HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-08-09, Page 6•
Green Tea drinkers do not know thOull enjoy-
' inen, t of Green- Tea• unless they. use A`SALADA"
Very choicest vorletYp•biended to Per-
lioction=packed In alr-tight metal toprotect the "
-flavour—Sells for only 38c per i -lb, --Ask for it a
• any grocer's.-
Chic Daytime Frock
•
7,5! ..„ •
F1145;w11-014 WatitIROW ",r4i
•4.1•113T RA -r By.
' RMA5A7rzikvirtas
America Ranks 1
LoW'in Air.Service
Investigator Finds Lindbergh
"Boom" a Colossal Flop '
Since Lindbeegh landed at Le Bour-
get there has been anextensIve"spread
of newspapet tallc about how he has
"boomed" aviatien throughout the
'United States, but J. Herbert :Duck-
' worth has thoreughy investigated the
situation and writes his conclusions
exploding this aviation propaganda in
the :Aligust.lseue a "Plain Talk."
"A peeneletten 'Was in Wrlingtein
last January," relates the. w ter in
"Plain Talk," "and, desiring to go to,
New Yorkin a hurry on ;important
business, iriqeired; in his :innocence,
about .'air schedules at his betel.' Ile
would have done the same thing utidee
similar "circumstances in any Eerie -
peen capital; The hotel porter acted
as, though he had been askedfor a
One table of the>nloway to the mean.
The puzzled Frenchmen needed help.
He taxied over to the office of the
'Aesistant, Secretary of.COmmeece for
Aeronautic's of he Dept of Coinmerce.
The men 1 in the Air •Information Di-
Viiiion Were obliged to „admit that
there Was .no air route ,operating out
ofWashingtonee'C'eateextrerdineirel'
• •
\‘.
•'Copley, :when I *uell/ doctor was
away. 1 IOW/lit to get Out. the dee_ ,r
and When she gave me the drug te
(Piet me, I accused_ her-,ot--having
a•giverf xne,an ever -dose in her mieite-,
Ment, She denied it, but was bother-
ed. • Then 'I pretended to lie in a du,
pot for almast an entire day. When I
came ta, I ficiedoaa if ',were stupid,
as if I ivretc. someone'. dime 1 said .1
pas 'a writer and asked for Pencils
and Ptiner, irkd wrote pages Of aan-
BE9Ijef-,11ERE. TOD. A Ire,•. vi).0,-yrop.)Eno` w Anything of Dr';
Bris-
1-lope Reagete,...daeghter, of weeteee tovee epgagenients?" she Asked nnex-
Leriags 'Ranger,. !diseppeers after a PeetedlYo• ' '
'luncheon with friendsat, the Plaza. A
'hundred-thousand:dealer: reward •""ia
•offered ,by the fatbet Jot -the ,safe re-
turn of his. daughter, . '. ,.1 ..,. • :
Ranger's two .friends, Xesticel.,Ilig
by, attorney', and 'Juarez Oharlie,eticl-
ventureee assist in the search for
Hope." •'". „ - "1 "a ., ; - -e
Acting- peon directione frem •Ho e,s
captors, Rengerleaves a hundred'
thoueancl dollars, worth of betide at ft
piece mentioned by the abductors.
At Ihs. BristeVe sanitarium 'George
•Kelsey is detained.. lie meets.- Vera
Copley, patient, who supposed to, be
sister to Anita Copley, muse. , Ater-
sonage comes to spend sortie tine at
the hospital and Dr. Morton tells KO-
eey, that he is called Alderreah Hig-
The SimPlidty otethe frock pictured
here will appeal at mice to the home
, modiste as a smart and easilY fashioned •
., style. 'The skirt has three plaits at each '
'side of the front and back and is joined '
to the bodice having a round or V neck
. • in front, a tie, and short kimono or long
•eleeves attached and gathered to narrow
• bands at the wrists. Of special interest
is the shaped belt which crosses in ehe
trent and gives a smart waist-coat,effect.
NO. 1602 is for Misses and Small Wo,
mem and it in sizes lc 18 and 20 years'. ,
Size 18 (36 bust) requires 334 yards 39-
• inch; or 234 yards .54 -inch material;
1/4 short sleeves require IA '3•Ard less 39 -inch
material. Price 20 40113 the pattern. •
. HOW. TO ORDEE PATTERNS. .
Write your name and address plain-
nuMber and 'size of such
patterne as you want Enclose 20c in
stanaps or 'coin (toin preferred,'' *rap.
fit carefully). for each number ,and
address your Order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 7,3 West Adelaide St, Torento.
:Patterns sen by return mail. •
•
exclaimed the, Frenchman." '
e 'Mr. Duckworth reveals that there
are no regular air lines carrying pas-
sengers from the principal cities of
the United States not to mention the
capital of the country. rttiliiing sta-
tistics to good, . advantage he dearly
shows that the ,United States is far
behind the. European countries in the
matter of air•transportation of pas-
sengers AS well ' as Of mail and -bag-
d •
gage. "
'Trade. VVith the 'West Indies
, Kingston, 3amilea,.. Mail: • ("the
Canadian Government are placing live
passenger and cargo veatiels on the
West Indian trade.) We are , inclined
to the belief that the.,five sips, will,
•not. only serVe to entourage greatee
:-"Try to take an airplane from New
York • to . Boston,"- says the "Plain
Talk" writer; "and you will discover
that there is no regular 'service be-
tween the world's lergest.eitseafid the
5-1,nah: of the Universe.' In fact, pas-
sengers' ate- carried 'only i by special
arrangement' From December :1' to:
April 1, no . passengers are carried
'ender, any circumstances." .'
. _Coniparing 'varlet's. sections of this
country With:itimiler portions of Eur -
open the "Plain„ Talk" Writer con-
cludeS that "when if comes to.passen-:
'ger-carrying 'airlines, :' the .United
States, considering her size, ,wealth
and.beia:sted.genips, itieke with Peesise
•and, until those really responsThle for
her Sorry plight Shake themselves. Out -
of their lethargy, it .would be only de -
"cent of the professional shouters for
aviation to soft -Pedal tr„ bit; Their
babhleabout,,the United States lead -
lag the world in .air transportation is
.ridiculous. ' . ^ :'
. "There is not, one Paesenger-earry-
ing, airlinein, the Whole of New. Eng-
land," declares :this -air in-vestigator
in Comparing that section of the Un-
ited •States with.Old•Epgland.,"plenes
leaete Proeden, . a :Lepden• suburb,
daily forall parts of Europe, With
connections to North . Africa and the
Fat East.. The:rates 'offer competition
to tlite railroads and the channel
steamers.. One can fly to Paris' from
•the $1;250,006 airport at Croydon (250
miles) for a little *der twenty dol-
lars., There is net a single patieepger-•
carryipg airline • reneieg from ' any
point on or near 'the Atlantic Sea-
board to any paint north, south, east
or west, with •tli exception of the
dinky little line, between Key West
and Havana. The Only lines in. this
.. .
vast area that are ‘cOmparable to
Western ' Continental .Ettropc',,are the
Chicago -Bt.. :'Plin.1, the Detroit -Cleve-
land and -the Cleveland:-Bufkalo. Every
Ainerican who has been abroad in the
last -few years kneels that 1.113 wh.olo
of.Europe is linktl,up with passenger
carrying airlines. from Oslo in the
north to Seville in , thi: south, front
London in -the west NO ooristantinople
In the' east,' and that . one •can travel
by air between 'aey of the Eurepean
capitals and between many 01; the
smeller Cities just as easily as one Can
trieel by the railroad.,'''. • , , •
..
Canad.ian-New Zealand Trade
NOW GO ON WITH TIIE ; STORY.
It came at last,' Kelsey had been
so intent on diseoveeing some ender- wee, we May be able to get away. ,
:, HO 'shook .111i. head, . "O.PlY/. :that 'I,
hoard him tell hisseeretary," he would
be. 'attendinga eitiner of the /Steclial
Society in tesen tomorrow " night," .'
,
"Tomorrow night!"' For some real,
sOn,.this seemed fto bee extreMely'im-
pearterit: . , 1 ,,, e - . . :
, "Arida Copley's' sick headache .,will
last two or three days; they always
de." '. She spoke s musingly As if the two
'facts to her held seine connection. •
Feaiin/gthat;he had already stayed'
too longavgth her, and. }mowing of •
no-
thing,•else A be said, Kelseeil rose 'te,
gobut she- deteined him with a quick
i
• "Weal" lie mild seethather .
fin-
gers Were trembling as she guided her
pencil; there was an exeited, tremor in
heevoice. "I must see you tomorrow.
Don't let anything prevent. I haste an
lying motive' in the 'request, that .he
had• not seen the advantage to , hini-
self. It was a great light, but still
he could not dvest himself of doubt
' "What's your gaine, Doctor?" he
asked bluntly. '
"I, wouldn't pull you out of the
Water if I saw you deoWhing,.er res-
cue you from a burning heti* But
it's foolish , for .a man to: cut ,Off his
He nodded. A„,nurse.wes moving to-
ward them, and he dared not linger:
a "I Will lay off about noon. and find
you." '
was ,eager of :couree to see what
the Message she had given him con-
tained, but he deliberately iteld
self in check. He ate his dinner, talk-
ed an hour of so with Morton, and it
Was not until he ,was erife in his zoota
nose to 'spaite•hisilfacel and rm"PrettY., and .4 had taken .every precaution
well fed., up on leafing. Perhaps, on against surprise, thiche ventured to
look at it. • .
• 'I was breught here," itilsegan with -
oat preamble, i'l• don't know how: The
next day -At must have been the next
day -Dr Bristow told me that I had
the understanding that I take over
this work solely for my own (1,1Lversion
and advantage,: and not in any Sense
to 'aid you, I might---.?"
"Put ton any grounds you please,"
Bristow interrupted with a• significant
!movement a thaeheeth, "ShalLI -ex-
pect you here tomorrow MorrOpg?" '
• - "Yes,' curtly. "I'll drawe up a sort
of schedule tonight of the subjects- to
be covered, and •heire it ready to sub-
mitetO-you."._ ee •
trade hetween Canada and the West
• Indlea; but tO* pave the.'way towards
.• the 'holding of another Trade pan,
.tereneo' at Ottawa to discus' the ad::
•' visability ot^Free Trade, between: the
DOMI1110fi on the one hind and the
British West Indies on tile' other -an
l'arrangement• that would .not Only go
., to Strengthen the British 'chain which
.
passes through the 'Caribbean Sea,
but would certainly afflict the aspira:
tions of : t,be United States to convert
. this' 'portion of the globe . Into an
Araerican lake. ' .•.
. CHAPTER KIII.
,
:Bari very seldom go exactly. as
'Planned. .Bristow hovered about all
morning, helping lay out the work;
.censulting books; offering 'suggestion's,
NEW
ANDY PAC
P.K.
K•
CHEWING/
SWEET
keeping Kelsey so besy that, he did not
have a Moment to :Slip away from hi
desk, and leek :for the; girl andthe
afternoon . was not leech .betteie . It
was:almost fiVeeclock before he felt '
free to leave the office and seek her
• :Moat Of thepatients, he saw 'with
their attendant nurses, were -clustered
. , „
over at the side of the lasen inter-
estedly Watchihg the 'destructien of a
.Wide section of , the wall beyond the
encit cling heige. . .
but his eyes were less engagei with tests -surprises, everything." .. •
"I 'heard Bristow talking. to Copley:
'She-nimble:he said at first but she
Was convhiped'hy this tinle that she
had given me an overdose, and filially
got him to thinking. so too:: 'I heard
him exfalaining to, het' about ,'shock'
and setnething 'a1out:4a congenitally
weak brain,' She,was, upset about it
•all; but he told her,"Bettor
true.' ,
'Ile *put, me through all kinds ;of
te4tS-Leserptises, everything. f. It was
dreadful, • but Mynerves are 'strong,
and r was fighting for rnylife.' He
talked to me about my Patentei; iny
halm. I was indiffeeent., Thep he
got to trying to make me remember
things that aren't true. He told me
my naine was Verna Copley,' and I re-
peatedit after them like a parrot. I
have ;only forgotten my pose With
.•••••
•"‘ A teiciPonnfuI of
Gillete.s Lye sprinIcIed
in ihe Garbage Can
prevents flies breeding
Use Cilletes 'Lye for all
Cleaning and Disinfecting
Costs little
DU( always
^ effective
:OM
.""
them once. That was when Copley ,
tried n hat on me and I caught a
glimpse of myself' and burst eut,laugle,
^,••••••,•••
Ancien ers
Days of Great Flying RePtilci
Repietured by Fossi
Discovery
• Eugene, Ore. -With man's co
of the air: now -holding the een
publlc attention,OspeciarInter
, attached to the ,diScOvery •of a
foselliZed bone near Mit
Ore: •whicif Is reminding a', n
• Selentistis of an earlier .,and, See
ly Iess successful .aftein.Rt: to i
e 06:realm of the birds,
'r but ,t'ePttlet.,,, pngag
these .early enterprises
developed, not. . Ina,chtnes, :but
• *membraneous, wingswith whic
piopel thernselvds: in: the "air,,%r!,
desalt°, tho. s('eming' power' .pf . theifd •
; wings,. whiehr-rn some) types-, reached .
4 spread of: as nu as. 20. feet,' the
flying"reptIles, ,;•or pterosaur, faded
out 0; the picture. All that, is left to, .
,reniind men .of Sikh .prea,tures' are ti,'•
few fossilized rends:ins; 'siteh'? as that.
found by ,Dr. E. 1.. Packard, tiltOfesior
of geology At thp UnlVersity of- Ore: ,
gon, while: on • an' .investigatien • in
Wheeler A:Minty last *sunimer.
, Dr. packards'; discovery , Is 'espe-
cially important' as It ia the , first "
•skeleton • of the^ kind • :found west of .
'Wyoming,: indicating the . pterosaur
, existed along the horesof the . ere -
Useful •t Campers taeecius sea which,. ettended at ono
ing.. tut it 3.Nai so grotesque that
Mountains" in Oregon. Tbat the skele-
"I' have been afraid to make Myself .
known to any one: To say that,1
Hope 'Ranger Would, onlY convince
most people • eluit I am the lunatic I
appeate But • I am,' Hope Ranger,,
and I know that you will believetme,
just,
as I heieved• you."• ' •:.
(To be continued.)
-• .
111.111.1.111110111111
Folding -Boats
even an imbecile would have laughed. o time as far east , as the Achoeho
knock -down, take-down, folding ton is that of a bona fide Pterosaur
o collapsible boat. -,whatever you
please to gall it -is not a sure-fire con-
traption- for getting an unexpected
bath as the old-timecampers Jcontend,
but accordink to the Camping Editor
•••—•
• eRetIlity
.Thank •Gesl• for thingwe . see. and
' • teuch- . •
• . . •
,For booksfor chairs, and mealS and
He stood leaking on ;with ,tlei 'others, ' put me through all kinds Of
• ' • . .
4i,, ,,i1 than in sifting the geoup of
Our love that died„our.-hatethat:Seaka
Are ghoats, '.;abstractions., Through
, the • Yeere •
We two Shall. cling eogether, -tied
By, habit; courtesy .and pride, .
leatiTse1eyeeelus1ite8e0neareegoriee__._._.
But coffee einie have bandies" onl
,---Loulse Garwood in ,Vaiiceuver
1
813etatc'i•s for sight the girl and been very ill and was •in a hoSeital,,
She was not .Present, when . he finally that I wOuld see My father and
•
lie had about made: 11P:his mind that r'out
haw'her Sitting on *stime bench alit•-
tle removed from the rest.• . •
Kdsey looked about for the: oMni-
preseet nurse, but she was noWhere, in
sight; so he walked boldly over and
seated hirnself on the bench.. " •
. ' Ile felt the girl start and turn but
he did net glance at her. • With his
elbow on his crossed 'knee, chin in
hand, he 'set watching the demolition
of the Wall. , '•
"Where.is Miss Cppley?"' he asked
under ,hiShreath., '•• '
"Ill?," she 'answered: 'She's got a
sick headache. Another of the nurses
is supposed".to be looking after .me,
but she's now.
"Oh," she went on in a fervent
Whisper, "I've prayed that you would
come today. : I've dared so much on
the. strength of • it.: 'It was so neces-
sary that I Should, see you." .
"And •e?o, that I should see• yea,"
he broke in. "I have neWs. • Bristow
.has engaged me to lielp him in the
preparation of sine magazine articles:.
1: will be in his officee in a position to
know everything that goes: on. 'Per-
haps--?" • ' • -•
."Weit!" she, interrupted. , "Before
any one comes, I have fiereething I
want to give you," • •
She cast a eearchin"g glance about;
and thee slipped.'a bolded paper from
between the Sheetei of her pad, letting
it fell on the Seat ' between them,
screened hy her frock.
He dropped his t hand over „ it, arid
with deft ileight-o,-liend tiesnsfereed.
it to his, pocket, bringing: up in its
stead a cigeret.: •
. "It's, safe," hipass.ur,o4 h
"And now rtie about r Work
with Bristow," she said.
He • • did se briefly, explaining the
features conneckethwith it that might
inure to their henefiL,, •
"Also," he went .on, "I have timed
out', about Biggins as..yon` aelted inc
' Auckland (1,1..); Star: NeWi -Zee,"
land is Canada's seceed - beat • eta-
. , fennel.. in the Enipire. We ipead on•
: A‘..tr..v4t, in, the repp .eFrint-gavore'd • th9 tentage Mere that thr,ee Million
iu0aF-6;ste4 jacket and :aaatilii. In Wttillehd°'. le II:Jeer:1. than Canada !.tr°a(Iwst;
the•Peppernaint,fiavated suns 'imd.cleme 'trona Alistralla with foUr, times Our
• . , len :stands' e alb. in del: 'of IM:
mether, soon, I belieVed what he said
for a littleeehile: But When theeffeds
of the drug' ".;iore nattst have
'been' 'given: drug ---LI felt well and
strong, .parents:. did ,not 'cone,
there. were ekeusei. • insisted` oe go-
wg home.. ' -Bristow and the CeP-
Iey woman'Wetildn't let :When
tried to. go, they prevented me by
force' screatned And etttiggled
Then the DectOrriet a drug int& My
erm. These ,scenes happened several
-tit-ries, and always ended in .the same
way: They never let me . get out • ,
that. One fem.' .then one day when
Copley thought I was asleep,' I •heard
her talking outside Mse'door.te another:
Province. ,.
Minard'i klnimetit-A reliable. first aid
,.• ,
'utmost' value in lentOasting' deligi;tr poltatitaf, fitt tko*New Zea-
, .
ifiSUE 'NO. gi
r
portant° among Canada's customers,
thp Canadlein ,rifarket 'is not very
valuable to Us. 'rnas president of our.
'21011'11)er-0f Catriknoree' recently •Point-
oitt thitt while the.' :average 'value
of .oni collodion imports .for t.hree
years has been 44,1154,606 . the alitril
ago nt our to CiMada, has, been
1410 thttn• ta,"'. million • poundit-o.btniti
.4,8i34;000, •
" '010'01000.*:°•°40..
,M 1 ft 4' $ nirne tit for Blistered' Feet tile
.
mmigration
IVianchester Guardian (1.11).)n (The
Is eritabli.shed ',through, its 4dentifica- •
tion by the Smithsonian Institution at,
Washington, 0.c., .when.ce, Dr. 'plack.
ard..sept the. odd -shaped Naafi. .
of the identification has just :been •re -
of ^."Forest and 'Stream Magazine," a \ ceived here from Washington.
valuable addition to any woodsman's The patio whfeh:Dr.•.,•Packard found
pack. • - formed the otmer...,11.xrn ot the flying
"It ifs strange SO relate /and ypt
fact nevertheless," .points out ,this ex-
pert, "that the great worth of these
take-down boats has yet to be uni-
versally :recognized, -•,and : it is even
riore'aJittleirnown-fiet-that-mostan11,
Archbishop. of Melbourne, 'speaking, at
a Manchester ..LuaChebe • • Pleb, :said
that on • the question ,of- linmig-ration
a greet deal bad been said that,. ought
to bo Unsaid.) iThe ..three.eualificae
Hoe§ reqiiired Of the Inetnigrant•eve.re
` • ••
reptile, he says. One of the fingers., .
on the hand ,at the end .of this arm
extended to great length,' and pa-
tween. tbie and the leg of the -reptile
was the'Tgreat, menaraneous Wing,
net;_...unlike—thg. of a • hat.' , •r:
of these boats' are made staunch' Sufficient information; upon the Iden
enough, unshakable enough so. as to elfleatiois df Dr. Paphard's find
permit an ,outboard motor being used has not been received to make
In combination with them. , 1 ' it possible for him • to reconstruet •
"Leietmmer," continues the eche' - eir. ----the particu.:,. -
tor; "I. was trying but for .the first lar creature • of which this 'hope was
time a cc•llapsible canvas bot A party 4 Pall,. He.avae -able to :visualize:: the
'
. . ,
looking ever our • outfit and inquiring reptile, flying over the',slatillow waters
about what 'sort of boat We. 1v4re:' go- on the margle of the sea, nicking ep
ing to use -Was shown the Salim in its fish , and mall foVv,1 for food.: r
take-down state I was promptly- told •ludt-,, why the reptiles .have been
that I was crazy for trusting awater, unable to retain domination of the air
craft of the sort.. One gentleman said is problematical, . according to 'Dr.
it would the bast thing he would Packard. ekThe leek .of feathers may
venture into . and that a a thousand.: be. a factor, and • certan differences in
iloller bill would not him out on a hones structure, another... The ptero-
lake in one of them:. To back him' up Baur, nr flYIng dragons, at they are ‘,
there were Vigorous head shakings elle sometimes celiSd, were 'Able to fly
around and 'figuratieely, I was already Many mileS, Dr. Packard "believes.
, While this le the only' specimen el
this -.particular type found by Dr.
Packard, thousands of specimens giv- .
Ing evidences of the, encroaChmente,
of the 'sea 'into what is pow inland
on • the Pacific Cerist have 'been•••lis-
cevered. These include anunonites;
clams, enails,, and other fossils'. It
Was on the shore of this sea' that Dr:
Packard di.scovereil the fossilized
leiii•e et the -pterosaur.
. .
waters.. cevered the great' 'inland •
basin east oe the Rocky ;MOuntains,
and on iti, shores, particularly '
Wyoming and `Oklahoma, other re-
rnains the pterosaur bave been .
found, but in 'all .there see very' few
in North America
eonrage, wiSclom end- petience, and. 'numbered with Yesterday's ten thou -
'firait'of till he Would Put .courage. Ne. Sand years. eofar...a.e.niy earthly Pres=
teen should ever collie to Australia' if, enee,weSeencefnede 'Arid. yet we came
he, thought he Was'going to A soft joie down , One .of the fest rivers, of •the
beceeSe he wesn't. , It meant hard northein this , outfit ' (One hundred and
Werk- feat the mane, rather harder fifty Miles, ,bY the way) And, cOniplet.
Work.for. the Wenian; eind men should ed the. trip unscathed,. in. feet 'did, not
'Pet .come, toe; old, nor :ik they had; the .ship water once.: while . going down
ankiety, of a oonsioorahie.' faintly: He twelve Miles Of as. treaphetions4apide
preferree: te have AmMigrants. quite as you. can find anywhere.' The same
• .
young, so. that, possibly from boyhood is" tree. of nut take-down or ,collap-
and igirlhood, they ' Might hail& the eihle .boats. ' Were people .to really
feeling that they .really, were "Atis, bave: confidence theta. there' would,
tralian,- and grow Up' In an atmoeplieee be hundreds of: 'vacations that wohld
in • which, homesickness • should not be successes ihstead° Of certain
play too Predominant a part It was ures,
not the least good a man' going 'Out:
10.
"This woman said': 'Is your ester
•
getting ane better" and Copley an
swered in a Weepy ;voice: 'No; she'll
neer be any better, I'm afraid." They
talked' a .while, and then the. other
nurse said t `If you wee a littleYoung-
er,' deatie, and hadn't. been here for
years, I'd 'try and. get the hundred
thousand dollers reward for that mies-
rig Hope Ranger. You're almost
dead isinger for her.' 1
"Then it all 'flashed over Me, what
they -were doing ; why, I, Hope Ranger,
"Oh, yes?" But the interest she had
shOwn the„„clay before,t0 the'"dperopit
old ' man seemed to have waned. ,
' "Re's \hand in glove with,13riateVe"
said Kelsey, concluding liti :sketchy
report. - "And' I have no doubt is just
as big • a
, "Arid Copley, too" .edded the girl
with conviction. "They're all three
crooks together." '
i
keiseyellimself had -ttittc ether sem°
Idea, but he hadra,Wanto to say it,
Strange, that she should Speak, so of
her mato, .
But already her thoughts seemed
to have turnod. in anothet, 'direction.
Site was gating again in the gap In
was in 'thie,place--": •
The sheets of the letter. shook .in
,Kelsey's hands.
"After•I heard these Women talking
and understood what it meant I nearby
went mad, trying to think what to do:
r had alteedy tried,tte `bribe Copley,
but she is in love with Bristow and
absolutely rifled by hint. • So I just -
sat ...thinking ; plane,. plans seething
through my brain--" , •
"I leriow all about that," muttered
Kelsey as he paused to turn the page.
Then she quickly eesumed:-
• "I was so furieus, so despairing, so
beat on finding some' away out, that I
wouldn't even look at Those tWO, the
only persens I saw. I wouldn't epeak
to them, or notice themf in any way.
They couldn't understand the reason
for the change in ine,-and vete Sur-
prised. I sew them exchanging
glances. And then it cameto me, I
don't`know,hoNsi, that if 1 pietended•to
be silly and net reniember'. anything,
they might letsme Out of that room
and go about as / saw the others doing
from My window.'
"I worked up another scene 'With
in geciw • epples- and peratoes whose ledge..., "Speeding, soh? • How •inany
.whele. life had: been • sPen:i. at the loome: times have -you ben :before. me'."
_ere 'should not 'go' out unleas he ,had Speeder*: "Neeer,. •yeee Hewes.. 'I've
*sem:ething. or .porneepe. to go W. .• tried' to..pase, you on the •road- onee
, . •
-J -," or twice, but my bus will do only fifty
-
Gloria ' Swanson won't yeti ,have five."
some tea? Lon Chaney: Ceigng will'
it. take? 'Gloria L'svanenn: I don't
know,- but I'll Ceylon.--ludge. '
„
, "Twenty -eye years ago," 'aitya Lady
Astor 1was taught better geography
than my smaa are to da Geography,
'of...p.ourse, wasvery much, 'better in
those days. e: •
,
3iliz'o.:5r.cJX.ZI aig.. Net*.•&. XIV ig
,
14:5 Wt• :1:"rIY.,atIOsat.111r);(1
iit$181°tr:tjer;1
fibillPing 1'0, Write
picycles WO• Messmer.
ie03
1.
es eftlille OATA.,
4 1 At t z
it! 1 If
IteoriitrkIlitcy:Cle/4
191-3-0 13Undas
5"(411i0 "Air.. Toronto.
. .
11
WHEN .IN TORONTO
EatTeinti S4q..,at ;
SCHOLES:tIPTEL
YONGE ST., Opposite ,Eaton'S
Rates: $1 Per Pay and tip..
, I
HAVE HOPED FOR
who wear double vision
glasses will fully. appreciate, the
advantages of 13eIng able • to see
above, below,and all round the
_reading field. The ample reading
segment Is 'the exact shape of the
path, of the eye le readin„.g.-
A British Invntion,
Ask Your Optical
SIMONDS
SAvis
aomachinq-Knives
..MONDfal CANADA RAW C0.1..ra
. monrregni,
VANCOUVER, GT,. JOHN, N,Dzi
TORONTO ki
EN ANAL
/
WWI %V. \\VAN.,.\\ \VAANVAU\\\•4N2(\11611.)11A1,A\MAVI
MOST People knowthis hbsolute
antidote for pain, but are you easeful'
to say Bayer when you buy it? And
do' you always give a glance to see
Bayer on the • box -and the word
---,gesuilie printed in rcd? It isn't the
genuine Aspirin, without itl A drug-
store always- has Bayer, With the
proven directions tucicedin every &Al
'ttln
t tile trade int* ,
ttieletetet1 in (annata) , , a.
ndlatitinit lierar Mennteetnro. While.. ft aft
fpfieeVintlreetelOtti '4,71`i'lliroattn.l.R741671%1:,
a tiolate wall be ettenpeal with Oietz "pagm
tiste". ttetleameek. .
•
•
•
M1 -
Befuddling the Brain ,
theeelew '•Statesman (Lon; .
dee): '(In an article On thei:Pring0.of
Wales. a Writpt in.•• eLondon Sunday
newspaper says : "You will • not fled .
'hen befuddling. his Mind; with books,".)
1 de not remember pier:reeding a sea:. •
tenee with 'morecurious insplications. .„
beeisSi only •befeddle, the hralit, •
'then • it would Obviettsli-thp .better
all the schoole were. Shut and School: '
masters -; who teach reading; lwriting
and arithinetic to innocentdilldren•
should :he ,sent to prisonas. public '
dangers. . . we are inclined
to da .to exaggerate , the Apipottence
of reading and writlng t� the growth
of ihe. intelligence, , A considerable
,pereentage,of .human beings Would ho
J4St afi intelligent as they are a t pre.
sent thee , had never learited to read ,
or 'write, and. I' hare knoWn. Men who
could not read or write and who Were
'neverthele'ss • better' eempany; "Mote. .
irnagitiative and. more 'intelligent than,.
others who could Speech plays, 'aa
'fel! More IMportant part in the life Of
.the ordinary. Man.. than reading" and
writing; -It 1 posaibio for a Man whoie
cap neither ,read 'nos. Write 'CO bO, eith-
er, a good fiOef or a .good larmer, and
eontaleieg good pate' ',end
good farmers Is a world. ie •which ony
o 'Its ought to: he e•easonably happy.
The World's- Work. -
Chet& Times (Letelen): The lucky
Mitiorileacien their living With 'pleas-
ant and aothetimeS OcaCting ,taskfa.
They,",Vatalt with 'a zest.. They tire not
the, least Inelhied tostrike foe ed
oight-Itotart, dey. • . Bet ;for thehiejoillY,
lb the circurnstancea et the reeeere
werld, work la' itiorieteinetta .ixed dune. ..
A Man might well Write A. lama -or
paint. a pietere.,or preech.a. eerrnmi . or,
Speed long hourn In:a Chun.' lout labbrav
tory 'without any thought at wages b •
Saturdayk It is no ..coneolvalito :th
`a sane man would clean, a iteWer'or,a
Ant for fun!' .And lnee theisee'
are Melly and linpletieeet things
to be Arnie hi a etedetei torenitinity, it
Is. snrelY,, eely deeetit that Sodety;
beileilts,' should- See that, its
Servants' :are paid . adequately" aud:
:t1iaan1d'.1itiVe Bdfflthflt ktfittrO' to '601n.:
• ;Peilsete them tbt their hours of taboi...