OCR Text |
Show THE JORDAN JOURNAl,, MIDVALE, UTAH • • • • • • • • ~~ Ancients Had More Than Fair Idea of Surgery MY FA VORJTE Evl•leneP that ~kull l"llrgery wns suepracti<·ed hy prehistoric pe•l· pte in ~lichigan has hePn IH'<'lwnted to 1 the Antel'l<·nn Asso<'iation for the A<l-: \·ancemPnt of !-'<'iPD<'e hy Prof. K F. I Gr1•enllHin of tltP Fnh·PrHity of l\Iieh!gnn. Pointing out that ~liehigau hn:; h<'en gTenll.r negiP<·tell as a field for areheoln~ieal Investigation, he said: "In Alpena <·ounty, :\Iidtigan, Hf'veral trephinrrl skulls-that 1~. skulls into whff'II holes WPI'e drilled during !)),e fife of the pntlE'nt, have h<'en re· porter\. One of thE>m Is In the Univer~<itr of :\Ifchigan museum and careful examination by anatomists of I'Ppute shows that a healing had he1,'11n nfter the operation and therefore the area of t11e practice of skull trephining must l1e ext ende<l far bE>yon<l Mexico." STORIES JalyVINGIE E. DISASTER •• Copyrl.rht by the McCall Comp&Jl7 SYNOPSIS. Kate Cathrew, "Cattle Kate," owner or the Sky Line ranch, on her way to McKane'• store at Cordova, seemIngly Infuriated by the sl~tht of a ~tlrl plowln&" In the valley below. places a rille bullet near the horses' feet. The ~tlrl takee no notice. Kate goes on to town, where her presence brings on a ll&"ht between McKane, tl'le trader, and Sherlt't Selwood. Nance Allison, the ~tlrl on whom Kate Cathrew had vented h<-r spite, Is with her widowed mother and crippled brother Bud farming land taken up by hel" father, killed a short time betore In a mysterious accident. Bud Is the victim of a deliberate :• scheme to maim Ol" kill him. Kate Cathrew wants the farm tor pasture land, and Is trying to frighten the Alllsons Into leaving. Big Hastord, Sky J,lne rider, desperately In love with Kate, picks a quarrf'l with a fellow rider, Rod Stone. Kate, to part them, lashes Basford across the face with a quirt. Nance discovers In a cave a tine collie dol:, evidently guarding a child. She goes home my ~tlftPd. Next day Nanee return~ to the cave with food and makes friends with the dog and the Amall boy, Sonny. He tells her "Brand" takes care of him and "Dirk," the collie. Selwood Is cPrtaln Kate Cathrew Is the ht'ad of a "cattle rustling" gang, with Lawrence Arnold, her partner, who rarely visits the ranch. Minnie Pine. halfbreed at the Sky Line ranch, Is In love with Rod Stone. Ranchers complain ot cattle-stealing and criticize Sherif'! Selwood for his eeemin~r Inactivity. Nance. vlaltlng Sonny and Dirk" In the cave; meets Brand Fair, Sonny's protector, and promises to keep their cret. Nance becomes keenly lnterest<'d In Brand Fair. The girl Ia relylng on a field of corn to pay ot't debts she owes lltcKane. Fair sees Sud Provine. one of the Sky Line tlder•, In Blue Stone canyon, and tells Nance h• and Sonny must move at once. So Nance takf'o Sonny home with her. WNU Service. \\'hat could be his rea,;on? \\'hut could there be in the DE>ep HE>art country to whom a little l'laiftl could make 8 difference1 But It was none of her business, sh" sagely conC'luded, and could wnit the lig-ht of the future. :1\Iaybe Brant! would !'Oille day tell her all al><•ut it. So she worked and planned f11r two days more. At their t>nd she d1·ove the eultivator to the stable anti stood Hrt>tehlng ht>r tire<l !'boulder museles while Bud nnhamt>:<~ed the t<'am. She looked back at the fielrl with stniling eyes. "Cun only get in It nhout onee more.'' she Fai<l. ''it's growing so fast." "l'rPtts,'' Bud saicl. "prl'tty as ~·ou. almost. Do you know you're awfuJI~· pr!'tty, Sis?" "Hush!" shP laughed. "You'll make nH• nlln. Pretty Is as prett~· cloes, you I.;: now.,. "\\'I'll, the Lorrl !mows you do Pnough,'' returned the boy bitterly, "if l was only half a nwn-" "H1;d !'' cried Nance quickJ~·. "you're the mosr Slll'e-('noH~h he-man 1 know. You',·e got the pntienee and the courage of ten rommon men. If It harln't heen for your stendy buelting I'd ncYer be on Nameless now. l'd have quit long buck.'' "Like the dick en~ you would!" salrl Burl, hut a grin replaced the shadow of IJ!tter!le~s on his face. SnpJ.Jer thnt ni~ht wus partknlarly Jl)E'ItSan t. The1·e were new potatoes anrl green peas from the l!;llrdl'n down uy th" river, and a rtatf' of the never-failln!! <"OOklPs, of which Sonny could not get enough, "He's hollow to his tot>s,'' said 1\lrll. Allison, "I can't ne,·er seem to get him full.'' "The little shaver's starved." salrl s"- CHAPTER XI-Continued • • • with her ton:;uP. straightened her shoulders and. taking her handi' fro!T' tht'ir grip on the pall. wulkerl out tO· wu rd the tlr.>ld. At the gate she stopped and gazE'II dully at the ruin hefore her. Where ye!'ter<lay had been a ~lgor ous. lust~·. dark grePn growth, fair to her sight as the ~>• 1 ~"1' of I'at·nclise. th!'re was now the bald, piteous un slghtlin<'ss of destruetion. Of nil the great field tl1ere wa~ sear<:cl,v a do;t,en stalks left stuntlin;; It was a sodrlr.>n mal's of trampled pulp, <·ut and sla,ht>d and heaten ill!o the loose earth by hundrf'IIS of mill ing hoofs. Far n<:ross at the nnper Pnd sh<• t•ould dimly !'ee. In the growing light. a hn~e gap in the fenee--two, three !JOSts were entirely ):!:one. It had tak<'ll many hend of cattle, drh·en In nrul harried. to work that lnnoc. It was complete. l•'or u long, long time Nance Allison stood und looked at ft. Then With ll sigh that see1.ned the embodiment or all weariness. she turned a way anti went slowly back to the cabin. At the open door she met Bud and pushed him back with both hands. Her ~other was at the stove, lifting a lld. At sight of ht'r daughter's face she held It in ruld·alr. "Hold h11rd, g-Irl,'' she said quietly, "what's up1" 'ance leaned against the door-jamb. Every lfuer of her body longed to B~d. -10·•. 'ot starved. but he ain't had rt'~l· lnr food - -not rl;ht to grow on. I can "Do you value it7" st>e 11 differenre nlrE>a<ly." "Does a duck swlm7'' ~nnce rE>ache<l over an lnvestlgntlng "Then give me a moment's attention," said Kate Cathrew, "and keep hand to feel the small shoulder. It what I say under your hut." bo1·e proudly a hrand new shirt made "J'm like the well thut old ~'<aw tells from one of Bud's old ones. To be of-the stont> sinlcs and Is never seen sure. there wns a striking dlsslmll· again. Confession In the heart of a tude of colors, since part of the fabric friend, you know." had been under a pocket and had · not "Thanks. Now llsten." faded, but Sonny wore It with the air \Vhen the woman rolfe away a halt of kings and princes. hour later, carrying another of those "Yes, sir," she sold judicially,'' be letters from New York which the Is gaining, sure. as the world!" trader had come to hate ever since It seemed to Nance th11t night that Selwood's suggestion conet'rnfng tb~ nil was well with the world, \·ery well. "'Titer, his eyes had a very strt¥lge ex- There seemed a wider margin of hope pression. It was a mixture of St'verul than us,Jal, as If success. so long denier! expressions, rather-astonishment, of them, wus hoYering like a gi;mntlc bird personal gratification, and a vague, in· nbove the home~tead, as if their lon~: cong-ruous regret. I! he had been a luhor was ahout to have Its rewnrd. better man that last faint seeming of She fell asle<>p thinking at the whissorrow might- have denoted the Joss p<>rlng tlelrl, of the trlr to BemE>nt. and of an· Ideal, the dt'ath of something -of Brand Fair's quiet. liurk eyes. th~ fine. look of the chin-strap on his brown But he looked after Cnttle Kate \Vlth cheek. a fire of pa~;sion that was slowly grow~he laid a loving hnnd on Sonny's J.ng with every Interview. little head on the pillow of the im• provfFed crib beyond her own l,ig hE'd~ Life at the homt>~tearl on N11meless and the world wt'nt swiftly from her took on a new color with the advent constioui'ness. She slept quickly and ot Sonny :f!'afr. :lllrs. Allison, an epft· deepl)". as do all those who work hard orne of universal motherhood, looketl in the sun and wlntl-the blessed hoon oyer the sc11nt, well-ruemled helongin:;:;: of tailor. of the family and laid out such urticl'-'>~ • as she judced could be spared. It seemed to her that she hn<l harrlly These she began expertly to make lost consciousness when Old John anover Into little garments. nouneed from II is ra fl E>r pE>rdt 1hi' l·om"When dlrl Brand huy yott these lng of unother day and she snw the pants, Sonny?" she Inquired, but the faint light or dawn on tile sky outchild l!lhook his head. side. "I don't know," he 11n~wE>rNI. She dres~Pd ns U!'nal, looked lo,·ing"H'm. Must be pretty poor," she ly at the small f:we of the little !;l<·eper opined, but Bud scowled In disap- In the crib, unrl went out, :;:oft·footE>d, proval. to start the kitcheu fire. That done. "Pretty durn stingy, I'd say," he re- she took the pull and went out to the marked. well. She rested the uueket on thf' "Hold judgment, Bud,'' counseled curb a momE>nt, lifted the well lwanl. Nance, "when 11 man tra,·els for two nnd stood looking at the faint uHrPote ye s he don't have much time to mal<e of light that was beginning to nnwn m~ney. We're poor, too, but that don't Ruin how cliff'. The <·iiff ltsel f was spell anything.'' hiRrk, hiUf'·hlnrk II!! dPepe!<t indii!O, Its Bud held hi• ton)!'ue. bnt It was foot lo!'t in the shallows thnt dePpenell plain hE> wa• not <·on,·inrE>d. d""'n :\f~·stl'ry ri<I,~E>. Shf' could hear ""'hat makes him so contrary, 1 t h<· mu rmnring of Nmoeles5, soft nnrl 11!,\~terions in thP <inwu. fC'el the.> little wo•cler?" saf<l the girl later. •• Ie's .lE>>IIon~." saicl 1\Irs. Alll•fln win<l that wns he!!'innin:r to stir to calmly, "bt>rause you champion th' grE>Pt the coming ria~·. ThPn. as wn~ her habit. she turnPd lrer eyp~ out ~tranger. It's natural." nr•ro!':,; the waYing greE-n Held of her The field of ('orn w11• heautfful. Its bladE'S WE>rP brond nnd «atlny, pre<·iou~ corn covering the hrown E>arth from \'lew. It must he earlier than she thought. and tltP wa,·lng ~re<'n floor enrnE> well !'he reflected, for tl.ere was 11ot 1 he up along the horses' fpgs as NanPe ~himml'r of light which usual!.'' m..-t rocle <!own the rows on the shnckly cui· her j!;a7.e. th·ator. She looked again at the eust<•rn l'ky. I~or thrt>f' dnys she hac! hf'e7J 11t lt. Why, ses-it was Hglrt as usual a Inbor of Jo,·e. ~he had man·, rll'E>nm~ tlwre. Ill! !'hP wat<'hed the ll!!;ht winlpllng on once more 8he looked nt the ftE>ldthe silky hnnnPrs. vague,. pfeaRnnt then ~he leaner! fonvartl, peering hurd, dream'! that had tu rio ''''lth her <'llll· her haulls still t~·ing on the uuek<'t'~ ef'lt'd <leht at the ~tore, 1\·lth thE> trip rim. Her hrow~ drew down together to Bement nhmlt ti.E' C'atpet, nnd with ns !'he strained her ;;lrarp slg!Jt to fo· the new hlllf' <Ires~ she hoped to get eus on what ,.he !'!11\'-or what ~he with the 1\Urplus. thought :;he saw. !•'or a Jon~ time she Rnd must h:n·e some nt'w things, too, stood !'O. Then. ~~~ renlizution strueli and hE>r Mummy needf'd shoes thl' home to her l'Onselou~nE>r<R, tl1e hand8 worst wn~·. on the l11H'ket grii•P<•d dowu until the All the~e thln~s the growing field kuuckles !'hone white unr!Pr the tftnne<l iJromlserl her, whispering uncler the skin. Her liJlS fPII open loo~el,v The little wlnrl, and she was happy, deep hreuth RtoppPd for a moment In her In her lnnocf'n t h ear t . lung~ und she f<>lt as if sll(' were She wonder<!d If she dared aqk drownln!!. An odd dizzinE>ss attaeked Rraml to lt>t her take Sonny on that her ~rain, so that the dim world of <lip to Bement, then lmnuntly decided ~~·arlow and light wav<>red grot<'squely. !lhe !<houl<l nor. Her kneE's Sf'erned buckling beneath 'l'hf're ml):'ht be someone from Name- ht>r nnd for the first time in her life le R In the town. and Brand 'Vas par- she felt as It !>he might faint. . . . ttr\Jlnrly fns!Hen~ on hls staying out Her Mummy had fainted once--when ,,; ~i!!:lrt. they brought John Allison home, • • . lw .... ,·er c·eR~<ed tQ wonder about But she ~tlhered herself with a IU· ~.. Bf preme el!ort. closed her lips.. wet them • OE • • I I l • • • • • n•uld henr far hael; the voice of Namell'sS, growing faiuter as ~h" l<>ft it. At anutller time she would have missed nothing of all thi~. would ha,·e glorft>d In It, drunk with the wine of nu ture. Now a shaclow hun!!: oYer all the fair exr1nn~e of ~lope and lllOUO· taln range, an OIJ[tres>iion ht>uvy, al· most. as the hand of death sat ou her II ea rt. ~he ru1le slowly, lettin;; Bnek~kln ll!ke his own time and \\'11,1', h<>r h:u:<l~ folder! l!sllf'ssl~' on hl'r fHlltlllll'l, her fadt>d hrown riding: skirt swinl!lng at hE>r ankles. She harl dlsc,trded her dlsfi;:-urin;( bonnPt for a wide felt har of Bud's nnd her lori:::ht Jmir sflonp unrler It like <lull i!<>ld. She wat sl'ar('el_v thinking. She ht~d gin•n w:n to f<'elin~-to fpeJing: the acid of d~ ft•at !'Ill ir,g at t.er vilnls. the hand ol an lntan:_:iille furc-e p:·pssing upon ilt>r Aud sire had to fa<·e )1<-Kane anrJ IPII lrim she <:ould not pa~· h<'l' tld)t. That St•emcrl till' wor~t of all. i:,;hl.' C"OUld ~o withuut tlwir lll'C(·s~ilii'S Ircr ~Jammy'" shoP~ and Bud's new nn· tler11e:.~r-and a~ for the luxuries she harl planned, like the blue d1·ess an•! the <·nrpet-wh~·. she would r·f>nse tillnldng allout them nt on<:e, though the giving up of thf' carpet die! come hard, she fr:mkly ownf'rl to that. But to full In her promise to pay-ah. I hat wns gall to her spirit l However, It couldn't kill them, she reasoned. no matter how hitter might be their humiliation. There wus alwnys another day, 11nother ~·ear, for work and hope, and there were st111 the hogs. They would bring, at lt'ast, enough for the winter's food supply of flour and sugar, salt and tea. She could not turn them In on til.! debt-the trader must see that. Cordova lay sleeping unde a late noonday sun when she rode Into the end of the struj!'gllng street. A few horses were tied to the hitch rack In front of the store nnd a halt-dozen men lounged on the porch. Nnnce went hot and cold 11t sight of them. She had hoped all the way down tllat McKane would be alone, for no conversation lns!lle the store could fall to be audible on th~ porch. It would be hard enough to talk to llim without an interested atllllence. She felt terribly allen, as if these people were allied against hEr, and yet she could not discern ~tmong the loungers anyone from Sky Line. As she drew near she did see with a grateful thrill that Sher!IT Price Selwood sat tilted back against the doorjamb, his feet on the runz of his chair. At sight of him a bit or the distres1 left her, a fnlnt confidence took ttl place. She remembt>red his kindly eyes that could harden and narl"oW so quickly, his way ot understandtnr things and people. She dismounted and tlE>d Buck11kln under 8 tree and went forward. As she mounted the steps the sherllt looked up, rose and raised his hat. Nance smilerl at hlm more gratefully than she knew. Then she stepped inside the doorand came face to f11ce with Kate Cath· rew who was Just coming out. ~Ic· Knne wn~ behlnd her carrying a small sa<:k which held her mail and some few purchnS""If The two women stOPDt'd Instantly, tht'lr t')·es upon t>aeh other. It was the first time they had met thus pointedly. At sight or thls woman whose unprovP<i. hfd<IE>n workin~s had meant so mUI'h to her, ~ance Allison's fnce went ~<lowly whit<'. f'hE> stood still In the door, straight nnd quiE>t, nnd loolietl at her In sl· IPn<·e. At the prnfon;!"ed lntPn~tty of her !'<"rutlny Cnttle Knte flung up her he>~<! and smiled, a l'<lllseions, insolem action. ''If yon don't want all thE" rloor. ee!<~fully Dy IRVIN S. COBB ~-€t:~~~,~~~~V::,r.:-€tr-0:-€tr-<!:~ r Copyrlg l.) Practically Destitute in Fact 1 l)ome of my de:1 rt'st lwyhond memories cfustf'r ahout a gravel ·eovered wharf where the Tennessee !Ike nn amorous ludy, kis::;es the Ohio not unl'e lmt twke and then In the em· I.Jrac·e of the wider. stronger streum ~oes romaucing a way to re<•efve t11e parental I.Jie!'sing or thnt fnther of nil the rh·ers, the 0111 Mississlr. ThE>re on the roi·t"!· of nn· nn<'ient hoat::;tore O\·erlooldng the matingplate of the wate;·s I hear~! tales of the older days whPn the gamltlers rode tl:e packets anti the male knew no closed season on lllack roustabouts and the b'il<'rs husled from time to tilllc an<l ~;eat tcrcd proud st<'tllnhOttts in splinl•·r.v smitiiPreen><. There too, l on(• d:1y henrd what I still. aflr.>r 1111 th"se sears, rpgarrf as a ma~nifi<'ent exmrrple of spontauE>ous Ameri<:an IJUIIIOL Tilted uaek In his chair on the boutswre porch sat Cap'n .Joe Fowlf'r, n~ typital a K<>ntucldan as !lw fag end 11f the last <·entury produced. A packet bound frnm Cincinnati ro 1'/ew Orleans, landed. lJp the stei'Jl slope of the whm·f came a tourist la<IY from Ui! 1\'orth somewhere--nnywhere across the Ohio was "up North" to us In that town. In the crook of her arm this Judy bore the first Mexlcun hairless dog Cap'n Joe had ev<'r seen. The animnl was no lnrger !hnn 11 fnil grown rat; in fact It rather resemhiPd 11 rat. It seemed a misernble, nal•ed, sickly little thing which shfverE>d ewn though the air was balmy and f1inched with vague uneasinN!S at e\·ery sound. As the lady drew close Cap•n .Joe stood up and made a low bow to hPr. "I beg your pardon. madam,'' he snid In his best company drnwl. "but might a total stranger so far intrude upon you as to ask you a question.'' ":You ml~ht." she said, her ~hn rp accents In strong contrast to his deeper yet tn:inltPiy softl'r ton"s: "Thank you, m11dnm," he said. "1'he quegtion, madnm, relate>~ to the dog you air carrying. Is that your own dog?" "It Is,'' she said. "Is that the only dog you've got7" "It Is." "Madam," said Cap'n Joe, "ain't you mighty nigh out of dog7" Cuticura for Sore Handt. Soak hands on retiring In the hot I'Jllds ot Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Cu· tlcura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one o:t the things Cutlcura w111 do l:t Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all tollet purposes.-Advertlsement. Ford owners all over the world buy Cham• pion X for Ford Cars, Trucka and Fordson Tractors, as a matter of course. Champlon'X/01' For.U60c. Blue BoxforaUo~~;an, ?Sc. More chan 95,000 dealen •ell Chamknow che a-ent<inc ~ £he double-ribbed core. ,non.. Yow will Alsatian Wolf-Dog Is Terror to Evildoers Cl!amplon Spark Plug 'fh<" dog- rno~<t prominent In public intere~t at t lw prPsent time is the Alsatinn wolf-dog. The Alsatian is pure hre<i, bein;; thE> oft'sprin~ of the Wurtcmberg slwepclog nncl the sheepdog of er>ntral Get·many. These two breeds have n partcular way of sheepfolding, and eXII<'rinl('nten; wondered If thE>y could bl<'nrl the ht'st strains of each. This thl'y did with remarkable success, nnd thus appearPd the German wolfdog, which the police ot that country were quick to use as a criminal hunter, says Tit-Bits. During- tlit> war these dogs rendered valuable service, and after the armistice, whE>n the dO.:! club was formed by British otlicerR, the name was changE>d to Alsatian wolf-dog, a de!<cription which has now been adopted 1 by nearly nil countries. to. Toledo, ObJo ww-, One.. Londo,.. Parle Farmers Attention! B Story of Zoroa11ter Zoroaster was one of the great tea<'hers of the East nnd founder ot whut may IJe culled the national religion of the Perso-Irnnian people, that is, speuklng gen!'rally, the Persinns. When he livt'd and taught Is not exactly known, but It is held that It was betwe<>n the Y<'ars 1000 B. C. and 600 B. C. He taught a dualism of power, one good und the other evil. Light represented the former nnd darknf'ss the latter. As corruption grew up, the sun b-ecame worshiped as the great source of light and, therefore, of nil good. Where Jimmy' a Education Really W aa Shy ay v: I. OUT CQT .lYOW JlT SarJe Money We have 75 automobiles that must be sold NOW without regard to profit. Any make you want- new or used. Trucks of all kinds. Priced to sell on sight. Write us today for com· plete details of any make car you want. Inland Finance Co. Box 326 Ogden, UtalJ ========= Jap11 Rebuilding Shrine~: The cult of Shinto Is no exception to the modernization wave which llns been sweeping over Japan since the great earthqunke of 1923. At a recent meeting of the Shinto shrine recon· structlon committee It was decldt'd that those shrines destroyed by the earthquake tire should be rebuilt of fireproof materials. In Tokyo and 'f. clnlty, ' 193 Shinto shrines were de· stroyed. The estimated cost of reconstructing these bus been placed at 4,562,163 yen. In the Right Place After a twenty years' absence a gentleman returned to the little New The loquacious stranger paused a!'. England town where he had been he walked down the vlllage street . born <tnd where he spent his boy- Jle look<·d to the right and he JookPd hood. In the neighborhood In which to the left, nnd then he sighed as though he had been reared he found but his esthetic sense was completely Rat· one of the original residents remain- isfied. One of the natives drew near, Ing, an elderly Irish lady. He made and th<> stranger nceosted him. "Pret· hirnse!t known to her, and she wel- ty village ~·ou have here,'' he remarked comed him back horne again, and pleasantly. The native considerE>d. She Made a Mo"e to Pass, but Nance promptly they fell to talking of the "Y t'p," he agreed, finally. "\'rhere Suddenly Put Out Her Hand. boys :llld girls with whom he hnd else would ~-on have It?" grown up. This one, she told him, Civil War Memento crumple down, to let go, to relax in had turned out badly. Thnt one had Latin American Charcoal defeat, hut she would not have it so. In tearing down the stf'eple of nn old' turned out well. Some were dead. In tropital Latin America the eost church in Kingston, N. C., recently, Instt>ad she looked at these two. so Some had moved away. Finally he of chnr<"oaJ hns risen so high this year nenrly n ton of old horseshoes and greatly dl'T!en<lent upon her, and ful'(~d nsked: the issue squnrely. "Tell me, l\Irs. Daly, whatever he- that man~· rc~id<>nts of hill towns arc scrap Iron was found stored high In installing electric heater~. the belfry, probably placed there for "It's tile corufiehl,'' she S:Jid with enrne of poor little .Jimmy MrKE>nna safety when the Civil war was on and ditliculty, "It's goue." who used to 11\·e In the shanty right Truth pr<>~ents only one face, but things of momentary lmpol"tance were ""'hat?" down the street here?" lies upp<>ar In myriad forms. being hiddcn.-Ohlo State Journal. "Gone? Gone--how7" ''Poor, is It?" E>e!JOecl l\Irs. Daly. 1 "Poor nothin'! Jimmy l\IeKennn hnd I "Gone--dPstroyerl-wlped of't the no sch•JOiin', as you may rememher, earth-trampled out by l'Utlfe.'' she but whf'n hf' grew up he ):!:Ot into !<aid dully, "eYNy hlade--evE>ry stnlkthe truekin' husiness unci from that root. stem unrf hn!lll'h !" he turJerl t0 eontruetln'. anrl chough "i.\Iy Lord A'mi~hty !" gnsperl 1\Irs. he couldn't reed and write. he marie Allison, und the words were nut !Jlas· a million." phemy. "Bully!" sale! the returned one. "Cuttle Kat!'!" erfE>d Rud. "And wh0re Is he now1" d-n her soul to h-ll" "As to that," said ~trs. Oal,v. "I "Oh. Hud-don't, don't!" s:rid 1\':tn<'e, young wornHr ~he ~nid, ''j)lPn~p.'• couldn't !'lly. T hope, though, he's In lrt'r lip~ bl'ginnin;; to qnh·er. "'Tle who l"hc made u .11ove to pnss, hut Nnnet' heaven. You see, sor, lwre ahonr tw1 -who i~ guilty of d-n-anrl danma· sudt!C'nly put ont 11 hancl. years :..l!;o, .Jimmy went down to the tlon ~hall he in dun~er-rfanger of h-1 ThE>re was 1111 ahi·upt di:mit~· In the [!I'll ,·el pit whf're some of the hyes ftrP.' .. mollon, a sort of lust-stand anthm·ity. was in swimmin', ·tn' It bein' a warm llut the hoy's blue eyes were hlnz"I do,'' ~aid the ~;irl. "want it all. T day he tool; of'!' his elot hes an<l fng and he did not even hear her. He lun·e Hllll<•tllfng to tPII McKane. und 1 warl!'d In, anrl he waded out too fnr jerked his sagg-ing shonltler up, f<•r you n1ay fl!': well hear ft.'' 1 uno hP gol ovt>r !tis heud nn<l wu~ 11 mom!'nt, In line wflh 'ts mate nncl rl rmnHfed." ThP irnp<'rfous fuce of Kate Cathrew shut his han<ls into struin'n·~ tl~t». fiu~hf'd darlily with the rising tide of "Oh. that's too hnd,'' snirl the visiGhnme a gun-'' PP ru~pe•l. ''Pup- hpr tPmper tor. "'l'o lhinl; of n hoy who h;tcl no py's gt·n-" '·(~et-ont-of- that-d<•or." !<he ~alrl !Jetter ~tart than Jim ~leKt•nna h:td "No gun". Bnrl-l've ~een fend-In <l!~tln('tly, but for once ~hu w&s not doing su Wf'll in tl e world, und !hen ~~~~,.:ouri. Tht>n>s lt<nd au' snnliglrt In nrel•tiu'-: nn E>nrl like tltat! And he EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 1925 · other pl>~<·es beside Nameless. \\'ith made u million. ~·ou !'ay? And yet . Jifp we <'an-'' he C'onld .. 't rPa•l anrf write." The bo~· !<hool; Ills hf'ad with n slow, "No,'' said MI·><. Daly, "nor swim." So Nance turn:; at last! When suyuge mot Jon. two such wom¢n as Nance and Kate meet, almost anything can "~ot for us," he l'afrl; ''1'<1 die 1ir~t." Not a Family of Musician'\ happen. Nauct> strlli;.d!t<·nt•rl hy till' door. She A !'E>lf· marfe Wt'stern milliouaire lifted lier hellfl and looked at his ):!:t·irn lluilt the lim•st hn\l!';e in hb nome young fate. Some of its grinmess town. fit> importt•d ilel'OI'alors ro !TO llE CONTINUED.) came !<llhtly Into h(•r own. furni~h it, and lll:tnll:;:PII to !!PI it tin· 1 "Hight.'' she !<aid, "so wmtftl I. \\·e :!;lief! lly the litue his Pltl<'st ""'' • B asiliccu arrivf'tl fi'OIIl the J;;ast when• lire I belon:; to .'\umPI<>s• river-where our TIIP name "l:asili<-a" wa~ given !I, ynurh had been <·ompletin~ his f'du- 1 rappy left us· unrf her!' wE>'Il stuy. an<"h•nt ltmu~ lu lmildings USt'll as F. 0. B. Lansin&", Michi&'an. Clition. Only-I prar t:od to keE>p mt> from The prou rl father e><errr I'd I he from-" she wet her liJl!' H!:::tin, "frum IUeetin~ pla<·es for husiHess 111en. and liS nnrrts of justkP. A ha<>ili<:a ron· younL: 111an lhrou::::h the slrin!ng new i what is ~tin·fn~ insi<le me." slsted of a ltna,; <·entrai hall or nave. munsion, followed hy the "'her I "He will,'' sHid Bud. "But I'm not with aisles, tl.e aif<lcs being SE'!Htrated members of the householrl. \\'hen j so parti<"ul:tr. \\'e own this land-and 250 WEST 57th ST., NEW YORK from the ua V<' by pilllJrs supportin; tt.e g1·:nHI tour had l1e cn <· 0~1tplelerl we'll fight for our own." the rooL At the end or 1he n:n·e. op· General Sales Department, 1819 Broadway, New York. the millionaire inqt:ired wht't IJer til~ "AnlCit,'' "· a1'd ,:'\,·•·,,<·e, ••'"'·~e wi'll. \\'e've ' " posite the entmne<>, Wll"' a t·abt!<; plat· son hurl an.v suggPstlon!'l to nwl<e. j PLANTS AT: stiJJ got the hog~ to sell. :\lammy- form, or dais, with ~C'ats for the "\\'ell," said the ~·oung man, "to me 1 let's have hrellltfast. I'm going <town judge~. To give adriHional spaee thPre Elizabetb, N. J., Lanain&', Mich., Oakland, Calif., Toronto, Caa. it sC'ems C"omplete in every pnssihle • to Co1·dova-it's 1·lght McKune ~hould \\'lls smuetimes added at this fartn"'r detnif t'xcept one." know." ··•rd, a sPmil'il'<·ular structm·e ,·:;.lied an ''What's missin'7" demanded the a[rS(', After the lntroclnction of Chrl:i· parent. 1 1ianty, \msillras werp \"ery gen<>r::IIy CHAPTER XII "\'ou ought to have a chanrleller in convertf'<l into churehe!l, and rims It th~:: main drawing-room;• snlt1 the "Get-Out--of-That-Door!" is that the form of th~> .oodern c-uthe· bny. That wal' u bitte1· ricle to Nllnee. drnl ls clerivPd tru:u tht: •nelent "Ml right.'' s11id the father. I'll The d11:v was SIYf'f't with the srent:- ~l~omun basil!ra.-Kansv~ CU:r Suu· order one by telegraph tonight but and sounds of summer. Birds ealie<l I'll bet a thousand dollars there from the tllickNs, high up the rine Doesn't evl'ry t>ig lndnstruu tJus. ain't a d-n one ln the family cal! tops, stirred hy a llttl!' wlnrl, Mng ness provide you A'ith someth.m;; t~ play it." their everln.stinr diapason, w.hile lh\0 1 coeu leb tlwn 1t ued tol sport·ation Star H Cars EW ICES 44 Commercial Chassis $425 Roadster. $525 Coupe $675 Touring 525 Coach 695 Coupster 595 Sedan 775 I DURANT MOTORS, INC. 20% I I I MORE POWER |