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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1933-04-20, Page 6S;-•
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eri
Py;,1:14.ZEL,ROSS RAILRY;'
BEG'IN'' HERE' TDDAT.
Mary Harkness plots to ensnareThe
Fly, who.. 'framed"..her. brother,
withthe 'iniircler of 'Mrs. Jupiter and
later killedhim. Mr. Jupiter aids'her, as,
does 'Bowen � the 'Star.. Dick HUyther,
Marys fiance, forbids her to'inveatigate
further. Bruce Jupiter and a question-
able 'friend,/ Countess "LopiSei, • try „-to
rout ,Mary,, :believing she is a golthdig4
•„ger, They fellew The, Fly to Miami.
Brace quarrels '.with" Louise over.' a
,,•diarnesok.bia.celet-glyert,:lier by The:71y.
it
She says is • Mary's. •Mary discovers
"v
it • was ,stelen frern "Mrs. Juniter.,,E•the.
,nlght.'she killed: Wearing the
fatrions.'Jupiter neehla.ee, Mary' 'dances
with The •Fly, who gets .it aWay.. :from
her: *le kiashs her and Dirk knocks
faints., The Fly gets ,away with the,
handbag' but is2-frightened, . "back by:4a
'
policeman and returns it and the heck -
lace, Mary has pirk., taken onl board
'the. yacht,' the "GYPaY•"'" Bowen. sup -
piles Mary with proof thaethe' Countess
• is, an adventuress, The "Gypsy"' sails,
With all on tioard. The Fly begins,, to
reallie he basovalked trite, a • trap. "
,
' NOW. gb ON 'WITH'TliE STOB.X.
clUPTER,
• Mr. Jupiter smelted- in silence. , An
u4sy something that had bcell.:1YiP0
. in he,:back of Mary's mhul.for .days
•• came th,the'fore 719.1w •'
‘418 it true What ivrr- Bates intimat-
• ed to me," he asked, !!`that you. want
' ,,hinl to,ina,ke'a break for it. So that
• :rou •him down?: You
: Wouldn't ,really do would. yoti?"
•• Mr. Jupiter took hi a piPe °et of his
mouth, cribbed: a nobbY, ' forefinger
• acre -siring, nose, but said nothing.. .
Miry .thuddered. • didn't know
•, yen:meant to go-'rthAt far," she 'whis-
•lpered fearfully."" ,
"Got any '`Olajectiona?" Jupiter
•• growled harshly. • When She didn't an-
'ewer,be knocked euthisPiPe
an .ie-
gan. it, .jah5ing tolioccO devin'
•.with ;a fierce forefinger.. ".0h; a man's
blood cools I don't know. A
•man i don't •know what he'd do, given
the .chance -but I'in haVin' my fun:
.Don't yougoInterferin': With
"i. won't. After, all," •••she• Smiled
b:tterlY,,"he'a !eurs first.' ; What's left
•- belongs to the." • • • III
-,-Diuner was:-.-a-illent,..-meal--eiccept
"tor .ORT4111"iF
lag ,Of Un1t:41'1*W. 's fishing • expedition,
•, in, spite` ,the litter indifference Of
•I his'. liateners. J3ates.' showed up for
that meal .but The FlY•Wit, tonsPien,-
Onsl.. alisent., Belch* to,eat iii his
room, but from'the comings and' go-
ings:ofhis steWard,••and the 'contents
, of, their trays, he seemed Mere -Occu-
:pied in drinking than in eating. ,
The yacht' had ,"turned the corner"
•at Key West about six. ofclock, and•
tl.ey were,now'steaming steadily wept-
• ., • ,
ward along: the keirs...'•In the deepen -
ii. night the flashing beam of ,pr -k
,. Tortugas light alreadY' could he seen
off on the hotize;i1 as, they car/leen
deck; its gleaininoi•e and More bright-
ly against "a ittk bank of clouds in
the southwest.' •
„
;When Mary wervt to heri,staterboin
--she had he,arc.L. More than: enough
• .talk of fiShingfor' orie claY,she. found
Louise there before her. • '•
"It is: now tomorrow," that lady be-
gin directly.,, Wish, MY ,b•Fac'ete,t..;
' Please -7 T •
Mary could hardly 'mask her stir.;
• ,
Irise. She had just heard Louise con-
.
.fessing. to De Lonia that she did, not
. •
-.have • it,-.--LcOulci •not get it. •
"I'm afraid it's • still- in the'
bassador, Safe," she replied ,with SOnie
•• annoyance "Can't you Welt?"
' "Tinto lone".
Mary thought of the press Clipping!'
• noli-`repoiing in Mr. JuPiter's safe,
. and Of • all they confirmed about this
,. predatory creature and her •ways.
' Mrhykeep. up the pretense? ' •
afraid it-antist .stay there for
some •time," she aiiswered".sbortlY.•
The. c4her uocidedi to herself several
• " tinies, theri . 'spoke ' in: grating voice.
•,"Brice, 'then, is .right, when' he Pays
•
you are What-you-call4-a geld -digger;
eli?." • • ^ ' ' ,* • : ' • •-• •
,"Quite right! • There is no More 'to
be Said: -Ilow go, please."
r•TheceuiitesS turned and,',walked
slowly totheporthole, and ,stood.look-
jog...cont. '!!1'. did oOt'come..to ask about
'that, really,"'she Said 'and' there Was
infinite weariness in her yoke., 93.i.it
abbot the Other.. You made .,.me an
--dstounding offer ' if . 'Yon', reineMber.
The .ruby .neeklace4:-If•--I went away.
and left: y6u. Bruee.,': .I Was. furious.
4be..t,-13?•643.-because,'„,..y6..a ,keoniganied
'Our offer with an itiSlat WhtCh• PP
one could receive without anger: ' - •
, . "But I have 'changed my mind. Per-
haps Yeg are right.I should not make
_a geed Wife. Perhaps it is pest .that
he flint:lean. American girl--" ghe'hesi-
tated, "-=-like ,you--"; •The 4 unreadable
-eyes Came': to rest on ;Mary's arnas'ecl
face: :."If, give you iiruce for the neek-
• lace, when you like,.''''. ; , • ,'.' •
The girr•stared. :"MaY,raslc What
caused you to change mind? You
. . . , ..
• certainly,' didn't feet this way,yester,
. .4,
, Louise turned.away, 'fiercelyimpa-
tent at,,,:the questkmitit. . !what do
you care? . Isn't it ',enough? : I love
him more than I ever loved any man;
But I. give him up. It, is better so..
Isn't it enough?" .,,' --;'. • '
Surely' • she. locoed • 'the' .•einefieii-
,
wracked .7.herginethe lowered: "eyes,
the heaving .ahouldera, the liandlcer!
chief ,tVAsted and bitten. '.• It was all
there,-alrthe 'tfine,tvorn-, histrionics'.'
All there 'except the eriliation itself,:
and that was lacking:
i
4`I•loVe,him :More than't .esk loved
any other Mair,hadn't_ 4, ' told'
Bruce that ...it Was ,De Loin :V;r:ho WAS,
the love of her :life:, •Certai ly; ie.' had
been her husband -so 'Much ',seemed
conclusive, frem the identity of •• the
Shine*, and from, a ehrietis •loyalty
Which drove her to help hiinatii•of his'
difficulties, even though his elutracter.
,inust be all tee Well 'known to her. ,",He-
-waara•-brute•P-Shelad;:said- thatOf
'Tilor once, and 7 -the -IT -given •Iiiiii-ei if
cent She liad...Wben' he asked -,.for r, •
. • No, Mary.wiknot taken in, but try
as she would she could not:place •her
,.., .
finger, on .the :•underlying reason. •for'
this .•ch*ke of. heart. , Would ' I.enige
accept , the inecklaee, evert thmigh.' it
•wks.,repnted to be Worth hundreds s of
thousands, :Unless' she: had icitt:herio,
of 'katithig Millions Not likely.
"Perhaps," '11).Eary .inased. .aloud,
...13t106. nolonger 'loves you?" '
.
Louise' was the ,..tiger -cat . again in-
stantly.
-
• ... "Not.leve me?' -Virr.iat, are you Say-
ing? ' Bruce' will not let.rne, go, if he
knows it! ' if he finds, out he Will kill
, you! • That is how, much he loves me!"
She Snapped her 'fingers 'Wider Mary's
very hese-Lwhirling.•aivay ...again; to
leak out theliorthOle.
.1;kil at Arl:•itce. Mary knew -the '; Clip-
pings!.. Mr. Jupiter Must have: faced
,her.withthein:•; .Mtieli.could haVe:hap-
pened in the ',,lohg. afternoon :'hours,
That demoniac eld man andliis "fan'
This.W.a.s..'zio doubt -part of it: '' : • .
. Mary 'laughed outright.
•., "'flip •offer is no longer open," she
•said. ;.:When I.,Ouise• had aternsed :out
Mary Went iiiinii7deek :to. find •Mr..
Jupiter and verify her suspicion; But
only,Bates Was:there; , As they lean-
ed ofilhe rail and Mary related what
.had happened, one of the Florida keys
caMe into. View, on' the pert 'rail: A
glance to starboard revealed another.„
• •"Say, we're right. int)* Iiiii4dip Of
.'tl.ingS here; Bates spoke uneasily. "I•
hope the captain knows What he's...do-
ing. Thereniust be 'reefs in here,"
'He.. yawned. '• "Welt, 1 gue,so. he
;krievie his business., • ',Gueas • I'll 'thrii
• in. Back to My. picture puzzle. ,•Got
'SOrtie 'o,f it put tegether; 'and yoia know
•• ."
,
ry
Stith crispness, flakiness.
freshness' are found only`
' Christie'sPreinittin Soda Ckers.;
They furnish just the salty tang:,
for soup or salad
the critp base for cheese or jam.,
Navc you
noticed thlit
thrisile'g
7rerntom 'Secti
-„r1;ritkort
yervkd
,2 •
; • .
*
4:
'Met• Revival
•
II Ballet athletics at London's„. Old
• • '"
„Vic. keeps (lancers in form. •• The
ballotiaundergoing a *revival ,in
what :think,it is 2icture of .Rudolph
-iValetitino!"• He:: laughed., ' ‘`Ne:Won-'
der De•Ionia tore it down...':. .
'Silt:hie/11Y tbe:. Ship :shuddered,
„. , • •
ed: to jolt :along: its bottom for Moe'
_Merit and then •stopPedvengine.s stilled:
thel..fsida.41e*a..,iolge.:,boomed
--tertheinaniknr-lhebridgep4Slie'P-hard
aground, From the bridge there
darnel -a' fervent,•!curse.: • tp : ,
CHAPTER XLIV
3. J. Jupiter Was the, first man :Om
deck..: A1t4Otigh'it was paSt. his usual
early retiring hour, he was still.
'cliresSed. Be Was there when Captain
Hendricks camehurrying down froni
the fridge; and together the two hien
retired -to the port rail:. 'pa* and
Mary .followed. '
"What's the Matter; captain" Bates
inquired, 's�rnewhat Tiervouoy. He
had .i.lancisinan's••inordinate fear of
itz3ident,- on lea, ,and even, Nary felt
a• childisblinpulge to rush to the cap-
tain •and.! cling -fp his handuntil the
danger was over. • '.•
"We're fast on a reef," Hen-
dricksCapt;;
to
'hive a tug out , of , Key' West though
"She's apparently :not Initti4he en-
gineers she!s.'". Making no water
;"We'll have a try at it tornorrow
levgive
4.asked.ass -'ae... til. b• g .dilter•
befew,blit•she•seerna•tcrbeivell stick."
to
"Can you get ar by yourself?" Mr.
graid. . •
"Dowhat', yottthink.hest,'!7.mT, J 94-
4er inswered:Mildry. ' • 7 ,
shouldn't 'have. Come', in tonight,"
the,captaihiontihned; "but the -Moen
made it, almost like day, and I've
;been :around:belege much: • thought
.e.Ohld Make: it even in. iog. This
channel' isn't '1.iSed, except ',fez.; sunlit
.ifighing , craft: and ; apparently senae of
the buoys hive drifted over: 'See that
•Mid,ebannel buoy there?'" • •
He ,Pointed to 'What loeked 'like an
Upturned. funnel to Mary. It was'
floating almost in the shadow the ship
.:Cast."On' the water.
"id -channel buoy; and it's 'stielc-
li.gright. up onte.p of a reef with only
about five feet a water over it! Ver.-
tunately we were coming in slow, just
barely turning over."' ‘• • .;.•
,"Where:are we'?" Batt S askeo.
'
"Just a:half 'inile.:frOm the old Pier"
at Fort jeffersOn where r intended to
make fast. another five' minutes
We'd have 'been there: That's Itiry
Tortakas. there a. couple if miles off
the starboard .
, tarhed to lbok, and the ray of
t.110 hig White' toWer sWePt
aeroS;i. their 'faces and ott, hitt) •the
-rnoenlit• night.
:"1"iii 'ping' fishing in :tlie Morning
then)" NIL said '
abo4 it; 'Bates?". • -
• ."fine.” • • •
better, ,1,54' .gatilig 'a 'little
.sle,rn:c4-0D:ent, to ,be' Oat bY• six 'any',•,
:nay, They bite hAter. early in ',the
morning. rverylicidy back tO bed now.
tiirgWe-c a n „-tio•to -anti
only • be in ,the way." • I
Conti*
• Aids Railways of
*$auth Australia
rwirYgio,it Indices Sgp.a. p
',1.1'fr'0: .W4y-
.„
to pousel,
Adelaide,, S lkost,-*10. ;Pe:111,1.eet•
has lifi•en. tried during the past tw�'.
year*throughout South,,Auetralla,
eonsisting' -of the •,GoVerninentgen;
con-
trol of road: tra.file• trans-
port confrel'fillard•WaS' appointed by
Parliament for three yearamathe
legislation will exPire ((boat Six:
months.
ppon'. the board was :,COnferiied
wide ,,pOwers'for t,h,e• regulation 'ot
road traffic• -•as the effectof inotor
con:me:Wien-was, being ',felt _seriously
by, ibe:, railways, pgFtiphxr4i ek many
•Ot.' the. :rnain toadshave : been built
ainidse patallel With the
: Ioarge, lOsaes w ire`being.ohstaided
by ;the ; :railways.; department and it
became a .Ogestion whether some of
the routes.' Would not have to be
closed. So the experiment of rig,id-•
ly •Coiatrolling,..the49/0 traffic was 4n-
Otituted: Jt has .teen 'Conclacted
sufficiently !long to giVe a t1ien110i
test,-..bn4;titar,hpaid,. in its annual re-
port just 'Issued, points out that ,it Is
'fffilleult, ()Yen to; estiinatelhe financial
effect of the operations on :the rail-
ways as the revenne Statements do
-no-- actunlly royeal-the-positieri,
. .
• • Idea of Pivergloh', •
The,' beard, explains, however, ;” that
aoixte Idea.' of the -extent Of the' . . , .
di-
version of thetriffit• fc the;railwaye
;mar bt. formed by -a eonsideratioh.,
of . the.,thtall :annual, ;Mileage. dis-,.
•cohtleued servieek aggregates
approximately ,2,479,95S initee;'' Made'
u.p of 937,748 Miles .fcif passenger Oer-
Tic* 4,40`.t0.32;g1,1'...eoles:.. for goods
transport.• The ..board' Calculates that:
at :leaSt.'..aioo,000 a• Year has -been:
added to: the •revenue o.f thez.rathvays
department thY . the I control,, Or •
elimi-
niition,
• ••: To :ixet, •rt: reliableidea:. of the effect:
Of. read Control the board sent to 18
station -masters throughout South Aink•
-pale.: the ;",question;..,;"What tte; been
the general: effect of the Road , add'
Raliway Transport 'Act on • ,railWa.3*
:•traffic?" ' be replies. glioWed- that the
Percentages of ,increase'; range ;from:
25;.-.`;tc.L..7.;$_Q0.747.-1111-7.so:tnel..ingtalices•L•the
:revenue has; been •clinibled;;• in 'one,
Caie.it:bas ty$eri, quadrOPIed,•••andlui
"inany Instanbes It. is reported that.
the 1,411:ways..nOt :handle the:whole
,of the •loCal. district trade. •''
• - • • •. • •
.What Roadatie.'Close I..
.„ :The ' heard will new. devote': itselg.
to :considering • 'what••••:'unprbfitalele
road' traffic Oafs:United ' • The ••••de
dding point', will he, ;what. ;course ' is
beet in the-,econornic interest of
State,- With Sortie relation, or ctfilite;
to Veer ;teascinable needs ;of the. die;
filet. Th4 question' of •• profit ,cannot•
be the ,decidirtg" factor •in• all the 'rellz.
Australia. •
..'.11fany• of. them, are purply' ;develop -
Mental': lines :and are es'Seiitial to the
progress . of tlte agricultural and
• pastoral Inclastries.: Sphie of ,them
can. never ,,Pay. 'directly as ,theY, trav-
erse • long -distancesof .eMPtY..,coun•••
'try :amt.: there is still a, demand •for-
'ln areas i .that •dte
opening:UP: With' "South' Australia's
indastriee:b eine, Wool :and.. wheat
no-
thlng be done to .:heniner thelr
expansion.. • In. feet; 'the ' Transport:
'pear& go tar departed, from its p.eliCy•
of road traffic- control last. season as
.
to institute...the experiment ef;.allow-
• ink • inOtot', lorries to. 'Convey .:Wheat
from railway idings and ferins; ta•'.the
shipping ports. .00,. that , there .sho.uld
be he cogsatien..ln,•eXPerts.. ••• • ,•.•
.The. board now 'cote:tole 49 roures•
representing 1669 and. ...hap
Paid .£1.1,250 ;in ,'•compen,satiOn:•• The
Vlctorlan•authorities are so Impress-
ed What :hag been' ••••edeohiPliali-
ed that an •Offieet was ent. byor
• re-
cently to report onthe SyStein,2,Which,
Is the only one of Its • kind
Unita. • ' • •''
,glectrie-ClOck Booni
Reriortecl.l.
It is egtimitted ::bsr, One antliority
that"more than 504000 electric'. elpelFs
will be sold in -Great this yetr
Tariffs have given, •a- remarkable inn;
lila AO the chiek in-nufaeturing in-
dustry in England, Whieh .iwas native
to that country, for Many gene.ratiOns
until a century • or ,se ago when cir-
eigh-made tirhertieCeS • became the
ShiOn.. Imports have ,I.,000,060.
so' far in, bomparison with 'the. figures
of 1981, i fact,attrilitited:tp•the,great.
4,1 d, greiving, ` popularity ' of the neNV
synchronous '''•electric :Clocks which,
plugged into the mains,. Will record
Greenwich.titrie ,within a second or
two for "Yettra et10. Alarm '-clocks
are In' constant: demand and already
are .13eing:;41tlitil ,ttiit-irel..-aitrqYf
2.500 a week."'
•
•••:.
uality
"Fresh, From
„
t e
,te
ar en,
..lig7SaW"
Glya •meithat littieOran Of tree-
And- take this bit of
That'esress, 1 guess; and this must he
The off coach-horse'slitiOn. : •
Now jest a.rninut•e; please don't
thUt7lar-of-ret '
And .this goes thus -and .so we find
Thelandlorcl.11as a head! • .
Just litO those English. supplement;i
To •Qhriotmas Magazines, ;
Though I 'really cannot 'see •S much
,sense • • .
Now take. those IClippers . wiag-and,
: . •
Or that Iron' by the Sea,
;They're really more the sort of thing
That have :appeal- for me; • --,••
No! No! DOri/tptit that •wiggly one
Dlwn there. . . Like. this: .•
here!, • • , •
guess that futny-pieee was ^done -
To represent a ;deer:, •
You've nearly finished with the Wall?
Well, how • about this tree?' '
No, 1 eayt find My ear at
You I've -got- you knee?
You keep theberseg Where:they were!
I've 'got: that .co'tichnitin • now. •. .
Oh, .look; it's . her father kissing
That liorn goes on, thc co*. .
, • ,
So, `W..411. -..a; desperateltntent
They strove from plight to plight.
An(j one wh wondered what It meant
Fled gibbering, through the 'night!
,'" ••y• -•••••The New Yqrker.
York. Minster
, as,. early.' in. the .evening. :' The
• • -
Sun as ",'going dowriLoVer 010. Vile of
IY.Or. • •Ir.•:::tin:d-Ltlie.•;:,:graiEtewers?'2.14: the
Cathedral r ;Church of p't. peter rose
over:. the flat lands.: There •was
Wind,:bloveing: at •iny hack or ••I, might
sha!"0 heard the Minster bells; whose
chimes, On 'a, Still evening„ go: over
,the fields, for miles, An'I .went on
between' the 'hedges My 'spirits rose,.
because York .is the; level:kit tity in
all England.' is England's last
anchor to the kiddie . .
:Men were; ,driVirig,. cattle through
the gitte. Or. York.. There ,Was. 'a
,sinell of ' smoke, the last tun lay
Ni.rariit:'.6Ver red -,roof-tiles, and from
Within:the walls .anie 4 marvelous
feeling of men and Women, of
Which; although present all eitieS,.
lacks identity unless 4city sits cosily,
behind its walls like. a Ihtiuse, 11111 of
'friends. , ,•• •••
. The ground 'fella away from.. the
wall- to the 'cathedral' and the dean-
ery gardens.. You see' York Minster
through a hedge Or a:flyer:White pear:
blosSems: Everything is Silver -white
ix.: the 'early ' The. ,itself is
'silver -White; ',Taclea.ster 1 steine is
washed 'by' every. ram, Jo.' that the
Wall .of Yotk always looked new.
An this white, enchanted' .riblion•
twists, on ailld 'areulik`neVer' straight
'for. more than twenty :yards lOsirr,
itself •in, green „bowers .as the tops of:
treeson. eithet side ',arch themselVas
'over. the white 'bastions:,
goac..i•Vern..daWing •round :the west
towers: „. The deares •..gittdener Was
bringing•thelawn mower. to d tiMootli
lawn:. :•A blgokbitd' With the early
Wotin in his saffron beak flew, to an
Litle:ttee: ' was ,,pouring
-out his heart.froni 'MO bong)); the
Stakihige, whistling; fightirig, rhining
and beetie=batlied; flew .truculent
•liOckS, only becoming ,sober 'tie rush
to the help of ' Some enernioua and
ravenous fledgling shalchi,T
wings and open. beak were the Sole
Signs' of infancy. -41,V, :Norton, ih
qTho Call of En (New York:
, .
, , „
MeBride.)
7
Blind Show Ability
In School Exhibit
• New Vork,--A demonst•.•ation • of
ability to riSe above seeming handi-
caps was gin by 85 students at
the NcW, York in'stitt:tefor the FAN -
"THESE .HARD: !IMES".
he hard tiiiles snd scarcity:Of'
an onek't,-nak(3§ it,. iiiore irolloii6iit. than
over 'tp,•edolionitze... 0,116 Wil`y-'1'.`illiVe•
;on ,•clothes is .by.tenewing tlo. color'
. . of failed : or .out,•fig•iityie drogSeb, .00tit4,,,
.st,the, woliletj , have , rici"--,,•ri.dy,ii, of Staeiiln0,. and 'ObilbliWQr; tear dyeing,-
ing,, or tinting, t alWaYs .0SO. Dlarnoni .
.''rhe: -day that, followed was•Jine 'nfl hhriter''' °13-sei7'il'e'e the ' Montreal• 81e!' DyeFi; •They, urn the finist 'ecolioniteill
unti,tterable- teditnyi for .thetle left,h& 'but' 'iu°81:' ' 9./. thehi '146 -6-e' eehee Pr eneg by :fai• bbeallsz tbby q0vet;t4INO
7ir1' •i".,•,11"ilii ,iivii•';'lloliii,-...lititi„ iltbis•eo. '111,tr1:'-e.t113.11 IVI°1 cliiilL ' lfreilluele ,r'ilrolli q 'Yli A f ,-itibic6 4.0'it7 1p•f'iri4,'
1.114i?,ililg,..;4144# .tig44,1,1 ...4.6.tijit • A tk.%1<•.,.,.,...,...2,:„..:,..;... ..!. :::- 4:4 ::' . ...W.bn...'things_...look,„,better.„.thao„ne W.
.41L;040hO44-li•41014-illlilp•WleWll4g3tthe."•fteTheetth•:".4e4lititit.ellt•ift*•eff,,itrVeUet,,-.0,1tOf.......Ted.y.ed.;;;;.*11.h:;,,......1.).1.6.0ioli.d.,-.B..yeff,,,,
,11 iteieited 'rabbi's Of:the •diStantifiSifer- loligi Since,. Ain di il is, ner‘cs were , nil, a, Tifey:r,i(e.f. Streti _,le..or• ruh, they:go' Oli
ltell through a telescope• loaned to hell, 1glea He roved froin one .end of 'the raniootlily ,. and. Oals•., ,wheil• in .the
JAy„..,the..eriptain. It WitS .not,,Vory'ehterj,. ship-, to the.' otli•er, leaning'on the rail , hands Ofc'eVenit ten year Old' Chjid,. An:,
,,,tbibing,btit it was better than nothing. ".iiiid sturYliitr' the ;Prespett. id. -ovo:ti4„cotlter thing; Inainbpil llYeii, ntvee take
I The 1)uyning' ',gun: iIi.ov.0 ili.nee' and diveetion '1111e'y• Were a11 very much I. the life Out of ,elotif Or leave : It Ihnli•
• Loolge downsini tk, . wher(1. 'tlieY played' theiianie, Which mil'at 'iii.tVe liden -dis••• .4xo seitit•Oeci (1.0•• .'1'hci tleterVe• Le he
likomiltroTn ganies ^Or s'olitair'e. . .,, chi', gi' : ' I '‘,.611611 A the Wora#SLIVitO,St,dybf" .. .
, , , • '.t) ,- , i web- . '
,
' .1,0flriit , / i•owield .:t.ho '.‘;:iiiii iiiie ,,, (•:.tigeil.. r, . .. •• :(r. . •
•,,:04.,,itibechy ' .8..., '8, 'a., 4iieht&,
•
e ,
•
• t
.cation of the Blind in•a two-day exhil
.b4ion• here. •
Moving freely about the stage, t
children' put' on. a 'Conference of th
nations in which•theydepieted‘ Various .
sports -bowling for England, •shating,' •
for Switzerland, and • i,rishjig: foli
Ireland, tumbling for ••*.lapa-n, a dance, •
for Holland, a; drill for Germany,
gymnasium scene for Greece, Lnd .apl, •
paratus for Sweden, with the United
States in( the character of presidind
officer. • I '
• In addition the children (*.tainatizect •
some of . the thingsthey have: been
taught, including :a. lively seuffle-bei.:'.
tWeen a rotund teapot, a tall: coffee
;percolatcir' and capable bottle -of ' milk;
Who ,easily VanqUishetrhis two opp64--
1.41t4entiLats• Atv,iteilreos44:_rustibltaitraocittacrivath!taitui..47"
were., exhibition' from the Moray? '
slaSeee'ahd the department of.a-ninutii'_
mr9troa;idriwinc,4ciinncol:idacittllg
inngWiea,vsewingi.ngbas1711trna
New,
Baby?
••• •••
fpt:4,44*".
6SB‘.raii7bLyE-48fQE:'*.;,r:!1:t..r °
• New nieithoral , .Eipeileat
oroiliere 1 SII04 for nigie,lielgfiil
kilolitre, on kaby you ever.
us.: 84 . Pages! • Wino to ,c10 :
• 'before ,tiaby :10yeeee:.
• Balq.'st bath; sleep,
• ;s0uslintt, bowel habits: lreigke,
height Aerie. • 'Breast feeding,
• Bottle '...feedIng-41inise find-
1.::::Inger.,0,'_Siipplementary. foods: •
roger for
fner FREE copy.
IliiiiitEle7.111t101110rEol
lyistien
.4ddija./.
Eagle Brand,
CONDENSED Milk,
- •—•
.11
..„.
0
9.atte,11,-
tilorni 4es
Vksi°0*Itt'uti311.citbc,st4a,t!a•Is.\17,s
i'v'esk101 oi:
vveea.vIllesa-s'\ acissul 1 a
/a1,4sz • a iee%
\
ets°''' 3
i . a 001. bp. ss -1
•
• Everyone accepts the fact. that
,AsPirinTS:.the swiftest kiln of raid
for headaches, neuralgia neuritis,
•••
periodic Pain,. and:other sntiering.-
If yoU'Ve tried' it; you tnoW. But no
one, needhesitate to take these
tahlbo betatise of their speed. '•TheiTe
ate ,perfectIg safe, they do not de- „
.,nresq :tile: heart'', They litiVe;no ill
LTC ct of any kind, 'The •rapid, relief '.
they 'bring- is •dtic• to •the 'rapidity
with which they dis11lv
ice* these lzililets. handy, and
„.
, keep year engagements -Tree froot
pain or diseenitart. Carry 'thO Paeltet '
tin for enactgentieS;"liity
of 160 far econonfy., The' new .re;•
2thicea 'price -iiite:lern"
A sPtirlil