t EP :: ACe@AzZ)/ â€" th Fx a ti when you want a change. It‘s delicious. "CALADA" 138VUE No. 35â€"27 BEGIN HERE TODAY anmsh wars the island . Peter Blood .6z30, the Spanish commander, red. He is given the froocom hip upon his promise that he ate the vessel during the { Jevomy Pitt, a young shipâ€" io woU CP IsNOp, 0 ‘amnical 1 his fe capture v». who You Should Try wWITH THE how, nay," Don Miguel h ironic repudiation. "I o knowledge of these ady you have told me is good for me to know." ed into the twinkling tain Blood: then added »ase, Don Miguel, but ry thing you must not thing Don Diego coss to do. It was Ris conâ€" himself and the falso ich you would be placed rect word from him of )pened. He paused a ar excellency â€" underâ€" it wh n GEREEN TEA .. wI frowned thought tand . . . in part, swept on to afford on before the Adâ€" 10ther word. in the boat below ~ng fifty thousand hich we are to deâ€" n beards th ty of th ed to leap enk RE TODAY. ed to receive them. Bfood observed hip succoessfully at.| the set, almost seared expression on of Barbados, upon| Fis face. 1 and a number of| "I see that you‘ve found it," he have become slaves.| said quietly. ‘ ner of Blood, is the| _ Hagthorpe‘s eyes looked a question. of slave owners.| But his mind <ésmissed whatever ow slaves, throwth thought it held. the»Spanish T\ :10 9B dnmmorke omm AAicirt so‘a 3/ utwA Rs ped; there the officers 10Vermor « in the na wioral in s m extracted t th STORY. Don Miguel ar is iaminly and myâ€" + «. Ke f Malaga he invitâ€" nd DVC iinaitienifiiii® d atet duics ds ind to apprehend. raâ€"| _ It was row a question whether they 'should convey the Spaniards thither of | with them, or turn them off in a boat ncâ€" to make the best of their way to the â€"= ccoast of Hispaniola, which was vut |ten miles off. This was the course urged by Blood himself. l "There‘s nothinz elso to be dene," ihe insisted. "In Tortuga they would | be flayed alive." J nd card sly m s n quaintances in the taverns of that evil haven of Tortuga, but even from f | a! "MY NAME," HE SAID, "IS PETER BLOOD." | _ "We do not break faith," said Hagâ€" thorpe firmly, so firmly that he quietâ€" ed them. "And in this case there was Inct the reed. Don Diego died in his , bonds beforo ever you reached the i Encarnacion." _ Peter Blood said nothing. , "Died?" screamed Estaban. "You |killed him, you mean. Of what did "I have seen," said Blood. "He died] beforo 1 left the Cinco Llagas. He! was hanging dead in his bonds when I spoke to him before leaving." Blood‘s council docided that, going east of Hispaniola, and then sailing along its northern coast, they should. Hagthorpe looksd at the boy. "If I am a judge," ho said. "Don Diego died of fear." Don Diego struck Hagthorpe across the face at that, and Hagthorpe would have struck back, but that Blood got between, whilst his followers seized look." "1 was not concerned to insult," said Hagthorpe, nursing his cheek. f‘lt is what happened. Come and the lad "Have you broken faith, you curs? Has ho come to harm?" he criedâ€" and the six Spaniards behind him made chorus to his furious questionâ€" ings, . "Don Diego . . ." he was beginning, and then stopped, and looked curiousâ€" ly at Blood. Notinqg the pause and the look, Estaban bounded forward, his face Hagthorpe‘s eyes looked a question But his mind <@smissed whatever thought it held. r Tortuga, that haven of the rs, in which lawless port : at least no fear of recapture 1916. It is not known whenr ‘I‘t'flvvvfl-i be finished. Several other American aviators are planning to fly to France. These heroic men are undeterred by the fact that Captain Lindbergh was kissed by several politicians on his arrival. Minard‘s Liniment for Flies are among the latest things used for trimming women‘s hats. And we thought there were no flies on Eve! P "Naturallyâ€"he‘s the man of hour." Man of the Hour. "Since he became so popular he says he has to live by the clock." +« That night he slept aboard his ship,? which with characteristic flamboyance he had named La Foudrea, and there on the following day ho received a' visit from Captain Blood, whom he greeted halfâ€"mockingly as his admiral.| Tho Irishman came to sottle certain| { final details of which all that nesd] concern us is an understanding that, ‘ in the event of the two vessels be-] | coming separated by accident or de-| 'sig'n, they should rejoin each other as soon ‘as might be at Tortuga. [ Thereafter Levasseur entertained his admiral to dinner, and jointly they drank success to the expedition. (To be continued.) All being now settled they made! ready for sea, and on the very eve of, sailing, Levasseur narrowly escapedli being shot in a romantic attempt to scale the wall of the Governor‘s garâ€"| den, with the object of taking pasâ€"| sionate leave of the infatuated Mad‘e-l moiselle d‘Ogeron. Because he disliked the man, Capâ€" tain Blood would not commit himâ€" self at once. But because he liked the proposal he consented to consider it. The end of the matter was that within a week articles wore drawn up between Levasseur and Blood, and signed by them andâ€"as was usualâ€" by the chosen representatives of their followers. ‘ This was the man who now thrust himself upon Captain Blood with a proposal of association, offering him not only h‘s sword, but his ship and the men who sailed in her. It was current gossip that even Mademoiselle d‘Ogeron, the Goverâ€" nor‘s daughter, had been caught in the snare of his wild attractiveness. ago. A roaring, quarrelsome, hardâ€" drinking, hardâ€"gaming scoundrel, his reputations as a buccaneer stood high among the wild Brethren of the Coast. There was about his gaudy, swaggerâ€" ing raffishness somethang that the women found singularly alluring. They had, indeed. He commanded a privateer of twenty guns that had dmppe{i anchor in the bay a week "Good," said the gaudy adventurer in English. "My name," he informed tha three men, two fowhom at least were eyeing him askance, "it is Leâ€" vasseur. You may have heard of me." Captain Blood took the from between his lips. "My name," he said, "is Peter Blood. The Spaniards know me for Don Pedro Sangre, and a Frenchman may call me Le Sang if he pleases. *é '. N 2A #5 P s Captain Blood looked up to consider the questiontier before replying. The man was tall and built on lines of agile strength, with a swarthy, aquiâ€" line face that was brutally handsome. | ~One day as Captain Blood sat with Hagthorpe and Wolverstonc over a pipe and a bottle of rum in the stifling roek of tar and stale tobacco of a waterside tavern, he was accostâ€" ed by a splendid ruffian in a goldâ€" laced coat of darkâ€"blue satin with a crimson sash, a foot wide, about the waist. "C‘est vous qu‘on appelle Le Sang?" the fellow hailed him. \ run_ like ripplés before the breeu across the face of the Caribbean Sea ’ To the score of followors he already possessed, he added threescore more. With them he entered into the articles usual among the Brethren of the Coast under which each man was to be paid by a share in the prizes capâ€" tured. Toward the end of December, when the hurricane season had blown itself out, he put to sea and before he re turned in the following May from a protracted and adventurous cruise, the fame of Captain Peter Blood had The resolve being taken, he went actively to work. Ogeron advanced him money for the proper equipment of his ship the Cinco Llagas, which he renamed the Arabella. To the score of followors he already possessed, he added threescore more. Moreover, to a man, those who had eccaped with Peter Blood from the Barbados plantatons, and who kneow ‘rot whither to turn, were all resolved upon cining the great Brctkorhood of the Coast, as those rovers called themsolves. And they united their with other voices that wore persuadâ€" ing Blood, demanding that he should continue now im tho leadership which ho had enjoyed sirce they had left Barbados, and swearing to follow him loaylly whitherscever he should lead them. & M. d‘Ogeron, the goverror of the island, who levied as his harbor dues a percentage of oneâ€"tenth of all spoils brought into the bay. sore feet threescore more. d into the articles Brethren of the each man was to in the prizes capâ€" pipestem the We sailed from Santa Cruz, at seven o‘clock, on a bright spring morning. In the town we could see the tops of palms and other trees but the south coast of the island was composed of bare, red, volcanic rocks. We saw the opening into the crater on the Peak, and about the middle of the morning passed Red Point. Here were many flying fish, some about a, foot Two days later the Peak of Teneâ€" riffe rose on the starboard bow, The sun was setting as we approached the island and Sugar Loaf Rock off the north coast was silhouetted against a flaming sky. In a few minutes the color faded and we drew under tall blueâ€"grey cliffs already shadowy in the dusk. The lights of Santa Cruz gleamed ahead, but while still a good way from the town we dropped anchor. ... side the railway station stands the ]smtue of Columbus and from a little l'way down the street can be seen the (funnels of the ships in harbor. ' The next morning I was crossing ,the French Alps into Italy and some |time after dark reached Genoa. Ountâ€" The ladies heartily agreed with him,| and a day among the splendid shops of Barcelona failed to revive their| spirits. The lordly peaks of the Sierra ’ Nevada, whicts we passed at sunrise,! were not worth a glance, and even‘ Gibraltar failed to interest. . . . | A westerly breeze was carrying her |forward at a good speed. Her red _ sails shone like copper and ber great Esprit, newly scraped and . varnished, ‘sparkled in the sun. I watched her as l'we overhauled and passed her, for of (all the rigs in the world there is none which makes the same appeal to the Londoner as thie Thames spritâ€"sail | barge. With regret I saw her topâ€"sail | dim and fade away in our wake for I |\ knew that with her had vanished the: \last sight of home. { We sailed for Peru at three o‘clock: the next afternoon, _ No mist veiled the exquisite city of Genoa from the eyes of the Italian exiles on board. Some were so much affected that they went down to their cabins. "I am going out for five years," said one young engineer afterwards. "If I bad as much as ‘ooked at Genoa as we went out of the harbor I should have jumped overboard." "That is what "an old Thames Diepee." me think of the Overland Pasfs«a-ge into London River. ‘"Why, she is like a Thamesybarge," I said to a sailor. Dieppe was showing up' ahead when we began to overhaul a sailing boat whose bellying topsail instantly made So "it came about that I left Engâ€" land for Peru by way of Newhaven. A thick mist shrouded the Seven Sisâ€" ters as we left the harbor and spared us a pang, for no cne would willingly leave the chalf cliffs of Sussex astern when they are shining, under an April sun. Farther out the sun was indeed shining, but the coast of England was already below the horizon. The Genoese ship I selected was to call at Barcelona and take her last sight of Europe at Gibraltar. Thence she would skirt the coast of Africa to Teneriffe and from thero run down thie trades to Trinidad. Who could resist the idea of first setting foot in America at Trinidad, so named by Columbus himseif when he sighted its three hills on his third voyage? The first shipping agent I consulted confessed himself quite in the dark as to how one travelled to Peru, "We have never booked a passage there," he said. He declared that I should in any case have to change ship at Panama; but after some searching disâ€" covered an Itallan line which sailed from Genoa direct to Callao. Callao, I had explained to the agent, was the port of Lima, the capital of Peru. . . . My literary agent had heard of Peruvian condors, cannibals and crocodiles. She desired me to leave in London a ful power of attorney. ‘"Your return being so doubtful," as she explained. He was nonplussed to learn that Peru had somehow or other escaped absorption.. "If it doesn‘t belong to us then," he said, "I suppose it belongs to the United States." Anothier journalist said I did well to go to Peru. I should be a missionary of Empire. "How so in Feru?" I asked. "Why, isn‘t Peru part of the British Empire?" he demanded. Two or three people treated me seriously. One Fleet Street man said All he knew about Peru was that it was where ink came from. I asked him if he were not thinking of "Incas" rather than "ink." He said it might be so, _ He knew he had heard of Peru in connection with something allied to ink. 1 When I told my friends I was goâ€" ing to Peru they became flippant. The most staid and serious immediately quoted imericks about young men of Peru who had nothing to do and sent snakes to the Zoo. Others made puns about Peruvian bark and several declined altogether to believe that Peru existed anywhere but in a poet‘s fancy. I am still unable to understand why Peru, of all the countries in the world, should be treated as a geoâ€" graphical joke, but I know to my cost that it is. Zinoâ€"pads Sailing for Peru sie is," he replied, spreety bound for Atd and s:loe'_-‘n" For some time the Germans and Americans have held a monopoly in this industry. It is also likely that the discoveries will have an important effect on the world‘s chemical supplies, and it is understood that a new company will shortly issue a new range of products, the derivatives of tar. London.â€"New methods of extractâ€" ing the byâ€"products from tar are reâ€" ported to have been discovered by reâ€" search chemists at the Mond Gas Company‘s plant in Dudley, in the heart of England‘s Black Country, and it is likely that an entirely new inâ€" dustry wil be created as a result. New Industry May Result From Treating Byâ€"Proâ€" ducts from Tar British Research Minard‘s Liniment for scaly scalp * Before he had the flag half out, three men standing near turned on him. _ "You‘ll get what you want," said one, and three firsts simultanâ€" cously struck his jaw. The man took no more interest in the proceedings. Now, of course, these three men may have been loyal citizens, suddenly moved by the same impulse, but it was a curous coincidence that they happened to be just whoere they wore.. Quite recently on the occasion of a big royal ceremony ,a violent Comâ€" munist who had been waiting quietly among the spectators started to shout as the royal carriage drew near. "This is what we want," he cried, putting his hand into his inner breast pocket to pull out a red flag. The Swing Howl!__ _ _On the day of procession through London, â€" any suspected man who comes anywhere near the Royal visitâ€" or is kept under close watch. If he starts to make trouble he is quietly, swiftly and effectively put on one side, and the men who do it are not particularly careful about the methâ€" od employed. Before any state visit to this counâ€" try our secret service gets in touch with the secret service of the other country and learns what dangerous elements, if any, might get here, who the men are behnd them, where they are and what their appearance is. Suspicious nationals find the ports closed to them. . NMV MADWLIT Y x TORONTO in this country. People likely to make trouble are known, just as each class of thief is known to the CLD. Their records are docketed, and their faces are familiar to the men behind the scenes. Toâ€"day the system is more farâ€" reaching. Our secret service has its agonts or informers in practically eÂ¥ery violently revolutionary group } The real guard is the systematic watch that is kept on every possibly 1dn.m::erous organization in this counâ€" try. This is not a new thing. Thirty years ago, when the Internationale had its club and secret groups cenâ€" tred behind Tottenbham Courtâ€"road, some of the most violent members of these groups received police pay, not always from Britain. PURITY FLOUR E Euon n enem oo rem P Oe NrETEE $°~ *SRLtmoOr Tnall ordinary flours. It is perfect for all your gaking-â€" cakes, pies, buns and bread â€" so the one flour sack only, is necessary. Try Purity Flour toâ€"day â€" it is certain to pieasc you. Everyone sees the open protection, the police car that drives 13 front of the royal guest, the attendant high police officials and the like. But beâ€" hind this is an organization that goes much deeper. ltg. superior strength makes Puri Systematic Watch Kept on Possibly Dangerous Organizations When King Fuad left London reâ€" cently one group of mer breathed more freely. They are the secret serâ€" vice agents, whose business it is to secure his safety, writes F. A. Macâ€" kenzie in the London Daily News. Send 30¢ in stamps for our 700â€"recips Purity Flour Cook Book. _ zea Werteen Canadea Flour Mills Co. Limited. Toroato, Montreal, Ottaws, Faint Joha, No one leaving Europe can look on the cliffs of Hierro with obsolute inâ€" difference. On its inhospitable hills are patches of light green verdure, and here and there a few white houses. Ahead of the ship is the open Atlantic, and when Hierro disappears astern we shall see no speck of green and no human habitation until, all being well, we arrive at Trinidad..â€"Anthony Dell, in "Llama Land." All Royal Guests Are Well Guarded Beyond Gomera is Hierro, or Iron Island, the westernmost of the Canaâ€" ries and the last point of land to be seen in the Old World. ... In the channel between Teneriffe and Gomera Island we met a northâ€" westerly wind and swell, but soon we ran under the lee of Gomera into smooth water. ... in length and others smaller, . They darted up from under the bows and skimmed away in flashes of silver over the waves, finally dropping with a sudâ€" den plop into the water. Seagulls folâ€" lowed us for some distance and then left us and soals of porpoises played alongside. i Causes Discovery If you can laugh at bles, your neighbor‘s seem nearly so serious I am a true laborer ecatâ€"get that I wear aughtâ€"glad of other content.â€"Shakospeare "Jack Pickford and 1 could have been divorced in Amorica, We chose Paris because it gives us both a va cation while we are waiting."~â€"Mary lyn Miller. * The older we get the more we learn and the more deeply we realize how little we know. Yet we are vain enough to think that our years of exâ€" perience enable us to render our clients a worthy service. | Extremely smart is the blouse |shown here, having two points at the ‘lower front edge, setâ€"in pockets, and \long or short sleeves cxtending into _ the neck. No. 1641 is fof Misses and Smaill Women and is in sizes 16, 18 _ and 20 years. Sizo 18 (36 bust) reâ€" i quires 2% yarcs 39â€"inch, of 1% yards 54â€"inch material; % yard loss 89â€"inch ‘materiul for short sleeves. Price i20 cents the pattern. ‘ ' The skirt, having two boxâ€"plaits ; in front and gathers at the back, is | i joined to a bodice top. No. 1249 is ‘ | in sizes 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 18 | (36 bust) requires 1% yards 36 or + 39â€"inch material and % yard 36â€"inch. lining for bodice top. Price 20 cents, ‘the pattern. | ONTARIO COLLEGE OF ART 1t C NIW TTAcHRS Course «Autmonity owt pret of EDUC ) DAY AND EVENING CLASSTs #t orry ©CToBrA Trirp *__+ _ WRiTE FOR PROSPICTUS OR INFORMATION . + % WWe i P ue «_ Urange ParkK , JToronto +s _ Complete Instruction in DRAVING , PAINTING SCUILPT URE and DE SIGN,COMMERCIAL ILLUSTRATION,INT ERIOR DECORATION, s gn_d‘l_!l{AP?LlED ARTS * Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adeâ€" laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. The designs illustrated in our new Fashion Book are advance styles for the home dressmaker, and the woman or girl who desires to wear garments dependable for taste, simplicity and economy will find her desires fulfilled in our patterns. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. â€" 1641 A CHIC BLOUSE AND SEPARATE SKIRT. $#3 â€"B) \ M#\ E3 g , mM T)/ Wilson Publishing Company tg go far : baking â€" $\ @ a afonf farther than i) your own tronâ€" troubles won‘t to him. _ 1 earn that I owe no man mon‘s goodâ€" l "The man who knows Shakespeare will handle men a great deal better [uun the man who only knows his mathematics."~Bishop of licr.ford. "Customers aro much the same as they were fifty years agoâ€"liverish, captious and â€" critical."â€" E. Parry James. "They eat other people because they believe that the qualities of dead peoâ€" ple enter into those who devour them : but @lso, they confess, they like that sort of diet, particularly relishing the hands of their victims." "I found literary cannibals in North Bumatra. _ They not only posses a wealth of triba; history but have a civilized alphabet of 19 lettors. And they write books in a new language resembling Sankrit. "In the little islzrnds of North Pageh, off Sumatra," Mrs. Clifton said in an interview, "the Mentaw| tribe exacts death as the price of too much material success. 4 "A prosperous man may be siting watching his pigs when he will b> seized from behind, bound, carried 0%, and hanged. He stays there unti! his executiqners think his sos! has had time to become a hostile spirit. Then they begin offering sacrifices to paci‘y the new ghostâ€"omne of a Jarge numâ€" ber. t _ The proâ€"whole wheat ar; further reâ€"enforced by the of stock breeders, who say t \flour has a "deadly" effect munity instead of them, and cultured on alphabei and found by Mrs. V known explorer, in East Indies. over mun then poultry and cattle. . "St: and cattle breeders," says 0 authorities, "would as rc their herds on dynamite." wholeâ€"wheat bread, calls it "a> to demand the substitution of â€" wheat bread for a world produ« iwhite bread in order to attain s called a modern standard of } _ _Other prominent physicians, ever, have rallied to the supy« the wholeâ€"wheat enthusiasts. O them, Dr. M. J. Rowlands, rid the idea of the vitamins in a â€" spoonful of yeast being a suf! substitute for, the vitamins in a : batch of loaves. Dr. Rowland recently carried out a compa experiment with wheat gorms with yeast. "The yeastâ€"fed anin he says, "suffered from an adv; condition of. dilated stomach. : as having other pathological ¢ tions which are depending on a min deficiency." In the pross dis lowed this lecture supported by sor authorities, notabl Hil. emeritus oro Superâ€"Socialisits Kill Membkors of the Comn "It is clear, therefors whole question of the ~el: of white and wholemes much more compliected th lic is led to suppose by rea propaganda." to the digestive oâ€"gans. CITES DRAWBACK T WHEAT. "Wholeâ€"wheat flour co, cellulose than white flou: than a certain amount « stance is actually a dete gestion and assimilation, Thomas. "It is not whet ; nourishes you, but what late. son eating it actually ; tional nourishment. The nourishment depends not chemical commposition of â€" in white admits t vitamin â€" But this baked of vitamin trich in th in the ba trich in this vitar in the baking of But even if | wholeâ€"wheat bre: nutritious than : ing to Sir Thom would be no #u: WCn actual calories than brown even at the same price the buys more nourishment for } Sir Thomas says bulk, white bread Sir Thomas Horder, phy: ordinary to the Prince of Wa lecture before the London Ci;, ciety, has attacked the "foo4 who advocate wholeâ€"wheat br their illâ€"formed enthusiasm. London. â€" The â€" question â€" whey brown bread is more bencfcial t} white has once more bocome the jeet of a heated controversy. d public health at the Birmingham, and Pr ammell. ADMITS SOME PEJ BENEFIT. CITES EASY ASSIMILA TION Prince of Wales‘ Physician Says it is More Nourishiny Than Whole Wheat Scientist Defends Using White bread white . Hill, individ n U a bread that wh S1 ae / Torm westive « does nc white B, for press discussion notably Dr. us professor health at th udais ar white than ; of all bre if by cho: bread prov an white / wia amin of al isirnds " Mrs, Cl the Men ome Ar flour : yes than m an in flour wholoe h its nf n d that Y Â¥r () rat th CO: AXJ OWt » QF‘ din @1 td in ( 1 quar 1 lt tun the n Th t im hand1 th T H puM} On the afternoo the schooner King quietly through t} the South Atlanti Cape Verde Island the coast of Sene little distance, the her hull softened ) of foam, her four swelling to the wis been a sight to gla« eye. She held stoa dipping to the Jlo pringy motion unk m ‘That truth 4s stranger was dllustrated â€" anow schooner Kingsway cam York Harbor a few days tale of ten men and a wor of primitive passion, Jea ness, murder on the hig peaceful death. What f, maccount of the Kingsw pleced togother from her ] the story disclosed during gation â€" conducted by t authorities. Â¥i rt i pal ither door t} A GRiM DRAMA met ad in‘s rath miled. ) The Husband h n But B R ki Log of the Schooner att & few days as 1 MURDFR th thar