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ee an mma aml esas eal onload by - ¥ a SS ESPNS EL Z aot } eS TES SY ——— / THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBE A Double-Barrelled Love Story With Twice a Hundred Happenings “SWEET STRANGER > BY BERT 1921, E (Continued) JOYOUS exclamation from one of the girls. “Why, there's Madama! This is the lady at the head of these Camps; geome on and meet her. ‘There advanced, out of one of the hacks, smiling, a lady in Camp uni- form. « Greetings, And then Jim's eager suery. “I say, do you know—er—Miss Gedtgia Tarbell?” % certainly do,” returned the lady brightly; “but you won't find ber here. is our Hill Camp, you see. It's the children. Georgia Tarbell is ene of our counsellors’at the Lake Camp—where we have older girls. Tl send a gitl with you acros thy fhe girl who piloted us over the Short cut was also # counsellor; 9 pleasant little brown-eyed creature who described herself as Hen- Medick"—which meant medical stu- dent. “and two of the boys who are dtedying medicine in the home town the swimming Instructors over at Camp,” she chatted on. . “Here's the Lake. . . . We'll maybe save some minutes by taking the ferry. I'll paddie you across.” { At the end of the path that we'd taken there was drawn up a red- painted canoe; and this the Amert- can girl handled naturally and eas- fy, “Now here we are. That's one of tthe instructors coming up now. . . . Of, Bul! © Billorcoke!” A young man—a powerfully built | ada lightly down the rocky , “Hello, Connie,” he hailed our “Cokerbill,” she began. “It is Bill fhis time, isn't it?” “Sure. Coke's gone off on this hike.” | “Say, Bill, ‘here are two friends of OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ‘camp, Where they were met by & gr 1, was found by Jim Vaui Imes he communicated with (hi With his (win alster, Ages. im inverted diring his | A Netter from ¢ they hed clue and Jim aod Agnes burried to Cn\ ‘They learned ¢ who bac just lef for a girls’ camp Io Vermomt. ‘Taay resohed | D of sirle | | ‘The little Hen-Medick cut fn, “Say, find Bill, do you know where I'll Georgia for these folks?” “Georgia Tarbell. Why, ye gone too.” Gone? CHAPTER Iv. HP powerfully built youth named Bill delivered an- other crushing blow. “Yes, Georgia’s gone off with my brother"—— (Horrors!) “with my brother and the Chief and Adelaide and a whole lot more of the giris—up the mountains camping.” “How long,” asked my brother, “will they be away?” “Depends upon the weather, 1 guess," from Bill. “If the weather does break, they'll turn right back. If it keeps fair we'll see ‘em back be- inning of next week.” With com- plete nonchalance, Jim asked where it was, this place up in the moun- tains, Also which route®hey’d taken, where we could get a map of it, and where we could raise a car. “You'll go on after them?” took up the Hen-Medick. "But, see here, you'd only get to the end of the road in @ machine, and then it’s all climb- ing, and you'd most likely lose your ways, and miss them”—— “1 think we'll push on and find them where they've gone,” returned my twirl. Off dashed Bill for maps and guidebook. “Connte” bore us off to the lake-house, where a group of girls and counsellors attended to us strangers. Suggestions rose about us in @ buzz, “They'll surely catch up in an hour and a half—they were hiking all the way.” “Ought to overtake them before they get to the Cascade.” “Say, aren't all the machines out?” Here a pertly pretty eirl of about seventeen broke in. ‘There's my father’s not doing anything this aft- ernoon, Let him take them.” “Bright idea. The Professor’ll Georgia Tarbell’s, ‘from England. ‘Miss Veughan and Capt. Vaughan.” | “Pleased to meet you, ma‘am,” said the smiling Hercules. He put out a fist that frightened me. “Capt. ‘Yanghan, I am pleased to meet you.” surely take them. Run, Dolly.” Flying exit of Dolly's brown-stock- inged legs down the lake path. “But, say,” @ counsellor inquired, “Mis Vaughan isn't going on all the way, is she, with her brother?” 0, & young British owner, Dut mailed Jim glanced at me. up to it, Mouse?” “Oh, rather! I'm coming.” I pro- tested. What! Disgrace my coun- try by letting these Americans imagine that any British girl couldn't walk? “You can’t go hiking in that out- fit, Miss Vaughan,” I was told gently, but firmly. “C’mon and see if we can't borrow some uniform for her.” Fresh vigor I seemed to put on with the “middy” of stout drill, with the bloomers to the knee, and, above all, with those square-toed, heel-less hiking boots of pale and supple elk “Don't you feel leather, comfortable beyond words. you.” my valets. up.” f 4 “CRASH!” PEALED THE THUNDER, DEAFENING, TERRIFYING. As a Pocohontas tied her own scarf | sandwiches and frult; also a poncho of orange-vermilion silk about my|in case of wet. hair, the puffing and snoring of an engine was heard on the lake path below. In bounded the rosy Dolly. “Miss Vaughan! My father’s got the car by the first gate, waiting for the Ball into sleeping-bags; with ourselves, into the waiting car of our next new (obviously the daughter). spare man, with A RUCK Syndtoate,_lee,) “We'll come right along,” chorused “We've got her all fixed The “fixing-up” included blankets ‘or the night In these unknown wilds. t included safety-pins to make them also straps; also This bundle was presently thrust, friend, the Professor vassal of his rosy) was a lightly built bright eyes in a face! He COMPLETE CUR B QUOTATIONS heres. Biwh, Low. 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WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Har pro- gress up the Potomac River markei by periodic rendition of the salute ually accorded the Chief Executive twenty-one guns—the orutser Olym- pia brought to his homeland to-day |the Unknown Soldier—representative of thousands of American soldier dead overseas. ‘The programme designed to express the nation’s honor for its war dead began when the Olympia turned this morning into the wide reaches of the Potomac. The battleship North Da- kota, lying at anchor off the Piney Point entrance to the river, dipped her ensign in ealutation as her guns tolled welcome. As the cruiser pro- ceeded toward her berth at the Wash- and Washington Barracks signailed Hieh officials and officers of War and Navy Departments wil! meet the Olympia. Secretaries Weeks and Denby and their aides will be among the party as well as (Gen. Pershing, Admiral Coontz, Chiet of Naval Operations, and Major Gen. Le Jeune, Commandant of the Marine Corps, with their respective aides Eight members of the House Mili- tary Committee were appointed to- dav by Chairman Kahn to represent it at the burial of the unknown sol- Ate; They are resentatives ene, Vermont Michigan; Hill, Maryland; | Wurzbach, Texas; Frothingham, Massachusetts, and Quin, Miasissippi; Fisher, Tennessee, ind Stoll, South Carolina The Historic eatalalque on which the bo@y of the unknown soldier will he in state was installed early to-day in the Capitol. The catafalque is the same mourning - draped structure which bore the bodies of former Presi dents Lincoln, Garfield and McKinley Admiral Dewey and Senators Hanns of Ghto and Bacon of Georgia. The public will pass before it to-morrow ‘The soldier guard for the body to day went on duty at the Capito! | An le the War Overt The Capito! is showing some wonder- ul pictures of French battlefields apro vos Armistice Week which stir audi- ences to patriotic demonstrations. Oddly nough they are followed by a pic> turesque set with « dozen singers rend ring “Auf wiedersehn "Is the war vver ar mott ington Navy Yard, Fort Washingi | the | DETROIT INDORSES MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP One Street. Railway Ordered to Quit Two of Chief Thoroughfares. DETROIT, Mich, Nov. 9—The voters indorsed Mayor James Couz- ens's munteipal ownership programm: by overwhelming pluralities in yes- terday’s municipal elections, Com plete returns to-day showed Mayor Couzens was re-elected over Daniel W. Smith by a vote of almost two to one. The ordinance requiring the Detroit United Railway to vacate two of the city’s chief thoroughfares, to make way for the municipal street railway, was passed by a sim- ‘lar plurality. Final returns showed a proposal to authorize the city to acquire and operate trackless trolley buses have carried by @ substantial margin. Kalamazoo elected Mrs. Lou Hen- shaw a member of the new city com- mission that will take office next Monday, while Jackson voted against a return to the Aldermanic form of municipal government Bi ehhh ag LENIN PREDICTS . WARS FOR THE U. S. As for Russia, He Writes, “One Must Be a Wolf and Kill Other Wolves.” MOSCOW, Nov 7 (Associated Press) | ber passage, each with the Presiden- | Nikolai Lenine has an article (a) salute of twenty-one guns | Pravda in which he predicts the The Olympia was scheduled to duck | world chase for go will resalt in about 4 o’cluck thie afternoon. The |svars between Anierica and Japan o ket bearing the remains of the man | America and England by 1925 or iy yecia unkown but undaunted, wili| The Premier says (he Soviet Govern A ee will geek TER A £2: | ment has merely retreated int! lington on Friday attack on world capitalism and i strengthening its position so it can make renewed assaults, “We must save all the gold Russi possesses. We must sell dearer an buy more cheaply, Among wolve one has to be @ wolf and kill others, he says. } PARIS, Nov. 9.—Insurmountable economic difficulties may compel Rus- sia to appeal to foreign capitalists for aid in order to sta’ off disaster, —Nikolai Lenin has an article in the Bolshevist Government is quoted as ng. He declared that, while Eng land endeavors to win the confidence of Russia, Germany ts trying (o take advantage of her ewe | |BELIEVES SOLDIERS | SHOT COWARDS| WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Represen- tative Johnson, Republican, of South Dakota, a former officer in the army declared in the House that while he | had no substantiation of the charge. | he “had reason to believe that soldiers | who were traitors, cowards or men- |dvce some of BLUEBEARD TELLS ABOUT FIRST OF HIS 260 LOVE AFFAIRS Retorts That Missing Women Were Not His ‘‘Victims,” but Merely “Customers.” VERSAILLES, France, Nov. 9.— Henri Landru to-day explained the details of the first of his 285 love affairs. When court opened for the third day of his trial on the charge of mur- dering ten of his flancees and one of their sons a change in the programm « resulted in Judge Gilbert continutas his examination of the witness instead of permitting the prosecution to pro- its 180 witnesses, as scheduled. The Judge asked Landru regarding the fate of his first flancee, Mme. Cu- |chet, a widow, and her son Andre, i seventeen, ‘The Cuchets furniture, including several mattreses and a clock, were piled in the court room. It was alleged Landru tried to eli the objects after the woman and bo: appeared from a villa she lw nied at Vernouillet ndru, with an air of resign patience, said he had met Mav Cu t through her son y was worl ing as his apprentice in a garag He went on to tell how the Cuchet suddenly left for England, leaving th | furniture for him to dispose of. ‘The number of spectators permitted | to-day was much larger and they in- cluded several persons high in Pari- | sian society. Landru admitted the authorship of many matrimonial advertisements but contended they were to draw widows anxious to dispose of furni ture for ready cash. “The transaction within proper commercial usage," h maintained, “Everything is fair in publicity, #0 long as there is no of fense to law or morality. If any thing passed between us afterwar: it was not reprehensible.” Judge Gilbert, after reading som of the love letters found in Landru’s was strict apartm@pts, remarked ‘very pretty The de@dant said he had written but had not sent them. “Do you deny their paternity?” When the Judge dwelt on the fa- mous list containing the names of Landru's alleged yictims—ten women and a boy—Landru maintained they were merely customers Did I write, ‘l, the undersigned, Henri Desire Landru, certify I have tally unfit, were shot by their own comrades while feaing the enemy.” The statement was hotly denied by Representative Bulwinkle, Democrat North Carolina, also a former officer who declared he would not permit the Johnson statement to go unchal- slenged, assassinated these?’ he queried, sneeringly. ndru denied having advised \cruchet to abandon her relatives, jadding that “One never advises a woman after forty.” He declared he rented the villa at Vernouillet for her “out of politencss.’ Ime. | pecting Professor at the wheel. | wife and I are exceedingly fond of her. From an Ocean Shrieking Babylon —— Liner to “The of Manhattan” lean, humorous; and he laughed away our apologies for chartering him as a chauffeur. \ Jim on the back seat—Jim (his tweeds changed for a thick gray sweater and flannel trousers lent by Bill) was only keen on eating up the miles on this road that was remote as any In our mountains but never out of sight of telegraph and telephone lines. “aren't we getting near where you put us down, sir?” he asked the Pro- fessor. “Shculdn't it be at that sort of nullah-place on the right?” “No; we've another half-dozen miles before we come to that,” sald the Pro- fessor good-humoredly. Suddenly the Professor asked me an innocent enough question: "Were you| working in France with Georgia Tar- bell?” “1? I-er—oh, no. I never got over| to France, Professor; just Red-crossed in our village hospital at home. My brother had four and a half years of France, of course,” I turned it of. “ah; It was Captain Vaughan, then who met Georgia over there “Er—no. He—that is, we—we d« met—came across her in London. “Very nice for her to have made such pleasant friends in that great city,” pronounced the Professor. “Did you,” he pursued, “see much of each other in London ‘ewell—not very much, actually,” I answered a trifle nervously. “She's a very fine creature, Georgta, | as you know,” continued the unsus- | ty hi A clever girl; a proud, generous, very sensitive girl—I believe, you know, that her father had rather a struggle to let her go through College. He's & doctor, and was far from wealthy | at the time. You know, Miss| Vaughan, not all Americans are| multi-millicnaires.”” “Oh, yes: I hastened to agree, “but, Professor, Miss Tarbell's people, they live in Chicago, don’t they, and she's on ‘The Paper? “She is returning to her post on the Paper, I believe,” said the Professor. | “ghe took up that work immediately | after she'd passed her exams; che | didn't want to be dependent on her people because of the others.” “Oh, I—l forgot if—if she'd got| brothers and sisters’’—— | No sister! not tell | but~—did Georgie By Neal wi, by The Press Publishin Copynent, the dope to you. Ticker tape has started t showers. tions per day. ‘decimal points. Fresnest data from, A . Market opened steady af-“ ter bad night. . . Pulse was 72 asked, 68 bid... .. On failure of sardine crop, ~American Can rattled down 18 points... + - Associated Bootleggers declared semi-weekly dividend of 100 per in Wall Ford rumored loose Henry cent... . - Rumor Street states that wants Muscle Shoals to raise mus- for cranking flivvers. Steel was first down, then sp .U. §. Steel, second down. yards to gain Federal ‘iveserve Board is on account of decline in Gerimacy | money values, death no longer loves shining mark. . . Govern- report on failure of the sued statement tha la | ment down 20 points. _. . « Associated — Bootleggers \ declares daily stock dividend of 110 |proof.... + nor Glyn novel thrown on the mar- ket, Sexional Bookcases climbed dozen points. . . Report of | Philadelphia mint shows 3,000,000 extra nickels minted, Automat Pre- \terred jumps a block and a half. : Report gains credence lamong best informed brokers that new issue of ladies’ skirts will be as broad as they're long. . Tal \eum powder interests demand more “what?” sharply asked the court.| \omen in Congress to offset. Dupont | now sitting in the Senate. . Treasury Department | depression has reduced appendicitis operations 80 per cent. . rectors of Penn. RR. claim their roadbed accommodates — 5,000,000 sleepers. . Standard Oil raises price of gas one cent to aid starving families of Standard Oil stockhold- . + «+ Woollen Barlaps drop- ” sucker crop sends Ku Klux Regalia) As result of new Fu-! bulletin shows that recent financial | Di-| you about the brothers that she's 60 proud of?” 0 “N-no, I don't believe she did,” I answered hypocritically. “Er—what are they?” “One ts in his first year, studying medicine, A brillant Ind, quite bril- liant, The other, the elder, was an army aviator for the war, and has returned to finish his course at the University.” Here the violent jurch given by the car put an end to the conversation. “Up that hill to the right fs the path you'll take,” said the Professor. “I'll start you on your way.” There was a sudden exclamation from Jim, “Ah! Look there, sir!’ He pointed “Something red, like their handkerchiefs, isn’t 1?” The Professor put on his glasses, I shaded my eves with my hand and it did seem to me that a ray had fallen upon a flash of scarlet—yes, there it went; and weren't there mov- ing patches of brown and white be- tween the slender tree-trunks?” “Phere they are,” exclaimed Jim, softly. “Come on, come on"—— The Professor said, “Ah! Yes, there’s our party. 1 thought we should come up with them about here.” We caught up at last with the group of people halted beside their| bundles on the turf, The first one that 1 noticed was the young man who might have been taken for his twin brother we'd left at the Lake Camp Then came the dark- mus- tached man whom I afterward knew as the Chief, wearing tweeds and an old solar tepi He was no boy, but as slight of figure as the Professor. He was building a gypsy fireplace, | helped by a couple of sunburnt girls. Followed, introductions by the Pro- | fessor. Explanations. And then the| information, “Georgia Tarbell? Yes, | she's right here, No? Where is| Georgia? She's gone’ - (Ah, no, | no! Not again? But we were re- assured.) “She's gone a little ways| along the path tere at the edge of the wood to. get dry branches for the | | Sieps over a slab of rock | everything. |the Primeval Spark for the briefest Clearly there floated back to us en the breeze a distant girlish cai “Coming!” {t rang faintly, Her voice! The others buzzed about us. * won't she be astonished?” ° “She'll be along in a minute.” * Jim purposefully, “I say, we'll walk on and meet her.” ay, ‘Til come along with you teered the powerful Bill's equally powerful brother Coke. But swiftly did he rend from my twin’s eyes that which made him add tactfully, “or you'll find her yourself if you go right along by the bend there, only a cobs of minutes awa: m “Thanks awfully,” said Jim, ca#fing our bundle of blankets to the Other bundles. “Come along, Mouse." “Jimmy"—— T hesitated atghie heels, “wouldn't you—hadn't 1 etter wait for you with the others?” sg “Of course not. Of course ggu'll have to be there too,” my twigysde- creed. And presently we found str. She caught the sound of our i@ot- Up went the red-bound head. Recognition sprung into her eyes, those resi¥m- bered eyes of dark-fringed bine. Shey turned from Jim to me, then me to Jim again. On him they for a second with a look that—T, not but believe it now, There it volun- ed n- in spite of flashed again, second, My brother stepped quickly for- ward, holding out his hand. Quietly, but clearly and joyously, he uttered bis greeting. “Cousin America!" The Spark went out—out of the eyes of the girl. She just stood there, her small face turned toward Mim. but startlingly altered. For the-fook in those wonderful eyes of hers*4was the look of unmistakable and péfteat anger. 4 It was of my stupefied brotherthat! she demanded. “What are you doing —here?” ved Jim found his voice, you've forgotten us”—— But the Girl, in a tone decisive as the snapping of a twig, “I have not —I think T'll call her. € r-siat 0 or-giat” rhe welkin rang with that name “Georgia Tar-bell!” 2 “Blow your whistle, Coke.” | Piercing blast on a scout's whistle | from Red Sweater. Ticker Talk Wall Street Tape Keeps More Guys Hopping Than Confetti Always Something Doing When Dots and Dashes Decorate Broker’s Ticker Service R. O’ Hara € Co, (The New York Evecing World.) | ITTLE dots on paper, little dashes, too, coming from the ticker, give he ruin of more guys than confetti Best agencies now furnish mile and a half of rumors and trac: | Positively no quotations guaranteed except zeroes and) bull pastures runs like this for to- cs eae ped 40 points for . . Advance style data Fifth Avenue shows that petticoat | government will have small chance this year on account of scarcity of | petticoats. . . . Associate Boot- jleggers bid $500,000,000 for Province |of Quebec... .- . . Supreme Court hands }down decision that if price of Ford jcars keep declining, we can soon July buy flivvers the same as we spell n-—with two V's Anti- loon League claims breweries are not to be opened until Christmas Shortage of veal in Chicago tockyards sends price of chicken sandwiches soaring. Over- alls Common picked up 14 points with settlement of railroad strike. | . Agricultural Department bulletin estimates bumper crop of cauliflower ears in Madison Square Garden this ye Investigating committee finds that House and Senate may be \regarded as clubs, but more often |they act like dumb-bells. |Semi-annual report of American Tel. & Tel. claims the line is busy. . Standard Oil drops 212 points on rumor that Rockefeller ‘gave newsboy $5 gold piece by mis- \take for a nickel Interna- |tional Reform Bureau names Thanksgiving legal holiday. . Improvement 1n | phonograph needles boosts | Steel six points above bogey. . Congressional expedition —_ reports |that hell is paved with good inten- tions, }of white wings there... . | American fashion arbiters declare |that fur-lined mouth is now fashion \able for morning-after wear... . . Committee of New York brokers finds “the street” is as Broad as it sale of vu. 8. | want to know what you've come here | for?" delivery. | from | which accounts for shortage | forgotten you at all. 1 know well when I saw you before. ite Ionly Don't Miss To-Morrow’s Interesting Instaiment. Wall. . Associated leggers grab options on U jadian pipe lines. . | WANT A MILLION? MOVE TO RUSSIA AND DRIVE A CAB Rubles So Plentiful in Moscow That They Use Valises Purses. MOSCOW, Nov. 9. Americans and Englishmen now coming to Russia suddenly find themselves millionaires, in rubles, because of the relative value of rubles as compared to dollars or | pounds. A hundred dollars ts equivalent to several millions of rubles. Tho first effect Is to make the stranger haggle over prices. It Kos him a few weeks to realize ot 4 million rubles isn't much is Boot- Can- * Laughing is a good Habit to cultivate. There’s a good laugh by Neal R. O’Hara Three days each week On The Evening World’s Magazine Page. moni A small shopkeeper has a daily turnover of 20,000,000 to 30,000,00q rubles, Every cab driver and tha boys who sell cigarettes ave mil- lionaire handling 1,000,000 to | 9,000,000 daily, A million is jocu- | larly referred to as a “lemon,” so | little is it esteemed |} Being wealthy in Russia is very much of a burden, The newly rich carry their money in satchels of handbags. It 1s so bulky that & whole valise full of it is needed for a journey of a few days. goakee Re Pete TWO MEN FIGHTING FOR PISTOL SEIZED i] | Detectives Working on Murder Case | Make Arrests in Pool Room, twenty-six, of No. and M, Meyer, 92 St. Mark's twenty :|Place, were arrested to-day by Detee- tives Quinn and Ramsberg in a pool }room at 10743 St. Mark's Place | while wrestling for the poss’ssion of *|a revolver which, tie police say, Emigholz claimed as his he detectives were at work trying to solve the mystery In the killing of Arthur Cook, who was killed on his | wedding eve Sunday In his deticatersen [fie at No. 131 St. Mark's Place. The police say the pool room was open when |the shooting occurred. Emigholz and Meyer, who have police records, are being held for violation of the Sullivam Law. f