The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-15, Page 2• .,
OWn-4.)0e4 WODOWYot-
tausTilbarsty RY
Vt,41.5ftetrelkrtt-D-i •
•
---- -fa •,....—. . ,---..........._
,- land1;-7=4:4t-„attiuh. in a sarPris? U. '
a k. 0 . • - nique, air
They spoke in one joyous breath,. •f
• •
sind WithebrevitY. 1 A cialL'0d
',k. .
"Sure," said Mr. Leffler, /LS ID Fbritain
"Get in," said 3lr, Greenberg.,
nor° vrho was close behind Charlie • • ••
CHAliTER XXX.h.:e proposed. We don't Want to 'Pon
The straggling process' ion oe„sein homecoram:g wall lean
au *et, whIeb is the 'Merrick Read, was hi"Pt1Th'14`rdt; Cha23 "'at'
th t' been
goese-fteshingme all the way, the fear
that we `might fall into the hands of'
yourself.
Lieutenant at detilt• looks up. etWhy,
alinest ended; that White Xibbon, of
'Maceflani and oyster -shell, with one
Village shirred on to anether as it
folio" the windinP Of the South
Shore-, was about to fray Out into the
ai1Phalh thread* et th° *Y..' all know him.
Charles mercurial OPirit was over-; st. Taa had aa, ,aseral time, Lieiden,
Cast with misgivings;-shadawed by the eat,' says BBL 'These three lunatics
Perturbing chainis'of resPonsibilit• capture me bYa.trlek, and have been
'41stiniticar. •Ile *tinted to A hill,. dragging me all over Loeg•Islaud. The
side ahltad.'*ith "scattered lights pier vromaa thinlies,,ehes the missing Hope
it,.sas he termed, hack 'tit Hope and Ranger.' Whit's the result:1;We three
the bulls. Figure it for
Alderman Higgins, what's WO They
Kelsey.: going t� stop here and are locked ' Bill calls a. taxi and
telephone. 'And, PM% better gag rides away,' ' • "
:liam the Silent there, and sit on'him, He ' gave a convulsive 'start, and
while about it. We dont want to stared over HoPe's, shoulder. int.° 'the
attract such attention as he'd love to inirror at the side of the windshield.
create, if he had half a chance."
Choosing an inconspicuous; place\ to
stop beyond the Peace* Monument,
Charlie drew up to the cerb and hur-
ried Altai' drag dere. After an inter -
i; he reappeared; much of his cus,
ternary jauntiness reetored.
"You can draw your own conclu-
stens, when I tell you I wateexchang-
ing a few.' remarks with a 'lawyer
whose name begins
Charlie was hick in, his agate,
by -this-time..:-.11Ve've-got-tos.ho-on
Our way nose
But when he attempted to drive on,
the starter wouldn't work. For several
niinutes he fussed with it, following
various suggest:km from" Kelsey and
Hope; but it was plainly out of order,
and he Was anxious tit- avoid further
delay. • •
Muttering anathemas on the•ballty
device, Charlie clambered down again,
• lied went to the front of the car to
crank up.
--His-experience- at-eranking-had -been
, hitherto -confined to flivvers. He did,
not reckon on the superior hOrse•hower
of the limousine. On the Xecpd revo-
lution the: engine backfired,' hurling
him 'site the middle ef the street.
He picked himself out Of.the mud.
All his deboallair CoMPlae, eneY• :had
vaaisheth Be steed ,lselitles the TUr.i-,
"My God'!" He whirled on Kelsey.
"What are you doing back. there?
Can't yeti see the old devil is play-
ing 'possum on you? He' been, signal-
..
. •
"Our adventure is -just beginning,"
she =immured. • • -
ingaut of the window with his hand.
Pidn't Make. any difference to , him
snug board, his face twisted with pain, which, way we -carne. He can raise a
gingerly holding. his right arm. 'bunch Of gunmen in any part of
Unnoticed by either of the men, towns • ' • „. •
Hope had slipped past them and run "Look back, and see if theres any
to the from of the car. ..She grasped one after mil"
theerank which hachproved so vicious
toCharlie, and with a deft turn or two
had catighilhe spark. 'No, she came
drive the rest of the way to
town," she said. "Well get along per-
feetlsr."
But before Kelsey emild do so„Hope,
whose eyes were on the mirror, gave
a &Y.
"There's a touring car 'hill of men
sist turned in from RiVingien Street.'.'
' CHAPTER XXXIi
. With the car onie mere i7/ MOtiOn,
Steadily, surely, the gunmen's car
, and the difficulty apParently smoothed
-xi= creeping up. At Washington
' away; Charlie began't° talk 'Alit! cairn' Square it had been, more than the
accord. ., . 2.,....... width of. the ' park ahead; new, the
"You see,, Bill," kindly, ' if 6
'- Y-"'"" diStance was .1e -,e. than two blockS.
"counting on any one haying listened -
As she came abreast of the Library,
in. on my talk to Iligby, you're goIng the colored mcions of the traffic tower,
to be fooled." , ''' •• • at Forty-second street flashed ..frori
Their prisener. roused Up at this, yellow -to red to green. She had lost.
and bent forward. 'Pilaw's. 'thatr the. eight of !Way. All over now' - It
gratingly' ' ' ' ,.,.„ A._ would be madriess to think of trying
"Whey, High/ 9t..course .7anwm *1•°. its dart 'throu4h that eloselecked line
IsnoW /test where l• Was, and h°7'w kng of ,cross-toWn travel. . .
before I'd arrive, and how I was cone- Charlie had a sudden' inspiration: .
. ing, arid all that SO, just to be on the Feel in Higgins upper, 1eft-ha/4
safe sides I am doing oMetly the op -
vest pocket" he sheeted back" to Kel-
' posite of what I told him." • , ttey, and. see if he liasn't got a :police '
He hardly stirred again • but all the
.1. . card!" • . ..
..,, .way through Brooklynt say. in that Quick to catch the cue, Kelsey leap-
. , state of collapie, one arm hanging
ed at Higgini, and rifling him, thrust
limply out of the windo*, two or 'three quare bits of pastehoard
And now the skyscraper of -Man- through the front window. '
batten loomed . before them •across .the Shuffling them iipitily, Charlie
• river. Soon they were over the Wit- gang Mit in triumph. -
lianishurg . bridge; • and through. the ' "I've got it' Keep en moving, Sis-
' East Side streets, Hope drove -towards •te e •• . . , • .
sprang into the Greenberg car; and New Fabric Termed One of
Charlie and Heise3r. 4144417 Mr' 144" Great Achievements of
Ser, dragged out Higgins, a dead
weight on Per 'bands-, Old hustled th0 Chernist.
him in after her. Reise$F followed, and An artificial silk exhibition recently
CLarlie enserasm4trelttdheduPOblVhdi-Ps:thhea°ddrivienrd. ti°4:;:r-tan'adllusti7 ry:Fsebirgte-trhe' triefoVist
story of
leideccompre-
%"*Atd, ohua, yntodureehrdaet me
'gfifao!"y thousand a thheanst ihveasde43oernbeietrantiasonse.., of Ithede infaEbrincgs.
ed earl.) "yaut'r piker after all t
you've got.", • ' the opening ceremony, Lord Col-
. Greenberg swung into Fifth Avenue, iwyn said: This Indust has Co to
and -Charlie drew hes,first long "meat/11011y and •it will make its mark OPea
since they had started., Also, for the the world. And We Are net alone.
first time in his adventurous career, Other countries have get this, fire anti -
e felt a warin,..emo len regard.for ficial silk business. ' see that Japan
is. growing and developing.: Italy made
in 1927 22,090 ions of artificial silk
and they employed 35,0)00 'workpeeple;
Japan is doing one-fifth of that now,
nd those of you who .know whit Japan
is and the power and enterprise of
that little country know that they Will
develop • it. . '" •
BRAZIL STARTS.. FACTORY
way, Bill, Charlie spoke in Pain -'-land. Many leadingmanufacturers
r e a • contributed to the display. The range
Our price iS ut 01/ab1e whatever of fabrics and colorings was striking-
That piquant, mellow smoothness 'of "a fine Japan
tea cannot be appredated unless it Is triedintlie-,
cup, Try this delightful greenlea,
Fre, sh freak the Gardena
es—and were obliged to crawl through Reports
• Of "White Indians"
rungs of es big ladded, -then get into
elate.idrace Ifi yards to the finish
line. • * •
Death •
sieve been half in love with esis6.
ful Death.''Keafiii • '
I have seen houses Ione and desolate; •
• Regret seeinedstill to linger at the
• door;,- •
Windows were eyeless; all•ash-strewn.
the grate;
While trackless ghosts met on the
. dusty Boor, . •
Dat i•have 'seen faces that Death left
• '" smooth
Revived
the petite. • • •.
They were eprinkled: up and down
the thoroughfare, guarding it for sev-
eral blocks from the Ranger home. ,
The long strain was over for all of
them. . Kelsey, sitting beside Hope, felt
,vast.relief and at the seine time an
infinite sadness• .
Tal;tached.e cartSheain
3v
' awas saeano
ilingfindi. his
he
those who loved her; a great heiress
slipping into another world than his.
Be was, an Unknown, peer young man.
Already the tar was drawing, to-
ward the sidewalk. . •
. "I want to say goodbye before you
reach home.". His voice was shaky.
.She loved him; so inunediately‘she
divined his trouble. , ' •
"Geerge!" She looked at him with a
quaintly Mischievous smile. "I didn't
know you were, shy., Are you afraid
oJ My father and mother"
It hint,' that light tone. "The 'ad-
venture's over," he said, stoically calm.
"I couldn't take advantage of your-e-
.r1.74+L-7
pt
Her lips brushed his cheek
.. "Our ,adventure is just beginning,"
she murmured. "A beautiful one this
time." ' • ••
• •
aria e
SM.4.RT FOR CLASSROOM
, A cunning one-piece school dress f
wool jersey in new rtst 'Shade for the
smart young miss of 6, 8, 10,12 and 14
years. The 'peter Pan, 'collar is of
crisp white linen, with tie of dark blue
grosisrain ribbon Style No 932 re-
. .
quires so little time to make, and is
so serviceable. For the 8 -year-old, 2
yards of 36 -inch material with 14 yard
of. .20-iech contrasting ie sufficieet.
Two major -parts to pattern; front
shirred on shoUlders and along lower
, H held it ou te sho the signature Meshed openings . at either side at
' 'Spying* the green lights of a . police ef the Nike cat
station, Kelsey called Charlie's atten-
Iniesio
net, as SUI :waistline. Navy blue wool crepe, print -
tion to them.
"Lea get rid of our paseenger.".
• hafid,Y
"Tliteit -lienerd. `7,1,5. -re
• • I fit
your • • •
•
Pee
-.-igot-llope Ranger here, um •wa ,
c bt18. tet her -hearse, •Oreenberg, Xon
••
• •
angry traffic .cop came bellowing • to-
ward thein, and as if. by magie, the
way opened.
"And now for home!" breathed
Hope ; ,• '
"No; this •wsvy;outl" 'Charlie waved
imperatively to the left on Forty-
fourth street." '"Don't think that 11h1's
Sunday school class will lay down as
easy as that. • I'll het that the tele-
phone Wires are 'buzzing right now to
the uptown' bunch; There'll he a gang 1
at eithee end Of the block where your
father lives, Waiting for us. I'm going
to takeyou to Acme people•l.knont on i
the West Side antil sure of a
clear .track.P
So, under h'is direction, Hope, drove
to the apartment on Central Park
West, which housed the Greenberga
Me; and Mrs.-Greenbeig, the Prin-
cess and Mlccas-thy, the ladies iiI
ed Jersey, printed; velveteen, plain
Jersey, in lovely Frenchblue shade,
nile green chambray, printed sateen,
candy striped cotton broadcloth, green
pique with white polka -dots and plain
tan ghigham are attractive. Price 20e
in stamps or coin (coin preferred).
Wrap coin carefully: '
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
'Write yOur name and address plain -
y, giving humber and 'size of such
patterns 418 you ant knelose 20e in
stamps or eoin '(coin preferred; wrap
t carefully). for each number • and
ddress your' order to Wilson Pattern
ereice, 73 Wesf.Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by return mail.
Minard's Liniment for Asthma.
8.
gay evemeg -wraps, were disappearing -.
through the doers, while Mr. 'Leffler r
'was, holding a light to' the cigaret of ! i
Mr, Dave Grnonberg, who 'was jut t
abetit to drive the fainilY carto the {
garsige. • ' • 4. t
"Greeeberg! Wait!'" Charlie hailed; 8
and .5tImping from the limetisine as
' lib Pe (hew e p, -rushed tea art) -she ,ivel
Good Deeds r,
e.ie is good' that:does good to others.,
f lie suffers for file good he does, he
better' 1,1111:ill; and It he suffers from •
hem to whimIie did good he . ifs
a
rrieed- to -that :height of, goodzies,
iutt nothing but an inerease of his
utfering eau add to its. if it proves
h
Is death, ,his virtue it; at Its summit.
e voiftre eoni p1' ,nruye re. .
,
•
I itli;i.anrlIdaIc does
vell to pi -sent •Iiiineelf as promineiii-
y as. possible, , Whether his tiekbr
Brazil has started manufacturing
artificial silk." They imported it up to
laskyear, but now they are making it
themselves. Norway, where we get
the wood -pulp from to make artificial
silk, has started to Make it • herself.
Little Greece has got an artificial silk
factory., Great Britain is not going to
be behind in this great Art antL_the
'fabrics which are on exhibition r think
cannot be, surpassed in the whole
worl
• In opening the eihibition. Dr. Pick-
ard. said:, "Speaking purely as a
scientist, 1 can • only 'expriss wonder
at the results that areon exhibition
-here. On perusing the various ex -
habits It 'it is extraordinarYhow the
fabrics, 'both those, composed of art
silk alone aid those composed of more
than one textile., materialalong with
art silk, have improved ithin the list
twelve. months, • '
TRIUMPH FOR CHF•IMIST. . •
, ,
"The industry of artificial silk ie
one, of the achievements of the chew-
ist,-at any rate the cheinist inade the
initial discoveries, but we must not
lose sight of the, achievementa., that
were necessary before' the .industrial
development of the factory could pro-
duce the results which we now See, be-
fore. us. When you realize all the
properties which go to Make an aceept-
able fabric not Only the'lustre,and the
appearance but the 'feel' and Pe way
in which they can be varied with the
extent that, is possible, one is 'lost in
tiarniratimi at the success of the work-
ers in this field."
Seniors or Juniors
Play These Games
'They Ada Fun to Field Day
. Sport
Several. days ago, Pearl Poh-ier of
Plantagenet, one of the senior Coiner
members, wrote for a leaflet telling of
interesting ganiee .which might. be
played at. her school's field' day sports.
Since we did not have , a' ;leaf-
let all ready to pop into an envelope,
we had to do quite a bit of remember-
ing and hunting upIn case other
Meces and nephews are interested, we
are•gieinghelew part 4 .the answer to
Pearl, describing games, novelty, races,
WALKING RACE IS FUN.
•• Are you having' a "walking race"?
One of the most amusing races 1 ever
saw was a "walking race" at my uni-
versity Field Day Sport% Those tak-
ing part were unasually tall students,
Of course it is against the rules to
break into a run, but it is, , a great
tetriptation when backers of your
'rivals run along beside you, pretending
to hurry you up, but really tempting
'you to break intoa, trot. ,
• DIVING THROUGMBARREL
Another race with lots Of latlighs for
the spectators is an "obstacle rice."
In the one in which I Wok part, the
contestants were obliged to lie down
with bodies aWayfrom arid headson
starting 'line. At ' the signal "Ge" we
sprang, to standieg position and ran
15 yards•to barrels. We were expect-
ed to "dive" throtigh these. We ran
five yards farther and crawled through
a large net Five yards ahead we had
to 'climb Over a pile of sticks, etc.,
which made a .great bonfire after the
sunset for the e.artipfire sing song We
continued 15 yards—with our scratch-
'drive US ThereS p'e•Wil g-taimexi
• s
after us. 'Leffler, a.te yoU gaine, to.seeet
our eat four_er five
tiere is a treat that cant .0,htrot arx4 leave Aro
be beat! Benefit and pica,. I, Vor the t:est of his life Charlie re -
sure itt .
generatis measurei tained art,itiordmate respeet for those
so too, yOUrig men. They took tbe, situa-
sta 11.61. tion standing. No running around in
/F•10010r11111111 riairor
mars eXeiternent. No fool clues.
They bad been,:in the ivai, and
l$SUE Na, '28
or' net, he is rehearsing ter
:long olleace,—Wasblottot :Star•..
goioroori'm are
YU reallY and trifly IoVe With the"
SOlonion: "My dear, you are orie in '
hooSsual" ; " •
Aren t the debgintur rp the
weter,1 •Vos, and winxt A. relief to
netlerstinsi the Value of quick tht hing have f" .fr hg 0111 of slight. •
When' in' 'Tore:into,. tali at ourWareo
to Ito these.- :wenttertin'
' initrareente Utirialit. Player
and Grand Pianos — oe Write for
ttStrated Catalogue add Price List
.
Hemtztriart .
195 Yonge St. ,7f Toronto
„ „
'
•
From wrinkles, dug by Care. .
Where did he find,.
The twenty, years Time lost some-
' , where since youth, ,
So that forgotten features came to
Mind? • • •
• ••.
And I have thought—if thus the body
.Deith to the soth ofzna good
mast he; • • ,
stains beauty
Must ,it wear; • '
hat sinidowless peace enjoY;lvben
ft is,, freeii
• • • ' •
And at a door where'Donbt stood witli
a chill
r tot-Mc:Death left a smile. Open the
—Alexander Louis Fraser.
'YOUR SKIN
Can be made'perfect, •bY LtiC •duiii -use
of HECHHHC110 .-Por, Ladies
who care'
One 2-ounee Jar of Vanishing crethn
and 1 Bon of Pace -Powder .inaiieit
any addreSs in Ontario for $1.00.
. sonawrnown, 1
2118 TIMM Stele , Toronto
pare,- , the ores,
epee ,df "'White. -the Anis.;
aen VJey have been revived •A•by
nelespaner dispatches published here
tellingof; the discovery • of Bach In-
dian; in •the Arayguaya and 'foetal'.
tins 'regions.' • • • •
• Brazilian natural scientists in Para
are planning: to .equip an expedition
to explore the region for the purees()
of iearnieg about the White' Indians. '
, • . . .
M inert*, Liniment for Grippe.
8,25
,
'OCEAN.-, FARE
TO CANADA '
for the
Wives And ., •• Children Of
British Subjects who ar-
rived in Canada prior to
.(.1,0ne 6; 1928'
Children under.'
17 year -FRE
Apply at once to
- cAIN.arnA.ti. SERVICE :
'Cunard
.
.trid
, Anchor.- Donaldson
Lines . ..,
:
'Bay
-Col. . and :Wellington
' "Sts., Toronto:
--or nearest agent
....
./
144!..•
'winter ,
UNNY lan• d of
O whefrrueiltiavndingflios:ejorsy;
the whole year•
• Varietyancl beauty!
atlas —smooth beaChes7–
• orange groves, pepper trees and, palms.
World cities—quiet retreats. Every sport
-.every day.
"ICsdifornia Mid -Winter Escorted Teurs--2I days -ail
se. ,On the way--Indian-detour, Qrand Canyon,Phorn•
tx, California and Yosemite. Return through
Feather River Canyon Royal Qorge,',Colorado Springs
and Denver. Leave Chicago Saturdays, January 5-19, •
February 2-16, March 2-16, 1929. Ask for deutils."
F. T. Hendry, Gen. Agent; Santa Fe Ry.
804 Transportation Bldg., Detroit. Mich.
, Phone: Randolph 8718
^
The whole world knows Aspirin as an effectiire antidote foe',
pain. ',But it's -jt as insfiortani Jo know' Mot lizeKe dg..ostly,,,one
gfituineAspina." Mebane Bayer Is on eery tablet, and on the
boar. If the name ,Bayerapptarg; genuine; And/it it doesn't,
it is not! IteadacheSare dispelled by Aspirin. So are colds, anil
the pathat gots with them ;even tiFuralgia, neuritis, and. ilieuma- •
tism promptly relieved. • Get Aspirin—at Any druzstore-rwith •
. . •
provel.dtrections. „
Physicians prescribe. Aspirin;
•
it does NOT..affed the heart ,
Aspirin ft tbe trade4niirk (registered In dasktitt) Irnileating ilA7et :Uanntac re, WWI it
hi well 'known that Aspirin means Rarer inanoraentre, to atiOre A. public Against liana.
tioss. the Tableti elli bo Stamped witk their "Royer Cron" trademark.
•
France's Older
Foreign .01fie6
in What is 1\19w the Library.
of Versailles; Two Treaties
Affecting American •
• Repalic Were Signed•
In these days when so mueh is writ-
ten and illustrated of the Quel
d'Orsay, the modern French: Foreign.
Office where the Kellogg pact was .
Signed. an 'where *Ninn,l1rianeh. spends
.hisArkingdays,
sft'ttilgtre-
call
thatthe;ejsanheFrenhFQr
For-
eign Offiee,newdisused enddeserted,
whtisorshoulelterestigto
vsos.
The building is now the Town Li-
brary of Versailles. In one of its
rooms, where .today. the librarian has .
his desk, the treaty of alliance be-
tween Trance' and the United, States.
, was,higned in 1778 And 'five years later
the treaty, of peace between • France •
and England 'which recognized the ex-
istence of the 'young American Re-
•
•
public.
Save for . the furniture; • the great
stately &hambes- itenow just as it was
when the bewigged, bepowdered And
besworded diplomats of Louis- XVI's
time. Put their seals and their signa-
tures. to the 'two momentous docu-
ments.. The whole edifice, indeed, is,
entirely unchanged since the :last ;
years before- the rsvolution, which is
a great deal more, than can be said for
the palace near by. Each year tens.
of thousands Of American visitors •
crowd into the Gallery of Mirrors and
gaze with interest at the table on ". •
which the treaty of:1919-44S- signed;
yet it is safe to say that not 1, percent •
Of their number takes five initiates'
walk down the Rue Gainbetta to the .
spot where some of the earliest histary
Of their nation was Written. •1
The room is one (ha safe Occtipying •.
the whole of the first floor. Above arid .
,
on each side of the open doorway are
!paintings by Van Blarenberghe of the
'capitals of Europe as they Were in the
jclosing years of the eighteenth. 'cen-
•Each-loonr. took -its character from
' the picture painted above its door.
'Austrian. affairs were dealt Within the -
:chamber having the picture of
na; Russian affairs in that with a
pie-
ture of St Petersburg, • British
niat-
ters in that with a ieve of Lendop. '•
Around the Walls .ofeach room are -
he light wooden cages that mice heldi, •
treatiescorrespondence- and secret re-
,
;ports. Most..of the papers are now
with the rest of the national archives
at Paris
DUC DE CHOISEUL'S CHAMBER ...-
About the high,. echoing apartments
there still lingersIthe-griteensindeahis •
et the eighteenth century. • The mem.
in which .the treaties concerning Am-
erica was signed wee the. Due de.
Choiseul's own inner chamber. From
there he went most days, in his thu•k • ..
blue velveteoat, to take his chair UP.
the •short hill to the palace, there, to
consult with the King
All 'around are books. Books over-,
flow into the roe= of the sneond and
third floors; where the Foreign Office •
clerks of Louis XVI'S day carriee out
their tasks of copying and engrossing
The , upper part of the hniiding *as ,
used to house a printing press, whence ,
"allthe official publications of the Grey,: ''•-•-•
ernment issued: The books here cone. ..
stitute the Towil Lihrary of Verdaillea.
The collection probribly has to equal: •
in the world. - • • '
A few of the laser and more costly
volumes are kept in a locked case
under the librarian's personal' seper-
'vision. Here the visitor. may fake .
from theshelves a book of prayer used
by 'Marie Leczinska, Queen of France;
roraances•read by her neglectful. hus-
band, Louis XV..; a book illustrated'
with pretty hind -colored flowers in
which their claim:Anis, the Princesses
Henriette, Vietoire and Adelaide, may
have learned to read.: One f the most
curious•specimens is a book, apparent-
ly presented to Louis XVI., in which is
ii/table setting out what would now be
called the vital statistics, -figures of
births,:niarriages and detithe."--of Paris
in one of the early years of. hie reign. .
• These treasures are kepi in a small .
apartment beyond the treaty room:
11)
a heavy 'steel safe, sothething like that
Of a bank, are articles of a more in-
trinsic value.. The heavy gold pen,
eiterheted with diamonds, .rubies and •
sapphires, with which Clemenceau
signed the peace treaty of 1919; is iri
its velvet and moroeco case. Upon its
nib is still a traee Of the ink of that .
memorable .occasion. • The precious
stones around it form together the
word "Pax." It was Presented by Nve
Men of the allied „nations to "the •
Tiger" Caeadian' xvoniea who sub-
scribed may hoe, wondered what has
become of the historic pen. Charac- .
teristically, Clemenceau did not take it .
with hire into his retirement, but, say-
irlg nothing about it, left it to Franee.
•„, .„ WALLING,
Darkness was settlingdown over .
the pietureeque Scottish iiighlarithV
and theihree 3'0011g American .college
ghee *ho were enjoying the viewfrenn
the--"creaking:-stage,coacli
Innen-to thiver,lii-Ilienneithie,hreeite7",-,
"is sese" tithed .4.h -end -river -to the -pats--."----"*"
Seegers beIo, "Is there a Mackin-
tosh do*V-ii there big enoughto keep* •
.three young ladies .warm?'", ,
eager voice froni tail& but
therrr's a big •MaePhersoil doon here
that's- wining .to try."
Seven engagenientie Were annoiined
at the end of a pletteure erilise On a
lineeOn fliture cruises; the thoughts
frlenda on shore will he With thOSO •
• in peril of the sea