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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-07-24, Page 2• ..4.7.4f4-,' iii?.•;11P,71.0 717, 0,11W. • 11,,,c44444: 444. • . • „„- - • . 0';;;;,t1, , . 11 JMt, 4 44. iil, , 1 •,••4 " w • • 1.s, 'rit 44, -. •• ,c; , ..., . '1?-„ko• • .„ : • • ' .. : Lk' . .s . • . . .. . to• 1 .. • • • • • 1 4. • A. • - Bell Lutien THIS HAS HAPPORD • __ Attempts have Wen made on the. -life of Elise MarbOrrYs owner of coo• , siderable property neer Pcirto Verde, Brazil. Vilak, ler cousin .md protec- 1. to; 'believes Gaylord 'Prentiss" to be ,responsible. Elise* Vilak and Lincoln • Nunnitlly, an aged che,inista. rescue Prentiss from day® :attack by natives. The -nest daY .Elise's little • , orphaned nePhew,,;s stolen ' The trail leads info' the. joogle. • ports that Prentiss'„has heep seen with the baby. Vilak: makes preparatjOns fora long pursuit:possibly of te7e Tilculthe; to 'reCoVer the babY. • NOW BRON THE STOtt - • • • CHAPTNR j1Xi14,' • - Elise .turned to month? u • . Tere•inonthe? ." she_rePeat- ed. Her werde were 41011, lifeless. Drearily she resinned„ her labet.• ' . • They eontimieci working throughoet the ' night:' Shortly after dawn the puffing:.Schwartz returned from his quest: Ile Sighed wearily she ploW; • ' ded-up to Elise"I haf und, some men, Yraulein Marberry • But vot a - • ...Pight 'hat 1 had. Una v t en. Der, good men vill not com They" haf their homes here now and t "ey do not Wish to leave. BO I must take -der ' , • rascals,. der leafers, der on s who dO • not -Work ether days and he_ eQMS • '•• 1 . :Supplies were. collecteld and ' lead4d upon the backs of eight mules which ware tO•aceerOPPIIF the Men until too great stretches of water made their use intpossibk‘ . • From 'her fozendu at 'CRAW; Elise obtained ,a second carme,:also of can'. Atos,--fOr the naivebotits were little :better • than dugouts '"and' keavy •and,. cumbersome as to be almost, ian- possible :Of tranopertatiea .ever the land.' Jr • -About two O'cleckwin the 'afterneon, two hours later than. •the Wm. -4100f bad, lieen set fer theit-apnear'anee, the! natives • who WeXe to aceaMPanythP aree A.meriranO began to straggle in. Lazineas wae•evident in' the eleerlY ,doping faces' 'of Scene • callonsnesi brutality in the visaget:ef Man*: • • TWo half-breeds, almost an tike.fiee expedition ,:b10.r- The .Poppie". Ar,:p44,400P , spect the: oargoeiiWans•T41-t:. . • 'Open the lonelY MO! ' • The white mall, •The--.,popples ate aoeep.no.w.. anything Which might be injured • pith Retais rolled ,abodt them, Hid in the eget green iwasses. Deep in the night's full shade. Dreaming of smille -spaces Snugly and, unafraid.'" ,Dreamfug of Wagdering.hreesea That whisper many things. When noon is at its fullness,. And birdi are on light wing; into the other. : They "started across When day is at its fairest With laughter the,•etreame-- PoPPies are.nsleee now. And mirthful .are their dreams. —Mabel Whitman Phillies. water tothe canoes, . The natives glanced .appeagenalesi Their dhncing Pleasures still; at the other.:side of the etream, and began muttering. Patties put a quick end to the 'possibility of •rem.ttiny. by' plunging'in and swimming swiftly to theother grumblingotherhetec.4T:die.other s litoghed, The white men,: Elise.and .our the natives clandoered into one game; The remaining nine blacks arid Indians the stream, some paddling, some hold- ing the swimming; mules by the ridles; As they neared the land the huge,'alligaters basking in die.. mud crawled off sluggishly into: th frightened ot 'their nombers2:-, They. _un -.the What New.. York loaded., the eanoes, ..replated „ • , $ burdens On the backs of the mule -,s, W ring Viten set off:once more: The- trail SeuL • ••• • • ,tintied uninterruptedly, throegh. the' •„ ••" ' •• • ferest.BYANNABEL1.E WORTIIINGTOX: As the eofavin -pierced deeer and • " • ,deeper 'into the wildernesi,,.: Elise's with thick mouths and 'snow-white, hair covering theire smallanimal heads, Nunnally thought appeared dangerous. Three Indians, tall, tawny, • almost naked, teetered over their cont-• panioris: The newcomers began lets- . . O . . urely to assist in leading the anirnals. ' • At three o'clock. Atabape, the giiide, 'Irealize itv Butl'mI'd aot toolnucionlygio..: III'rnbreak down agidgrn ;u Aot y.: anived. Tall like the .other Indians; hehad more of the Mongolian cliarae- Only . delay us.' You'rei doing „ teristies, which have led anthropelo-everything youcan . . . iverything . . . I'm nOt going to make it=harcler ,• spirits 'somewhat brightened. • "'you 1pok -better," Vilak said. "I an- . I've been thinking.' She" forced herself to smile. "If I let my- self go„ if I stopped to . . . •renember gists to be certain thatthe Indian , • for you by looking, mournful all day merely a development of•the Mongols , • , tong." • "Good. econtr he •answered alid pressed her hand. '(to be continued.) "reek from the gardesi.st tainiany Corner , Harold Fish was sitting in the dark in the drawhig-iooni with hie ..youag :lady friend, andfie did not nOtiee' that the hour as getting „late 'Suddenly the door •opened and the girFe father appeared on the scene 111u.strated Dressmaking Lesson Fule lashed With Every Pattern "Do yon know the timer!he asked. Fish jtimped to his feet at once,, snatched up his hat; and almost ran from the room. , • Accidents suggest • automobiles; gradeeroisings, airplanes. explosions, or nigh -speed. iteeltinery,; But a -recent survey of the injuries • 4isted in elaimaLunder--worlunerk's: • 'compensatiOn insurance reveals that even the deeorative daffodil, a timer- •" 'elle mouse, or the wind at the Battery • wall may mean menths. in a hospital Says -the-New--York- 250.3 correspondent of the Bosten Herald: • "Oddly. eceuired injuries come to . • light - freouently through the clahns •irork"of the. Ne* York State inenrance fund; which is the largest carrier' of compensation insurance in the State. A perusal of the -claim files at the • borne !Ace diaereses that .hidden perils oftenbeset the most innoeent- appearing .cireumstances. •"An elderly man engaged to run errands ,icoetd not cope With • the strong wind at the 'Battery. He was blown against a railing and his leg Severely injured. "Some dange lurks in the current fashion7-a girl forgot she had placed. 1, %needle in the hem of her skirt. •Her leg struck against a table. The needle Iva§ driven into her -leg just above the knee. 1 , • "A spider in the cellar bit a plunib. er." • • "A• machine at which , a girl was working broke 'with a crash that sounded like an explosion. The girl's facial muscles became paralyzed from the frigbt.. • "A school prIncipal handed a die. Irma to a ' girl graduate. With be presented a bouquet of roses a rela- tive had Sent. A thorn pricked his finger and bleed poisoning developed. He was incepitated for several mouths and the courts awarded 'him compen- sation, holding that the injury was re- ceived , in the course of his employ- ment. • "A bookkeeper turned his head; s Only and a pen in Ills hand pierced For neatness and, order she surely was " ' •4. • • . ':. • 4t. ••• 4,4 „.• • 44 , • Vilak, sitting:at the fire to keep watch,. was left alone. now them se who eiossed Bering Straits ad finch moneys. • "Three, four, niaybe, iss good In - diens, fine Indians. Der rest iss I know not vot. .Der vorst off Porto Verde.. I haf get a guide; too. An Indian vot calls himself Atabape. I do not know him veil: 'He hal, just come to Porto Verde. • He is 'a In,- diad from the west, toward, Equador, toward Peru, -I din. • A Berero, maybe, maybe a blhainhiquara. Be say dat he know der count.7 and iss not afraid. Maybe he knows it, maybe he does not. But der iss othpri. Bo I can do noddingi brit to talt4:hirn. 'He and der others who -mit us go vill .be here ven comes twelve o'clock to morrow." • • Elise thanked ,hirri. She gve hint some orders.: In half an hour . the' •fazenda- was humming with activity. Liie—like good golf—is made Up of many little things each oneef whiehlelis die score. rt Better ,digeStioh•-steadie* nerves—clearer brain, are at • factors that ,count and are gained fro the the use of Wrigley's. . Aftet • etery meat, • Marte.q kCeilys yotr awake • ISSUE No. 49—'36 :41 spread down the American coasts or the Polynesians .who ,sailed in their staunch 'outriggers from the Pacific • islands. His eyes weleislanted: only a degree less than' Yilik 'So his .cheek- bones very high, his nose straight but broad: Scarcely moving his long, thin mouth when he spoke', his bony face gloomy, impaes've, be annbunc9„ that he. was ready. . • With the 'guide and the three friends at' the' head, the caravan set off. Schwartz, together with the ca- daverous Wilson, whc had come over from Villapi with 'the canoe and dog- gedly insisted on accompanying the expedition, followed: After •them came Pantos with ,the eight placid, heavily laden mules. Then came the two canoes, each .borrie on the heads of three negroes.. ; The procession ended in •a, line of Indians and sleepy half-breeds, the latter listlessly smoki_g cigarets and sadly thinking of the ,tinte when the mules could no- longer trudge along • the trail With them and they must carry the heavy burdetm on their backs. • • Dee to the lateness of their start, it was almost sunset by the time they had reached the swamp seliere the newly cut:,,tyail began to pierce the jungle. Goillg on half a mile facthir where the land was slightly higher and the danger of fever and of insect 'plagues consequently less, they cleared out a narrow' patch of underbrush and pitched camp for the night. They, ate; ai hour or two later the Y began to crawl into their hammeiks. . Vilak. sitting at ,the fire to keep watch, was left alone. Ile drew a nide of 'Brazil from his pocket and for triong time studied the great river valley i- and equatorial wages that to the westward,:then returned the map to his pocket. At two -thirty he' . roto, woke Schwartz, • who took {hid place at the Ore, and seiung into his _haninigek fdlr a brief • sleep. At five o'elock the .eartivhn raS 071Ce in en route. They reached Ne river winding -4' I through the jungle' „blackness I :here' Jane is sp thrilled because her new yellow and • white 'dimity, frock. ,is sieeVeless: It has a capelet collar ilia like. mother's that.mahes doubly at- tractiVe,, The cellar .crisp white *pudic. The scalloped edge is fin- ished with:a running stitch. ity.yellow thread. - .• • • ',The - in:Mt and back' of 'the ,diesS ,• are. gathered and joined , to a' yoke. The .senlloped.bent has bias 'binding in plain: yellow Organdie. '• ' It's' so easily:made micro comfort- ably cool .end pretty for summery days. • •. Style No.•250 may be had in -Sizes 2., 4,16 and. 8 years. Pale blue dotted swiss, nile green, 'handkerehief lawn. 'red and- white pique print with white pique collar. 'and sub silk in pink and white are failionaele coinbinations. • • ' HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. ' •• • Write your name and addreseplain- .1y, .nurnber and size of suzli .patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stainPi-er 'OW preferred;: wrap it' carefully) for each . number, and address your order-to:Wilson Pattern• , Sertlice,-73 West Adelaide St:, Toronto. The Perfect .Housekeeper She always kept everything perfectly Front the cellar clear-up to the top; his nose. Infection developed that ' brought on, a fatal brain abcess. "A delivery boy: who says that; in accordanceIvith safety instructions, • he waited -for the proper signal light before crossing Fifth Avenue Wage,. alleges that as a result he was inca- pacitated by inhaling the fumes from passing automobiles. • "Even 1.11.,e safsty of the home may be overestimated. ".'It is not generally realized,' said Charles G. Smith, manager of ' the State fund; 'that about one:fourth of all fatal accidents ar• e in the h me no me. best information •is that there were 'approxiinately 100,000 persons killed in accidents of all kinds in the United States, last year, " and that abotif 25,000 of these deaths occurred in the home, " 'In general, automobiles brought about Most, /accidental deaths, while -falls 'took the second largest toll' Of life. In the borne falls stand first in the HA of 'Causes 'of aceidental deaths'." • • • "Cruet is pretty clime." • • "Yes, he is so staall that he could take a full hath fa a finger bewl." MAitttlAGE. Scii00t_8 "•Mattirliony," says a writer, "is ,an •institution of leartinginesvhith a mon loses his bachelor's degree ivithoet ac. auirieg a Master's." ' • Mitiard's Liniment:give& gawk reUef. ' keen, And no one could ..et her.to stop. , Her husband could never find comfort at .home, For fear he would muss up the plate • Where his wife with a broom and a ° duster would roam , , With a stern sort -of look on her face. •, She never had time to be reading a t hook. • ' She never had time for a call, • Instead; she Was scrubbing corner :or • nook , • " • Or sweeping the stairs in theiball. She swept all her beauty and gladness away, She swept all the;joyent of life. Until she beeame an antomaters grey • • • • • • ' 'When he had -gone -the girl's father turned to his daughter. ' "Is that young mail a fool'?" he ask- ed angrily. "What make§ you think that, fath- er?" querried the girl. He only went diesel:Ise he thought you were giVing him, ihe hint." .."Alathing of the sort;" her father - explained. "My watch has stopped and I came to ask him the :correct time."—Answers. • . Pidlded Plums ingredienti: Four pounds of pluins, one "peund 'of .Demerara sur, one pint of hest vinegar, • six cloven...1 a piece of cinriamon:,',n few grains Tof cayenne. Prick the Pints Well with a silver fork Put then' in an earthen - Ware bowl. Put the sugar and sniceS in a stewpan with the vinegar -and tiring 4he boil. Cook and when is-only-WarM,:pattr-it-ever,the. pluin% it - Leave it far 'twenty-four hours, then • reboil the yiugar pour it over the plums again. Repeat this , ford three days. Then put plums and vinegar in...a _preserving pan and boll eke- eether for five -minutes:: • Turn into jars and tie down when sold. • Minard's Liniment for all Strains. • The Right Atmosphere • Scribber dashed into the editor's "Can have $5 advance on the story I'm writing?" lie asked, " The editor looked up from his de,sk. "irliat is a. very unusual reques" i, he murmured. • Scribber gave an appealing look. "I know," he returned; "but it's like this.: I've got to a point in the Story where the hero sits down to a square meal, and I want to get ;the` right at- mospliere."—iAnswers. • • Prices from • 455 to St.o0 Nothing can fake the place -of: Enameled Ware. Indentify it by the SMP label of quality.' No matter how severe• ,' you tan always have •mediate relief: • A:cleaning Inachine-not a wife. She scrubbed all the love front the -.heart Of her spouse; Her 'children , were playless and She had her reward—an immaculate whehre4vitnseo,body 'ever wenid come. She swept and she dusted aritiSernb- bed like a slave • :Till she Swept herseli into the tomb. And the monument now at the head of her grave• • IS A duster, a brush and a hroom. —Perron Brafey. . Sunspots and Rabbits , The numbers of pelts' feeeived 'by. the iladilee's Bay Company from year to year sitiee about 1540 show marked periodic variation. According' to an investigation -.made at the Dominion ObUerVatOrY, Ottawa, the number of rabbit pelts iva8, on theaverage. three itithes greater one year before the ntinimuni of sunspots LIMA at the MaxittiUni, 4. 4Est Aspirin alwayas stops ipain quickly. h • does it without ny e fecti.%•tierti SS 1 to the heart. harmless to onyhti.1.1;. tlut it always brings relief. MTh., t:uffez? patetustard .Pte• . Line a pie, plate with a goott`erug • , aed pet in 2' *cans chopped4a1 " 'then malie..a euitatcl' followa:., Two" egg yolks, Wren'? sugar, I cup milk,' pinchsalt,r). teaspoon 'vanilla (a little nutineg may be used in place of vanilla). Beat this all ,well and: POur'aver dates. Bake untii•fitm; then ' cover with. beaten egg whites, to • which a teaspoon of sugar and pinch of baking • PoWder have been added. • Brown in moderate Wren. •• Cardinal Salad - Boil"2 largo beets until tender, or use canned beets; slice, cover with 2 tablespoons vinegar and allow them to stand over night. Brain off vine- gar and add to mayonpaise. Take 1 cupwax beans, cap. peai, 1 cup as-• paragus tips and., kix with the red . mayonnaise. Serve in little roselike ". nests Of lettuce 'leaves end garnish • :With red radishes. • • ASPIRIN; I • 'MOL MArnt REG. . 1 • • 'Strawberry Shortcake ' „ • • • Beat 1 'egg, add cup ,sugar and. ,• 1 ettp•rnilk and mix.Measure ‘2,1,4"ctips pastry 'float; 5 teaspoons baking:pow der and %,teasPoop Salt. Add through 'a sifter to .the egg mixture. • Beat well. Melt 1,11.' cup butter, add mix7 orid 'Turn -info greased 3 -inch layer'eake Belie, at 400- degrees , 25 to 30 minutes) When baked,;" remove ,from •pans. Place cakes en n.calte cooler witil • derd. :W.asheird'stein--2-truirts Straw- • berries... Reserve ebOut 1 dozen of the nest shaped berries. 'for garnishing., Crush' remainder slightly With potato Masher. . Then add 1 cup sugar and mix. Place one-half; of berries .he- tween the ttvp layers and theremain- der on the upper laYer. Whip 34 pint cream; add 1/1 cup pciTrdered sugar, Pinch salt, and •% teaspoon 'vanilla. and , Mix: Cover the upper layer of Cake. with creatn, garnish with whole 'berries. and 'serve it once icomormsco meat. std- , vitas your child, of course, if possible,butdon't experiment with all sorts of food • that you knome little about. . Basle Brand has been thestandardinfant food since 1857. It is entirely pure* it is ex— ceedingly digestible end there In an ever ready supply at any dealer's no matter where youo. eitslive or. Btratill baby books scatfrti" • on ttvast . • . yet c TifE,1301trittki CO., timrrao 440 St.1Patil Mcintclid Sebd rt.? Baby Books to; • • teseet. AY411;4145.5.44 40e • • , ta, ## # ttttt 00000 Ifistd. ttt 0000 &la Add To Your Smuttier 1 -tome Enjoyment With a Craisahoutt •,..- - , Fort FISH ICI swim- ru ,/ j 9 • , mg.fast terry, day dtsbOtt, . • 19711isqbp • SgieS and Setviett by. • 11 T. B. e. BENSON, N.A. . 371 14 Street Toronto Out. boating or ratortlight oitis-Jug, the eitrisa0Out has no mna' for JOY.," givn. health and rt00t1 nets oh the laugbitifti rionting Atates. this erktisabcut. 29' long. it` ^la" beeitt arid 2:f 44 draft. is a big. burly rionlitY built. isMtl.ti • . ttivittith0 rtinefnint Wit dettendoble 110-11.P. Gra Marine meter.. l'ha 1 ooltnft IS startle for an, party., 'the smatt . bow cabin has toilet and loti ot hanging snade fav ibthes, bathing Ittlital golf bags and tithitiri trikle. Tills Ofay Cruitiabet (prided at S3.S5 at 'fa tory) and her sister -hip' are utittated • in Mt ill catalaitil& • Write tvr I 00.•