad-! matter what the loss to the tax-! ning counties. Other speakers! Attorney General George F. | afer, Independent gubernatorial John W. Carr, James-+ payers or how great the damage to! the economic and financial life of | North Dakota.” Reviews Branch Bank Plan | Reviewing the proposal to place | branches of the Bank of North! Dakota in each county voting for such action, Nestos said the danger is too great and that the fact that such banks would be sub, Expresses Confidence the augen bill; the rly com- | John Bruce. John’s love for her wanes for various reasons, and she has to scheme to get his love bach which she does, She puts him in 2 very compromising position, a situation that doesn’t work out at the way she planned, but the rc- ilts are the same. Sons Are Entitled to Shares in Land Affirming the Rolette county dis- t court, the supreme court has that the sous of George R. Fox, Rolette county farmer, are en- titled to the shares in land held in > name of their father, for which had paid. The case came before the court on appeal by several daughters of Mr. Fox who demanded that the t be CHAPTER I. you marry that girl I'll jump in the river!” The man at whom the reckless speech was directed smiled his dis- belief. “But I mean ft, Nicl,” the girl Persisted. “Yes, of course you do. Just as you meant it with Berto last year and Harry the year before and h, shut up! T never pretend- ed to caro about them, but you are different. I'm crazy about you, Nicl. The whole village knows it.” Tho man made a gesture of wear iness with one hand. His other was busy at tho table before which he stood, arranging the decorations for a buffet supper. “Please stop being childish, Chiri,” he said, “and help me with these flowers.” Chiri sniffed. “Orchids! pose SHE sent them.” This time the man paused in his work to regard her seriously. “Why not? She sent this cloth, too,” touching the fine lace and nen cover, “2nd these,” lifting a piece of sterling silver tableware, “In fact, she sent all this stuff, Chirl, but what does it matter it she wants tho things she’s accus- tomed to? It’s her party, too, you know, and if 1 hadn't won the mural competition and used it as an excuse to celebrate down here wo would be announcing our en- gagement uptown.” Across the richly appointed table the girl called Chir drew back and looked at him scorntully, “You . . » poor es « « fool,” she sald slowly, - 1 sup- “For heave tripatiently, rel with me 8 seke,” he returngd ‘stop trying to quar- and get busy; can’t these candles up you stick atraight?" “I didn’t come here to straighten candles! Everyoue's talking about you, Niel, aad this . . . what's her name? . . . Brewster girl We all think you're mad, Why, Niel, dear”—sho changed her voice sud- dently trera anger to tender plead: ing--“can’t you see it will ruin you to marry an outsider such as she is? Look. Linen! And we are used to bare boards, or Italian brocade when someone is lucky. How will you like to. sit dowa day after day at precisely the same hour to precisely the sme correct table? The butler wili sneer at you if you touch anything when you shouldn't, and pretty soon you'll want to kill him; and what will you do when they call you to din. ner just when you've caught the thing you couldn't get into your work for weeks and weeks . . .” “Good lord, Chiri, you don’t know whet yowre talking about. I doubt if you've even secn a but» ler off the stage, and besides wo aren’t going to live on Park Ave nue, I hope to take Verale to next year and I imegine We'll bo able to find a common meeting ground for our tastes.” “That kind of imagining has ruined many artists, Niel, and you know it. Oh, I can't let you do it, I can't.” Chirl_ came Mike a whirlwind round table and torew herself into his unwilling arms. Hor hands clung boy! his neck and her ‘bell, A nice mecs if it’s Virginia. Bi {at ie is | th in th sp ca di hi Chirt came like a whirlwind round the table and threw herself into his unwilling arms, Sew! “Chiri,? he began firmly, “I want If it {s, for heaven's sake bchave you to stop this. You know you're | yourself.” only acting and that you arcn’t| He moved off to answer the sum- worried about my career.” mons and the girl looked after him | Chiri smiled straight at him and| With mutinous eyes, Shoe could threw pretense to the four corners | not havo him. Not now. She knew of the big studio. that. But men change. Things | “Well, what if I'm not? I don't change. And nothing could make | her stop trying. ‘hero hadn't) want you to marry, and one rea- bed a or son’s as good as another.” been another man like Nathaniel | Dann. If only she coul ake him | “Then please save your acting Only she-could make say, just once, “I love you!” for a better occasion. The only 5 = thing I’vo ever liked about you,|., Suddenly, lke a cat springing, i she reached out and grasped a Cea tolls SPAN uu Nene beavtitul purple and white orchid | say I love you.” in her slim, nervous fingers and “Because you're lying. But I'd aut dt epi etaly. LS ohare’ be sorry if it were true, as I hon-| . ob dering tho elrlyiio Bad estly believe I'm monogamous. | ¥°" forever what sho desired and Anyway, I’ve never loved any girl could not have for even one hour, but Virginia, and I have an idea| Between her and the door stood that I never will.” a screen. Sho glanced at it with Chiri let a peculiar Mttle sound | €¥¢s made X-ray by her obsession, that meant “too bad” escape her | Nathaniel was kissing his love— lips. “You're talking Hke a bour-| She knew that, and if she hadr’t geoiste already,” she declared re-|*own already si:e would have proachfully. “That's what her in-| hen she saw the girl’s face. It fluence has done for you. Monog-| ¥28 radiantly beautiiu: as only the amous! My God! <Aln’t nature | f2ce of a woman happy in love can wonderful?” be. Niel’s kisses scemed to linger “Must you be vuigar?” Nathanicl ;{" the shining tenderness of the asked guictly. clear gray eyes and the curves of “Mh, I don't care what I am,”|the smiling lips. Chiri cried with genuine tears in| Chiri hated to louk at it when her eyes. They were, however, | Nathaniel introduced hee t+ Vir- tears of exasperation. “You're the|Sinia. And the voice that creeted only man J love and you have to| ler afforded further irritation. It 9 monogamous.” held notes like those that Nathan- Nathanlel laughed. “You talic as{icl coaxed from his violoncello if that were a political platform, | when he played under the stars on Chiri, I'm ashamed of you, hon-| hot nights, estly I'am. Do you think even if} Chiri loved poctry, beauty in T loved you I'd let myself be just | Sight and sound. Sho knew that enother scalp at your belt? %'m| Nathaniel loved it, tov. Atd hero beginning to be afraid of you. Le had found his dream giil. Chirk “The trouble with you, Niel, you | could see that. ought to have more conceit. Why| For a moment she felt defcated, should you care what brand my | without hope. But having her way effections hear? It’s my love I'm | with Nathanicl had become iike the talking sbout and I guess I know | battle of iife itself to ner. She more about it than you do. I'll|could not give up. guarantes it’s interesting.” But she knew she could gain “Not to mio, Chiri; please be-| nothing by creating a scene, and Mevo that. And there's the door-|ber passion being what it was—a | mi flame which she fed with conquests btn! ase m vii sal in, at mi as) ki to m¢ gi for mi! to! Loves and fleeting satisfactions—she was able to control it, to speak calmly and act with ease. |never be swept into an ungoverned | demonstration of feeling. ishe did, no matter how unconven- tional, wa when Chiri had left them, | Cheery. g\| art of the name of a South Amer- parents, poor littl kid.” dent-model. now and then and tries to work, but mostly she models.” | Virginia then. ;| Who might be presupposed not to understand art. about models? Nathaniel went on, still watching. ure.” are sweet.” nudity! had any, It gave her! that. any time?” bell. iel asked. guests, Niel, Dad's terribly disap- pointed. He said he must see somcone on very important busi- ness tonight.” meant it. He genuinely liked Vir- come engaged to her he had feared that Richard Brewster, millionaire, would not welcome & poor artist pointment not to have troducec for the first artists of Greenwich the happiness of seceiving gratulations ef were @ joyous herd ti mostly in groups, tral figure—a famous “I didn’t shoot him after he| permitting voters to go uninformed. on of a treaty with Canada and | pr« be divided equally among dropped the money, but I gave the| “A great majority of our people,|immediately thereafter construc-| his children. police the license number of his car,”| whether they be Leaguers or In-|tion of the Geat — Lake The three sons of the dead man she 8: dependents, desire nothing except | Lawrence waterway. ‘This, he said,| contended that their father bought In V » Ind, two men, |that which will promote the welfare |yill mean more in the decade the land and took title in his own armed with a shotgun, blocked the |of our people,” Nestos said. hey}come to the farmers of name but that they helped pay for path of a car driven by Mrs. George | need to get at the facts and to h: Dakota than any — other it with the understanding that all Carson, of Joliet, Ill. She replied to|them presented so fairly and justly} now before our people.” w to have an equal interest in the command “stick ‘'em up” with|that it will inspire them with con- RR the property. The lower court held two shots from a tae eval in her | fidence le the bile a oH e— | they were entitled to the shares of machine. A few blood stains were|ness of our position. believe i the only traces of the holdup men.|thoroughly that the program pre- I At the Movies | os sented by our platform, to manage e The starling in aa immigrant|the industries that we now are ELTINGE THEATRE from across the Atlantic—a much] operating honestly, efficiently and} Florence Vidor is a comedienne! Westminster Cathedral is being later comer than the English spar-| economically, but to establish no} That fact h: been definitely | decorated in mosaic work, a task row—released in Central Park, New| others, is sound and wise and that! proved in the past, and now she] that, it-is anticipated, will’ occupy York, in 1890. each taxpayer who studies the facts| has been given a xole that permits | a century or more, -—_a kk a ee She might be- ve herself desperately infatu- ed with Nathaniel but she would What is done with purpose. Only ue love makes one forget oneself. What did you say her name ’ Virginia asked ithaniel “Chiri, as though you spelled it Odd, isn’t it? Says it is ‘an fruit. Must have had strange seems . . . sort of. . . Who {s she, what does do, pain ‘Well, she calls herself a stu- Really gets serious Deliberately Nathaniel watched Chiri had not been e first to plant the seed of doubt his mind about the success of e marriage of an artist to one Would she be common-minded “I've used her quite a lot lately,” Virginia lifted calm eyes and joke. “For your illustrations. I nm seo she was the woman's fig- Virginia did not know why he id it. He came and took her in ‘s arms and said, “Virginia, you Sho hadn't even thought about The figure she mentioned He had sought to ko her think Chiri was the love figure in the mural drawings, her reaction, And she hadn't No more than an artist siting him and discussing the me subject would have had. No, certainly Virginia wasn't go- is to be cheap ebout his models, He had known teat all the time. He felt he coulén’t have loved her he'd been less sure of her fine ind. “What made you do that?” she ked him whea he released her. “You. You come over me some- times like a wave of something I can’t resist. i'll always have to iss you, Virgiala, when I feel like “Good gracious. If it happens a ‘Any tim “Well, if thé attacks aren’t too closs together we might arrango have them happen in privacy. Do you thiak you will have another one tonights” “Right nowt 17 tw Se Tho maledy wes cured for the joment by the ringing of tho door- “Is it your father?” Nathan- “No, it must be the first of your “I'@ sorry,” Nathaniel said, and inia’s father. Before he bad be- r a son-in-law, however rising he ight be. It would be i night when Virginia fi es SF But he soon forgot bis ‘ # i hat men Re 7 (Continued on page. \ ea