The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-07-24, Page 6nghain Advance -Times.
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INGHAM - ONTARIO
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J. W. DODD
Office in Chisholm Block
1711M, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND
--- HEALTH INSURANCE --
• AND REAL ESTATE
te. Box 360 Phone 240
WINGHAM, ONTARIO
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money to Loan
eDfilice—Meyer Block, Winghani
Successor to Dudley Holmes
• VANSTONE
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.
Money to Loan at Lowest Rates
Wingham, - Ontario
J. A. MORTON
BARRISTER, ETC.
Wingharre Ontario -
DR. G. li. ROSS
DENTIST
Office Over Isard's Store
E. W. COLBORNE, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Medical Representative D. S. C. R.
Successor to Dr. W. R. Humbly
Phone 54 Wingham
DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND
LRCS. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Lond.)
IVIMONG TROPICS SAFE
snutous Owe Their Lives to a ,.Man
Whose Name They Nave
leeiver Heard,
"Who was Patrick Mansell?" is Om
question the mart in the street will
ask when he beam that the Royal
SneletY of Tropical Medicine is an -
pealing for funds to build itself a
permanent home, and that this home
Is to be called Manson House, as a
memorial to Sir Patrick Manson, 8aY5
an article in Answers,
It is now nearly eight years since
Patrick Manson died, and it is fairly
safe to say, that even while he was
still alive, there were comparatively
few people who had ever heard of
him. Yet there are inilliont3 who owe
to him the fact that they are alive
to -day, and because of him the wealth
of the world is immeasurably g-reater
than it would have been if he had
never lived.
To take only one example, but for
Patrick Manson, It is pretty safe to
say that the Panama Canal would
never have been constructed. Again,
but for him, the Gold Coast of Africa
would still be the "White Man's
Grave."
Many year before most of the
white men now living in the tropics
were born, a young man was hesittet-
ing over the choice of a career. Re
had been destined for the engineer-
ing profession, but he felt that he
wanted to be a doctor. There might
not be the same chance of wealth in
medicine, but he didn't care for that.
"PIT-
WHIM-1AM ADVANCE -TIMES
WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE
Dr. Long, out fishing with Alexan-
der Pierce, a detective, tells •of his
projected trip to Southley Downs.
Pierce advises him to keep his eyes
open wide while there. On the way in
a train Dr. Long is attracted by a
girl, who later faints. Dr. Long
treats her, and looking into her bag,
is astounded to find a loaded revolv-
er.
• Dr. Long meetsAhmad Das, an
Oriental, who conducts him to South',
ley DoWns," where. he • meets' Mr.
Southley and his stilt, Ernest South.,
ley, Mr: Haywood and his son: Vilas,
and then Josephine Southley; Who is
the girl he had Met on, the train. Jo -
So Patrick Manson embarked on sephine tells him the story of South -
the study of medieine. A little later
he went abroad and ..presently • he le --
v Downs and its ghost, which is
found himself at• Amoy, in China. It
was here, fifty-three years ago, that
he made a discovery that changed
the face of the world. He proved that
the filarial worm, which causes the
disease of ,elephantiasis, is conveyed
by certain mosquitoes.
Thus, for the first time, it was
established that insects might be
transmitters of disease. The science
of tropical medicine had been born,
and the way had been cleared for the
discoveries that were to follow, and
which have enabled white men to live
and maintain health and strength in
countries where previously they went
only to die.
It was Sir Ronald Ross who finally
established that mosquitoes were al-
so responsible for the transmission of
malaria, but long before that Man-
son had come to the conclusion that
the insect was the guilty party, and
his help and advice was of the great-
est value to Ross in his researches.
Even apart from this, however,
Manson had made his place in medi-
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
cal history secure be that first dis-
..
eovery. It opened a new field, and
•made possible all the work that fol -
DR. R. L. ST VY lowed—work that tracked down to
Graduate of University of Toronto,
Fatuity of Medicine; Licentiate of the
Ceetative College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
Office in Chisholm Block
joseplaine Street. Phone 29
their source the origins of such dis-
eases as sleeping sickness, yellow fev-
er, plague, and typhus.
In 1897 the value of Manson's
work was offizeally recognized by his
appointment as meeical adviser to
the British Colonial Office, and two
years later, with the support of Mr.
Joseph Chamberlain and the aid of
DR. G. W. HOWSON other distinguished men, he founded
the London School of Tropical Medi -
DENTIST eine, in which he taught for over
Office over John Galbraith's Store. tvrenty years, helping others to equip
themselves for carrying on the wink
he had beguu so well.
Then, in 1907, he was one of the
founders of the Society of Tropical
Medicine and Hygiene—the Royal
was added in 1921—and became ite
first president.
Although his Christian name may
suggest that Manseen was an Irish -
Man, be wasn't. He was a Scot, a
Phone 272, Hours, 9 a.m. to p. . native of Aberdeenshire, and educat-
e- d...ea Aberdeen 'Dig telt'.
case A oii01 tit% ..%e"'
-A. & F. E. DUVAL which shs ackleqess of Fine
retle,.04' every4111 ha heard et
Licensed Drugless Practitioners
F. A. PARKER
OSTEOPATH
All Diseases Treated
Office A.djoining residence next to
g,litaan Churth on Centre Street.
Sundays by appointment.
Osteopathy Electricity
asteur and Lister but Mauson,
Chiropractic aead Electro Therapy. ae. e
aos - Whole war atas been every bit as ims
'""--VragualeS al -tatiadiat thitoptactic portpt tallhairsarai Danataaa„
College, Toronto, and National Col- juss muc
V4a. atah, has ',leen al -
Most unkitown to ilia irPal. public.
lege, Chicago.
Out of town and night calls res- The idea of naming the new home
vended to. All business confidential, of the Royal Society of Tropical
Phone 300. • Medicine Manson House should dc.
something to remedy that. It is cer-
tainly fitting that London, the cap-
.]. ALVIN FOX ital of the Empire whose develop-
ment. has been so enormoueiy facili-
Registered Drugless Practitioner tated by lelanson's work, should eon -
CHIROPRACTIC AND teat some memorial to him, and there
DRUGLESS PRACTICE
can be no memorial so suitable as
•this.
ELECTIZO-THERAPY
Hours: 2-5, 7-8, Or by
intment • Phone 191,
J. D. McEWEN
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
• Phone 602r14.
Sales of Farm Stock and Imple-
metais, Real Estate, etc., conducted
'with satisfaction and at moderate
chaegtia
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
*REAL ESTATE SOLD
otigh knowledge of Farm Stock
Phone 231, Wingliarn
+
RICHARD B. JACKSON
AUCTIONEER
Thane 61.3r6, Wroxater or address
not the ghost of a huma.n being but
of a tiger,
NOW READ ON
• CHAPTER III
the slope toward us—something that always in the most insulting tone. It
"My fattier and some of the ser- seemed dark and not very tall. We seemed to me just an unjustified aver -
vents went out --both Ernest and I 'stood still and waited. There was no- sion, and the taste of the thing was
were aafity at school. They couldn't thing else •to do. open to question.
see in the shadows --but my father Then all at once the crea.ture's There was a tenseness, a heaviness
gays that beyond all chance of doubt form seemed to change. I can't de- in the air. it was obviously the cairn
some living creature bounded through
the thickets in front of them It
might have been a calf—or even a
arge dog. • tall and narrow. The change was so toccupants of the house. There might have you. It isn the. way it s done
"A few weeks ago the details be- abrupt that the creature seemed fair- lbe.windows to close, or other prepar- ()lief there. If .a man's struck the
other pays.
41ri
-
Thnireday, July 24th, 1930
The tone was insistent, and per'-
hapsit had a $eoriiiial quality, too.
"Of course, he can't go until the
rain is done, I won't send ow, my
cars on a night like this,"
The girl whirled to 1110.,Appeal wa$
all over her,
"You won't go till tomorrow?" she
Pleaded. "Tell me, doctor. You won't -
go till thc storm's over?"
"I can't very well," if your father
won't let his cars go out." I tried to•
speak bitterly; but even after,her be-
trayal, the very look cif her softened,
me.
I found young Southley sitting be-
fore a little fire in the library, and.•
he called to me as I passed. In epitee
of the warmth of the night, the little
-
flame looked hospitable and kindly.
"Heavens, what a night!" he ex-
claimed. "I suppose you've heard'
about—about ,the tiger?"
"Of course, 1 • know the
Anything new?"
"Hasn't old Hayevard told you? He
my father have been out talldng
off, and Vitas and josephine would be liaised rain. We listened to the night down that thine
birds and the noise of a banjo infine
wastes, 'nen Hayward touched my • '
: He hasteried about the table and my
• aged host leaped in front of nie. 1
tried to ptish him away; and his an -
alone. •: •
I wondered how nitwit of :this Cer- itely • rernote, above the drear, gray
ious development' was engineered by.
Josephine herself. It wasii t a partic-
ularly pleasant thing to think about,
Of course, girls in this age have a
right to play: all their cards to win the
love of a desirable man, It Was all
legitimate—all fair, But sometimes it
seemed to me that she would have
preferred to stay with the rest of es,
but that some inscrutable power, my-
sterious • and inimitable, denied it.
That power was either Josephine's
aged father, the elder Hayward, or
Hayward and I were having a good
night cigar together: My:wrist watch
indicated ti few minutes after tee.
And then Hayward saw a shadow wa-
ver in the 'moonlight of the golf
green.
It was hard, to see at first.. Some
living creature was advancing eking. be mistaken. Orders he gave were
arm.
"If you'd go in, Long, and look at
Ahmad's hands," he told me, "you'd
Lind with mud: on 'em?" -
"Why, Mr. Hayward?"
"Because he was crawling up, that
hill -e -on hands and 'feet!"
Then his face grew into a scowl,
and he entered the house. ,
I- had pipe by myself -after he
had :gone. At first I thotight, about
what he had said. But it did'ne: make
particularly good sense.. It was true
Hayward didn't :like the ,yet
this wotild have scarcely lee' to an
accusation So bizarre. The glare with
which HayWard's eyes followed him.
when the servant 'worked about the
roams was little short , of deadly—I
had observed it too many times to
swer was a latigh—one grim, syllable
ironical
of laughter;
"He won't kill me," he said. "I'm
the goose—tha.t lays the golden eggs.
He won't kill me."
Vilas screamed at us. The murder: -
madness was on hint yet. 4'
"I -Te struck me," he cried. • "The
devil struck me. He's got to, apolo-
gize. He found me with Josephine,
and he struck me as if I were a dog."
• His father took the pistol from his
hands, and put it in his pocket. South -
ley sighed a little, and placed his can-
dle on the table. The girl rose :up
behind ns, and I was amazed at, her
self-control. It had all come back.
"He struck me," Vitas said again
and again. "What are yott going to
do about it, Southley? You've got
jest ten minutes to turn him out of
this house—or else go instead."
"Let's fo'rget it—" the old man an-
swered with utter weariness.
"Forget nothing, Southley!" he ex-
clee.imed. "We've got to get to the
bottom of this, If my son was struck
scribe it except to say that uPon one before one of those blinding, crashing he's got to have satisfaction. I lived
instant it appeared to me as being; Floridian thunder -storms, long enough on the continent to
low and rather long, and on the next a thought I had better warn the know that, and so has he. And so
gan to vary. It was after my father's ly to leap. Yet it easily could have lations. The library was empty; but
old friend, HayWard, and his son been the:effeet of the moonlight or 1 I heard voices in the den that opened
came to visit us. But tell „ane this the shadows. It 'might have been sim- 'from it. And maybe it was e sign that
first. Weide]. you say the younger Mr. pbr. a Matter of perspective. At once :already the atmosphere of Southley
Hayward would be troubled with We saw the advancing farm that be- Downs has instilled poison into my
faulty nerves?"
• "I saw him jamp tonight when the
owl hooted." •
"Remember he has ,spent nearly a.
Month in this house. After a Month. know•that the moon and the darkness door opened softly bezieatb tny hand.
• • The 'scene in the cendleelight was
alielimeaztiere•te'7- like a tableau. The light was so yel'e
fore had seemingly had the dimen- nerves that I did not remember to
sloas and outline of a huge dog was 'stop and knock. With the memory
just the form of a man. But I had of that mysterious calm behind me,
been enough in the mountains to I hurried across the Softrug. The
A Cave of Diamonds,
Can you imagine going into a cave
and picking diatuonds from its walls?
This is what Six Europeaes did at
Namaqualand. where diamond minee
abound.
Tweety miles from Port 'Nolloth.
heavy seas have eaten huge eaves at
the base of the cliffs, and the men
found one inewhich the action of the
sea had bared a diamondiferous etre-
tam. Although the descent down the
cliffs was a 'dangerous. one, they ea -
toyed the cave at every low tide, for
each time, the, waves left the cav(
they bared mere 'diamonds.
'up fortunately for the mee, the cave
was in the prohibited diarened dig-
ging area, They found the tempta-
tion to .continue when they had at -
ready aceumulated a huge • fortune
too hard to resist, and at last the po-
llee' heard. of their scheme. They en-
tered the cave and canght the raiders
• 11.' R.t5Gorrie. • Sales coi;dnetedany- red-hauded,
Oalgin of the Word "Tatair."
Whoa the Moors were masters pi'
Spain their ships used lay wait tor
mercbant vessels :coming through the
Strait of Gibraltar baund for Italy,
°mace and Egypt, in order to blun-
der there,
' These NtOoret We :140 Wait ated
very Wisely obterered Diet it did net
pay to kill the goose that laid the.
golden: eggs, so, to keep up the game
s long as posslisle, they levied sort
of blackmail with a fixed settle :of
payment on the value of the mem
after the ship hod been taken into
their harber Of Tarifa --- about' 30
nill(a- front Gibraltar.
H.,Thins or/crenated the i•tnel
'')10o.people still thiak the tatitt is' a
ildld up atter all tetese years of
wake :tad eatietiorn
'
aulttosie and 'satisfaction guara xiteed
,
DRS A J. & A. W. IRWIN
DENTISTS
Offint acDonald Block, Wingham
4,4414,,,N444,44*644441,44fretau4441,44W4444410,441044411.4,144440,14,4144
A. J. WALKER
NITURE rioNnItAL
SERVICE
A..• 3. Walker
baled Funeral Director and
Fanbalme,r,
!Thom: 1 06, Res. Phone 224
Limous i uira Coach
, . . . He leaped at me .). and I met Ern with a blow, . ? V 4 :_,C!
,
and the jungles pla.y, strange tricks en
i
fancy and vision.
1 •It was Ahmad Das., He was coin- 'Words. They were, bared and unmask- in the same house, with this between
ing •in :from one of his long walks. 1 ed before me. • the. Tell him Southley—that he has
1 Hayward gasped behind me, and ad• Vilas turned to me with an oath two Choices. One is to 'apologize.
ttlitnig.e•stotrtalitnetfilaciolar The other is to leave. the. house."
I moved back the backs of our bands r atrillsewgeii.jeldsliiifill'7c,siviftahion
I
lifted the girl into my arms. I cross
ed with her to the little sofa at the
side of the room where the two had
evidently been sitting; then turned to
meet the man, He had followed me
across the room ,and not 'six feet was
between us. •
"1 thing:, Dr, Loma" Vitas cried,
"that you're altcig,ether Lou officious,
"Good Lord!" Hayward breathed, You'd better lceep out of this."
I am not just sure what I answered that s'eas an her eyes. Bet she didn't
inn u pi ma pass Othi :a awar- look steaight at me, iirst she glane-
"I wasn't looking for that wretch." -
-:ft isna eery pleasant,- see warned, "He was just coining in from one
ft it, you'll jump, too. I mean, under
irdinary Conditions, a -way from • this
atmosphere."
"I would certainty say that Vitas
Hayward had no nerves to trouble
"just a few nights after .his
al, Vijets 'Hive -ward came in to ,dinner
with a ,curions look of question in
his face. He said tic had seen some-
thing."
Josephine's eyes were fell and in-
tent upon miee, and the .sentenee died
away: The silence of the Viltii mom
was the kind to be listened to in re-
mote deserts, br in the mountain
nights,
"Yes?" I urged her.
low and soft, • the shadows so start-
! ling black, the actors stood so mot-
ionlees. With arms leaning -upon the the broken old figure that, was my
"Your Sonja •sufficiently' able to
take care of hiinself, I hope," I sug-
gested. ••
"If he's taken Carc. of himself; you
would be laying under this table now
-with your 'blood spoiling a. good:
Oriental rug,"...the" older Hayward
an-
swe,red .with startling malice. , "Pin
not sure but that he'd ought to have
done it. I believe it's up to you, Long,
to give a satisfactory explanation-"
"I have nothing to. :explain." Then
I turned my back uporebbn and faced
little mahogany table in the center
of the den stood Vilas H,ayward.
There was a drunken look abottt him;
yet I knew it was not fromavine. His
'ace was fleshed, intent. • With the
'table between them, as if for. a shield,
fosceaine faced him.
-Don't corne a step nearer," She
-aid as the • door opened.
'Ter face was white as the candle
-hat• 'burned between ihern, its: lines
were deep, and her dark eyes were
smouldering. The little silken week-
end,hag I had Seen on the .train lay
before her on the table, and her hand with the relations between Josephine
was lost in the lace of its mouth. 1 and ray son?" he asked, querulously.
host. "Sir, if there is any explana-
tion to be made it will have to come
from your daughter."
It was a cm -ions expression that
came to the old man's face. Its lines
seemed to grow slack. There was
hopelessness in it, and the weakness
of long years, and above all things
else, hopeless, utter impotency.
It seemed to Inc that the girl open-
ed her lips to speak. But before the
worlls came, the .elder Hayward had
answered for him.
"What has this yowls- pup to do
There were mild, primal passions , "They have already been settled. If
at play in the room. One of them ,hat is the issue, it only makes it
was lust; and one was the fury of more certain what course. remains.
murder. There is no ttse of mincing They can't go on living here, guests
• touched.• "Is that the • truth?" asked my
Hakward's felt ,cold, What ,ever
lied been fancy and wrong 'perspep '"rell. him- it is the• tnutha" Hay-
tive before, this was the truth. •His ward's words went on The tone was
bloodwasn't in his hands, as it should Of a • threat—ominous, determined.
have been, ftividently it had all gone The eyes of the two elder men mei.
up to his brain, playing strange tricks ' 'Shn. has nothing to
with it. Southley told me falteringly,
Ahmed Ni. bonscd uStts he pass- : I looked at the .and no Man
ecL n • an mahstire deserilsc the anguish
' cited in me, too, and the words Were" elder ,Hayward. • Then she searched
"A doctor has I he tight to know ,,r his wFilics•."
"Thoso walks of his! Why 'don't straight. He leaPed -4t-lne' and I met
' him with a blow. . and herb she fOund her answer.
for her father's time -dimmed eyes,.
T -Te reeled, then caught at the table. "He's right Dr, Long," she told me.
And his hand reaelted for the silken "'You mrtSt make your own emplane-
bag1 1c.),..111,,,‘t%),,lell•Ittlatble
, tile gid wl.is ..„,,creani. tionis,"
',
"„ t seems the odds are against Inc,' I
ing, The sound rest: above the noise I told theni iiallAY- "Mr. Southley,
of Lite storm. 1 leaPed fur him, b.ut I have only done What any 'Americau
he Whirled.' abont the table before I man watna ;laveto do„ and I earat and
could roach hint. He tore the pistol 'Worft: aPelogi0 to allYorte, I have
from the bag, It glittered in his 'Italia, carried out the obligation of is guest
I had no deltasions about what he to llis host iu the war my instincts
initiates before eur host had beenwo
__and .1 al me the troth." the smouldering -eyes, told all too neve-that 'Aid wrong:7h is evident
uld do ,wite it, 'i'ht- deawn ewe, told. me. Nothing will make me be,.
,.
with tis. He had gone into the hoese
PlainlY. RC was too 'far for nie re that ;Yoti uPhold What these other
on tiOrtle: Crtand, 3 Osephine, was,•with "Yea," ,
"Did—did yett See a.eything.ettraitis, leap at him. Sc, I strack out the eaa„. Men say—and your daughter upholds
Vials oe the veranda, and. •his chair
legend..
to the servants, just a little while ago.
He's quite an old beast, you know.
Well, the colored people say he is
walking again tonight."
"Nice little thing to think about as -
1 drop to sleep," I suggested.
"Isn't it? We have an old gardener
that we call Mose. Mose was in tow*
today, and he came back riding a
horse about eleven o'clock. Rather it
was somewhat before eleven, because
you and the older Hayward wire out
on the golf green for your late even-
ing walk."
' "Go on," T urged. "Mose was rid-
ing home1 suppose he saw the -
ghost -tiger floating through the air,
or riding a bromiistick—"
"Nothing quite sO! bizarre as that,,
I'm sorry to say. Maybe I talk light-
ly, but I'm feeling rather serious,.
Long. If our tiger had done nothing
except ride a broom, or fly, or some-
thing, it would have been a good leg-
end to tell our children— and toast
to in vintages. But unfortunately --
our tiger took other ways of mani-
festing himself. All he did was fright-
.
en Mose's horse—and leave his track
in the earth." •
The man • spoke wholly without.
emotion. He smiled a little, too—a
rather wan, hopeless smile that was
singularly upsetting to the spirit.
"His track!" I echoed. "You don't
mean that."
'"He saw a great yellow and blac.k
cat—almost as large as a pony. But
that isn't quite all. Mose kept bis.
head. He told himself it was a de.-
lusion, just as you and I have told!
ourselvds many times. So he .con-
trolled his horse; then looked down at
the moonlit road. • It was covered.
with crust, and he could see very
plainly. And he saw—just what y told.
I spoke very quietly.
"Tracks?" •
"Yes—as big as his two hands, clear
across the road. He wanted to take
father and the Haywarcls and I down
to see them. I think all of as except
father, who is rather old for. such ex-
cursions, were going—but something
has evidently 'd,i,verted them. They
.were to meet ine here."
"I suppose the • rain has spoiled
them tuna."
"Wealcened them, anyway. Of
course, the colored people are terri-
fied, The night he tiger first went
wilcrwas just on such a night as this-
-in the middle of the sform. They
say on such nights as these—he likes.
to- come back into the warm, dty
house, and play in the curtains."
In a few minutes rnore we were out
where the ram beat upon us. The
road wa's already washed with water.
It didn't seem possible that if there
had really been mysterious tracks in
the dust, that they could have enacts!,
d the storm
"I've got some fine plans for to-
morrow—if it just clears up," the
youth told me joyously as we tram -
ed up the road. I think lie was try-
ing to divert his mind, as well as, '
mine, from the business in hand.
"I'm aprry, Ernest," 1 told him..
"l'in going home tomorrow,"
He stopped in his tracks, and I urg-
ed him on.
*Going- 'home? Good Lord, why?
I thought you'd stay to see us
through. Of course, I can't blame
y mt.-a"
• "I've got to make is livieg," 1 told
him lightly. "it's time I went to
•
'But you were goiag to stay a full
week—and ybu promised sis last night
that you would make it ten days
two weeks."
"Did she fen you that?"
"Tail me? I should say she did.
She daneed a highland fling."
(Conlin:tied Next Week)
all the symptoms1.7
"T -{e said -when he came through the smithies'. forbid 'em? Will if he
long hall' that leada from . the draw. don't. I'll be dartmed if I'll have him
ing-room something. walked before
him. It was in the •shadows, and he
could net see it plain, He asked if
We kept a great yellow and blackdog,
a hound as lareer•or larger," than a
Great Dane." ,
• 'the elder Hayward and were
strolling On the :course, and a few
walkieg through those jungles and
creeping ap on as 1.1118 way!"
"CreePing •- on ns?" 1. echoed.
'What tvay?''
allesides, what Would a man want
to walk. around in those: jungles for?"
he went :on,..unheeding me. "Tell me
that?" Then his voice changed—
tone .by time until it was almost a
whisper. "And tell me ibis, too Long
tirawn dose to ltnts At ffr,t 1,,abutrt—about A tunaers' pumnre as thent, too. And it you wall have my
wtttibag brotight to mee I wili go.at once."
'rim girl clasped her father's hands,
A, world et appeal was in her dark
wasn't thielniag about" Hayward or eeenc 1.11) the hale. Of course, it was
aaturnabasing probably just the moonlight--syet
with whot astounding' fortune Vilas there was something puzzling about
and Josephine always Seemed to be it," •
alone together. . -confess:I. didita recognize hi
It was a baffling thine I .onldn't at 011e14."
think •
of any conecioue effort itt that it. 'rim( quit(' il,
atasseinta yet sesmisaisaa /anises, in .1,011g, Ott, the devil! I e.4 111111 S
the sloe were alw:tys thro \vans them anYwaY:'
1,e2:01,ea I 11 011(. in 31,101 all he lye.. NA/c Walk( 41 tip to tits veranda and
npani:-. be li
Sonitiley Down, WtItYl111111011:or an iivgant on till," SICPS,
On ille veranda toetalter; in the neat, a last lnok OVOr the 11110-111, Tliere
Vet1..T I 1 liavt win dared Was a ring around 'the 1110011 that p
p,sai—
lip O. 15 :
ro•
The dark fell over us, 'Plat sound
of the storm obliterated his breath-
ing. Ti 'was the truce of darkness --
a truce reinembered from primal"
days,
delta know hOW long it had con -
flatted when Hayward and Southley
me. forms saddenly appear-.
('(1 in iiR" door; and each of 1ht.'711 Car.
tied candles,
Vilas still held the pistol.,
gleamed hi the candlelight.
'Was!" Lis father celled.
Put
eyea, •
.!!He Can't go in this storne"she
told hien ,road along tlie levie
isn't eaten tell hint he can't go till
the storm is over." • :
•- '.1.1.1:e elder 'Hayward thoriled from
Inevond the table.
"A' good wetting' Inight• teach 'him
111111111ers," he stiggeSted. '"VVhat aboui
11, ,5(inttileyr
Inds in 1 ilkfileitite,,
ed burn itch end lista of Aka
1111 ete 4,9101;8041111.:Salva'1,,t writes
(MVO,' feeding stopped. Piles
aeon nisliod. Ataidod oporatioa.”
Get itts Wit Soaltits today, AU druddiats.
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