,,*z,g_i A2 _ OCC+ NUSTESE C1OSeR idoight June , 1935, ï¬&}m wi?f be awarded on the decision of the judges, which will be final, Whether you win a pair of silk stockings or not, we will mail to all entrants free of charge, our famous bookletâ€"‘The A.B.C, af l& Rug Making", address, to o? A. H Caldonhlj., ‘oronto. 2. Send as many as you sgnll . OO OCCC ENVE T Only RIT offers this advantage! RIT is the modern tint or dyeâ€"easier and surerâ€"far superior to ordinary "‘surface dyes"" because it contains a patented ingredient that makes tllecolornrhh , Set faster and last longer, Sold everyw‘e’re. HOYW TO win 3. Write a short statement (under 50 words) o‘.w&ywmfer,ll’fbyumdnndit ssosrhA Lrax®._" Z1" HIH and prizes to 1,000 entrants. There a reasons why you will prefer RIT, im Ts ksct."u"sese L thare sull ... 1. * *C C ToF AiGK Use it. Then tell us in a statement of 50 words or less, why you prefer RITâ€"1,000 }m‘;s of Mo::’rocb‘lgrcbnuq:: f:ll}: ashionedâ€"shadowâ€"free pure silk c foo stockingsâ€"latest Spring shadesâ€" guaranteed :l.oo valueâ€"will be given as DEKXES WS Y DDPY suses ns Cmy & o to your druggist buy RIT Dye Ciay ol so OAZ T "You stop fooling and outside with me unlece "Obh, but I am this one," said the Starling from the your h.il’, I mea Meriston." *°°I° Cal,. i can manage this one." Adam was now at the foot ot the stairs reluctantly beginning to climb, The two burly men entered the hall and threw open the door through which he had entered. "Now then, what do you think you‘re playin‘ at," exclaimed one of them. "We‘ve no time to listen to the wireless today, thank you." ‘ "For the last time," sald Mr. Perâ€" kin grimly and thrust something hard against his back. Adam moved slowâ€" ly forward and his slowness seemed to annoy the gunster. "Quicker," he said and jabbed harshly with the muzâ€" #le of the gun. Then an idea seemed to strike him. "You two go and take «are of the old fool and the driver of CHtHK CHU. L Chlt MANRAOGE Unke se t * at their long delay in foll and blamed them bitterly tionally for not baving or him into this trap. Adam still stood where he was. "You (â€"â€" your part, now," the lawyer rommanded, and the hunchback movâ€" ed towards the end of the hall and disappeared through a door under the stairs. "Come along, Meriston. My time‘s limited, very limited." Into Adam‘s mind the conception was slowly penetrating that he must do his utmost to delay. There was the Professor somewhere outside and their driver. No match, either â€" of them, for the three who confronted him now, particularly as one at least of these three was armed, but capâ€" able of creating a diversion of some kind possibly, and, at all events, the only resource he had. He wondered at their long delay in following him, ETY y & IZ Pn mmmP VHT CC 4J employer=â€"Corville Perkin, Adam, in his private hours ments with shortâ€"wave wireless, Walking homeward, Adum is fun down by a tnrge swift car, lHe calls on Priscilia Norval, Mer futher recounts the histc five untioue chairs he possesses. Adum is extremely puzzled o Connection _ of Corvilie _ Perki Montada who wants the antique Then Priscilla is spirited awav. Kirl who a30,,0°D from the hands of a K)"l who explaing that 1t contains the day‘s takings of her father‘s shop. He attempts to Wack the thieves nno reaches an old warehouse. Adum enters the building _ while the girl watches the door. Suddenly he heurs lootsteps, The man tufns out t me Aanuss tickey 16 _ "_"IO%. O# _ farmers son, Arlicled to a solicitor, makes a bruve but unsuccessful attempt to â€" thwart thrge thieves in a bil-llllll:hln' raid The bag was torn from the hands of a KIfl who asnlat.s 1. 0C MHe + By FAREMAN WELLs t l B on Tt n i i t val o o4 44 N HETEEEE S 53 0e s nlen z‘l"b’#-if ?##06%44#4‘**49"'â€â€œ% #mm#’m’m""‘*‘l’%’l’**'% 4 4 ; Five cRooken | CHAIRS $ !'. F2 ii_‘r- -uukm 1t em miph Sn epiy, es package e o Johp A. Hustos Co.nï¬ aA 22008 and come along me, unless you want to ist or department store and ay color, 15¢â€"2 for 25¢). 1 us in a statement of 50 am sure you will like the voice of Professor the open door. "Keep mean your hat, on, _ Corvilie _ Perkin _ and wants the antique chairs. is spirited away. meward, Adum is nearly a luige swift car. Priscilia Norval, recounts the historyâ€" of hairs he possesses, stood where he was. part, now," the lawyer id the hunchback movâ€" e end of the hall and wish; contest closes Ditterly and irraâ€" baving rushed like TINTS and DvEs Rit is a convenieng scored waler, eas ler to measure; won‘t sift out ef are dozens of ‘. RIT comes 1 which can Paris shades, to be Adam‘s over the ¢x peri Adam did not wait to see b}m go. Still in a mood for violent and effecâ€" tice action he scrambled over the , "2CCC God. rou get round to the front quick,. There‘s a young lady there. Look after her. But keep well away from the house. It‘s mined." The driver threw down his cigarâ€" et}le ag stamped on it. Perhaps he feit safer when it was no longer alight. Then he Rurried off, keeping as far as possible from the building as he made his way round to thel' front. "Good God. Yol & front quick,. There‘s there. Look after her away from the house The driver threw 1 " C ERRUT Y CIICT Adani. "He went in there after you, sir a few minutes ago." He rushed away and forced a path through the shrubbery at the end of the house. At the back the driver was standing near the open window lightâ€" ing a cigarette. Their car stood betf 'door still. The over was deserted and Mr had disappeared. Adar Priscilla to some tree deemed to be a safe di well away from the hc shelter of the trees," I must go and see that clear." He glanced round. A pungent whisp of smoke curled lazily through the doorway. There was no further need to tell him to hurry, He made a last slash at the linen that conâ€" stricted her limbs, seized a sheet from the bed and, swinging her to the winâ€" dow, proceeded to lower her with the sheet passed under her arms. He had to let her drop the last few feet and immediately she was clear he lowerâ€" ed himselft from the sill and dropped too. A professional fireman could not have performed a more efflcient or a speedier rescue. l "Oh, it‘s you at last," she cried as he stooped to hack with his penknife at her bonds. "You‘ll have to hurry. The place is on fire. That awful man said we should be blown up toâ€" gether." M \Onlnlit nds d 4. 4/ | The hunchback paused and glanced t around him. He paused just long enâ€" i ough to allow the rays to be directed ‘| on him, just long enough for them | to take effect. Then he put his arms | up as if to protect his head and charâ€" ged blindly for the open air." "Eight seconds at fifteen feet, A particularly susceptible subject," comâ€" | mented the Professor, taking out his notebook. A moment later he dropped E it. "Hello! Smoke!" he said. Adam dashed up the stairs. It was a twoâ€"storey building with an attic and de began a hurried search on the first floor, fiinging open doors that revealed only empty, dustladen rooms with queer streaks of light squeezing . through their shuttered windows. The fourth door registed him and from behind it he heard a voice he knew. With a splintering crash the door came away from its ancient hinges. It would have had to be a powerful door that would have stopped him then. This room was| roughly furnished with a bed and | dressing table. Its windows were unâ€" | shuttered . Lying on the bed was a bound female figure, a figure in a C linen blouse and a skirt he recogâ€"| j nized immediately . Where‘s the The hunchback was gliding stealthâ€" ily along the side of the stairs. "Stay where you are, my man, unless you want to get a thorough fright," advigâ€" ed the Professor suavely, 5 0. en wte w L ‘THE PLACE is minED." "Good job you packed all the batâ€" teries, since there seems to be no electric light available here, though I must say they do make it extremeâ€" ly difficult to carry," came the voice of the fastidious Professor. "Hullo, who‘s this?" Minatatvel lt ds 2 10 4 AiF +\ glanced down into the hall, saw the two men fall back as if amazed, from the doorway, heard one of them gasp out an astonished "Crikey!" Felt a last gentle prod from Perkin‘s gun, almost a timorous prod. Then he heard the gun fall clattering on the stairs. He sprang round. The two men were tugging at the great ball door. Mr. Perkin was dashing to help them. The three were mixed up in a mad scramble in the course of which the door swung open to their frantic effort. Then they rushed out into the tangled garden and were lost from his sight. T a Ne in Alan: d ie ie e y ty tz o o i e e ho ie sls e e go to kingdom come headed old nanny" «: erted and Mr. Perkin‘s car ppeared. Adam hurried with to some trees at what he 0 be a safe distance. "Stand y from the house under the f the trees," he told her. "I and see that the others are The overgrown garden stood before the front "bGom come, too, you baldâ€" 1d nanny," said the man. was now four stairs up. He door that would have hen. This room was ed with a bed and Its windows were unâ€" ‘1g on the bed was a figure, & figure in a Professor?" â€" cried + e e 1 If our inward griefs were seen ,written on our brow, how many ; would be pitied who are now envied! ; â€"Metastasio. It was the first such crossing but such a motor car is not likely to prove popular, since regular Cbannei steamers from Dover to Calais make the trip in about &n hour. l The Channelâ€"scene of many freak passages, including ones by mer. maids, mermen, water bicyclists and a man who tried to walk across on water skisâ€"probably never saw anyâ€" th?ng q'ï¬k}’te As complacent as this slowâ€"moving "land ferry," chugging along with its paddleâ€"wheels cutting a leisurely wake,. 1 _ Dover, England, â€" A novel amphiâ€" bian motorcar clambered, dripping wet, onto dry land here recently and rolled on toward London, after cross. ing the Channel from Calais in eight hours and 20 minutes. The machine was operated by Jacob Boulig, Gerâ€" man sportsman, . ‘ Amphibian Car Crosses Channel "Never remove your feet from the pedals when going down hill." "Never pass a street car on the leftâ€"hand side or when stopped to take or let off passengers, "When coming out to the street from a laneway â€" or gateway, ride slowly and make sure that no pedesâ€" trians are nearby and that there is no approaching traffic in the vi-l cinity. "Do not ride your b sidewalk or on a footp; "Never carry another bicycle designed for one "Never takeï¬l‘nold of a street car or automobile for the purpose of being drawn along the street. alais To Dover Trip On Novel Apparatus Made In Eight Hours in traffic to boys and giris on bicyâ€" cles, city police have launched a campaign in which the assistance of school teachers is being sought to educate children to take greater care while on their bicycles. Chief Emile Joliat has sent to evâ€" ery public and separate school a syâ€" nopsis of the provincial and city reâ€" gulations governing the equipment and operation of bicycles with the request that the principals â€" direct attention to their pupils to them in whatever way seems best. _ In adâ€" dition, the chief has prepared eight primary rules for safe cycling which he believes would reduce the accident tolll if generaly adopted. The rules are: "Never ride two or more abreast. "Always ride as close as possible to the rightâ€"hand curb and steer a straight rourse, Riding in a zigâ€"zag erratic manner is very dangerous to ‘ yourself and confusing to the drivers | of other vehicles. Ottawa. â€" In an effort to check the increasingly number of accidents SIMPLE RULES FOR YOUNG CYCLISTS Police Send Copies lations to Ottawa "Get back, you old fool! The place is mined. You‘ll be blown up!t" "That would be a new experience forf e ....." began the old fellow. But Adam interrupted him by proâ€" ceeding to force him violently backâ€" wards across the yard. . ¢T9 be Continued.) ’ "Hadn‘t you better bring the cirâ€" cuit with you, Meriston?" he heard him say as he dashed through the big room to the window. It was not until he had been plumpâ€" ed rudé@y on the path outside that the poor little man got his chance tol protest. "My dear Meriston," he beâ€" gan. ‘"This is really, if I may sayl "Eh? What‘s that?" came an unâ€" perturbed old gentleman‘s voice from overhead. _ "Come out! Come out, I say!" "I take it you have found the young lady? It would be worth your while to take a look up here though, There | has been something very interesting going on," came the answer from the top of the stairs. The â€" dreadful, unhurriable â€" little man! Impossible to drive into his head that there was danger. Adam made &â€"couple of bounds to the top of the stairs, caught the protesting Professor about the waist, slung him uncereâ€" moniously across his shoulder and stumbled blindly down again into the smoke of the hall. He could hear someone moving about overhead. "Come out! Come out, quick!" he shouted, gasping in the smokeâ€"laden air. sill and pushed through the smoke wreaths that clouded the big room with lazy pungent clouds. In a secâ€" ond he had reached the hall. It was empty. At the foot of the stairs he paused to call out at the top of his voice, bracing himselft every moment ‘ to endure the final crash. 1 Along the street. . ride your bicycle on the on a footpath. governing the equipment ion of bicycles with the t the principals â€" direct ) their pupils to them in ‘ay seems best. In adâ€" chief has prepared eight another person on Copies of Reguâ€" Ottawa Schools more abreast. e as possible and steer a in a zigâ€"zag dangerous to will never FOR SQUEAKING SHOES Stand the shoes for 24 kours in a shallow tray of castor cil. Let the oil reach to the junction of sole and upper and no farther; if it soaks into the leather of the uppers vou _ Cantley, Que. â€" T. B. Gow disclosâ€" ed recently he has grown a mommoth white trillium, and would like it diâ€" agnosed. _ The trillium, a soâ€"called double one, has 22 petals instead of the regulation three. Gow said he disâ€" covered the flower in the bash near his home and transplanted it to his ‘ garden. Huge Trillium all | ed." "What we can tell you is where lay our single fault. We never failâ€" ed lacked for skill. We stressed too much the qualities of body and of mind. _ We gave too little thought to those spiritual values by which all human progress must be weighâ€" aA 3» ""You have to rebuild what been wrecked. _ You have to b again the task of building a be world. With all our errors we ] given you the tools with which work. How they are to be used for you to learn. _ "We risked all this in the hazard of war and in a mad race for profit and pleasure. You know what folâ€" lowedâ€"the crash of fortunes; the long line of idle men appealing â€"for help; the rising clamor of discontent, and the constant bitter argument concerning the case of all our troubles. to be force. We opened the storeâ€" house of knowledge to all. We broke down the bars of caste. We gave plain man the luxury of ancient kings. We widened liberty and made toil no longer a burden. 1 "The world of which you are the ke‘rs is one of bitter strife ard turâ€" moil," the chancellor told the stuâ€" dents. "Weâ€"your eldersâ€"have dealt unfairly with you. From our fathers we inherited a world of growing wealth. _ We carried on the task of widening its bounds. We â€"spread ploughed lands to the edge of the desert and to the line where good soil ends in the rocky wilderness of the north. _ We built railways from sea to sea. We linked the contiâ€" nents with ships. We destroyed the barrier of space to human speech. We split matter into its final fragâ€" mentsâ€"even to the point where matâ€" ter ceases to be matter and seems Montreal â€" In his capacity of Chancellor of McGill University, E. W. Beatty delivered the Baccalaureâ€" ate address to graduating students of the university at a special service recently. ‘ The creamâ€"colred ware of Josiah Wedgewood and the bone china dishes of Josiah Spode captured the world‘s markets 150 years ago beâ€" cause they could be washed for a generation without being scratched. "No #reign â€" manufacturer has ever approached the technical perâ€" fection of English ware" the paper says proudly. ‘"The machine, I was told by Mr. Packham, Curator of Ceramics, has not learned to copy the flowing brush strokes of the artist." "Here are enachanting tureens in the shape of waggish rabbits, who seem to be cocking their highlyâ€" glazed ears to catch the jokes in the tableâ€"talk. The pottery of toâ€" day makes _ wonderful patterns against severe, linenâ€"covered backâ€" grounds from the streamlined kitâ€" chen â€" and laboratory utensils of massâ€"prodrction to the signed work of studio potters, the artists of the craft. __"Let those who think we take our pleasures sadly observe in the i8thâ€" century room how high spirits can be immortalized in â€" a soupdish," the writer goes on. ‘ Some probably beautiful and cerâ€" tainly wealthy lady of 250 years ago brewed halfâ€"cups in this doll‘s pot at half a guinea an ounce, remarks the News Chronicle. She washed it herself, of course, which is why it stands without a flaw in its case, god to look at today. T London. â€" Probably the oldest teapot in existence, a diminutive red and gilt affair of painted Stafâ€" fordshire ware, is one of the feaâ€" tures of an exhibition of English pottery from 1350 to 1985 at the Victoria and Albert Museum. J TASKS OF YOUTH Pottery Exhibition in London Includes Teapot 250 Years Old ENGLAND PROUD OF CHINAWARE C1 _ oL the uppers you‘ . able to polish them. t1 to rebuild what has You have to begin k of building a better l1 our errors we have to is | TIRED=»«IRRITABLE The girl who writes to me ha parently forgotten the hero of story, I think! She is willing stand down for her friend, but do consider whether the man is ¢ as willing! And as he is really key to the whole problem, he not be ignored. It is my opinion that he is in The third member of this triangle seems inclined to build airâ€"castles, she will romanticise, build up dreams within her mind, and even come to believe that they are true after a while. I "I was weak and }ELZ;;‘;:,;"'X nciï¬hbor brought me your Vegeâ€" table Compound. It helped me so x:cb that I am taking it now at Change. _ Get a bottle NOW . It be just the medicine YOU need. me â€" is affection;te, w;rrgfl;;r.i fond of being ‘on the go‘, with good sense of loyalty and dignity TORONTO To take the handwritings, 1 find that the man is straightforward, not unduly affectionateâ€"that is, he is not the type to fall in love with any girl who comes across his orbit, but he is a decent and a cleanâ€"cut type of fellow. The girl who writes to me is affectionate, warmhearted, fond of being ‘on the go‘, with a This is a problem that differs somewhat from the usual problems that are sent to me, but handwriting and knowledge of psychology will solve the problem in this case as in most others. J In the remainder of this letter the girl points out that her girl friend has been very good to her in many ways, and that she feels that she owes her something. i s "Dear Mr. St. Clair: My girl ;| friend and I are both interested in .| the same man. She has been telling | me for many months that she is in love with him and he reciprocates. A few weeks ago I met him for the first time at the home of a mutual friend, and he instantly became inâ€" terested in me. Since then he has been meeting me quite ofc.en and now affects a love for me. When I told him about my girl friend, he said that he had never been interâ€" ested in her to the extent of love, and that she must have been makâ€" ing up a romance out of very slendâ€" er threads Now my girl friend is cross with me for letting this man take me out and says that a real friend would not doubleâ€"cross her as she says I am doing. Will you please look at the three writings I am sending you, and give me your honâ€" est opinion. Is the man deceiving! me or is it really true that my girl friend was romancing hen she told | friend was romancing when she told | tween him and herself?" Should a girl make a real sacriâ€" fice for a friend, when in her heart she feels that she should follow her own course, irrespective of the friend. This letter is a little unâ€" usual, and I am giving part of it as. this week‘s problem: l its human interest problem, makes absorbing reading. Have you conâ€" sulted this Graphologist on your problems?) (Editors Note: Interest has mountâ€" ed in the recent articles in this series, and this week‘s article, with k. She is willing to or her friend, but doesn‘t ether the man is quite And as he is really the whole problem, he canâ€" @©@ Green tea drinkers will find a sheer delight in the exquisite flavour of Salada Japan tea. Try a package. to me has apâ€" love this Ask your druggist for Phi days‘ l:po:{y (in :r.n:r.:' of taste) for 50c ; 45 days‘ suppl What Phillips Yeast will do for you is to help your digestion, make your food do you the maximum of food, and enrich your blood. Phillips Yeast has been outstandingly successful both in England and bere in Canada, PP s n Eie F UTC i1VE Yeast. In this new yeast, an English development, a way ‘has been found to keep the live elements in the highest state of activity without botherâ€" some refrigeration and care. Bo you needn‘t bother about getting & new supply each day. You can buy several weeks‘ "â€IJO“ Phillips Yeast at onee'â€"and cut down the cost treâ€" ie Falls, Minn. â€" Neglected many years and then stripped by souvenir hunters, the boyhood home of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh is soon to be placed in its condition of fifteen years ago when Lindbergh last lived there. | tLnjoy areally fine _ h"""!_:t):lde ciq&lvy'etm rolling your own Have you any problems that Mr. St. Clair can advise you upon? â€" He will be frank, unbiassed, sympathetic and friendly. Have you any friends whose real natures you would lil(c‘ to know? _ Your handwriting 'Q"l’ the true story of yourself, your charâ€"| acter, your innermost nature. Send | specimens of the wrtings you \vioh: to be analysed, stating birthdate in each case. Send 10¢ coin for each specimen, and enclose with 3¢ stampâ€" ed addressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St.| West, Toronto, Ont. All letters will{ be confidential and replies forwardâ€"| ed as quickly as possible. ] "Having suffered from sciatica for eighteen months, 1 was adâ€" vised to try Phillips Pure LIVE Yeast. I am most thankfal 22 It is all very well sometimes to be a martyr, but this is not one of these cases, and I have no hesitation in advising my correspondent to go ahead and encourage the man if she really loves himâ€"and she says she does with all her beart And I wish‘ you all the good luck you deserve. Little Falls te. L2 0_ OATCE NETEE GOLDEN VIRGINIA & NPYUnprreprnarmmmmmmmmmms _2 IN CONVENIENT NEW FORM mo 1 say to my correspondent that, no matter how much she may feel indebted to her girl friend for past assistance, she cannot, in all sincerity to herself as well as to the man, give him up. That would not help her girl friend at all, if the mnnl doesn‘t love her, and I think he doesâ€" Restore Lindbergh Home with the girl who writes to me, and not with the other girl. Her stories of his love for her are probably the fruits of her romancing and desire to have him love her, rather than an accepted fact. 1 taunting me, I found in your a tenderness, & One dream divin Though you‘re n« sever You are Dr "In every dream 1 Love I think rather more from the bead than the heart. Wce 292 7. C Teucse C lmanhood, Charles Dickens la.\vnre of his tendency : ,those with whom he J Andre Maurois, the Fren (in his Study of the great and made fun of himselt ’Ml own epitaph : | Last, here‘s Charles Dick. well knew, Emanatedâ€"to sp number few As all dis acouai His faultsâ€"and they 40 al! his friends‘ faultsâ€"it almost makes me weepâ€"â€" He was wide awakeâ€"to his own fact To all his now gone for It‘s clear that he very clever; | In the heydey of the clippershipâ€" | the fifties and the sixties â€" the |names of their captaing were as fa miliar to the rising generation as the names of movie stars are to our own children today, Mr. Van Loon _ deâ€" clares, adding, "and a bad exchange, say 1!" "Their pictures were printed in all the most fashionable magazines and you became quite a personage in your community if you had ever sailed with one of these famous skippere . For the careers of these men were & matter of great public interest. Fortunes were lost and made on the bets that foliéwed such ships as e ‘Flying Cloud‘ and the ‘Red Jacket (holder of the record between Sandy Hook and Liverpool, thirteen days and one hour) across the Atlantic.." , "We now know all about Joh F.tch," he explains.. "A grateful U $. Congress has even given hin, : monument. We have exact and <« tailed pictures of his boats with th«i paddleâ€"wheels, â€" afterwards replace by some sort of prehistoric prope! Jer. We have time tables giv.ing the hours of arrival and departure of the Philadelphiaâ€"Trenton steamboat se vice, duly published in the public papers of these cities almost twonts years before Fulton ran his ‘Clermont from New York to Albany. But Ful ton continues to get the credjt and Fitch is not even a name to most people." Obsessed by Will it ever be possible to r« Robert Fulton from his posâ€"t ic honor in the popular mind 2: real inventor of the steamboat" Hendrik Willem Van Loon <i; book, "Ships"..) Then he shake bead and says: "I am afraid no _ *‘That is. why nowadays a great number of readers hesitate to buy my books," chuckles Ford (in his auto biography, "It Was the Night: gale"), "thinking that they must be about automobiles or Detroit ." "And how should one | pronounce your beastly . name?" he | askeq, "Hooeffer? Hweffer?® Hoifer?! Hyooâ€" fer? It‘s impossible to know.. He elphll.tl that nolhing so puts people off buying books as any dif ficuty in pronouncing an | author‘s name. A bookâ€"buyer hates to fee like a fool or as onmne unacquainted with proper pronunciations. "If only you‘d sign your books ‘Ford‘ I might be able to sell the beastly things." asleep. was well and favorably known in the Jiterary world as Ford Madox Huefferâ€"his real name.. For strictly private reasons he changed i. lega}â€" ly, to Ford Madox Ford, intending however, to continue to write as Mueffer.. But one dayâ€"so he declares â€"â€"he went to call on his London» pubâ€" lisher, Said the publisher,, my love The printer turned the Jast y into "divorced"! "But even Miss Genee had been dancing for ten years before she wis discovered.." _ The sad tale of a horrible prin:. er‘s «error is told by Ford Madoy Ford, the novelist (in his delighs,) book, "Provence: From Minstre}s ;, the Machine..") In an enthusias;;, appreciation of Adeline Genee, fam. ous dancer, Ford had written: Some years ago, Ford Madox i; _ me, 1 want you . . . your caress, a happineeas, ‘Ss, so true , , , divine, will live forever, re not mine, none can acquaintance . extremoly â€"n«27C8 INnckens was well his tendency to criticize whom he lived, says in vorkl .. ©©~ and A esweet refrain Charles Dicken‘s, who‘s awakeâ€"to his own fast speak to him in good song in blue." , the French writer Of the great novelist), of himself by writing an image of ideal woâ€" ior ever, he thought bimselt OF THE FAMOUS Franc‘s Smith you, I do . see your lovely hear a melody were _ not in , haunting 64 rd ring w h B M wWELLâ€"DRESSEDp ¢ wWwEAR 3 W Hy A k Burmese a certain last time. die like Si except a | Migk s 1. Ask