Evening Star Newspaper, October 6, 1931, Page 33

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First Mortgage Loans Invest at least a por- tion of your surplus funds in our 6% First Mort- gages—that pay this Hb- eral interest unchangingly —and with principal se- cured by conservatively appraised improved Wash- ington Real Estate. May be purchased 'm amounts from $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. National 2100 925 15th St. N.W. LOCALBLONG DISTANCE MOVING CRATING PACKING 8 SHIPPING AGENTS ALLIED VANLINES RUGS %3 AND ST':’R!DD FUR FUMIGATED AND STORED IN MOTH 313 YOU PROOF ROOM TREET, NW. PHONE NORTH-3342- 4394 Wort oin Out of Your f Way to Sec ® Home Movies made with Ciné-Kodak Super-sensitive Film On exhibition in our projection room. It’s worth your while to arrange a special trip to see thesort of home mov- shots you can get with Ciné-Kodak Super-sensi= tive Panchromatic Film. Indoor sporting events.. street scenes at night. intimate pictures in the home with ordinary house lamps (twoormore 100-watt bulbs) — these are some of the interest- ing home movie subjects made possible by Ciné- Kodak Super-sensitive Panchromatic Film,used with Ciné-Kodak f.1.9. Come in and see a typical reel in our comfortable projection room. EASTMAN KODAK STORES, INC. 607-14th Street, N.W. Tel. District 8592 Subscribe Today It costs only about 1% cents per day and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington's best newspa- per_delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- 1ng. Telephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the end of each month. SYNOPSIS. Lorry Kershaw and Nate Tichenor are survivors of two warring {amilies in Eden Calif. Nate has returned, wealthy, f absence. Lorry. whose father an_encumbered cattle Nate and Owen Ker- r, ‘had been buddies in the {vorld War. 'Nate o1 3 promised, Owen he would look after Lorry like a brotrer. Silas Babson. & scheming banker, who is on the int of foreclosing o "Lorry’s ranch, alked ‘when Nate comes o her aid. But Babson hopes to secure water power sites owned by Lorry and Na n di that Nate is behind a power company which learn the cow business. He did manage to E‘“ up a little bit of culture and uplift into the Hensleys. I made up my mind to stay out of and forget cows as ‘a first-aid to mak- ing a million dollars. “When my mother and ‘aunts dled, I was the sole heir to the Bar H Land and Cattle Co., and the corporation was in excellent shape. There Wwas about $200,000 in the bank and no debts; there were 1,200 head of cattle, and the ranch was unencumbered. I 3 | decided to sell the cattle and lease the ranch. Rube Tenney, who was in com- ed. ([mand of the ranch, classed the cattle, s0 I knew what I had and what they Y |were worth. I wrote my attorney to ate. lls | trade. see your father and try to make a It seemed the fair thing to Nate |do, to let him have first chance. He'd wounding several of revolver. en she stops & newspaper office and marches to jail. raid on the several ralders INSTALLMENT XXIL HE succeeding week Nate Tiche- nor spent in hospital at Gold whither Dr. Donaldson had ordered him for observation as to internal injuries. When at last Nate came to the K Ranch again Lorry saw that, out- wardly at least, he appeared to be normal. “Doc thought my backbone had been tramped out of salignment” he an- nounced, as he kissed her, “but it was only a couple of ribs sprung loose from my spine. Doc warned me not to move around, but I couldn't stay away. Qut- Jaw that I am, I couldn’t neglect you for another week.” “I wasn't reared to be a clinging vine; I'm accustomed to man's work— and if you're gorth having, Mr. Tiche- nor, you're worth fighting for. I en- joyed " it.” “I'm almost afraid to marry you now,” he teased. “You'd be a tough wife to handle in a family row. Have you been arrested yet?” “No, dear. Joe Brainerd appears to have smoothed over the aftermath of that ruckus. He traded with Babson. Babson loaned him the new plant of the Forlorn Valley Citizen and then had a talk with the men we jailed. Babson levied an assessment to pay for the damages to Brainerd’s plant, and Joe absented himself at the preliminary hearing of the case; so Anson Towle waited five minutes for Joe and his counsel to appear and then turned the men loose for lack of evidence. The men I winged are all going to get well, although they’'ll all be on crutches for a month or two. I think they are glad to let the matter drop. We've all enough undesirable advertising through- out the State.” “As for undesirable advertising. you and I haven't had any of it. We're Nate. I've been | heroes.” “Oh, do tell me, |afraid to read the papers.” “When a mob sacks & newspaper |plant, the gntire fourth estate regards the act as a direct blow at the free- doom of the press, and instantly the fight is no longer a private one. The Gold Run Nugget has burned Forlorn Valley to a crisp, and so have all the other county newspapers. The Forlern Valleyites have been called thugs, mur- derers, bad citizens, rioters, bullies and cowards. I am advertised as a peace- able, well meaning citizen and a dis- tinguished ex-soldier of whom _the county is proud. I sought to do For- lorn Valley a signal service and was mobbed and brutally beaten and bruised in return. All of the papers have cried out upon the senseless brutality of vis- iting upon a biameless young man the sins of his forbears—and they have done as much for you. In fact, they've made a heroine of you. You are com- ‘mended for your great charity in ‘wing- tipping’ my assailants instead of kill- ing them. You have a nickname. You're Wing-Tip Lorry Kershaw now. “Your _action in shooting Bill Rooney’s high hat off and making him run for cover has the county in con- vulsions of mirth. The sheriff has dis- missed Rooney as the Valley Center deputy, and.the Gold Run Nugget has suggested you as his successor, if you'll accept the appointment. Babson has been lampooned and criticized and scolded as the real instigator of the disgraceful incident and has fallen con- siderably in_ the public estimation, while Henry Rookby is still abed recov- ering from a slight fracture of the skull. Physically, he will survive that fractured skuil at the hands of a woman, but socially, never.” She turned to him suddenly. “But I am curious to know how you accumu- lated all the money you appear to have. For you do look like cash money, Nate.” ‘Well, the fact that I have a few dollars doesn't imply that I'm a financier,” he protested. “The Hensleys had great veneration for cash, but I'm only half Hensley. My father was a paleontologist. He came up into these hills one Summer to hunt for fossils. Nothing would do but he must be our guest and have a horse to ride into the hills and a man to protect him from the Kershaws. “My mother was 24 years old at the time and already beginning to be re- garded as a fossil, so father added her to his collection and stayed on in Eden Valley and wrote some books nobody ever Issd and resolutely refused to Skin smoother instantly ...clearer in 8 hours Nurses tell how to get this new beauty discoveted 2 really quick way to end this trouble? Largely on the sdvice of these nurses, over 6,000,000 women use & quick-healing, medicated cream. ‘They find that just one application makes their complexions softer, smoother—noticeably clearer. And that regular use makes them abso- lutely lovely! Noxzema's special formula is the secret of its many wonderful results. It contains bland oils that soften the skin and smooth away roughness. Amild medication thatridsthe pores sstringents t| ink coarse pores 20 an almost invisible smallness— and radiant bloom of youth, ‘When your skin breaks out with- Blemishes, roughens, its pores en- large (as everybody's does at times) —use Noxzems. See how quickly it ends these distressing faults — brings back your own natural glow= ing skin beauty. 1f your skin is only“pretty good” right now, try Non::- today. Stop ot your druggist’s & generous teial jor of Noxzema Skin Cream, he bought all the cattle and leased the Bar H ranch for $30,000 a year, for five years, with an option to buy the ranch at any time prior to the expiration of the lease and on very easy terms. “The result was that early in 1920 I found myself foot-logse and with about half a million dollars cash in bank. Now, while I was in France I e alony. spieadidly togeiher, 1 $0t long splendidly r. 1 go !ogmw 'fil man and to trust him and admire him. In civil life he'd been gen- eral manager of a large New York stock brokerage house. He had about $50,000, and he wanted to buy a seat on the New York Stock Exchange and go into business for himself. But he didn't have cnough money to buy the seat and finai®: his operations. “I told him I'd finance nim—8$100.- 000 in cash against his $50,000 M cash, his experience and ability, and we should be equal partners. We made money from the day we opened our doors. “It was my partner who saw the post-war panic in the offing. He begged me, while the war-time prices of all commodities were soaring, to raise all the cash I could and be ready to pick always wanted all of Eden Valley. So |y WASHING'TON, the brokera house made me about $300,000 & yu‘r‘. and: I m:\nn in the market, always D. C, TUESDAY, Of ?9::" d his deluded followers wide g on you, Nate, dear, the pri t was w-urmuuoxaupmtmthml.’tmu acre-foot.” h ?a“ Pl such a PPy ace. I remembere: that_dam site we'd had in !hemfunud for 50 years and I knew its value. decided that when I was worth $5,000,- 000 I'd quit, return to Eden Valley an: build s dam, buy out your lake site and become a water and power mag- nate on the scene of my lowly begin- nings. So here I am.” l“l;nd you say youre not a finan- cler?” “The lust for money has never over- whelmed me. I find, too, that I love Eden Valley. I'm going to close out my interests in New York and return here in the Fall” “And that reminds me that I've sent down to San Francisco for a ring, and here it is. If it's too big, we'll have a tuck taken in, and it it's too small or you prefer some other stone, I'll change it” And he slipped on her finger a square emerald worth at least a hun- dred steers. It was the first plece of jewelry she had ever owned and her ot tears of emotion baptized it. Her warm lips caressed it in a silent prom- ise he knew would never be broken. “Suppose we get married in a hurry and make the New York trip a honey- moon,” he said. She shook her head. “Impossible until dad’s estate has been settled. I can't leave here now. I have to work this outfit out of debt, because I can’t afford a trousseau until I do. However, dear, you run on to New York, com- plete your business there and when you return we'll make those two mergers you spoke of. I'm too busy now. I've got a lot of those early calves still to brand and I'll have to brand about & thousand late calves in the Fall. I don't want to leave any worries behind me when we go on our honeymoon.” “Have it your own way,” he agreed. He was disappointed. “Babson hasn't quit,” she reminded him. “We have one more fight on our hands. He'll wait until the local ex- citement is over and then pass around his petition for permission to organize the irrigation district.” “Well, we'll not hinder him, Lorry. I want him to put his plans through and after he has it completed we'll bust you can’t vindje- “Don’t worry 1 ge you're unn he complained. cl 3 attention upon Silas Babson, it will a man to lead that sorry wretch to meals—if any.” ““This will do nicely,” said Lorry dreamily. “It's gorgeous, darling.” “And we'll spend our Summers in Eden Valley and our Winters outside,” he suggested. She leaned against him e liftle wearily and held him tight, but did not answer, (To be Continued.) GETS 120-DA.Y SENTENCE Policeman’s Memory Robs Colored Man of Freedom. Policeman Q. E. Heyne's memory cost Kenneth Robinson, colored, 120 days’ freedom in Police Court yesterday, where he was arraigned for driving an automobile without a permit t. Heyne told Judge Ralph Given he was In court on another case five months ago when Robinson was fined for not having a permit. While seated on his motor cytle Sunday at Rhode Island avenue and Monroe street north- east Heyne said he saw the colored man driving a car. He gave chase and ap- prehended Robinson. “That's about the best memory I ever heard of,” remarked the court. “One hundred and twenty days in jail.” World Network Planned. An international radio network will broadcast a world's championship bridge game January 20, 1932, when representative hands in as many diff: ent countries participate, according to an announcement in New York City last week by Ely Culbertson, the bridge expert, —_ Daily consumption of water from 1 | underground sources in North Carolina 15 estimated at 25,000,000 gallons. fool, yourself but fool BAD BREATH i OBER 6, 193L KIN OF WASHINGTON TOCELEBRATE MASS : Rev. Richard B. Washington, to Conduct Services at Yorktown October 17. Rev. Richard Blackburn Washington of the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart, at Hot Springs, Va., a descend- ant of the family of which George Washington was & member, will be present and will take part in the exer- cises to be held at Yorktown, Va. on the occasion of the’ Yorktown Sesqui- centennial celebration October 16 to 19. On “Revolutionary day,” October 17, Father Washington will celebrate holy mass at Yorktown, which will be tended by Marshal Henrli Petain of France and his staff, with members of the French diplomatic service in this country. ‘The Catholic priest who will thus rticipate in the Yorktown ceremonies a great-great-great-grandson of John Augustine Washington, brother of the first President. He is the son of George Washington, whose father was Col. John A. Washington, last of the family to hold possession of historic Mount Vernon. Pather Washi) n is also the great- great-grandson of Richard Henry Lee, who in 1776 in the Second Continental Congress made the motion that “these united colonies are of right free and independent states.” A convert to the Catholic Church, Father Washington occupied a place of honor in the House of Representatives 6 | in the Capitol in 1927 when President Coolidge spoke regarding the 1932 Bi- centennial celebration of the anniver- sary of the birth of George Washington. s kiial ety A one-mile railroad connect - ‘wood and East Stanwood, Wu‘{)‘? ’E'-:‘nm operating after 40 years. Brazil expects to adopt an eight-! day and 48-hour week. et THE gganizing aches from neuralgia can be quieted in the same way you would end a headache. Tzke some Bayer Aspirin, Take enough to bring complete relief. Genuine aspirin can’t hurt anybody. Men and women bent with rheumatism will find the same wonderful comfort in these tablets. They aren’t just for headackes or colds! Read the proven directions covering a dozen other uses; neuritis, eeiatica; lumbago; muscular pains. Cold, damp days which penetrate to the very bones have lost their terror for those who carry Bayer Aspirin! All druggists, in the familiar little box: Hours of gargling wasted while bad breath lingers on Weve made a breath taking discovery for taking away bad breath (halitosis mwbmfilatadm‘ttmpflsa]'m killsgemxsialom . antiseptics. Stop gargling long enough to consider this: If you mix your moath wash with water—as 3 out of 4 do—you must use one thar kills germs when dilated. Then, and only then, have you the right 0-expect freedom from bed beeath—seecarity against —Pepsodent vance. kt climaxes the best antiseptic stady of 50 years. A germ-killing agent is employed unlike those now in wuse. It makes Pepsodent Antisepeic from 3 to11 times in killing germs than other leading iacptics, -depend dich mouthy taste, and ic still kills germs in New Seandard *Hal Dictionary Definition: itosis—a malodorous Jess than 10 seconds. P.A. is 3 to 11 times more powerful in killing germs fig apr leading mouth Pep That's where most other leading mouth antisepeics fail. Yet in spite of;u:hnpo'egPepwdmAndsepdcisumlynfevhmmd fuflmgdn.muvupondfisne'mdupdcisin:hefigh against bad bresth. Checks bad breath 1 to 2 bomrs Bad breath checked 1 to 2 hours longer! Thar's Pep- Immediately after use, 95% of germs on mouth sur- faces are destroyed. Two hours later the oumber of gamxumimndaceabyn'h'l‘hzisfnlmsfl «+ . and it kills fighting colds. acting than other leading mouth antiseptics. And please remember when you use Pepsodent Antiseptic for bad breath you are doing double duty by also $3 Worth for $1 Yokill mmst be used fall strengdh. Soto M mix themyesich water is~waste-of time. Pepsodent Aatiseptic can be mixed with twie s own volume of water. That means every $1 borte does what 3 borles of other mouth antiseptics do. Goes 3 times as far _p’”mfusln.luvingoffi. sodent v Checking bad breath and combating colds are only two uses for this remarkable antiseptic. There are scores of other uses. Some are listed on this page. Learn to rely on Pepsodent Antiseptic whenever a safe, effective germ killing agent is required. Keep it in the home. Take it Again we say: Quit being good to germs. They've laughed at you Tong encugh. Play safe. Buy an antiseptic that really kills germs whes dituted. Remember: You cin fool yourself but you can’t fool bad breath. Some of the 50 different uses for this modern Antiseptic Cold in Head After Extractions Throat Irritations After Shaving Voice Hoarseness - Minor Cuts ) Blisters Bad Breath Loose Dandruft Coid Sores Checks Under-Arm Perspiration Mouth krritations Tired, Aching Feet

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