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RARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG QASSEg A% BYNOPSIS: Curious to ace the ouse’ il which Georgle Bancrort ives, Nichotas Boyd calls. Georgld as vontoived & romaitlo ‘attichs B wiont ror Rhose: briffidnt ed= !‘,,‘,’, gwgv;:n' ha: b(mdn ended L ut shé seens a child to him. Whild e iy there Georgie lamrns thad ovelock, her cholerid —uncle's ousekeeper, has died siddenty. 1A @ rush of pity, Nickolas dproes 0 Iluw ‘Georgie tb take walks ‘with . e it (i if ‘an acetdeit that mals his jdce, Chapter 21 NICHOLAS' LEGACY NEORGIR stooped down plcked up a last year's acorn| and { S e | ‘which was lying at her feet amougst ; '§b@ dried grass and moss. % 7 ¥This is the fourth time we've en here this week,” she said i a 08 of gre. satisfaction. Nicholas Boyd finished lighting \Bway. “1 used (o think,” Georgie went on. *“*that nothing would ever happen to me, and now every'hmg geems to be h%ppenlng all at once.” “What is happening?” Boyd asked, | with faint amusement. “Well,” she pulled the acorn from its little cup and looked at it inter. estedly, “first [ went to America, anu {then 1 met you, and unow we're friends.” “All of which are most important milestones,” he agreed. Georgie missed the sarcasm. “And then I met Clifford,” she went on. “And tomorrow I'm going out with him.” : There was a little silence, then ‘Boyd said:-"1 see: and so that is iwhy you informed me we could not ihave our walk tomorrow.” “Yes,"” she - was busily. engaged cracking the little dry acorn. “Mr. Asher wrote to me the day before {yeslerday}' “You did not tell me.” “No,” Georgie considered point. “I didn't think you would like it,” she admitted. “Why not?” “] don’t quite know.” “I thought friends always told rne another everything.” “Do they?” her eyes were upan *khim. “You don’t tell me everything,” she said. He laughed at that. “Perhaps not, but as a matter of fact, I have sev- eral quite interesting things to tell you this morning if you care to hear (them.” “Of course.” Nicholac prodded with his stick amongst the dried grass and twigs. “First of all,” he said, “a distant {relative of mine has most consider- ately died and left me some money.” “I thought you’d got heaps,” Geor- ‘gle said. “I've got some, but not so much that a little more is not very wel- = come.” ! “Ob, if it's only a little.” 'No, as a matter of fact it's a ‘great dea..” “I see. o A L) B P | ‘ i : There was a queer little | . teeling round Georgle's heart. £d- ¢ ward Bancrof* always said that H “'money raised more Insuperable bar- : iriers between people than anything i else. f There was a long silence, then Boyd asked: “Don’t you want to hear the rest?” @ | “Please.” { “Well, then, I am going away.” | - She caught her breath, ™ * ‘“When?” “Next week.” b “Where?” H “To- Germany.” s “On...forlong?” “I don’t know. ¥ The silence fell again, into 'hlch | [Georgie’s volce dropped like &n } ‘echo. } “And won’t you ever come back ‘again?” ! 1t all depends.” » HE turned her head aside with the curious dizzy feeling whick: she had experienced when Edward Bancroft pushed her that night in the hall, and she fell. “Depends on what?” she asked. “Whether the operation is suo- stul.” ¥d kert his eves fixed on the \end of his stick which was still prod- ,ding the dry grass. “Thete is & surgeon in Germany,” he went on, “who believes that he can give me back my lost beauty.” There was a sort of dry sarcasm in his voice. “I am not a vain man, at i lei tE hope not, but though I have ; oni here such a short time, it has been long enough for me to | realte that I am not content to be 8 ! buried nonentity.” | | Georgle mulstened her lips. f- “You you want to make ‘some more pi tures?” "I luwou um s lt. yu. bis pipe, ard threw the spent match | the | « 1 woods, where they sat on a fallen IN U.S. DOLLAR NO WiLL HAS BEEN : FOUND 'AND ‘A \ SEARCH FOR MISSING / HEIRS IS BEING \,’ CONDUCTED ON BOTH g SIDES OF THE ATLANTIC ... Sho sald with an effort: “But if you've got all thxt money.” He laughed, and took off his hat, pushing his hair back with a weary gesture. “It isn’t money, Georgie,” he said half sullenly. “I mean, it-isn’t the money [ wapt. I've got enough to keen myself in coimfort for a8 long as I live. [t'a the fact of being no- body, of baving fallen out of life as it were. | wonder if you can nder- stand and why [ ad telling yod.” The litfle acorn rolled from Georgle's fingers an: burled itself | agaii in the dry grass. “And then you'll go back to merica, and | shall never see you again, except on the films,” she said. | "lie wa: silent, and she drew a | | deep breath +- say bravely: | “Well, I hope it will be a success if you waut it to, and | hope it won't hurt you.” {1is lips twisted into a smile. “And is that all you've got to tell me?" Georgie said, after s moment. “No, there's something else.” But | it wus sorie seconds before he put it into words. ‘My wife Is coming to ingland.” \ ie was still looking at him, | ae only saw the pretty empty but face of Bernia Boyd as It iad smiled | up at her from the pagés of the pa- per she had bought the morning she | went to London. Pink and white, golden hair; ugh, | how she hatci people with golden hair. Presently she found her voice. “Why?” shie asked blankly. “Presumably because she h: heard about the distant relative,” Boyd answerea. “I see,” So Edward Bancroft was rong, and money was not the most superab barrier in the world, sezing thot it was to bring these | two together again. ND shall you take her to Ger- many with you? | she asked | “No, I shail be gone before she | arrives.” “Don’t you want to see Ler?” The | question was out before she realized | that it was not a suitable one to ask, | and she added hurriedly: “I'm sorry; it’s not my business.” { Her thoughts were racing round | ! and round like a circling bird, and she could not r+ zapture them. She heard herself say: “And If it isn’t a success? The operation, 1 mean.” He half shrugged his shoulders, and she urged quickly. ' “Then you'll come back here, | won't you?” There was an unconscious eager ness in her voice; at the moment she would have welcomed anything that brought him back. The last weck had been such a happy one. Edward Baneroft, ¢heck- ed by the death of Lovelock, had managed to keep fairly sober, and had even allowed Mrs. Spears att' e Boar’s Head to find bim another wo- -/ man to come to do the work, a Mrs, Drill who @id not sleep In, because as she tol¢ Georgie, she had to ‘do’ for her hushand, who was an invalid, but she arrived before seven in the morning ¢ .4 stayed till supper time, so that Georgie was left free again. And every day she had gone for & walk witl Nicholas Boyd, and al ways in the same direction, to the tree and talked. She said presently, in a helpless voice: “I thought . .. Mrs. Boyd was busy making pm.ures." “1 befieve she has just finished one, and requires a holiday.” | “1 expect she really wants to see you,” Geor; ia said, and felt guilty a8 | she remembered what Nelly had said about Billy, that she no longer loved Nicholag now he was a “wreck.” Georgie put her hand to her head where the tgly bruige was beginning to fade. It was all rainbow colors now; she looked at it interestedly every morhing, faintly amused at the way it changed. It ‘still actied though, and when she was worried or unhappy a little nerye th ‘e seemed to throb and burn; at the moment 4t throbbed unbearably, a dull pain, almost like a twin with the queer pain at het heart. Nicholas said suddenly: “What are you thinking lbantf" “You,” Georgle gald. “Oh, 1 thonght perhaps you were thinking about tomorrow,” he answered. “Tomorrow?” she had forgotten about tomorrow “What about {77 - “The lunch- you are to hl'l witk the strong, youthtul hero.” (Copyright, 1983, Doubleday nmn)l Georgie has, tomorrow, still ane ¥ other MW lO lu"‘l‘- s WELL KNOWN IRISH SPORTSMAN, ) AV RECENTLY IN DUBLIN, LEAVING AN ESTAT! ESTIMATED AT 2,000,000 POUNDS. AaouY 7soqooo {in the Scottish \ every other name for | all, i fine | sis of Christian |in the case of sickness, THE LAW FIRM oF OToOLE, O'TOOLE | AND O 'TOOLE IN DUBLIN ©71933. King Fear Frein B Chnsuan Sc;ence, Assurance to a Troubled World, Subject of Lecture Given Last Night A free lecture entitled “Christian Science: Its Assurance to a Trou- bled World” was given last night Rite Temple by Peter V. Ross, C. S. B. of San Francisco, Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church. The Flrst Church of Christ, Scien- tist, in Boston, under the aus- pices of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Juneau. Mrs Alice M. Coughlin introduced the lecturer, who said in part: . “In recent years the English speaking race, indesd western civ- lization, has been stirred to ils depths by Mary Baker Eddy in her discovery and presentation of ‘Christian Science. “In one place in her writinzs (Science and Health, page 465) Mrs. Eddy defines God as “Infinite Mind, Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life, Truth, Love.” And in another (Retrospection and Introspection, page 59) she writes: “Life is a term used to indicate Disty; and the Su- if properly >mployed, preme Being, has the signification of Lif¢ “From this point of vantage it is easy to ses how God can be everywhere and All-in-All, for ob- vicusly Life, Mind, Principle are everywhere and all-pervading. No place of purpose, then, remains for man but to abide in Lifs and reflect Life. Paul, speaking on this issue with his used insensity, de- clares that in God ‘we live, and move, and have our being;’ and thap God ‘is above all, and through and in you all’ Tt is per- fectly accurate, therefore, to de- man as the expression or manifestation of Life—Life without beginning or danger of disease or end. Digease Extinguished recognition of this truz “The | status of God and man is the ba- Science practice. in Science, consists Jargely in realizing, as clearly as one may, the unity of man with Life harmonious and irrepressible, and the consequent impossibility. save in belief or appearance, of inaction, inflammation, or infir- mity of any kind. Censciousness Continuous “Man, far from being the physi- cal corporality he appears, really isan individual spiritual conscious- ness. But consciousness seems not wholly spiritual, not wholly good, | but a blending of the spiritual and material, of good and evil; and man appears to vacillate between righteousness and sin, health ‘and sickness, life and death. So that consciousness, mysterious in sub- stance and swift in action, may cne moment sound the depths of Adam and in another second the heights of Christ. “Life and Mind have always found expression, and always will find expression; and that ex- pression is spiritual man, individ- ual spiritual consciousness. Hence man coexists with God, without beginning of days or end of years. Not in the beginning of ages but in divine Principle has God cre- ated man. Therefore, were the midst of material existence lifted, it would be seen that birth and death are unlike unknown to man. In this unassailable truth lies the remedy for fear. “‘Material consciousness may lapse at times, as when an anaes- thetic. Is administered or accident or sickness overtakes the individ- ual. It may weaken or fade with advancing years “and eventually come to an end. If one's observa- tion extends no . further than these pdssing phenomena, one may conclude that ‘man 'is moftal and that individual existence ends with the grave. “And yet, were the entire struc- ture of mats consciousness dis- solved, +there would remain the sublime structure of spiritual con-. sciousnsss, ‘'which, * like Mind, is from everlasting to everlasting. spiritual consélousness precedes pirth as certainly as it persists after death. Repeatedly does Jesus refer to pre-existence as well as to future existenca * ‘Father,’ he prayed, ‘glorify thou men with thine own self with the glory which T had with thee before the world was’ Also, ‘T’ came forth from the Father, and am come ‘in- to ‘the world; again I leave the world and go to the Father. Not By Bread Alone: «Poverty in the presénce of plenty—a strange paradox truly. Now that ingenuity has brought Treatment or prayer forth, machinery which all but amufiut -lhdJ 5 HERE'S ANOTHER CABLE' FROM AMERICA.. OUR CORRESPONDENT THINKS FINNEGAN'S D GRANDSON MAS BEEN LOCATED - BETTER GET NEW YORK ON THE TELE PHONE - g CAN THE MEANTIME - - SULLY 1S STILL A CAPTIVE THE VIPER'S HANGOUT.. N » Imflglll(u%lfllllgifllllé UNG SAWBUCK GAN AND HIS NEW PROTECTOR, BARNEY GOOGLE .. HIDING IN AN UNAWARE OF WITH ONLY ONE TO KEEP OUT Syndicate foc, is bewildered and knows not what to do with its leisure. Still mes- merized by the bygone curs2 that man must earn his bread by the sweat of his brow, p:zople look about for a ditch to dig or a col- umn to add, and they would make war on the machine that have| despoiled them of their drudgery.| So the world today, which might be a place of peace and abund- ance, with cultural and spiritual development as man’s chief occu- pation, has to appearances, become a place of alarm and want. And the end is not yet, for the miracle | of production is hardly more than | well under way. Tt can fill the| world with comforts and lu\uries] as the waters cover the sea. “Have we noi in all this a hmt of the coming of man‘s dominion? The intelligence which almost mir- aculously has speeded up invention and released man from toil, can we not trust it to lead him into higher and richer fields of en- deavor where work is unlabored and gloriously productive? Labor, in its old sense, is nearing its end, let us hope; but on the other| hand let us not overlook the fact that man as God's represzntative | cannot be otherwise than active,| and that work and business, more and better than have yet been known, are at hand for those who have the vision to se2. “And men have this vision just| so far as they let that Mind be| in them which was in Christ Je- sus. That Mind holds the solution for the world's perplexitis it has a way of escape. Leaning less upon our own understanding and grate- | | fully turning, to, divine Mind for direction, we may confidently ex- pect to find that way and thai“ solution.” | | | DOUGLAS NEWS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE IS ON Douglas Eagles Out Af!er} Delinquents — Also New Candidates A membership drive, in whic former members are being favor is being successfully held at th present time by Douglas Aerie No. 117, Fraternal Order of Eagles Under 'a recent ruling of the| Grand Aerie, a special offer to those dropped during recent years from the rolls for non-payment of dues is in effect, and the local Aerie is in a position to welcome its former members back withou: initiation cost, and praetically on the same basis as contihued mem- bership is maintained. In addition to the return three old members, two new Eagle: passed through the initiatory cerc- mony at the regular meeting of Douglas Aerie last night. A Dutch lunch was enjoyed after the meet- ing. of —_——-——-—— SON BORN A 7% pound Baby boy, their sec- ond child, was born' yesterday - Fairbanks to Mr. apd Mrs. Marce Straiger. The father i8'a son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stragier Douglas. ‘A W Wwas Teceived by them telling of the event. \I‘ Stragier was Miss nexen McDonal MRS. GAIR AND 'SONS' Exr_:cr‘lp yonu: SOON Mrs. Alex Gair and sons, Alex Jr., and Anghs; fire ‘éxpétted hon on one of the next steamers from Wrangell. The latter, whose illn¢ occasioned the trip of his mothe! and brother to Wrangell is thou: to be sufficiently recovered fr his Operation tb stand the jourv y home. ' An advanced case of o pendicitis necessitated the opc tion. sr——————— The Empire wili show you tne best way to save and invest whil cash you hdve. Read the advertise ments of t.hc local merchants U OBSCURE HOTEL..BOTH THE FINNEGAN FORTUNE.. THOUGHT IN THEIR MINDS T u= THE VIPER'S PATH... [BROWN BEARS NOT SO TOUGH, ASSERTS PACK Publisher of Nature Maga- zine Visits Juneau on Picture Hunt g n brown bears are no: a tough as they are reputed to be ne@rd:na to Arthur N. Pack, pub- lisher of Nature Magazine in Washington, D. C. Mr. Pack was a /Juneau visitor yesterday, leav- shied it at lhn bn»\vl =/ SAVE MONEY! Mucic i WASH AT HOME went i ‘ 'lm . tore to blte | abou! from ..r“ Wante No surprising posed to t dion o1 such rocks going hug2 mouthfuls ground. In spite of all this !'said that one of Alaska | tourist’ attractions is the frenzy a and threw to such len; h of the Mt bi; i bear! which- he called a grizaly,| Newest G a5 increasing numbers are coming! Washer AR e, {in to photograph as well as to $ shoot the big animals. 1 ONLY [mg carly this morning @board the Bear Protoction ' ’I:n:::.fla. 60 foot yacht ownad by 'he brown bear should & Low priced, but not “cheap”, this Capt. A. W. Lepage, of v“““""""'lprol:w(:d better,” sald Mr. P | new model will help you eave . . B."C. “One big trouble s the lack of| i money, time, ellort Sea it at Mr. Pack has been taking pic-|funds to enforce the 1aws TIOW in| home demonstation . tures of the bears on Admiralty|existence,” he continued. Island, getting material for his{ From the Pack party| ¢ 3 m ne, and reports that he has|left for Bay, where they ALLASKA ELECTRIC B al close-ups taken near as will try to nL some Sicturss of YT ~ 25 feet. He spent ten days on the | Muir Glacier, moving pictures oi LIGHT & POWER CO. island, and has many interesting |ice breaking off if possible. They stills and moving pict | also hope to get some pictures of Dg)LU(FE)\%:};TOM Gm Sheoes | the whales at play in the bay.| ? Ae His 1 The party will then go back to| REMEMBER THE FAIR tive t is | Admiralty Tsland for more bear ‘ — 3is 28, i that on one occasion when a bear | pictures, expecting to arrive m»‘ o »d too close to the photo- | Vancouver about September 1. i len E. Hasselborg | Beside Capt. LePage and two Res“"edmn Lutheran | who acted as gui “membors of his crew, there are| | Church E the part hooed the be: Mrs. Pack and Frank Hibben, of | | REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, | away by throw his hat at Princeton, N. J., aboard the yacht. ] Pastor | When the bear proceeded to eat| Mr. agd Mrs. Pack also make| | Morning Worship 10:30 AM. | | the hat, Hasselborg picked up J“thnlr home in Princetdn. . . Whether it’s something that HE buys ... . or something they both ' buy TOGETHER . . . or something that SHE buys . they’ll save time and money by shopping for it FIRST In the Advertising Pages of «The DAILY EMPIRE