The evening world. Newspaper, July 20, 1921, Page 18

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18! BANKING AND FINANCIAL. “THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 19st.” d , “serserecesent in HUSBAND DEFENDS ra THIS IS KIDDIE KLUB HONOR DAY | AT BEAUTIFUL STARLIGHT PARK, — SETS PRECEDENT IN YgaRETHER THRILL tan BUILDING LAW| hi + UPPER WEST SIDE. RAYNOR NICHOLAS : | 1 | Chicken Houses Must Have WH E D I S G S mM bi Ce lidated Stock i} . . Bzchange of New York. | Steam Heat, Janitor Service, | ge EN TH KI D E ET MEDAL , Seranton, Pa — - j Sorents | DYCKMAN | HOCK and Muftled Rooster: | ——++ ra Wilkes-Barre, Pn, fared SYNOPSIS OF PRECE DING INSTALMENTS. ) N'Y. Rochester. N.Y. ‘ " Commissione! U : : . Gea RE , By Farmer Smith. T Says It Is Do: The Baseball and Athletic Champions and the| nx fit Sot "tm matey os od Ont ta he, ay ne cue we i) ch fue firm etx monthe—Aividend iis CEDAR GROVE, N. J. Sly 2. signed to Limit Number Little Klub Actors and Actresses ill Have {oc EAR IIS ih Fett ro ute = eg td, ea ond } became KAGWA hehe tude Ww i, fe tiger that as iise bs inshe's ‘compet ta asd American Tobacco || uun|f| Structure Will Be Opened To- [ows following the recent cuss | From Southern Europe. Day All Their O ine Worl tate ta ee, perth acta eal Pa ly hy a Sn eclares apectal 4 " ‘ — after, ‘who eeoan 4 Denver & Rio Grand Night With Picturesque | ogi hum Pointy, vile — PeecAl cioe! cir Own—Evening World) ier sit, ia, tri uie Sete Ses Seat baal tha IS pied Carainoni near here, ssod'asone and | ina enation of j Free Movies a Great Attraction Rukia “chsatey I's (ite apt 28D 2 Gok rate eaten WRG esta Ceremonies. Bet Tere Dinan fhe. deere ination of prominent aliens who ‘action. Wick ine ha calla one Payta by avcniting “Whee-ool” and then mounts upon ter have been slightly delayed on incoin- Tarzan do Meo and stas he gorse, ‘The following morning he sels out on Current Happenings — Pending ment occupies fourteen typewri the city of A-lur whe ae foot, for Events in Important Stocks The new Dyckman Street dock is| tn pages and, among other | ing vessels by the operation of the Witeh les ats ben-Oulo.” He fo wought Deters sesea, kine of Palculcdsne eer ond fom of the aimtaniy ded Up to the minute financial clippings of vital . things, provides new Immigration Law does not worry ‘There is a surprise in store for the © interest to the investor to be opened to-night with cere- shall have less CVAPTER IX, 1No pigs HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB, W. W. Husband, United States Coin Brooklyn boys who won the Kiddie within his crafty mind, Lu-don, the This publication contains the above and other dependable in- formation, Something different from the usual market letter Policy ultra-conservative, No ob- ligation. Ask for EW-30 | ph : — NEW YORK Phones 1 Low Priced Rails The evident turn for the better in the railroad situation, again brings before investors future possibilities of the stocks, which may become part of great trans- continental systems—consoli tions which far-sighted railway men know must comeeventually. is expected io benefit through the new dock, and citizen living there think it opening a new channel for the ar rival of foodstuffs from the Jersey farms across the river and partly by facilitating the transportation home building and depressing rents. Street to their lists of per Bronx. At present they have t order to board a Hudson River boat posal for a public market in greatly will eventually reduce the cost of living, partly by of building materials, thus stimulating Steamboats of the Day and Night and other lines are to add Dyckman stopping places, thus contributing to the con- venience of the residents of Wash- ington Heights, Inwood and the Up- go to 129th Street or to Yonkers in It js said that Mayor Hylan in his speech to-night will outline a rae n- wood, to be fed by the new dock. The competition of such a market, it is be- cement floors, steam heat, hot and water and They shall be within 25 feet with mufflers for roosters, 4. Sidewalks shall be wide ,| enough for engaged couples to pass without breaking rank janitor’ service, equipped, when of the neighbors. colored lights for the festivities to- |night. To airplanes and a hydro- | -| plane will circle about the scene. The members of the Committees on Arrangements and Reception are: Arrangements—William O'Shaugh-| nessy, Commissioner Grover C. W len, Department of Plant and Struc- tures; Commissioner Murray Hul- bert, Dock Department; Leader John| |Mara, J. Lissberger, John J. Ready,| |George Euell, Daniel Lanahan, Ed. | |. Flinn, Mmes, McPherson, Murray, Ready and Goodhart. | Reception- Philip J, Goodhart, John a Lamon McLaughlin, Thomas Burke, Arthur Codding, William . Crona, John F. Ulrich, Richard | Fink, Thomas H. McGarry, David C. » M F. school of New York University yesterday afternoon, He came from Washington to deliver the lecture us part of the course on immigration policies of the United States, “You have been hearing,” said he, with a disarming twinkle in his e3¢, “tales of how a golf player of British birth was held up several minutes, so land how a prominent foreigner wiio had lived in this country for several years and has an American-born wile was det ed for a short time. ends of the latter gentlemen were 60 alarmed for fear he might be in- convenienced that they made repre- sentations to the State Departm When the matter was brought to my ttention L said I hoped he would not p delayed at all, but chat if he considering that in his twenty yeurs of residence here he hi seen fit to become @n Ameri zen, | wouldn't go out and sit down in the park and cry about it.” & ber of the Honor Kiddies, 1 medal from Starlight Park. Capt. Whitwell, manager of the big Bronx amusement park, is an enthusiastic baseball fan, He says that the championship game was one of the most exciting games of baseball that he has ever seen and that it was well worth @ medal apiece to the boys who won it. Capt. Whitwell will personally pre- sent these medals to the boys to-day, when all the “Honor Kiddies” meet at Starlbght Park to receive their awards and enjoy the fun missed on Kiddie Klub day last Wednesday. The fifty or more little actresses and actors who performed at the Kiddie Klub’s own show make up the greater num- To-day these brave youngsters, who ve up their own pleasure to give enjoyment to the other kiddies and Ba NAME, aa siting co ede Oe on become members, Each member is presented with as sliver gray Kiub Pip and membership COUPON 813 EAN! Miss Mary Mancini, 307 Bast 112th Street, and Mrs. John O'Connell, No. 307 Kast 112th Street; Plaza,’ 59th Street and Madison Avenue, Mrs, Dreyfuss, No. 361 Hast 49th Street: Mrs. O'Connor, No. 482 Kast Sist Street; Mrs. King, No, 307 Hast 49th Street; Orange, Broadway and 137th Street, Mrs. May Dando of No. 525 West 160th Street; 68th Street Play- house, Third Avenue and 68th Street, Hunter Collage— —. . WHERE KIDDIES CAN FIND FINE ENTERTAINMENT. Theatres free to Kiddie Klub mem- bers on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The number of seats reserved for have seen Dor-ul-Otho before. Yesteday as we were return- ing with the Kor-ul-lul prisoners we beheld him sated upon the back of a great gryf. We hid in the woods before he cane too near, but 1 saw enough to mike sure that he wh rode upon thegreat beast was none other than thenessenger who stands here now.” The evidence seemed to be quite enough to convnce the majority of the warriors tht they indeed stood in the presence f deity, “If indeed you re the Dor-ul-Otho,” said Ko-tan, addtssing Tarzan, “you will know that or doubts were but natural since we have received no sign from Jad-be-Oiho that he in- tended Honoring & so greatly, nor how could we knw, even, that the Great God had a ion? If you are he, all Pai-ul-don ‘ejoices to honor Market Comment monies, a speech by Mayor Hylan,| than 59 per cent. open space. CUT OUT THIS COUPON. Con Aitses cet prescient. ontntons of the || monioks A apecen PY Matreet Clean. | 2 All hungalows shall be of one | Missioner of Immigration, the least Klub baseball championship. Tn ad- ee cme uk. Gur Mocmataenl high priest of A-lur, did not openly Prsalle incline markot sramenive ine IAs recastment Band. story, with the cellar and the | bit, nor shake his faith in the excel- dition to the Kiddie Klub champion- 66 question Tarzan's right to the title ef, Fie Wall Sleeat ‘Olpaut TI ea ret ar ide of tne city| iret on the same floor. | ienes of the law. ship cup and the individual Kiddie 2 dim Gaara aren R e ie! All the upper wes pity 3. Chicken houses shal ave | ie told # lass in the summer Klub medals; they are each to receive ‘or Tam sure now that) 4h hud relinquished, the quiuauasret the guest to Lu-don, and now the latter led Tarzan through those por- tions of the temple that he wished lum to see. As they passed the barred entranee to a dim corridor, Tarzan saw within a great company of pithecanthropi of all ages and of both sexes, Ho-don s well as Waxz-don, the majority | them squatted upon the stone ose ee attitudes of utter dejection, while seme puced buck and forth, their fea- tures stamped with the despair of utter hopelessness. ‘And who are these who lie here thus unhappily?" he asked of Lu- don. It was the first question that he had put to the high priest since entering the temple, and instantly he regretted that he hud asked it, for Lu-don turned upon sim a face pon which the expression of suspicion was but thinly veiled, Vho should know better th son of Jad-ben-Otho?" he retorted, | “The questions of Dor-ul-Otho are }not with impunity answered with j other questions,” said the ape-man a Lewis, George W. Hurst, John A.| The Commissioner General gave it Cousins on cach Free Day is noted ; quietly, “and it may interest Lu- Balto. & Ohio St. L. & San Fr ney aes era peaks Lea ee on Ginley, William ¥, Barry, John J.{ns his opinion that the law represents along with the name and address of |you; if you are nt he, swift and | the high priest, to iow, that the blood Rock Island = St. L. &S. W. Prihe location-of the Dyckman Street |Halleron, HH.” Finnegan, “John general +rend of public opinion the theatre, terrible shall be tk punishment of |Of # false high priest upon the altar Chi. &Gt Weet’'n Mo. Pacific arte iat tow on the north side of | Ryan, HW. McDonald, Maurice R. Jar-|and serves the object that Congress MANHATTAN. your temerity. I, b-tan, King of (Of his temple is not displeasing in the Kan. CitySe, Pere Marquette the street, will be changed to the|vis, Arthur J. McMenony, B, 4,| intended it to serve, that of leaving North Star, 1%0 Fifth Ave; 190|pul-ul-don, h " & Ob eves of Jad-ben-Otho.” Pittbars & West Vs. south side when the new $200,000 | Burston. the door as open as possible to im- neats. ‘ Aelia, AG 2) Jal su-don paled as he answered Tay. nlip there 1a finished, Then there will oo migran‘s from Northern and West- Manhattan, 46 West 103th St.; 50 ‘And spoken weil, 6 a King should |2an's question. “They are the offer- A complete analytical report on hevoom for another new dock similar] U. 8. CADETS TO SAIL FOR Homm,| ern Wurope and limiting immigra- seats speak,” said Tarzan breaking his|'M&8 Whose blood must refresh the tion from Southern and Bastern the sbove and other stocks to the one being opened to-night. COBLENZ, July 20.—Eight West Point oh Bushman, 36 West 120th St.; 60/long silence, “who fers and honors | C#8tern altars as the sun returns to SUGARMAN & CO, J.D. Members Consolidated Bie Ex, N. T. BUGARMAN BUILDING, Beaver St., N.Y. Phone: Bread 7760 UPTOWN BRANOHES BANKING AND FINANCIAL. HOES, Bareela”” rama bei Tate. GRAIN Provisions For the benefit of those intersted in com Mmoditirw we maintain a comokte wire ser- Mice, our offices being furnisbed with Chi- cago Board of ‘Trade quotations, Informa tion or statistics may be hed upon mquent, E. D. DIER & CO. Stock»—Bonds—Grain. 42 New Street, New York lephone Broad 6140, + Tel Vanderbilt 9633, G7 W. 125th St. Tel. Harlem 5651. Philadelphia Pittsburgh Cleveland by us and appear in Call, phone or write for copy. isk for BW; INVITATION TO OON ¥ Miscellaneous Consruction and Station Finish. Wealed bids or proposals for performing miscal- laueous construction and station finish work for Parts of certain municipal rapid transit Tellrosde tore fully descrlved certain contracts dated Many authorities on market conditions agree this is buying time These opinions have been collected “Investor and Trader” under the title: Is now the time to buy stocks? | BROAD STREET. §, MADISON SQ. ind STREET (OOS BANKING AND FINANCIAL, this week’s 24 page BROAD 8° Broad 171i 235 FIFTH AVE. 1 Tel. Mad. Sq. 1377 Direct Private Wires New York Chicage Boston Philadelphia Pitesburgh Detret Bakimere Cleveland JONES & BAKER || Members New York Curb Morket ! Seventy Cabin Passengers On French Liner Are Held Seventy of the 180 cabin passengeas on the French liner La Touraine w held by the immigration inspectors when she arrived yesterday from Havre. All were aliens, and Wash- ington was asked for advice as to whether they should be admitted un- jder the new immigration restriction law. One of those held was Emil Mor- big, Assyrian importer, of No, 136 Liberty Street, who went to Beirut to direct an exhibition of products of American manufacture. He has been in business in this country twelve years, He said the Zionist movement as a failure. When he was at Port Said there were 5,000 Russian and Roumanian Jews restrained from landing at Jaffra by the determined efforts of Jews now in Palestine to keep others out, he said. CREW OF STRANDED STEAMER BINGHAMTON LANDS SAFELY. HALIFAX, July 20.—Capt. M. L. Gilbert and the thirty men in the crew of the American freight steamship Binghamton, which went ashore on Gannet Dry Ledge yesterday, landed safely last night at Chebocque Point. The ‘wreck is about fifteen miles from rmouth. The steamer, it was feared, be Mareb 1015, Moown a Contract Ne. 3 and Contract No. 4, wite the Interborough Rapi ° sit_ Company ¢ New York Municipal Bail Way Corporation, respectively, in the Bo Manhattan a) , Borough ef Manhattan, City, until the twenty-fifth day of Jul J. At eleven-thirty (11.30) e'clook aA. M. ‘chich time Place or at @ later date 10 bo Nard by the ‘Commission ‘the proposals will be publicly Th the werk within aot. fe Coutractor must complete the (mes stipulated tn the fuller description of contr din the contss be decmed amar of this Invitation conies of which may be k-groted and purchased at sald’ of- flog of tke Commission. No propose! will be recefved unless ® separate certified check for one Bui (5100.09) payable to the onder oft roller of the City and drawn upon a Natlonal oF fe Hank or trust company aatisfactory to. the Conn Its prinelpal office in York k ot be enclosed tn Will be made by the Wable after the open ted ‘dal ‘Comp ng in Pie right to voect any and all bids is ro weryed. York, Inly Ath. 1921 THANSIT COMMISSION. GEORGE McANENY, Chairman JAMPS BL WALKEL, Secrotary. MEETINGS. STATES: ‘DS, INC, TO STOCKHOLDERS. 3 South William Street, Pity, July, 6, Fat A meeting of STATES LLOY 1 nay come before APPLETON, " ary PRANK 1 dent FION. | ey _LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. | OTE that tae following | WE WEREY GIVE ¥ AML, PITPSUN GH AMPRICAN CHINA CO. GKEEN BUKG, P — FUNERAL DIRECTOR —— oe FRANK R. CAMPBRIL, “THE FUNERAL CHURCH” fae. QNoo-Sectarian) 1970 Broadway at 66th St. PHows CoLumnve Office, Z3d St. & | Na SUNDAY WORLD WANTS | WORK MONDAY WONDERS | be ‘ New York City POSTAL STATION BLDG. First Mortgage Real Estate Gold Bonds Property Owned by EASTERN BUILDING CORPORATION, Inc. Normal Federal Income Tax up to 2% paid by Borrowers New York City— Broadway and 83rd Street 41 YEARS’ INVESTMENT EXPERIENCE SAFEGUARDS OUR CLIENTS’ INTERESTS $1,650,000 at an aggregate rental of $6,100,000. $1,800,000° Secured Upon Varick Street ————_—_—_ BANKING AND FINANCIAL, Secured by First Mortgage on the land and building at 34-50 Varick Street, New York City. Title guaranteed and insured by The Title Guarantee and Trust Company of New York City. Building is under contratt for a twenty-year lease to the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT EIGHT PER CENT First Mortgage. Real Estate Gold Bonds LOEW’S THEATRES Newark, Titles Guaranteed and Insured by Trustee of the above issues AMERICAN BOND & MORTGAGE COMPANY, inc. 562 Fifth Avenue, New York City Telephone Bryant 9600 Chicago, UL Columbus, Ohio Davenport, lows Grand Rapids, Mich. Rockford, UL N. — Broad and New Streets Prompt Payment of Principal and Interest GUARANTEED Normal Federal Income Tax up to 4% paid by Borrowers ‘Lawyers Title and Trust Company of New York City Columbia Trust Company of New York City Our ability to offer the investing public absolute fety together with a rea sonable and just interest reture is due solely to our policy of sharing the bene- fits of high money rates with our customers, Residence SECS mmr Kindly check in space below and booklet designated will be mailed promptly without obligation Postal Station Loew's Theatres Phone. a STARLIGHT PARK BASEBALL MEDAL, their friends, are going to coast on the giant coaster, spin round on the carousels, fly high in the aeroplanes and do all the things they did not get a chance to do last week, They will even splash in Starlight Pool wita their “Cousin,” Aileen Riggin, who will, of course, be there. So will the twenty-four boys and girls who won a place for themselves in the Kkidie Ki athletic games and the basebail stars, all of whom will receive their Evening World prizes from Cousin Eleanor and the Starlight Park medals from Capt. Whitwell, If it should rain, Kiddie Klub honor day at Starlight will be postponed io to-morrow. THE “FREE MOVIES” PROVE BIG ATTRACTION, At all the theatres which are gtving free movies to Kiddte Klub members everything is ready for those who were good, foresighted Kiddies, yes- terday, and took Coftsin Eleanor’s ad- vice and went to one of the theatres on the list and got their eards, made out for admission to-day. ‘At every one of the theatres on the list Kiddie Klub chaperones will be waiting, who are just as eager for their voluntary task, after trying it once, Cousin Eleanor finds, as the Kiddies are to see the pictures on the sereen, There are some chaperones who just cannot come every day and there are atiN chances for grown-ups to help in the movie parties by vol- unteering to go as chaperones to theatres in their own neighborhood if they will help the Kiddie Kab and assure themselves of a few mighty interesting hours by writing to Cousin Eleanor. Here are some of the chaperones who will be on duty in Manhattan to-day: Manhattan Theatre, Mrs. D. W. Harvey, No. 132 West 72d Street; Windsor, No. 412 Grand Street, Mrs. Green, No. 25 Lewis Street; New 14th Street, No. 235 East 14th Street, Mrs, Hattie Maraglino, No. 201 East 11th Street; Sunshine, No. 141 East Hous- ton Street, Mrs. Schneider, No. 191 Rivington Street; Winter Garden, No. 158 Bi ing, ast 86th Street, Mrs. Mary Flem- 326 Fast 85th Street; Mrs, Hitchman, No, 503 East. 83d Globe, No, 2184 Third Avenue, No. Stree! Rogun, 60 West 116th St.; 100 seats. Fifth Ave., 1312 Fifth Ave.; 50 seats. Classic, 564 West 181st St.; 50 seats. ‘Winter Garden, 158 East 86th St.; 50| sea Globe, 2184 Third Ave.; 50 seats. Florence, 73 East Broadway; 100 seats, Plaza, 59th St. and Madison Ave.; 100 seats. 68th Street Playhouse, 68th St. and Third Ave.; 100 seats. BROOKLYN. Farragut, 1401 Flatbush Ave.; 100 seats. Rialto, 1085 Flatbush Ave.; 100 seats. Linden, 817 Flatbush Ave.; 100 seats. Park, 4322 Fifth Ave.; 100 seats. Peerless (Fifth Ave.), 5612 Fifth Ave.; 50 seats. Peerless (Third Ave.), 480 Third Ave.; 50 seats. Colonial, 7415 Fifth Ave.; 50 seats. Stone, 375 Stone Ave.; 100 seats, Stadium, 102 Chester Ave.; 100 seats. Sheffield, 308 Sheffield Ave.; 100 seats, Parkside, 728 Flatbush Ave.; 50 seats. Bunny, 314 Flatbush Ave.; 60 seats. Carlton, 290 Flatbush Ave.; 50 seats. Stanley, 2076 86th St. (Bensonhurst); 50 seats. Atlantic, 206 WFiatbush Ave; 100 seats. Montauk, Bath Ave. and Bay 2th; 50 seats. Park, 2082 Cropesy Ave; 50 seats. Manhattan, 106 Manhattan Ave.; 50 seats, Mara*hon, 188 Prospect Park West; 50 seats Globe, 236 15th St; 100 seata. Normandy, Fulton St and Howard Oxford, St; 100 seats. BRONX, Bronx Strand, 827 Westchester Ave.; 100 seats, ‘Tremont, 142 Webster Ave.; seats. Empire, 864 Westchester Ave; 100 se: ats, Valentine, Valentine and Fordham; 50 seats, United States, 194th St. and Web- ster Ave.; 100 seats, Bronx Plaza, 187th St. and Wash- 100 ington Ave.; 50 seats. Miracle, 754 Melrose Ave.; 50 seats. Metropolis, 2644 Third Ave.; 100 seats. Concourse, 216 East Fordham Road; 60 seats. Broadway and 137th St.; 100 seats, sea’ 3275 Boston Road; 1,309 re- served seats open free on Wednes- days onty. STATEN ISLAND. Richmond, Stapteton; 50 seats, Star, New Brighton; 50 seats, Empire, Port Richmond; 60 seats, LONG ISLAND. Ftushing, Flushing; 60 seata Nassau, Port Washington; 60 seats. Park, Corona; 50 seats. Rialto, Jamaica; 60 seats. seats on Wednesdays and Fridays.) Garden, Richmond Hill; 60 seats. Roosevelt, Jamaica Ave, and s9th St., Richmond Hill; 100 seats. GET ONE OF THESE CARDS AT THE THEATRE YOU WISH TO ATTEND; MAKE SURE OF SEATS. EVENING WORLD'S KIDDIE KLUB SUMMER AMUSEMENTS Keep This Card, Theatre | I hereby authorize .... } member of the Mother: | Mame of Child ., Address ,. Age Certificate my son, daughter, (0 the above Mot! Signed ... This ticket good on (date) ....0-0. It Is Your Ticket of Admi: veces, BOTOUGN coesee ‘3’ Clubs to accompany NO. «4+ ion Picture Theatre, Parent or Guardian. When card ts properly filled out present it at the Kiddie Klub window in the theatre lobby. will 'e admitted. Only children of eight years or over When you get yours, fll it out carefully and keep it; if & your hel uf admission to the theatre af which you got th A | tain if you were fit to rle his people. My first experience ofrou indicates that Jad-ben-Otho cho well when he breathed the svirit oa King into the babe at your mothés breast.” The effect of this statment, made sO casually, Was markecin the ex- pressions and excited whpers of the now awe-struck assemblge, At last they knew how Kings tre mace! It was decided by Ja-ben-Otho while the candidate ws still a suckling babe! “It is well then,” connued the ape-man, “that you shou assure yourself that 1 am no impoor, Come closer that you may see Gt I am not as are men. Furthernre it is not meet that you standupon a! ligher level than the son your god.” Ko-tan was satisfied thatie was entertaining deity, but as to jit what form his entertainment shou take he was rather at a joss to kno} No foot other than a King had touched the surface of the apexf the pyramid in the throne room at\-lur during all the forgotten ages thugh which the Kings of Pal-ul-dothad | ruled froga its high eminence. So what higher honor could Ko-tan ffer than to give place beside him tahe Dor-ul-Otho? And so he_ inved Tarran to ascend the pyramid ad take his place upon the stone beth | that topped it. As they reached ie step below the sacred pinnacle Ko-ty continued as though to mount to h throne, but Tarzan laid a detainin hand upon his arm. “None may sit upon”a level witl the gods,” confidentiy showed his embarrassment. “But,” added 78 honor his faithful ser him to a place at his side. Ko-tan; thus would I honor the name Of Jaden Othe” The ape-man's policy had for basis an atte Come do it without making of him enemy at heart. it had of, the court continued wh bdpn interrupted by disputes between was present one who step just below the throne kingdom. The massive, lion-like features. until man ceases to exist. of his neighbors. of his claims to godship. When the affairs of the audience northern end of the group of buildings within the royal enclosure The temple t of the palace tecture, ‘There were several monial places of varying sizes, punposes of which 1 confecture. Bae hi arebi cere th and similar in dan altar in th they were oval in shape, their longes diameter lying due east and west ‘The high priest alone wore 7 headdres® He was an old man, wit thin-lipped mouth. ger to his ruse, he saw at ‘ance thas the mi ra him to n, “a god MAY nd he bowed his head. nt by inviting you in its 1pt hot only to arouse the fearful respect of Ko-tan but te At Tarzan's direction the business dvent. i ponsisted princi pa in the settling 0 consisted principally ing of food upon the | ‘and which | a Sto learn was the place|will bpleasing in the eyes of Jad- een afar the higher chiefs of the |ben-Ob7" tarning a look of puzzled alked tribes which made up Ko-tan’s | one who attracted Taeeors attention, was a stalwart | replied place upon your altars such Tarzan'® of powerful physique and gifts ofood and apparel as are mont He was|weloomein the city of your people. addressing Ko- is as old as Government and that will continue in unabated importance It had to do with a boundary dispute with one elf was really a part an could only In was antagonistic | No matior whal suspicion lurked shows how investments in these hilip M. Goodhart, President of|cadets, members of the class of 1923,{70P. “If it does accomplish this, seats. | Your father at the day's end.” issues should prove most profit- ig awed Civic Forum, believes that | who have been visiting the ®uropean | Ne Said. “it or something like it will Windeor, 412 Grand St.; 50 sea:s, _ | ‘he sod of his people. It is well that | “And who told you," asked Tarsan gp able, the new dock can be used in the ave- | battlefields, will sail homeward from | very likely be the basis of our immi. New ith St, 235 East 14th St.; 50|/¥0U insist that I indai be the Dor- | “that Jad-ben-Otho was pleased that ning in the summer for a recreation Anunere BY oa Sreatiiant ena thoy oe lJegislation for the next fifty seats. ul-Otho before you tveord me the | his people were slain upon his altars? Write for LP-19—No oddoanen. |] [ICE With band concerts Eres Monae ana crating eette | veare Sunshine, 141 East Houston St.; 60/homage that is my @o, Jud-ben- | “wf! YOu were mistaken?” The dock will be festooned with | ome j seats, line\charaed ime epediiy 16: aucer: countless thousands have died in vain,” replied Lu-don, Ko-tan and the surrounding war- |tiors and priests were listening at- |tentively to the dialogue. Some of |the poor victims behind the barred gateway had heard and rising, pressed se to the barrier through which one 18 conducted just before sunset eac! day never to return. berate them!" cried Tarzan with a wave of his hand toward the im- prisoned victims of a cruel supersti- “for I can tell you in the name of Jad-bem-Otho that eeeea. at you are mis- CHAPTER X. U-DON paled. “It is sacrilege!” he cried; “for countless ages have the priests of the Great God offered each night a life to the spirit of Jad-ben-Otho as it returned below the western horizon to its master, and never has the Great ven sign tiat he was dis- Stop!” commanded Tarzan, “It 6 the blindness of the priesthood that has failed to read the messages oi their god. Your warriors die beneath the knives and clubs of the Waz-don; your hunters are taken by ja and jato; no day goes by but witnesses the deaths of few or many in the vil-, ps of Ho-don, and one death each’ day of those that die are the toll which Jad-ben-Otho has exacted for the lives you take upon the eastern altar. What greater sign of his dis- pleasure could you require, O stupid priest?” Lu-don was silent. There was he admonished, steppin&raging within him a great cunfiict be- up and seating himselftween his fear that this indeed might upon the throne. The abashed Ko-tanbe the on of god and his hope that but at last his fear won “The son o} id-ben-Otho has spoken,” he said, + 4d turning to one of ‘the lesser Fests: “Remove the bars and re- Mn these people from whence they che." thus addressed did as he was bid am as the bars came down the Primers, now all fully aware of the |mibje that had saved them, crowded for\rd and throwing themselves d upoltheir knees before Tarzan raised thelivoices in thanksgiving. Koan was almost as s was no’, religious rite “But hat,” he cried, "may we do that ppreMsion toward the ape-man. “If yy seek to please your god,” he an on a question that | ‘These thgs will Jad-ben-Otho bless, | when yoimay distribute them among those of \e city who need them most, With suc things are your storerooms filled as ‘have secn with mine own eyes, andsther gifts will be brought, ‘The matter held little or no in-| when the pests tell the people that | st for Tarzan, but he was im- this way ley find favor before their sed by the appearance of the | god,” and 4rzan turned and signified speaker and when Ko-tan addresse he wod leave the temple. as Ja-don the ape-man’s inter- s they ere leaving the precincts permanently crystallized, for | gevoted tore worship of their deity Satdun was the father of Ta-40N: | the ape-mamoticed a amall but rathe: That the knowledge would benefit bim| ornate buildg thai stood entirely de- in any way seemed rather a remote | tached fromthe others as though #t possibility since he could not reveal | nad been cu€rom a little pinnacle of to Ja-don his friendly relations With |limstone whiy had stood out from it his'son without admitting the falsity fellows, “AS hix. interested lan d overt he noticed that and wintws were barred , | pit its {| door concluded Ko-tan suggested that | “spe wha Mie son of dad-ben-Otho might wish What Erpose is that to visit the temple in which were per- | al Sater eae se formed the religious rites coincident w to the worship of the real eit is notht ani 5 so the ape-man was conducted) | _Teplied the high Py the King Nimselt, followed by the pee Penne, there is no one warriors of his court, through the | 2l0 oa tae ts vacant. Once it corridors of the palace toward the; Waa used butnot now for many s| years,” and he yoved on toward the |fateway whichled back into the palace. Here » and ‘the priests - halted while Tamn with Ko-tan and -|his warriors paed out from the e|sacred precinct of ihe temple grounds. e| The one quesbn which ‘Tarsan west end and another in the east and|would have askeche had feargd to task, for he knew hat in the heart« jof many lay a Spicion .# to his © genuineness, but h determined that h before he slept h would put the close set, gunning eyes and a cruel,|question to Ko-tangither directly or indirectly—as to Wether there was ‘At first sight of him Tarzan real-/or had been recentl within the eft: ized that here lay the greatest dan- jot A-iur a female ¢ the same race as bis. Do Not Mise To-Mwow's Int ing Instalent.

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