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Housewife's Idea Box A Patching Hint It Is a fine Idea to make handker chiefs out of the leftover pieces from the children's cotton dresses. They can use the handkerchiefs to match the dress and later if a patch Is needed the handkerchief can be used for patching. It will have been washed as often as the dress and will match as a patch. THE HOUSEWIFE. O Public Ledger. Inc.?WNU Service. Week's Supply of Postum Free Bead the offer made by the Postum Company in another part of this pa per. They will send a full week's sup ply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for it.?Adv. Hotel Guests Save Birds During u violent hailstorm at Butli, in Switzerland, 20(1 birds sought refuge in a giant beech near a hotel. As the violence of the storm increased the birds were beaten to the ground and more than 100 were killed. The guests of the hotel went out in a body and gath ered up the survivors, which, after tbey had passed the night in one ot the hotel rooms, were perfectly fit again and were sent on their way rejoicing. SEND FOR THIS GIFT! DIONNE'QUINTS' BIRTHDAY BOWL J Sent to anyone for 2 Quaker or Mother*? Oats trademarks and 10c to help cover special postage and handling charges~ (15c in Canada.) Send to The Quaker Oats Co., Box L. Chicago, IIL ? This offer is made to cele brate the selection of Quaker Oats as the cereal for the Dionne Quintuplets, even be fore their first birthday. You will love this souvenir. A beautiful design in lifetime chromium, 6" in diameter, use ful for serving many things. Send now to address above. IN VITAMIN B FOR KEEPING FIT . .. WORTH OF qdaker oats w equals 3 CAKES OF FRESH YEAST Qmkf and Mothf*? Oats ere tti? Mine Really Bad "How is your insomnia?" "Worse. Now I can't even sleep when It's time to get up." lalotaos [CLASSIFIED ADS] IL i FORMULA A?Positively grows hair wber? . [bars is fur*. Prepaid 11.00. Print nam. J ana address. J. ADAMS. TKANKLW HO j rEL BLDG, glOL'X FALLS. 8. DAK. f 'nsaranee Claims (not Gov.). We help with "lability claims Medical Investigation Bu Box UM. Washington. D. C. t . \ &-T333333 i j My Ideal Remedy for > r*1 HEADACHE , L ? J "Though I have tried ml! good ' A a remedied Capudine suits m | ' V' ? beat It fa quick and gentle." For headache, neuralgic, or mus V cle aches, and periodic pain? I ^ , use either Capudine Liquid or j - '? Capudine Brand Tablet?. ^ 1 J "J | j | "j I I CAUGIfl in b::r I | <lie WHP 1|| SYNOPSIS As Alan Garth, prospector, is pre paring to leave for his mining claim in the Far North, a plane lands at j the airways emergency station. In it are Burton Ramill, millionaire mining magnate; his daughter, Lilith; and Vivian Huxby, pilot and mining engi neer. Believing him to be only an igno rant prospector, the men offer to make an air trip to Garth's claim, although they refer to his samples of platinum ' bearing ore as nearly "worthless." Lil j ith Ramill, product of the jazz age. plainly shows her contempt for Garth. CHAPTER II?Continued ?3? ' The plane nosed down so steeply that the pontoons went under. For- I tunately the craft was almost fool proof. She bobbed up without plung ing to the bottom. Huxhv taxied I shoreward against the current from the stream and the thrust of the down gulch breeze. Garth stood up to pilot the pilot. A clump of spruces stood a few yards in from the water-smoothed ledge on the right bank of the stream mouth. Ilux by obeyed the signal to shut off the motor. As the propeller ceased to spin the plane glided in between the banks of the outrushing stream. Uncoiling the line as he went. Garth ran out on the right wing. From the overhang lie leaped down on the shelf ledge and bounded along it to the nearest spruce. The plane had a! ready lost its headway and was start ing to drift backwards in the swift outswirl of the stream. The line tautened as Garth whipped It around the tree trunk. To make doubly safe, he used the last foot for a pair of half hitches. He knew what would happen if the plane should drift free with no pilot aboard. Snubbed fast, the monoplane swung to the near bank and lay with the right-hand float snug against the pol ished waterline of the ledge. Huxby came out on the wing and jumped off to peer down the glassy slope of rock at the pontoon. "Not so bad," he admitted. "I had the place picked out," Garth replied. "The rock Is very slick. There'll be no need of fenders during our few hours' stay." The engineer pilot shoved his gog gles up on the front of his helmet. "How's that? Ticked out,' you say. Been arour.d airplanes, have you?" "I know how rough stone will chafe a boht," Garth replied. "Your floats are a kind of canoe. Can you get Mr Qamill and his daughter ashore by way of the wing?" Miss Itamill called from the cabin: "Why didn't you pick a decent lauding place, Vivian? We never can get ashore up this smooth sloping rock. The steps are no use. You'll have to make a gangway for Dad and me." Garth vaulted upon the wing and walked in along it to the fuselage The girl leaned from the big rear win dow of the cabin. "Give me your hand," Garth said. "I'll swing you up on the wing." He knelt above her on the cabin roof and reached down. Her lips curled in a contemptuous smile. "If that's the best you can do, I'll sray right here. I've no wish to go bathing. "In that case, get out of the way. Your father wishes to see my prospect. I'll not waste time building a needless gangway." She was the heiress to millions and had been reared in prodigal luxury. Never had shebeen treated so cavalier ly as by this buckskin-clad prospector. She turned to her fiance. "Vivian, you heard the insolent fel low !" Huxby grasped the wing tip to pull himself up. The girl's father spoke over her shoulder: "Stay where you are, Vivian. We're here to look at Garth's mine. He has agreed ro help Ulith and me ashore. If she prefers to remain aboard, she may do so." The girl looked both surprised and angered. She drew back into the cabin. Her father thrust out his head from the window to look up at Garth. "Won't it be more than you can manage? I weigh over two hundred." For reply. Garth reached down. The portly millionaire hung in Garth's grasp almost like a dead weight. Yet Uarth swung him bodily up and around an the wing. He led the limping gentleman out to the far end, near the tip. and low ered him down upon the top of the edge. Before he could follow. Miss Itamlll called out ro him: "Come lack for me. It should be safe enough. You did not drop Dad." Carth looked up the gulch, smiled, ind went to swing the girl out of the window. Cp on the wing she clutched lis shoulder as if to steady herself. Her scarlet-smeared Hps curved In a ratronizing smile. "You're wonderfully strong!" "More knack than muscle." "Both! It was simply marvelous low you lined Dad without losing your inlance." Out near the wing tip Garth drew lis arm free from her clasp, caught ler by the elbows, and lowered her nto Iluxby's uptbrust hands. She looked up and smiled. "Ro nice if you, old dear.' Now, If you'll fetch a cup. i m dying to try a drink of this delightful-looking milky water." 1 he dying would be more apt to follow ypcr drink," Garth replied. He sprang down beside her father. "Your milk Is rock-flour ground off by the glacier, it's apt to be a dangerous drink. 1 here's clear water where we're going." He caught up his rifle, and set off aslant the easy upslope from the lake shore. The others followed alter him. picking their way between the scraggy brandies of the spruce trees. Before long the trees dwarfed down Into tim berline scrub. "What an odd-colored stone!" The girl turned to stare resentfully at the desolate grandeur of the mountains across the valley. "Did you ever see such a horrible place? It's almost as bad as those ash-heap mountains in tbe -Mohave desert. Come along. Dad. Don't keep us here forever. This raw hole makes me sick." Her father spoke irritably: "You wouldn't listen when I advised you to remain at Edmonton. Why didn't you stay in the cabin, instead of following me ashore?" "Oil, tune off," she complained. "It's quite enough to've dragged myself out on this God for saken dirt pile. Even the berries are sour. I'm going back. 1 here ought to be- a dance program on somewhere. Only thing, can Vivian get me up Into the cabin?" He looked expectantly at Garth. The smile she gave him Jerked the atten tion of her fiance away from the pur pose that had brought them ashore. "I'll swing you aboard easy enough, Ulith," he said. Garth spoke to him without a trace of amusement: "If you ask me, I think this little walk to the mine would be good exer cise for Miss Itamlll. When 1 left here, last month, there was a she grizzly with two cubs back along the lake shore. They may have gone off; maybe not. That pistol of yours wouldn't be ot much use if you hap pened to blunder between the old lady and her young ones." "You saw the beast, yet did not kill her," scoffed Huxby. "1'retty thin!" "Not at all; she was quite fat. It happened, though, I had no need of meat or bear skins. Also, she was as willing as I was to live and let live, just so I kept away from her cubs." Mr. Itamill started to overtake him. "Lead ahead, Garth. I came here to see your prospect, not to talk about shooting." Garth went on, up aslant the tundra. When lie came to where the smooth slope dropped into a shallow trough, a barkward glance showed the girl and Huxby loitering along behind her fu ther. Tlie portly millionaire came panting up beside Garth. "Well?" he asked. "There's my claim," Garth answered. "My lower stake is down at that cross dyke of gneiss, a thousand feet or so from the lake shore. The upper one stands about three hundred feet below those slide ledges. You could stake a claim above mine,_but 1 doubt if you'd And pay dirt. There is none at all be tween the lower stake and the lake. The dyke stopped the downdrift of tbe alloy. I sampled several acres. Be ginning at the grass roots and going down to frost, the dirt ran from five to ten dollars a pan. This trough is a placer pocket?a cache tilled by the age-long downdrift from those disin tegrated veins up the mountain. My claim covers all or nearly all the de posit, and It is worth several hun dred thousand dollars. If not a mil lion." The cool certainty of Garth's state ment compelled belief. Mr. ItamlU's ruddy face went blank. His daughter looked at Garth with a sudden change from boredom and dis dain to an Interest that verged on re spect. Here was sensation?something new. The despised woodsy vagabond of the wilds was not a pauper, after all! It was like a play, the wandering beggar boy disclosing himself to be the true prince. He had said, "a million!" Like the older man, Huxby had put on his poker face. He was not so suc cessful, however. In keeping the glint out of his eyes. He had yet to make his fortune. "So it's a million?" he scoffed. "No wonder you prospectors go crazy. Find a little placer you guess has some gold In It. and yoi think you've located a mint, five to ten dollars a pan! Why. Jack, your metal wouldn't give you half a dollar a pan. even'tf yonr small percentage of gold was alloyed with silver, instead of lead." Garth smiled. "My mistake bother ing you to test that sample. Just chew on this, my friend: A good many sourdoughs might not be able to iden tify that gray-white metal. But only a chechahco would be unable to recog nize that It is not galena or silver." This silenced the engineer for the moment. Mr. Itamill favored Garth with his blandest smile. "Technicians like Huxby are too apt to Imagine that the rest of us know nothing. Now, admitting for the sake of the argument that your guess re garding the alloy is correct, suppose we sample your prospect." For reply. Garth led down Into the I trough to where a moss-bedded Spring , V rill trickled down from pool to pool. He stopped beside a shallow dugout, roofed with spruce branches, moss and dirt Under It lay a small shovel and pickax, a worn gold pan, and a little aluminum cooking pot Garth turned to iluxby. "There's the pan. Get your samples and go to it" "How do I know your holes aren't salted?" "You don't know anything. Why not scratch down to gravel yourself? Or perhaps I salted all the trough, before I laid on this blanker of grass and moss." Mr. Ramlll interposed: "Mining en gineers have to guard against fraud as well as error, Garth. I was salted once myself. In my callow days. Just to ease his professional conscience, sup pose you clear gravel for us midway between here and the staked hole down there." "That's my discovery stake," Garth replied. "Wasn't looking for gold In this trough. Just happened ro notice the gray metal where the spring gush of the rill had torn the moss from the gravel. About my digging, I must beg to be excused. What if I should hap pen to drop a handful of that galena into the hole, when your expert was not looking?" Ignoring the Irony, Huxby pulled the shovel from the dugout shelter and gouged Into a bed of moss. Mr. Ramill stooped his portly body to pick up the gold pan. Huxby shoveled clear the moss and black humus from a space two feet or I more square. He tossed aside a few stones the size of his fist, and took I the gold pan from Mr. Ramill to load It with gravel. They went a few steps j downslope to the edge of a lower pool. None too deftly, Huxby dipped water into the pan and began to rotate the j contents. After more than twice the time an old prospector would have I needed for the operation, the mining I engineer worked the pan clear of all except a spoonful of small dull nodules Miss Ramill had stretched out to I bask In the summer warmth. With the upslant of the sun towards the noon of the nineteen hour day, the Garth Vaulted Upon the Wing and Walked in Along it to the Fuselage. breeze had died down. The calm brought a -swarm of mosquitoes up slope from the lake shore. The girl put on her head net, covered the unbooted part of her legs with caribou moss, and resumed her sun bath. Out of the tall of his eye Garth watched Huxby and Mr. Itamill. When he saw the two get their net-draped heads together over the gold pan, he rose and went towards them. The tread of his moccasins was noiseless. Before the two noticed his approach, he stood looking down over their shoul ders. "Not half bad for a starter,** he said. "At least five dollars in your first pan." "Hardly that value,' replied Mr. Ramill. "Admitting there is some plat inum in this alloy, I an. afraid you're a far too sanguine young man. Call It five per cent platinum and five of gold. That leaves ninety per cent of silver and lead, with of course traces of iridium and osmium." ? "Yes, move the decimal point of your million three places to the left. Jack," said Huxby. "It brings your wonder ful fortune down to a few thousands. To sluice this placer, freight out the alloy, and ?-pay for separating the metals will leave slim profits. There may be none at all." "Too bad you've had all your trouble for nothing," Garth replied. "I count ed on your finding it a real, strike?the first big platinum deposit located in North America." Mr. Itamill rose to lay a consoling hand on his shoulder. "Never minjl, my boy. You'll reca'l what $ told you about my encouraging wortHV prospectors. I stand by tlia* now. I will give you two thousand dollars for this prospect, and take the chance of getting back my money by large-scale placering." "You're too generous," Gartb pro tested. "I couldn't tblnk of taking your money. In fact, I'll have to own up 1 had a little testing acid with me when I happened upon this gray alloy. So, as I do not believe in cheating, suppose we head back for the Mac kenzie." The millionaire mine buyer chuckle! and clapped him on the back. "Boy, you're a whole lot less a fool than you look." Huxby stared hard. Then, pocketing the alloy, he went for the shovel. "Good idea," Garth said. "A pan from above Discovery, one below, and the same from three or four hun dred feet out each side?they'll tell you whether or not it's merely a smali pocket." Without replying, Huxby set ofT up the trough. Mr. Kami 11 limped slowly after him. Miss Itamill appeared to have fallen asleep. She lay still, prote-ted by her net from the mosquitoes that tinged about her head. Believed from the company of his un pleasant travel mates. Garth stretched out like the girl, lie thought of the vast length of time that had been re quired to erode the side of the moun tain above him. Nature had spent ages in collecting these hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of precious alloy upon which he now lay basking. And he had chanced to stumble upon the treasure near the end of a trip of which exploration and adventure had been the prime motive and pros pecting only a side Issue. Now, by law, he was sole owner of all this wealth. He thought of the two men upslope whom he had brought to share in his good fortune. They had thanked him by seeking to lie and cheat him out of It all. But that was the nature of far too many men. There was no reason to be surprised or angered. They had failed to outplay him with their stacked cards. He looked at a clump of alpine blossoms close beside his elbow, and smiled. Upslope he heard the swirl of gravel In the gold pan. After a time the sound died out. His keen ear caught the dull tread of heavy feet on the turf. Mr. Itamill turned toward Garth. "We will go back to the plane for lunch while considering the matter." "Only for a short time," Huxby qualified. "I inteqd to return here for more sampling. No need of your troubling to join us." Garth saw that his company was not wanted. "Thanks. I'm not hungry. Come to think. I'll go down to the lake and make sure my old lady grizzly isn't lurking in the bush." "Your phantom bear," mocked Miss Ramill. "Watch out she doesn't make a ghost of you." Under cover of his smile at the gibe. Garth caught the glance that passed between her father and Huxby. The girl had said it. "Watch out" was the word. He swung down the trough with no sign of hurry. The length of his glid ing stride made his movements appear leisurely. Without looking back, he slanted In among the scrubby spruces. A mass of the dense evergreens put him out of sight of the three chechahcos up on the open tundra. He turned sharp to the right Midway down the brush-fringed lake shore, the tall spruces stood well spaced. He broke into a run. A vista between the trees offered him a view upslope. He halted be hind a screen of young aspens to look. The three had already reached the side of the trough. They started to hurry on aslant the mountainside. I.iiith Itamill and Huxby had the girl's heavy bodied father between them. They were helping him along twice as fast as he could have made it without their aid. (TO BE COST! MED) Alcohol in Body Cannot Ignite, Chemists Assert According to popular belief, the body of a person soakeu with alcohol Is combustible. Cases of the spontaneous combustion of the body have been re ported, especially In France, when the first Instance of this kind Is said to have happened in 1725. The spontaneous burning of an al cohol-soaked body Is a popular belief In Rumania, according to a writer In the Cleveland I'lain Dealer. Prof. A. Elfer of CluJ. In a lecture before the Hygienic society. Is reported by the Bucharest correspondent of the Jour- , nal of the American Medical Associa tion as saying that "In past centuries It was earnestly deemed possible that the alcohol laden breath of a tippler may catch fire from the glow of an | oven or even from his own pipe/' 1 In 1S47, the Countess Gorlltx was I said to have become Ignited spontane ously In Darmstadt, Germany, and burned to death. A commission whose members Included the greatest chem ical experts of the age, Leiblg and Bischoff, studied this case and com pletely refuted the theory of spontane ous combustion. Where Joan Hid The catacombs at St. Aignan. France, where Joan of Arc once hid her army, are now used for wine storage. i ********* *********** I STAR ! | DUST | * Alovie ? Radio * ? ? ???By VIRGINIA VALE??? PROBABLY one of the most dramatic things that has ever happened in connection with the making of motion pictures was the confession in New York of those six young gangsters re cently. Accused of murdering a collector for the subway, they had been grilled all night without result. A motion picture executive was in the office of District Attorney Geoghan the next day on business. Geoghan happened to men tion the cue, and added "Want to meet one of them?" The one they called Duke was brought in?sleek, composed, deter minedly innocent. The movie man questioned him about himself and finally asked "How'd you like to pose for a news reel?" Duke was delighted; he promptly took out a comb and fixed his hair. A news reel crew from the movie man's own organization was on hand, un known to him; it had been sent down just on a hunch. So?the six young bandits were called in, and the first thing anybody knew they were confessing the crime. The excitement of breaking into the movies was too much for theml ???? Pity Adrlenne Ames, who thought she was seriously ill and found that her trouble was just hunger, caused by the need of dieting In order to go on making pictures! Seems funny that girls with plenty of money can't eat, when so many people can't do it be cause they can't buy food. That need for dieting has a lot to do .with the retirement of screen stars. When Phyllis Haver left the movies. Just a9 her career was at its height, (she'd been asked to do "Anna Chris tie"?remember??and didn't, and Gar bo got the part,) she said to me "Just think! Now l ean eat all the baked beans I want to!" And she can?she married a man who's heid of a big canned goods business. ? -Ar One star's meat is another star's poi son. Paramount bought the popular book. "National Velvet,** so that Claudette Col bert could play the heroine, a part not very uell suited to her, and she knevc it. Katherinc Hepburn is crazy to play it. So maybe Paramount u ill borroic her for it, or perhaps RKO uill buy the story from them for her. You can be sure of one thing?Hep burn u ill play iL She gets what she xcants. ?* ? Put the name of Jimmie Savo down In your notebooks; It looks as If he'd be one of our biggest stars before long. Known as one of our greatest mas ters of pantomime, quite as great as Chaplin, he long ago made a name for himself on the stage. But the movies didn't seem to take to him. He made a picture for Hecht and MacArthur, "Once In a Blue Moon." which was so bad that he tried to buy It from them so that It wouldn't be released. He was fine but the picture was awful. Final ly It was shown in a few places, ad vertised as "The Worst Picture In the World.** You can Imagine how Savo liked that. But now Hal Roach has signed him up and promised that he can se lect his own stories. Maybe he'll get a break, and then hfc'll land on top. Maybe he won't, and you'll never see him on the screen after one picture. He deserves the best of luck. He's a delightful person, very good looking, rather naive, which is odd In a man who has been on Broadway for years. ?* Ruth Chatterton's career may take another twist. She left the stage ten years ago. went into pictures two year* later, and now may return to the stage again. I She owes her start in pictures to Lubitsch, who gave her a part when nobody else wanted her. She went straight to the top, as you know. Now pictures don't seem to be quite the right field for her, and the thea trical managers are urging her to come back. Nice to have two strings to your bow, isn't it? Think way, way hark, you old timers. and remember Carol Dempster, who used to make picture* for D. W. Griffith. I saw her on the street In Westport, Conn., one day not long ago. and never did anyone look less like a movie star, or more beautiful. She's happily married and the movies now adays Just mean something to go to evenings. James Melton, that sweet slnge^ of the air waves. Is In Hollywood to do a picture. And the first thing that hap pened to him after he arrived was nn encounter with a hold-up man. He ar rived at his destination?a party at l'at O'Brien's?thrilled to death over It ODDS AMD EMDS . . . Jimmie Cagney is drinking tea afternoons?just happens to like it . . . Jean Harlow will he a brunette in "Riff Raff* ? ? ? Ford Bond, Kelvin Keerh and James Vallington are resigning as radio announcers. They're free lance artists note, thank you . . . Take all your handkerchiefs to mThe Dark 1 ngeC . . . Fredric March almost missed the boat uhen he sailed for Europe the other day C Western Nevsotpe* t'n'.on. Billings Child Knew Just Where That Clam Went The Billings child on her Sunday visit to the beach picked np a clam shell and regarded It meditatively. "Now I wonder where that clam has gone to?" she inquired. Neither parent responded. Four year-olds are always wondering something, and Billings was busy resting in the hot sand, ^hlle Mrs. Billings was busy rubbing sunburn oil on her person. "I wonder where that clam has gone to?" repeated the Billings child. No answer being forthcoming she demanded ^nudly: "Mommie, do you want to know where that clam has gone to? Dad dy, do you want to know where that clam has gone to?" Both parents averred absently that they did. The Billings child tossed aside the empty shell, picked up her pall and shovel and started for the water. 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SOIOLS IOOMAITO PHIVATE IATH 2?d A hot?l on 42nd Strent 8 blocks n& of Grand Centra] Station
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1935, edition 1
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