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g E ISLE OF .. RETRIBUTION lequu. fad s And Blisters On Face Cuticura Healed " My fase 10 ieh and small bl which R later broke and dis- charged water, | had 1o seraich on account of the irriation, which madethe BEGIN HERE TODAY, Ned Corpet is sent by his father, Oodfrey Cornel, on a voyage Lo Northern Canada and Alaska to ex- change two thousand silk and velvet §OWhs With the Indians for fine furs The fits are to be split 76-25, the Nen's share to Ned Corner 18 accompanied on the voy- E- age Ly his Nancee, Lenore Harden- ' Worth, and the latter's mother, less Gilbert 's hired to go as seamstress. E Alrs. Hardenworth ohjects to eating Bt the same table with Bess, 4 At Vancouver, the night following their departure from Beattle, they loaded on certain heavy stores. Cap- ) tain Knutzen, in charge of the craft, | I8 ably assisted by MeNab, Bess aristocrate as much as possible, They | in turn ignore the girl ] NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY There was such alittle group of them, only eight in all. The ship was a mere dot in the expanse of blue, Around them endlessly lay the sea swept by unknown winds, cursed by the winter's cold, like death itself in its Infinity and its haunting fear. The life they had left behind was al- ready shadowed and dim: the farewell shouts, the laughter, the galety, the teeming crowds that moved and were never still were all llke something Imagined, unspeakably far off, Only the sea and the sky were left, and the eraft struggling wearlly, ever farther into the empty North, Lenore found herself oppressed by An unreasoning fear. Realities were getting home to her, and she was afrald of them. It would have been wiser not to come, yet she couldn't have told why. The launch was x wholly comfortable; she was already k: accustomed to the cramped quarters, The men of the crew were courteous, Ned the same devoted lover as al- ways. The thing was more an in- stinct with her: such pléasure as the trip offered could not comgpensate for 3 an obscure uneasiness, a vague but ominou sshadow over her mood and heart that was never lifted. Per- kaps a wiser and secret self within the girl, a subconsciousness which as pride of ancestry, social position, a certain social attitude of recklessn: that she thought became he most of all by refusing to believe that life contained any depth that she had not plumbed, any terrors dared not brave, any situation that | she could not meet and master, here these things mattered not at all. Neither ancestry nor could save her should the winter cold, hinted at already in the bitter frost of the dawns, swodp down and find her unprotected eharm would not fight for her should she fa |Here was a reglon where recklessne could very easily mean where life itself was suddenly revealed a4 2 - ‘e | Utterly beyond her ken makes up her mind to avold the thre« | was no turning back, the Charon bore her farther from her | perfectly sure in his own strength; home, thought were more lished, was only made LENORE FOUND HERSELF OP-[to bring him fo the s PRESSED BY AN UNREASONING £ 9. the YRrge ot (at FPEAR. > for two years, “1 was reated without any pef~ manent relief, A friend told me 1o iy Cuticura Soap and Olntment so I purchased some, and after using two boxes of Cuticurs Ointment, together with the Cuticura Soay was completely healed," ( Miss Martha Prenosil, 371 Main Iu;.'ct Springfield, Mass,, Mar, 923, ' Cuticura Soap, Ointmentand Tal. cum are all you need for all toilet uses, Bathe with Soa| Ointment, dust with Talcum, and that she But position Her own personal verhoard into the iey wate death; and But there Every hour but there was also a more complex Mre. Hardenworth, whose habita of [ reaction—one that he could not ana- firmly estab-|lyze or put into words, He ecouldn't irritable and|call it happiness. It wasn't that, un- —| 1688 the mood that follows the hear- ing of wonderful music is alse hap- piness, Perhaps that was the best comparison: the passion he felt was something like the response made to There had been times when all conditions were exactly favorable, that he had felt the same, and once when he had heard Fritz Kreisler play Handel's “Largo.” It was a strange reaching and grop- ing, rather than happiness, It was o stir and thrill that touched the most secret chords of his being. He felt it most at night when the great, white northern stars wheeled through the heavens, It was good to see them undulled by smoke; they touched some side of him that had never been stirred into life before. At such times the sea was lost in mystery, ,Thetruth was that Ned, by the will of the Red Gods, was percelving something of the real spirit of the North, A sensitive man to start with, he caught something of its mystery and wonder of which, as yet, Lenore had no glimpse. And the result was reaching discovery: that of his own weakness. He had never admitted weakness was wise with the knowledge of the ages before ever her being emerged from the germ plasm was even now warning her to turn back. It knew her limitations; also it knew the dreadful, savage realm she had dared to penetrate. The North would have no'mercy if she were found unworthy. | to Perhaps in her heart she realized that she represented all that was the antithesis of this far northern do- main. She was the ¢hild of luxury petulant by the new surroundings. Never good company except the stimulation of some social gather- ing, she was rapidly becoming some- thing of a problém to Ned and Le- nore, crew, on the constant verge of insult entire expedition, e i him? Would not this northern wil- had never been disciplined to meet hardship and danger; her only re- | erness show him up as the weakling source was guile and her only cour- before. He had always heen so sure of himself, so complacent, so self- sufficient. ut curiously these things were dying within him. He found himself doubting, for the first time, the success of this northern adven- ture. Could he cope with the reali- ties that were beginning to press upon under She was' irritable with the Bess, forecasting disaster for the Unlike Bess, she For the first time in ‘his life Ned age was recklessness; so now she tried to overcome her inner fears with more reckless attitude toward life, Tt was no longer necessary for Ned and Lenore to seek the shelter of the pilot house for their third whiskey-and- soda. She was only too glad to take it with them. = More than once-the dinner hour found her glassy-eyed and almost hysterical, only a horder removed from = actual -drunkenness, Never possessing any true moral strength or real good breeding, a cer- and ease: the tone and spirit of these wintry seas were travail and desola- tion. She was the product of a gen- eration that knew life only as a struc- ture that men's civilization had built; otit here was life itself, raw and _ raked, stripped and bare. She was lawless, undisciplined, knowing no code. but her own desires; all these seas and the gray fog-laden shores théy swept werc in the iron grip of Law that went down to the roots of Cornet knew what realism was. He supposed, in his city life, that he had been a realist: instead he had only been a sophist and a mocker in an environment that was never real from dawn to darkness. He had read books that he had acclaimed among his young friends as master- pieces of realism—-usually works whose theme and purpose seemed to be a bald-faced portrayal of sex—but now he saw that their very premise time, She had never looked beyond ] £ e e, o L the, surface of things; the heart that[tain abandon began to appear in her|as one of falsehood. ”""’ Wers sed in the breast of this wintry[speech. And they had not yet|the true realities—unconquerable seas édlm lay sv deep that only the most | rounded the Alaskan Peninsula Into r}:‘: ;;:::yp];‘z‘:: and winds from off and old, devotees to nature's|Bering Sea. ! Unlike Lendre, Ned's regrets were To Ned, the long north and west- ward journey had fi,ee“ even more a|not that he had ever launched forth upon the venture, Rather he found gecrets, could ever hear it beat, She d the unmistakable feeling that, in anj unguarded moment, she had blun- | revelation. He also knew the fear, [ VF ler . nt, swift sense of | himself regretting that he was not dered. into the camp of an enemy.|the disillusionme a b 2onb ol e Attan 19 ontend.withiit, TPerc weakness when before he EE——————0 haps, after all, his father had been Eyer.she discerned a malevolence in right and he had been wrong. For the murmur of the wind, a veritable threat in the soft voices of the night. The nights, her innate sense of artistry told her, were unspeakably beautiful. She had never -seen such ~ stars heforn. They were so large, so white, and yet so unutterably aloof. Sometimes the moon rose in a splash of silver, and its loveliness on the far was a thing that words couldn’t reach. Yet Lenore did not like things she could not put in words. For all their beauty those magic nights dismayed and disquieted her. They, too, were of the realities, and for all her past attitude of sophisti- cation, ‘she found that realism was the one thing she could not and dared not accept. Such realities as these, the wide-stretching seas and the in- finity of stars, were rapidly stripping her of her dearest delusions; and with them, the very strongholds of her being. Heretofore she had placed her faith in superficialities, finding strength for her spirit and bolstering up her self-respect with such things BIG EATERS GET ~ KIDNEY TROUBLE Take Salts at First Sign of Bladder Irritation or Backache. B The American men and women must guard constantly against Kid- ney trouble, because we eat often too much red meat and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric aeld which the kidneys strive to filter | out; they weaken from overwork, he- come sluggish, the eliminative tissues clog and the result 1s kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general de-| cline in health. 4 . When your kidneys feel like Tumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are p obliged to see relief two or three L times during the night; if you suffer - with - sick headache, or dizzy, ner-| vous spells, acid stomach, or if you have rheumatism when the weather i bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Balts; take A tablespoonful in a glass of water he- | fore breakfast for a few days and | your kidneys may then act fine famous salts is made from the acid o grapes and lemon juice, combined with | . Ithia, and has been used for gener-| ! ations to flush and stimulate clogged | E Kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the | ‘ upine S0 it no longer is a source of ir- 2 ritation, thus often ending bladder disorders. Jad Saits is Inexpensive: cannot in- | inakes a delightful effervescant | water beverage and belongs in honi¢, Dbecause nobody can| . mistake by having & good| widnzy Lushing any time. sl fl £ ¢ nsist! !disbetieve him. | Almost any disster Say Bayer, andl ' | could fall upon him here, in these () wastes of sunlit water, in the very Unless you see the name "“Bayer’’ on package or on tablets you are not get- d ting the genuine Bayer product pre- scribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of |empty seas were plaving tricks on his twelve tablets cost few cents; Drug-|imagination; he could conceive that gists also sell hottles of 24 and 100.|the journey of which his father had Aspirin is the trade mark of Manufacture of | of Salicylicacid. the first time in his life Ned feit the need of greater strength, of stronger sinews. What if his father had told the jtruth, and that strict trials awaited him here. It was no longer easy to ASPIRIN o shadow of polar ice. The sun itself had lost its warmth. It slanted down upon them from far to the south, and it seemed to be beguiling them, with its golden beauty on the waters, into some deadly trap that had been set for them still farther north. 1t left Ned some way apprehensive and dismayed. He wished he hadn't been so sure of himself, that he had taken greater pains. in his wasted years, to harden and train himself. Perhaps he was to be weighed in the | balance, and it was increasingly hard to believe that he would not be found wanting. In such a mood he recalled his father's words regarding that dread realm of test and trial that lay some- where beyond the world: “some bit- ter, dreadful training'camp for those Colds Headache that leave this world unfitted to go on Toothache Lumbago to a higher, better world.” He had Earache Rheumatism . |georned the thought at first, but now Neuralgia Pain, Pain he could hardly get out of his mind. It suggested some sort of an analogy with his present condition, These Bayer [ spoken might not be ®o greatly dif- neas of the stars, the wystery, the same sense impending trial and stress (Continued in Our Nest lasue) INDIAN BOY WRITES lates His Teachers' Ideals | — a— | |ation bas recsived a | India, who is now located in | Himalayan mountains with his fam- fly for the summer months, He writes in part: “After a month with |my family in these wonderful Hi- |malayas, & month which is supposed |to have been a vacation but which has |actually been spent in developing our | American school, I am off tomorrow for four months alone at my work In Lueknow, “Mrs, Hart is the honorary prinei- ‘pul of this new school for our Ameri- can kiddies, just started this year, and has twenty-seven enrelled and | for this reason must remain here un- tit November, “Looking one way from where | sit T can see the snows In such gran- deur as 1 can't describe and by turny ing my head in the other direction I can see away into the plains for miles and miles, As I look ahead to these lonely months of separation and think of leaving this wonderful spot and my little family you can see how 1 have to screw up my courage to do it “We are up 7400 feet here—high enough for a little shake last night by an garthquake—and it is delight- fully cool, but It will be very hot In Lucknow for th months still, “You may remember that 1 am do- ing community work here in Lucknow and the enclosed pamphlet will give you some idea of the approach to this delightful city, I have been do- ing some camping as you will see and am enclosing an essay one of the In- dian boys wrote as a part of his camp test, It is not good as English goes for English is difficult for these lads but these are his exact words and 1 thought your boys might like to know how he feels about it, “It is evident that these ideal we bring are being assimilated for even in this first year he knows ahout the Y. M. C. A, four-fold program, “Sincerely yours, “HENRY G. HART.” The Indian boy's essay referred to in Mr. Hart's letter follows: “The boy who wants to be a good camper, he should be pure in thought, word and deed: He may be able to run fast, should bhe interested in games and other activities. He should know swimming, cooking, wood cut- ting, that is, handicraft or wood- craft, and nature study. His health should be good and he should know different kinds of games and should be a good player. The boy should be near to his God and should he re- ligious. He should be a good speaker and should be able to draw the at- tentton of the public. The character of the hoy should be good. He should be honest, trustworthy and loyal to his leaders and officers. He should be friend and brother to each other, The boy who is always cheerful and happy is liked much by others. The boy should try to help others at any time or he should be helpful. He should be a good singer because sing- ers make a camp interesting. ““A boy who khows some good tricks which makes the public laugh, that boy is a better camper than who | knows nothing of thht sort. The boy them is one of the best campers. The boy who likes cleanliness and keeps all his things clean and is prepared always to do any kind of work and never discouraged if any failure comes but whistles and smiles under all difffculties makes the best camper, “In short the boy who is perfect in 1four-fold Program, that is, wHo is good in intellectual, physical, devo- tional and service and always tries to improve in these four things makes the best camper. “J. T. LALL, “Tent No., 1, Sat Tal Camp, “Himalayan Mountains, May 15, 1923" BILIOUS? If you have bad taste in mouth, foul breath, furred tongue, dull headache, drowsiness, disturbed sleep, mental depression yellow= ish skin—then you are bilious. SCHENCKS MANDRAKE PILLS quickly relieve this disorder, which is the result of liver derangement and severe digestive disturbance. Purely vegetable. _Plain or Sugar Coated, 80 YEARS’' CONTINUOUS SALE PROVES THEIR MERIT. ferent than this. There would he the same desolation, the same near-| Monoaceticacidester $ALESMAN $AM : BUT NOW WHEN | . GET HALF wAY AROUND | GET 50 Dr. 4. H. Schenok & Son, Philadelphia and #athering, ONSCOUT STANDARD who respects his leaders and obeys | In Lolty Himalayas, He Assink- | | The Young Men's Christian nuofl~| interesting l1et- | chamber of Comimerge at a speeial ter from Henry G. Mart of Lucknow, | meeting yesterday deeided to break the | off commereial and industrial rela- tions not enly with Italy hut alse with all Italian firms in Greece, | | | | Hockville, Sept regeiver for the tive Dairy Co., erganised age. notes with d 1o have iquidated. that Tege be Failure members of the company plete notes tendered for stoek pay- | ments, is givengas the reason for the company’'s diffieulties, END BUSINESS DEALINGS Athens, Sept; 6.—The Hebron Man Appointed Réceiver for Dairy Co —William G, Frese of Hebron has been appeinted Parmers Co.opera- Recelvership was ordered yes- |terday in the Tolland superior court where suit was entered by the coms papy against four stockholders asking which they pald for their six years e als stoek, of ecertaln 1o eom- Athepian Internal Baths </i|'¢-/!c-u[!/1 Find out how sands mfiflhm The_whole seemed In story is in & book—as FREE book. Call fog,your copy today. . XT WEEK Featuring B8 1) it “The Court — with — ORCHESTRA Jim Tenhrook—Danny dances, the like of wh have never seen before. that you will go wild They're Great See 'Em Sure .\l(l.‘\"-—-Tl'Efi.——\\'En. Special Big Time Vaudeville Attractions “BERNICIA” Old King Cole” | FRED FREY'S BERNICIAN Ethel Bixby and 15—~PEOPLE—15 Its a blaze of music, songs and Special Added Attractiod “THE VOLUNTEERS" An excellent offering and one OTHER BIG ACTS of Dove, ieh you about. uine Saturday, " Sept. 8, 1923 back, Ask for the CIOIYWMM“ or your WILL BE Paper on Page 10 . ‘The Big Red Letter Day IN NEW BRITAIN ead Our Announcement in Tomorrow’s Alex Auto Supply The World At Its Worst. [T WILUANS % FOR A TELT HAT, SIZE: 7V RETURNS WITH A7 ISN'T T WHEN YOU INSIST IT'S THERE ANY 7'4's THE STORE Too Far a Walk ' 'VE GOTTA TURN mo%?g AND VESHIR- '™ BLL \N-NOTA & 0’ PEP LEFT- CAN NOU HELP ME? CLERK. LISTENS ATTENT- IVELY TO YOUR REQUEST TINDS SIZE TAG MIs— SING, BUT ASSURES YOU AND SAYS YOU LOOK IT'S A 778 YOU WANT TIGHT, HE TURNS AND ASKS MR WICKLE ARE 35 EXAMINES YOUR OLD HAT. YOU MURMUR 1T'S A 74 AND SAYS HAPPILY IT'S YOU WANT - APTER. VERY MUCH TOO Bi6¢ SEARCHING THE SHELV- £S, HE RETURNSe WITH A 7/ AND SAYS TRY, THIS ONE ™0 SIGHS WEARILY IN TABLE (CY Wheeler Syn. Inc. Q0V BET- EVERY MORNING TAHE. B DOSE OF TS "PEPO AND WALK AROUND TH' BLOWA ONCE~ BECINS TOSSING T'S ON TO THE AND 7% ETC (o WELL, OLD “TMER- GETTING ANY OF NOUR STRENGTH SURVEYS YOU CARE: PULLY IN THE 78 VERY WELL INIT DECLARES A LITTLE STRETCHING WILL FIX IT ALLRIGHT ADMITS RELUCT - ANTLY THAT 1T SEEMS TO PIT ALLRIGHT, BUT ADDS THAT A T——T" By GLUYAS WILLIAMS Getting the Right Size Hat (As the Customer Sees It.) YOU CAN HAVE A WANT IT SEEMS TOO SMALL oD HIS HANDS OF THE, WHOLE AFFAIR BY SWAN NAW - FOR TH' FiRST c%m DRMS | WAS* LE. TO WALK BROUND ™ BLOK ALLRIGHT | LARGER S$IZE IF VO POINTS OUT THAT IP IT, IS ONLY BECAUSE Yo ARE USED T© YOUR. HAT 3 HANDS YOU YOUR. PUR CHASE WITH THE AIR OF WISHING TO WASH L]