The evening world. Newspaper, July 30, 1921, Page 9

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- Billy Brighteyes's Letter. 5 trom Lee THY OOM { Vv Me ses ; Ai vetlel et awl cov c1pEen ed & % { Two Feely wee i Sey Oe Lik wor B HSINGIRD Wv atl The Sonps dw The _woo0alAna hia a 1-9 a ee OOS ONS eee aa, ‘4 hil wile waa tie y He a The flowe: Ry twelve years, Brooklyn, N. Y, # And this fla O'ge dear America’s sod MIRIAM . teen yeurs old, Brooklyn, N. wart Bvt Bow Tr'2 waeuw ar uk 7 Summer. in bloom, Phe birds are all here. They come to grect The summer dear. ‘The air ts bright, The weather is fair, ~ And every one Is free from care, With the summer oomes vacation, Wor the tired working earth, ssAnd all around are glad and happy, yul of laugbter and of mirth. ‘Bo! you see that summer or many, many reasons, Is the very best ll the earth's seasons. UVELYN LEVITTAN, of aged The Scout. What sort of a fellow is a soout? Why, a chap who'll help you WWihdn you're down and oui; Metad emake you glad You have lived this day. who will try in every way, the feeble cross the will help street, trains give those who stand his reveres his God Joes lov will strive keep the peace dove. KIRSCHENBAL HOW TO GET A NEW PIN. In order to get a new Kiddie Klub pin you must save up six coupons, numbered in 0- totion, and send them to Cousin freanor, The Evening World's Kiddie Kiub, No. 68 Park Row, New York City, together with & letter giving your name, ad- dress, age and certificate num- ber. A new certificate can be obtained in the same wa: The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Korner Coorright, 1921, by the Prone Publishing Co, (Tho Now York Bening World.) Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Free Movies for ‘‘Cousins.”’ Get One of These Cards at the Theatre You Wish to Attend; Make Sure of Seats. EVENING WORLD § KIDDIE KLUB’ SUMMER AMUSEMENTS. Keep This Card. It Is Your Ticket of Admission. Borough... Theatre ........ I hereby authorize. TAA ECCCONSS members of the Mothers’ Clubs to ac- company Name of Child . Address Age. sass Certificate No, ais my son, daughter, to the above Motion Picture Theatre, Bigned. ....6. 5 on ‘arent or Guardian, This ticket good on (date) . When card is properly filled out! present it at the Kiddie Klb window in the theatre lobby. Only Children of eight years or over will be ad- mitted, got it. HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB. CUT OUT THIS COUPON. Begining with any num. ber, cut cut direo of) these coupons 819, 820, and 821, and mail Cousin Eleanor, Brening Work! Kiddie Kit, No, Vark Row, York City, with om i Must give Four AGE AND AD. COUPON 819. COURT WOULD LIKE “DUCK” IN . TANK HIMSELF Justice Levine Rebukes Com- plainant for Trying to Take Joy Out of Life. “Somebody is always trying to take the joy out of life,” Magis- trate Max S. Levine said in Jof- ferson Market Court when a pro- test was made by a citizen against the noise made by men and maids who frolic in the Greenwich Vil- lage swimming tank in 8th Street. “Lf that tank was brought right into this courtroom,” he contin- ued, “I shouldn't object a bit and if all the neighborhood trotted in with bathing suits and made a respectable appearance 1 don’t be- ve it would upset the dignity of the Court. Believe me, I'd like to ‘duck over’ into that same tank myself right now.” The enraged citizen got away auickly as possible. WOMAN STRANGLED BY UPSET AUTO Brooklyn Motorist Killed in Berk- shires by Car Seat Which Catches Her Throat. PITTSPIELD, July Mass., 80. 7910 Fifth Avenue, was killed South Egremont the car in which was viding’ skidded and plunged over a ten-foot bankment, The medieal examiner: suld death was due to strangulation as the seat was lying across her throat, Mrs. Phillipina Hoffman, the dead woman's mot suffered a broken clavicle and rations of her hands, while the other two occupants of the car, Arthur Hoffman, Mrs, Hoffman's nephew, who was driving, and Miss Molly Hoffman, her daughter, were uninjured. The party was driving from Hud- Brooklyn, in when! she son, N. Y., to Great Barrington when Hoffman Jost control of the machine while going around a curve on Molasses Mill. —— AUTO CARAVAN OFF FOR SCHENECTADY. Hreaks Camp at Rhinebeck—Ne- ception Held im Town Hall RHINERPCK, July 30.-Seott's mod em caravan, which left New York Tiursday on unt to Buhl, Idaho, started for Scheneotady to-day. It ar rived at Rhinebeck last evening and pitched its camp for the night at Springbrook Park. ‘There are thirty five automo’ los, each wi trailer. A large dele citizens of Rhinebeck met the cars at Fishki! and escorted them thirty-two miles through Pourhke the inter vening towns to where the streets were lined ¥ sing crowds Unon arriving at Springbrook 1 kK fifteen minutes for th le bungalows to be erected apper Was served, after which bers of the caravan w corted to the Town Hall, wher» reception was given them. were made by mepresentalives town and villue WOMAN AND TWO BOYS KILLED BY LIVE WIRE, of and inebeck. th ele ‘or thy A great Addresses of the Mother Shocked to Death Trying to Get Bodies DOVER, 0. July a woman are dead of the boys Ix from contact with wire In Strasburg, Donald Heitzman, ten, and his cous Harold Horn, nine, of Philad i did not return home from p and Mrs, Edward eityman, paren La search for the hildren dead i 1 tou Jeitzman f Son and Cousin, 20,—Two boys and and the father of on @ erltical condition tric an power near Ww re, and boys hed a tt Mr. lift the bodies, with the result that Mrs. wire and Mra, tried Heltgman, aged thirty-four, was Kil instantly and he was seriously burned, 1 When you get yours, fill it out cors-GAmerican woman will fully and keep it; it is your ticket off know this. It assures us n admission to the theatre at which yougPérticularly outstanding feature will Pinned under the back of a seat, Miss Bena Hoffman, thirty-eight, of No. THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1921. | LN VOR 1 NEC ops O*. of the suit buyers in a prom’- nent shop asserts that Ameri- can women absolutely refuse to implicitly follow fashions as dictated by Paris, or even our own designers She says she has taken this into con- sideration in selecting her fall sui and coats, so that if a woman comes into her department and demands a short coat to her suit she can have it and likewise she is able to supply the demands of the woman who prefers a long coat suit. The independen: be glad to that no predominate in the style of the fal: suit, 80 we can wear the last season's suit with @ complete feeling of se curity that the coat will pass in the eyes of fashion's critics. As far as the skirts are concerned they have wider hems, because d signers are not quite sure that the American woman will adopt the long skirt that has been accepted in Paris. If she does she can let out the hem to the desired length. If she cares about Madame Mode's decrees sho will at least drop the hem to abou: six inches from the ground for the coming season anyway and by spring the matter of skirt lengths may be ‘an entirely different story. This same buyer is of the opinion that navy blue will have first place in suits for fall and the browns wi.t run @ closo second, and she says we shall probably find that wool fabrics will be preferred to worsted materials, The tables piled high with bathing requisites are attractive and bus: centres these days. The varied as- sortments in headgear are striking. They can no longer be termed bathing caps, for there are pure rubber rubberized silk hats in these that are quite as interesting as the usual millinery showings. And it ts quite as difficult a task to select the head covering for the beach as it to select the hat for Easter. and displays There are chic little close fitting caps in all colors, Red, of course, is prominent, A toque with outstand- ing side wings all in red rubberized atin is fetching. Tt bears a price tag of $2.95, Vor the conservative bather there is a rubber hat in blue with white polka dots, and it has a sing fiower adornment, This is $% Then there are the hats with qui brim to keep the sun out of the One model has a stiff brim and a soft crown of pure rum contrasting shades. There combined with yellow and with tan. These are only Speaking of dathing acce when you get into the shopping dis- look at these bathing s One atyle in red or bine rub. ed fabric that looks like § mounted on a gilt metal fram clasp. This ts a smart looking b; and can be had at $2.95. Then there is a pure rubber bag mounted on two bracelet rings. rubber in red is a New and Original HDRE are times I during the summer when one’s only ambition s to collapse before an electric fan, and the favore ones of leisure find a dainty nerligee about the most appreciated item in their ward- robe, Others whose life's ambition has harnessed them to a business or profea- sion look forward to an hour or so after returning home to lounge about before dinner and indulge in the ‘soothing infor- mality of such a gar- ment, There is no pret- tier fabric for its construction than porgette erepr, launders as if not better 1, any cotton fab and lends itself graciously t inty elaboration and 1 Most women develop their int at home, expensive though expert und the m ig them are Al and = attructive npractical 1 have designed a model which will be found to ex- . combining as, robes they to for are buy, requiring no workmanship, fabrics cc y but simr some rzette grcen or lilac wide cream lave e colored such It is kim head down are ploc at the neck, rsettes a double the wide banding, ie piece a hole for the satin rib ands that The ace bd: sleeves ethie somplete the lower portion of the negligee is in By Mildred Lodewick YOU SHOULD WHA T WHEN AND WTIERE WEAR DVANCED styles for’early fall wear in- clude the two novelties At the left, the “combination coat dress” of heavy canton crepe features the high neck effect, while at the right the gown of bro- caded satin exhibits the very newest featuré designed for milady—bloomers attached to the skirt. Protos wADEL> HERBERT: here shown. { TWO DISTINCTIVE NOVELTIES FOR EARLY PALL Fancy Girdles Increasingly Popular. HEN the fancy girdles first peared a few seasons age thir general impression seemed to be that they would be short-lived, but with more varied ¢ are extremely ornate +oms to be the d with purehas n nent in the new may be of ppearing in ach coming Fashion Designs A PRACTICAL NEGLIGEE SIMPLE TO CONSTRUCT efor ‘ rieved means of plac binding at a distance om the hot neg the material from under top e ting It drop dow: be felled the lower edge of the garment - fl ' crown with a bins fold t from the top, while a rose in Dear Misa Lodewick: | have enough gray taffeta to make myself a hat, as | have a gray Georgette taffeta. with the dress mn they ¢ arger quantities signk and styles, 1 BY MILDRED LODEWICK. trimmed How would you suggest making it; that is. in a broad brim or small through the but pointed chin. My face is b eyes, road roli? 1 will wear this hat with a rose linen MISS J. M. dress also. A mediums com shape w The 1 rracticnl nade f the taffeta ipper reposed and ta 10 n fuss front stem and leaves resting on the brim foundation on which row with large flat pink Dear Miss Lodewick: Would you kindly help me out with a design for a simple, dainty little dance frock for my eight- year-old daughter at a resort? hotel danc to wear to She is chunky and fat, so | never dress her in crisp fabrics. Silk dotted nade up simply bon 4 bp. A Sas net MRS. would over a Dear Miss Lodewick: 1 want to make a sport skirt of silk like sample, which, see, is an invisible plaid. pretty think it weul id be atin 4 w. K effectty kon light ted net w tel s you will Do you side plaited or shall | make it strvight and rather narrow? Am forty years old and measure 38 inches MRS. L. K through hips. Viaited should not one lop prettily. skirts are judge you which your mate Dear Miss Lodewick: 1 started to make a white crepe de Chine dress when trimming was but now | have it nea not fashionable, ton stow jal w the fringe comme ly finished and would like to use something else. Will you suggest for me MISS 1. L summer Dear Miss Lodewick I wender if you could aid me ees: » | CHECKERBOARD WRAP scarce of ber, ovus wine his fri Dew and hill tuto the pit of the auee Mo-nar ut of Alo sat of Ja-don nce gate, The ape fines of hi wa in progress. The minutes hours, ‘appeared to be a rope. Slowly and ca and ready his into the something close: nearer the exte Immediately the room above saw the peering down these and ond wrists he for comple elbows almost t this y other him and pulled vole. No word did they » and 800) bore Lim. CHAPTER XXII HE sun rose te see the And now as h toward the aperture through ite centre, gelf upward, hand over hand. upper chamber hideous priest's hands wer y bound Tarzan din of batde had Tarean encounters (a isu and. tbe. Ae on ieee that bas aclocked Fact Toe. @auRhter of the forces still neld at the pal- man paced the con- ss narrow co.) Presently he heard the claaging of a gong from the corridor without and faintly the rush of feet, and shouts. He guessed that his war- riora had been discovered and a fight dragged slowly into looked again n the roof there something depending IL appeared to be utiously he drew him- Nearer roof he cume. Ale nded arms projected and then d suddenly upon both his forearms, pinioning them tightly and jeaving him hanging in mid-aic unable to advance or retreat, a light appeared in him, and presently he mask of a priest him, In the leathern thon tint about Tare ms 1 they together from his o his fingers, Behind presently saw n several Jay hold of him up through the upon ns we they upward to the temple speak to him as risen again Ja-don had urged his forces to enewed effec Ta-den had not rived and th forces of the old ehief- ttin were revealing in their lessened waar iy eombination WittQatfarts their increasing demoraliza- wetal plaguesins fact any-gtion, and then it was that the priests thin vd ‘tself to this type§carried ‘Tarzan-jad-guru to the root St nm seems 100 be em Qof the palace and exhibited him on In bead joedies He iw a moat the Sight of the warriors of both fac- n Visine wndoone is hard} ion: tte make a seleetion. The§ “tere is the false Dor-ul-Otho,” m tex can he se-g Already the high priest noted Hiteulty shat some of the palace warriors ~ standing near were whispering to- gether and pointing, He stepped [Scivser to Obergats, “You are Jad- }Qben-Otho,” he whispered. “denounce IQhimt" The German shook himself, His | mind eles J of all but bis great ter- with a suggestion ae to how | might fix a white satin sport skirt from which the cleaner could not remove a spot on the left side front, nearthe hips? Skirt was new this vear, and I dislike to throw it away. MISS M, D. You wig patch pockets on ‘ spot on the que over the skirt fu eover the J i -V The checkerboard wrap is. the latest for evening wear, [is made of evergold metal ribbon com: bined with black velvet ribbon, and in all makes a very startling and effective wrap. ww De I IO OO vor and the gave him the ol Lam Jad-be! POPP IP ILI: tightly turned his eyes 4 in the direc looks like He was our Ia "We have at | Tobn,” she rep! have been rayer now is hey And now naked Obergat the Germ w alter, bimae other's left. » Obergatz, “And after th sphet.” and finger at J i to th wande ton tine Iu-den Lu “Prep Jon newdd gathered ith end + wtood. Impul id restrain} nd, t tnd (hen raised w nthe alr and J ard across tenc victim. alarming noise together bef the end,” spent do not leave came Approi upen his bac words of the high priest tue to safety Otho! h screamed. Tarzan jookod bin straight in the ye You are Livut. Obergatz of man Army,” he said in excel ent German. “You are the last of he three P have sought so long, and in your putrid heart you know that God has not brought us together at iple comet AL eit was packed end of the ‘arzuu and bis less, ‘The sounds 1 i A Tin, Wf Qiast for nothing. ti 4 you might) Phe inner ten ita satin down each Qwith humanity le 1 Hid be ewught fardwestern altar sto of ver it, then left @mate, bound and eo, ant eben inder the hem Qor battle had ceased and presently ; tue ape-man saw Ja-don being led fe ee into the jnner court, his wrists und him. toward Jane d tion of Ja-don, ““Phis he said quietly, st and only hope.” east found each other, 4, “and our last days toget My only that if take you me." Lu-don and the and the high priest to his place behind If standing upon the nd nod- Lu-don whispered a word who eri ne tal e god, the false he pointed ‘an ai adon, Then his eves e form of Jane Clay- And the woman too?” asked Du fon "The case of the woman T will at tend to later,” replied Ob will talk with her to-night is had a chance t itat 1 consequen of arousini n-Otho.” +s upward at the sun. he ire the saerific lifted re they his head ith, in taid at ut @ Kk! with f the mone where J vely and ier the w ending 4 ‘or an rushed Kly, kissed upon the forehead. ““Goud- hy she whispered. “Goodby,” he answered, smiling. The priests seized her and dragged raway. Lu-don handed the sacri Obergatz am “he the German, “thus wrath upon all my nemies!” He looked up at the sun the knife high asphemers of God!" 1 same in- f rang out 3} nd m (Sh sereaming whi ad-ben-Otho cru the body of his Again the same and Lu-don fell, o death ewcape. He then to be hidden there aiiarcers of O-lo-m At oft dane, but ey Tartan finds Jape: ‘ive palace and Tarzan ta han fate proclaims himself Jad-ten-Otho. hird and Mo-sar crumpled to the ground, And now the warriors amd the people, locating the direction of (his new and unknown sound, turned toward the western end of “he court, Upon the summit of the temple wall they saw two figures—a Ho-don ware nor and beside him an aimost naked creature of the race of Tarzan-jad suru, across his shoulders and abow iis ‘hips were strange board belts studded with beautiful cylinders that glinted in the mid-day sun, and in his hands a shining thing of wood and metal from the ep of which rose a thin wreath of blue-gray smoke, ‘The sacrificial knife tay upon the altar where it had fallen trom the dead fin, 3 of Overgatz, Pan-@at crept closer and then with a sudden lunge he reached forth to seize the handl eu Je, and even as his crutehin fingers were poised above t, the strange t in the hands of the strange creature pon the temple wall cried out tts crashing word of noand Pan-sat, We under priest, eaming, fell back upon the dead body of his master. A warrior near thi altar had seized the sacrificial Knife and cut Taraan’s bonds and also those of Ja-don and Jane Clayton, and now the three ad together beside the altar, and the new from the western end of the » court pushed thelr way toward n the ¢ of the woman went wide in mingled aston Ishment, ineredulity and hope. And the stranger, slinging his weapon across his back by a leather stra, rusted forward and took her in his arms, tack ™ he cried, sobbing on joulder “daek, my sont” And ‘Tarzan of the Apes came then nd put his arms around them both, ind the King of Fal-ul-don and the arriors and the people knecled ir temple court and placed their foreheads to the ground before the tur where the three stood. CHAPTER XXIV. THIN an hour of the fall of Lu-don and Mo-sar, the chiefs and principal wal riors. of Pal-ul-don gath- cred In the great throne room of the palace t A-lurupon the steps of the lofty pyramtd and placing Ja-don at the apex proclaimed him king, Upoa one aide of the old chieftain ‘stood Tarzan of the Apes, and upon the other Korak, the Killer, worthy son of the mighty ape-man. Ang then it was that Ja-don turned to ‘Tarzan “Let the Dor-ul-Otho transmit to his people the wishes of his father," he sutd. “Your problem is a simple one,” said the ape-man, “if you but wish to do that which shall be pleasing in the sof God. Your priests, to im- crease their power, have tauglt you that Jad-ben-Otho is a cruel god, that his eyes love to dwell upon blood end suffering. But the falsity of teachings has been demog- to you to-day in the uttér rat of the priesthood. “Take then the men and give them instead to the women that they may be adminis- tered in kindness and charity and h the blood from) your drain forever the western.” As he ceased speaking a mormur of evident approval ran through the Uvony The following day O-lo-a and Pan- it-lne and t nen of Ja-don'’s palace at A-lur, one roosn Ta-den were wed, and Om-at and upon : 1 Week Tarzan and Jane and Korak remained the guests of Ja-don, as did Om-at and his black warriors. And then the -man announced that he would depart from Pal-ul ‘They went by way of the Kor-ul-Ja accompanied by the warriors of that tribe and a great contingent of Ho- don warriors under Ta-den. It was the morning of the last day that, as they were breaking camp to take up the march, a deep bellow thundered from a nearby grove, The ape-man smiled. The chance had cyme. Fittingly then would the Dor- ul-Otho and his mate and thelr son depart from uninapped Pal-ul-don. “Walt sald the ape-man, and with Mis spear in hand he advanced toward the gryf, voicing the weird cry of the Tor-o-don. ‘The bellow- ceased and turned to low rum- m and presently the huge beast wed. What followed was but a an's previous huge and fero- was that Jane ant san rode through the uss that hems Pal-ul-don upon the back of « prehistoric triceratops while the | reptiles of the swamp fled hissing in terror, Upon the opposite shore they turned and k their farewells to Ta- and Om-at and the brave war- s they had learned to admire and nt. And then Tarzan urged their mount onward toward \the north, abandoning him only whenYhe Was assured that the Waz-don and the Ho-don had had time to reach a point comparative safety among the craggy ravines of the foothills, Turning the beast'’s head again to- ward Pal-ul-don the three dismounted and a sharp blow upon the thick hide sent the creature lumbering ma jeatic- ally back in the direction of its native haunts, Fora time they stoad ooking back upon the land they had just ery; ana quit--the land of Tor-o-don and of ja and jato; of Waz-don Ho-don, a primitive land of oy and sudden death and ry and beauty; 9 land that they aif had earned to love. And then they turned once more toward the north and with Heht hearts and brave hearts took up their Jong journey toward the land that is best of all—home. * temples from the!

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