The evening world. Newspaper, April 23, 1920, Page 28

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ited Pict Prod 1300 United Met Candy 1000 World Film .... ‘ 2600 World Film 24 ..... RS INDEPENDENT OILS, 100 Ajx Oi . 900 Afien O11 2000 Tavinetbie 1100 Island ON 100 Kay County Gas. 3 BIG UPSTAIRS STORES: NEW YORK — BROOKLYN — NEWARK WE DO AS WE ADVERTISE MENTER MENTER Read Terms Read Terms CITIES _ WOMEN’S COATS, SUITS, DRESSES Ladies! The loveliest of Fifth Ave. styles are here and you can charge your * purchase and pay weekly or monthly as you prefer—no exira charge for credit —cash or credit our prices are just the same. Blouses, Sweaters, Millinery, Girls’ Coats YOUNG MEN Get a Real Stylish Suit Right Now 40 to 75 The tremendous volume of business Menter does in 42 busy stores is due to sterling values, correct style and no extra charge for credit. BOYS’ STURDY SUITS 10-12-15-18-20 READ MENTER'S TERMS $2.00 down and $2.00 a week on 4 purchase of $30.00. ‘On purchases '50, 75, 100 or 150 dollars liberal terms will be cheerfully arranged. iIMENTE 83 BIG UPSTAIRS STORES: New York Store Brooklyn Store 226 West 125th St.| 435 Fulton St. ONE FLIGHT UP ONE FLIGHT UP Open Every Evening Open Every Evening Newark Store, 149 Market St. One tligh ' aie Eee r,t a High, Low. Last. 28-78 % 1% 1% my 34 20% 2 90 Last, | 200 Merritt O11 WH 1TH 1200 Metropolitan Pet. “mo 10% 3500 Ryan OM... 16% 6800 Simms Petroleum. "% 500 Kouthern States FINANCIAL NEWS AND PRICES | 100 Mexico OU1....... 1% pany 800 North American Oi. mY 200 Otiahoma N Gas. e ‘ a% 000 Salt Creek Prod. 200 Shell Trans rts. 500 Bequoysh O11 1900 Skelly On. = w 19% 5 1 oe 1 % 1% 8 % 1 iy a. 5600 Alss-Br Cot * 00 Arizona Silver 1000 *Host, & Mont. 1500 *Caled Mining. 2900 Calumet & Jerome . 1500 Candelaria M 10 Cons Cop M 100 Con Virginia 9000 Cortes Silver 1000 Cresson Gold 4100 Divide xt 1000 Ei Salvador 2500 Hanma Silver 1000 Bureka Crocwus 1000 Rareka Holly 1000 *Gold Merger 2020 *Gold Silver Pick 1100 *Gold Zone .. 800 Hela Mining . 100 Honduras Synd 1500 *Knox Divide 500 McNamars, 1800 “Marsh Min 1000 *Motneriode 100 Motherloge new 600 "Murray Mogridge . 200 Nipissing 15y North Star 90. Ophir Silver. 1000 Prinos Con 1000 "Hex Cons Li t TloMa &PRE 1200 *ltothester Mines 18 1818) Ob Pre, “Tool... 4800 Roper Group . 1 18 18 Jo RL. & Pe. 100 San Toy . i 6 | Ctl, Great ‘ 3500 Biiver King of Ariz 2% 2% 24] Oni. & No. W. Ry. 1T0W0 *Bilver Mountain 1 0h | Cate One; 500 *Bilver King Divide 3 3 3 | Chino Capper 400 8 Silver Lead fe te) Gol, Fuel & tron. 100 *Sucoems Min ‘ 5 6 = | Gol, Ges & Kee. 1100 *Tonopah Belmont . 2 1% LH] Col, Grepihaphooe. . 1000 ‘Tonopah Cash Boy . 8 8B | Gommp, Tab. de Ree, 29.0 Tono Divide 1¥| Con, Clear Comp... 1% | Conmml. Ges Co... 21 | Om, Inter, Cal. M 12 | Continental Can 1% | Conticental Candy. Up. Open Sat. Eve. BANKING AND FINANCIAL, “The Stoneham Oils, Industrials, Mining and Curb Securities. J No one interested in the market, either as an investor or specula- N tor, should fail to place his name N on our mailing list, to receive a N copy of this full-of-value publi N cation. Imisiration Capper . Impiration Capper . Ask for Copy No. 30, Chas. A. Stoneham & Co., 41 Btoad Street, New York. BI : Low. Last, Casa, Ye + | Int, Néctat B% — 1% | At, 1 1 1000 *Atiante : 116% — 8% | 6000 Belcher ‘ 100 100% + % 2000 *Beicher ‘ A 1000 *Booth 5 2 8 =m « a Penn RR .. Penn Sea Steal Perle Gas ,... Vere Union Bag & l'aper.. Union Pacitic .... 118% Union O8 United Alloy . United Fruit Un, Retail Stora, Were 1.e.. United Food . U, 8. Indust, At. saaeeneeh oe rr 32! CURB FLUCTUATIONS IN OILS AND INDUSTRIALS s FEF (bttieerl “You... leit x“ - 1% | ‘2h Ga | % % 4 cocktail. He threw it away.” served?” it critically—‘“I took his advice. He_ sneered: Jane? A sweet thing to face, trying to be other than yourself, confining yourself to the morals of the crowd.” “Not just that, Dick, There's a Sweetness about it, yes. As for we didn't discuss them at ‘This man said that he supposed some people thought it was smart to drink. ‘That hit me rather on the head. We were the smartest people in New York, weren't we?” ot ‘Perhaps. It interested me, though, when I'd gotten over the first shock. He said another thing that interest- ed me; he said that I was the first good white woman he'd ever seen wma iaughed harshly He laughed harshly. Re Teast he did you the honor to ink you good.” iniyes"—still deliberately—“and it was a novel wensation. It was the first time any tan had ever appealed to the commonplace thing in me that we call, womanhood. He wasn't preaching. It was a practical matter with him, . A “| don’t think you'd undestand this man, Dick. He takes little things ‘quite seriously and yet he appears! to be laughing at the whole scheme the time.” Bite put his glass down slowly. “Do you mean that one of these roughnecks has been making love to i sacs) "t think h, by no means, I don't tl he Oren Hikes me and I want him to Why, this morning he was going away, was not even going to work for me, and I had to beg him to stay. “Dick, you don't understand! This man is so different from you, from me, from all of us. Rough, yes, but I don’t think nh try to. buy @ woman, And if he should I’m sure he'd be most frank about it; he wouldn't hide behind words. She looked hard at him and though sbe smiled her words stung him, but fore he could break in she went on: “When I sat here having him talk to me last night I had that dreadful inferior feeling again, felt as though I weren't up to the standard of good women that these roughnecks hold. T can't explain it to you because you wouldn’t let yourself understand. 1 i+ ee bl++ ++ eererre Ree SE VI+1 BOYS IN OVERALLS ‘Lawrence, Mass., Principal T spectable” Clothes. nt to thelr homes by the principal jay for starting an Overalls Club at st, Friday, 6 P.M. ee Cox of Superior Court here. Another ia | SMITH.JULIA. Be CAMPBELL “art” Callahan, brother of “Tim” and FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, 60tn'“Mike,” foot ball stars of Yale and Saturday, 9.30 A. M. Princeton respectiv SENT FROM SCHOOL Four They Must Wear “Re- LAWRENCE, Mass., April 23.—Four | Doys attendinr, the high school here were school. HILLS.—DAISY, Services, OAMFBELL| return until they put on “respectable” FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, @6tn | cjothes, One of the boys is the son of Judge ‘ells | ** foto old Maxtelins OT. ton | Halt Accomptt 100. ip 10; "Riddle, | 95 | 1a the | FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Calm and Peaceful By DR. BERTHOLD A, BAER While mere praise is no sign of efficiency, a letter like the following, coming from a feeling heart, spurs to greater endeavor: “T feel that I owe you a word of sincere thanks and deep gratitude for the lovely manner in which the ar- rangements were carried out for my dear father under your direction. The entire atmosphere of the Campbell establishment was calm and peaceful, and the things were done just as one wished to have : “Thank you very sincerely for all =o did! My mother and sister join me in this.” (A. W. K.) And yet Mr, mpvell did not do any more for the family than he will do for you, or you, or anyone else who comes to him in the hour of grief. But it is as much the way he is doing it as what he is doing that makes Mr. Frank E. Campbell, founder of The Funeral Church, Broadway at 66th Street, the most prominent undertaker in New York City, if not in the country. (©) 1990 FUNERAL DIRECTORS. pate ee) 435, $168,907, charges standing preferred stituent companies taxes and interest. Moline increase HAVRE DE GRACE ENTRIES. navn meitl 0 The Erening World.) ete RE GACH RACE IRACK, Md., 4; 114; Cullinan, ntTee Hable entry, SOND RACE—olaim ing turlongs, — Biinadt 115; F113; Migs Sterling, SDerkharl, 11g: *H Tattle Mamta, 11 Commonwealth Power, and Light—March gross $2,545,437, increase $71,872; net earnings $977,- increase $84,243; fixed charges $248,673, increase $29,567; balance afler preferred dividends $29,667, include dividends on out- Plow Company—Foarteen months ended Dec, 31, 19 come after al) charge ious for a time, but he was Tent’ according to his way of think- f Famnat way is going to be my way” —with growing firmness. “I'm play- ing @ new game and I must play It according to the rules. 1 did more than make up my mind to leave the drinks and cigarettes alone. I re- ‘our, (a) Ponrage, 104; GL; Gimdys, want way of the respect I these men to have for me! i okie and ‘Because this Westerner Ben of the way you have lived bast a Hie knows the rules of the doesn't Go! Laws. “Yes. 108; *Revilan |, 116 4 tanneee! He advanced to her and caught her hands in his. “I love you, T love you! I'm not going to see you jJosing your head this way!" * She struggied to. withdraw her hands, i) Tm going, to yea pa to keep you. I'm’—He drew ie & him euxbiy) but she slipped from the clasp of his arm and backed across the room, her hands still imprisoned in his, “Dick”! It was not her cry which caused nim to halt, It was a step outside oak bands in his, he met the level, emused gaze of Tom Beck. Jane turned from him and he let her go without attempt to restrain her further. “Ma'am, the horses are here. Your foreman said to tel! you.” His face lost a measure of its light- | ness as he stood hat in hand, looking from the man whose face was lined with passion to the girl, flushed and | spoken, a@ bit breathless, “Vory well... T'll_be out soon.” He stood a moment irresolute, though he And thank you. THE LAST STRAW BY HAROLD TITUS An Exciting Western Romance of Adventure and Love Broke, disheartened, a New York society girl | _ She watched him go down the rope | stow hand over hand, with caution and assurance until he rested his Es on the nose of the frighteney | | animal, A forefoot shot out in « lightning stroke at him but he did nut flinch. She saw that he was talking to the Horse, gently, quietly, with the born confidence of the master. “Anywhere?” she asked herself again, this time aloud, still watching Beck. vhy ‘Well, that was a devil of a thing to do. | solved that I'd try to be worthy in| : | m going to stop this fool- the door and standing there, her - & ; ,* || suddenly finds herself heiress to a vast Western te cattle ranch. This thrilling story tells of the + 4 || Gfe she found there, and of how she won for- 4 || tune, a home and happiness. rad on ‘Coppright Gmail, Maynard and Company, 1820. ‘ rid SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ; 7 + = CHAPTER 10. % % ® (Continaed.) . S she spoke of her alternative a glimmer as of hope passed across the man’s thin, finely moulded face, but he did not let her seo. He shook his head and said: ‘ “After this the first thing I need is a drink.” That, like the rest of the old life, all belongs in Book %| “On the sideboard,” she answered, “is my stock.” mart He walked down the room and examined the bottles, then poured out two drinks and returned with them. | “Anyhow, we drink to your future, whatever — x {he said, cynical again. —3 “That's kind of you, but I'm afraid you'll have to drink alone.” wad S| She put the glass he had handed her on the table. | “It's the first time I've ever seen you refuse a drink.” | “A record broken! bin ' one" you never thought you used cnough to hurt?” . ‘No, I'm sure I never used enough to hurt my body used enough to hurt anything about me | “What made you change your mind?" She was half impelled to pass the question off, then said resolutely: “A man came here to talk to me, one of my cowpuachers. until last Did you fire “No"—deliberately tracing a line on a rug with her toe and watching You see, the.men out here expect things from women that no one has ever expected from me before.” “Turned Puritan, ® T have wanted you nd I'm jealous of the months, even I'm sure, but that doesn't the weeks, help much. “Sure? Of what?" “Of you.’ “And why?” ment. ago. out background fighting your own batt forced the issue long Necessary, but you are pec “Why, women made to stand alone!” “Flattering! “Yes, it is. loved, and to make the lives always done just this admitted it, here, this sires, . Every That is a rule of iife: You can no more be a “Don't you see that disaster? In your old Delief in yourself; in you have failed that weakness. either this, or me, this, trying will come back to me as we stand together in you, -know and love, and I back. | will be wholly good,” His @ deliberate, cold dete: Weak? Surely, until now. And she back enough, “What “You might if you sort. But you won't. fail, in spite of all you She sensed clear! “I know, I know. It argue with you. lesson by experience, that taste, Jane, ‘I am not going away. to stay in this can well do that. love you want if you o1 all seemed so absurd, in the things which and his manner left her with a sense that he thought more than he had assurance that his founded well, that he be needed there. Then turned and | ruthless. 5 Railway ked away. “Your help seems rather uncere- monious,” Hilton remarked, “Thanks for that! seen more? You cali this love? “It proves that it's love, “You set me wil vagaries, Jane! You—" He checked himself and, with an obvious effore, smiled. Then went on with voice and manner under control: “You see, I surplus after Fixed stock of con- in addition to Net In- Federal bit off my head, m much In love with you and losing you for only a little while puts me What if he had Dick, are you beside he replied with your | “The things I have Yes,” she thought. anywhere?” The sound of the reused her, and she Then @ commotion in rtected her. She saw the loop, a he snared a pinto and against the antics of the animal and held Srmly untl-it bad quieted, and wherever it may be,” I never thought [ "Because I know you fessed your weaknesses just a mo- You know as well as I that you're without foundation, with- in. this experience. Why, Jane, if you'd been capable of help, you need tbe faith of other le. like you weren't You were made to be to be protected, men take the knocks for you, you and all your kind. You were born to lean while by leaning on them, never to at- tempt to go your own way. “Your wild wants, your absurd de- one has them. the thing you are not fitted to do. an than I can fly; you can no more cut yourself away from your old en- vironment gnd slip into this than one of your cowpunchers could fit into my e. you have, but you have not, your eyes Will be opened and when you see that , Portunity, vill be a failure, and’ nothing ts so | @ked. hopeless as that realization. | “You are weak, and I thank God for |!ed the sorrel through You know that it is You are trying to refuse me, ‘but you| oi You may come back without a shred of faith in yourself, but I have faith in the old Jane, The future won't be bad; it words were very gentle, manner most Rindly, but beneath it was a scarcely detectable hardness, perhaps it was this which struck a fear into the girl's heart. she was weak! Always had been weak, never had proved strength by act’ or decision +. . she did not know. . . . ‘You are sure that I will come she managed to say naturally if I should fail? Might I not try somewhere else?” strength beneath his smooth manner; his pronouncement had not been as Jan opinion; as a verdict, rather, and ominous in its assurance. He picked up his hat and gloves. You must learn this be bitter, but I will do all I can to make what waits beyond take away little ‘town. four years of waiting and following I Your world is there, |Jane, yours for the asking, | are the things you wanted; He left her then, and when he had gone she felt a quick panic come. beneath his sleekness he was, her head | following him with her eyes, “But love, is that) “it might be might be CHAPTER Iv, KCK was still busy horses when Jane bareheaded and clad in a ri- ing habit. He had separate: the unbroken stock from the hurses * that had been turned loose for the win ter and was playing with these lust, overcoming the shyness that monihy on the range had engendered. As she stopped at the corral he walked toward her, studying her fa ‘There was no trace of confusion or en- barrassment, and for all he could dis- cern she might have had her mind ou horses only since carly forenoon. That puzzled him because, though he was far from certain, he had felt that the scene which he had interrupted had caused her distress. Still he remindeu himself this was not the type of won an he knew. She was completely strange to him; good margin, that, for coming to mistaken conclusions, “These, 4 for you. They’ you'te peed re some of the best ey're rough, of c y i marked after eyeing the animate moment, and he looked at her sharply because her manner was of one who ix familiar with horses; “but nothing hero looks particularly good. Are these al! : rest into the little corral e' mine gent’ g00d ones there, but Lhe, ey walked toward the other in. closure, aye evidence of alarms (28 cole “Now that brow y " bess a horse's been ridden “But what broke in as white star with appes, night.” I made a him, as he de- for four years You con- about the sorrel? she a shapely head with a between the e: ass of bar! les, you'd have eer before it was best colt you own; got the makin not. You need 4 fine horse, but he’s a bad actor.” Just then'the crowding of the horses broke into milling and the sore came into full view. A beautiful beast with “white stockings ‘behind, deep foe igh withers, short, straight she declared, “He He's gaunt now but I suppose that’ on the range. I like d sort when you can without sacrificing the “He's a beauty! has bone and leg. not enough bell of men worth be eo ely: to have You have and you have afternoon. its strength looks.” ¥ bie I ee it.” “I've ridden som Can you bring him eS iit ck entered the corral ani “ the horse. For an instant he pe head | flung back and feet secureiy i; e cams bua Planted; t out of the buach “He knows what a rope j ; take an intelligent creature, mason? beast, long to learn.” ™AR oF The horse stood watchi piciously, ready to run if riven the ops “Where shall we wanting to do business wom- you're risking life you had a this you think then you} “In the big corral,” he replied and an ‘ the sate, colt, closely snubbed, stood trembling while the blanket wad put i then flinched and breathed loudly as the weight of the saddle was gentl: placed on his back. He stepped about and kicked as the cinch drawn tight, and resisted a long the ef. forts of the man to slip a bit between his teeth, Jane stood by watchin, tion divided between admigaiey of the horse. ‘The former was the latter alarmed, rebctlous bay eves nized the fact that pan at he was under con- “Now, if you'll sh tirry Til try him,” she aig OF ernie “You'll try him, ma'am? horse ain't been’ ridden cares us in his life. “He'll buck an’ buck hard” “So much nore reason. why’ [ should try him. We spoke of reputa- tiong last night; they can only be formed at the cost of knock# Phen are many things I must try to do out here; there are bound to be some that I can’t even tr; orld Y, but this is not “But you"—— 'M I order you to let me ride just as surely in this room. the one I can bring that his rmination, and did not know were another And you will can doy Jane.” y the harsh 3 him?" There was no lightnes 5 tion; she meant Business, Berke Weer ized, And her brusquenesg delighted him, for when he turned to give the cinch one more hitch—his only reply to her question—he was smiling mer- It was not much o; orn dig eo f a ride as West- sorrel with the black sil wore about his neck, helped Sent " mount, saw that she had both stir. rups, took the rope cautiously from the trembling bronco's neck and, a her nod, drew off the blind, fj Por @ moment the great there aa’ if bewildered. Them wired grunt and a bound, he bowed his back, hung his head and pitched. “Keep his head up! His head warned Beck, watching with intense interest. “Watch him * ¢ ‘The horse went Straight forward for a half dozen jumps. Erect in the is of no use to It is going to I'm going After There there is the nly will see it.” It her struggling held her back, was would not be the tacit waiter he had suggested. ! saddle, sitting too far back, trusting She knew his passion for her, she | too much to her stirrups, Jane rode. knew his will, and it came to her then! thought his presence might | that The violence of the lunging jerked unmereifully but tt had |her balance * * © until he sun- She stared down Coyote creek, not fished with a wrenching movement | that heaved her forward against the Kk, da y near a fall, called Beck, not re- |membering that his injunction ‘to | hang on was as Greek to her, “He~ " Look out! weptcned Jt 80-1 "With a vicious fing of his whole Meee rie | body the sorgel swapped ends and as wanted, * * ¢| £0) car departing saw Tom Beck standing ready, rope in| he Came down, head toward the man, his hand, then, with a dexterous filp of | the girl shot into the air, turned com- slight overhand motion, | § letely over and struck full on her 4 pack, braced his feet | (another Fascinating Chapter To- Morrow). “I cut ‘em out § He's probably hv. ol “You're acquainted with horses some- ~ try him? Jane‘ Beck blindfolded thay |

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