The evening world. Newspaper, May 15, 1922, Page 14

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY MAY 15, 1922.” FEW BRAVE THE SURF AT CONEY’S OPENING Police Order Issued Against One-Piece Bathing Suits ‘This Season. Island opened oMeially for the on Saturday night and yes- terday The occasion was about 260,- 000 visitors short of opening prépor- and followed the temperature, which was about 20 degrees below poomer weather for a real big step-offt for Island season, Still, more TI EMOST TALKED ABOUT STORY IN TEN YEARS OH MALL. MAYNARG U CO, PUBLISHED Sr PmmesOn: Cons CHAPTER IX. Continued.) N the four weeks that had elapsed caught at his velvety nose and drew it down beside her fa He was a very affectionate beast and gentler than most of the other horses, and he pressed close up to her, whinny- ing softly and hoowisg ut her with lags expressive eyes, “T haven't anything to give you, poor old boy," she sald regretfully, CHARACTERS IN THE STORY. DIANA MAYO, nineteen, beautiful, aristocratic English girl, deter- ince she bad proriond him ter mines to make an expedition into the Arabian desert from Biskra. | obedience she had been very Her brother, silent. The fear and hatred ot} ANTHONY MAYO, by whom she has been brought up, virtually as him grew dally. She had learned to a boy, tries to dissuade her. So does tion! the hi stifie the wild ats of rage and tho] JIM ARBUTHNOT, who loves Diana and wants to marry her. At] fissing his muse and. thor necking] {nan 175,000 men, women and children uy ancry words that leaped to her lips. a ball even to celebrate her departure she tells him she has none} nim away from her. She looked up] *' rive before milvaflerfoom. | af She had learned to obey—a reluctant of the feelings of a woman, has never been kissed and can obey again into the sky; a dark speck ne Sean Of celebrating tho great an- ii obedience given with compressed lips no man. Her expedition into the desert is led by ats one Lien te Hight) ual seaside event, Hardly anybody 4 5 ven, an DI v 5 ours {i eee eee etc oven herseit, | MUSTAFA ALI, an Arab with a fine outfit of well-bred horses, | mignt be picking her benent om Solan PLNBHAR 4 (Sota Ne Day after day she had followed the Disturbing signs appear before the journey is a day old, ful Heavens! Coney teland " Precinct, pert a usual routine, dumb unless he spoke Diana is captured by Wee tare ooine psrpadect ra Gi asl new Sergeants and elghty-five ; m oc : ¥ ' of the coura once ‘ ; Ledlh re attars ‘Daronh ihe four | SHE!K AHMED BEN HASSEN and taken a prisoner to his caravan,| een second nature? If she tot heel 2° ae ibang walls of his tent he had not noticed where she is cay eae to his passionate attentions. nerves get the upper hand, she might] |; cee ae ee cae eke or did not trouble to heed her silence. Diana is served by an Arab maid and by as well make no further effort but! \ater or out of it. This,goes for men Lately he had left her very much) GASTON, a young Frenchman who has long been attached to the|!!° down and die at once. With] iii. ay well as women she had ridden with him al- Sheik’s entourage. shaking fingers she ree els clé-) “One of the unaccountable develop- 5 rette; smoking would #0 3 ; ‘4 Most daily until the last weotin the {ted Past Diana's ears. To the pos-)everything. But now the whole as-| "Yor ane hesitated botece the iit it; |Ments of the 1922 season at Coney is he had announced curly x rides munt | sible fate of the little Frenchman left| pect wan changed. there were only a few left and her|the, failure of owners of about 1,000 ' meantime the length o! Gaston would |0? foot so far from the encampment,| She loved tho endless, undulating | need might still be greater, But with|f the 1,500 bungalows there ito rent j be curtailed and that Gaston wored{%¢ Rave no heed. For the momentlexpanso stretching out ‘before her, |n reckless lnueh ahs snapped the thin|tiem. For years past such bungalows Scoompany her, He hed. not ‘ot | *he did not even think of him, she/and as the gray topped each ri80/ case to, and carefull. 4 the} Were rented months before the early / any explanation, and she had Pt} nag no thought for anybody but her-|her interest grew Keomer. What Cvirameiling nulshor mater wee fen | summer and new ones ware taken be- sought one. in it merely |®!f- Her ruse by Its very simplicity|might not be behind the next one? | ’aat wood strip. She settled hereeit {fore they were finished. She had chosen to see Imposed on |)@d succeeded, She was free and ahe|For an hour or more the ground rove | eomfortably again full length "Al —.-.—_— ong a ea Raita ex. | id not care about anything else. She{and fell in monotonous siccession, around her were the innumerable tiny) SKY BEACON TO GUIDE + had no plans or ideas what she should |and then the desert grew level again rT f th a Caan oscar Halted her con. | 19 oF where she should go beyond the | and quite suddenly she could see for |ooinneas inreet liter the ome, of] AIR FLIGHTS BY NIGHT ORBERS | D1 ¥ is c a PSR AS SER _ [fact that she would keep riding north-| miles, About two miles away a few $f ats = Pi ftinually. And under ae oe es ward, P palm trees ehowed clustering. to- pane ae ocean ne! or ee First Acro Ltehthouse Now ta mission a wild a reverant? for | She had vague hopes that she might} ether, and Diana turned ta their di- MIDSInE oF 6 tie on at at me Operation at College Point, Ha eatin hat the Sheik's|fall In with friendly Arabs who, for|Tection. They probably meant a well, [ood yranch, sounds that would have | An sero lighthouse, the first perma- means of a a vow iven her the |@ promised reward, would guide her|and it was time she rested her horse heen insemlorshetaivis actit we sks be_|nent night gulde for flyers in America, absence seamed to have &' o and herself. It was the tiniest little A\eCnne WeCae ned vice 1s é chance she had been waiting for. In]to elvilization. Most of them could (ahs (arene a | fore, was put Into service last night at Col. the solitude of the previous night she [Peak # little French, and for the rest onals, EDL EGG Hts ean ai For a few minutes a sand spider] lece Point. ‘The light {a @ steady beam 6 had tossed impatiently from side tofher small stock of Arabic must do. rade ss Doble eats saree he lattracted her attention and she watch-|thrown skyward from a high-power § * She knew that she was mad to at- nd a. light. side of the big couch, vainly trying |i ten ade acroas the desert alone,| But there was one, very much|¢d his hurried painstaking operations| i ne nich was authorized by te find some means of taking advan- but she did not mind, She was free.| silted up, and she set to work to with wondering interest. Gradually a Superintendent of the Bureau of tage of her comparative freedom | che was too excited to think coherent- | clear It as well as she could to pro- |drowsy feeling stole over her and she 8 at Tompkinsville, Staten i eftect her escape. Surely she could |} he laughed and shouted like a|cure enough for herself and Silver|realized suddenly that the air was Is the first of a series to. be : find some way of avoiding Gaston's} 7 4 ting and her madness communi-| Star, who was frantically trying to|!mpregnated with the scént of the te Cheage, they wil be plased : wibilence. ke hait| cated ttself to the gray, who was go-| Ket to the water. It was exhausting |tobacco that was always associated apart and will mark out an is Excitement had kept her awake half}, oa racing apeed. work, but she managed to satisfy the|Wwith the Sheik. It was one of his}ijininated path that will enable aviat- 3 the night, and in the morning she had} “)..44 Knew that he was out of} gray, and, having unloosed his girths, [cigarettes that she was smoking. Shel ors to make night flights in safety, } had hard work to keep her agitation! trol, that she could not stop him|she flung herself down on the ground|had always been powerfully affected hidden and to appear as usual, She}ir she tried, but she did not want to}in a small patch of shade. She lit a|by the influence of smell, which in- had even been afraid to order thé the faster the better. In time] cigarette and lay flat on her back] duced recollection with her to an ex- | horses any earller in her nervous ter- traordinary degree, and now the un- q ror lest the valet should suspect common, penetrating odor of the i there was any reason behind the . Arab’s cigarettes brought back all that | mple request ae Feit 6 eaten she ae been trying to put out of her § jeuner she had pa e tent, ui sites sd te } ; 7 to sit still, dreading lest any moment With a 3 groan she flung It away and i might bring the return of the Sheik burled her face in her arms. The past and frustrata her hopes. ith rose up, and rushed, uncontrolled, a She looked back into the eye wie through her brain. Incldents crowded fi a shudder as her eyes ro pba’ into her recollection, memories of f SSed peuleltgr? De aa basse vy Sarl: headlong gallops across the desert, rid- | ent objects that Neuen veclbiney ing beside the man who, while :she | ously familiar in oe slab caret hated him, compelled her admiration; 2 lee gerae equipment hie wr sce memories of him schooling the horses man's own bat! recthatinong att SS that he loved, sitting them like a cen- an el men, memories more intimatel ° \ able to solve. So much had been so ly con. nected with herself, of his varying moods, his swift changes from savage cruelty to amazing gentleness, from brutal intolerance to sudden consider- ation. inexplicable in himself and in his mode of life. She drew a long breath and went out hastily into the sun- shine. ses were waiting, and Gas- . ti eserbeanelng taady to Held ter yaihere hhnd even been times when he to your druggist stirrup. She fondled the beautiful had interested her despite herself, and fay ocws'h ott Bose! and patted hie she had forgotten the relationship in _ Stops Pain Instantly which they stood toward each other in listening to his deep, slow voice, till a word or a gesture brought back the fact vividly. Memories of mo- ments when she had struggled against his caresses, and he had mocked her helplessness with his great strength, when she had lain in his arms pant- ing and exhausted, cold with fear and shrinking from his fierce ‘kisses, She had feared him as she had never be- Heved it possible to fear. His. face rose before her clearly with all the expressions she had learned to know and dread. She tried to banish it, striving with all her might to put him from her mind, twisting this way and that, writhing ‘on the soft sand as she struggled with the obsession that held her. She saw him all the time plainly, as though he were there before her. Would h pursue her always, phantom-like Would the recollection of the hand- some brown face haunt her forever with its flerce eyes and cruel mouth? She buried her head deeper in her arms, but the vision persisted until with a scream she started up with heaving chest and wild eyes, standing rigid, staring toward the south with a desperate fixedness that made her eyeballs ache. The sense of his pres- ence had been terribly + dropped on to the ground a an hysterical laugh and px thick hair off her foreh Silver Star, laying his muzzle sud- denly on her shoulder, made her start again violently with heavy, beating heart. A frightened look went acrosa her face. “I'm nervous,” she muttered, ing round with a little shi shall go mad if T stay longer." The little ¢ had hailed so joyfully satiny neck with a hand that trembled a little. She loved the horse and to- » day he should be the means of saving her. He responded to her caresses, gentling her with slobbering mouth and whinnying softly. With one last look at the big double tent and the rest of the camp behind it she mounted and rode away without an- other backward glance. She had to exercise a rigid control over herself. She longed to put Silver Star into hand gallop at once and shake off Gaston, but she was still too near the camp. She must be patient and put a certain number of miles between herself and the possibility of pursuit before she attempted anything. Too early an endeavor would only bring the whole horde in wild chase at her heels. The théught of the promise she had given to the man from whom she was flying came back to her. She had promised obedience, but she had jot promised that she would not try escape, and, if she had, no prom- ise wrung from her by fear was valid The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in two forms—a Colorless, clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid—the action is the same. Safe, gentle. Made in a world-famed laboratory. Sold by all druggists. Free: Writs Bauer & Black, Chicago, Dept, 1% for valuable book, Correct Care of the Feet. Almost Unbelievable Youcan hardly realine the wonderful im- “WHEELING SILVER STAR, SHE HEADED FOR THE NORTH.” he would tire himself, but until then]with her helmet over her eyes. in her opinion. let him go as he pleased, She was} For the first time since she had She rode steadily forward at a slow, | rast putting miles between herself and| shaken off Gaston she began to think swinging canter, instinctively saving |the camp that had been a prison, be-|seriously. What she had done was her horse, plan after plan passing |tween herself and the brute who had| madness. She had no food for her- through her brain to be rejected @8/dared to do what he had done. At|self or her horse, no water, and impracticable, Silver Star fretted|the thought of the Sheik a sick fecl-| Heaven alone knew where the next continually at the moderate pace, ing of fear ran through her. If any-| well might She was alone in an tossing his head and catching at his|thing should happen? If he should] uncivilized country among a savage bit. She took no heed of the time|catch her again? She shuddered, and] people with no protection of any kind. Deyond the fact that it was passing{a cry burst from her lips, but she|sne might fall in with friendly Arabs quickly, and that if anything was tolgripped herself at once. She was|or she might not. She might come be done it must be done as soon as idiotic, contemptible; it was impos-| across an encampment, or she might possible. But Gaston, riding a few |sible. wander for days and see no one, in paces behind her, was very much} It would be hours, perhaps even) which case death from hunger and alive to the hour and looked several|the next day, before the alarm was! thirst stared her in the face What times at his watch. He ranged along-|Klven; he would not know in what} woud she do when night came? With side of her now with a murmured|tirection she had gone. She would], sharp cry she leaped to her feet. apology. “Pardon, Madame. It|{have miles of start on one of the]” What was she to do? She looked grows late,"* and submitted hia wrist|fvetest of his horses, She tried tol a around the little oasis with startled watcn for her inspection. put him out of her mind. She had|eves, at the few palm. trees and Diana glanced mechani clumps of camel thorn, the broken own wrist and then remembered that well and the gray horse still snuffing FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON New York Gouraud’s Oriental Cream SE M.COHEN. 115 7°AV.Cor.17"St rOoR GEST SELECTIONS HART SCHAFFNER & MARX SUITS “iso"’ 85°” SAMPLE SUITS, $7 UF. look- are here much sis that she had become utterly repugnant and she was im was a nightmare that was over, ‘Bobbed Hair ; she had broken her watch the day|@fects would remain = with about its mouth, She felt frightened] patient to get away from it. She before. She pullea up, and tilting her |*!Ways: nothing would ever for the first time; she was alone and| climbed eagerly into the saddie and, be kept always Luxurlantly Soft, F helmet back mopped her hot fore-|the same again; but the daily lahout her was unending space, and A , Moalthy and free from Falling with the rapid motion, she regained her calm and her spirits rose quickly. She shook off the fecling of appre- hension that had taken hold of her and her nervous fears died away. A reckless feeling, like the excitement of the morning, came over her, and she urged the gray on with coaxing words, and responding to her voice, and hardly feeling her light weight, he raced on untiringly, All around was silence and a solitude that was stupendous, The vast emptiness was awe-inspiriny The afternoon was wearing away; already it was grow- ing cooler. Diana had seen no sign of human life since she had left Gas- ton hours before and a litue feeling of anxiety stirred faintly deep down tm her heart Traces of carayans she passed sev- eral times, and from the -yhitening bones of dead camels she turned her head in aversion—they were too in- timately suggestive. She had seen a id Handrutt by washing It regularly with FITZGERALD'S HAIR SOAPI(@ (The Medicated It can be arranged tn any style tinmedi ately aster wash f5c. At Druggists dread, the dally contamination would be gonu, the helpless tortured feeling, the shame of submission that had filled her with an acute self-loathing. that was as intense as her passionate hatred of the man who had forced she felt like an atom, Insignificant, the least of all things. She looked up into the clear sky and the blue vastness appalled her. Then the sudden panic to which she had given way subsided and her cour- age rose with a bound, It was only midday, anything might happen be- tween then and nightfall thing only she was sur repent of what she had done. Behind her was Ahmed Ben Hassan and be- fore her was poesibly death, and death was preferable, She was quite calm again and lay down in the patch of shade once more with a resolute de- termination of mind, Time to think of them when they came, For the next hour or two she must rest and eseape the intense heat. She rolled over on her face with her head in her arms and tried to sleep, but she was too excited, and soon gave up the attempt. And in she argued with herself, head, and, as she did so, a sharp breeze sprang up, the curious wind that comes and goes #o rapidly in the desert. An idea flashed into her mind. It was a poor chance, but it might guccesd. Bhe shot a glance at Gan-11.. i, endure his will, ‘The memory ton, He was looking in the opposite} fit? Crud ive. with her ftoreve direction, and raising her hand, shel, nad made her a vile thing. He Guttered her handkerchief a moment] necks scorched with the thought in the breese and then let it go. The] ang she shivered ut the remem wind carried it some distance away.|o¢ ai) that she had gone through, She She gave @ Httle cry and caught at} nua been down into the depths and the bridle of the valet's horae. she would carry the scars all her ‘Ob, Gaston, my handkerchief!" lige, ‘The girl who had started out and pointed to where the morsel of|4o triumphantly from Biskra had be- cambric lay white against a fock.|come a woman through bitter know- With @ comical exclamation of dis-|iedge and humiliating experience. may he slipped to the ground and| ‘rhe pace was lesa killing now, Sil- started to run across the sand, ver Star had settled down into the She waited until he had got well on] steady, tireless Nop for which his way, sitting tense with shining|qanmed Ben Hassan's horses were (a- eyes and. thumping heart, then,| mous, The little breeze had died snatching off her helmet, she brought |away as quickly us it had sprung up, it down with a resounding smack onjand it was very hot. Diana look PLAIN S0¢ Fancy 134 FOR SALE EVERYWHERE LEARN TO swim NOW GUARANTEED BY AYVAD MFG. CO.- HOBOKEN = N-y AMUSEMENTS. OLUMBIA THE AL Cc By way|Twice Daily/Popular € A7thi2.30 & 80. Ptooe SUMMER RUN show K and McCULLOUGH CHUCKLES of 1922,” any case, a MakK the hindquarters of the servant’s/apout her with glowing eyes. Every-| she might sleep too long and lose| few Jackals, and once a hyena lum- Constance Talmadge horse, stampeding it in the direction|thing seemed different. Krom the] precious time. She stretched luxuri-} "red away clumsily among some TRAN rocks as she passed. She had got away from the level desert, and war threading her way in and out of some of the camp, and, wheeling Silver|tirst sho had loved Star, headed for the north, deaf tolpack of everythin Gaston's cr! everything had ousty on the soft ground, thankful for the ghade from the burning sun, The gray, tired of posing round the the ¢ nd mis the in ‘The Primitive Lover, sert, and § Orch ied with ling by at ay ——1an s AL ICE LAKE been AMUSEMENTS. | AMUSEMENTS. | AMUSEMENTS, 7 WINTER GARDEN «": CENTURY teen ea ga, | Maxine Eiiot’s Fie5. 20% Wana: 3 Matinees Wed a8 and Sat. Thu : Aiea ‘Tesen Kosta Jaines Barton Marion Green In EMEC AI SP The ROSE, of STAMBOUL RamBexu Goer ton With NAN HALPERIN, EVGS, (EX a 5Oe, With ‘ON din St Bre 990.) SHUBERT Teen 2th, AATH ST. Shira "an ak. Ba with CHAS. | FRANCES | TAYLOR = tm, THE det TIE RIITCHING REINI i DOVER ROAL CHERRY | NATE ouwes ci Wolse | THE BLUSHING BRIDE West|Open- BELMONT Sic*"i9>e TO.NIGHT,*%, ty KEMPY =, =, Thea., 48th & Bway, Eve. Matinees Wed. and Sat., we BRONX EXPRESS FOR GOODNESS SAKE! LAST 8 TIMES. ROADHURST, + oth MONTH, TL MARIOLAINE : 49th, near B'y, Bv Anns Mata, Wed. and 8 BLOSSOM AN _ The Greatest Musical Hit ASTO ‘Mir. Mrs. Cobern in Hv.8.20.Mtn Th 28, ) MUSICAL TRICMPH y th. NOX PAWLE. z PUBL Tee Nore | Ben ES GGMEDY tos | PRINCESS snare ac LAWFUL LARCENY |WHITESIDE::. HINDU] fag RED GERENIUM <2] West 42d Street. Evenings, 8.30. ELTINGE sine Wea. wad Sat., 2.30 Casings THE DEMI VIRGIN. a it iG i Aa ‘Up The Laer ais, | NEST wits, Mate Wed. and Sat,, 2. s ERR’ MOVES TOG. {K NEXT MON, FULTON Matr, Wed. & Bat. 40th St., W. of B'y. TTHE PUBLIC WANTS OK,05 W.95. Mts. Thur.gSat. baal EUGENE O'NEILL'S vote” MONTMARTRE | HE. LONGAGR West 48th St. “THE HAIRY APE,” Mate, Wed. and Bat. 3 Plymouth, W. 45th St. Eves. 8.45. ETHEL LEVEY '* eres x Mats. Thurs. ae "Maen Comet ESTELLE WINWOOD Pretilest Girls in New York. Boor! 44th Bt and Sat, West 4nth, Mata. Wed. & Evi Sal = a Y MILNE'S NEW taindetat 2am SATRE, W. 48th St, TRUTH Gay, ~ WATIONALS* YANDERBLT Eva. ts Weal 2 48 ABOUT BLAYDS 8 of Bw ; relight RY by et Frei “Panny Hawthorn’ yc | __" vksAROhtt Sas, baal wa! 0 PLSD wALL ey REENWIGH Vitinee Thea. 4th st. Ten Av, mroxpway| ORGH. SEATS, -penvcttiwors, $2 Teper cori at 47th St CENTRAL RETURN BY POPULAR DEMAND LON CHANEY Re ee The TRAP ot te sean. BILLETED’ “Kept the Audience Laughh AVOUO=: TE VINGTE ILLIAM FOX. presents vwrth MARY OG WORT Batene ier erate RROD 4G 740. HS, HEART. THROBS NEW AMSTERDA\ Matsa. Are || 7 Direction of Hugo RUSSIAN | "3X DIAN Bivay at CRITERION 2x72 CONTINUOUB, NOON TO 11 P.M ‘i HEATH, Weaver @ » Rome & Gaut, Bol Mabel Servo, Bob Boway & its EMPIRE i Cl ToT SSING (BEE Sos * , ihe Vv Winning @ Picture oF ae S8thSt “Nty Old Kentucky Home” = HEAR INET ands SUPREME vbente COHAN T8023 MATS WED & SA) @ ED. ED. W BELASCO TASPQ West 4ath Mats, Thurs, and § DAVID BELASCO P HUSBANDS’ || Bate THE SENSATION OF PARIS LENORE ULRICas KIKI] |H itch Sees oa LIBERTY ‘nz qe iro Nata, “We Biway at BROOKLYN. ‘Ip The lf (i as ‘ett Hen: RIVOL 49th St. THIN aD W., Griffith's HE DSON, We t ath, 8 ei ATH MONTH oria Wy, anson shone Regular Stran SECOND AND FIN > The RUBICON! “With Vion ‘Beyond the Rocks’ jentino. Rr PICTURE. BUSTER KE. ATON COMEDY, “THE PALEFACE,"” RIVOLI CONC Frederick Bt HEMING. RT ORCHESTRA berg and anuel_ Baer Conductin; IALIO dock Hol Bebe Danes Times in “North of the Rio Grande” are Famous ne Orchestra, Be at 8.20 at 2.20 4 Broadcast Thix to Your Frie “THE NIGHT CALL” as and Sat Matinees Wed. Hudson Rival by Daylight WALLACEEDDINGER—Mary NASH 's “CAPTAIN APPLEJACK” MUSICAL, COMEDY § GLOBE } way & 46th St bs “BY mm. at ris ane: Bat at Service day, including, Sunday, leaving yee y VEST eubrosses Bt. MUSIC | BOX’ NOW OPEN--S0'N Me Wet 12bin Bt, a0 “A - ee a M IRVING MUSIC | ntain, TWest Pc i , TPough! BERLIN'S teil, Hudson a Hest music show ever made In America." as, Mui tlekets fromm New. York to Albany and from Albany to New York accepted, | SrREPteC ECHASE OPEN ON SUN iotebod Lraeee a0 ke Beg We as SIX CYLINDER LOVE b Pryor'sBand| sites eet ENTIRE SEASON. Yonkers, 10.50 A. M,, for ‘Hear Slomaentae With ERNEST TRU Free Dancing. Free Cireus, | {Ne™bUrEH and fPoughkeepsle, Return steamer same day from pointe sic Hall, way & Cent Mosle Hall ate 690 ST, Mowe Bell oss irate, sac SHUFFLE ALONG Extra Midnight Performance Wed., SsSMOS a THE AT eee BOE. KEITH 355°" BEST VAUDEVILLE Daylight Saving Time. Ideal One-Day Outings. Further informs Pier, New York. He RIV NIGHT LINES Pier 32, 1 gabronees Ot, 1 9300. ER , fee ath hs, ria" ving BROADWAY ates ona, ae . BROADWAY with Raymond Hatton. Wa Boston aia HUDSON NAVIGATION 6 OMPANY Middleton 8. Borland, Receiver. DS-WAT (De an CREDI? Diamond Co. ah Watch 4 an ay Maiden Lane Fifth Ave. vance {24 Stn 8! 1 Mt SMITH, Bailey & Cowan, Nisits CAPITOL GOLDWYN Prevents a Fourth Floor, | | BOSTON ‘622 METROPOLITAN LINE ‘ 11 Via Cape Cod Canal ' A "WATCH YOUR STEP 2S CREDIT oenetiag st Boston for Portlends wer PU aL Ost, Gavitel are w ‘ockland, Bangor, Yarmouth,N.S, NitbabS be NEW NOH.” “Chie Kesin) fete 5 ciacense oak Surrey, sey: wow Swart, aly, (e Most entertaining motion ple, on B'y"'--Times | = pene} pale, ats M. (Di Saving Time): ‘Telephone Barclay See, PAAR sen" AROUND 7” WORLD DIAMONDS 721vene EASTERN STEAMSHIP LINES Hat | BURTON HOLMES) SS°RESECTON "uate tat . Pop. Sat. 149 Bt Bronx tes House $1 Weekly Buys $50 Dieased Ring SGHTNIN’ 7 971$2 Weekly Buys $100 Diamond ad eae 4 WEST «2D STREET. DIAMENOS: i "SIGHT SE DS sts ‘37 MADEN EING YACHT Stati’: ame Con. 11 AM. to 1! Pai low hills, which she felt were taking her out of her right course. (Te Be Continued) “KISSES. MARIE STODDARD Wild with excitement and free to] fear, go his own pace at last, her mount galloped swiftly and the wind whis- well and blowing disdainfully at the wandered over to her had dominated side and moazied her gently. She the continual restraint, petual subservience to the whims of thorn bushes, the per- ber captor which Oymp Fangs 1922 a BaD av,|\" JAMES COUGHLIN | “TOURIST,” Around New York, Lecturem ve Battery Dally 10.80, 3.00, Tel. Broad Git, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDELS “

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