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The Seaforth News, 1927-06-23, Page 6T7 0 4 or rAto for free sassy] e. Write 51a+11�eY8A9 a `� M3+ e BEGIN HERE TO -DAY. To escape hanging on the charge of sedition, Andre -Louis Moreau flees' from his native town. of Gavrillac and hides Ma identity as a member of a hand of strolling players in which he makes a great success in the char- acter of Scaramouche. Rip flight. has caused him to delay revenge on the groat and powerful Marquis de La Tour •D'Azyr, who tricked Andro's dearest friend, Phil- ippe de \Minorite a divinity student, into a duel and then killed him be:- rause e=rause he feared the idealist's"danger- there were acufflmg out gift of eloquence:" Over the dead ly exchanged" body. of his friend, Andre -Louis swore groups, and here and there swords L i',':"k of reforming', were being drawn, but fortunately the ti+c 'ret�f' ;e peasants. I press was too dense to permit of their Scaramouche as Andre -Lossie is Bing used effectively. now called, falls in love with Cumene, Men fell quickly into groups repre- dnu'^h`er of the ownerrgtof the troupe, sentative of one side or the other of l i toforget t] beautiful speeded to Scaramouche's appeal to its passions, the Marquis swept aside the curtain at the sidle of the box, and sudd'mly showed himself. Hoots and yells assailed him, fists were shaken at him, canes were bran- dished menacingly. "Assassin1 Scoundrel! Coward! Traitor!" But he braved the storm, smiling upon them his ineffable contempt. In the pit pandemonium was al- ready raging. Blows were being free- Ing the theatre with 'a view to meter- ing order. Maim way, ox ;I'll been youx- brainsl" he threatened;them, and in- tie:heated, they fell back and let hint pass. The street behind/the theatre was deserted. Down this he went on the run, intent on reaching the inn for clothes and money. BOOK' III.:' THE SWORD. aur. asses orae to et Aline de Kercadiou, whom, he thinks,this great quarrel that already was will marry the Marquis. Cliniene beginning to agitate the whole of trots :rim with coldness. France. Their rallying cries were CO ON WITH THE STORY. • 1-c'-:th:.:ale and Rhodomont ex, c;.ang': 1 glances: the former winked, r c v,:tbeet mirth. Lut their attention was held by t' f S nouche He had ,1e VO CO a carat sterped to the front of the stage. "he doubts it," he was telling the a u;ren. n. "Shall I convince him? bhall I tel hires how a company of noblemen backed by their servants tndr am:El—six hundred men in all —sought to dictate to the Third Es- tate of Denims? Must; I remind hien cf the tna•'tiol front shown by the Third Est tz, and how they swept the streets clean of that rabble of t eh;-e—c rte canaille hoble , .." Apr n +'' interrupted hien. The rinore h '1 struck home and caught. ''But lit re tell you of their leader -le rima noble de cette canaille, ou Men le pi's canaille de des nobles! You know him—that one. He fears mons- thiner: but the voice of truth he fears reset does this proud leader, M. ea T a Tour d'Azyr. You have h'a^i of th.; veiiant Marquis, this great lc:d or lire and death?" The 1 t v..,; in an uproar a mo- ment. It glee., 1 again as Scaramouche continued, "Oh. it was o fine spectacle to see ittis: mieltir Ranter scuttling to cover like r, Mon. Rennes has not seen him since. Rcn:tr ; would like to see him :men. Du's if he is valorous, he is also tri Greet. And where do you think he has taken refuge, thl'e great nobleman who wanted to see the "AWAY WITH YOU NOW, OR YO IT'LL LEAVE YOUR SKIN HERE*" streets of Rennes washed in the blood ci its citizens, to silencethe voice of mason ani ut t:bsrty that presumes to ring ti r°7p h France today? Where do you think he hides himself? Why, here In Nantes," Again there was •uproar. "What do yeti say? Imposssible? Why, my friends, at this moment he is here in this theatre --skulking up there in that box. Ho is too shy to show himself—rh. a very modest gentleman. But there he is behind the curtains. Will you not show yourself to year friends, M. de La Tour d'Azyr, Mcenleur le Marquis who consileeve extremes so very don- . gerolos a gift?" Challereeed thee. and date the ominous manner In which the bour- geois eieme.nt.in the audience had re - ringing through the theatre. "Down with the canaille!" from some. "Down with the privileged!" from others. And then above the general din one cry rang out sharply and insistently: CIIAPTES I. "You may agree," wrote Andre - Louis from Paris to Le Chapelier, in a letter which survives, "that it is to be regretted' I should definitely ;die- cardlod' the -livery,' of Scarantouche, since clearly there could be no livery fitter for' my wear. ,IIt seems to be my part always.to stir up'btrife and then to slip away before I ani . caught in the crash of the" warring elements I have aroused.. It is a humiliating re- flection. This time they may want to hang me for several things•includinig murder; for I do not' knew whether that scoundrel Binet be alive or dead from the `dose of lead I pumped into bis fat paunch." There is also another letter of his written' at about the same time to the Marquis de La Tour d'Azyr. "The Paris newspapers," he writes in this, "inform me that you have escaped the fate I intended for you when I raised that storm of'public indignation. I rejoice in it. Had you died; had you been torn limb from limb that night, I should now repine in the thought sof •your untroubled •sluneene In torment of mind should the guilty atone. "I am content that you should live to enrage and suffer in the shadow of your evil deed, kaownig at last that the voce of Philippe de Vilmlorin will follow. you to denounce you ever more loudly, ever more insistently, until having lived in dread 'you shall go down In blood under the just rage which your victim's dangerous gift of eloquence iv kindling against you."— Those two' letters, both written in April of that year 1789, had for only immediate effect to increase the activ- ity with which Andre -Louis Moreau was being sought. Chapelier would have found Andre - Louis to urge upon' hien once again to take up a, political career.' The electors of Nantes would' have found him --at least; they would have found Omnes Omnibus on each of the several eeca- CORNS (tuickre�ieffrgmpainful' (Qu i_ corse, teijder•toes end'• esiessureeof ttellies:hoes. Der- C.hod1p( r��„p At thee Z2V'.,�61St'�1.7r aacvchi:Yweer, shield, in -letters of gold, ran the le - gond: BESTBAND DES AMIS Maitre en .fait d'Atmes des Academies dlu Roi In the end he climbed to the sec- ond floor: On the landing lee paused outside a;door on which was written "Aeademy of M. Bertrand dee Amis,” From beyond came the stamping sof feet, the click and slither of steel upon. steer. Andlree ouis tapped an the door. (To be continued.) Wilson Publishing Company C Jl r� r the '. A Pehebls E1'<is the Cave ItVPrizfs C'an*l It kept hie nzoath moist and freob on his hot, rocky road. Calling on his sweetie, he took her a smooth, white stonel Today, to make a lasting, aatiefying' impression, take her Wrigley's. After Ever Meal After Smoking Tool. C1•.20 ISSUE No. 2C—'27. "To the box! Death to the butcher of Rennes! Death to La Tour d'Azyr!" There was a rush for one of the doors of the pit that opened upon the staircase leading to the boxes. M. Binet succeeded in breaking past Polichdnelle and Rhodomont. Half a dozen gentlemen, habitues of the green -room, had comeround to the stage to disembowel the knave who had created this riot, and it was they 1607 OUR-- -RCTIC EsitIRE. Can' We Say How. Far Our Heritage' Extends THE CHALLENGS OF THE NORTH Since Confed'eratio'n the w11denno8e frcntier of Canada has, entirely si ifted. Then t,ho prairies, which now sends a substantial, Tu00esen!ntion to the House of Commons were known only la Indians Inc traders, missionaries and a few.explorers. T,he first task o1 the newly formed Canadian govern- ment was to arrange tor a transcon- tinental railway to link „up tho infant settlement In British Columbia;, tq fro uft14a:,� Li W�`ti: YALP J1b�s13 ee¢hh'.Irrtbi�p� •s ,s ez IYt>•yW...,„ t'se P)di t- f alf work' WILL' :ROSS'IIA PAY $realm With Br itatiia•May Has. teas Payinen!t f Old 1LIn.bilit-ins London --Gro at Britaiu'S b re tic witit tho Soviets t refine an ininre T .1 praslirrt of luyxna paying ite, (melee.,.n.t eeee C1.ie is the opinion of Leslie UTryu- hart, chairman of 'the. Russo-Asiat(c tonsohd•tteci Limited, which has attt- atanding elaltes against Moscow, amounting to £66,000,000 for mining and other properties expropriated m the Urals and Western Siberia, Presiding at a meeting of the cote- ir5`.u' hJh�M�h.•i Ivvt�i'n"iW '?a 4T'�%�sitr as worsts men as' Edward Blake argued earnestly.,against the folly of wasting fhreei Rivets ,Nouve111 money :'laying e railroad across such Prime Minister Iiertzog has just achieveda . pekynonal triumph aver pernamentay -uninhabitable areas.' es the southern parts' of'ths present peov.1Genenalt Smutei; attrl these Who are 'noes of lVfaniteba, Saskatchewan and einmee•d to a too categoric assertion Alberta. As late as 1874 Sir William l of South' Afric is ettonosny. By a Butler wrote a forble:ding deacn-ipt'ion majority of 15 the'Legielative.Assem- of the cite of the Present duty of Prince WY of the Union tins ratified lois'pro- Albert to prove them Shiropeane could' poral fora. national flag which excludes never live there the ,ye0t• round. , the Union Jacic, Thie proposal has The- wealth and habitability' of the roused violent, conirroversy in South slouthern `' praires-'• are now common Africa. Naturally enough it has met knowledge!' To=day the push is north, with..o:ppossten•ft0171 the -jingoes, im- NortHes'ai'6luebec- nd Northern On- perlallets of all••shad'es and from the,govornmient,: based upon- oxptreatrose tarso have attracted miners' and far- "savers of einipire." It has revived and .granting unconditionally political niers; 'Settlers arse raising vegotarnesy the old Britie+h'• prejudice ageenat the recognition and trading piiviley.s- grains; fettle 'and even 1ns1ts far north Boers::.' What adds -,,piquancy to the whish in offset usurped the, sights and of Hagel:ton en the Skeemla. Away to 441:niggle against leerteog's proposal functions of the British investing the north of Edmonton ,the fertile) is the fact that General Smuts 'has community --there was little doubt an •' ar i its himself •titken;; a• strong stand against equitable' settlement of the Britishee Peace.' River -Varlet is sew d nt t pioneers, .The eDuth to the nbt'th '1b the idea of •ertcluditrg theUrrion Jack, claims would -em now have been made eonttnemt- w'lede,:and "10 on in .earnest. The brillianet ;nationalist politician by the Soviet Government. There was We dare not predlot-what, by the era Hartzog steed up to the tempest and for Moscowsno other altietnative." of the century, win .be the population refused to withdraw. To -day he is The Situation was changed mei- of thee& great -central region, Winch "carrying away the bacon." This is pletely, 'however, from the moment have all beenp raven valuable. an _example by , which other Prime' recognitionwas granted The Mee - The Arctic arced sub -Arctic planes alone a remain a chal:levee to, the' pioneer. ' Already, thanks largely to e Stefanason, this vast expense ie d-oeine Its mythological terrors. Here are one and one-half to two million square miles of grazing Mode, with their: ea tive mowers. lichens-, ferns and 762 epeclee_of 1tomiering plants•, Yukon is Yielding her gold; but in Alaska the annualcatchof fish new far exceeds the products of the misses in value; and Canada's Arctic waters teem with fish. - The reindeer industry in Alaska has proved•so profitable; thist•Lomen; * Co:. alone ship annually 10,000 carcasses that bring a bighes• price than' beef in the . cities of the United: States. In- spired by Stce8snsson., the I7ndson's Bay Company has lensed for raising reindeer the southern h. tlf of Baffin Island—an area the size of the British Isles, If the project of domesticating the musk-ox ie carried out, a new source of food will be available that The Flag in South from YOKES ARE SMART THIS SEASON. The attractive frock pictured here is a style that will be found suitable for many occasions. There is an in- verted plait at each side seam and three tucks 111 the front of the bodice. A shaped yoke extends over the s'hoee d- der's and the raglan sleeves may be short, or long and gathered to narrow' wrist -bandit. No. 1607 is in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 requires 2% yards 39 -inch, or 1% yards 54 - inch material; 14 yard lass- o9 -inch material is required for short sleeves. View B requires 1e yard additional 89 -inch contrasting material. Price 20 cents the pattern. Homo sewing bring_ nice clothes and yesterday that of the southern within the reach of all, and to follow prairies seemed:. an dnsuperable the mode is delightful when it can be done so easily and economically, by following the styles pictured • in our new Fashion Boole A chart accom- panying each pattern shows the ma- terial as it appears when cut out, Every detail is explained so that the inexperienced sewer can make with - oat difficulty an attractive dress. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in atamps-or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing- Co., 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. stone when a vacancy occurred in their body. And the Marquis de La Tour d'Azyr would have found him that they might send him to the gal- lows. With a purpose '`no less vindictive was he being sought by M. Binet, now unhappily recovered from ,his wound to face oompleteat ruin. His troupe had deserted him during itis illness.' M. le Marquis, prevented by the riot who had flung aside these two coin- from expressing in person to Mile. °diens who hung upon Binet. After Binet his purpose of making an end hint they carne now, their swords out; of their relations, had :been contraien- but after thorn again came Polichin- ed to write to her to that effect from elle, Rhodomont, Harlequin, Pierrot, Ave a few days later. Pasquariel, armed with such Mune- Meanwhile the fiercely sought rents as they could hastily snatch Andre -Louis Moreau had gone to up, and intent upon saving the man earth completely for the present. And with whom they sympathized in spite the brisk police of Paris, 'urged on by ofa11. the King's Lieutenant from Relnmss, Well ahead rolled Binet, swinging }vented him in vasa. Yet Ina might the long caste from which Pantaloona have been found in house in the Rue. du Hasard within a stone's threw of the Palais Royal. He was destitute. So desperate was his case that strolling one gusty April cended and broke upon his shoulder, tnorreng down the. Rue du Hasard Had he net moved: swiftly aside aa. with his nose in the wind looking for. the blow fell it must have taken him wheat might be picked up, he stopped across the head, and possibly' stunned to read a notice outside the door of him. As he moved, he dropped his a house. nand Us hos pocket, and swift upon The notice announced that a young the cracking of Binet's breaking cane man of good address with some co the Brack of the pistol with knowledge of swordsmanship was re- whigqit Andre-oX.uie replied. squired by el. Bertrand dee Amis on 'tYou had your warning, you filthy 'the second floor. Above this notice panderi" he cried. And on the word was a black oblong board, and on this he elect him through the body. Binet went'down screaming, whilst the fierce Pclichinelle, fiercer than ever in that moment of fierce reality, spoke quickly into And/re Louis' ear: h t I is inseparable. "Infamous scoundrel!" he roared. "Name of a name, you shall pay!", Andre -Lewis turned to face him. Binet's came, viciously driven, des - patty, at,y>inhich a capitol reorganiza- tion scheme • was approveO, iris•. Urqu- hart rohieeddetailed evidence sup - positing this view. . Up to 1924, when I 11 the Brstlth Government granted f,_2 trade' privileges to the 8°1*M the lie. '. . ter, Mr. Urquhart said in order obtain dGplomattd;, recognition, a to our nregkets, aned financial credits, were peefxared to snake a settlement -- evith its Bribed- creditor -s.' If the British Government, be con- tinued, ;'had• remained consistent in its attst•ude:einstead ;of• givirg a lead to Etstope in;.recog'nizinlg a, system of Ministers night conceivably profit. Succeeded. cggw extirent8s'bs 'hands were sur'd's ,•th- 4ned and instead of willurgness to ne- gotiate was found nn attitude. delisted categorically last December by ,•.1' So*iet representative here, who raid, "Nb eon'iimatee peopertice weed be eretuenee to their owners, and 11.1 no event would compe'naation be paid by. the Soviet Government" ' The withdrawal of diplomatic: rela- tions anti special trading facieitiea, Mr. Ul luhart concluded, had "at last dearer the desats, reinstated Brititee creditors to their rightful pe ,tins, a position 'more hopeful for these t1•e- in tt-of sur claims than we have heel since -the trade agreement -of• 1921 t; as esign-ed.. Aftar, what leas: hap.ee'ned. we must realize that nothing "onearth can bring about a resunrition . of r s - ma] relations with thio country ee the ;f- • tern and that a prerequr ;ts "113 thet 'dumb son of ,lake's .still as Ms Road." _condition will a now be settlement 4::".iu' college titin' t' got somethin' into a debts and liabilities. " Naw, not any more, Ito committed Mr..Trquherts. view fin support suicide last week." in financial circles. The Financial will( put to profitable use great trivets ---.y— of our Par North. 011 hes been found between Fort Norman and: the Arctic Circle. What glee the Far North will give, only time will tell. • But the Canadian polar regions are not as 'cold as Siberia, which is :being voluntarilty co'Ionized, And ae•'the climate' of tire Atlantic Comet once presented terrible difficulties to the French colonist°,. Fool! So rue was no necessary Away with you now, or you'll leave your skin here!" Andre -Louis thought it good advice, and took it. He gained the wings, and hereefound.himself faced by a couple of sergeants of the patch, part of the .police that was already invad- e NURSES n vad- Campers -Take Minard's wlth you. NURSES Tho Toronto Nospitpl for tnodrablos, In affiliation with Bellevue and Allied Noebitala, Now York City, offers a three years', Course. of - Tralnlnp to young women, Seedily required education, anddcslra. of beeomine nurses. Thl. Hospital hoe adopted the eight- hour rystem. The bupilr reoelvo: uniform. of the School, a monthly "allowance :.and ,travel- ing expenses to ant: from New York. For Wrenn. Information write. the Superintendent. Sundial Antiphony (Written for The Christian Science Mon o It stands serenely summoning Tose shy, swift passengers awing, My dial is a •ovely thing; Its story is of hours that pass Not counted off with boom and- brass But stun -encircled on the grass. It stands enewi„thed in velvet mist, By the first flush of sunrise kissed ' With topaz, rose and amethyst. • Between us, with a manifold' Sweet, secret meaning—told' and told,— As dear as friendship and as old. Upon the weaker -beaten face Of the old dial now 1 place Aavo.tive bowl of seed, a grace. bas ancient shape is cradled and rude, But comelinessis in its, crude, Gray face—a stone beutitud'e. 8 know a call the redbride know— - A ritual .of morning, slow, Antiphonal, tossed to and fro, Orlalth. Soon on the dial rests A fire of wings., a flame of crests, Of coral beaksy of ruby breasts. And so they go :the way they came. I know' their tongue, I speak 'th'eir name, The dial, glows an altar flame. My dial is 'a lovely thing, . It stands serenely summoning Tire shy, swift passengers' awing. Sally 11: Ctav,.. Minard's Liniment for lnsect bites. stacle to our fathers-, so the belief, in which we were brought up, that the That All Gone Feeling. FarwNorth was, an impossible region of She—"You'ro so hungry you. meat perpetual snow is fading in the light be going, Mr. Sus:eke" of scientific knowledge that the whole Ile—"Toe,- might as well, I've that of Canada is habitable 'end p-Yidue- ell gone feeling now." eve dee of the greatest problems of the younger generation is to discover —"Searle—"What should we do if it ways ami means of mu]sing.t.he north of its ees joyous excitement. Tlris en integral part of Canada, instead of 'wasn't, for tete friends Balli" 1@ ave is rife bees' method of increasing the the hinterland it tins been. 1 don't know. Wed probably have redo. -, to do arrangers." Early ori the spring the queen com- mences to lay eggs that develop kite' Time•; for example, gays: "Howevet'a the, Ct:emmunists of Russia may Meet our cnpital'iettic IpatOm, however much they may plead for oto destructiong. they fervently dednu'.political recon - radon by the British Empire, because, as Mr. Urquhart says, they' badly sial our cash" It continues: "If re- lations are returned, it can dilly be ie - st bads of the; taettlement of outstanei- Ing claims' and a definite rep•ud(etiau oaf the policy of barefaced, s'harniese robbery." Swarming Bees A swarm is. emerging!! The beesse, are affected with a temporary ebulli- tion; they pour from their hive pell- ntelf and soon the air is filled with' ti seething, buzzing horde which seorne to impart to its owner some Special Crate foci Shipping Fish Eggs A special crate for shipping Beee.. eggs has been developed by the Can- adlian• Department of Marine 411111' Fisheries. In this type of case sal- mon eggty have been shipped, from the Maritime Provinces to Ptitioh• Col- umbia; from St. John, New Bruns- wick, to Dublin, Ireland; and from Vancouver, British Columbia, to Tokio, Japan. Tho eggs in .these shipments hatched out Dietetically as well as them hatched at' points at which they were produced. worker bees only. Later, as the col- ony becomes 'stronger, the weather wsirmor and now nectar es aveilablo, drones (or finale bees) aro produced, and yet later, as greater strength 1.1 attained and nectar becomes abund- ant, eggs are deposited in queen :ices and preparations for swanning r1%) d Single Cylinder Motorcycle the literally less brood Is produced • The Hycle Davi mon 0 Y otorcycta is- the greatest ]ratio ma- and the activity of alio colony is ru- chine that has been math:. Salo to duced as the young queensT are do - ride, easy to control, and most seen-. velopieg in their ce11a. Nine data n o tical, Stands without ' a rival. 100 front tiro time the eggs were deposit - Miles to dalton of Gasoline. P, dee ed in alio queen *cells the larvas an?.; Ater Andrews ly to be ,capped over and if the $'32 per month. W. , tar plentiful at tit's time,, the old $300. Down Payment $100, 13atanoe road Limited, 346 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont weather be Bright and rearm and nee - Made only from hard Western wheats, Purity Flour is rich in gluten —:The energy giving and . body building food. Purity Flour is best for all your baking and will supply extra nourishment, to the children; in cakes, pies buns and . bread. r our o r 700 -recipe Purity Send 50c in stusrtje' for 7 p�' Flour Cook Book. Zea w:.etern Console Floor Mile Co. Limited Toronto, Montreal. Ottawa, Saint Jana r Nugget White Dressing is a real "sticker." The longest, fastest set caret shako off its snowy whiteness. Whether your shoes bo canvas or buck, always use "Nugget" reessing Vitro's a" Mtge/ " shade for. every shoe male. queen, with the majority of the field bees, will then leave Go hive' to es- tablish a new home elsewhere. In the old hone arc left a few fielders, the nurse bees and the brood with younb queens still in their Cella.# Sometimes the swarm will fly direct: to its new home but more often it clusters for some time on 0, nearby ohieot, thus' aIroi•ding Llio owneran. opportunity' to rohivo it, Natural swarming woe onceconsidereddesir- able but modern beokeeners seek ip. .prevent it because it usually ocoL .t when loast desired and thereby duces the honey crop. Moreover, ct in- crease can bo made just as efficiently., with less labor and at a more oppor:, time time by tho beekeeper himself.. Write to the Bee Divi ion, Central tat Experimental Farm, 01t: wa, for fur- ther information on Swarm- Control sand 10161155. • - Unemployment in New England Sprin,;;Tedd geapublicaai: ,Nert lancl! ::.t prosert en cuneus car.ain phases of industrial cle,piscosion more acutely' than ether parts cf the C3 011D. try -1 hoa•e 1s ranch risen 7yt ie t in the uuiustea t1 ccntreS. T s drier^ie,n- t.i' e of Ciro State' Free Employ- ment riplo;/- ni;e t Bureau 1112091450 says the tin- orny)tri-:art :etc Mem 11.re ie the worst in 25 years. Two 1'hou..nn.1 persons apply fer work tach d p but 19 but of every. 20 fail to get it. it