Zurich Herald, 1926-05-06, Page 2GREEN TEA
The little leaves and tips from high
*mountain tea ardens, that are used
SALADA are much finer in flavor
than al' liv Gunpowder or Japan. Try it.
ey
EDI ti 14,R TITS
1•iy
tt.W, S+te"TTE R1' Mee)
BEGIN HERE TO -DAY.
Michael, husband of Jenny Pendean,
disappears and Robert Redmayne,
uncle to Jenny, is suspected of mur-
der. Mark Brendon, criminal investi-
gator, has charge of the case. Jenny
goes to live with her uncle; Bendigo
Redmayne. Robert, in hiding, sends
for Bendigo to come to a secret cave.
Both amen disappear and there is evi-
deuce of a terrible struggle in the
cave.
Jenny marries Giuseppe Doria, who
works for Bendigo, and they go to
live in Italy, where Jenny's uncle, Al-
bert Redmayne lives.
Peter Ganns, famous American de-
tective, assists Brendon in the investi-
gations.
nvestsgations.
Ganns arranges an arrest of Doria.
Jenny is kil:e d when she throws her-
self in front of her husband and re-
ce.ives the bullet meant for him when
he tries to escape.
NO.W GO ON WITH THE STORY.
"Nothing at present was positively
known by me which made it put of the
question that Joseph Pendean's wife found, and that is all. His purpose
should be the mother of Giuseppe is to indicate a hiding -place for the my meat and drink within his pages
Doria. But none the less many facts
corpse and lead search in a certain and to see my own youthful impres-
edglit exist as yet prove such an sus dirction; but he is not going to trust sions reflected and crystallized with
edge, which would prove the sea; he is not going to stand the the brilliance of genius in his stu-
picion vain. 1 considered how to ob- risk of Robert Redmayne's corpse pendous mind.
Remember, I, who write, am not
thirty years old.
AS a young man without experience
I sometimes asked myself if. some
spirit from another order of beings
than my own had not been slipped into
my human carcass. It seemed to me
that none with wham I -came in: con -
to clear the :point, 'belt I can guess
that et that first interview with Ben
he tumbled to the fact that you were
hidden in the tower room.
"That being so, his own plans .had
to be modified pretty extensively.
Whether he meant to finish :oft Ben
that night, you can't be sure; but there
is very little doubt of It. Everything'
was planned.
"Now we get another lifelike report
of runaway Robert; and finally Ben-
digoconsents to visit him in his hiding
place. The' lamp is going to burn and
show the particular cave on that
honeycombed coast where Bendigo's
brother is supposed to" be concealed.
Another night comes and Ben goes to
his death.
"Two Redinaynes have gone to their
account and there remains but one.
Meantime the course of true love runs
smoothly and, Doris marries his wife
again."
CHAPTER XVIII.
CONFESSION.
Durilig the autumn assizes, Michael
Pendean was tried at Exeter and con
t 1emned to death for the murders of
) obert, Bendigo and Albert Red-
mayne.. He offered no defence and he
was only impatient to return, to his
seclusion within the red walls of the
county jail, where he occupied the
brief balance of his .days with just
such a statement as Peter Ganes had
foretold that he would seek to make.
This extraordinary document was
very characteristic of the criminal.
Here is his statement, word for
word, as he wrote it:
MY APOLOGIA. •
•
"Here, I think; we may spare a tri-
bute of admiration to Pendean's his-
trionics. Both he and his wife were
heaven born comedians as well as hell -
born criminals.
That he will leave a full statement
before the end, I venture to prophesy.
His egregious vanity demands it. You
may even expect something a little
new in the suicide line if they give
'him a chance; for be sure he's thought
of that.
"And now I'll indicate how I
brought fact after fact to bombard
my theory, and how the theory with-
stood every assault until I was bound
to accept it and act upon it.
"We start with the assumption that
Pendean is living and Robert Red-
mayne dead. We next 'assui`le that
Pendean, having laid out his wife's
uncle at Foggintor, gets into his
clothes, puts on a red mustache and
a red wig and starts for Berry Head
on Redmayne's motor bicycle. The
sack supposed to contain the body is
"Hearken, ye judges! There is an-
other madness besides, and it is before
the deed. Ah! Ye have not gone deep
enough into this' soul!' Thus speaketh
the red judge: 'Why did this criminal
commit murder? He meant .to rob.'
I tell you, however, that his soul hun-
gered for blood, not booty; he thirsted
for the happiness of the knife!"
And again:
"What is this man? A coil of wild
serpents at war against themselves --
so they are driven apart to seek their
prey in the world."
So wrote one whose art and,-wr"idom
are nought to this rabbit -brained gen-
eration; but it was given to ine to find
taro these facts and naturally my
thought turned to Giuseppe himself.
"Having found out what Penzance
could tell me, I beat it up to Dart -
spoiling his game. No, his, victim never
left Foggintor End probably Michael
will presently tell us where to find the
mouth, because I was exceedin ly anx- body,
mouth,g "Meanwhile a false atmosphere is
ions to learn, if possible, the exact
date when Giuseppe Dorsa entered the
employment of Bendigo Redmayne as
motor boatman, Albert's brother
hadn't any friends that I could find; !-
but
but I traced his doctor and, though het
was not in a position to enlighten me.!
he knew another man—an innkeeper
at Tor-cres , some utiles away on the
ceaet—whe might he familiar with
thio eital date.
"Mr. Noah Blades proved a very'
shrewd and capable chap. Bendigo _
Redmayne ne had known him well, and it I
was after spending a week at the!
Tor cross Hotel with 'Blades and go.-
ing
ing fishing in his motor boat, that thei
old sailor had decided to start one,
himself et 'Crow's Nest.' He did so
and his -first boatman was a failure.
Then he advertised for another• and
received a good many applications.
He'd sailed with Italians and liked
them on a ship, and he decided for
G`.useppe I)oria, whose testimonials;
appeared to be exceptional. The man
came along and, two days after his
arrival, ran Beedigo doettii to Tor -
'cross in his launch to see Blades.
"Redmayne, of course, was full of
the murder at Princetown, which had
just occurred, and the tragedy proled
so interesting that IIlledee had little;
time to notice the new motor boatman.'
But what matters is that we know it
was on the -day after the murder`—on i
the very day Bendigo heard what his
brother, Robert, was supposed to have,
done at Foggintor' Quarry --that his
new man, Giuseppe Doria, arrived at ,
'Crow's Nest' and took on his new •du-,
ties.
"That meant that not Pendean, but
his wife's uncle, Robert Redmayne,
perished on Dartmoor. And there ho-
lies yet, my son!"
"I hurled. him over the cliff."
ee
created under which he proceeds to
his engagement at `Crow's Nest.',. And
then what happens? The first clue— My life proceeded order;y; I chose
the forged letter, purporting to come the profession of dentist, as being
from Robert Redmayne to his brother. likely to introduce me to people of a
Who sent it? Jenny Pendean on her more interesting type than my fath-
way through Plymouth to her Uncle er's acquaintance; and I kept an open
Bendigo's hone. mind for myself, but a shut mind for
"Jenny plays widow but spends as others.
much time as she wants in her bus- The brainless Robert Redmayne,
hand's arms all the sane; and tee brought his niece to spend her school
gether they plan to put out poor Ben. holiday with him and I discovered in
He'd never seen Pendean, of course, the seventeen -year-old school girl a
which made the Doria swindle pos- magnificent and pagan simplicity of
sible. Isineline to think that Michael mind,
combined with a Greek 1ove:i-
meant to begin with the old sailor and nese of body that created in me a
that, when Robert turned up unex- convulsion.
tact was -.built on, or near, my own
pattern, for I had only met oner-
son as yet.—my mother—who did not
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Write your name andaddress plain-
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suffer from the malady of a bad con -e ddress your order to Pattern Dept.,
science. My father and his friends : Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade -
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At liftetn. years of age I killed a return mail.
man, and found, in a murder under-
taken for very definite reasons, .a
thrill beyond expectation. That inci-
dent is unknown; the death of my
father's foreman, Job Trevose, has not
been. understood till now. He lived at
Paul, a village upon the heights nigh
Penzance. Among the fish -curing
sheds one day, unseen, I chanced to
!tear Trevose speak of my mother .to
another pian and. declare that she did
evil and dishonored my father.
From that moment I doomed Tre-
vose to .death 'and, some weeks later,
after many failures to win the right
conditions, caught him alone in a sea
fog. I walked beside him for fifty
paces, then fell behind, leaped at •his
neck and hurled hint over the cliff in
an instant.
pectedly'"on Dartmoor, he altered his We loved one another devotedly
Mr. Gams took snuff and proceeded. n.ans.
t "Now we come to the preliminary
tbr
.,-'s , ,) it makes
them siiatle
it's sure
worth while.
.1
case
11.)31.1E No, 18---'26.
After
every treat •
1 steps at 'Crow's Nest' which ended in
the death of the second brother, You
offered just the starting point; and.
before you left on that rough, moon.-
I light night, Pendean had recreated the
forgery of Robert Redmayne and ap
' peered before you in that character:
And not content with this, he kept the
part going for all it was worth. As
Robert Redmayne, he broke into Strete
I•'arm and was seen by Mr. Brook, the
from the first understanding.
(To be continued.)
Miinard's Lielment for backache.
The Music.
The birth befell',
Upon a night all the Syrian
stars
Swayed tremulous before ono lordlier
orb
That rose in gradual.splenclor,
Paused,
sulci. blooding the firmament with myotic
"Now we get .to •blindman's buff! light
with the forgery. Follow each stew' And dropped upon the breathing hills
Bendigo never sees his supposed bro- A "Cid" tnusir.
ther once; you never seen him again.
Your united search through the woods
is futile; but Jenny; and her husband
in the motor boat' bring news of hint.
Robert must. sec Bendigo all alonee-•
and he mist have food and a lamp in
his secret hiding place:
"Well, it's fixed up and 13en decides
to meet his brother after midnight,
alone; but the old sailor's plunk wave
• e'eLe-whq shall blt me him?—and he
arranged in secret with you that you
iThould be hidden in his tower room
when Robert Redmayne Comes to keep
the appointment. -
"Nori the next thing .puzzled Mie for
a Moment; but 1 think I know what
httppeii d, Only Pentlean`s final ;state-
ment, if he ever Makes one, will servo
—Doh Marquis.
eiseitileffitieSeisafismintitaletaleelielEillot
On Monday eveeiug, May 3, at
eight o'clock,. from Massey fall,
Toronto will be RADIOCA ST
by Station e.t1.i,C., 357 meter wave
length, a LECTURE on Christian
Science, entitled
"Christian Science the
Science of Healing"
13y Gavin W. Allen, (1.8,13., • of
Toronto, a member of the Board of
Lectureship of Tile Mother Church,
The Peet Church of Christ, Scien-
tist ,Boston, Mass. You are cor-
dially invited to listen in.
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Re454
The Mouth Organ as a
Physical Stimulant.
Apart from all effects it may pro-
duce upon the pulmonary organs, the
mouth organ has in many instances.
proved a splendid mental tonic.•While
discussing mouth organs' with a friend
recently, the conversation turned to
army days. My friend mentioned an
incident which occurred in France
while a company of, wearied troops
were on a forced march. It was neces-
sary to reach a certain place before
day break, but the Company was still
a number of miles away from its des-
tination when it became evident that
the majority of the men were physi-
cally tired out. Steps began to drag,
and it seemed that the party would
saver reach their objective at the time
ordered.
Suddenly. wheu everybody was ready
to drop, the old familiar tune of "Tip-
perary'"broke the night's silence. One
after another heads went up, dragging
feet stepped out in time to the music,
and the whole company Moved for-
ward like a new man. The music kept
up mile after mile, and the soldiers'
feet kept up with it.
In spite of exhaustion, the company
arrived at its scheduled destination
with every man marching. The day
had been saved and the glory went to
the man who had suddenly remember-
ed that in the bottom of his kit bag
was the only musical instrument in
the 'company.
I suppose it's hardy necessary for
me to say that that instrument Was a
mouth organ.—S. T. Leonards.
Sentence Sermons.
Seven Bests --The bent compliment
—the one a woman pays a man when
she marries him.
—The best business—making men
out of hired ]rands.
—The best music—the laughter of
ones' children at evening time.
•--The best religion—that which re-
sults in orthodox conduct.
—The 15est medicine --faith, as an
antidote for worry.
The Scrapegoat.
During the war, especially, many a
man was removed from office or from
a. high command more as the victim
of a policy than for any sin or omis-
sion of his own. Re,w.as sand to be a
"scapegoat," because he was, more or
less, suffering for faults that were by
no means all his own.
This passage, front the Bible, illus-
trates the present use of the term
"scapegoat":, "Aaron shall cast lois
upon the two goats; one lot for the
Lord, and the other lot for the scape-
goat, and Aaron shall bring the goat
upon which the Lord's lot fell, and of-
fer him for a sin offering. But the
goat on which the lot fell to be the
scapegoat shall be presented alive be-
fore the Lord, to make an atonement
with him, and to let him go for a scape-
goat: into the wilderness. .And
Aaron shall lay both his hands upon
the head of the live goat, and confess
over hint all the iniquities of the Child-
ren of 'Israel . . . prating then upon
the head of the goat, and shall send
him away by the hand of a gt man into
the wilderness: And the goat shall
bear upon him all their iniquities unto
a land not inhabited: and he shall let
go the goat in the wilderness."
Thus, through` three thousand years
or more, has this pitiful picture of the
scapegoat come to us, tb he used to -day
as the symbol for a man who IS the
victim, more or less innocent, of other
people's inistakes and errors.
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"That luminous paint is a splendid!
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`-`What do you use it for?"
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Justice and truth are absolutely es-
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S. Marden.
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