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THREE AT FAULT FOR COLLAPSE OF Frida since 1903, covers ‘the active issues of the Oils, Industrials, ‘Mining and Curb Securities No one interested in the smur- pak Dia recei’ of this full-of- Vales publcatoo, + (Rak fer Cony No. 98. Chas. A. Stoneham & Co., 41 Broad Street, New York » BRANCHES jor Det rot Milweukee—Hartford— Cleveland. ESTABLISHED 1863, NO PROMOTIONS CTI ——— respon TAKE BLEVATOR TO 12TH FLOOK, ~FOREIGN MONEY in Brooklyn Drain Which Cost City $85,000, tes EB Giiscks, Cable, Drafts, Honda, fiujifon, | Avenues, Brooklyn, which collapsed Paper, ROUGH T, Money ¢ , |Jan, 9 last and made reconstruction, VICTORY BONDS: xohange Prices. to the city of $85,000, with the prow {pect that the remaind four-fifths of a mile of an enti sands of dollars more. Phones Beekman 4973 7822 6-74-2625-5 LIBERTY BONDS According to Philip All denominations bought for ensh s*ruct should ha thick wer to bry th first oc ' SAVINGS BANKS, EMIGRANT 5?" SAVINGS Si CHAMBERS STREET, NeW YorK The Bonrd of Trusters has declared « Semi-Annual Dividend at the rate ef Four Per Cent. Per Annum ON AIA DEPOSITS ENTITLED THERETO. DEPOSITS MADY ON OR BE. FORD JULY 107TH. 1920, WILL DRAW INTEREST FROM JULY 187, 1920, INTEREST PAID ON UNDER AMENDED berosirs ‘rose * to *5,000 Brine nea. | FOUN B DALY. Comptrotiss. JOHN J. PULLIOYN, President, ASSETS $200,000,000 THE EAST RIVER SAVINGS INSTITUTION 291-3-5 Broadway, N. W. Corner Reade Street, New York Deposits over $33,011,000 ‘1 Leow royaae pata Par Surplus over 5,000,000 A semi-annual dividena at the.rate of Four Per Cent. Per Annum hans been declared on all depunits entitled thereto, Deposit up to 85000 wil) Le received and interest pald thereon, A deposited on or before July 12 will druw interest fro july 2 HBNAY'T. NICHOLS, Prévidtot © 6%" LOBE VAN BRUNT, Secretary, ee TEES i citizens’ Savings SAVINGS BANK 1 oe 120TH SKMI-ANNU. DIVIDEND, wal ‘a pre KMI-ANNUAL DIVIDEND, , The Trustees have ordered intoroat at eae Aiter funy 2%, 1080. the rate of IU 40)" pin CENT annum to %PerAnnum| | Be" and up . alned on with the by- bank. Money . Prostdqnt, etary, +. Amistant Sec'y Banking Made a Pleasure care vemcanvcar oven (Malden Lane Savings Bank oy UNION SQUARE SAVINGS BANK 170 Broadway, corner Maiden Lane, 4% Deposits made on or before July 10th draw interest from duly ast. Deposits recetved from WA. M. to 6.80 BM. Satumlays to 2 P.M EDWW A. LAHM, CARL A, RICH months ending Jun: entitled hereto at : FOUR PER CENT 4 um’ on sums from $5 to. $8,000 ‘One I 000, staceeding 48,008. bem ad Cee see eR Mstor, Brow, pee WTB Grissom WEST SIE SAVINGS BANK gos LLS, Treasurer. Sixth A A h Se e BIUNCKENHOPY, Soc'y,| Tho Trusiess Nave dosered a oealsans NER, hier. nual dividend at the rate of ‘Mon. 10 to Ti Sat. 10 to 1 F SOCIETIES ACCEPTE PER pean er OU annum, whieh will be credited on all outa antitied thereto on June 30, 14 W. Cor. 16th St. and Sth Avenue | will Dividend July 1st, 1920, at the rate of INTEREST FROM JULY 1ST UP TO $5, UR PER CENT OPEN MONDAY! 7 A.M, Me By Siiper ounem on oii sums of $8 and over on- AccouNts" dv 'so¢ Aare thereto y= AY wt se Hie Mabe oN ‘ou bisone IRVING SAVINGS BANK fj JULY 187. 115 CHAMBERS sf., N. ¥, a WILLIAM FELSINGER, Prosi@ent, | Mme “trustees have declan a dividend ‘for t OB L. BLAKELOCK, Treasurer. | ¢ix months ending June J0, 1920, at the rate 5 ee ALTER R. BRINCKERHOFF, Boc'y. FOUR PER CENT. um on all deposits from 85 te dt Treas ~ “eDry Dock Savings Institution | sat" esit tts te aesS Cor. 84 St. New York | Deposits to $5,000 made on or eee mantis coding dune 10 1030, ca | before July 10th will draw in- te entitied thereto under the BY= ee tie “mais at TORK Bee Ceut yor | Cerest from July 1, 1920. payableon and after July 10, 1020. | M, B, TENDR, President, ita made on or before July 10 will GEORGE B. DUNNING. Secretary. interest from July 1. 1020 | "oe a) oa? r Anse ly Fet.| Dollar Savings Bank "EDSTEK, Secretary OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK ‘Third Avenue and 147th St, ls it credited July ist, at the rate of Four Per Cent, Fon Be on accounts from. $5 to s.000. Deposits made on or belore uly soth draw interest from July ist, BRIAN G, HUGHES, President, WM. M. KERN, Treasurer, HARRY PF. REGAL, Secretary LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. Lost ou basset June 27, one. lad ‘ dresses, Ae. Liber 1 Lexing warnet Coote and 4100 ~ SEWER ARE DEAD gineers Find Serious Defects A thorough examination is being made by aity engineers to learn the Ibility for the faulty construc- tion of the #reat 13-foot trunk sewer in 60th Street, between 16th and 16th J@st completed, necessary at a cost ion must be rebuilt at a cost of huntreds of thou- ley, con-; n engineer, P, J, Donlin, the contractor who undertook the repaira, | found that walls of the sewer which been brickwork two feat but from eighteen to six thehes thiek; alvo that timbers used ok upon in our inve turn over to the new informa ing, but I ¢ portance to down, if it takes department gin of Sheviin’s District Attorney Talley at noon. 7 ley told them that he would probably have some information Jat cay, Mr Talley had been examin- ing two witnesses supposed to know | scemething about Blwell's alleged | Heth. Steel B... whiskey deals, Heifetz, violinist; Sop! tralto; | Reinald 'W and Lambert Murph ry INTEREST & DIVIDEND NOTICES. one donesited tc ce belene duty the | ee ES ACCEPTED, FLEMING—Monday, June PEIXOTTO.— ALE TT had been jeft in “place and bricked in with an outer shell The sewer was completed in 1904; ihe contractor was John J. Cream who, Farley said, had always enjoyed the best of reputations with the city, It has not yet been learned who were the sub-contractors, Farley said he did not know whether there was any method by which the elty could re- ecver the cost of reconstruction The inspector, the engineer in charge of the woN and the engineer of construction, who should have jn- d the work and reported the skimping, are dead, The chief en gineer, H Asserson, who aceopte their reports, hag been out of th city’s employ for many years, 1 was entirely possible for the skimping to have been done without the know!- edge of the principal contractor or the chief engineer, Farley added Assistant Superintendent of Public Works Joseph Fennelly said. the entire matter had been referred to the Corporation Counsel ELWELL BOOTLEGCING ~ CLUE LEADS OFFICERS BACK 10 KENTUCKY (Continued From Mirst Page) indifference to the business of his morning caller provoked the latter into a rage which culminated in the shooting. We are not seeking to discover the} murderer of Elwell." eaid #ederal Kn- forcement Agent Shevlin to-day We looking for the Whiskey In which, | We are informed the murdered man and his partNers were trafficking. Of course any information in regard to the murder which we might come {gations we would oper authorities, “1 cannot divulge the source of the n received this morn- ed it of suffictent im- t my men to checking It up. If everything told us can be vert- fied there will bo no doubt of the existence of whiskey ring which has been doing business on a very large seale, and no doubt that the | murdered man was a big factor in the | ring. Other names } to us of which I am not prepared to ap \"One of the new leads carries the | 4m. investigation back to Kentucky and been given k of at this time. that rail will be thoroughly run ail the men in the William P, Lord and Daniel J. Man- staff visited Assistant in the It is said that the prosecutor's of- | fice, working in conjunction with the | Federal authorities, is doing its ut- | most to run down all the facts con- ne trawsaction and that the man sup-| posed to have owned the liquor or represented the men who did own it will also be questioned. tgd with the alleged whiskey One witness sought by both Gov- ernment and District Attorney de- tectives is described as “a German liquor dealer." One German dealer} has already been examined, without result, ———. OLYMPIC TO DOCK FRIDAY. argent British Liner on Her First Trip tn Year. A wireless received here yesterday ‘by the White Star Line from the steam ship Olympic, largest British passenger ship, sald that she will dock here Fri day morning. This Js her “first vorage in a year, the big craft having been Jaid up during conversion Into an oll burner, She is the largest ofl user in the world, The Olympie is bringing 511 first, 640 second and 1,160 third class passengers, She Js in the command of Sir Bertram Ha. war for his services as skipper of the Olympic during her work as a transport, who was knighted during -the Among her passe; rs are Jascha e Brasiau, eq@- renrath, baritom™, tenor. United Drug Company First Preferred Stock Dividend No, 18 ‘The Directors of United Drug Co, have de- lated « rewuar quarterly dividend of 1% % on the first proterred at ck of U UG OO. payable August 2, 1 of record J G, MeCORMIOK. ‘Treasur Boston, June 25, 1920. DIED. COUOH,—MARSHALL. CAMPBELL FU NERAL CHURCH, Wed) osday, 7 P. 1920, JAMBS J., Dockmaster of the City uf New York, father of the late James J ar. Funeral from St, Ann's Churoh at Bueet, near Fourth Avenue, on Thurs: | day, July 1, 10 A. M. Remains at Boyertown Chapel, 434 Street and Bighth Avenue | MARRIE.—VIOL daughter of Mra, C. Martie, Funeral from her late residence, 998 First Ave. ‘Thursday, 8:30 A, M.; thence to the Church of &t. John, 53th Street and First Ave, where solemu mass will be said for the repose of her soul, Interment Calvary ANDER, CAMPBELL ERAL CHUROH, Thursday, 10 A. M, FUNERAL DIRECTORS. At Your Service, Day or Night FRANK EB CAMPBELL, *THE FUNERAL CHURC) 1970 Broadway, at 66th St. Downton Office 23d St. & Sth Av. Tarzan the Untamed —By— Edgar Rice Burroughs A New, Thrilling and Sensational Story of the Ape Man. He leaped and crouched and leaped again, now growling and bark- “ling, again stopping to raise his hide- Air Pilot With Urn Containing Woman’s Ashes Strewn on Statue O46 2G4-bho0G4 ADL PRI@HGDY ° 3 14444060065 it was not without the strange scene she looked such a scene as no other ing, probably, ever had and yet, withal, It was horribh ‘As she gazed, spell-bound, a staal- thy movement in the trees behind her caused her to turn her head and there, back of her, blazing in the re- flected moonlight, shone two yellow-groen eyes. ther, had found her out. The beast was so close that it have reached out and toughed, with a great, taloned paw. There no time to think, no time to to choose alternatt impulse was 5 loud scream, leaped from the tree into the clearing: Instantly the apes, now m by the effects of the dancing and th moonlight, turned to note the interruption. h she Tarmangani, helpless and alot and they started for her. panther, knowing that not even Num the lion, unless maddened by starva. tion, dares meddle with the great apes at their Dum-Dum, had silently van- ished into the night, seeking his sup- per elsewhere. ‘Tarzan, turning with the other apes toward the cause of the interruption, saw the girl, recognized her and also again migtt she die ers; but why eon- knew that he could not though the acknowledg- ment shamed him, it had to be ad- ‘The leading shes were almost upon the girl when Tarzan leaped among them, and with heavy blows scattered them to right and left; and then as the bulls came to share in the kil they thought this new ape-thing about to make that he might steal the flesh for himself, they found ; facing them with an arm thrown about the creature as though to pro- “This is Tarzan’ “Do not harm her. way he could make them und that they must not slay her. glad that she could not interpret the It was humiliating enough to make such a statement to wild apes about this hated enemy. So once again Tarzan of the Apes was forced to protect her, he muttered to himself in ex- anachild of the jungle, guned hie tithe of Lord « broak of the war, ho A turne hie rant in Covtral Africa and murdem hia wife, yan vows vengmnee on the entire. (erman race He sheds his garmenta of rerta to the juny Hon, the maida the German. line, of them, Then he begins tive tor personally avenge is beating upon his shaggy breast, ut- scream—the chal- had the girl the bull ape, el but known It He stood thus in the full glare of aming forth n the setting his weird challenge, Sheeta, the of the primeval jungle Wo ls an eneeny BEGIN THIS THRILLING STORY mightily muse! dawn of life Hercules out of the hen from close behind chances or Rice Bulbuens.) Terror-inspired CHAPTER YI an instant later saw an ilmost naked white man drop from a nearby tree into the clearing. Instantly the apes became a roar- M4 of angry beasts. F had entered the and was outside the pairsade when there came far beyond What maniac was this who dared ap- |proach these frightful unts, alone against fitty? the village an bathed in moonlight w ward the snarling symmetry and the beauty of that per- , its strength, its wondrous proportioning, and then’ she Ik straight to- She saw the = $90650606 with a wish made in writing fourteen years ax h D. Brown, temperance advocate and writer of New York home last week, were strewn the Statue of Liberty ‘The plane was The photo shows the sea- bout to leave its mooring at 82d Street and North River. stant is shown holding the urn containing the ashes then there broke long, weird cry of ape calling to ape {and he was away through the jungle who died at her flying over she had seen Major Schneider from General Kraut's headquarters, the same whom she had struck down with escaped when have returned her to her enemies, the same who had slain Hauptmann Fritz spared her life that Brown's body Mollen of th: the butt of her 8. Marine Corps, |drum of the anthropoids, leaving be- atthe hands of |hind him an awakened and ter |village of cringing blacks, who would —~jforever after connect that with the disappearance of their white prisoner and. the death of their fel- jow-warrlor. Bertha Kirchner, hurrying through the jungle along a well-beaten game trail, thought only of putting as much | distance as possible between herself | and the village before d permit pursuit of her, was going she did not know, nor was it a matter of death must be her lot sooner or later Fortune favored her that night, for passed unscathed through as sav- jage and lion-ridden an area as there permit it, an: Schneider and night in Wilholmstal, watched him as he neared the apes. issue from throat--sounds with those uttered by the apes—and though sho re ree believe the testimony of rs, she knew that this god- like creature was conversing with the brutes in their own tongue. LY, GOMPLETE STOCK QUOTATIONS—2 P. M, Adams Expres reached the shes of the outer circle. Lam Tarzan of the Apes!” he cried You do not know me because I am nother tribe; but Tarzan comes in comes to fight—which Tarzan will and so saying he pushed straight forward through the shes and the young who now gave way before him, making a narrow lane through which he passed toward the moment, since May Dent, Stores ground which the white man had not yet discovered, where deer and ante- jlope and zebra, giraffe and elephant, Shes with balus growled and bris- tled as he passed close, but none hin- dered him and thus he came to the inner ircle of bulls. Here bared fangs and growling fe “Lam Taraan,” “Tarzan comes to dance Dum-Dum with herbivorous animals of central Africa abound unmolested by nope but their natural enemi lured here by a@ woman ami IT am not a #0 it could not be other- cats which, asy prey and immunity from the rifles of big-game hunters, swarm the district. fled for an hour or two per- haps, when her attention was arrested by “the sound of animals moving about, muttering and growling close ahead Assured that she had covered a suffi- clent distance to insure her a good start in the morning before the blacks. could take to her trail, and fearful of Ovio Citien Gan. CHAPTER IX. HAROLD PERCY ‘SMITH -OLDWICK, Royal was on reoon- A report, or it would be better to say a rumor, had come to the British headquarters in German East Africa that the enemy had landed in force on the west coast and was marching. across the dark continent to reinforce their colonial troops. In fact the new army was supposed to be no more than ten or tweive days’ march to the west. Of course the thing was ridioulous— Preposterous — but things often happen in war; and, an® way no good general permits the least rumor of ‘enemy activity to go uninvestigated. Therefore Lieut. Smith-Oldwick flew low toward the West searching with keen eyes for signs of a German army. Vast forests, unrolled beneath him in which German army corps might have concealed, so dense was the o hanging follage of the great Mountain, meadowland, and lovely panorama; never a sight of man had the young Lieutenant. Always hoping that he might dis: cover some sign of their passage—a discarded lorry, a broken limber, or ar old camp site—he continued far- ther and farther into the West until tree-dotted plain through the centre of which flowed a winding river, Ke determined %, turn Rags and start t woul © straights flying at top speed to cover the dia- | tance before dark; but as he had ~ ample gasoline and a trustworthy machine there was no doubt in his that he could accomplah It was then that hts en- gine stalled, He was too low to do anytht land and that immediately had the more open country acceast- ble, for directly east of him was a vast format ped ‘nice a stalled on- gine could only have plunged him injury and probable death; and ao he came down in the meadowland near the winding river and there gtarted to tinker with hie As he worked he hummed a tune, some music-hall afr that had been popular in London the year before, so that one might have thought him working In the seourity of an’ English flying field surrounded by innumer- able comrades rather than alone igp the heart of an unexplored Africa. It waa typical man that he should be wholly indif- ferent to his surroundings, although his looks entirely belied any assump. he was of parthoularly herole strain, Lieutenant Haron Oldwick, was fair-hatred, blue-eyed, and slender, with a rosy, boyish face that might have been molded more by an environment of juxury, indo- lence and ease than the more stren- uous exigencies of Jife's sterner re- he repeated Air Service, pressed forward and the girl in the tree clapped her palms to her cheeks ched, wide-eyed, this mud- man going to a frightful death. another instant they would be tupon him, rending and tearing until that ‘been ripped shreds; but again the ring parted and though the apes roared and menaced him they did not attack and at last hé stood in the inner circle close to the drum and faced the great king Lem. Seaboard Steel 2 Hootlr Pisberies, large tree with the intention of spending the balance of the night there. She had no sooner reached a safe and comfortable branch when she dis- covered that the tree stood upon th edge of a small clearing that had be: hidden from her by the heavy under- growth upon the ground below, and she discovered identity of the beasts she had heard In the centre of the clearing below Canadian acitic Remington ‘Typ, Cerro de Puno... T am Tarzan of “Tarzan comes to live with his brothers. come {n peace and live in peace or he will kill; but he has come and he Which—shall Tarzan dance in peace with his r or shall Tarzan kill first “T am Go-lat, King of the Ape: Obes, & Ohio. preposterous simultaneously Siowssihett Steel moonlight, she saw fully twenty huge, | man-like apes—great, shaggy fellows | who went upon their hind feet with Harold Perey St Jowept Lead ; * en roar StL & San Fron and with a sul he charged the Tarmangani. The ape-man, as the girl watched him, seemed entirely unprepared for nd she looked to see him borne down and slain at The great bull was almost upon him with huge hands stretched to selze him before Tarzan made a move; but when he did move his quickness would have put Ara, head of Histah, so darted forward the left hand of the man-beast as he seized the left wrist of his antagonist. quick turn and the bull's right arm was locked beneath the right arm of his foe In a jiu-jitsu hold that Tarzan had learned among civilized men—a hold with which he might easily break the great bones, a hold that left the ape helples knuckles of their hands, light glanced from their glossy coats, the ‘numerous gray-tipped hairs im- | parting a sheen that made the hideous creatures almost magnificent in their | appearance. ‘The girl had watched them but a | minute or two when the little band was joined by others, coming singly and in groups, until there were fully brutes gathered Among them Shel T & T. Croctole Steel pf, Cute Cane Sug, Tobacco Prod. there in the moonlight. were young apes and several lite ones clinging tightly to their mothers’ shaggy shoulders. Presently the group parted to form a circle about what appeared to be a small, flat-topped mound of earth in the centre of the) clearing. Squatting close about this mound were three old females armed with short, heavy clubs with which they presently began to pound upon| the flat top of the earth mound, which booming sound, and | | U. 6, Real. & dm, reat Nur ity pf Great Nor Ore... | Vanadium Sted, screamed the ape-man, "Shall Tar- zan dance in peace or shall Tarzan gave forth a dull | *Weatinghouse Willyw-Overiand commenced to move about restlessly, | weaving in and they carried the impression of a mov- ing maas of great, black maggots ‘The beating of the drum was in a| With the quickness of a cat Tar- zan swung the king ape over one hip “Tam Tarzan, King of all but prently WiChONe Ue "RUE DESReR HY the Apes!” he shouted. into a heavy apes kept time with measured tread DENIES HE WED TO EVADE DRAFT Go-lat, infuriated, leaped to his feet shouting his wa mass separated outer of which was composed of shes TODAY'S PRICES LIBERTY BONDS, Liberty 8 1-28 opened 91, up .02; 24 Ist 4 1-48, 85.70, up .04, 84.60, off 04; 3d 4 1-48 85.21 Victory 8 3-48 . again Tarzan met him with a sudden Rubin Also Refutes Charge of Re- fusing Wife a Maid Because of Socialist Theory. Arthur Rubin, against whom his wife mature bulls. The former ceased to norant of, could not possibly avert— a hold and 4 scream of delight from the interested nd suddenly filled the girl as to the man's madness —evidently he was quite sane among the apes, for she saw him swing Go- lat to ts back and then catapult him. The king ape fell and lay very still 1am Tarzan of the Apes!" cried “[ come to dance the Dum-Dum with my brothers,” and he made a motion to the drummers who took up the cadence of the dance where they had dropped it to watch their king slay the foolish Tarmangani. It was then that Go-lat raised his ad and slowly crawled to his feet ‘Tarzan approached him. zan of the Apes," he cried nee the Dum-Dum with brothers now or shall he kill first? Go-lat raised his bloodshot eyes to the face of the Tarmanguni, he cried, “Tarzan of the Apes the Dum-Dum with his brothers and Go-lat will dance with haunches, while the bulls now moved a circle the centre of which was the drum and all now in the same direction. that brought 48, 84.34, off .16 faintly to the ears of the girl from the direction of the village she had recently quitted a weird and high- pitched cry. 24; 4th 4 1-48 85.10 charging he deserted her on May 15 after he married her to evade the draft on April 22, 1917, and that he refused sterling opened 3.95, oft|t® sive her ® maid because “It is against Socialistic doctrine to have al serf or a slave in the over his shoulder. FOREIGN EXCHANGE STEADY, movements and titudes of intent listening for a mo-; one fellow, than his companions, raised his face to the heavens and in a voice that sent the cold shudders through girl's slight frame answered the far- franc ¢ebks, 12.17, Belgian cables, ! 6.49; marks Swiss cables, immediately | dem. higher at .0262 ¢. ; In her 19th year, | poseta cbls lower at .1658¢; Stockholm! said in the offces of brought against him. “I’m hopeful of a reconciliation,” he 2 ; the Socialiatic » 8. dis on Can, dem.,| newspaper Forward,’ of which. Rubin 8795c.; Argentipe pesos dem,, 1,058 Sterling dem., 3.95, cbis.,] who, his wife claims, Franes dem.,, 12.17, cbli beaters took their drumming and the slow dance There was a certain cination in the savage ceremony that held the girl spellbound, and as there seemed little likelihood of her being discovered, she felt that she might as well remain the balance of the night in her tree and resume her flight by the comparatively greater safety of ays he is ass! is advertising J 90), Tees And not only was the young Meu- tenant outwardly careless of the im- mediate future and of his surround- ings, but acutally so. That the dis- trict might be infested by countless enemies seemed not to have occurred to him in the remotest degree. Hi ‘bent assiduously to the work of cor. the adjustment that hed used his motor to stall without so. much as an upward surrounding country. the east of him, and the more distan' 12.15, | manager, “The whole story is wrong," he con- ‘I married her « few days I didn't know | dem, 85 1-2, obls., 35 5-8, war was declared. would exempt me from military service. “As far as refusing her a housemaid, I did not say it was against Socialistic Good Socialists who can af- Certainly, they ‘The Fisher Body Corp. declared the quar, divs, of $2.50 a share on the common and 1 8-4 p, c. on the preferred stka,, payable Aug. 2 to stock of record July 20. Assuring herself that her packet of papers was safe she sought comfortable a among the branches, and settled her- the weird proceedings ‘And then the girl In the tree saw the savage man leaping, bending and stamping with the savage apes in the ford it have servants. ‘The,reason I didn't have oneewas because f was only making $28 a week, fhould not get_a maid on $28 a week when he pays $40 & month rent. “And I didn't leave her I loved her dearly and took her back and take ber back. home if only position as self to watch in the clearing below her A half-hour ps the cadence of more beastly Openec ” Ypened steady handsome Yace Candy, 14 1-4 to | Roat, 11 1-2 to 12 1-2; ‘Tropical, 20 8-4 1 1-4; Simms, 17 to 17 8-4; White, 19 to 20; Asphalt, 73 to 78 1-2 river, might have harbored an arm: of bloodthirsty savages, could elicit even a paswing \ on the part of Srith-Oldwick: Another Exoiting Chapter To- Morrow during which | than the beasts’ ‘the dram increased She left me. his challenge as his wouldn't be away from m: she was in the home that leased for us two," Ihud replied to the distant call leaped an have already | from the Inner circle to dance alone smooth, _ between the drummers and the other shiugsy coats of his fellows, It was