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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1916-3-30, Page 2Write for Free Sample Packet Bahru fn November, in a'measuroI had prepared the minds of oath for 0 openness to conviction regarding the German Police. Are Continually Raid- IA9THER I/ ether's innocence.. f jug Dwelling Houses.- - The two then directed their sus- I + pfcions toward Steve W diets, a life nay by day the Borne 'I agwacht,"E prisoner in San Quentin, and can the organ of Swiss Social Democracy, tk t4� EL veseed the situation from this point tells what is really happening in of view. For some time Lao's in Germany, In the latest issue that has fluence had enabled him to communi- reached this country, It describes the syRUP cate with 'Steve through the medium political' activity of the police. of the "grapevine" telegraph that "First of all, everybody suspected The proof of Mother Seigel's constitutes a connecting -link between of. having revolutionary tendencies is !Syrup is in the taking, That 'A every prison and the outside world.' feel upon day and night. A num- is why former sufferers, whose p g and learn how delicious good tea can be. State your choice. Unsuccessfully he had 'sought in- spied iv papers whish are under Pre- ventive longer ,allowed vitality was helot' sapped by Black or Mixed or Green. With the sample we will send you an formation that would put him upon ventivo Papers are no ons Indigestion, say it' is just cv interesting illustrated booklet about Ceylon 'and its wonderful the trail of Marian Sylvester. Steve to leave blank spaces, where passages b ' tea gardens. was wily and evasive. Life prisoners or an article have been suppressed. ecRent for stomach, liver and TORONTO NTO sometimes were pardoned, and thea "Wurtemburg is under a specially bowel troubles. Thanks ,to ADIaRF�SS:-- St' LA DA, 34 YONGE STREET, O O the missing heiress would prove a close surveillance, The local police Mother Seigel's Syrup, they most valuable asset, Steve had son-; officials were sent from the famous are now.strong and well. r •; p trfved to keep informed respecting� these to 3?rC�? yni his putative daughter's whereabouts men were not found sufficient IS EXCELLENT FOBS ii and condition, but he was not taking M� y safeguard.publie order. Stuttgart is Lao into his confidence, even though flooded with detectives, who are pre- If you are afflicted by Inch - sent ��� the latter was holding out the tempt- sent in numbers ab every meeting. - gestion or othcrdlsorderSof the int hint of a possible jail delivery. These ave dissolved on the slightest stomach, liver and bowels take By CHARLES EDMONDS VVALK So Lao was merely fed with facts pretext, and all the names of persons Mother Seigel's Syrup regularly that stopped just short of enabling taking part in the meeting taken for a few days ; long enough Author of "The Silver Blade," "The Paternoster Ruby," him positively to identify Marian. If down. to give it a fair chance to male "The Time Lock," etc. h 1 certainly bout the "Ono of the latest'`heroie' deeds of its beneficial influence felt. • LIFE. IN THE IRON LAND, Y* --- IN EVERY EMERGENCY You will find some use for Vaseline. Tr da Mnrk ['wale= hie, It relieves rough, chapped hands, broken blisters, bulbs, cuts insect bites and skittrl•i- tatioits of all kinds. Sold in handy glass bottles and tin tubes, at chemists nitd gen- eralstokea everywhere. Refute• substitutes. Free booklet mailed on requcsr. The Green Seal aseline 1 d CHESEBROUGH' MFG. CO (comatdsitd) letle Chabot Ave. Montreal e could death Bei m y u Lfia e• tattoo-mark—But how was a China-, the police in Stuttgart was the arrest Then note the improvement }Cie`— f man to go about that? of four Social Democrats. The police in your appetite, your strength, Steve tried to make Lao believe that uj on their own affairs, they were col- Handled then in a most brutal way. your general conditicin. 3th, CHAPTER XXE?C, (Cont d), flight from China, and remove sly Lois was in reality his daughter; and liding with him at every turn, press- Two boys who witnessed the arrest The previous night, it was Strang's : others that were being carelessly . when Strang, after the November ing against him at every halt, so that were detained from two ,o'clock in n �+ firm belief, Loa had meant to tell; left to the disposition of chance. But ghe arrived at the hotel in a condition the afternoon until late in the even- HEADACHES,{�{QU$�ESS Lois the whole story, as far as Fos -j Peter B. Perris was dead, and what meeting, wrote Hardwick warning of nervous strain that left him,. as inglest they should tell what the Bible explain his reasons for wanting had become of the ring? Occurred him to becautiousabout Lois (of he expressed it,. "in the right frame knw of the affair and denounce the CONSTIPATION the tattoo -mark obliterated, and thus then Charley Yen's death, and the whom Strang at the time could know o' mind to take it out on someone." elite. It often happens that school try to win her consent to its removal. trail was indicated to him, though I nothing definite), and when his warn - was ransacked room afforded the last p p ing was followed immediately children are suddenly arrested on INDIGESTION. But to secure the requisite privacy for a time he hestitazted'to approach, straw; but his aches and bruises re- thele way home, detained without without exciting her alarm and sus- me, and did not do so until obliged; Lao's return to Los Angeles by aa-' stricted the taking -out process to an food or drink. until late at night, and to. Events in which he was secretlyother from him, to the effect that any until chircumstances been nextplayed to impireitly, le a principal participant were rapidly Lois's presence might be part of a upbraiding of Corrigan,- the hotel tion. liberated ib ea ed ir without nes are neva- into lhis halide. He was provided with drawing to a head In China and he ana- blackmailing schema that threatened Aloe at last in the new room to' ous p all sorts of dire calamities to Kenton- warned and no excuse is ever given the thebopportunity of talking to Lois was all at once forced to act quickly. I which he had been transferred, he to them. The children aro being Hardwick, Meyer Hardwick was under the best conditions, and fur- Straightway, however, he was op- thrown into a, panic which was openly began fully to realize the seriousness terrorized in thousands of ways. thermore, unsuspected by her, of its posed by another serious disadvant- manifested bythe blunt dismissal of of the situation confronting him. In "Frequent also are domieiliary ing his disappearance as a decoy to age: radical difference of race made a little while he formed a pretty ac- searches. A whole row of houses was Money in Sorting Potatoes. get me in his power with the ring it very difficult for him to recover the innocent and unsuspecting girl• I curate •conception of the true', state and the reliquary. The hour had the boxes and the ring without (in So many important eventualities examined because a rttmo- had spread There is money to be made by the awere set in motion by Strang's and, of affairs; Steve had escaped - from that a leaflet was being distributed There of potatoes. Conium is, longe struck when he must have them, and his estimation) involving the likely Lao's meetingin ArovemUer, event- prison; he knew Chinese nature, their protesting against a winter campaign., ;and meal}, do not like' mixed lots. they extreme measures had to be resorted hazard of betraying their significance. ualities which in workingto an in genius for concealment, for acting "Nob less severe is the censorship want them uniform in side and goal to. He would not have. harmed Lois, So he went about trying to gather ' r 1 ecretly in the dark( and he knew it in Rhineland. There is serious unrest sty. Consequently potatoes nee us - Strang averred; he might have them in after his own peculiar me- of our vas disrupted the even that t of our lives, Loss's and mina that ft would be hopeless to appeal to the amongst the miners in consequence wally sorted before being .put on the brought about my murder without thods. was a pity the meeting could not have police with the fantastic story he of - the prohibition by the Government market and the price which is paid a scruple, if I had refused to give up It must not be lost sight of that happened would have to offer to account for his of all discussions concerning the pre- the potato -grower is the price of the ring and reliquary. for more than twenty years Strang years before. As another roars. It was too late to find me at sent state of affairs in German In instance, when the two became res- y sorted potatoes, less the cost of sort= However, his program was inter- and Lao Wing Fu, deceived and mss sonably certain that Steve had taken my office, and he dreaded going this way the authorities hope to pre- ing. Therefore, the potato grower rupted, as we know, by Struber hay- guided by what they believed to be abroad with the diamond in his poi- vent an outburst of discontent. In who ships unsorted potatoes really ing met and followed Farlin and me. the true state of affairs, entertained the diamond , California slang with little Marian, Lao immediately .re- session. He could met even open his Socialist papers the word `capitalism' has to pay the charge of sorting. Tao-fuism had been spreading not a hostile and suspicious attitude to- conspiracy door without seeing a Chinaman some- is invariably cut out by the censor The shipper of unsorted potatoes, alone among the Pacific Coast and ward each other. With true Orient- to- solved was soon to effecrting t the bandit's where in the hall; the reflection that "In 'all big stations and tramway also, has to pay another charge, and other Chinese colonies of America, al patience and impassivity, Lao escape: a degenerate and irrespons- they were hotel servants did not in termini there are many police and that is the freight on the culls which but with changing conditions, it was bided his time, believing the oppor- the least restore his peace of mind. detectives. are later taken out of his shipment. once more coming into its own in tunny to get even would sooner or sueble hiseve Willets inat lions, otdinpur- It was now clear that Steve meant "Often trains ate stopped and the The shipper' of unsorted" potatoes, China. Lao's rank made it im er- laterpresent itself; but the fact that�sim erratic inclinations, would in p t time expose what a . Steve Willets o have the diamond at any cost, and passengers searched, but not from therefore, is simply wasting money.' ative that he recover the symbol of the diamond never appeared between lconfined could so easilykeep eon, that he had at his. beck and call any fear of spies. It is even probable It pays to sort because it gives one is authority, which my father had the time of its loss and the meeting cealed. After which Steve could be number of dangerous allies against that the police keep a descriptive list the top market prices and because it seized at the time of the other's between Lao and Strang at Johore'removed without jeopardy. whom a solitary stand would be hope- of all Socialists suspected of peace saves freight on culls, and, it might Then, too, Strang was in posses- less. Out of the predicament grew .propaganda, as many members of the be added because the Bulls could be cion of facts that Lao Wing len did the idea of mailing the diamond to Socialist party have noticed them- kept on the farm and made use of in not have. If Steve had stolen the me and accompanying it with a let- selves being photographed in the rations for. live stock. diamond, the fact that it had not since ter of explanation, which he would streets. e - reappeared argued that'he had hidden follow in person as soon as it was s "It is ec of suspected nown that all the corris "When is a partnership.like a it; if so, where? possible for him to do so. Pen. When there is not a split in it." James Strang thought he knew. How he was assaulted and dragged opened by the authorities. Lately the P He became active at once. First into an alley when he went forth to police are even overhearing all con - of all, Hardwick was privately and hunt stetter-box; how he succeeded versations on the telephone and us- The difference between stealing guardedly warned by letter against in dropping into it the parcel but not ing this means to ascertain the opin- and embezzling depends altogether Lois. There was the old underground the letter, which was taken from him; I ions of different members of the So- on the size of the pile that the thief traffic in opium upon which their, how his assailants were finally rout' cial Democratic party." gets away with. Mei.00botlk of Syrup contains three antes as rnrrch as the Sx site. .e .e ..,4 ..esti _ .. e:e It's the season for Bitter Oranges and Grape Fruit. Make your Marmalade with St. Lawrence Granulated Pure Cane Sugar. Being absolutely pure it assures best possible results and removes all risk of fermentation. FREE Upon request we send excellent orange and grape fruit marmalade recipes and 3o marmalade labels for home use—Address ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINERIES LiMITED, MONTREAL v • - : 1104 +e4-/ee )a Irzt 9 sP1I !„11114 .111 ti Does Pain I tele fere? There is a remedy NX x. Sloan's Liniment Read this unsolicited grateful testimony— Not long ego my left knee be. come lame and sore, It pained no many restless nights, So ea. mous did it become that I was forced to consider giving up my work wheit I chanced to think of tiSloan's Liniment, Let me say -- lose than one bottle fixed me up,, Chas, a Campbell, Florence, Ter, Ii011010110101 L. fortunes had been built, respecting' ed, and himself, now seriously which nobody was better informedjured, crawled into a cab and was than Steve Willets. And Strang wast driven to the only haven he could unsparing of the cables. Within a think of --.Meyer Harwick s residence week or two he had gathered together —must all be passed over. For days a mass of information which marie{he was confined to his froom, fretting him more than suspect. Lois's real( over the gem's fate. The letter, of identity, and led him to extend to *el course, had been taken to Steve, and United States an already projected Steve would know where the diamond trip to England. He brought with had been sent, whether or not it reach - him the ivory box 'in his possession, ed its destination. Therefore Hard - 1 because it bore in its pattern the dis- wick's machine was pressed into serv- i tinetive symbol of death, a mark that ice and a guard of private detectives would establish the girl's identity be -1 followed me until. Strang was satis- yond peradventure. 1fied that• I was no longer in danger He had informed himself about my- I from the Hop Sings and his desperate self, too. He arrived at Los Angeles' brother. By means of the personal on the day he notified Lois of, de-. he cautioned me against Steves sini- termined to lose not a minute's timet liar method of trying to entrap me in recovering the diamond 'and pre -i into a betrayal of having the diamond senting himself with it and the ivory l in my possession. And at last, when box at my office. I he had about made up his mind that He secured a room at the Republic,l he was well enough to leave his re - on an impulse registered his • true' treat and pay me the long deferred name, then boarded a car. for Sant call, Struber had found him. Pedro. Among the hills on the old Strang turned aside to indulge in home place was a certain ravine; in a brief digession. that ravine was a cave which, in the "Was Lao far-seeing, or a lucky old days,had been known only to his! dog? His success made bin head o' brother and himself; in one of the; the tong. An' then the time came cave's rough walls was a small con-' when he had toskip so sudden that cealed niche that had been the hiding he left behind everything he owned place of plundered treasure many al except the clothes he was wearing 'c total time during the . od of their youth -1 arat the an'i complete looked like but, by fail- fulvmora at er, While singering gosh! just see how things 've -worked over the matter of the missing dna-! outl mond this old hiding -place had re -1 "But look here. What I ryas going stored to .Tames Strang. Ile wthe' to say was this: It wasn't long after straight to it, out a hand into age that before the Tao-fus were the most recess and drew out tightlya small package active figures in the government. which once had been wrapped in oiled silk. Now, towever, the fabric Many o' the leaders lost their heads was rotting and falling way; but in- in more ways than one, but Lao saved side it reposed the diamond, unclim- his by lighting out for America, an' med and unharmed. lit looks to a man up a tree as if he'd He crawled out of the cave, and a guessed right. He worked for the second later came face to face with—d dynasty all through the recent revo- not a Chinaman, as at first he had ;lation, an' now when it's beginning to believed, but Steve. With a roar of , look like the battered old empire was fury, the disguised 'fugitive plunged' caught in the toils of a despotism at him, and the quiet, secluded ravine, worse than any it evet' knew, he 're- because the scene of a terrific combats; covers his badge of authority an' The very fierceness of Steve's on-; goes hiking back to China, Republic? slaught, however, defeated its pur-: Huh! To those who know anything pose, Strang was sent hurtling down: o' the inside workings o' Chinese poli - the steep incline, and before Steve, tics the -word has been made a joke with mare regard for his own bones, of •" (Tit be Continued.) could come up 'with him again, he hate won the highway and the open, where - the other dared not press him, Resignation may be a good sauce As a result of this narrow escape, for adversity . Strang was obliged to remain tinder cover at San Pedro until near night- ..,--- fell, is it h t you ie Va fall, nursing his bruised body .Aunt-- Johan , Whyt When ho started an hie return to never remember 10 say "Thank you'P" Los Angeles he discovered that he was ,Johnnie (eyeing wistfully a box of surrounded by a veritable cloud .Of chocolates on his aunt's knee)-•..oe Chinese.• While seeming unawm•e ,,of expect it's because I don't get things Isis presence and to be intent 'only given to me often enough to practice," e Syrup of Hundred Uses Of course, "Crown Brand" is your favorite Table Syrup. Of course, you enjoy its delicious, appeti ling. flavor with Bread, Pancakes and Hot Biscuits. But what about "Crown Brand" in the kitchen ? 1)o you use EDWARDSBURC =NR, 40-11°14r 144 YtQ C ' • for Gingerbread, Cookies, Cakes, Pies and Sweet Sauces for all kinds. df Puddings ? Do you always use it for Candy -making? Try it in all these ways. You'll -fzud "Crown y Brand" Corn Syrup handy, convenient, econo- mical, dependable, good, "I,I Y WIIITB" is just what its name im lies—a clear t L 7 p "Crown Brand inflavorthau -� cern syrup—more delicate f i"' s that is equally good for the table and for candy -snaking. —AND 20POUND TINS. ��. hey, ASILYOUR GROCER IN. 2, 5, 10 ` ry '' The Canada Starch Co. Limited, Montreal. are the bulwark of RAMSAYj QUALITY tin RAMSAY PAI.NT you get the most accurate and thorough eembhtadon of Approved raw materials. Master painters will lr•II you no batter materials oda,Your own good iudamadt woi tett you ht •., ie tIha marN ine mixing it superior i6saeep•work and "hand paddling.' 'Specify Ramsnv for your next terpeieh—and for the odd Mt yottdn your spit sot am tight Stirliri "I've had another addition Itamsayriattil, Splendid nervtcofronithe lo stltamseydealer m-writrtht a,aautaenuprc, til g, A. ttAINSAY & SON CO. (Establishedto my family 'since I saw you last." 1842) MONTREAL, Que. Ashley—"Y'ou don't say! Trey or girl VV' oannesiesimponneassairoximottassoommoni Stirling--•"Son-in-lnwl"' Ips l>a-►osO1►O1►-a•ox.1.•gt-Au log tli the Far 'aYMt+11.7+r405eP -Breaking a Stubborn' Horse, An amusing illustration of the power pf determined patience is re- lated by Captain•leerr, of the British Cavalry. In his words it is as follows:• "I may instance the treatment by which a well-known Yorkshire breed- er and breaker—one who always broke -in his own colts -cured. if stub- born and by no, means uncommon case of mulishness, Riding a colt one day, about noon, the colt rested -- Le., obstinately refused to turn out of the road that led to his stables. He reared, whipped round, kicked, plunged, stuck his toes firmly in the greund, basked into the ditch, and otherwise behaved himself unseemly. Many a man would havo adminis- tered severe punishment, and have endeavored to exercise the demon of contrariness by free application of the Newmarket flogger and the Latch - fords. Our friend's creed was the suavitor inmodo, spiced with patient determination. After exhausting every method of kindness and encourage- ment he determined to 'sit it outj so, bringing the disobedient youngster back to the point of disputed depart- ure he halted him there, sitting- in his .saddle as immovable as one of the mounted sentries at. the Norse. Guards, or the Duke of Wellington at Hyde Perk Corner. "At the end of an hour's anchorage a fresh essay to make the pig-headed colt go in the way it should go result- ed in a renewed exhibition of rearing. Observing a lad passing at the time, the determined tyke ordered him to go to his wife, and, tell her to send, his dinner to the :cross roads, for there he meant to retain ont all night •and the day following .if need be. "'The. repast duly arrived,kand was des- patched on the animal back. Ano- ther effort was but a fresh failure; so the- statuesque, weary wait was resum- ed, and the veteran breakersat again for hours immovable, Here was the living exemplification of Patience on a . monument. "With' the setting sun came the horseman's supper, still not a move, and the sturdy yeoman prepared to make a night of it. In due course his topcoat and- a stiffly mixed.'neet cap' arrived. Whether or not the colt divined the meaning of, these campaigning arrangements ' deponent sayeth not; anyhow, his master lead hardly donned the one' and swelled the other when the quadruped, with one long sigh, one that nearly car- ried the girthseaway, all his obstinacy evaporated, and thoroughly defeated, relieved himself from.' his post, and quietly walked down the road in the direction he had so long protested so firmly against. The lesson was a permanent one; it took some eight hours in the teaching, but lasted a lifetime -he never 'struck up' again." If it be objected that a vicious ani- mal cannot be so handled, suffice it to say that impatience and harshness certainly never controlled or broke one. Drainage and Hauling.. Proper drainage not only allows the farmer to cut his crop under more favorable circumstances, but it also affords easy removal of the crop from the fields in large wagons. Charles G. McLain, farm drainage and water supply expert of the United States Department of Agriculture, in disarm - sing farm hauling, says: "The removal of the crops from the field to the barn is often a very diffi- cult proposition, especially if, the sea- son happens to be wet, or if there is a bad section of ground between the fields and the barn. This condition can be largely overcome by doing some drainage. It will also be of benefit to every farmer from the fact water now held in the soil is removed so .much earlier in the spring. By drainage you not only put your soil in better condition, you lengthen your season of work.. It is through drawing the water away through un- derdrains that you accomplish these two purposes. "The experience of the farmers who have underdrained their fields is sure- ly enough to convince any one that drainagemakes for better farming. The fields that have been under•- drained will stand the teams and wag-. ons much earlier and better than sin- dsained fields. On the drained fame the loads that can be hauled are much heavier and larger than on the undrained farm. The reason for this is that; the water in the soil is con- stantly seeking a lower level, thus leaving the surface in a much. firmer condition to withstand the heavy loads hauled over it. ' This -also stands good with the farm- ing machinery. I have in mind a case where the fate -nor on a well im- derdrained field 'cut his entire crop of oats with a binder, while his neigh- bor across the line fence, with the same kind of soil, but not underdrain- ed, had to cut his crop with a scythe on account of the soft wet condition of his field. Ther were also consider- able difference In the yield of grain in favor of theunderdrained field. Stn'ely this shows five of the big ado vantages 'of soil' drainage • as it ap- plies to the farm,"