1 THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, SEPT, 13, 192S max wm^ip^^~' BEGIN HERE TODAY. j "I asked if you'd beer Ftod'og th lifefes bodies of tof|^fjf> n>llir.,3 a cigaret two partners at their gold mining jta,ln fingers, camp, Harry Gleeter fires southward. She nodded, knowing that he will be accused of <.jt wag con.-:de,-able of - On the way Gloster siaves|had ^ ^ w'ck hos to in?" he suggested. "He's a lion of a horse the life of a stranger, Lee Haines, irom the murderous hands of a scoundrel by the name of Joe Maoarthur. Glcster is jailed after getting into a fight with several men over a girl. 1ee Ha'.r.os and Joan Barry, daughter of a farrows rider of the old plains, asslot Closter to escape. Haines, fatally wounded by a bullet, tells Joan the story of her father's hectic career. Now rid'-T after liter trjsa to sit astride the tot.'.ir.g back of Haines' hr^e black stall:on, tb© "Captain." After all have failed ar.d the crowd has dispersed, Joan apnrraches the Captain in bis stall and tames him with a few gentle words. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XX. free pinions But there was no danger, There was not an instant of doubt in hre mind the moment she faced him, and prfstnt'.y he came shrinking forward, stopped in the midd'? of the corral, end raiding his head toward those she said. "He's a man-killer," observed Buck. "I hear they ain't eveng going to try to sell him." "What in the world will they do with him, then? Give him away?" "The sheriff don't see it that way," taid Buck. "He's going to put a chunk of lead into the Captain's truck Joan dumb. Women's Dress Again Under Fire Western Europe Bars Exposure of Arms and Legs By JOAN BENEDICT Pari s.--Women wearing short y fSr!> sleeves have for some months past and the grod Deen stopped at the doors of Italian •eoi Wi'rth his churches. Short sleeves are not al-'reat. was his l°wed within. Arguments, persua-| sions, tips even, do no good. Both Yet, blinking through the w'nd Church and State forbid entrance, which that gaHcp raised, the taw the Tne sleeves must be quite long. Let Captain swing back again int.) view, ,ilem end just above the elbow and coming past on he - right; then, a mo-' tne appraising eye of the verger bids mont later, he wa'ked url on her one to keeP out- --and she undent;id. Ho Was utilr.gi Brittany has followed suit. Geo- If BDl horse l :.;:aigh:t ked at tc icll( lite Uy to graphically the oldest proi | France and always a strong supporter "SALADA" In remote and distant parts of the world, fine teas are grown--wherever they grow these teas are procured for "SALADA" blends. The best the world produces is sold under the "SALADA" label. Millions know the satisfaction "SALADA" gives. onds. Then the Capta out of the night with bis back and his 9 Of { and wait- of the Chu few sec- one betl te flying in a re > combed any wor ight out church I but also bar3 any :h, Brltauny has gone Italy The Bishop of St. Brieuc decree not only forbids without sleeves to enter a presbytery in his diocese, with bare The Captain at all odds must ^^^^^^^^s or too shot. outh and eyee which, it seemed to soes so far as to prohibit boys wear-jjoan, were devil'ehVy bright. Peter inS their shirts open too low in the | whirled away, and the great stallion neck. ■ent by, missing them narrowly. Joan They are likewise busy in England, saved. She could not beg him from] Sim Hargess. How could he po.ssiibly, understand? And yet the Gapta must be saved! When she finished her work a tntai vith the afternoo: soft c ' gr< ed I aint. opened the back door and went cut- j dropped side. Buck Daniels was pacing solemn-! masbewd by tern ly to and fro in the darkness, with a cloud of fragrance from his pipe following him. The sight of his Military figure stirred her with pity. And though she wanted to go out to the ground as Peter,' In Exe; ', darted away with land of bridle reins. She did not think of it at the time, for her rrJind was filled brim full of delight, and there was ro place for If°any ideas came to her at that time, they were of her father. For ror father's boras had sGred this stallion : and <s>uch a horse as the Captain had Satan been, leas gigantic of body but fully as great of soul. He would bare krown how to handle the big block, that father of hers. With bis voice a'one ho had ruled Satan; with hla voice alone he could have ruled the Captain. From him came her own authority over the b'nek: and so the ..-tar/ion was the bond which allied hor to the ghost of Dan Barry. All of this was in her rn'nd, but when the afternoon shadows t'ar.ted sharply and the night wind began to move in cool and quiet from the desert, shie went hack to the place where she had tethered Peter, and mounted him for the return to the parch. Che was barely home in time to ccok sapper for Buck Don' Fa He wen. an older and a oat'iier man, Once or twice during the mc.-.l he tried to make conversation. Each time Jean strove to answer him cheerfully arid! take up the buir-den of tbe talk. Yet in tpite of hor-fX?l the silences wouM come as her mind ramiblei far off to the s:2iv:s of he i md take his ras held back by >uld be ill at east to hear that feeling that She did not diiffidence in startled and guess at that look in his eyes. In her room she threw herself on the bed without undrer,;ing and waited a long age until Buck came upstairs. He did not pause at her door this evening to say goodnight, but with a loud, stamping step to his own room. She listened to the creaking of the floor until he was ii bed. Then she was up at once an< dawn the stairs, all silently, not ii dread lest uBek should hear her now but in pity lest he should wake an< worry for her until her return. In the pr-tture she found and r.ad died hr.net>; Peter, and a few moment: later they were bound for the town at a gallop. She cut around behind the houscn, according to the plan which she had worked out before, tethered Peter at a litr'e distance, and then, carrying a bal'.er and lead rope, she started through the trees toward the hotel stable and the corral behind it. Vo'ce3 in the darknora stepped her. "This is where Haines was hit," one of two men was saying. "If him and this Harry Gloster had ever got together again with that gariT of the '.-.is utj in the mountains, they'd of been hard to beat, eh?" Joan slipped away to the tide and when he stared far off at the tag been s^tfclea^rt TAILORED LINES [r~lSl c'ou"ntrv '-xnd' Smart English youngsters of 4, 6 aip of the outlaws,!! and ^ years wear this attractive no doubt, toward i « telI°r^d hnes w.th fulnese , had been looking! fall1lnJg from the shoulders, for gen- ■ould be ■ to it i Lgle til she reached lows me through the day. And j She hurried don't do juot as you want me j the corral. There were many voices near it. Two or three men were busy :?h, Jean!" he said, seeming j in the stable behind the hotel. And •'•vit'od than pleaded by the j in a back yard adjoining, two young-•ok «f affection. "Hush, honey! sters were"talkirg in shrill vwSces. don't have to do no explaining i The Captain himself, lighted by the Here is a treat that can't be beat! Benefit and pleasure in generous measure! CI so Peppermint Flavor ISSUE No. 36--'23 the' right." She (I'ared r a whiile with a heavy he art and th m looked up to the narth- cm and west horizon whore the moun- dewy pyram ds and low running linesi. Ycnder was his .goal, and how soon. he wouM be among them, bathed in freedom! She mount ed Peter and started sad- lv awav toward the ranch. Three nrghty in.fiu r.ecis had peuTod into her life one afto r another: Of these, Lee Haines was. dead and Glceter and the Captain were gone forever. What remained to her was the dreadful mor.otonv of the ranch life and the lor.?, sad till sr.ces of Buck Daniels, Peter, tnv: ngirjg on ait h!r3 smooth canter, sitai" ed sharply to ihe s.ide and dowlad his paco. CTJt of a holo stea'gbih bsf ore them swept a sha- dow. And, althou?h eould rot make it out. the Duddan f e»r of Peter .cav-trfit ho'ld on Joan. She sept him occasions, and especially for travel. It has an effective monogram in same contrasting shade as Peter Pan collar, applied trimming piece, cuffs and patch pockets. Inverted plaits at each side of front give sufficient fulness to hemline. It is usually fashioi.ed of 'wool jersey, chambray, linen, printed sateen, tub silks, cotton broadcloth, shantung, pique or challis prints. Style No. 254 can be made in the 8-year size with 2 yards of 40-inch material with % j yard of 32-inch contrasting. Pattern I price 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin! preferred). Emb. monogram motifi (blue) No. 11012 costs 20 cents extra.1 We suggest enclosing 10 cents addi-! tional for a copy of our Fashion! Magazine. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. -Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of such j patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in i stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap j it carefully) for each number and; address your order to Wilson Pattern! West Adelaide St., Toronto. ry in Eng-number of Englishwomen went to church without their hats. In hot weather hats compress the head and make the hair perspire, for both men and women. Also, they obstruct the view of those sitting behind the wearer in church as in the theatre and cinema. But the Bishop of Exeter ordered the vergers of the cathedral to make sure that all women who came to worship had their Then the League of Nations took a hand. . It issued a formal circular from its Geneva headquarters forbidding bare legs to women frequenting the administration buildings. Also, lawn tennis in bathing costumes was prohibited upon the territory of the League. Too Hot for Many Clothes This season's tourists "in Europe, from whatever country they hailed, were all remarkable for the few clothes they wore. Fashion in general fostered it; the unprecedented heat justified it. Emergency hospitals and nursing homes would have had much more to do had not char-ablauc patrons gone in for undress. But the question is, "Will the interference of Church and State succeed? Many precedents seem to prove that it will not. Take General Pangalos. Things were going splendidly with him in Greece when he took it into his head to interfere with women's skirts. Short skirts must go, said he; but it was the General who went. Women do not vote in Greece, but from Aspasia and Phryne they have been famous for indirect influence. How different the experience of Kemal Pasha! Just fifteen years ago the women of Turkey began their agitation against the veil. Lifting the veil was then a penal offense. Slowly but surely the reform made itself felt until now Kemal Pasha has practically abolished the veil, in some cities at least. In Constantinople and Angora wo to-day dress as do the women of 1 York, - London and Paris. A little more darkening around the eyes, perhaps, and with a thin scarf wound judiciously about their heads, sometimes with a hat, sometimes without, but altogether in the European way. Kemal Pasha might not have been so successful in other things had he not advocated emancipation from the veil. Queen Souryia of Afghanistant has done much toward the withdrawal of the veil. Her triumphal tour in Occidental dress throughout Europe was a practical object-lesson. The reactionary measures against dress in Italy, Brittany, Exeter, Greece, Deauville, Geneva and elsewhere are contemporaneous with the contrary movment in the East. There the effort is all the other way. suttar, the parts of a woman's body which are to be covered according to Moslem law. In this, the young Turk differs from the old. The young Turk is wjiat is known as a Revivalist in religion and he says that the face is not Included in suttar. He even goes so far as to say that In early Islamic history women were unveiled. Most Moslem clergy argue that the present state of education throughout Islam does not guarantee sufficient respect for womeirwith the face uncovered. Kemal Pasha has settled that question successfully by giving his police unlimited license for the protection of women ar.d the right to,' inflict the severest punishment upon | offenders. The result is that in Tur-1 key a man hardly dares to look upon a woman in the streets, let alone rno- Bossy Parrot Puts Visitors on Street Wily Fellow Clears Central Park Bird House and No One Can Catch Him Hevf York.--A parrot in the bird-, house at Central Park menagerie has become a volunteer in the service of the park department. The keeper in the bird-house gives orders to the visiting public just once i day, at closing time, when he calls: "All o all .. STOP AND GO LIGHT8 stop and go lights, ( Such conservatism on the part of the keeper was unappreciated by one of the parrots of the menagerie. Once a day seemed entirely too seldom to issue the order, the utterance of which brought such prompt and satisfactory results. So one day recently he took it upon himself to act as spokesman In the absence of the keeper. In a peremptory voice he shouted: "All out, all out. Hurry up, all The result was a disconcerted public. It was not closing time, yet a mysterious voice was ordering them out. Surely this wan not in keeping with the regulations. However, when the orders came the visitors left and not even James Coylo, head keeper at which of the solemn-lookln^ green hire 3 the uilty c Shaw Anxious to Meet Gene London.--There is a good chance that Gene Tunney will achieve his wish to meet George Bernard Shaw, who is taking a holiday at Antibes, France. The Daily Mail's correspondent at Antibes told Shaw of Tunney's expressed desire to meet him, and the latter replied: "Tell Gene I will be delighted to meet him, in fact I had every intention of making his acquaintance. I will be back in London September 15, and hope to see him Shaw added that he did not intend to allow reporters or photographers at the meeting. "We will meet as private gentlemen," he said. "I will discuss boxing and Gene wilt discuss literature, so we ought to get along | Mr. Coyle even chaliged hi3 clothes to disguise his Identity, but the parrot is either a modest fellow or a very wise old bird, for he says not a word in the presence of his superiors. But once Mr. Coyle has retired to his offices comes the order: "All out, all out. Hurry up, all Minard's Liniment for Every Pain Joan, aged five, out to tea was I puzzled when she saw the family bow j their heads for grace. "What are you doing?" she said. "Giving thanks for our daily bread," she was told. "Don't you give thanks at home, Joan?" "No," said Joan, "we pay for our bread." Eastei Small feet i In China. Jo trait of her declares opei Turkey conse and pains, but be sure it is Aspirin the name Bayer should be on the package, and on every tablet. Bayer is genuine, and the word genuine--in red--is on every box. You can't go wrong if you will just look at the box: Patte mt by oturr Frisking Heeney Shac sad and face r of shopping conductors. Houston Post Dispatch: It lias not j both h( been figured out how much of thelSort; oj $100,000 the Anzac will be permitted ■ moreov to take home with him. After he has | genCjea paid his income tax to this GoTertrl trolley ment, and paid his manager and Arabia is abi handlers.his transportation home, and' country where his income tax to his own Govern-J women has not ment, he may decide that a plumber's ; Tribal customs.: wages look pretty good. It takes a. {n the land of t lot of money to dwarf a plumber's j not favor agita partially covered are shielded by a This hood is, Pilot Stultz showed that he something of a philosopher, as as a flier, when he _ remarked l among birds the parrots, which the best talkers, are also the poo fliers. or are they in favor of other reforms cheherezade may still delight and dis act for one-thousand and one nights; hen she goes abroad, she veils, j In Syria, recenly. the Women's j Party of Damascus decided to marcl I through the streets without veils 3, The first suffrage parade in New Yorl that i [1 be allowed to For Better Pickles Make mustard pickles this year in your own clean kitchen. You can select the particular combination of vegetables you desire--make the pickles tc /our own high standards of quality, purity and flavour -- win the admiration of your guests. More and more, every year, representative hostesses are making their own mustard pickles at home! Write for FREE recipe book on pickles, salads, salad dressing, sandwich fillings, etc. COLMAN - KEEN (Canada) Limited 1080 amherst street - montreal Ilia, small Let stand o Aids Digestion xa