Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Jun 1925, p. 2

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J*-***- ..-'vM* <&»4 > 1 *£*»%,>« > % 4 • ..-'~J '...:., i'..- V..-,.-*HB aeBINBl mniDEALEiU MoHENBY, ,"-\v'*-V - ^V! -t" J*??-,* 'V fJ: ^ *?& J£'•'>*" t HI 1111M M i i i n H i 11! II; I' n JI 'M' I •»| mm. M i i;;;: i. i J.)' • 111:: ^1. Sinners in Heaven • \ Bq CLIUE ARDEtt ^ LW-U'-.v - V£V • JCLi Copyright by TH« Bobbs-Merrlll OP. |B ^tiWffliiiiiimmtwiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiilihhillhlilililliiiiiiiiillliillllillhiiiliiiiiiiiimmmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiflH PART FOUR--Continue# rfk "I--killed him? I--killed Babooma •« man--?" "I Swiftly he closed her Hps with his ^^-•••ivn, with quick perception of the directs which renewed civilisation might have had upon the primitive In- •tlncts aroused on the island, pi-' • "I owe my verv life to you, wife of «'•: 'Mr heart,** he whispered. But his reflections were misplaced. * "Thank God!" she cried unexpectedly. "I would still kill anybody---say , ,4fey--who attempted to hurt you." " «Nom de Dleu!'" toe echoed the Iflrenchmen. "Our life will be a check- , #ed career." .. Then Barbara fully recognized once . Bore the old Alan of flesh and blood, deep moods and light banter, poetic Idealism and prompt action--delicious- If human, warm with love and life. ... 8he suddenly laughed, the bewildered aense of shock failing from her--the grst real spontaneous laugh of many Weeks. "Alan! Alan I Nothing matters but Be fsct that you are here--alive 1 But I can't understand It all. How was •ach a mistake made?" "Very easily. Because De Borceau *dn 't of course, know friend from ".libel Things were going all right with Vs. But when one of the devils set fire to the hut and the friendly spear knocked me out, De Borceau naturally &ough all was up. Some of Baboo- Ma's lot tried to reach you, but Roowa frustrated them. Then De Borceau Wan staunch to his path. He fought anybody who came near you. like a feedleval knight, and carried you off to safety. Poor Roowa thought he had stolen you from me, and nearly Jtent mad!" He laughed reminlscently. "But you? What happened to you? Jthe expedition searched the Island. And what became of the De Boreeaus j i\ When they returned--V He sank Into the big armchair, still ft ^ 4Hasping her In his arms. "It's quite Ml fairy story. You remember the wood / Vvlp the east--where, that first Christgias day--V - "Every leaf!" she breathed. He smiled Into her eyes. . . . >' /i_ "But not every moss-covered rock. " «:|n that wood was a very cleverly conf i eealed entrance to a subterranean pas- C »age leading to a kind of vault. This ' Vv' gun-rowed down Into another outlet-- <31; H|utte Impassable--on the shore, which * allowed a little fresh air and glimmers of light This cave was tabu. In happier days, when the tribe was sufflself- supportlng to--provide its meat, the condemned dinner was we need not go Into details! that cave was supposed to be with the spirits of past feasts, liked to speak of It, or go near ^ It When I was considered dead, our * friends, very naturally, carried off my „! bleeding corpse--" [6^,' ' "Oh, don't!" cried the girl who bad suffered to much from this well- -#ieanlng act She burled her face on lis shoulder. ... . After a ludd Interval be retained ftls narrative. "When they realised you had been %tolen* and I was still alive, the fear irose that the 'bird of 111 omen' would ' Return and make off with me, tool So, to Insure my safety--that was the frony of it all--they raised the tabu ind hid me In the cave. Only Roowa Was courageous enough to enter with food. I was knocked out for some time. When I recovered--Barbara! Can you possibly Imagine my feelings fpon discovering that the rescue party fad come and gone? I was raving Had! The poor beggars had done it for the best and were bewildered. Nothing would convince them that the White men were my friends. I spent What seemed years of agony, doubtfu: If any further help would come. My •nly hope lay in you.** ? . "In me?" t y . . "I thought yon would persuade De ., Borceau or somebody to try »gn»n, DOt test content--" "I wanted to come myself," she j Cried. "I Implored and threatened and-- Oh! everybody was so pig-headed. But what happened to V De Borceau?" "As soon as the plane's arrival was known the whole tribe raced pell-mell /He the shore and burned It to cinders. |• fo und the brothers hiding for their f #fe ,n the forest." He gave an lrjjepreuaible bubble of laughter. ."They •-literally--fell from the trees upon my neck! We have been kissing each ether's hands or faces ever since. 8o, again, nothing remained but to wait and hope. I thought at least a missionary party would turn up. That second expedition was Infernally •low!" * He laid his cheek Impulsively down upon hers. "But De Borceau could give me news of you. He told me everything--about Singapore--" Her lips turned, trembling a little, to hit. "And." "And fnble. causlnjr the flame of the lamp to Jump. "Those blighted Pharisees I Those d--d, gossiping--" "Oh, my dear!" She laughed again at this familiar vehemence. "I went to Darbury," he explained briefly. Her laughter fled. "You went to Darbury. Alan?" She glanced apprehensively into his grim face. "What-- what happened?" He remained silent for a moment, then, met her eyes with a smile. " W e l l . . . No d e a t h s o c c u r r e d . " "Did--did mother--say--?" "There was a very free, candid Interchange of opinion! I honestly tried to reconcile 4vour mother, but"--he gave one of his old careless shrugs-- "she considers herself disgraced, and talks darkly of being obliged to leave Darbury. . . . I saw Rochdale, too--" Barbara raised her. head again. "Ah! Dear old Hugh I He has been-- splendid, Alan. His friendship--his struggle to--to--believe--" Her voice quavered. "I know. And he, of everybody concerned, might with justness have condemned--" ' They fell silent awhile, each knowing, by their own Joy, what it all meant to the friend who had lost . . . A realisation of what this return would mean to Mrs. Field combined with her own overwhelming joy to draw from the very depths of her heart a voiceless prayer met thanksgiving. In the . luminous, darkened •he whispered. "*ItM" ,, apm® tightened. "And--other things. 1 Insisted. He acted loyally--for as both, Barbara. -Oh, Dontr Cried the Oil* eyes that met her own, she sifr the same look of almost reverent awe. Never had he seemed so gloriously alive, so radiant in spirit Again she raised her hands to feel the features she had never thought to see again; then drew the dear head, with passionate tenderness, down to her breast, and clasped It there. . . . To both of them, beneath the superficial lightness of talk, this hour equaled in sacredness that of their marriage morning in the dawn. But this held In It also, the half-fearful Joy of a resurrection. The past dark* ness, with the struggle, toward the light, had left ineffaceable marks upon e a c h s o u L . . . 'Can't we go back to the Island?" she whispered at last Some day." He raised his head and smiled. "We'll retire there, now and then, and live It *11 again 1 But our first jaunt Is to Australia. • I've been commissioned t<r rebuild the old bus. There's been an awful lot of Interviewing and publicity since I got back ten days ago--" "Only ten days Ir Pff'vt to Darbury--" "That's not all.* He looked at her with eyes which held something of their old Inscrutability. "Your relations showed unflattering surprise at what they termed mv 'constancy' now we are rescued. Oh, lord!" "They would r ate crted, with Indignation. "The fear that we meant brazenly to defy the English law possessed them. They besought me to marry you 'properly, in a church.' Your aunt particularly insisted upon a Protestant church --not a registry office, or chapel." "Just like Aunt Mary!" She laughed rather bitterly. "I couldn't feel-- more married," she added, with the quick shy look he loved. His gray eyes darkened; with a little catch of the breath his arms tightened. "There's one thing, therefore, which bold bad barons must have in their pockets when they chase their victims to Darbury, to prove their good Intent." „ "What Is that?" "A special license. I know a parwon near here. We haven't met for eight years; but I wired this morning to tell him we should arrive at his church to be married tomorrow--" "My dear whirlwind!" she gasped. He bent, with his old violent suddenness, and caught her up so close she could scarcely breathe. All the old passionate, dominating love, which had so often swept her away, poured forth and surrounded her; no that, pantiug and glorying, her individuality, after all its lonely travail, once more transfused, transformed Into his own. "So," he whispered, "we must have another wedding, my Beloved! But It cannot be more beautiful--more real-- than the. other In the dawn--" "With a little sobbing, tremulous sigh, she clung close. . . . "If we had one every year, In every land and every tongue," she murmured whimsically, "they would all seem beautiful to me." •The landlady discreetly entered at last to lay the supper. She cast one comprehensive glance at the armehalr, and her smiling face grew more radiant. "We are to be married In the morning." Alan remarked. Cornish people take life calmly They do not lose their heads or forget their duties In any crisis. "Yes, sir!" Mrs. Tregutheran agreed brightly. "I'm sure I du hope you will both be happy. And--will you have eggs tu breakfast, sir--or bacon?" "Both--heaps!" They smiled at each other when die left the room. "Somebody must teed us." he observed. passing his fingers through her curly hair. "Every little note baa Its niche." • » » » • • • • Hugh sat long over a lonely breakfast, a few days later. The "old people" were away. The London paper, with Its list of marriages, lay upon the table before him; but he stared away absently, through the window, without t u r n i n g t h e p a g e t . . . Presently, with gun and dogs, he stepped out into the raw February air, turning aimlessly down a lane. . . . An hour later, followed closely by six puzzled brown eyes, he walked slowly up the pathway In the little wood where--aeons ago--he and Barhura had discussed their honeymoon. The gun still rested unused within his a*m, the cartridges untouched within their b a g . . . . Underfoot, the flr needles lay soft and damp with here and there froiids of sodden dead bracken drooping upon them. The tall pines swayed a little, whispering their everlasting, murmurous song; dropping, sometimes, splashes from their wet leaves, 'like tears, upon the dreariness below. All the world appeared gloomy, dead, sorrowful. It seemed impossible that, soon, the sap would run in the tali trees, the young green shoot forth upon the hedges, spring--with Its fresh myriad life--awake with the "singing of birds." . . . The unloaded gun dropped unheeded to the ground. . . . The six brown eyes questioned one another wonderingly; then looked back at the tweedclad figure lying face downward, with head burled in his arms. . . . At last Shag, Hugh's favorite terrier, ever the most tender-hearted of friends, approached cautiously; sniffed; then gently licked what was visible of a much-loved cheek. (THE END.) mm of GMtw, Mad* Companion* at Dog* In -Memories <md Notes of Persons and Places," Sir Sidney Colvln gives an intimate glimpse of George Meredith's conversation with his dogs. "The mod characteristic strain In his ordinary manner was this blend of' the most scrupulous courtesy with the frankest raillery, both somewhat elaborate of their kind. He would take and keep the same tone with servants. He would even take it with his pet dogs. I have noticed that the dogs of men of genius love them mora passionately and devotedly than they love ordinary masters,. I suppose feeling in them some extra glow and Intensity of the emotional faculties calling for a response In kind. To the succession of black and tan or pure tan dachshunds given to Meredith by various friends, .Koby fend Bruny and Pete (for *Kobold,' 'Bruno,' 'Peto'), and Islet on whom he wrote his well known elegy-- to these it was a delight to hear him talking eagerly by the half hour together in terms now of caressing endearment how of Irony, or sometimes, when the poaching Instinct had proved too strong in any of them, of pained parental reproof." And in the same chapter Colvin Quotes Sir James Bnrrle's account of Meredith, written after the latter*s death: "He came swinging down the path, singing lustily, ^nd calling, to his dogs, his dogs of the present ahd the past; and they yelped with Joy, for they knew they were once again 4p breast the hill with him." Hatty faying Not f Fault of Eati fhdtdM American salesmen, trained to high pressure and quick-result methods, meet with puzzling experiences when selling In India, where men and women appear to be bunting always for an excuse for delaying a decision to a future date, says a writer in the Ohio State Journal. A New York trained motor salesman learned that fact when be tried to sell a handsome motor to a man of wealth in Delhi. There had been some reductions made public in the price and the salesman assured the man of wealth there could be no more reductions for at least a year,' using that statement for the purpose of closing the sale. It did not bring that result the contemplative resident there merely smiling and saying he planned a vacation for a year and would look over the cars on his returfe. ous Old Thltf year sees the three hundred and •Ixty-fourth anniversary of the demolition of the magnificent Church of St John at Perth, the restoration of which is now contemplated. This Is without doubt one of the most Interesting churches In Scotland, says the Weekly Edinburgh Scotsman. Tradition ascribes its foundation to the Ptcts, but, whoever founded it, It is one of the earliest stone churches built in the country; and. In the Twelfth and Thirteenth centuries, as evinced both by ancient documents and by the surviving remnants of the edifice of that tltne. It was mngniflcent and extensive. The monk of Dunfermline, to whom It WHS granted, allowad It to fall Into disrepair--a state of affairs which Robert the Bruce set about remedying, hut the restoration was stayed by his death. Odd Quail In Born*o The long, hairy, reddish crest gives the moderately sized, rich green plumaged greenwood quail a distinguished appearance, says Nature Magazine. In Its native haunts, from Slam to Borneo and Java, it is a lover of the tropical forest up to an altitude of 4,out) feet and seldom visits the open country. important Agreement The Webster-Ashburton treaty was a treaty between the United States and Great Britain, negotiated by Danlei Webster and Lord Alexander Baring Ashburton In August 1842. By this treaty the frontier line between the state of Maine and Canada was definitely agreed to. By this treaty, also, seven-twelfths of the disputed ground and the British settlement of Madugaska were given to the United States and only five-twelfths of the ground to Great Britain, but It secured better military frontier to Canada and Included heights commanding the 8t Lawrence, which the award of the king of Holland, who had been chosen arbiter, had assigned to the Americana. By the eighth and ninth articles provisions were made for putting an end to the African slave trade, and the tenth article provides for the mutual extradition of suspected criminals. Abturdity, of Man Really, when it comes to glory there Is no limit to the absurdity of man. A man will glory in a disease, a vice, the wealth of an ancestor when he is himself poor or the poverty of an ancestor when he Is himself rich; the street In which he lives; the color of his hair, of his eyes; the possession of something which he picked up In the street--even the abuse of some one more notorious than himself. Men will glory in anything, just as the famine-struck will eat anything. Such Is the appetite for glory. And why is it there? I say again, to make men achieve, to make them write bad verse, build hideous houses, put up Impossible monuments, pass bad laws, and in general destroy their kind.--Hlllare Belloc in the New Statesman. Totograph TorriAod Many When Prof. Samuel F. B. Morse. Inventor of the practical telegraph Instrument and code, first put them into practice In 1845 many intelligent citizens were actually terrified. Some of the more skeptical spoke of him as being In league with the devil. The first message sent over the line that had been constructed for the practical tryout was: "What hath God wrought!" Morse was a painter, and not an electrician, but he combined tbe principles and devices that electrical scientists had produced up to that time and in that way won credit for the idea. He met with great opposition In getting the idea accepted. rise to know what you were facing-- jTwwn'i Description of Missouri River Water the inferences, the-- And there I was, powerless aa a stranded infant, to help you." "It was--b--1!" she murmured briefly. *Have you beard--V "Madge told me everything. She %SOt the news of our rescue almost directly after you left London I I came home like the very devil--by sea. air, and land--to find you bad disappeared --gone to break your little heart alone, where I couldn't find you--" *1 bad to come away, Alan. 1 was * turmoil--" "My Barbara, don't X nndterstaadr SwtdenJy hj» epes biased In thefr old Inyri and be dashed an arm upon the In one of his return trips to the state of his boyhood, Mark Twain wrote a. friend he had found one thing that had ndt changed--the mulatto complexion of Missouri river water-- and probably a score of centuries would not change It. "It comes out of the turbulent, bank-caving river," he explained, "and every thimbleful of It holds an acre of land In solution. 1 got this fact from the bishop ot the diocese. If you will let your glass stand half an hour you can separate the land from tbe water as easy as Genesis, and then you will find them both «eod---iOie one to eel; tbe other to drink. The land Is very nourishing, the ^ftter la thoroughly wholesome. The one appeases' hunger, the other, thirst. Bi|t the natives do not take them separately, but together, as nature mixed them. Whfen they find an inch of mud in the bottom of the glass, they stir It up and take a draft as they would gruel, it la difficult for the stranger to get used to this batter, but once used he will prefer It to water."-- Pathfinder Magazine. Th* Cow-Tro* In Colombia there is a tree known as the cow-tree. It Is treated much ss we treat a cow, or, this vegetable cow Is bled; rather. Its veins are cut, that Is to say. the bark of the tree Is Of ALEXANDER Arehaologift* Beliepm Can B* Locatad. It ' \JL report sent from Baku says that search has been begun by the Azerbaijan Archeological society for ihe treasure of Alexander the Great, which is believed to be burled near tbe village of Andrlevka. It Is rather a relief that the quest for burled treasure has been shifted to thfe neighborhood of Baku, and that It Is the wealth of Alexander which is sought. Search for the buried treasure of Captain Kldd and that of the Louisiana-Mississippi pirate-patriot, Jean Latitte. -has been carried on so extensively that it IS right to give the treasure of Alexander a chance. So much also has been written of the buried treasures of the lncas and of gold in sunken galleons that It is diverting to hear from the region of the Caucasus mountains nn<) the Caspian sea, in old Georgia, whic^ Is now the Azerbaijan republic. Many unsatisfactory results h»ve a tended the search for buried treasu and In the matter of finding the wealth of Alexander one should keep expec| tation and enthusiasm under control. It is believed that the third king of Macedon, in the thirty-three' years of his active life between Pella and Babyion, may have accumulated wealth. In his triumphal travels in Byzantium, Egypt, Persia and other countries lie might have gathered treasure. Whether be buried much of it or qny. near the village of Andrlevka is the qnee> tlon. Treasure of Alexander the Great would be double treasure. The gold would be gold worth so much an ounce, but the gold coins, vases and amulet^ taken from kings, princesses and priests at Thebes and scores of othe* cities would be worth more than their weight in gold. Lovers of antiques* lovers pf things with imperial associations, lovers of things steeped in associations of war, plunder, conquest and assassination would bid against each other. The dispatch says: "Although there are no precise historical data Indicating the existence of such treasure, the archeologists were led to excavate by the statement of an 80-year-old resident of Andrlevka, who says he owns an ancient map stolen from a Turkish sultan many years ago showing the spot where the treasure Is burled. The old man's story. of a stolen map has a reminiscent sound to persons who have been burnt by the burled treasure fever. The dispatch also says that "it Is an established historical fact that Alexander's troops mutinied at one point in the great empire builder's campaign against Persia--2,256 years ago--and local legend has It that he burled all his treasure somewhere on the Caspian littoral to prevent it falling into the hands of the mutineers. The trouble with many local legends of buried treasure Is that ^hey cover &90 ttiucb ground. . ^ ^ ~ Whore Phone Operator Does All the Talking The telephone, which has been gradually reaching out into the dark places of the earth, now penetrates into the remote fastnesses of Abyssinia. Some Interesting facts about the Abyssinian telephone service are given in a recent letter from an American missionary. The construction of the telephone line to the capital city, Addis Abbeba, must have been a difficult task, for the country is extremely rough. It is an extensive country, bigger ' than France and Italy put together. The telephone line Is strong on poles so low that one has to dodge under the wire when riding. The operator receives and transmits messages, shouting them at the top of his lungs and using the instrument alternately as a transmitter and a receiver. The public Is not permitted to use the telephone directly, but messages are given to the operator for transmission. An Interpreter, of course. Is often necessary; but anyone who Is interested can sit at the telephone office as long as he likes and listen to all messages that are being transmitted, whether they are intended (or him or not Got id*a in Dr**m A "dream Invention," making posit ble movlng-plcture shows In broad daylight is claimed by a young bookbinder in Budapest according .to a dispatch from that city, the New York World says. The inventor projects pictures not against a white screen but against a rapidly rotating disk covered with strips of daft: green and dark blue paper which radiates from the center. The dispatch says the Invention hss been proved a complete success by experiments and is already patented. The inventor says the idee came to him in a dream and he Is nnable to e» plain It Incised. Immediately the laclferous/ who made the Bunsen vessels thus bisected yield an abundant flow of white liquid which as regards its appearance, taste and nourishing properties hardly differs from ordinary milk. Evaporated by gentle heat, this vegetable milk yields a delightful sort of marzpan with a slightly aromatic odor.--From the Wonder Book ef Plant Life, by jean Henri Fabre. Automatic "eyes," to aid aviators fai fog, give a reading la feet when th« crmft Is within 100 feet of any %bjMl v Couldn't Harm Him "Sir," cried the ardent suitor, "I can not live without your daughter I" 'I don't believe you," announced her cruel father skeptically, "but it won't do any harm to try U."--American Legion Weekly. < Nona*phyxiating Go* A new heat and light-producing gas that Is nonasphyxlatlng, has been brought to such high perfection that Its heat value and candle power are said to be higher than ordinary gas. Vtdmy Soatrh for \ Lost Cremona Varnith / Say* the Encyclopedia Britannica. apropos violin varnish: "The varnish of the old Italian violins contributed the most Important element of their miperiorify in tone to their modern efrpies.* "Save the surface and you save all," carols the vurnlish vendor -from the corner paint shop. This is as true concerning violins as villas, writes Otto Meyer. Charles Reade. the famous English novelist, who was also an authority oi| violins, did not give up the search for the lost Cremona varnish until the very end of hid life, when l»e admitted, "l have not been able to discover the secret." And yet It was no secret In Stradivaiius' day except that each ihaker mixed ahd prepared his own varnish and had Ms particular and individual way of applying it to his instruments. But with the Introduction of the quickly drying and more convenient spirit varnishes the vlolinniakers gradually lost their skill or their interest In the old-style product, which fades rapidly out of the picture; and with the end of the Eighteenth century is gone for good. As Hewer remarks in one of his boojks: "Once It was generally known how copper could be hardened; bow Stonehenge was posed; how the ancient galleys were rowed; how the old masters mixed their colors; how the poisons of the Medici were distilled; how amber varnish was made and how applied; and today nobody knows!" Those of us who have been privileged to gaze upon the supreme combination of wood and varnish in the "Dolphin Strad," have seen one of the few perfect things on this most Imperfect planet The name Itself, the "Dolphin," Is an attempt to picture tbe undulating and shimmering loveliness of the magic violin. TWO YEARS Fb>*By Relieved far Taking Lydn E. Pb»kbsmr» V«f«- .table Ccrapound, S«y» &'•> Mrs. Anderson Ranseley, Maine. - "LydU E. PinkhamWegetaMe Compound helped nw greatly forbearing down pains in tat sides and back, bead aches and tired few* ings. I suffered for two years and it seemed as though I could not get my work done nam «m day tothenext After reading letters from others who had tmksn the Vegetable Compound I decided to try it and now l ean do all itfaA of work, eewinfc washing ironing and sweaptag. I live on a £urm smT have five m the family so sa busy of the time. I recommend tbe VegetaMt' Compound to my friends and hope my Setter will help some one to take jemt medicine.' Mrs. WALT*® E. ANIMFE* son. Bo* 270, Rangeley, Maine. Over 200,000 women have so far replied to our question, "Have yoa received benefit from taking Lydia E» Pink ham's Vegetable Compound T" 98 out of every 100 of i "yes," and because tne Vet Compound has been helping other men it should help you. for sale If druggists everywhere. |-r- A'r't' , Hi§ .if S 3 Pilgrim* Walked 'to RoUhfc Two unusual Anno/Santo pilgrims recently presented themselves for confession at St. Peter's. One was from Oberammagau, in Bavaria, the other froth Scotland. Both had made the entire pilgrimage to the Eternal City on foot, except of course, the passage of the English channel, by the Scot. The clergy raised a fund tor permit them to return home by rail-"* road. In the first Anno Santo. 625 years ago, and many subsequent ones the great majority of the pilgrims came on foot. It Is still customary for young German boys and girls to walk to Rome In the spring, sometimes with piety in their hearts, sometimes merely with the zest for adventure. Some affect the trade of troubadour and gayly sing to the guitar in the streets, accepting, even requesting, pensies to buy their evening meflil| improved Sandal* ^ y Spring sandals strapped on like skates and with two .stout steel coils fastened between the bottom and a lower leather-padded sole, are now on the market for boys' and girls' amusement. Theyv are made In five different sizes and stiffness of springs for small and larger children, a^d the pprings are so flexible that there is practically no danger of turning the ankle. Walking .or jumping with them Is said to strengthen the muscles of the feet and legs and besides providing healthful sport the sandals lead to the development of new games for the playgrounds--Popular Mechanics Magasine. Moal in a Monument Most visitors to Windsor Great park have seen the equestrian statue ot George III which stands at the far end of the Broad walk. It is a huge statue, and when It was erected In 1823 the horse's body was first set up, then Its head fixed, and lastly the figure of the king was seated upon his steed. Just before the3 head was fixed one of the officials of |. the castle, and six friends, had dinner inside the body of the horse. After all parts of the statue hail been closed up and hermetically sealed, they remembered that a short ladder had been left inside. That ladder is there atllL--London Tit-'Blts. Costly Fishing The high cost of salmon fishing in private Scottish waters has gone higher this yesr. For some reason the fish have refused to provide sport for the wealthy anglers as in other Reasons, says a writer In the New York World. The salmon population of the River Spey this year was estimated at 300, compared with approximately 2,000 in normal seasons. A sportsman is said to have paid $3.50 weekly for the privilege of using one fishing rod. He remained five weeks and caught one lisb at a cost octiTja Anthracite Rival Claimed Dr. Hugo Strache of the Vienna Technical college maintains that he has produced a charcoal that has heat calories equal to those of anthracite coal. Wood, wood shavings and wa||e are utilized, and because of the coaltar products derived from them, the cost of. the new charcoal is said to be low. Doctor Strache has been work* Ing four years on the Idea, which was started when the coal famine* threat* ened disaster in Austria. lop" Lift Off-No Painl ONp Doesn't hurt one bitl Prop a little ^lYeezone" on an aching corn, instant* ly that corn stops hurting, then short* ly you lift It right off with fingers. Tour druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without sorettess or Irritation. Let Cuticura Soap Keep Your Skin Fresh and Youihful CMBSBSaOUOH MM. CO, COOTU l> smi St *•» • «UWtM PfTfiOUEUM Jftur Better i lw»n Pills For Livrr Ills Axiom's Roast Td like to get an Adam's roestf The butcher's face grew red. ' "I've never heard of such a thing." "A single rib." she said.--The Progressive Grocer. MJSi IL burner, Is the inventor. The new gas is made from oil or the residlum from making gasoline. Ordinary gas contains 30 per cent of carbon monoxide, while the new gas contains none. Thef secret of Its being nonasphyxlatlng Is that It is made at lower temperature than ordinary gas. The process premises to be cheap. Coat ot Arms Changad The eagle and the sword on the We«i Point coat of arms has been reversed. For thirty years the coat of arms consisted of a perpendicularly striped shield, bearing on its face a helmet of Mars through which a sword ran diagonally downward from the right oi "sinister" side. Surmounting it was an American eagle. _ food for Protest There Isn't much wrong In a country Chat doesn't afford grievances enough te feed a party of protest--Dulutfc XKgCsld, •' •-»: - You cant feel so good bat what m will make you feel better. Remarkable P*et William Shakespeare -- the other William, who has written a book called "Plain Words on Singing"--tells an amusing Incident about Lablache the greatest basso of all time-- whom a friend of his knew Intimately. At dinner one day, Lablache, full of fun. sang a long note from piano to forte and back to piano; then drank a glass of wine, without having breathed; then sang a chromatic scale up the octave in trills still In the same breath, and finally blew out a candle with his mouth open. There were gianta In thoee diyvl Sailed on Famous Ship Samuel G. Haskell, of Georgetown. Maine, was once a member of the crew of the Constitution, not when she was making her fighting reputation. but when she made her last voyage In 1878. She was sent to Havre. France, when the exposition at Paris was on. and remained there several months; the return trip was the last she ever made, and was done In 45 tlavs from Havre to New York. Mr. Haskell was present when the celebration of the Constitution's 100th annlrersary took place. . - New Long-Range > The United States army has developed a 75 mm. gun which shoots nearly three miles farther than the '«'"ou^ eg^fate^|ro^^ French TO mm. gunaaed In theWorld Mgans. Three slsss. All druggists. Insist war, but weighs (he same.--Science m ^ --i , > • « - • , # FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haarlem oil has been * worlt|» wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatisn^ lumbago and uric acid condition^ , gQftDMEQit ' HAARLEM OIL^W , •Mil Ti'iiitffer '"3% rA'i.

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