#J â€"since hbe‘s your kinsmanâ€"for hayâ€" ing the impudence to send it. But it does not vurprise me at all that one who is a minister of James Stuart‘s should conceive that every man is to be seduced by brikes into betraying those who trust him." He flung out an arm in the direction of the waist, whence came the halfâ€"melancholy chant of the lounging buccaneers. "Again you misapprehend me," eried Lord Julirn, between concern and in c\anmation. "That is not intendâ€" who until that =oâ€"=ent bad stood still under the cpe!ll of his astonishment, «sengaged his arm from his lordâ€" ship‘s, and stco} «q~arely before him. "Yo‘re my gue~* aboard this ship," said hbe, "and I still have some notion of decent behavior left me from other days, thief and pirsate though I may be. So T‘il not be telling you what I think e you for daring to bring me this ofer, or of my Lord Sunderland â€" W nAL‘s thi«:" whose mood was fic ler/ship was not "I desire, sir, th sail he suave‘y. to expla‘n hims~!? When he had ¢o who until that =oâ€"=~ under the spell of Ed csengaged his ar ship‘s, and stred «0 "Yo‘re my gue~* said be, "and I still of decent behavior | days. thief and pir whose m« th Wh "iss Pickp sat bemused, her brows t._ At last his lordship broke the That is why people insist on Salada. CHAPTER XX.â€"(C Unvarying Quality and IS9UE No. 42â€"27 azes me, this man," said s slow, languid voice that med to change its level. should alter his course for itself matter for wonder; * should take a risk on our at he should venture into aters . . . It amazes me, as d thke Captain pacing on râ€"dock. With the amiable he veed, Lord Julian stipâ€" n through one of the Capâ€" fc‘! into step beside him. thi«"" . snapped Blood, * VC : you deserve." why, if you please king to him as you did." y call things by their till more amazing is that hold us to ransom," said ‘m stared at her. Then 1 his large, pale eyes, ‘s head a little. "I wonâ€" 1 hate him so," he said o !aughed softly. "Faith, aiv. 1 have his commisâ€" ccket." And he increasâ€" «ment by a brief expoâ€" cireumstances. In that c left her, and went in ) was moved to sarcasm. Id use your influence _ Sutherland to have the ~ a commission." should, ma‘am." _ His e his thought frankly. regarding. He‘d be an the King‘s navyâ€"a man the things he did this as fleree and raw. His not disturbed. r. that we be friends," v. Then he proceeded «~** and his mission. d Jone, Captain Blood, Lord! What a thought! the fellow at all." TEA her eyes, and ont‘d.) | Wondering, Lord Julian mounted the companion as he was bidden. ! Standing beside Captain Blood, he looked astern, following the indicaâ€" \tion of the Captain‘s hand, and cried out in his amazement. There, not more than three miles away, was {landâ€"an uneven wall of vivid green that filled the western horizon. And | a couple of miles this side of it, bearâ€" |\ing ofter them, came speeding three | great white ships. "Hold there a moment, Jeremy!" he reared. "Wait!" He swung back to face the Captain, who had placed se 2 ee pag n o e en e iereencigs es I have. 1 should have known better than to come so close to Jamaica by night. But I was in haste to land you. Come up here. I have someâ€" thing to show you." "Good morning to you," he said, and added. '_'l'vg_tglund‘:red badly, so By the rail, immediately above sndl But Ogle, violent of mien and gesâ€" behind Lerd Julian, stood Captain | ture, interrupted him. Blocd in altercation with a oneeyed: _ "The men are of my thinking, and giant, whose head was swathed in a!they'll have their way." red cotton kerchicf, whose blue shirt‘ "And what way may that be?" hung open at the waist. As his lnrd.‘ "The way to make us safe. We‘ll ship, moving forward, revealed himâ€" n¢ith>r sink nor hang whiles we can self, their voices ceased, and Blood , ht!P it." turned to greot him. I (To be continued.) In his eabin on the starboard side Lord Julian, disturbed by the same sounds, wes already astir and hurâ€" riedly dreesing. When presently he emerged under the break of the poop. "1 wonder why you hate him 8$0," he said softly. "Oh, no offense But . .. I‘m a thief and a pirate." He laughed without mirth, and, disregarding the proffered kand, swung on his heel. he found himself star'mrgr mountain ¢f canvas. CHAPTER XXI. THE SERVICR OF KING JAMES. Miss Aratbella Bishop was aroused very early on the following morning by the brazen voice of a bugle and the insistent clanging of a bell in the shit‘s belfry. ed. Your followers will be included in your commission." His lordship fetched a heavy sigh. "A pity," he said slowly. "Oh, blister meâ€"a cursed pity!" He held out his hand, moved to it on a sudden generâ€" ous impulse. "But no offense between us, Captain Blood." "And d‘ye think they‘ll go with me to hunt their brethrenâ€"the Brethren of the Coast? On my soul, Lord Julian, it is yourself does the misâ€" apprehending." up into a "Ogle," said he, in a voice cold and sharp as steel, "your station is on the gunâ€"deck. You‘ll return to it at once, and take your crew with you, or else .. .." A CENTENARIAN SENATOR s Senator Georgeâ€"C. D: Saulles, who celebrated his 100th birii dJay anniverâ€" sary last week. He was 79 years ct’a(e when he was appointed to the Canadian Senate. He was presented with a painting of himself, It should in any case have been sufficient explanation. But before more could be added, their attention was drawn at last to Ogle, who came bounding up the broad ladder, and to the men lounging aft in his wake, in all of which, instinctively, they appreâ€" hended a vague menace. At the head of the companion, Ogle found his progress barred by Blood, who confronted him, a sudden sternâ€" ness in his face and in every line of him. "Captain," he said, and as he spoke ho pJinted to the pursuing ships. "Colon=l Bishop holds us. We‘re in no case either to run or fight." Blood‘s height seemed to increase, as did his sternness. Thus challenged, the obvious trucuâ€" lence faded out of Ogle‘s bearing. But it gave no pause to the gunner‘s inâ€" tention. If anything it increased his excitement. "They are ships of the Jamaica fleet," his lordship answered her. "What‘s this?" the Captain deâ€" manded sharply. "Your station is on the gunâ€"deck. Why have you left it?" As if to answer her a third gun spoke from the ships toward which she was looking intent and wonderâ€" ingly. Wolverstone _ swore _ elaborately, then suddenly checked. Out of the tail of his single eye he had epied a trim figure in gray silk that was ascending the companion. So engrossâ€" ed had they been that until now they had not seen Miss Bishop come from the door of the passage leading to the cabin. And there was something else that those three men on the poop, and Pitt immediately below them, had failed to observe. Some moments ago Ogle, followed by the main body of his gunâ€"deck crew, had emerged from the booby hatch. "What is happening, Lord Julian? she inquired. Captain Blood bared his head and bowed silently in a greeting which Arabella returned composedly and formally. "Not so daft as you when you talk of fighting that." He flung out an arm as he spoke to indicate the purâ€" suing ships, which were slowly but surely creeping nearer. "Before we‘ve run another halfâ€"mile we shall be within range." "It‘s a bargain he‘ll never be offerâ€" ed," retorted Wolverstone, and his earlier vehemence was as nothing to his vehemence now. "Ye‘re surely daft even to think of it, Peter!" "There is mo question," said Blood, "of surrender for any man aboard save only myself. If Bishop can reâ€" port to England that I am taken and hanged, he will magnify himelf and at the same time gratify his persnal rancor against me. I‘ll sond him a message offering to surrender aboard his ship, taking Miss Bishop and Lord Julian with me, but only on conâ€" dition that the Arabella is allowed to proceed unharmed." a hand on his shoulder and was smilâ€" *Steady, Old Wolf! Steady!" Capâ€" tain Blood admonished him. "Steady, yourself, Peter. Ye‘ve gone mad! Will ye doom us all to hel} out of tenderness for that cold slip of a girl?" Their glances met, sullen defiance braving dull anger, surprise and pain. "There is no auestion" said Blood: Canada‘s Grand Old Man 99 |Minard‘s Liniment for Asthma. The tabloids make eavesdroppers of reporters, sensual meddlers of journâ€" alists, and reduce the highest ideals of the newspaper to the process of fastenâ€" ing a camera lens to every bovrdoir keyhole.â€"Aben Kando‘. Of most comfortable design and easy fit, is the ulster coat pictured here for boys from four to ten years. Note the wellâ€"fitting convertible collar worn open or buttoned snugly to the throat, assuring warmth for the coldâ€" est weather. An inverted plait at the centre back provides extra width for the most active boy. If desired, the plait may be omitted and the back left plain. The long twoâ€"piece sleeves may be finished with or without the cuffs. Generousâ€"size pockets are set onto the front. The diagram shows the simple design of No. 1186 which is in sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. Size 6 years requires 2% yards of 36â€"inch, or 24 yards of 40â€"inch, or 1% yards of 54â€"inch material. The same amount of lining is requiréd as for the coat. Price 20 cents. The Puritans were great people and we owe much to them. But they made some mistakes, and one of these was their gloomy and severe idea of keepâ€" ing Sunday, That idea did much harm to religion.â€"Bishop Manning. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c 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. BOYS‘ PRACTICAL ULSTER COAT Wilson Publishing Compzny HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. BOQ_| 1186 Put one onâ€"the pain is gone He arrived back in 1589. Despite financial ald from the Queen and his friends he remained poor and petitionâ€" ed for an appointment. ‘ At length, in 15695, he became Warden of Manchester College. Nine years later he returned, weary and discontented, to Mortlake. His last years were passed in dire For some years the pair wandered about Poland and Bohemia, sometimes living ip luxury on their gains from the credulous, sometimes starving in poverty when they fell among skepâ€" tics. They enjoyed the bospitality of the young Count Rosenberg in his castle of Trebona for months, and the most marvelous tales are recorded of their performances, especially their communications with the world of spirits. 4 Dr. Dee received an invitation from Queen Elizabeth to return, which he promptly accepted, She even furnishâ€" ed him with the means to travel in state like an ambassador, There had been genuine science and learning of real valueo mingled with his fantastic notions. But in 1581 he met Edward Kelly and became, it seems, the dupe of that rogue‘s preâ€" tensions to occult knowledge. This Kelly was an apothecary who had been convicted of forgery and had had his ears cut off in the pillory. Kelly proâ€" fessed to have discovered the philosoâ€" pher‘s stone, capable of converting copper into gold and lead into sliver. He said he was able to call up spirits. Dr, Dee joyfully engaged this wonderâ€" worker as an assistant at £50 a year. Genuine and Fantast!c Dr. Dee traveled to Vienna to preâ€" sent to the Emperor Maximilian an elaborate philosophical treatise ded!â€" cated to him. On a second journey abroad he fell dangerously i11 in Lorâ€" raine, and Elizabeth sent two pihyâ€" siciars to tend him. When in 1578 the Queen‘s health caused anxiety, he was dispatched to consult with physicians and astrologers in Germany respectâ€" ing it. Later he was employed to inâ€" vestigate a claim to territories newly discovered by Elizabeth‘s subjects. Dr. Dee settled down in rural quiet and seclusion beside the Thames at Mortlake to pursue his favorite studies. Of rare and curious books and manuscripts relating to the subâ€" jects that interested bim he possessed a unique assortment. He made a colâ€" lection of scientific and magical instruâ€" ments as well. His "Speculum," or mirror, in which he asserted that he saw prophetic visions, is now in the Brtish Museum, It is a ball of pinkish glass about three inches in diameter. He also used a pilece of cannel coal for his clairvoyance. Queen Elizaâ€" beth visited him to inspect #4s treasâ€" ures, but as she arrived a few hours after his wife‘s funeral, she would not stay and only examined some of his instruments which he brought out of the house. On the accession of Elizabeth, Lord Dudley consulted Dr. Dee respecting a propitious day for the coronation. Queen Elizabeth bad been vainly atâ€" tempting to comprehend some of Dr, dee‘s mystical writings and sought his aid to unriddle their meaning, devotâ€" ing three days to conversing with him on the interpretation of his obscure treatises. He was accused of using enchantâ€" ments against Queen Mary‘s life and passed many weary months in prison until some of his friends induced the Queen to liberate him by an order of council. Fearing persecution as a sorcerer, he deemed ii expedient to go abroad and remained some two years at Louâ€" vain University, where he attracted a great deal of notice. His reputation for learning grew. At Rheims a course of public lectures on Euclid‘s "Elements" had an enthusiastic recepâ€" tion and at Paris he was urged to a¢â€" cept a professorship of mathematics. But he declined and returned to Engâ€" land in 1551. Edward VI conferred on him a pension of 100 crowns, which Dee soon exchanged for the rectory of Uptonâ€"onâ€"Severn. Leaving the university, he spent nearly a year in Holland, in order to visit the ominent mathematicians reâ€" siding thero, and on bis return was elected fellow of Trinity College, newâ€" ly founded at Cambridge. Me took the degree of Master of Arts. Dee began to be suspsected of practicing black magic when he mystified the university in a classical play with a mechanical device representing a man soaring to the sky on a beetle‘s back. Dr. Dee was called the "White Wizard" because of his profuse white hair and beard. He boasted of his descent from an anciont Welsh famâ€" ily, His father, a wealthy vintner of London, sent him at 1" to Combridge, where for five years he applied himself to mathematical ard astronomical studies. His Reputation increased "I was so vehemenatly bent to study," runs his own account, "only to gleep four hours every night." Just four tundred years ago the famous John Dee was born. He was an extraordinary compound of ingen‘â€" ous scholar, credulous dreamer and astute â€" charlatan. Among British astrologers only William Lilly, who predicted the Great Fire of London, has enjoyed greater popular repute as a necromancer. Anniversary of Famous Scienâ€" tist and Magician of %t;een Elizabeth‘s Time as . Born 400 Years ie Ago SCHOLAR AND MYSTIC ARIO ARCHIV TORONTO Dr. Dee, Wizard London Herald (Lab.): The Gerâ€" man Burgomaster _ whose claim against a caricaturist for publishing a ludicrous sketch of his august feaâ€" tures failed, should console himself with the reflection that che Court‘s judgment did declare him to be a pubâ€" lic, and, by implication, a famousâ€" personage. And, indeed, to bo taken by caricaturists as a subject is, for the aspirant after fame, the final gauge and guarantee that he has suecâ€" ceeded. . What an enormous advantâ€" age it is to the politician to have a caricaturable face or a distinetive habit on which the caricaturist can seize! How much did Mr. Gradstone owe ti his collars, Mr. Chamberlain to his monocle? Where would Mr. Baldwin be without his pipe? Music is not a Bir Henry Hadow Minard‘s Liniment for Toothache. Herces in the Cause of Science | _ London Evening Standard (Iind. | Cons.): ~The men who have given| them#gelves in the causo of ecience | would make a noble ro!l of honor, | though of many of them the world at | large has heard but vaguely. TheirI exploitsâ€" are not spectacular or, as &A | rule, set in picturesque surroundings.| The imaginations of all of us respond : to the picture of the airman precariâ€"| ously poised in his frail machine over | merciless waters, or to the explorer | isolated among the Polar snows, fightâ€" ’ ing for his life in a blizzard. _ The scientist in his laboratory overall just off one o four familiar streets is not at first sight so romantic a figure. He has left his commonplace home that morning and gone by the bus or the train, which will carry him back to his commonplace home again at night. We find it hard to realize that in the interval he may have been facing wild adventure with the courage of a Lindâ€" bergh or a Scott. Ah! once you walked the carth as gods supreme In beautyâ€"the elite of all our raceâ€" How shattered by the bolts of Hell, no place Of burial in yours in proud esteem: Yet in the Hall of Memory we trace The names we love, glorious with as tralâ€"gleam! AND ; TiNTINQ | are so easy and perfect IF you awhile, Till heavens crash, the records and the scroils. O Souls rest unperturbed, with aureoâ€" les As bright as saints‘, chastened and , without guile; The "Missing" shall be found; the Father‘s emile For those who paid the soldierâ€"mar tyrs‘ tolls. Souls! â€" And thou, the Lion of Britannia‘s Tele, Posted aloft, sleep not, but guard The Gate crumbling them u;.'l'm;'rur::- n ' -n.LA pres poverty died in tomb is are so easy and perfect IF you use the samekind of dyes Profesâ€" sional Dyers use. Dyes that are mup in big;::{ concentrated, y powdered, soluble form, l':o work. .t:l dissolve them. ever any ving, so ng or crumbling them up. Tbmre_:â€" and complete neglect, and he 1608 at the age of 81. His in the parish church. of Menin, meet for Giant Andrew, in Montreal Sta Caricature The Gate a drug, but a diet _| may be. This is chiefly obtai _\ ing to the old builder insisting | predominance of width and *rover height. He preforred, same amount of enclosod src: cure useful floor room | in: _ | waste space above. What a l inge feeling of repose there i 'mï¬ for ‘all timé the supply of raw material for Canada‘s woo! »=in> | industries. |__It is estimated by the Forest =~ vice that the only cconomic us=> ¢» | threeâ€"eighths of the land area of Canâ€" | ada lies in,the growing of trees. This | vast area of tel'ritor{. while incapable ‘of snuogcessful agricultural production, is, if permanently dedicated, protected, _and managed, suited to the production , of a timber crop which would guar Horse manure from stables vsin. sawdust heats very rapidly whon lo/t in the pile and the excessive for mentation that takes place will ros=i! in a loss of nitrogenâ€"a valuable nisn food. It is therefore advisable ~| to mix such manure with that (~; the cowbarn keeping the pile moâ€" and compact, or to spread and incor porate it at once in the solll â€"â€"Kxp<: > mental Farms Note. ! Within, these old houses, ju: ltrom those that I have seen, ar lightfully picturesque, though, a« !Ing to modern ideas, their planuni | somewhat inconvenmient, for it i; {m unknown thing in them to ha pass through one room to gain a to another. But perhaps the eccentricity of such planning ad their charmâ€"at least to those are but passing guests, One : I have always noticed about the: {tcriors is the sense of snugno: their chambere, however lars Dry sawdust and fine shaving a clean and satisfactory beddin rial for all kinds of animals. When the supply of strawâ€"tho | ding material almost universally u on the farmâ€"is short it may be « plemented with sawdust, or the |a may be used alone. Dry sawdust absorb from two to three times much liquid as ordinary straw, )« it must be considered an exce!l material to soak up liquid excreta, most valuable part of the manur There is a subtle charm about th: old Cotswold houses quite inco: munjicable in words. Doughton is village of homes, a something apa from a village of houses . .. Writi1 of one of these old houses that he dearly loved, Willlam Morris say "Though my words may give you : idea of any special charm about | yet I assure you that the charm there; the old house has grown out of the soil and the lives of tho who have lived on it."â€"From _A English Holiday With Car and Ca: cra," by James John Hissey, Sawdust as a i Bedding Materia‘ waste space above. What a ing feeling of repose there : these ancient rooms with th« ings, brownâ€"beamed> and | beams being adzed so that th an interesting surface and reo human touch, not planed into : ingless smoothness,â€"their cu window bays, <their panelled with the warm and furnish these give; ". . jand, above al wide, â€" openâ€"hearth fireplaces their upstanding firedogs an: mented fireâ€"backs of iron, not get their spacious inglenooks \_Cotswold Village The houses of Doughton are of the #imple and homelike Cotswold type, and are larger and more important than those one generally finds in. vilâ€" lages, showing, 1 take it, that they were erected at a period when not only the poorer classes, but men of moderate wealth, were content and glad to live in the country; and from the caredfor look of the Doughton homes ~they still appear to do #o there. The Cotewold type of house appeals to me on account of its hon est construction, lastingness, and simâ€" plicity. It is both bullt and roofed with stone; its walls are delightfully thick, so that the interior is warm in winter and cool in eummer; its roof of thin split stones, sized down from the top to the eaves (the smallest hoeâ€" ing at the top) makes the lovelioct covering . possible to imagine, | for these stome slates for ma mosailc of many greys, ranging from cool to warm; mor are they laid with maâ€" chineâ€"like monotonous regularity as are the blue slates or red tiles of a~ modern byliding, and their rough swâ€" fraces encourage the growth of zol and silver lchen, further enhancine thair charm.. The old Builders unde> stood the importance of a ro»f, and they took pains to make it beautiful, and they made it high pitched, the better to throw off the rain and ths snow. A roof emphasizes the shelter that a home gives to a man. . A rt October 23. Lesson The Prophet, Kin Amos 7: 14, 15, Isa den Textâ€"And | he the Lord, saying, W and who will go for Here am 1: send # I1., U iT 1X . THE CA THE Sunday Sch R 78 MI Lesson V To