i 6 t ’! # 3 { ree #F th ut Fazying less TY tu» It wlogsy the northern ela,. To that conrs steadly thro=ch t re ult that when d Th th PECGIN HERE TODAY the m« Plood is wrongly convicted of acainst the English king. He ‘nv Pitt, among others be ‘aves of Colonel Bishox, &A planter and uncle of Araâ€" «â€"n whom and Peter Blood ting friendship springs up. i ship conquers the wland ‘ured through the strategy CHAPTER XIV. ' v*~sEUR‘s HMEROIC‘S. I 1 be somewhere about ten the following morning, & ! fore the time appointed :. when a cance brought up ! 1 Foudre, and a halfâ€"cast= crr<d out of her and went dic<r. â€" Me was the bearer of «c:a> of paper for Captain *~o heads a boardinmrty D‘on Diego, commander of who was g;ven freedom of ttempts to betray Captain his followers {ut fails. for Tortuga, headquarters »a, where he joins with MA vanennp ie en ayetiiety.c rother adventurer. wITH THE STORY Real Quality thy t â€" inderstanding the p‘an involved, Captain rthelâ€"~s. accepted it, and chor before the appointed norce ving@ his associate to may be roughly tran lwedâ€"I am in the m~rouw, which is about @4 to separate us forâ€" father is sending me v brother‘s charge. 1 me to my recue. De wellâ€"beloved herolâ€" Madeleine, who loves tt~ halfâ€"caste pointed TEA e4 hero was moved m by that passionate wling glance ewept Dutch bris, which he due to sail for Amâ€" cargo of hides and ~â€" to be seen among that narrow, rockâ€" H~ roared out the frothing surf that on of the reef conâ€" ~ «*ronghold‘s main scvond it, a mile or can only mean poor tea. . |jind" a4 A the ascociation tored, Levasseur r ways of evaâ€" ~~er suffer violâ€" is presence to a ‘wht be done in + out to sea toâ€" inding out to Arabella and S uo) PERCE >, a} _ Dawn found La Foudre close on the raâ€"‘ Dutchman‘s heels, not a mile aslem,‘ 004 and the sight of her very evidently . ‘“n‘:i flustered the Joazvrouw. The Dutch! eay ship veered, showed them her mdder,l arty and opened fire with her stern chao-v' p cf ers. The small shot went whistling ; n of through La Foudre‘s cshrouds withl tain some slight damage to her canvas. ails. Followed a brief running fight in the| ters course of which the Dutchman let fiy with a broadside. l ‘ Five minutes after they were held * tight in the clutches of La Foudre‘s ‘mpnels, and the buccaneers pouring noisily into her waist. ‘ The Dutchman‘s master, purple in ; tem the face, stood forward to beard the ig, A pirate, close‘y followed by an elegant, inted paleâ€"faced young gontloman in whom ht up Levasseur recognized his brothsvâ€"inâ€" C 2 daw clect. wes alone. La Foudre under cover of | darkness had sruck away to the’north-; east with every rag of canvas on her yards. * l 3 L 9n ie & s 2oo Hham From the quart d‘Ogeron looked eyes in breathle: wellâ€"beloved here with a glad shout The Dutch maste: hands upho‘d to Levassear did ro him; ho Wa bis mistress that he car Â¥ & + y @4 l‘ ©HVUUERTET! :‘L/;'i 1 3 .‘j’/.f‘flâ€â€™; ' To â€" Levasseur‘s relief, Captain :{é): a & t stt ‘ | Blood net only agreed, but pronouncâ€" ’»./,:; ,_»‘\:,._' & «. WÂ¥ ’/' . ed himself ready to sail at once, "€)%4 We * \ P ‘ [ t At sunset that evening the wind ï¬{ï¬â€"f.p [‘ s | | freshened; it grew to a gale, and from â€" o 4 \t«hat to such a burricane that Levasâ€" e evushed e ; sour was thankful to find himself He erushed her to him brutally and ashore and his ships in safe shelter kissed her whilst she writhed in his | * grnievesy j embrace. l CHAPTER XV. went down with a cloven skull. The, eager lover stepped across the bodyi and came on, bhis countenance Joyousâ€"| ly alight. ‘ _ But mademoiselle was shrinking now, in horror. L He laughed, as a hero should, with the tolerance of a god or the mortal to whom he condescends: "He stood between us. Let his death be a symâ€" bol, a warning. Let all who would stand betwe>n us mark it and beâ€" ware." P It was so splendidly terrific, the gesture of it was so broad and fine and his magnetism so compelling, that she cast her silly tremors and yielded hereelf freely, intoxicated, to his fond ewbrace Thereafter he swung her naete o e n te, with a deprecatory smile. But no smile answered him from her set face. She bad seen her beloved hero‘v naâ€" ture in curlâ€"papers, as it were, and she found the spectacle disgusting and terrifying. He crushed her to him brutally, de man‘s master, purple in od forward to beard the y followed by an elegant, ~ung gentleman in whom ceovnized his brothsrâ€"inâ€" quarter rail Mademoiselle , kod down with glowing ithlees wonder upon her| hero. He saw her, and shout sprang toward her.\ :aster got in his way with d to arrest his progress. id rot stay to argue with s too impatient to reach . _ He swung the poleaxe ried, and the Dutchman aon, uesc ermeamenrcammergntent 1 n skull. 'I‘h(-| tar gANSON: l ross the body‘ In the glory of the following mornâ€"| mance joyous-~ing, sparkling and clear after the, 's.torm, a curious scene was played on vas shrinking the beach of the Virgen Magra. ' Enthroned upon an empty cask sat| o should, with| the French filibuster to transact the ; or the mortal, business of making himself safe with ds: "He stoog the Governor of Tortuga. cath be a symâ€"| _ A guard of honor of about a halfâ€" all who would dozen officers hung about him. Beâ€" wEl us *Ct 4| 0 0 uim emnarded by two halfâ€"naked of Hiberately burtful because she resictâ€" ed, and kiseed her whilst she writhed in his embrace. Some one knocked. Cursing the | interruption, Levasseur strode off to open. Cahusac, his KHeuterant, stood before tim. Ho came to report that they had sprung a leak betwoeon wind and water, the conswruence of damage mstaincd from ons of tho Dutchâ€" man‘s shots. In alarm Levasseur went off with him. l Ahboad of them a low cloud skowed man‘s shots. _ In alarm Levasseur went off with him. Ahoad of them a low cloud skowed on the horizon, which Cahusac proâ€" nounced one of the northarnmcet of the Virgin Islands. “We‘arhr;mâ€"t“;‘-\ihr for shelter thore, and careen her," said Levasseur, "A storm may catch us before we make Cahusae grimly. "Have y that?" He pointed away ECCC ! _ Levaseeur put off in a boat accomâ€" | panied by Cahusac and two other | officers, and went to visit Captain Blcod abcard the Arabcla. '| "Our brief gseparation has been | mighty profitable," _ was Captain * Ai c Phusrranipr o k5 u4 20 92 0h 0 4 02.Aï¬ e n cE uP miles of shore, he almost fainted from relief when a voice from the crow‘sâ€" nest above announced that the larger of the two ships was the Arabella. Her companion was presumably a prize. C No l ol io o4 C mmavons '| "Our brief gseparation has been mighty profitable," _ was Captain \ Blood‘s greeting. "It‘s a busy mornâ€" ing we‘ve both had." He was in high lgood-humor as he led the way to the great eabin for a rendering of ac ‘ counts. | | _ The tall ship that accompanied the \Ar:ubella was a Spanish vessel of | twentyâ€"six guns, the Santiago from marts Hiee with ‘a hundred and The tall ship that accomp=N"=" * ; lA»r:ubeHa was a Spanish vessel of twentyâ€"six guns, the Santiago from‘ \Puerto Rico with a hundred andl |\ twenty thousand weight of cacao, | forty thousand plieces of cight, and \tho value of ten thousand more in \ jewels. A rich capture of which twoâ€" fAifths under the articles went to leâ€" | vassour and his crew. Of the money |and jewels a division was made on | the spot. The cacao it was agreed ,1, should be taken to Tortuga to be sold. i\ Whan. it was the urn of Levasseut, "A storm or something else," F Then it was the turn of LCVASSPT*s| and black grow the brow of Captainl Blood as the Frenchman‘s tale was| unfolded. At the end he roundly °exâ€" pressed his disapproval. The Dutch wers a friendly people whom it was| a folly to alienate, particularly forl so paltry a matter as these hides and, tobacco, which at most would fetch a| bare twenty thousand pieces. But Levasseur answered him that a ship was a ship, and it was ships they needed. Perhaps because thlngsi had gone well with him that ~day, iBlood ended by shrugging the matter aside. Thereupon Levasseur propoced that the Arabella and her prize should return to Tortuga and there to urload the cacao and enlist further advenâ€" turers that could now be shipped. Leâ€" vasseur meanwhile would effect cerâ€" tain necessary repairs, and then proâ€" ceeding soutb, await his admiral at Saltatudos, an island â€"conveniently situated. fore him, guarded by two halitâ€"nako4, nogroes, stcod young d@Ogeron, in} frilled shirt and satin smallâ€"clothes | and fine shoes of Cordovan leather. | Near at hand, and also under guard, | mademoiselle, his sister, sat hunched | upon a hillock of sand. ‘ _ Levasseur addressed himself to M. d‘Ogeron. He spoke at long length. In the endâ€" ' "I trust, monsieur," said he, "that 1 make myself quite clear." | (To be continued.) Emm ty ~ Used by phyliciam-Mlmrd'o Liniment It a small boy refuses A second plece of cake, it‘s a sign that there‘s something wrong with himâ€"or the cake. WHEN in TORONTO Call and SBee Our Stock â€" of Guaranteed Used Ford Cars and Trucks, over Sisty Cars to choose from. Cash or EASY TERMS. Make Your Headquarters Here During Exhibition, Riverdale Garage | 7§5â€"763 Danforth Avenue, Tor Autborized Ford Dealer? seems else," said you noticed y to starâ€" Toronto | Wilson Publishing Company 5.. S0¢ . * aag . es (c‘x‘%« 597 V O;L\/ | y 5._" ‘ il;% 0 “ L_Jfl “1527 ‘ uAt Selsey, and at East and west, iWittering, close by it, the seeker may | A SMART FROCK FoR THE Miss find afaits o. o o otiie ofet ém? round, as are some other last Coas pR SMALL womaANn.: ‘feaorts; cornelians are quite common Delightfully girlish is the chiC‘ in Wales, and have been found on the frock shown here and would be smart| Suffock â€" shores. Scearborough is faâ€" if fashioned of either woollen mater-}. mous for its jet, and both Suffolk and ial or silk. The skirt has boxâ€"plaits‘ the northâ€"east coast sometimes yleld im front and is joined to the bodic¢/ amber, having tucks at each shoulder. The| The longshore hunter cherishes alâ€" long raglan sleeves are nished with| ways the faint hope that ho may light shaped cuffs, and a trim turnâ€"down‘| upon ambergis, the precious secreâ€" eollar fastens onto the dress, The tion of the sperm whale, though it is back is in one picce and a shaped belt rarely washed up in our home waters. achieves the twoâ€"piece mode. A smart Southern seas are more likely hunting note of contrast may be introduced in grounds and good finds are occasionâ€" | the collar, cuffs and belt. No. 1527lally made off India, Africa, and Bra | is for misses and small women and is | 2ll. . '[in sizes 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 18‘ Some Norwegian seamen, whalin® | requires 3M yards 39â€"inch material,| in Australian seas 2 few years ago |or 3 yards 54â€"inch. If contrasting caught a whale which proved to b l,matcrial is used, % yard 39â€"inch adâ€" _:?_,:.._.__-â€"-â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"’"â€"'-â€"â€"â€" | ditional is required, Price 20 cents | the pattern. 6 | Many styles of smart apparel may m |be found in our Fashion Book. ()ur‘ "designers originate their patterns in |the heart of the style centres, andi Cakes baked with Purityf ;!their m.'eatim‘.s are tihof.fe of tos't,cd four days. Purity is a Vig{) 4 popularity, brought within thc means and holds more water or mi + igio 2“;0“::;2!%:?)‘:;' Price of the large, light buns and bread || How To ORDER PATTERNS. C }} Write your name and address plainâ€" o 4 Hly, giving number andFsizle of2 ;cuch t .\ patterns as you want. Enclose in a ~| stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap Send 30¢ in stamps for our 70 _lit carefully) for each number and Western Coasda Flour Mills Coâ€" Limite 1 _A Whole Week‘s Entertainment 8 l o Canada‘s Great Illustrated Newspaper C _ ‘All News Dealers Sell It Ontario Sales Agent â€"by leading writers of fiction and humor. A story each week by Fanuy Hurst, the highest paid whort story writer in the world. onmmmane.s on n se m Pictures of people and places you hear talked about. Stars of the screen and stage; the world of sport and busiâ€" ness and world statesâ€" 16 PAG ES â€" colored Comics each week, includâ€" ing Bringing Up Fatherâ€" Tillie the Tolier â€" Gasoâ€" line Alley â€"â€" The Gumps â€" Winnie Winkle and Smitty, The Standard keeps you in touch with the latest developments | in _ world poUtics, business, finance, sport, fashions, art, iter« ature and science. The Rotogravure Stories S ~â€" * ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO t Canada‘s Great Illustrated Newspaper 1 o > ‘All News Dealers Sell It C Ontario Sales Agent Ontario News Company, _ 7 w es ABFLLL aaias EPRIECCC RTET NBE > Wilson Publishing Co., 43 West Ad¢ laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by lnteresii;xâ€"g_ Fi;_,dgflMule On UT ECCC PERRVITC It is astonishing how beach loot can |, travel. There was a queer case, last |, year, for instance, when a midlander dropped a wallet, containing £500 in notes, on a North Wales beach, and had it returned a fortnight later. It had been washed up at Formby, in Lancashire, twenty miles distant Trom Prestatyn, where it was lost. All sorts of interesting finds have been made along the shores of Selsey Bill, where the sea is encroaching more and more upon the soft crumâ€" bling flats, disturbing the mud and sand, wherein lie buried relics of the past, such &8 Roman ‘coins, tiles, orâ€" \naments. and onceâ€"only a few years agoâ€"the skeleton of a mammoth.. ’ At Selsey, and at Rast and West | Wittering, close by it, the seeker may find agates. Cromer, 1oo, is an agate ground, as are some other East Coast !resorts; cornelians are quite common "in Wales, and have been found on the :}Suflock shores. â€" Searborough is fa ) mous for its jet, and both Suffolk and t‘ihe northâ€"east coast sometimes yleld ide Some Norweglian in Australian seas caught a whale w 8 zy o E~:'2;~ | ig LX M [CZ 3 PU&RITY FLOUR Standbard for the whole Familyâ€" The enlarged Montreal Standard brings you each week 5() nages of interest and entertainment. Stories from the pens of leading story tellers and humorists. Carâ€" toons. News of the world by camera and cable. Keeps you inâ€" formed of the latest developments in world politics, commerce, finâ€" ance, fashion, science, sports and art. Up to the minute news of radio and the motor ear. Pictures and stories of leading figures in the news of the world. An entire week‘s entertainment for the whole family â€"all for 10 cents. n seamen, whaling s a few years ag0, which proved to be d with Purity Flour keep fresh for three or Purity is a vigorous, "dry" flour that absorbs wore water or milk. Tasty cakes, rich pies, and buns and bread are always yours when you use h stamps for our 700â€"recipe Purity Flour Cook Book. 26 our Mills Coâ€" Limited. Toronto, Montreal, Ottaws, Seiat John, 36 Pages . â€"â€" â€"â€" _ Toronto, Ontario | Exhibition Visitors Call to See the New 1928 Model Harleyâ€"Davidson Motorcycle, with it‘s front wheel brake, new wiling system and carburetor, which makes it the most upâ€"toâ€"date motorcycle. If you are more Interested in & secondâ€"hand motorcycle, wo bavye them from $100 up in alt the best makes, and all are guarantced. worth £27,000, as it contained about 900 pounds of ambergrist That kind of luck is rare, but any one who noâ€" tices a lump of opaque, blackishgrey, soapy substance on the beach when holiday making this year would be well advised to make inquiries before using it as cricket ball, or throwing it back into the sea for the amuse ment of the dog, @8 gcent manufacâ€" turers pay upwards of £2 an ounce for it, so much is ambergris in deâ€" mand as an ingredient in the making of certain perfumes. Drives The Limit. Wife _ (to fastâ€"Ariving husband) "Ohâ€"Jim, don‘t go any faster!" Jimâ€""I can‘t."â€"Punch.. A weather expert says inal AUSTS will be fine and warm. Weather per mitting, of course.â€"Passing Show .. wWALTER ANDREWS LIMITED %46 Yonge St., Toronto A horse that AEBEPRE | sn Roaur Unaited away painâ€" /vp02 .‘Jway J Pi9 L LTost out ts worlth. :: Depending. lies down and goes 10 minutes is causing its cern. It concerns U8, been â€" backing it for Minard‘s Liniment says that August Mfru. Montres\ ya O ene® ECRIELTC TW anpc e his classic "Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Motor," in which he described an entirely new type of prime mover. Air was to be comâ€" pressed in a cylinder under a pressure of four hundred to seven hundred pounds to the #quare iuch and thereâ€" by heated to incandescence. Oil inâ€" jocted into this highly heated comâ€" pressed air was to be ignited sponâ€" taneously and the resultant expansion was to give a power impulse to a pisâ€" ton. It took four years of experimentâ€" | ing and $107,000 in money to reduce ,tms simple principle to commercial practice and to give the world the most efficient engine ever invented . Originally built as A stationary motor, the Diesel demonstrated . its mbility to compete with the highly veonomical marine engine as early as 1912, in which year the first motor whip was taunched. More than half lthe world‘s shipping under construcâ€" 1 Smd ol IC * c ommlivnonolt Abust h d in t l i cidl Heicicitsrigs Aninaatt »1 least three times as eicient as the steam Jocomotive in converting heat into mechanical energy. No time is Jlost in raising steam. Long runs can be made without stopping for fuel or water. No ashes need be yemoved, no fireboxes and boflers cleaned. . The cost of maintaining a locomotive is reduced onebalf. Such gtriking adâ€" vantages more than outweigh a highâ€" er initlal cost and a greater weight. No wonder, then, that rbout sixty lDtesel locomotives and railroad cars are now in use and under construcâ€" tion in different parts of the world. Much research must gtill be corâ€" ducted before the Diesel locomotive is standardized, Theore is no unaniâ€" ‘mity of opinion on the â€" method of iVoomamifiine mbower to the axic. in In gutomobile. In the United uis engine drives a generator which plies electric erergy to axleâ€"mo Whichever type persists, the D locomotive promises to be a boo oxpensively operated branch lines ‘pnm' roads. Indced, it may even & off the day of trunkâ€"ine electr tion in different parts ol the wold. Much research must gtill be corâ€" ducted before the Diesel locomotive is standardized, Theore is no unaniâ€" mity of opinion on the â€"method of transmitting power to the axle. in Europe the tendency is all toward ‘chnnge-(tpeed gearing, . 80 that â€" the ‘IDlesel locomotive becomes a glorified lsutomobfle. In the United States the engine drives a generator which suyp elude tu comotive ship. 1 the _ rai hbeen th« give as that, for examp‘c, Wmon NAP given us the modern electric lamp 07 the telephone. The locomotive of toâ€" day is still a crude machine, its posâ€" cibilities by no means devoloped., Ljungstrom and Zoelly, two brillilant Furopear engineers, have couvincing | ly demonstrated what can boe accomâ€" '\pliehed by research. They bave cast asido the old piston engine, . applied the turbine and obtained economies on South American and | European roads undreamed of ten years ago. Far from driving steam . from railâ€" roads. Diesel engineers have actually nided in a renaissance, But Stephenâ€" son, the lineal descendants of whose l"Rncket" have served us well, would ‘hardly recognize the new steam locoâ€" | motives, driven as they are on the windraill principle by blowing «team ngainst vanes, No outside cylinders, | no faching piston rods, no deafening ‘;pnfling at the start. These new maâ€" ‘d\!nes are noiscless, emokeless, alâ€" ‘ most vibrationiess, and more in keepâ€" | iug with this age of comfort. They ‘nnd the Diesels will do much to keep t down the rising costs with which our | railroads amust constantly struggle. 1893 Dr. Rudolf Diese! published wh l Anaponittas. Cleveland Auto Club Decides on Protective Plan Intoxicated Drivers Menace to Other 90 Per Cent. Law Abiding Autoists Cleveland, O.â€"Inauguration of a campaign to aid in curbing drunken and partially intoxicated drivers is beâ€" ing plannud by oficials of the Cleveâ€" land Automobile club. The Club has been making a study of accidents in which â€" intoxicated drivers . are conâ€" cerned and it intends to lend its aid iin stopping the practice as far as posâ€" sible. STATE LAW SUPPORTS {S The new law provid€6s that anyone \driving while under the #fAuence of ‘mleohol shall be fined not less than !$100 nor more than $500 and shall not Officials of the club holl that city legislation to provide laws of greater geverity than can be taken, in view of the Creighton law, which became efâ€" fective in the state on August 2 and which provides more adequate punishâ€" ment for this form of law violation. be imprisoned for less than 30 days and not more than six months and a gugpension of the right to drive for rot less than #six months and not more than one year. The adoption by the city of such rtringent measures as the state law will quickly eliminate drunken driv ers, it is belieod. ‘There is a big dezaad from spinâ€" sters for litcrature on marriage,. Shel t would be a mustase to COMâ€" uat the picturesque steam loâ€" ve is doomed io join the eclipper Highly standardized as it is, rilroad steam enzino | has not 1e subject of research as intenâ€" :; that, for example, which has us the modern electric lamp of ephone. ‘The locomotive of toâ€" still a crude machine, its posâ€" Time for Ontario to tgh‘»m ap too ines and ven stave nd "All Red" Plane Great Britain eventually to the greatest of proje standstill by the : place on Persian t To say that t labored for mor this airway into over the snag » would be a rath they are in hig to views expres hand of Moscow failure to compl} Riza Kha pointed Sha member . 0 and also sai the British yexls wh Lw wel ment in 1 BUEp ratif Ar tim tor, 1 M )1 th th birt rt A s British Gran Aid Mi ( 19 18 00 acres ol 19 jeot, and . alr been purchase Jt is estimated on acre 'of †Rvery acre ba day costs, ou® peria lates the i w l ET Apt es of land 10 Oarr nd â€" already44,000 urchased at a 00 timated that the @ : for 30 years‘ wor acre “flQ‘(O‘ w astes. ounble the #18 §o W a at t @1 \ffortestal ith Aus(rtj ssistan«