The Lucknow Sentinel, 1933-08-24, Page 2. .S.T,Ncu?1.$... '
' " her ' ' 'I/
. :Willie Mrs. Willett,dao4.1.0..cr . lc-
- Jet, Major Burnaby and three :neighbors
.pitt-ed at table, tipping,. a "Spirit" rnes,
egKe. .Stztes that 'PArt• .,TOs• TreyelYan
has., been nturdered, at 'iiis-. hOine in E.7t-
• Iihiupton.... f;tirnatty found his friend
• :.deed, the baso of his..Sithit fractured,
Trewelyan's- WM: rdivides his estate into
...tour Olt* .parts, between ' his ,osister,
MiL Jenniter. Gardner; oa-id the three
• ChiltIren Of his 'deceased. siatet', ,l5,tit,r3t,
Pearson. A., dames Pearson had been ;in
Es
tnnupton. the, afterneon of the niorder,
caving for •;,00dols. the following' morn -
I
.
ng. Major 13urnaby.receiee6 KChetpie
for 5,090: pounds in' a ltie*Spaper coinpe-
- tition:.! ; '..pitly Trefueis,, • pearson'S
titincee,, belay:ea ..a4. islnitteCent anct.'huri-
'1,48.'40 gicllaniPt911;, Ina.1•50S'' _,4'il, clerbVP
cqu'aint4,7ke and asks. him to"...heln, clear
.rearson.._; .Sne schtides: 14.340. .13,11irl,F,
03o twit:ITS:4y: • ' '• - • -
„. . .
,
Pg4;PTER, XL-7-(C9,it'd.)
".We muSt saYe, Proyn'Wailed.,
•course We will/ Of course- we
will," Mrs. Belling consoled her. •
• Emili, dabbed her eyes. vigorously,
./aye one ,last sniff,• and gulp, and;
• raising lier 'head,: demanded fiercely:
'",Where can I 'Stay at Sittaford?”
"Up4te'Sittaford? ToP're. set, on
going 'there, my •dear,?".
.4r.Sres," Emily nodded vigorouslY.
Well now Mrs.. Belling cogitate
the matter. r"There's only one place
for ee to staY. There's not /Much to
'
Sittaford. the big- house,
Ifttaf�rd House, whiih Obtain Tre=1
velYan built': and that's let now to a
touth. African :lady. , And thereethe
• six "cottages he and No. 0 of
them, cottage!has got .:Netirtii,, 'What
' Used. to be gardener ' .at Sittaford;
House, in it;. and :Mrs: ,Curtis. She
lets rooms in the siiramei time, • .the
Captain allowing hertodo so. There's
-ziowhere-else--yon could stay and
, laCt:
There's the biacksmith"s. and
the ;Post; office, ,but Mary .Hibbert.,
'ahe's got Six.,Childreit and her sister -
•living with her, and the
blaCkiMith's, wife .shes'-OxPeeting.heF
eighth, so there won't be se raUch•as
'a ..corker, there: But, how are You
going to get ,up to Sittaford, ,miss?
Hava..you,hir;e&-.al-ear?"
"I. ani :going to. Share Mr.• Ender,
arid. Where will he be, staylag.
1 wonder?".,;; • ' • :•.'
"1 sjse hew 111 havel,tti.be put up,
at Mrs. 'C'n,rtis's ,too. have
robin:far. hoth-of:
, don't know that, that will look
quite right for young lady.like
. . „ .
said- Mrs. Beling.
"He's iny
7
trinsin,". said
On no .aedatint, she.'-fele,•--rnuSt
Aensa.'of propriety intervene. to work
'AgairistAer in Mrs:
The lahdladY!arciv,.cleared.•"Weil,
:that. '14k -e4 all. right :theii.,!' 'she ;al-,
lewed grudgingly, "and •not
. if .yore not.,..comfortablevith .1VIrs.,
Curtis they : would put you . hp the
big hOuse,":. • N
, J.„,m,•aer.ry: I've been suel'Ain
• ssaid •Einily;sni6p'piiv.bnc
37, :e more at;
1•g •
. ,
only natural, dear: And
you. feel better for ..
."I•045;1. said : truthfully. ."
teel, innob' bettert". '
• 'good. ei•-y,-anii '•good cup of 'tea
nothing' to heat there„. And
a, nice eup'- of :tea You shall have at
.onCe, my. dear, before' you 'start off
On that cold, drive," " : • .
....)t0h thank " Oh but I don't think
I really want -7' • .
"Never, Mind. what you witUt;
*hat ,..yeif,re 'going to have " Said' 'Mrs::
.. )3, risingwith, determtpatton and
iineVing towards- the ‘,`Arid. you
id -AmCurtis from me that, Sloe's
•to Inalt ,affer you ' and -see you take
your :food proper and. see.. Yon. don't
‘'le,Oca .ki#0•44 said •
,
• Attt.ir:rd tner•d-,_ Wel? 11:1•Y''
'dewra.
er, part Jo
war* ' '71Z, ! •
lavyt•T' •"4" "rt.
1,111ng 4c),••br. 14i,,141
•••
::-"That I will.wt
-
„
deer, hat,e you/ .
Sean OuP 'of , his ,i•re")44,- 1.104 ,
"I must: go fend pakk,"'•
.1 •. • ; .
".' • ".PII send the tee to• you sa4.e.
:Ws; taint.„. • •„,
upstairs. paelted her
• few •belongings tato:, her . suitcase;
. 0$pohged her, eye's with .eold water and
,a liberal alloWance of powder
touch of ruge.' •' '
• She rang the t,he' clianth'er,
„ .thai'd-7111te- Synipathelic Sist:erArf-1&*',
” .,Constahle. Grave') • carne• promptly.
n•lily: presented' her , With a •pperid
ote and 'hegged,lier earnestly' to..pa'si
!ion any Information she niight acquire
.rotindabotit ways .frOirs
4es. the -girl piernied readily. •
"Mrs, Curtis's up te Sittaford?. t,
•*illindeed,Miss tre' anithing that
' iwill. We 01 feet for you, Mi, more'
'thnn 1 ca/3 Say. ".• All the tinie I keep
iting!'"te- :myself, fancy , if,. it
tii,a's you and vi:oa, 1 keep saying.
;i0Onid . he distracted—that I *Old.
The least thing 1 hears pees On to
4.o -tiff Miss, at grs, Otirqess," •
angel," said toilyo
:Thus, the centre Of rethantie
. ton; •ttilly left the Thre‘: 'roWrief
• • havin dtay..kulped down' the, cup of
!4whyr..
"they've get. sne}t. pure tnintjs hi
the,conntry,'r said Eu.ily. ..41 :thought
it .wptild be better!' • •
aPdeSlOd• In that raid .1gr.
Enderby, rising to his opporthnitieS,
0..!I had "better call, you, "
"All right, cousin4-whait's your
name?"
.'"Charles."
"All right, Charks."
;•
Emily ,Was -rather fascinated by he:
,first ,view. of Sittaford. • Ttirnng off
the main:.road •abOnt•two miles f rein
Eicharripten they went upWards over a.
rough moorland. road Until they reach-
ed a village that was .situ: ted right
on the edge ;Orthe InQ01%, It e4esisted
of 4 srnit.hy, and a Conil)i.ne4 'Reit of-,
AiO:irrad sweet shop. From there they,
f011owed. a Jane, /and eaiiie•Ao a row
of •newly built sinall' granite bunga-
lows. • At the second, of these the car
.atriPPed :and the. driver .volunteered
the, •Infotaktion that this „was; Mrs:
- Airs. Curtis was A small; thin, gray
haired. Wortien, energetic'. and shrew!.
ish:in,diSposltion. • Shewas:. all .agog
With :the.:A6vs Of the 'Murder.
"Yes, • Of course /1.: can take you
Miss, and your ; cousin tool, if he can
Inst---walt-',nntil,71-shift • as•-fevtitf4;
You Won't •ytiur rneals
along nt 'as, ; 'don't .suppose? • Well;
Who lArpid,.. have believed it? Cap-
'tain TreVelyail Murdered and an in-
quest' And all: This • morning When
the news came you could have kneeked
nie down With A feather.:''
Both Emily and Charles deoldedthe
talkative '. Mrs. Curtis. would prove
useful.'
, „
,
CliAP:Tgli XII,
, , .• .
Drowned a: sea of talk, Emily
and; Charles '.., Enderby, were .shown
their new quarters' by Mrs.
Eniilyhad, a smalll Square robin, setup-
' uleusly Clean"? looking :Out and Up to
the .'shipe. ; Of ,Sittaford Beacon..
Charles's was a small slit fad-
iag. the front of:, the house.: and the
'lane; containing a bed and ,a inkro-
seopie `Chest Of ` drawers " and
wash-
stand. . ,
•
"The great,thing he: observed
after' the. driver of the car had been
duly. paid and thanked, •Ptltiat• we are
here.: If , we don't *now all there. is
to be known . aliout everyone living in
cr
SItfafor,.within. the nexcqUarter or,
•
Ten' minutes later, they were sitting
'ciewnetairs in, the comfortable kitchen
'being....intre'duced Cnrtin,; rather
gruff .looking„- gray haired 'old ,inaa;
and being regaled •. with :strong -.tea;
bread And butter, pevOnShire. cream
and hard-boiled .eggs:, • While they ate
And drankthey listened.. 'With" h lf
houran they knew everything there
was to be known a out the inhabitarits
• • ,
of the small community.
Flrst. there, was .Miss: kereelt4ser
who. lived :in .No..4 The cottage's, a.
sPilistet .ef,,,ttneertaip.years:,:.and Terri -
per ;ho had come 'down here to die,
'according to Mrs: Otitis, six years
:ago, :. •
`Tut believe ,pot, Miss,. the
air. of Sittaford henithy that
'she .pieked up from the day she Came.
"Miss Pereehonse haS•a nephew who
.oecastonally :copies .down to see her,'."
she .Werit on, "and indeed hes Staying
with her at the present tim• e Seeing
to it that the money .doesn?t. go out of
.the faniily; that's what hes doilig:
Ver.? dull for. a young gentleman at,
this, time of year.. .Bpt. 'there; there's
mere. ways than onerof *Using your:.
Self; -and his coming has beep a provi
deuce for the young. lady at Sittaford
H. -,we. Poor young thitig, • the ,idea
• b.ririging her to:that:great barrack
..• fai,je• in thewintettime...S_eltsh
-at mothers Are. A very
. too: Mr. :Ronald
• i -Ly op there a" -h otierr. as he
Miss:kerce-,,
•
Wag
• .51a4e,••;-?...7,a4 ,Ecnitl7 et, •
0:`440A:i;
ote.4,t , „
4o.',"..r.*. •
t * 4,9nr• ,a;tiet, •.10r
't•t4,•*:
1;*"
fohy teod brfirciyr tkrtlet. XV;
re- :part',4fKi".„:er
adayti...t A bathrtr,•,, tort
he is -7314,1A
OOP) T.:tak look of,k,"„tr,, bUt
hasn't got the.minnei.',
.13:tirtabyrAt; Woi4d •;1!...now ' s•
,• rnuuitary gehtlernan . the. fir st; ..tiVre.:
you .elappad„ eym,
es: on Ki'
9s79, 3, that Mr. gyeroft'u-
elderly gentlernap... They ,d9 aky thai
he used •td.' Ofte7 birds to otttlandiab 't •
Parta fot.theBritish Museuix
they call a natOriliat,•be .1t.Zr Alwsyt,-
opt androarnin.eVer the itheAtt:./ Andi
he has, a. very fine library
Tfi''cottage Is ta,4arlY" all .bookeasess:
"No :, 2 is •art•invalid t
CaPtain ,Wyaft, with an Indian
ant: And poor fellow he does feel the •
cold,' he :does. The servant 1. rnearb.'.••
mot the eaptaim OnnIng frotn I:
oittlandfsh'parts, it.'s riowinder,,
heat they' 'keep up inside the houeel'
Y9417,104t gentle.1411; he is,,apd,yert
MtiP*X0 14 And qptaih, T.re*.e17.
)140 were as thick as thieves
'Frieads.
of a lifetime they were.; Anethey,
V9th have the sonte.kind'ef putland'Oh
heads stuck upen the walls,"
• be continued„),
Sees Empire's Future
In Emigration
Rght Hc[1:. .7:hti,01a.
Says Natural Outlet for
British People are•
the, D, 11,n1
Vrightep, ,England.--,Rght.gon, J.
11, Thonias.told an .audience here ihat
•the "natural and InellAtahleentlet for
Brltlsh PeopIP through our 007:
miniens." , Mr, TPQ144,e', el),e414440..et.
the :OPening of .the„.$,Out-4..Afrle411.„d_144,
rplat,at tha:EmPire:Millt9I1114-*fT0,*
eitep,..aPpeled'hitt.:•hearera. te,
tDAY
gooda..itoni the DoMitt19110,
I• Wanted to sfXese,.eile..;Peint;!'
."Wir' Thema :Said, "it. would .be",thia4
,.T.ttat; whatever ,may: be-the...,.„.fiLtPre ot
this ceentrY, one thing certain Is. thnt,
the natural and ineVRable- outlet for
Boron • peg/Au must be through our
Dominions. ••' .
,"When you.", remenlber, e etna-
tiiined,;"that fOr; the past 30 years the
average number. of men, and lken1_,en
leaving Great : Britain: for. eVereaaS has
been hetween:150,00d'had.'206,010 every
year, And that for the flrst time In
his-
tory, 14. Instetid.‘4 of ',:any--kohig,:::-G0,-,0*"
tinted last •year, you get sonte ldea of
the ;important 'park : :emigration must -
play in .the solution 'Of our .problems
•• • ,
"Therefore,to securethat, we must
Malta our 'Doinknions- prosperous, • and:
when, we can comblaedtity With Plea-
sure. ;and get .satifactiOn from hotb.
...VS° shall :be on TOhat 1 i'Vottict eall, !P.m"
sporting phrase, an absolute certain-
•,' •
:in? another pert of ,I1194ddreas".Mr:.
' Themes- said, "We are living: at a time
. .
when'netiona4sin aeenie to be rninfillig
.niad;:but demet'letnajorget that. with
all :the ;troubled p'eriodswehave pass-
ed through and
unshakable in the whOle-woyld,',is
the 014 There no
nation in the world ,,bitt is envious Of
our„POSition,.
." . •
.Now Mr. Ripley
:...London; Eng.—Believe it• or not, Mr.
Ripley, writes' a coOesPondeht, but the
World la being,Manafactured
by a Lon-
don instrument-makera:
•:-The bore is ei?ly Ore-hundredthija,et
of An. ineh .autl" requires a:,PressUre,:ef-
2,006..ths, • to force ,mercury: through It.
tube one would • require
only one Aoa threenuart0 cubic'
.:.inchea 'Of nieicury.tet fill it. -,':•
the tube is tobe used in 'heat -gaug-
ing instrumentsi,
•, '.•
In_J
L,ondon.'s (Eng.) new. ;factories;
ernployizig•10,000 _people. all sorts of
articles.:are made, ntetuding Pyjamas,
radio' Parti, .cosinetics, :and, .sati.Sage-
. .
. ,
"Notnianyheads of great banks
hare a ,cOntetriPletive meatal -habit; if
they. 'did they. would not he ,be,atis of
great, banki.krank, A. Vanderfr :
•
"The wise man is he who now takes.
a bullish ,position.:a.ncl hangs to teal-
aeieuSly irrespective of teMlittrai•-•1°:'
aCtions."—Rbger W. Babson. :
" • .'
•
• .n ramous I'eople
Hqw
tiellOttO117::chn4Fuil:tigtnelJt4e.e. •
.atty. thiti:0!1, Oirt.whO.'had.OonO: •
44-0.41'01. for the first4inne was asiteit!';
on Y01.7...47Ttgrtt 1`04.4t the mittister had •
and 'what" his tPXt. had .
been—
:etciinlsces 049.net A. A. And.e,rapg,(in-
"Experiences .404'14:1PreSsiens,•")'
t4aaoltferA_WPtlei.aha, 'then said:
, '•"Oe.p '..e.tir! $6111 on tga,!' „..
Nono ts11 0444 reca4.014
text, but tiloy• Nand later the minister
had pre,4,0134 from 04.1.,t4t.,of St.
'Tatars 'IceeP '
:'It was put h a betterway by the
40. your .1.1eeo.
trouble about ntOrt•OlnO: ielfr
• Then there: was snall bey
nephew. of Ohltntei1.;Andergoti.'4-'-19101-
,
seeing ;the, .1tottc1.!'ex-Papse: Of, h::'starlit
night in,,the.Ceuntry,:for the:first time,
aiid after eObill$::Ina4T-141:1-gOtiOne 0.014
theretare en.114'h,IO pra.yerh, that, night
by sayliig: * :
•41 thantl Thee. 0 god, for making
such a lovely world, and ,pUttin;.,Stt:cb
a beautiful, top opit!"
, •
.And that leadgrup' toaiiiither story
told by Colonel Anderson. Aniong, his
many friends was Joaquin
t'poet „pace When, -rets,-saiall;Weaset•liket aimals, ••could;
Miller'waS riding through- a be :infected with the l '‘qrua *ere
lage in Mexico, he saw E.!..n Old colored considered highiYinwertant because
woulan'eoming out of.'a etittage.:45f...41te-poisibility.".that.-tlithgerm-ootil
Sho graTITAW70.iritill:7": be isolatedand an aotItlote' be POnd.
shabbily dressed, and was carrying in,
for hoinan.beings: „' ' •
'
rrdflce. �I 13.10:1soirrit
.1.
OW' ,Use
ueizaI umonia
,
'London. T p"ures--of nterz'at
pneumonia by aerian.'aindlar to that
ter,' immunizing ferrets
are*clailliedb,3':Dr• 10,1141.4.
Lon-
don , •'
In telling hp*" he treated, two We.
Wh.oth was P!..Tia.ri
sa4.4 cases reacted 14 4verY (Irk
inatic. fashion" and recovered.
• :1/4 The serum was prepared ..from y hu -
Mau beings eotl!faleseini frOtii;luiluen,
;za. Recent annoimeemeats•that fer-
her land, a small,' broken .flowerpot
'tied together,with.a Piece of string, in
Which, she :had t:Planted a robe, She
''.1*COQd,91e,,pot on th'e stepby the,. door.
encl.,' was 'tending it with such •Ioving
care that Miller stopped to Watch her:
.•
• Not caring teaPpear too eurlou
•,said:
Dr. Hare reported In the Lancet,.Bri-
tish4ineitical journal, that h14 first ease,
'a woman of 47; was in a ,graVe'
' Given i'Wo injections
Aftertwo injections Of seriim 'four
hoop apart, he said, site began tO. Im
oroize-and-.eleit-very-iv-ell-4tt night A
third.' injection was Made:the. follow-
ing day.....arid,',"deipite_a-tendepcy. to
have temperatures 100 • e r, the
se "far' as' her heat font -would Alloiv • gees ' -
e
••• "It's very. pretty evening,. Atinty."'...;
The .old woman -Straightefied herselt
and
,'placing oneh hand above h eyes;
,gazed lovingly.down the valley Where, "ale's 'theata',''saYs Dr. Sutherland.
g.tbitieOnettriany.ka:s.aulindiviar:o.'psr. cast eo t, _ItbTognhet, Once used fgr.c"sts?'•na'w.'it °'311(;1/4itlY
converted int!) artificial -ostrich' featlf.
purples abh:vasdro;wpsr,'s'tatynd:c.victt.ildo.,:. Massa.
e.r:3•1
a• Very pretty world." • ' ' Br. Sutherland 'El/mat his boyhood in
•iterY hae.'rernalried with: me,H the. Scottlsh ;Highlands and he' has',
patient,,continued; to improye,:. There
after. her •rvecovery was steady,
In second, 'ease: Alse,".
Said there- W.68 -11n‘ .uainteriiiPted ••
coVery and, a difilculty inbreathing•and, •
a, pain in tbe, chest!disttppeared,Within •-•
four hours after an Injection.
The .reaction • in -both instances weit,
similar,.. 'the :•inyeatigator ' continued:::
The .t.emPerathrebegan to fall and be. • -
came :normal, within 1,2, hours. Pulse
. • , •
.rates fell 'coincidentally. '
-7-311OSt-realarltahle, • he said,was, all •-h•
14iprOveMent in the' general ,
.'ef, the. Patierits;enabling both: to,s,loep •••
n't•trA,r;tolt_Afte,r,:....the.,,initiat tale: "
' •
• ' • •
Bare added • that finther cases ,
were m4yatlable; s0. additional experi:
mints add . investigation are . des i rabie.
The Latest listed as diSCOverers el •
the reaction an ferists,' three doctors,
Wiison:,Smith, C. II. AudrUSS; and P. P.,
kreVjoizsly 'the Inability to • '
iled an aniinal susceptible. '
fectionliiridered_experiMenig"• • '
.11i°. tests' were said: to lia e eop-
,firthed, that.intip.Onin jePpytiy.,41* to
gernithat.can.liass 'through hiters. ' •
r.
adds Colonel Anderson,. ....an4 sdnio enchanting:: mentories. :of those
ever I, see' some especially beautifal 03'.1.3- • :'..• • • •• • ,
offiso of nature, 1 hear myself .saying ' Mr. Cameron, thd.•.farmer,./t04i'
-.with. that . old colored •Nothan.: me of witches 'riding' On their ..brooms
pretty world,:MeSsIt. It's across : the dark Waters Of tech Ative •
very pretty World:". He had also ' known a Witch" and. hid
'killed her: She had lived three Miles'
up -tlie glen in::a srnall -ci-oft; now -
ruins, and at night. had gone about 111
the form Of a., hare.... One-innenilight:
.nighthe had .seen this hate running
,away -from. the door :Of tlie ItYre,•.and.
in the morning, One of the cows stopped
giVing milk. • •. •,. ..• ..• • :•••
• . "thenext night. he, leaded his gun.
and over the charge rainined doWa„a
sixpence,. beeauSe .a bullet is.
file only .bullet ' that Will ..•kilt a',Witch'.
iTiten.he..waite-ir 'behind- a Wall over-
looking the byre, and in 'the 0incionlight
She gave a. stream and fled onthree
legs,',.trailing a broken hind:leg hehitid_
:her.' 0.n 'thefollowing...day•,no smoke
was rising from the.hoilse.of the ivitCh,
found her 'groaning. 011 her hed. when:
the .doctor.caine,••' he ..aaid..licr right
thigh WaS.Aroken..belOw'tile hip-jolut.
,The witeli explained' that, ..ihe 'had,
fallen in her ;moth.. Mr. •CatActon knew
'better, and 111 h feW days she WIthidead.•
If the' doctor.had out 'int0 her, he.w,aold
.have.foUnd a sixpence 'in her thigh!
,-':`--,-Int,the7:whalerintriftlii% three. pet:dire:-
.. • .
tiould sit arOurid asmt11 table for if.,
Aerneciii..tea, says Dr, Halliday Suthoi
-landr distinguished ,Harley Street (Lon
of the
Years') but the gullet of the 'whale
js ,narroW,t• and no _.knoviii .species ; Of:
whale could have swallowed Jonah at.
though the 'ancient: .Chroniele'does' not
;inaention the whale but "alaifge • fiSb.°'
Yet . it; is not •a. -physical IMPosSibliit3i,
for a m,ati to have lived In -a W.hale.'h
mouth . for three days „
,
If he steed:hp,. against the plates of
Whalebonelie *Old 1,6.2kiiee7deep.'iTi
Water..when. the -whale. Was On the sup;
face,: arid, :whenthe whale: .diVed.".lie
would be in .a.eloSed'eaNern of air.' AS and when,. neighbors. entered.. they
soon. as the:air became vitiated the
whale would:0Se to the surface th
breathe: but,.•:a. Moro'• uncomfortable
ybyage cannot ;he cohceliredr,-tadds'the
doetor. ' • .:„ •
, BY the way, whalebone, so called, is
reallyformed of cartilage hanging
from the' ridges at tlie.:haek, of the
"By'fike, to.,rhti6rbY'fr ,aRo; I is 'Major lAurnaby",s eottako.'
' AS: the aged Ford sprtivngfii' tiok;,,afld 1 go in
,
'Ou Pre • Chesil , don t to do for • nIrn.,ear4 mornings., he is •
Sprightly Youngster s of
. " • , • . ,
.• Do -yort.'heilevein fairle's? • • .
there.'wawDonald Grant's boy,
. „
'aged' eight. .. He...found, a cheese, in the
Wood's' and brought it hoinee" • ,
"'take it;baCk•Where yo got said
the, father. •
'rhe boy took thii eheeSeaway, but
hid it. in an outhouse, "Ogre, lie ale It
-ist,s-ebreti•7•11rtli'elfarfteleat•cm, "creelrlateT
'he ..fell• on the, Seythei..cut the nialn.ar-
t4.6 in, hiS.Lthigli....and„bled4,to.death_iti
A. feW •Minutes.4 •
,Although Arnold liehnett ...schooled
:himself to obSerVeregular working
e-Was-d-glattOit'for-WOrk-
-there Were times When his' pen 'Men,
ally flew over, the paper, for lie wrote
everything.hy hand. These cntries 111
"'The 'Journal of: Arnold.i3ermett 11)21-
11)28,''. she* that: . ; .
Wote 1,000. words of 'i4ord Railgo"
16,06 ininoto." I
0/ Wrote. 1,100 Words --4 •ceinplete
. Chapter ((,f.''''.Vitlignard') 1,d1.5„MliniteS„
d then felt .batter,"' , , °'
P.tPtantly „at 1.2 1 sat .doWt to Work
and;1t 1225 had at:Wally writcn Igd
words(Of' It "seems -as if,
e.',011.4(.4) ttnin.WOrkisflkilliAt
• ntitTh" •••• • "
. :JWr11,114.;.. at., white, belit1..
1„Wrote tAfi• wOrila ht. 'itei4hrent' be,
• Ore ilia Walked' to tho,,ltefortn,
'(lUb ti, Yhtiot .lorenk). '8Witmorton by
akirotntinont, (tOd wo lufiched..1„I'ben‘.1
110,40/Jed 1110 tioV:?'?i, .1 4,00),.tet quite O.
- 'llre,j bp 0,4'1.. felt 1,1 the morn ino•;: )0
the morning 't made, Alan eliarseteeltr
'Aeettlentl lose!•lits*:temper, 'and I did
trr. ventiti ,riL at.:4;1:
.. See 'A4 iS44 Nerhey.(his.riceretary.) Ann
culled lipoirto n.tplaiti "tn her tho
oth3.0. Of Ink
• t.
' In search of ideitC
„"1 Went on ter ;,3d1101 g.'vrivsfitglOt
RitHletr ik by doiny, ekerest tb4 lilifYrionas150 'Club, in kOeffiri,1(Ier,„
• inany. . ,00-4; Ake ''0:000'!.ers)o•rojt"ol•7
,tavOrtte*exere-ise, . • write oldest ••'" • •
:* •
nfrpir utrIrir lir a
• :Seoif'unt-tit't ft 11 eame
--And had 440-..woyds...•
).3oto;•4:t L had written athrther 1•1,400
-
words • Of the ilovel .CAecident9
words all, the:complete chapter dea.•
crlbing the ,rallway ;accident...I wrote • •
:ft:great Apeed,:. and was 'rather
. " . •
.T. .01i0g• 1J!
:..The lengeil.:11v.e" the More c.niain
adv. that 'absolute refusal to 'take .up
firrns .is• the only', waY, to-SalVation,..•7 .
Rt.,Hon. George Lansbury,
Oting*ornen• today 'get .,:engaged,
aad:thith inform their,parents over, th4'.
telephone3--,-nr d•ti-ur,'ht!er•--Aelooltoneil :
Inc Ipat as 1 was'atarting •but.,in jty' •
in the golf Match With the, .1?ritiee.,,,ol
.7.talae.(Astor,
toOrp
ldine*O:f.h,.e..r en#Ltgepient.
',...‘
-'2•The aSt ine in ,mc.trl!s .knoW•
ledgeand in. his...control ever • Naturf. „
has ,not been ae•CohipaIlled.bY.a.Correp
ponding iatiprOveinent: his, moral.
character.7700 Iidi in John
The average wopkart...,enjOys a. ioe
for the pleasure of .titalting.it up after
,Warda. "'There:Is nothing like ,a• thtin
:13'...Storin „for:.
yipar West:
, .
The ?Pat) precien.s. coiicctioti Of.
stamps :-.1n-÷the ,world Is botltod,It.•
'the' 'vaults ,.ef, Seinerset. House.Lou
don ng It :contains' tiVertiY-feui'
specimens of every; stain.p...ci•ter. niade
In : the British ,Empirc, : •
As a PratAidal..pbiloSophy, :life th
.suranCe And annuities are doing a
great deal to make the lives of. the
.American peonle 'safe and secure .." --r
,Alfrdd E. :Emith..'
. ,
•
.there would net ;be :se...inn:eh, harm,
in the giddy following the fasliioni;:if.
•§91nehow'llie ,wiSe. could alWaye set .•
- '
,
OTTAWA
LADIES
copLggE.
.41;,;espiadatil Scuds,' .fot Gino, Unor
tbe ti-iatfid.Chnro4.'
- .
qpippletc eon rscs frortIVO.i•yittry 10 1100
?Eat,iCu1ntic,n. Sipclzu1 itti1,es in; Art/
,anq Craf's;
E.Jet'cii6e, Physical .Culture:
.seloca Es -opens Tuei1a1r;'901..enilier
„. , .
. •
alli3x1 X, J. Priacipato
. . ,
Oltt'AWS,
'