■MiKtfctMi ■mrnurMi nrnfm Mi M» Mi MI Mi Mi MiMi »m urnimmili 15he mO/i HOUSE 1 NOVELIZED BY I EDWIN C. HILL 1 §j FBOM WILLIAM FOX’S GREAT PICTURE ROMANCE M m OF THE EAST AND THE WEST | BY CHARLES KENYON AND JOHN RUSSELL 4 Brandon stood leaning against a tree throughout this ttirade, his eyes fixed on something in visible in the far distance of the West. Lincoln remained silent, watohing Brandon. Suddenly, Big Dave spoke his eyes alight, his powerful sweeping the west ern horizon. “Look out there.” he said. “What is it? Waste. Wilderness desert—ihountains—-Indians— buffalo—God knows what! But some day, in our own life-time, the railroad will be built that will reclaim that wilderness—the road that will make the United States a real nation. If God spares me, I’m going to have a hand in building it, and I want my boy to have a hand in it.” He returned a steady gaze to the West that was drawing his dreamer’s soul. Marsh spoke irritable: ‘ ‘ In all your life, Abe, did you ever hear such a fol-de-rol of nonsense?” “Why, yes, Tom,” said Mr. Lincoln in his leisurely, deep drawl. “Yes, I’ve heard men talk that very fol-de-rol—good men, Tom. I mind hearing a young man named Dodge, talking just that way, when I was out in Council Bluffs a short time ago. I was sitting on the porch of the old Pacific House listening to the bullfrogs ana looking at the stars, when a young army en gineer sat down beside me and got to talking about surveys he had made for the army on this very railroad notion. Well, sir, this young Dodge was just crammed full of the railroad project. He’d been all through Nebraska territory, clear to the Roeldes, and he was just popping with enthusiasm. Tom he made it look pretty reasonable He just about converted me.” Brandon swung around from bis pose by the tree “ Do you believe it can be done Abe? Do you really believe it?” “Bosh!” said Marsh. “All a damned rainbow! Fellows who don’t want to work, looking for the pot of gold!” Mr. Lincoln put a great, brown hand upon Marsh’s plump shoul der. “Old friend,” he said, “some day men like you will be laying rails along that rainbow.” Gratitude welled up in Bran don’s heart. Emotion often sway ed him. He gripped Lincoln’s band. * “Seemes to me,” said Mr. Lincoln, thoiighfully, “I’d head for the Black Hills, Dave, if I was really set on going West. This young Dodge told me that right there was the heart of the prob lem finding an easy pass and a 6hort cut through those hills. Dodge seemed to think that’s where the pot of gold was hid, Tom,” he said, his eyes twinkling toward Marsh. “Two weeks ’ll see me on the road,” said Brandon, as he turn ed away toward his cabin. “I’ll take my chance in the Black Hills, Abe. I’ll follow the rain bow 1” CHAPTER m A RAINBOW GROWS IN THE WEST It was a wintry, sunlit morn ing in late February when Big Dave and Little Davy turned their backs upon Springfield to seek the gateway of the West. Their going ma'de no stir, pro voked scarcely a ripple. They had few friends to wish them well, few indeed, whose hearts would follow them out upon the long trail. In the month that had drifted by after the talk with Lincoln and Marsh, the talk that fired him to decision, Brandon had sold or traded his few posses sions, the cabin which had been home for him and Davy, its poor furnishings, and the “patch” of a dozen acres which went with it. Marsh saw to it that Brandon was not cheated—the surveyor had the worst possible head fcf. business—but the proceeds were hardly enough to capitalize even a dreamer. After all their necessaries had been bought, riding horses, a pack-mare, a Sharpe’s rifle, throwing a bullet heavy enough to down an elephant in its tracks, an ample supply of powder and their stores of food and extra clothing, Big Dave was not con scious of the weight of gold he tucked in his money belt. “Won’t have much use for hard cash, anyway,” he told Higgins, the general storekeeper. “Guess you think you’re hit tin’ the Hallelujy Trail,” grunted Higgins, a sharp-nosed “down Easter” who took small pains to conceal his contempt for Bran don. “Pussonly, I never heerd tell of any country where a man didn’t have good use for money.” The loungers who made Hig gins store their club for tbe resolvent of all questions, social, political and religious, cackled their appreciation. “Better keep tight hold onter yer hand,” advised Higgins’s sallow-faced clerk, a youth hard by fever, ague and a mean dis position. “Why so, Hank?” inquired Brandon, incautiously. “Bekase the Injuns ’ll sure jerk yer skelp loose,” said Hank with a stuttering titter. “Well,” replied Big Dave, good- humoredly, but pointedly, “if they do, Hank, they'll let daylight in on something your head never held.” You think you’r durued smart, don’t ye?” snarled the discomfited clerk, as the loungers haw-hawed. As Brandon and his son rode away from the store, their final purchases securely packed on the mare, the idlers did not trouble to wave good-bye. Big Dave felt a contraction of the heart. After all, these people had been neigh bors. They might have given him a heartier, more human farewell. “It shows what they think of me,” he reflected, with bitter ness unusual to him. “Time I was getting out, sure enough!” “At the western edge of the town, where the main street end ed and the road to St. Louis be gan, a little groupe awaited their coming—and going— Mr. Lin coln, Thomas Marsh and Miri am. The lawyer showed a cheer ful, encouraging face to the Brandons, as one who felt the need of lifting their spirits and supporting their hopes. Marsh was solemn-faced, still irritable over Big Dave’s obstinacy, but realizing, in his good heart, the friendlessness of these home less pilgrims. Miriam’s blue eyes were' drowned in grief, and though she bit hard upon her lips and thrust forward her rounded chin, the tears kept welling down in glistening rivulets of sorrow. “This is good of you,” said Brkndon, as he got off his horse and shook hands with Mr. Iin coln and Marsh. “I won’t forget it—” He stopped, wordless. Marsh thumped him on the back. iliat s all right, Dave. I think you’re doing a fool thing but you’ve made your own bed, and I’m not the man to hope you’ll find it hard to lie on. The Lord bless you and keep you safe, you and Davy. Now, if there’s any thing you’ll let me do for you— a little loan, maybe?” “No, we’ve got enough to go on with,” said Brandon, quietly. “But I thank you, Tom, for the offer. I recon we’d better just say good-by and hit the road. Good-by, Abe. I’m not forgetting what you told me about the Black Hills.” “Just a minute, Dave, just a minute,” said Lincoln. He turned away a few yards to where Davy and Miriam were standing in in articulate farewell. They were very close together, but they had found nothing to say. The grief which paralyzed their young hearts, kept them silent. Mr. Lincoln put his great arms around them both and gathered them to him in a “bear hug.” “Don’t feel so bad,” he com forted, “it won’t be long, maybe. Now, I have brought along some thing for each cf you, something to remember me by, a keepsake. If they make good their threat ' | of sending me to Conaress and you ever come to Washington, , you can always show these to the doorkeepers and they’ll let you He produced two medals, cast in bronze, exactly alike, cadi bearing the haughty head of an Indian Chief, a date and some lettering in long words. “Medals of the Black Hawk War,” ho explained. “You (ki^ow—” lie smiled drily— “they made a ciptain of me in that little rumpus. I wasn’t much of a captain, b*.t then it wasn’t much of a war. I col lected a few of these souvenirs after it w. y all over. Perhaps they’ll malca you think of Abr’am Lincoln and each other quite a lot. Keep them with you for luck pieces.” Miriam gripped his arm and sobbed, her little woman’s heart wrung unbearably; while Davy, for all his effort at manly fort itude, showed wet eyes and a quivering chin, and gave his “thank you” iu a shaking voice. “Aren’t you ev-er coming back ,Davy?” said Miriam, between sobs. ‘ Please, please come back' I soon! 1 can't bear it without you. | Nothing will be the same.” 4 She threw her arms about his neck, and Davy, always the protector, held her closo to his heart, murmuring a boy's words of comfort. Mr, Lincoln Bloody drew them toward Brandou and Marsh and lifted Davy to the saddle. Big ITave mounted. There were no more words. A wave of the hand, & despairing sob from Miriam and they were gone to wards the sunset. They made slow progress. There was m need for haste. Brandon planned to go on to St. Louis, taking his time collecting there whatever information might be of value and then, if possible, to find some means of making his way up the great water road, the Missouri River, with other West-farers. For days they rode, gradually throwing off the de pression of uprooted home ties, their spirits uplifted as they felt the call of the new—of adven ture. They spent a week long the road to the Mississippi, and were ferried across its broad, yellow flood to the levee where up-river and down-river steamboats lay in orderly array, the sun glisten ing on their ornamental brass work, their white paint and on their great paddle wheels which could conquer the swiftest of cur rents. Steamboats before the com ing of the railroad were the lux urious couriers of a rich and splendid business. The fine, fast boats that met the eyes of the Brandons fromed an absorbing spectacle for oy and man. It was the middle of the day and the levee, the long, sloping embank ment which descended from the water front of the city to the wharves, was throged with heavy wagons and one-horse drays bearing freight to and from big and little boats that had plowed triumphantly all the way from gay New Orleans in the far South to St. Paul in the far North, carrying the cotton, tobacco and molasses of the land of sunshine in exchange for fabric, furs, grain and machinery of the lam1 of snow. “Oh, Daddy!” Davy cried, as his enchanted gaze identified a particularly graceful and famous river flyer of the times. “There’s the General Pike, daddy, that w’ve read about, you remember when her eengineer told cap’n he’d ‘bust the record or bust her bilers!’ ” ‘I remember," said Brandon, hardly less interested than his boy. ‘‘They’re wonderful, these boats. They say that inside they re all silks and velvets and fine paintings. Maybe we’ll have a chance to see soon. But wo must push on to find a place to stay." From the ferry landing that Jim Bridger had eestablished nearly forty years previously, they slowly made their way through a bustling throng. Hun dreds of river travelers were hurrying up or down the levee, 'embarking upon or debarking from a dozn (steamboats: Rich planters trorn the South, wearing broad-brimmed hats, broadcloth coats and breeches and high oots of fine leathr, gallant, mas terful-looking men, with faces browned by a hotter sun than Missouri knew, and speaking with tr sott liquid-drawl; fur trappars from the northwest, rangy, larded giants garbed in buckskin shirts or heavy woolen jackets, wearing round caps of haver or marten, booted too, and striding along with a free swing that took Davy’s eye as their stragne oaths took his aar; bos ses: from the great trains of Sante Fe wagons awaiting their burdens for Southwest and West hairy, heavyshouldered fellow^ redfaced and noisy from the tent whiskey of the levee bar rooms; Easterners in what Davy thought was very fancy garb, indeed; here and there an Indian in fringed buckskins and moc casins (government scouts. Big Dave guessed) ; army officers in dark-blue, very alert and straight-backed, on their way to or from the farscattered posts of the Indian country; lordly steamboat captains, tread ’.ng the levee like the monarchs they were; steamboat mates, hard men, who carried blacksnako whips or loaded billies as the symbols of their man-driving trade; here and there a fine lady, mincing along under a ridiculous parasol,-not much bigger than a pancake; -wearing a tiy hat trim med with close-curled feathers, a tight “basque” and very wide, voluminous skirts falling to low heeled shoes of daity kid—very wonderful ladies, they seemed to Davy; professional river gam blers, high-hatted and dressed with the rigid severity of a minis, ter of the gospel; hudreds of negro slaves, staggering undeer burdens, tugging at great wagons mired in the mud, or passing in squads under the rough com mand of cargo mates, black faces glistening with sweat, th whites of their rolling eyes showing, and singing with the inextinguishable merriment of a child-like race— these and others passed before the gaze of father and son, mag" netized by the fascinating St. Louis of the fifties. T i * was mie aiternoon before they found a tavern which suited Brandon’s nurse, one that prom ised simple, homely fare and decent shelter for them and a stable for their beasts. It carried a high-sounding name on its dingy signbroad, The Indepen dence Hotel, and it was crowded with men whose feet were trail bent—toward Texas or Santa Fe, toward Kansas, toward the Ore gon or the Salt Lake Trail and the upper Missouri—men whose restless spirits and fortune’s call were leading into the magical West. (TO BE CONTINUED) INJECTIONS MAY FIX SIZE OF MAN Physicians Declare Small Men May Be Made Larger, And Tall Men Smaller Boston.—If you are a ''sawed-off” little person, or if you are tall and lanky, this story will Interest you. The "sawed offs” may become tall. Those Who soar to an embarrassing altitude may stop growing. In either case all you will have to do Is to call In the family doctor. He will merely Increase or reduce the nourishment for certain glands of the body. Bresto! You may b« short or tall as your heart desires. Dr. Walter B. Cannon explained It all at the Harvard University Med ical School. He credited Dv Eva/ns, of the University of California, with the discovery of possible future oen - trol of bodily height. The scheme had been tried on rate. Dr. Cannon displayed lantern slides of two mt proteges of Dr. Evans. One, having had frequent Injections of material from the pituitary gland of another animal, had grown one third larger than the other, which had no Injections. Both were of the same litter. The pituitary gland Is at the base of the brain and con trols the bodily size of animals and human beings, according to Dr. Can non. Under-development of thin gland causes dwarfish stature and abnormally slender legs and arms. Likewise, over-development reacts Ihe other way. So watch the pitui tary gland. Dr. Cannon told of an eight-foot, six-lnen man In Ireland who used '.o light his pipe at street lamp posts. He was found, after death, to have had an over-developed pituitary gland. Two-thirds of the bodily substanoe is water. Dr. Cannon pointed out. "Adequate salts, particularly limy for forming bones, Is derived from cus tomary foods, especially wheat and milk," ho asserted. "Butter fat," ho continued. ‘'is es sential for growth, also nitrogen, which It Is essential the farmers should have for fertilizer, In order that vegetable foodstuffs may ab sorb It. Another essential Is protein found In gelatin, peas, beans, white of egg, cheese and lean meat.” China Getting Religion, Bible Sales Disclose Shanghai, China.—Nearly nine and a half million copies of the Bible were circulated In China during 1924, according to are annual report or the American Bible society. This or ganization shares with the British and Foreign Bible Society of Scot land the tremendous task of*keeplng Chinese supplied with the Holy writ. IDstributlon during 1924 sbatwsd a a Increase of neatly two mUUoJQ copies over the previous year. HIDERS DONT APPROVE TOO MUCH EFFICIENCY By Charles P. Stewart, Washington NEA Service Justice department officials are fixing up an arrangement they be lieve will make it easier to catch fugitive criminals throughout the world. Several European govern ments think well of it. Next the | department plans to submit it to Latin America. It’s a cinch It won’t get the in dorsement of certain long-time North American residents of that part of Latin America known as the River Plate region. Several of them are very promi nent and influential there, too. If they object to the justice depart ment’s scheme their protest will count. And they’re sure to object. In Borne instances old scores stand against them In the home land that don’t outlaw under the statute of limitations. • • • "Old Bob,” for instance!—not to designate him too explicitly. "Old Bob” has lived 20 years in and around Buenos Aires. He’s a very substantial, conservative citizen now, but he makes no bones of the fact that once he robbed trains and rustled cattle along the Mexi can border. One evening he was talking with me in a cafe on the Avenida, when the question o{ the year of the "A. R. U.” strike came up. "I think it was in 1894,” said Bob. "Yes,” after a moment's reflect(>n, “1 know it was, because that was the year they chased me out of Texas for killing a man, and the strike was going on at the time.” * * m Why is it that Americans break more laws than any civilized peo ple? asked ex-Governor Hadley of Missouri in a recent speech before the American Law Institute. Then, answering his own question, the ex governor said the trouble is with our criminal courts—they let folk break the laws and “get away with it." Dr. Charles R. Mann, talking be fore the American Council of Edu cation, of which he’s director, of fered a different explanation. His theory Is that Americans violate more laws than any other nation ality because they hava so many more to violate. • • • If a penniless criminal falls into Hadley says, but the one with money turns his case into a game between his lawyers and the prose cution and wins, provided he's had sense enough to provide himself with a better legal battery than the opposition’s. If the American people are con fronted by a fact they don’t like, observes Dr. Mann, they pass a law changing the fact. Only, facts can’t be changed in reality, adds the doctor. This wasn't a debate between Hadley and Mann. It simply hap pened they got onto the same sub ject at the same time at two entirely different meetings ia "faah ington. * * * A painters' strike is on here. Word came into union headquarters that CO men were painting a big house in New Hampshire avenue. An agent hastened to the spot “What’s this?” he demanded. "This,” said the foreman, “is the Italian embassy—foreign territory," as, indeed, foreign embassies and — _ [ legations are supposed to be. | What’s more, the union officials 1 recognized it, when their attention was called to the fact, and didn’t Interfere. Not 8olomon In All Hl« Glory. From the Mich. Aggie Green Onion. "Look mamma, the circus Is In town.” "Hush, darling. It's only one of those college boys.” Not Quits Right From the Chicago News. "How does your sister like the en gagement ring I gave her, Bobby?” asked Mr. Snow. "Well,** returned Bobby, ”It-s all right, she said, but It’s so small that she has a hard job to get It off before the other fellow comes.” One-sixth of the electrical energy now developed In Canada Is being exported to the United States, according to tbs latest census of central electrical sta tions in Canada. According to returns made under the electricity and fluid exportation set, central electric sta tions exported 1,344,196,867 k. w. hours during 1923, which was 16.6 per sent. ot the total output of all stations. "***- ^ 11 —' ■■■ 1 1 l « II mai -T 1 "*■ 1 *' — ■mi in • -m • Contracted Cold at a ■* Billy Sunday Revival Developed Into Systemic Catarrh Recommends PE-RUsNA Mr. A. R. Wilton, LaFollette, Tenn* The letter written a short thne ago by Mr. A. R. Wilson of LaFollette^ Tenn., brings some more direct erf dence of the value of Pe-ru-na in thf treatment of catarrhal diseases. It reads as follows“While attend ing Billy Sunday's great revival at Knoxville, Tenn., last February I con tracted a cold which weakened my en tire system. I have taken only thre* bottles of Pe-ru-na and feel like ai new man. It is a great system builder) as well as a great catarrh remedy." To attempt to even estimate thd thousands who, in the last half cen tury, have come to know and appre ciate the merits of Pe-ru-na would b* worse than usel-ss. The number i* astonishing and increasing daily. Year nearest dealer lies Pe-rn-na la both tablet end liquid fora. Insist upon having Pe-ru-na, the original treatment for catarrh. How to buildup your Weight TO RE under weight often proves low fighting-power In t he body. It often means you are minus nerve power, minus red-cells In your blood. minus nemth, minus vitality. It Is serious to be minus, but the moment you in crease the num ber of your red blood-rolls, yon begin to become plus. That’s why ss. 8. s., since 1828, has meant to thousands of underweight men and women, n plus In their strength. Your body fills to the point of p o w e r, your flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that coine from thinness dis appear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel It, too, all over your body. More red Mood-cells! S. S. S. will build them. S. S. S. Is sold at all good drug stores In two sizes. Th«i larger size Is more economical. Worlds B^st oodMedidne British Labor M. P. a Poet One of the Labor whips of the Brit ish parliament is James Welsh, wh>» started composing poetry when he was eleven years aid and is now a nbvel* 1st of note. Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soup dally and Ointment now and then as needed to muke the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum, and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Advertisement. A man's headache seems n good deal worse when lie didn’t have any fun acquiring it. Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn’t hurt one bit! Drop a littleB “Freezone” on an aching corn, instant- B ly that corn stops hurting, then short-B ly you lift it right off with lingers. Jj Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of B “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient toB remove every hard corn, soft corn, orH| com between the toes, and the footB