it i£ The "Chief" Railway California another exclusive ';;f;; Momhllmwouy. Fred Harvey dining service ing keep thé‘p_;B'b; and the pounds down. the Markham nodded art Sergeant into the mai passed down the heaw‘l sage to the rear. thera "He‘s at the universit expected to return soon." Warm days in the ue CETTE! CARTTT P H have a talk with Professor Dillard and the other members of the household. And, by the way, Sergeant, you didn‘t montion Mr. Arne#son. Isn‘t he at home*" on Soanto Fe rails "all the way" from Chicago and Kansas City, You leave on the Santa Fe ang arrive on the opinion, * "Don‘t let Mr. Vance dishearten you, Sergeant," Markkam rallied him. "He‘s permitting his imagination to run away with him." Then with an impatient gesture he turned toward the door. "Let‘s look over the ground 8. ons 8 ' I13SUE No. broke up and erying; so I thought I‘d let you have the pleastre of interviewâ€" ing her. Snitkin and Burke," he jerkâ€" ed his thumb toward the two detectives by the front window, "went over the basemert and the alley and back yard trying to pick up something; but drew a blank. And that‘s all I know so far. As soon as Doremus and th» fingerâ€" print men get here, and after I‘ve had a heart to heart talk with Sperlâ€" ing. ther I‘ll get the ball to rolling and clean up the works." Vance heaved an audible sigh, "You‘re so sanguine, Sergeant! Don‘t be disappointed if your ball turns out to be a parallelopiped that | won‘t roll. There‘s something deuced oddish sbout this nursery extravaâ€" garza; and, unless all the omens deâ€" j teive me, you‘ll be playing blind man‘s ‘ buff for a long time to come," ; "Yeh?" Heath gavo Vance a look 1 of despondont shrewdness. It was eviâ€" dint he was more or less of the same |, Wil take you through Phoenix . T. HEXNDRY, Gen. Agen 504 ’;‘ANIAn";l R!iu‘_, ransportation _ _ DETROIT, MICH, ° A man known as Cock Robin is shot through the heart with an arrow. The body u“:«nd c:‘th archery range where Robin was well known. The crime seems to be the intentional dramatization of the old rhyme, "Who killed Cock lobh;z District Attorney Markham is puzzled by the apparently senseless cireumâ€" stances attending it and asks the aid of Philo Vance, wealthy bachâ€" elor who dabbleâ€" in the ldvin of unâ€" usual mysteries. The zï¬co get on the trail of gSperling the last man known to have been with Robin. CHAPTER III. ‘ "What have you done about Sperlâ€" u i1g?" asked Markham. ‘ "I got his addressâ€"he lives in a 4 country house up Westchester wayâ€"|, and sen: a coupla men to bring him / here as scon as they could lay hands ¢ on him. Then I talked to the two g servantsâ€"the old fellow that let you in, and his daughte., a middleâ€"aged 1 woman who does the cooking. But a neither of ‘em seemed to know anyâ€"| thing, or else they‘re acting dumo. f After that I tried to question the o young lady of the house." The Serâ€" p geant raised his hands in a gesture # f irritated despair. "But she was all !i broke up and ervine: sn I thanokt 1A A Santa Fe Ticket to the The Bishop Murder Case n the neuvlyâ€"carpeted pasâ€" rear, there was a sound on «. and a clear but someâ€" others arrive. ll}l;‘rv-l-’-l‘l- with Professor Dillard and university; but he‘s SYNOPSIS. 1 and followed the main hall. As we A PHILO VANCE sSTORY BY 8. S. VAN DINE Capes 4 22 CC P22 VY UHG exception of the York Round for men. _ ""TC PosSsidie a sixtyâ€"yard range.iil;l' permitting target practice for all the standard archery events with the one axmamkias ce uy «es 200C : P M nslï¬ id naiimd in 2s i ’whero a butt of hay bales had been erectodoni:ha.llowbedofund.'l’he distance between the two walls was 200 feet, which, as I learned htar.l made possible a sixtyâ€"yard range. thie _ The archery range extended from the wall of the Dillard lot on 75th Street dlï¬nwzytoaï¬mflnltmt nuofflx:anhrloton%thSmet. whansy a Kore ks Â¥__ 18ce, It was not until much lnt;;'fl:a.t' afternoon that I was able to guess what had caught and held his atten. 488 I notice&â€"gztm Vance had his eye on this bay window, and as he studied it I umess ~s "me qy 5 s dows; and only the bay window at the side of the house had an unobstructed view of that part of the areaway in which we stood. "Let‘s take a look at the body and the lie of the land," he said gruffly, As we emerged into the warm spring sunlight a sense of isolation came over me. The narrow paved areaway in which we stood seemed like a canyon between steep stone walls. It was four or five feet below the street level, which was reached by a short flight of steps leading to the gate in the wall. The blank, windowless rear wall of the apartment house opposite extended upwards for 150 feet; and the Dillard house itself, though only four storeys high, was the equivalent of six stories gauged by the architecâ€" tural measurements of today. Though we were standing out of doors in the heart of New York, no one could see us except from the few side windows of the Dillard house and from a single bay window of the house on 76th St., whose rear yard adjoined that of the Dillard grounds, This other house, we were soon to learn, was owned by a Mrs. Drukker ; and it was destined to play a vital | . and tragic part in the solution of | Robin‘s murder. Several tall willow | , trees acted as a mask to its rear winâ€"| . uns is e e o $ dent. He tossed on a chair, and otiter door. saw a flicker of interest ce. It was not nnti]l wa.l markham frowned and compressed his lips; and I realized that he had been clinging to the * rlorn hope that the tragedy might have been an acciâ€" Siik Â¥+ & ET On the floor stood several quivâ€" ers filled with target arrows. He leanâ€" ed over and, withdrawing one, extendâ€" ed it to Markham. | "This frail shaft does no: look as if i would pensetrate the human breast ; but target arrows will drive entirely t‘ ~ough a deer at cighty yards. . . . Why, then, the missing hunting arrow from the panel? An interestin‘ point." ’ Markham frowned and compressedl his lips; and I realized that ha haj This panel attracted Vance particuâ€" larly, and adjusting his monocle careâ€" fully, he strolled over to it. â€""Hunting and war arrows," he reâ€" marked. _ "Most inveiglin‘ . . . Ah! One of the trophies seems to have disappeared. Taken down with conâ€" siderable haste, too. The little brass brad that held it in place is shockingly h"' »» UE NN d it + en in ts cvachiss o lstre'wn with various cdds and ends of tackle, such as bracers, shooting wloves, piles, points of aim, and bow strings. A large oak panel between the door and the west window contain. ed a display of one of the most interâ€" esting and varied collections of arâ€" rows I had ever seen. and near them fashioned toolâ€"ch s near the the suï¬lightflv;izvi-c};?!.;caded two rear windows Mw. gets â€" _ _svnNwre wall was painted with a l panorama of archers throughout the ages. There wore a piano and a phonsâ€" graph in the room ; numerous :omfort. able wicker chairs; a varicolored diâ€" van; an enormous wicker cen: reâ€"table littered with all nramwiae as c s l0020 is a narnesw n« mmnel. 1 _‘ y ~*Ot .# . Batrow . blond ltower hall. Beyond was a narrow pâ€.' moustache. He was clothed in a twoâ€" ,nzeway. terminating in a flight of | piece sport suit of light gray flannel wooden steps which led to the base.| a paleâ€"blue silk shirt, and tan Oxfords ment. At the foot of these steps we‘ with thick rubber soles. His hat, a came into a large, lowâ€"ceilinged mom’,x:ufl-:_ok}ï¬ felt fedora, was lying with a iving directly upon ear his ueawayma,‘tâ€t.htel wegt s‘ dr:c ofythep‘;;o:: Beside the body was a large pool of This door w slighly aj d in the| Coagulated blood which had formed opening gtoo;. the mai f,{:;‘tge I?omif in the shape of a huge pointing hand. cide Bureau whom Heath had set to| But the thing which held us all in a guard the body. «& | spell of fascinated horror was the The room had obvicusly once been a | Slender shaft that extended vertically basement storage: but it had been| from the left side of the dead man‘s altered and redecorated, and now sery. | breast. The arrow protruded perhaps ed as a sort of club room. The cement| twenty inches, and where it had enâ€" floor was covered with fibre rugs, and ‘ tered the body there was the large one entire wall was painted with a| dark stain of the hemo::rhage. What PANOYRNEE of Archark thinnol.as n . Emaide uts flls oW j . _ _ "" Purside of the orcheryâ€"r \ "TH join your uncle in a very few ,' door. It was on its back, the arms minutes, Miss Dillar1." Markham‘s ‘ tended, the legs slightly .drawn tone was paternal and sympathetic. | the head pointing toward the "And please wait with him, for I want Street end of the range. Robin to see you, too." ]boen a man ofâ€"perhaps thirtyâ€"five With a murmured acquiescence, the medium height, and with an incipi girl disappeared round the head of | corpulency. There was a rotund pu the stairs. | ness to his face, which was smog We moved to the rear door of the shaven except for a narrow hi Iittne haIW) ‘Wenanl i .lal c I ww â€" _ [ |a narro what tremulous woman‘s voice lMelwbich v from the semiâ€"darkness above. | fence in "Is that you, Mr. Markha:n? Uncle‘ door wi thought he recognized your voice. He‘s I The t waiting for you in the library," reoctlhy â€", a small tossed the arrow hopelessly varying sizes and windows. One wall door was hung with ‘ying sizes and weights; hem was a large oldâ€" »lâ€"ch‘s.. Above it was susâ€" iall ea _board or ascham, various cdds and ends of _ as bracers, shooting@ points of aim, and bow walked towitd"{};; cross his in from the space from that of mink and werselsâ€"the skunk has precisely the kind of easyâ€" going temperament which gives a man the reputation ofâ€"being a good fellow, It is cruelly unfair to him thutjlll name should be used as a synonym for all that is despicable.â€"From the ediâ€" torial page of the N.Y, Tribune. from For Dry Skin=â€"Minard‘s Liniment. the human. We are all a little wary of visitors in the dark; but we have a different armature. As a matter of fact, apart from the special capacity with which nature has endowed himâ€" cne which differs only in intensity gu 2 iseut JB <us LK P to catch them. Grasshoppers and crickets are his proferred food, but when the supply runs short ho takes almost any food available, In the outer suburbs he finds the family garâ€" bage can a great resource; there must be thousands of suburban housekeepâ€" ers who would be horriffled if they knew how intimate were his nocturnal routes. ‘There is a superstition that the skunk smells all the time and that he is aggressive. It maligns him; he can be as cleanly as a cat. and uses his spectal weapon only when anâ€" noyed. Traveling at night, as ha does, he sometimes makes the mistake of assuming hostility before it is proved; but in that he is not so different from A woman will nl'ully forgive a husâ€" ind‘s past if ho comes home with a Now, the skunk is really a very amiable little animal whose chiet fault is laziness, He likes mice and birds and snakes, but is usually too indolent |__A woodchuck is a fat thief, as danâ€" gerous to a farm garden as a host of locusts; yet even the farmer‘s son has a sneaking affection for the ‘chuck, and a sneaking respect for anything fat which can move so fast, All the squirrolsâ€"red and gray and chipâ€" munks alikeâ€"are skinny thieves; yet we love them. ‘The poets include wild mice within their zones of romantic interest, and every one, except the farmer who catches them in his orâ€" chard, feels a warm glow of enthusiâ€" asm at sight of a deer, Henry Wilâ€" liamson writes fondly of the otter; even the weasel becomes royal as "erâ€" mine." Among wild animals, in our scale of values, only the skunk is vile. Skunk‘s Character Is Cruelly Maligned | . ___ _ Girectly into the vital spot, | between the ribs and without the slightest deflection. Extrordin‘ry! . . I say, Markham; such marksmanship isn‘t human. A chance shot might have done it; but the slayer of this johnny wasn‘t leaving anything to. chance. ‘That power‘®ul hunting arâ€" row, which was obviously wrenched from the panel inside, shows premediâ€" tation and designâ€"" Suddenly he bent over the body. "Ah! Very inâ€" terestin‘. The nock of the arrow is broken downâ€"I doubt if it would even hold a taut string." He turned. to Heath. "Tell me, Sergeant; where did Professor Dillard find the bow?"â€"not far from that clubâ€"room window, what?" ho. 09 G00e® MWg TBEW SUUuV , | the shaftment were two stripes of turâ€" , | quoise blue, giving the arrow a gala | appearance. I had a feeling of unâ€" | reality about the tragedy, as though | I were witnessing a scene in a sylvan | play for children. Vance stood looking down at the body with halfâ€"closed eyes, his hands in his coat pockets. Despite the apâ€" parent indolence of his attitude I could tell that he was keenly aler:, and that his mind was busy coâ€"ordinâ€" | ating the factors of the scene before ‘him. _ "Dashed queer, that arrow," he comâ€" _mented. "Designed for big game; . . . undoubtedly belongs to that ethnoâ€" logica!l exhibit we just saw. And a ‘clean hitâ€"directly into the vital spot, between the ribs and without the slightest deflection. Extrordin‘ry! Beside the body was a large pool of coagulated blood which had formed in the shape of a huge pointing hand. But the thing which held us all in a spell of fascinated horror was the slender shaft that extended vertically from the left side of the dead man‘s breast. The arrow protruded perhaps twenty inches, and where it had enâ€" tered the body there was the large dark stain of the hemorrhage. What made this strange murder seem even more incongruous were the beautifully fletched feathers on the arrow, They had been dyed a bright red; and about SX .0 do eb olsn I | eoitss n pying the cornor a¢! "‘Bout eight quarts, surr,." be reâ€" it ment house occupying the corner of | plied. 76th Street and Ritersido Dï¬". BQ-' “ROI"’." said Smithson interestedâ€" tween these two gigantic buildings ran Iy. "And how much of that do you a narrow alleyway, the range end of | sell» ‘ which was closed with a high board "Well, surr," said the labourer, withâ€" "fenee in which had been set a small ! out hesitation, "we sells somethin(‘ door with a lock. , two rear yards had been removed ; where it had once transected the space ‘now used for the archery range. At the further end of the range, backing against the western line of the Drukâ€" ker property, was another tall apartâ€" PE Di CBC Noi C t cb t . B ‘ ‘The Dillard lot was 135 feet deep, ‘ the depth of the Drukker lot therefore being sixtyâ€"five feet. A section of the ; tall ironwork fence that separated the (To be continued.) a huge pomtx_ng- _};l;&. which held us all in a mated horror was the TORONTO A man went into a shop for a shave and was waited upon by a man who waxed eloquent on the germâ€"proof naâ€" ture of the business. The towel was superâ€"heated, the razor sterilized, the soap bacterialized, and the comb and brush antisepticized. "Great scheme," said the customer, who had been waiting patiently for the discourse to finish, "but why don‘t you go ahead and shave me?" "But I‘m not the barber, sir," said the man.â€" "You‘re not?â€" Then where is he?" exclaimed the customer. â€" "They‘re boiling him," the man replied. Mal maallll D LLLCC® PEZS, 2005.° I clal Ontario If interested â€'..‘;2".'}.!"‘::_:::.'_’.'3"‘ Office, Use Minard‘s Linin}ent for Toothache Take advai â€" of rate of $6.70 on Alperte gost. new 52+ rate of $6.75 on Alberta Coal, now exâ€" cial Ontario prices. If interested wot ‘‘No, thanks," said Robinson, seizâ€" ing his chance. "I‘m in rather a hurâ€" ry." "I‘m going to the staii&t,"r â€"s'aid the carâ€"owner, "Would you like a lift?" Robinson, one of theï¬set. was on his way to the city one day when he met Browne in his secondâ€"hand car. > Revenge The little set in the suburban avenue had long decided that Browne was overâ€"proud of his bargain in the secondâ€"hand ‘car market, and that something must be done to damp his aggressive enthusiasm., ‘ The medium size requires 3% yards of 39â€"inch material for bolero and skirt with 1% yards of 39â€"inch maâ€" terial for sleevaiess waist. Lightweight tweed, wool jersey, velveteon, flat crepe and canton crepe: make up smartly in this model. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS, 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 Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelzide St., Toronto. COAL MERCHANTS 14, 16, 18, 2 inches bust. The belt marks the normal waistâ€" line. The bolero rolled in revers reveals a blouse of eggshell crepe that buttons down the front. The skirt favors the new boxâ€"plaited treatment. The tightened hip yoke in pointed outline tends to lengthen the figure. EMPIRE COLLIERIES LTD. It is youthfully smart and prac tical in qa_rls green crepy woolen. A darling bolero.frock that is the pampered fashion of all the French couturiers, Style Ijo._ 2626 may be had in stzes Iilustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furâ€" nished With Every Pattern BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON "Well, surr," said the labourer, withâ€" out hesitation, "we sells something siccc on cE w , 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 "How much milk does that cow give a day?" he asked. The man paused in his labors. ‘ "‘Bout eight quarts, surr," he reâ€" During an inspection of the sheds he saw one of the farm laborers mukmzJ a cow. Smithson, the clty' man, was spendâ€" ing _hu weekâ€"end on a friend‘s farm. Is Wearing @QASPIRIN Curates are said to be drifting after training in Wales into England, where stipends are higher and the prospacts of advan:ement are beiter. Bombay.â€"One of the queerest anâ€" imals in the world was found in New Guinea and brought here for shipment to Europe by Herr Kibler, German naâ€" turalist. _ It is two feet long, has a birdâ€"like bill, spines like a porcuplne.i pouch like a kangarou‘s, lives underâ€" ground like a mole, lays eggs but suckles ifs young and adapts itself ‘ to ‘temperature like a reptile. "What do you consider the first of advancing age?" "Getting mad when anybody you old." However, death as we know does not always result, for the germs do not have things their own way. Certain formations and substances have been Placed in the human blood by nature to fight against infection. Often, this defending army of the blood stream wins the fight against the invading a - 4/ to A victim of diphtheria dies of poisonâ€" ing, just as surely as though he had swallowed prussic acid. So you see, a great national work is being left undone. _ How does diphtheria kill, and how can its ravages be averted? First of all it is a germ disease. A healthy human child (children are diphtheria‘s victims for the most part) who hapâ€" pens to be susceptible to this disease, is suddenly attacked by a tiny, invisâ€" ible germ of it. These lodge in the youngster‘s throat and feed and multiâ€" ply. They give off a waste product which is a deadly poison, and this poison spreads throughout the system. # 4 C day." 'iu al Don‘t be helpless when 4 ways ease a fodans dtogongs relief. If you :ram'o iate pains of neuralria «. . "O4 O This is one of a series of weekly articles on health topics, written by the Canadian Social Hygiene Council. ‘ Diphtheria Can Be Prevented If for t@n years or less, Canada were to pay as much money towards preâ€" venting this disease as Canadians now‘ pay for curing it and burying its vieâ€" tims, it could be virtually elminated. And yet at the present time 13,500 Canadians experience expensive and dangerous attacks each ~year, with’ 1200 annual fatalities. Simple Injection of Su&mnw Called "Toxoid"â€"Disease Kills 1200 Every Year Out of 13,500 Casesâ€" ‘Tremendous Waste Diphtheria Can Be Wiped Out And Lives and Dollars Saved No other Orange Pekoe you, get some at when anybody calls ‘Fresh from the gardens‘ sign British apprentices are very popular in Frerch racing stables, as French boys are said not to understand or care about horses. "I told you once," ahorr;;l'lod. "He‘s a vegetarian. He sells vegetables." What‘s in a Name The magistrate was questioning a woman witness in the box. "What‘s your husband‘s vocation?" he asked. "He‘s a vegetarian," she replied haughtily, The magistrate looked puzzled, "No, no," he said tersely. "I mean what does he do for a living?" How much simpler to hav. your children undergo this simple treatâ€" ment than to have your home quaranâ€" tined and possibly lose a child or two through diphtheria! If only every public health department would see that this marvellous substanc be pnt‘ at the disposal of every parent, and it only all parents would insist upon proâ€" tecting their thildren with it, diphâ€" theria could be wiped out of Canada within ten years, and hundreds of lives and thousands of dollars saved every year. I Just Off the Boardwa‘k Fireproot Construction On a Residential Avenue Harmonious, restful surroundings with recreational advantages. Europsan Plan trom $4 Daily American Plan from $7 Daily WEEKLY or SEAsoN RATES on APPLICATION Your own family doctor can adminâ€" ister this treatment and it is up to all parents to make sure that their family doctors do so. It is safe anc simple and sane and practically painless. At one time the city of New York imâ€" munized 10,000 infants with toxoid, without any ill effects whatever. I _ Comparatively recently doctors have discovered a substance called Toxoid which, when injected into a human body, induces the blood to develop that same resistance to an attack of diphtheria. In other words, the imâ€" munity to diphtheria which a patient painfully develops, it is now possible to give to a child by a simple, safe series of injections under the skin. Now once recovered, such an inâ€" dividual raroly gets the disease again. The defending army in his bloodâ€" stream has learned how to repel the attacks of this particular germ. army of diphtheria germs, and when that happens, the patient gets well. Idne e tl PA LAORTI OA have a day off for your grandmather‘s funeral?" Second Ofliceâ€"Boy: "Whatl Aud me working for the regis‘rs~ o births and deaths!" "You remember my son who used !# help me in the shop?" he mentioncs. "Yes," returned the customer; "but I haven‘t seen him Jately." ' Un..u said the grocer, "He left me to become a boxer, and he‘s alreass ï¬;'l‘l Mp. andâ€"â€"" , w"m championship shouldn‘t wonder," interrupted (»* The rather garrulous grocer »** :"‘hc- his customer in conversai~>® attempting to serve him wit! ® bound of sugar®at the same tims. "Please, reply, “NO'v" she commenced, "can any one tell me the greatest of a!| \(\> virtues ?" No answer. "Come, now, think," she insiste4. "What am I doing when I give up my own pleasure to come and ta!> <* you?" A grimy little fist shot up. "Well, my little man," she aske4, "what am I doing*?" A philanthropic lady had giv> her afternoon to address a class young pupils at the village scho« up into fragments by narrow domestic walls ; Where words come out from th> i>>k of truth ; Where tireless striving strotches i# arms towards perfection; Where the clear stream of reason »# not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit: Where the mind is led forward by Thee â€" into _ everâ€"wideniog thought and actionâ€" Into that heaven of freedom, my Pather, let my country awaks. â€"Rabindranath Tazore A Prayer Where the mind is without foar and the head is held high : Where knowledge is free: Where the world has not been brokea And such is the lot of a large nroâ€" portion of India‘s te@ming millions, who are still swayed by such superâ€" stitions as these. P?| Pinoo, m A| wallah" (kz ‘"] ready with : *| inquiries. @ “Be“.r?" C "No, sir, n berry bad m *| _ And this is 1| related. T off che cow which be bad killod, and ln!ut]u. mournfully, its voice Guru (Hindu priest) to whom hbe conâ€" fessed had said it. The appendazs round his nec® and waist wore the symbols of his guilt. A cow‘s horn, a cow‘s tail, and a cow‘s be] The man was a Hindu, he was a cow wor shiper and killed a cow, He was, therefore, ostracized until the comâ€" pletion of his menance. â€" Morsove:, hs must beg from door to door unt!! the rising of the eighth moon in 1934, wearing the tail, the horn and the bell That was in 1923, on the rising of the eighth moon, and for seven years !o must act like a cow because the "Beggar?" 1 asked. *"No, sir, no beggar, but curse. j4 berry bad man, make too mush ;in* And this is what my mentor further related. . The man was atoning for killing a cow! He was by prof»ssion a cow cart driver, and one paricu larly hot day when the temperature probably hovered around 199 in the shade, one of the beast of burion in his team was inclined to be lazy, #o he in his usuai manner twisto) its tail. Still the animal refused +o move, This stubborness on the part o the beast infuriated che dv>iver, n the paraw«.llah (policeman, on _ tratie duty had pulled out his pocke: hook to note the number of his cart for geâ€" laying the trafic. Unhappily the load on the cart consisted of iron hars,. »o he picked up one within his reach and struck the head of the cow,. The blow cracked open its skull and the animal tumbled down dead. Pinoo, my mentor, is a "subjun,. wallah" (knowâ€"it@l) and is forever ready with am explanation for a!! my inquiries. During my recent stay in (,, cutta, one very enervating Sunday a), rnoon, I lay on a veranda easy chair whep q was awakened by the occasion; tinklg of a bell and a "moo" such as sigi the privileged passage of tho sucreq cow as it meanders around ()» bazman and streets of India. Ellnw‘ Ut to see the indolent movements 0! ; soy I was not a little surprised who my eyes fell upon an unkempt Indian wig numerous appendages rouni neck and waist, who alternated his moure. ful "moo" with a tinkle of a prasy bell suspended from his neck. ; t»4 same time I noticed Pinoo, my bearer, to wit, valet, drop a copper coin into a small empty basin held in tho Wh» kempt man‘s band, ther exchange 4 few words in the vernaculs; The mendicant walked on, moo and tinkling. By E. F. BRAYHA») In Indiaif a Hindu dares <, harm ‘cow or even mccidentally injo,», [ 8 . . w " the trlditu.“, 0‘0: religion to undergo a penan<» Forag of penance vary and ar» o;,, wig. gested by the Guru or Hinj pricst, whose directions no Hindn ;.,, “ obey. India consists of i; 1Mmerable religious bodies but Hini«;,, Dr& dominates. In this faith th> Riyg Ganges or more religiously, "Moihe Ganges," is one of the two ; {ying factors, the other being the ; 7 Yaan Pmanvée J F or Kming a C,OW Polk 9ns depa" miss, buttin‘ in," came Out of Place : *Don‘t. you eva a‘cutta, crnu when I | tinklg Sig naly sacreqg «ho face 0 fortunate and progr« wide «00 #he Don Impotus 6n« anids prog «V ter ©us wf the Sy ter wa wlon be awdian 1 tlemen: wlly ex All Land "The Canadian been indicated on €efined in oficial s y the Minister of Mouse of Commons maps and public st that Canada claim worth of the Can: exception pendencic part of title thus eontiguity exploratio tive occn; which Dom{: in N awda by Orc a@ll British Don gove of t the Mn Island in 1 J is about miles wide. «amaller in &« Th #prir look AT 850 Miles Bey Axel Helberg, th Sour islands. is «ito #red and exy 1902 by Con leader of the #lon. in the tC 14 t Norway RT Arctic as London.â€"The Pr Railed as the leadin Mhe world recently more than 200 mile *®ontrols of two ma aed oneâ€"half hours, In addition to pi Bying boat DOX t« Salshot on Novemb Kew an amphibian 4 Th Prince of riendly N STEPPING UP ex} is one 141 of hy abilit d p ) i~Note nd for I U 81z n »0 AVC the 1