HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-04-15, Page 2 (2)T
77",177179117"""Trr.'"FifF4
—
ro 6
,at
st tobn4oltit el) r` 1 • '
0
IU QUX TO&r at a• ll,
Or *tang .,ne
ft
ent at the •Sunera
while be wi
bad endured.. Iie
c upy s minrI by
nt of the Ear
incapable of the
tration that this,n
Auer was, MA.
ihe _ otn,
s .snatels
ehnc tho
'very, grog/ I Aligh
tc mOvo
ed herself tor.hi happn
wb*tu the resulit ITh
• SAW befure Ier T
eye;j Cnot be 1
fter ailI it wo the bt
not Ethel, retherston.
A mad joy urged to ,her
snd her bosom rose and fell rapid.
of o delirium of happnern that
Jthi lovelirould-bring her eized
in iti rip. She mule *.movement
her eye* filled with lo
Ke Iooked up tutkle141`, *nu there
44 X41,04104 .to him in a Oath the
intensity of her posion.
red :her devotion to, his, fa. -
the pluckytight which. she
vbebn• b 0
Io'*
now 'Isola*, hone:11.04Y •
at tell you,
as,,he.-tried to
ver
rusted you. When 1 titin
xffering I tau you,
you can *till- love
too, have suffer
we,ks, and 1
ison a has
" • Cyril 1
ebt of gratitude
epay. Each *sing
ur as we liveOUr lives ogot.her,
*Omit thank Gcd for hr ere
"But
friend, doer. She hvezh.
was she who broughi me baic
to my sengea. Tbis lnornina I felt
WO r al,
*11 from
"I do not untlerstanLordWol-
norning to • itt
sooms t4) 'take an intereg in no.
t broods all day. It is
not. natural, and h4 wants X044.•
if he has seen Ethel F.etbers-
I tlat„'",t I had better -e*11--on:
"Nes.- Oco this, morning."
Rebekah found Ethel at home,
the mourning which she wore
seemd to aetentuoto her fair
beauty. Out her eyes were trou-
bled, and he eagerly greeted her
visitor.
"Rave you hez4rd from Cyii1
Rebekah asked at once.
o. He has not written owe,
Ethel replied wistfully."Perbaj
he I not forgive me, and I 4ar
not go to "
• her tell* me -0
Something must be dotteat tnce.
You ee, father *rot X are oi
abroad ior long time and Ican
o eave England with's *mien
unless I tee you 4100 )1iPP;i7.
11 MY' punishment, and I, it.serse I may have lost his love,
ant so miserable, Rebekah,
avt no pride. Shall' I go to hbar.
must remember the terrible
trouble he V** gone through'. He
• fovea you, you may be sure. (Intl
ts not one who would ever change.
ball Igo and tee him!"
'Ye,. and give. him 41, menet
fir e. Tell hint. that- is sotro
&, y sorrow, ani thot I long
comfort him,"!-Ethe1 .said eager'
"I will go thh afternoon,":'
helm)* replied tenderly.
must not be uuseroble.
Joel consented to accompany
bekali on her cal' upon Cyril, but
t was with much trepidation that
she- kcked forward-to--tho-inte
view. At the sight of, hi* changed
tare she gave a- cry , --of quip*
'"You poor dear boy," she cried
enderly. "and,you_have been sIl
alone.' - -
Joel was looking round fie
room, which was littered.. with
4travelling trunks, and there was
..very tiign that Lord 'WolverhOlme
. was engaged in picking up his et-
teets.
"Are you moving from here
*sktil anxiously:
tinta going .abrood at 6ute„-.
M in need of a. chine," he s*id
:curtly, but .his tres'-dclur not meet
Ribekalt*it, wo gove o try of con)
stern4tion r,
44nIttlEtbc1l Are yelli ging
see her 1" A6 4061164164, eat 7.
'.1 don't know. Not yet,"
tied quitkly. "I mutt be
I, 'ins weary. awl? *i at bee
you understaindr* IM wound
helPle-**Ir.
'1%). I 'cannot,ke-cried rm-
“Cyril. I must speak with you.
otter, Will you run away for &
while t”
400 toot up his bat and ebed
esily itft tbeat,t0sither. ----
44What is the matter,Cn1V' she
ask ed with simple. directness.
"1•1 'floret ktiew," be replied li
"Ony thst all sai feeling
seems
4
'flit t y-ou atilt love'Ethel Pet
nolet 1.-ou still wish to
17 she dentaittled. farntly
ut I mutt We time " ie
orttestly. "I feel* tht
;but ytt 1 tonnot ive
b. t et* that 1 slid."
• 1'0*f
;
was ruc
worthiness 0
" ril, she
ought*,
ease of
wild toil'
pays for • rat h 0:tritest
beazkL
t
114,:i *tn.,
• ou nos,
reeryoiri. •
' n in the "ntikr
t pays the top priee for tbem, says
kLon Answers.--
wog.'Attitotti
our concern was
4 between 21370, when the
t&ndard Oil Company of Ohio pro-
ducod
our pet-oent. of the rdned
output,, Awl JP; when it pro-
duced
*net,. ,Ave per
looked tar ahead; we too
o statesmanlike view ofthepossi-
bilities of a. now trade.. Tho men
who built up the,Standord-4.
ockefeller, William Rockefelle
11. M. Meet, .Tohn*Archhold, and
the ret-rthought" in continenta.
They established their network
plueal
4,4
-
a, n o gio
A.A.6t!iey were
develop it.
IfEr "WILE. RE ON
ts o
rl*Lirrilling 011104.14',uTr4Itejilatl '
millton baels. at', oil
Werth twenty.nine 0 e
!Or their relit tit and inade tbe Pr
' utiers give another million. This
roved to he good policy. The
rkmenare devoed
andar sits - En
-
*most an position,RE ,,0 4)0h;itit,,Tht.the
is
andord * jobfor life..
VIM
recentin Standard Ito
?devoted its at tion mainly to ex
i s its foreign luarketa.
IL M Flagleri one -of 'the bcads
of th0 compon,y, visited lanutioa in
. yacht...Mar Twain WAS on of
4 guests, and the genial humor
1 rejoiced s found
where the people
it lace * t
burn(ird not h ail.
ourself . you want. .mo
to think that wbat 1 have done hair
. been in vain 1 Don't go, away,
'implore you."
effect
here 6 Via of
er
word5, and gave an exclama-
tion of diappointiuent wheu. she
LW' that he wasunnioved..
ViVet me something," sho
iid at alit, for she - was 4etermin
1 to se hint from hia I
You expressed Your -„gratitude
what,. you thought I had dime for
PA. Do $'4,ou -want Ethel Fether.-
n to come, hero on hot
and beg forYour loret
acting tho g#1341040 Part .1*
of wbat she ust.he sufferi'n
wronged
doyou wish her- to think th-
xemains
unforgiven
eroe•--worder had•tbe
will ti
nervously,
*Tit to see Ethel, but 1 don't
know that I could,
not mytelf. I should. hurt ber by
nty Ptintier, for I should be con
troined and unnatural. She would
think 014..1 did, not lore.her. 1
must wait fill the recent, happen-
ings are not lo vividly 'before
I should imagine that • she was
hinking of my father's confession,
sind 1 should be miserable."
hot is nonsense. I understand
Ethel now. Your father'* ditgraee
wouki or have influenced her;
8he would eoluuk:t0 you *11 the
moro ctosely.was wh*t * 0
thought o your 'treachery that
n 3apane pro
distant' from
cannot be obta
re meat is not i
,lizards are
rundani
onsidex
and Are pr
lioniers*rank a
icacies, They . a
captivity withou
ren *tiled A e
ng
that
toat be tern off, ne'ver
lad dreas-igAilwarl.„
ily, bad Iiis own.
"Octopus over freight rat
be controlled the New Yo
traI. He-WItICUked- by Cominission to U4140.
ret of tbe Standard's success.
on can't .keep. such
6 d *a," he replied.. "X don't
it eau be 40no by any le
hioh are e enitatment. They will be.
o *II the time,*
at trF,241 Mr. JAI] D. Roelrefeller forined
Iily.1"Al'' the ,Standard Oil CompouYi in 1870,
* nalr-44 with a. esoital, of & nultion donors,
l*Now-its authorizedcapital is $110e
but thermsrket value of its
•etimated at, well over
o reatly
scheme*
upon your tit
6
The` application
adio te1eraphy. continues to be
*tended ,e043t4 fra-
quentIMI by ships, where its„,uso
often of the'utmost iMportance. In.
December a., now station WAS ,ore*.
ed at Bolt liead, South Devon,
rtillik044 This stslion will
silablo for communication .wi
elb7fTegra.
rusade in Standard oil by score
emissaries aU over the island.
ancy lamp* that delighted the
_$ 01.t. ,h,tr tte,„
riterrinv•
it Sot-.
et had been capture
A Berlin beiettist advocates tlze
use, of electricity for etiring away
1A0Wis His apper6tus consists
On to . Whieh the *no
)ff the .roadway is ;shovelled
ntath whicb are * series of
this motet .k t
radiators. Tho
•ow falbi froni the platform int�
iter from and is
mounted
*charged as
0P The plat-
i-za.
A
wheels for
anaport to 'rarious p&rts oE tho
oroI herto act as she did. Tho
thinking at you were disloyal
Willyou dine with u* to-nightV
she wound up abruptly. "I- mu
convince you that you are -*Ton
You eitn't.tefute me that."
es. I will qinie."
"Goodbye beu.1 s
but 15 i not
be niuch ued by ships
dist,ance of about 100
will *150 be employed for
t
41 r inter-
ruption
. e
le connecting the
lands with England. Ur.' Sidney
Buxton, the ,Oritish postmaster.
oilers!. -anticipates that radio-te-
egraplly
*Lit term. an lfective
ineanis of communication in in i
ountainous or naccessible dis-
tricts where loud lines ore too cost -
or:
imPLritcticatile.
• RINESE INVITATIONS.
The hinese send three invito.
tions to heir guest's that they d
at their great repasts.
The firat is despatched two day*
hetore tho• feast; the second on
the day itself,- in order to remind
those they exepoct of their engso.
nt, nd the third just before
`
he
tou„truck, how irnp&tient m,:•k,) as to-shoyr
insect • hoyeptted'ia
lives in the tamed 4a for
44*Theseeight *tuts * barreI under the *OW -
s gar or honey at Vest of transportation, and in -
but they are *hot structe4 its allied.pipeline "'sell
The chili- 0it in the Standard:* territory at
not 00-17'in the any price whatever."' The Stand.
he--.1opitote• 10-i.--otter A 61A ruontliie Bigtt,
*04. Pl*e0 04 th crushed this opposition by'zupertor
et as salad, organization, and dictated terms of
eaoe, which gave. it a practieal •
monopoly of the production and di*:
t ibittion of oil in the United
St*tes. It allowed thA ,Pennsyl-
vania, its beaten enemy, to.. carry
barrels * year. In
• ennsylvania gave the
rebate of 10 per cis
n ight. It is true itof-
ered
the 'aitnie ccossron to all
hipperz of oil, . but hedged °Iwct
one winch on
ouult
tduAuT115.1
,4
Titis was . the ' Jr&etioe of ather
tlwartAntiLt.tho
Act made •rebates i le
ince then; the Stamford has bea-
en
its rivals through its owner-
hin
of terminal ‘facilities at the
and by owning or leas'
ractiesill,„v all the oil -tank cor
on the railway*, the salt storage -
t the oilIelds, and the vest
of pipe -lines . whichnow
aeds the railways in carr,ing
rude"oit from the to
,
eaboard, or from well, to t
attresse made With pa.pe sba
tags are in
oldiers*
returnto Ethel
Feth-
rston, but tent her a letter.
'Come round at six -thirty to-
night and stay to diuuer 1 want
to tell you *II, *bout Do
be Miserable, all
wound. up";
t in her heart Rebekah
o sire." . She could only h
was guilty of. rudeness when
zrrived, for she did .not notice
.psaranoo till within a for
biutes of 'seven. She was no
tous to be er,o-t, Crairtilled by
. $0311
Otet4033
OU lee Pit I t
not * word about *is
k forbid. it ab
* *Aid plkytully.
evident that Retie
oxasttntb
door. At, ufl
rv*ut stood iirntl
with the iu
e bilL
desi ,
to sr!tly f�y
here h tori Wotverb�l*
"In the Wintry, its."
*re tome," Ale
be
9,6'ad Fin very glad to
Os Estber will tie slow*
inateWontyou tom. into
Toting -room "
enterPrise of the tondo
new oit region was
11 Alislid*Yed in the esse of the
°Don*I4, rush” in 180t. Iu July
that year the distriet pr�duced
of„3,000 barrels a day,
them were no, facilities for
instal** more. In Ott naiad
Augas,t, 14,000 barrels daily were
ssg dealt With, the Standard
pping in with a complete organ-
tIoL By
September lot *MO
ng handjed 441
The IO9 type Doirnlet
ot remarkable efficieno
!icily • of 10
!Reno in running
to y suotor yet 4
PiNli ,Ara'et,
•