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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-11-18, Page 613Y RAFAEL SABATINI., The I,faater Tale -Teller, Author of "aardelys the Alegi:Mee:nen Another. Stirring Story or Adventure and Love 'ina.New Setting— The Peninsular War. WHO'S WIIO, Lt. Richard Butler of the Irish lra- ons, on a•foraging expedition during ellington's cameaign against the French in Portugal, -}leers of a rare Wine possessed by some monks. `Drunk he starts out to get some of it: He mistakes a•nunnery: for the monastery Ile seeks, When admittance is refused, be' lie ' vin filo g place i s a "hotbed helloed of treason, he lorees his way in. Shock- ed and sobered when he realizes his sacrilege, he 'turns to' go, but 'strikes his head on a oilier and falls uncon- scious, Sergt. E'lanagariwho with a few, troops accompanied him, meanwhile is attacked by peasants enraged at what they supposed was a. deliberate ;viola -1 Mon of the convent. Outnumbered ten to one, he manages to escapewhen the' abbess a peststo the peasants. between O'Moy and the offender, in able to guess. the sources of the hes - (tetion of whichhe now beheld such tillmistakaile -signs, the minister na- turally misunderstood it, , illi "There meat be. no flinchingin this, general," he cried, "If n- 'capai Souza at,all, you you kne ow th t I he' will not religuish his posit{on vitlt- ou to fight, Give me now, that I may eurinee that this miyour an, Butler,eial wil]' be shot„ and I assure you that Principal Souza, thus deprived of hip stoutest weapon, must succumb in the struggle`, that awaits IIs, ' -:"Then," said O'Moy slowly, "you may publish my official assurance that the 'officer in question wiB be , , , shot when 'taken," "General I.th omit you. u 3 Mycountry, hanks u. You may be condent , -NIUFISES '• Thea Toronto n5aoltal Tor .Ineurahlee, In etflllstloe with Bellevue rind Allied. It oaoltnle,' N w. York City: offcry a thre. YG,re Crone at 7rrInth to young women, hasintl the, naulretl tlen • oud da,lrvue of heoomlos nurse,. Thle leenit0 hoe rdooL^d the eluht• hour eyelet,, The 00111, reoetee lnitar.e .t the Bohool a monthly .allowance nodtraYsnne erl.nee• to end from. New York.. ; F44', further Information write the. 8uoerintonilent I"What of Richard Butler? Tell me at - once," J Seeing the men stele/tee-speechless Samoval ,Intim bewildered` astonish meat, O'llfoy'from' d'istresei she jump - 1 ed to the conclusion that motives of • modesty, accounted: for their: silence: 1 "Leave us Sylvia, pease," she said. "Forgive me, dear.'. But you see they. wil•1: ;not mention these' things while' you are present." She. waited a tt v ed until til the obedient r lent '. discreet Mies Armytage: had and from view, passed' me."'Now," she bade them, "please tell.: And O'Moyy ^delivered himself husk - EY of the hideous truth. Meanwhile; Miss Armytege, took her wa to Y Sir Ter encs s workroom, know- ing. that she would Sind Capt, Tre-^ mayne there, and .assuming that lee Sir Robert Cranford commander of this issue." Would be aI ue:, Ile bowed ave'•y to, "M once 7 the light division, hears Flanagan's O'Moy and then to Tremayne. "Your from theId doorway, in. she asked him report that Butler was left for dead, excellencies, I have the honor to wish He sprang r, "It is just as well," he says, "for Lord You good day," taint ,pang to his feet. Why, ear- "It Wallin on would have had flim shot, Y Miss Armytage,' For so fm - Sir tlerence O'Moy, 'adjutant -gen perturbable a young man, lie seemed evil of the Irish dragoons, learns that oddly breathless in his the ess' ti Sutler, who is his young wife's bro- 0'1,10Y. welcome her. She closed the door and Cher, left the convent alive, but has A frontier in the northwVest carne forward into the room. not returned to his regiment. the third I want you to tell me something, C Capt. Tremayne and I want you to be frank with nxe.'i re I ho I .t Pe could never e be anything nyt}ung• "What has Dick ,Butler been doing?" He looked into her face with sharp- ly Y do 9 min• „ e you CHAPTER VI. LADY cross their was gatheringFrencharmy apt. Tremayne, OrMay's •secretary, Massone, commanded by Marshal reminds Sir° Terence that Richard's na, while We]lfrtgton, at the death woultle more d ha ldbreakad of La aB ' d 0' British Ma a ish Y for ,Y' to o heart. 0 Moa' has always been jealous than one-third of the French host, of the strong friendship between Una; I watched and waited, maturing his his wife, and the young captain.. stupendous strategic plan. Behind Principal Souza of the council of a the Britsh army and immediately to regency is opposed to Lord Welling- the north of Lisbon, in an arc some 30 heard? g Yes What have tan's .plan to devastate part of Portu miles long, the lines of Torres V r gal, and interferes with were beim - us -"Onlythat military o g constructs I at he has do , .,y P dunnit nia a wa dor the at � to x g erations diel ons u ' n rection Tavern t � ect' a r the British commander- ton of Colonel Fletcher and this'� o a for hvltich the consequences that; reeecretlY to remain Unknown to Brit the lea of in -chief has issued the ultimatum may be grave. Una sent me away on unless Souza be 'removed from the"sh and Portuguese alike,. P nit youth nod, innocence, government he, Wellington, will with To these lines it wascan Which were nut to be Offen u aro fro the British led. But 1 from. country, I commander's plan to effect a stow re -'offending." can trust you to tell `.nue without aMuueI Ponies, -Portuguese secrtary,Itreat before the French flood when it - "Sylvia!" of state, warns Onley that Butler should sweep forward, thus luring Sylvia!" It was a curious gratitudeand he had commanded should be laid re- implied confidence, lentles lShe pp s waste,stiffened e Ytd hIIperceptibly. Ii ,that CHAPTER there FTE that R I I -"Won't I ,enemy Cot ( ltd) . night first be starved and afterwardyou tett d q t aim ltoy know?" In himself d of Domdestroyed. He Miguel o efol n1 d.d g e Iorjas was 3 Such was bis terrible dee; � story,her quite sintply'the whale shrewd enough to apprehend to the' mend upon the country for its own I not forgetting to give pronun- en toc..' the ' carom m ata Hess e m xt t' full the emiii' s I tar e ' a v ' n u atto Y rs f n. g o the B ' rrtish I = - f r n chi lef, ' s , fruits of which he had already wvituessed'and he knew that unless this man and the troops undersu' s common d remained in Por- tugal end ncl enjoyed- complete liberty of action there could be no hope of stem - mar n rt ' +g The InB a Butler's ter her s n n favor. -nobles whose lands! must suffer opposed the measure vio.. r 'And when he is taken,"ptohh n?" cantly. And Antonio de Souza Made I r Hetlowhdt will happen him?" hints He elf their chary a lookedhe at her, S champion until lesitatit' P to hx for broken by Wellington's ultimatum was l hasple, then is word red to the g"O'Moy the Council. has pledged his word Parttt_ g the third- lovas}on for which Souza quitted" government and. government that .Dick Butler; EIad 8sena— the, .tshall ablest.he chall, of a utaq be shot, all 1 a Na P e hadwhen 1en' Napoleon's been to senken. i todemanded, n and"r ed mar. But sha.s wa! i aFf that?" now aWellrore thenn tiI "Terence>� inonI di g hish`d dl- g' laved $'G PS •!vi that he1wouldn. was white. Y a s .face visions in the north,. and Portuguese to duse!quit intriguing, he misjudged his man, "He was compelled independence would be ground to dust So that he ruined Wellington it mat p to o, lienor under the heel of the terrible a tered nothingand duty demanded "This,' emperor. ! to Antonio deed no loss of him I So "Honor?" .. ThiSouza s h e saidt ha t at lehe sl ut hshould in d a ruinShe vt etcuttered length e�i that was aw•ea,"is.an ultimatum, I y at the sante himself Ind his most with contempt, ed the ward al- „ own coulrtr p "And what of "It is that,'O'Moy admitted readilmood he passed out of the eouneile of U"a?" "Perhaps it is no welt," he said. y' i the Portuguese government into a II .) am thinking of Una when I say "That Lord Wellington should go?" brooding and secretly active retire - cried O'xlSoyc rent, "That Lord Wellington should an -f As a result of Souza's downfall '- nounce intentions of " !bio 1 l going, Poems Y was able to breathe more freely, explained. And .having' admit d !Then too as tl deathllsomewhere in ethehills. Dick's the best that can be hoped for," I had better go to her at once. She t e so,weeks passed, theaerateful to!will be needing me,ppr lila. I am much, he now stripped oil the official mask overhanging him with xlifted, 'And your confidence and for telling s h ht ask completely. " He spoke with his And thus she left hint verythoughtful own voice, and not with that of thetNo further word bed there been of!er- council whose mouthpiece he rower. "Cf the missing •lieutenant, and by the end as concerned for Una as she was liar eel,course, it will never he permitted,(of May both 0 Moy and Tremayne Lord Wellington has been entrusted' had comp to the concvsion that he (.....___..To be continued.} v.}th the defence of the country by the must have met death at the - Prince Regent; coneetluentl it i some of the for to hands of duty o£ every Portuguese to ensure) O'Moy dreaded lothe nn moment that Lit all costs lee shall continue in explanation must be made to his wife, that office," of Richard's absence, O'Moy was mystified, I In the end, however, he was spared "But your excellency understands the necessity of falsehood- For the the terms—tire only terms upon which truth itself reached Lady O'Moy in an his ordship will so continue?" !unexpected manner„ "Perfectly. I shall hasten to con -1 It came about a month after t Vey those kerma to the council, It is day when O.1lioy }lad hat' a:sro quite clear that I may convey to first received news of the escapade at Tavora. my government your •assurance that He, with his wife and her cousin the officer responsible for the raid Sylvia Armytage, were break -fasting, Q11 the convent atTavora will beshot one morning when Mullins broke i when taken?„ . upon them with the announcement of Knowing'nothing of the relationship' a visit from Count Samoval lar—the h e Heaviest Woolens or the Finest CeS and Silks — )OTthe -whole ani Wash ot2in. 9 Cleanses so Thoroughly and Safely as LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO 1;53] ISSUE: No. 47 -.nail. CHAPTER VII, 11] 3 MOUS TRUTH. The h Pcr Lnguese nobleman a sl ar, handsome, swarthy Ivan of 30 introduced, His friendship with the O'Mo now some three months old, had b c orrsid • e2A hl strengthened . Y ef late the fact that he had unexpected:y b come one of the most hostile criti of the council of regency as lately co stituted, and one of the most arde supporters of the WellingtonianHe poli the ladies bowed tokisstheyfai smooth hand of his hostess, and too the chair O'Moy was proffering. `Good news, I hear, general. A tonio de Souza's removal from th as already bearing frui The ni: mile ' smut leu valley ,ey of the Monde are being effectively destroyed a last O'kloy,r who yhimself had but receive the news. There was a note almost d he wa vexed Ion thatllse select i attthe erenshould s "non be put abroad. Natu a_y, and with reason," was the ons wer, deriveted with a ruefu smile.- "Ani I not interested? Is not end - was ys,. een. by e - es n nt cy. to k he t. Mendez d d o s o 1 acne of my property n question? But I bow to the necessities of war. The indivr lua: must suffer that the nation may triumph. A Roman maxim, my clear gen e ra L" "And it Rrargh on•e,., said O'Moy. "Oh admittedly," replied the emi- t!: Samoval; "You proved it by, your encempromieing firmness in the affair of Tavora, And in your own interests; my dear general, I trust there will be no weakening when this Lt. Butler is caught, and---" "Who?" her ladyship asked sharply. "General—Richard .Butler," answer- ed Samoval, In the seared hush' that followed the count .perceived that he had stu nbed headlong into a mystery He esw Lady ('Maya face turn whiter and whiter as she regarded hint, ! "Richard Butler i" she echoed The Hill. "I thought you would like it" Was wbat you Said, . And dumb with beauLY. I bent my heats, Whlepering Poplars, Moon -shade playing, Our hushed voices, Moonlight gray ing, Gress -green meadows That darkened down To far lights marking A little town, Beauty murmured; We heard her salt— Yet only the .poplars Spoke et a11. People have given Me .lovely things, Books. and pictures, Brooches, rings. Of all my gifts I would rather see The moonlit hill - You gave to. me. —Ethel Loufee Knox. A SIMPLE AND PRACTICAL GIRLS' DRESS. If you are, thinking of making a new little frock for .your young daughter, you will find this smart design very simple to fashion. The dress has the popular kimono shoulders, and long sleeves gathered to narrow wrist- bands. The neck hes a front opening and is finished with a neat round col- lar. An,inverted plait at each sid'e of the skirt gives added width, and a belt and patch pocket complete this e trim n lift: e. ire sa. No. 16 36 is in sizes ea0, 8,x0, 14 years.Sie• Z 8 years s acquires 2% yards 36 -inch, or 1% yards s 64-inc ha rte' rtal, 20 cents, Our new Fashion Book contains ninny styles showing how to dress boys and girls. Simplicity is the rule for well-dressed chi'dren. Cloth char- acter and individuality for the junior folks are hard to bu bu to make with our Y, tea small amount of money spentiongood small ma- terials, cut on simple lines, give children the privilege of wearing ador- able things. , Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERN& Write your name and address plain- ly, Y, giving n umber and size of su:h patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) far each number and address yourorder to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade. !aide 01„ Toronto, Patterns sent by return mail. Norwich Cottagers Breed - Canaries. Norwich—this quiet old English city - es the headquarters of one of the world's quafzieeet cottage industries, the breeding of hundreds of thousands of canaries, whose song's are heard In nearly every •country' In the world. Little is eoenmgatly' known of the sur. viva!' of this industry, through the changes a .n d iiPhcavals trial age,'but 5lnce the ofithe; Indus• Flemish weav er8 were o drd veu. from their country in 1534, and settled at Worsted, now a decaying village about 12. miles from Norwich, bringing their canaries with Whom and teaching their English neigh. ors' how to handle them, the canary hd ni str Y has been an fmPortalnt source 1 income to thousands of families. There is said to be scarcely a work- gmam's home in Norwich that do not house growing colonies of can les. The.owners give the most to ng care and thoughttil attention their birds, who raper bY'flooding t tkagee anal, tenernects with th enge.. When the t'oti'ng birds ar ady for sale they are packed, each its own little lire cage, with a three aye' supply of food and with a sponge the watercup to assure moisture an drinking supplies. This is the shipping season and as. to binds are gathered for shipment motor trucks they sin and ad; sir quota to the din and excitemen t •b a n ar 00 8 r iu in A tl by th es .Ilr 7 uey are called ' 1,0 lizards' because of a superstition that he • if one ellouldr fall fxrom the ceiling and iia, 1 strike a human being the vicar woMel 0 . die within twenty-four hours. Through sheer ouriosity we attempted to re -1+ move some of them! from the' o, t 1Y by using long sticks, but found. rt was tee] it' i I sig TSB F ilfits tea at tel best. Om1�' 43c per ;. lb "3 LORD AND LADY B�iG TRANSP CAldAD, A TO ?SIR HOME Q E IN ESSEX Loral and Lady eyng have carried back to England with them mea), of the physical and mental associatioata which they experienced during their 'tenure of 'office at Rideau Hail, Ot- tawia; and they are endeavoring_ .to make Thorne Hall, their old home, "a bit of Canada tremelp]pented to Essex," After many years during which he,� had no permanent home, the former governorgeneral of the dominion 'is home at last and "would 1'tke ver much to bave a "reel rest," Plant Canadian Flowers. As w sate in the library of Thorn Ha1ly:Latlp ByngeotsId, be seem throng the window, attired in a beaded moo skin coat, a Canadian gift, directing the a aliens , pe?' . of gee -denim wile Were treating a rock -garden of Canadian plants and floweas,, The farmer governor-general spoke of his many friende in Canada, end of his great affections for the dominion, The conetiltutional queetJoat, he said, "is past and gone- It.would be futile. to die'cuss it now, and I have too great an affection for the Canadian .people to wish for further contaroversy. I ms all a real "bit C KING T W POTS GROW shall mover forget the kindnesses Of the Canadian people. ' I•• 'shell - miss them all.", Strangers to Their' Home. THE WAY' TO:. KEEP LOVE ' A Young man writes "I•:am-about to bo matelot!.My Bermes jid I aro very much iu •love ,with :each• other, but no we look around among euir married eequatntesiees, we ate that: !some hus- bands and wives have lost all the fine romance and sentiment . with which they must havri 'started out on, the 'maerlmongtat voyage. They ere indif- ferent to each other. Ssnietimee they kis even. hostile. Nearly alseey11 they bare each other. W0•,dio not want this calamity to .o to e. What can , . d keep aur love as fresh -when W8 Iiro fifty as itis now?" • Be Lovable, It we 'Neigh to be loved ..we must make a"urseives lovable, You can't turn the 'entire 'business' of keeping in love over to the ether. party. You have to lend a .hand at the task youreelf, 'A woman should d0 all she possibly, earn to keep her Hall ,!e sttkated `in ancient 1 husband fascinated. - A Man Shahid monastic toads; with fteh-ponds creat- make Very. effort to keep his Wife cid by the monks in bygone oenturiee thrilledwhere at bothh h vel. put his foheirr fn order t But whe� o ensure m have a supply ve 1 forth pD y of fish for to pth their ut- Frid'aps. . The estate wee sie?eetetd by 'indivktval m endeavor supplemanteit byye, the . Lad D ng, when her hwaband was in in malr- g a few hypnotic passes' over him- self!, For love, is largely;a matter of self- hypnosis. - Even whin we are in Dove, we know, in our lucid moments, that the men and warren We havt5- et our,- the"bililding 1s' b ; , t of nearer -uenlita-are tb l3r ., , being -r`,s.r', t+ uY mar- . . earanl.edg Ry insisted on havingi g8a'nttitll, more' intelligent, more ay all the woodwork of C'anad'ian hemlock, Betio for the the time berernaindhr ty seenani c,e Canadian maps 5 popima•. cedarBut the btbeing they eeotn like Ars are also bei ande that to .us because we haus n thel r ng' P'lan'ted irr the !rated all of our thoughts u g'toumrda, and the fish'pomds rile ngwp ug' Pon their populated with Canadian consiperteder tis end have declined even to ma'llarda and other wild geese, teat, consider tLol2• defects, mte et incl a and rip, the B , On their Nothing would do more to their En fah y took domestic felicit Promos- gl gaadener who rel y 'and to keep huh planes, I wen; and trees from all Seats . bands and wives in love with each 1n order to r other thhn fol them to carry this state y Y Egypt.Ln 1913. On the outbreak of tate world wax, they convected the estate into a hosrpitol. Then they came to Ganalala, and now s for: the fleet t rim rel.In Maw as Y Yes P, they Y have tllsla home as a kante se 4"m nton- najre Tbor }i . ofPomade." aniles over well built •trails in search of ma to rl aj far their mi tBLI no n m bele. 'Having ng Ian rur] a suitable tree, the breaches win be entirely. defoliated by see aot-ve ereaiuree in a single night the leaves ev tarried'back in bits to it homes, where they are made into compost and used as agar ON TRINIDAD SID a�•'�+e+• fix • anti t he NATIVES �i �1ES' PLUCK °UTEN--n SILS FROM PLANTS. one often Home Of_ r""@8 That Never' a surprise to OBS wi ! Water Flame at Night. tires. Vines which produce sponges trees from which natives tray' cooking utensils weave; clescr{bec b Fred J. Seaver, curator at the York Botanical Garden, in a lm3 Dr. • Seaver, who with several mycologis'tg recently completed a vey of the fungi of Porto Rico an Virgin Islands, said many new f Lad• been collected in Trinidad, w he passed eleven wvpeks studying t cal vegetation. r - "The curiosities of Trinidad are a0nflned to the animal kingdom," Dr. Seaver, "There are not only banyan tree with its tunny trunks the canrson-ball tree with its pe fruit, but aleo vines which p sponges and trees which grow coo utensils as though nature hard blued to make it as easy 'as pees far:t'he residents of this tropical la "The great cavern of the Gua of mind •into their wedded lite, and to refuse e to wake tr P am the trance in- to which they have thrown them - solves, Therefore I eau give no bettor advice about how to retain i `oui a - C cti o ' Your f uor f ron y r wile :than fuse to focus -- your oyes upon her shining virtues and Wilfully Y blind yourself to Ler faults. It is literally true that we can think n on ourselves in love, or out of love. We can glorify the good qualities Sties. of our husbands sad s and wive s so that t • a w e' them m - Bee as we want t them em o as they are, or we can turn a spotlight on their. bad qualities and gaze ugon ,then until they bemane'unendurable afflictions. IL is When a man begins to let his thoughted'ally with how stout and mid. dieted his Wile has become, .instead of how.faithful and deviited iihe is him; it is when a woman begins turn- ing over and over in her mind how seldom her husband takes her out to. any place of amusement, and how long it has been since he paid her a tom- nlimeut, instead of remembering how hard ha 'works to .make her comfort- able, that love Lulls sick and Pines away. Another way to keep yourself:-. in , love with your wife it to.,foilow th a - Boy Scouts' motto; and do some good deed for' her every clay.. The more we do for people the more we care for them, µ10d any man can keep himseif a romantic lover as long as he cultivates romance and treats his wife as It she were still only his sweetheart. Earth's Surface is Always of Moving. - which .certain fun a® used by theme Ars growtt and as food. "The stingless gees which encounters in ,fixe Gro i P tali junglear are xo s aa'ecuttomed Sting aind'Flint That M0L. to the war -like mot'hoda and the ef- and Ifective weapons or their re - to northern re and Pluck Y Dr. Mewl cthee. other sur- d the I ungi l here ropi- not,, said.. - the, Alt!] miller toluee cool emu - ad." h - tiros," he said, "is Populated by a r wierd bird known as the guaeh which flies only by night and w when disturbed by day makes the caw resound lilte an inferno with its w shrieks and cries. Still other ca are o ufi 1 P aced with � the vampire blood -sucking bat, "Other queer forms of animal. lite are the oysters wyl1lch glal'! On tress, the huge lightning bugs, which, it is 01ai mad, are used as cagud]•es by the Peasants, and the 'twenty-fon.r•hanr lizard," whish runs over the ceiling, of the bougies, picking off flies,; w'Jhich 1 are greedily devoured -as food, ca'e 'twentyfourdie Pretty Fast'oGlrl, Wen she's out with a man at dight she•'•a the slowest thing at get- ting home I ever knew." . Yes; I've hoard she's a pretty fast girl." Mtnard's'Liniment for Neuralgia. art, I Toll. of thleSeas. aro,1 During the flret three mouths of the t 1 h ch, year .139,70e tons s o f shipping - i'P g ifema e� totally' oat by wreck or sir ill Yes of leavetalrlmg. As a rule they gent o wholeeale dealers in Gerinany an 'Torn m th •er ail s ee nt All overthe , - •w0 all The breeders of the 'canaries devote much, tame 'had patismfce to:teaching the birds 'to rang. It • has been found that by &awing a'ccre along a glass bottle in a eerteinway ,the canary can he closely Imitated. The owner,, sits in front of the cage and patiently rubs the cock'until the cr,nn.ri,55 unable to resist the swinging taslee Join Io the s and are 0KYJ•n warbling all day. g. From an economic standpoint industry Ss more important than let be though 4)./41 it is estimated the bade sold by the Norwich eedere ' during the 'present B i e ,, l o]�s weather, say, a Lloyd return, ase Live. ftes� h rotate �• r shrimps, wild ani- mals, including tigers, a panther, and a bear, one hundred steam rollers, and twenty great locomotives are among theunusual fr'•' freight carried on .British ran 1 .ways recently. Of Scientists And .i a.. tr ono mars ars noir engaged in experiments which will la,sit until December lot, to ascertain what are the precise relative sit oceuibeag by the varioua positions countnias of the world, says an'1Cngditalt writer. It is well known that the surface of the earth is always' on the move, and theta- s can .. no daub: t that ouT conceptions of the locations of oar own and •other countries are, to a great extent, iu• correct. ! . As a' basis for the. work; what Is -.sailed a "fundamental polygon' has 1., ,.in set up, consisting of t'ho United I Settee Naval Bate at San Diego, Cali- fornia, the Algiers Observatory,. in Africa ,and the Shanghai Obeeevatory, y, In Oh'iatn, • hese palaces are all in approxihaate- the same latitude, anti [urs abcatt it keens apart in longitude. Time nags are Beteg sent out all over the 1•d by wireless, and 11, Will be ugh dis(repannies in the reception hent that errors in the present no - of 'location will be' dlaeovea•ed. addition to the stations comp'is the "fundamental 1 nd:u.xnental polygon;" other impossible 4 stole P toad do so btheirf•-. c e�'. at i9 e P. z' alertness and agility, . war "The phosphorescent fishes wlxiclr 1 o t] A a play about the shores making Helga of 0. p S aa �• oY t fire in the water �°� �1i'�L water at night t��� .tion ire 11. th The feat -cutting .are &nether Jn cuttin I Ig amt3raly, �t!d�,ny l.d� u�t®t Mg arouse their share et int•erest.- T,ne • e913.a�1tt eU' �1 gr I y d 11ve in great mounds almost Stn Parg4 Ilei 1 r sca:i,l• " garntemtr bacaute 1170, ,- �e. a amain house trave•Itng 'rfteil far yen -timer lien its 'mien ' it''•` s • t, r wl c a• tailed. 1. in le se t,s .• � , s 1a Yen than n Lo lli ,,y ori cap Make I . k It .PUZZLE Find ; �n brand new, Pilsltion';leaa _ a}rlo s la:dg. 1 A Too Close. I shorn I Robb,;—"The barber 'cut your hair ion irrettY cease, didn't he?" the Wife —"I should Ray so, 1 could I rig smell the garlic on Iris breath all the ' that Limo be was 1<orkin8•" I will Geraniums re losing popularity i Uric! among garde.netr, tl-elr p:ace being taken by•begonias 0 hors Fhlnard's Liniment for colds. Bid br bring about 411100;000 to the tls- f London's bridges, elow-moving e traffic iii heaviest on the Tower! ge, with Waterloo Bridge next - .1r,ntaG1r.us !, 1,etu.e 1171115le`s you dress better,. :d, .,`. .s FrLcn e and have the nicest home furnishinge,lre ,, � e.eiwe.�rir r4 seep . a,thc'ut spemci•fng.tl lot of n • n"....7,,,, i': ^ a.re., un 5' 0(Ii .g Wnls � a a A r �a t P, r Y r d r . Fn y n• ® th. L 3 t f` i h' tv •h Lr at e s v• e4' a 11 e• -'i"A 1 7C t rr N. Calom'B—but is+hethri`:dyehig air. tinting, � tints. L•,tafr a.,. Always s I �+ ��-,. .. aa. and i.rva Untie I 1 Ft E m roe, •.l 13 at 'Bir your drugstore, now: - h, -s 0rtxn Diamond 1Jyr Cyeiop,edlul ful] of sill'- wales Each• a gest............ . complete, , a•vatctrlee taking part hi the tests Greenwich, •Pains Washington A), Bexlie, eed twto in -three In out Iia,ris of Auetralla and Newv IId, react 1133 wit-sless enthusiasts wvht interested in this matter should that, is connection with;it, long- signals aro being gent omit three s daily Lasa Somali011s (17.148 +r), Ar•ddaigtan, VI., cr-•Belivue fs -rrt B to titre seal dye r 1 y risk nlctre eeo1f a for 1)lamond !lyes; they give fu.d rich C311E, ewers, (79,7 Or write tor big, ilJustraled book Co.'or Perfulnee at 10c each you can Wu an* Di tits above sow t tg very easy, tf le, just mark SANTA wIth on X cad CIO it to ce ot 1000 OTHER -PRIZE,S on,at, -- fres address DIAMOND Delo If you eun outvo thlo putzlo 4111d Win Awl 24 Frani' DI 1-)e 1\75, 1k. in a SO'r, once and If It le correct We wik mkt you. ths Perfume to Self right away. SELPASIT SPECIALTY cp. Oesk 12 Waterford 0 ',fake IR NEW for I'S cgd 00 Inetrers); , llainoiu'at ra•I 500 Duet :from volcanic eruptions hes been keown ft> travel 600 ;riles tlee