New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 30, 1923, Page 20

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MATING NkW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1928, IN THE WILDS By OTFrWELL BINNS ILLUSTRATED g W~ *RALSATTERTF IBLD - % @120 ALFRED A KNOPP.ING BEGIN HERE TODAY Hubert Stane, who has been prison, rescues Helen Yardely as her canoe travels toward a dangerous waterfall Helen is niece to a gover- nor of the Hudson B Company. ‘They are camping ne northern post of the company Gerald Ainley, former friend of Stane, is in love with Helen While Helen and Stane are walking the trail to the governor's camp, Stane is se- verely injured in a fall A forest fire Lreaks builds a raft on which the flames. in out and Helen she and Stane They find a fee from deserted cabin STORY her NOW GO ON WITH THE She turned and resumed and singing at the same and Stane lay there looking at with the love shining plainiy in his eyes. The next day was spent in removal to the eabin further up the lake, both of them king at g the raft with all their stores. e cabin was well situated on a smnall bay where a fair-sized atream emptied into the lake, and behind it stretched the forest, dark and impenetrable. As he hobbled through the open door, £tane looked round, and under the bunk discovered a number of stee traps which the girl on her first visit had overlookéd. Also on & peg in a dark corner he found a set of dog's harness hung just as the owner had feft it, probably months before He pointed the traps out to the girl. “As 1 guessed, it is a trapper's eabin, Miss Yardiey Any day may bring the owner back." Inside the cabin there was woodpile, and with a few logs and dried sticks she stove roaring, and then bega bestow their possess ticdly the time that was accomplished the shadows were creeping across the lake and deepening in the woods, and it was time for the evening meal, and when it was ready they ate it at the rough table, with a sense of safety and comfort that had long been lacking. “This place is quite cozy said Helen, looking round the firelit cabin “Tomorrow I shall make a curtain for the doorway out of caribou okins."” ®he broke off suddenly sparkle of interest came in Pointing to the pile of woor corner she eried ‘Mr. Stane, | sure there is something hidden under that wood.” Stane stared at the stacked-up logs a slight look of apprehension on his face. The girl langhed she caught the look 1t is hing alarmed at; but t ORS are leading I am sure can see soniet] it is 1 to find out Rising quick down the ered a larg some time or another had ained bis cuits. Pursuing nvestigations she uncovered two similar tins and for a ste regarding them with Then she lifted one “What L & minute of the mouth, tasted it “Flour! You “You seem wonderingly “I am,” he “Rut—we it were gold could 20 according to t work time, her ittle choser n had the a By and er eye for at one place 1 What L L gleaming don't kne but 1 am YW moment rious eyes 127 asked Stane It looks took u eontents and lifting | Flot fon't say? alighted in t know She pine to her ke ma eplied 1 One always v eerted cAhin hooke And we find f raioice “1 do, “Miss Yardely, th eend We told me, only a pour and 1 was afraid that we might have to live meat fish alone, and you don't know what that means. 1 do! 1 lived for weeke o moose meat iast winter and 1 haven't forgotten it yet For ® make open the other tir The girl oheyed the remaining tins reves tents. One held of rice and the other filled with beans To Stane the stores was a great than the girl knew he had no fea for good game country, but he MRS, HINCKLEY NERVOUS WRECK ‘ells Women How She Was Restored to Perfect Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound answere at flour god you oft were very short, as or two three m, and presently led their co pounds ree parts vas th greater starvation were Of they Mempbis, Tenn.—*“ Two years ago | ‘was eompletely run-down and myner ves were a wreck. | cou ! k.1 could ] t sweep a room without resting. 1 | 14 not do my work | llexcept a little at a - timo and_the doe- jJtor’s medicine did flinot help me. One day some one threw nials of women who had beenlike myself. ani got me a bottle of ham’s Vegetable Com- . 1 do all of my own work and could do more. I can mfl‘uy that R s Vegetat me my beaith.”"—Mrs. INCKLEY, 316 Union Ave., Mem- E Pinkbam’s Private Text- ““ Ailments Peculiar to upon * will be gent free re- Write to The L’m E. am Co., Lynn, Mass. aoptains valusbie Edormation. ©UEINT A SERVICY. ING) danger of a meat diet alons, and now that for the time being that was eliminated, he was correspond- Ingly rellevad; the more so when, two mornings later, the door of the hut being opened they beheld a thin pow- { ghot-llke snow. “Winter is here!” sald Helen, a ittle sobered at the sight of the white pail | some excitement, |as his own had been, gor | He swung roun and dimly throug the darkness described a fmire re- treating rapidly northwards, The retreating figure never paused ver looked around, but kept on -line over the untrodden snow. ou saw him?” Helen cried In “No, 1 saw her!” "It was a woman." Helen's surprise was as complete answered Staze. He walted = moment, then he ut- tered the thought which had been in his mind. When the storm is over and there s a crust on the snow we will go| exploring together. We may find the camp from which this woman comes. If the air keeps still through the night, it will be qu' easy to follow her tral! in the snow.” But in the night there was both| “You found wind and snow and on the morrow the woman's trail was quite obliter- No more snow fell for over a fort- |ated and the snow on the lake made night, and during that time, despite traveling impossible. Helen Yardely the cold, Stane spe many hours noted the fact without regret, racticing walking without crutches. “There will be no exploring party Then at the close of & dull, dark day |today,” she sald, “so I will go and the wind began to blow across the look at my rabbit snares.” ake, whistling and howling in the “And T will accompany you,” an- trees behind .and the cold it brought swered Stane, “the walk in the snow with it penetrated the cabin, driving | will help to take the stiffness out of them closer to the stove. All night ' my leg." it hlew. and once, waking hehind the They set out together, but had gone tent canvas with which the where she slept was screened, girl caught a rattie on the wooden walls of the cabin, that sounded as it it were being peppered with innumer- Seated by the stove “Yes," he answered. this hut just in time.” the | sharp “Hist!" “What s it?" he asked quietly, some kind “There is a man in those bushes in bunk but a littie way when the girl gave a | thinking that she had seen game of | 'VOICES IN THE AIR | o Friday, !iv;ib: 80, 19! . (Westinghouse—Bast Pittsburgh). 6:16 p. m.—Organ recital by Lucile Hale from the Cameo Motion Picture theater, Pittsburgh, 7:30 p. m~'"The Power of the Early Church” the Sunday 8chool lesson for Dec. 2, presented by Dr. R. L. Lanning. 7:45 p. m,—"A Trip with Santa"” by Banta Claus from Rosenbaum's Toy Town. 8:00 p. m.~National Stockman and | tarmer market reports. | 15 p. m.~—Radio Boy Scout meet- ing conducted by Richard Vietor, Scoutmaster. 8:45 p. m.—Concert by the Blue | Ridge Division quartet composed of Charles L. Bllleter, first tenor; Hamer Gardner, second temor; J. A. Rogers, bass; Willard Hamiiton, second bass; Raymond Bandi, violin. WBZ (Westinghouse—Springfield) 6:00 p. m.—Dinner concert by the | WBZ Quintett 7:00 p. m.—"The Challenge,” a dramatized story from the Youth's Companion 30 p. m.—Twilight tales for the Current Book Review, by | kiddies. able pellets front of us” she anawered in a whisper. They advanced together. Stane one With his rifle ready for action,, since fire a presence that avoided them might “No!” answered Stane quickly. Well prove to be an inimical one. He “Just a couple of trees whose hearts Watched the bushes steadily as they have burst with the cold There ' 8dvanced but saw nothing and when will be no one abroad this weather. they reached them, thinking that the _— girl had been mistaken, he thrust his | way through them. Then he stood | quite still with an anxious leok upon his face There was no one behind the bushes, but there were the marks of moccasined feet in the snow, CHAPTER XV. A Face at the Tent-Door cried Helen. “Look!" ey had almost reached the eabin on t ourney and were full in view of the lake after breakfast, Helen was startied by a brace of cracks like those of a pis- tol. Rhe started up. { ‘What Some was that? e return (Continued in Our Next [ssue) French People Dislike Exploding English Coal Paris, Nov. 30.—~When the people of Paris, during the cold weather last | winter, used FEnglish hard coal in | stoves to heat their apartments, they began to notice * explosions In the burners that occasionally did serious damage. The trouble was ascribed to gas generated by the burning coal. Investigations last summer have proved this was not the cause of the | teouble, It is now declared that the | English miners, in getting out hard | conl, used explosives which sometimes did not always explode Small fragments remained in the coal, and brought disaster to not a few domes. | tie heating plants in the French eapi- | tal | » o \\“\\nfl - STANE CAML UPON A SNOW-SHOY SUDDENLY TRAIL Rut in that " wus mistaken. For when, in the early afternoon, wrapped in the fur gare ments which the girl had manufac. tured at their old camp, they ven. tured forth, not twenty vards away from the Stane came suddenly upon a broad snow.shoe trail. At the sight of it he stopped dead ‘What is it?" asked the kiy Some one } hut girl SAVED Fourteon-Year-Old Girl Saved as been here,” he said, Without saying | began to follow few minuttes had made it ake and had been =0 interested in the cabin as to walk all around it The tracks of great webhed.shoes spoke emselves a Helen could read the signs plainly CHAPTER owing ke in a curious from anything the trai realized that whoever down the voice further he d withi the Critical Age ! When Sa Many Girls Go Into a De. Consumption at had come cline. This Girl was Restored to Robust Health by Allen’s Tung for Healer X1y aga I MRS JACKSON'S LETTER wa driving wind and about t of doors would folly, and the fashioning now would be could ture was engaged in cabin had that v d m any ed to lenk in and mess Mr. H.J Dear 8ir restored hy Allen Your Lung Healer has 14syear-old niece to per. fect health from the verge con. sumption. &he had & severe cough all last winter, which, an we could do for her, semed to take n stronger hold. She hegan to fade and lose her appetite and strength and to grow thing and pale. Every breath of enld air caused severe conghing. Her lungs and pained her a great dea coughed up great lumps of phlegm We sent her to the cou for the summer, but she seemed no better this fall. As her father died of con- sumption helieved she was in the grip of the dread disease. Hearing the wonderful work of Allen's Lung Healer, we it lerful wreath rmont of in spite of preparing the alr ¢ omestici probably have utterls aied stranger wi H then 6 had chane became sore stooped o annauneced 1 think ready, and 1 pan and she this r won s try ha ord t helie r home conld 11 my will put the and after the and hler away it snow.-shoe will dine nas i1l sleep of broken by them decided to gi a results were almost miracu iz gone after using one bottle and the hottle cured now and strong fesh, ecats b tria a most after irely well ous, as the co was a second st ent Rhe is thy perfec regained her lost without feeling remedy The Great coldest weather any bad effects of ca this whick Live 1 is due [ should he ea Saver.’ MRE CLARA 107 Wymar This letter was written IACKSON St West bynn cars ago & Heally iren and mother this gir is " Brainerd £old ir Clark & Drug $ALESMAN $AM BAWGONT P0P- (™ GONNA SHOOT ) / A (OUPLA RapdiTy BEFOAE MILLY || AND | (0 BBiA - EVEN (F | WefTA || 0T BT £ N & GROERY M ANOTHER LIFE Book store. Farmers' Period—"Buy- Distributing the Farmers’ * by Howard W. Sel- Eastern States ing and Raw Materials, by, general manager, Farmers' Exchange. | 11:00 p. m.—Program of Chamber | Music by the WBZ Quintette and M | Harry G. Kitson, Soprano. Mrs. | Miriam Munyan Thomson, accom- panist. ; WGl (American Radio and Research Corp., Medford Hillside, Mass.) 6:15 p. m.—Code practice. L son No. 176 6:40 p. m.—Boston 6:45 p. m.—Late Sports news, | 7:15 p. m.—Talk by John J. Row- lands, editor of “National Sportsman | Magazine.” | 7:30 p. m., — Evening program. First, sclected verses by Charles L. rH. Wagner, radio poet; second, mu- sical program by the Cambridge Sal- vation Army band; third, Red Cross health talk under the auspices of the | Metropolitan chapter of the Amer- |ican Red Cross, by Henry Copley Greene, reporis. flashes. police news WEAF (American Telephone and Telegraph Co., New York City. 7:30 p. m.—Dally sport talk Thornton Fisher. Gertrude planist; Emma Gilbert, cont g Songs by the Abraham and Strauss choral soclety, Brooklyn, N. Y. WGY Eleetric Co. | NYO 6:00 p. m.—Produce and stock market quotations; news bulletins. 6:30 p. m.—Children's program. 7:85 p. m.—Health talk, N. State Dept. of Health. 7:45 p. m~—Radio comedy drama “Shavings,” by WGY Players 10:30 p. m.—Union College pro- gram including cducational addresses by members of Unfon College facully. (General Schenectady, WRC Corp. of America—Wash- ington, D. C.) (Radio 6.00 p. m.—<Children’'s Hour Pegey Albion 8:00 p. m.—Piano recital by Ges. | trnde Emallwood £:15 p.m Sale 8:30 p. m.—Violin recital by ander Podnox Rith p Jam Shanahan a:00 p [ m.--Song recital hy Wile m.—A talk on army mat- Concert the band by United States Army WIZ (Aeolian New York Ha City) 7:50 p. m.—Looseleal eurrent topics 5:45 p Curtous,” Travel clu Night eon 1 Holland Wert and the Qu Harnitz int America Legion Aldred Wi P anged by the | | LEAGUE. ANALYZES FINANGES OF EUROPE Experts at Work on the Money Matters of Foreign Nations- Geneva, Nov. 30.—In view of pres- ent plans to hasten a settiment of reparations problem, with the co- operation, if possible, of the United States, special interest attaches to a review of the fimancial position of 14 countries, mostly FEuropean, together with certain remarks on the German reparation question, econtained in a memorandum issued by the league of natlons. The reports shows that in been adopted and considerable sav- ings have been effected, although the ever-increasing burden of the public | debt has in many ecases swallowed up | what may have been saved by cutting down the administration. The de- velopment of the public debt has been compared with the changes in the | price level, ie. the nominal amount |of the debt has been divided by the wholesale price index number, and in this way reduced to pre-war price level., When this is done it is seen that the French debt has risen to R. A MacDonald of the Court Square|tpree fimes the amount of the pre- war debt, the British debt to seven times the amount, and the American debt to nearly 13 times the amount of the pre-war debt. NEW VIM FOR WEAK, | | / OU car’t enjoy your work or 1Y have your nhf‘re of m;:{l% pleasures unless you get ri that run down Ieelini and purify and enrich your thin blood. Begin right now to take Gude’s Pepto-Mangan. You'll get up in reches a1 g0 through. the day , & Toug y with eolg; Gude’s will help 1 to increase your bodily Free Trial Tablets [os, i zooret ;n- Trial Package o™k B0 % Bciioniat o Warren S N 7. . Qude’s Pepto-Mangan | | Tonic and Blood Enricher A Health Food for - Frail Children I g $CO (B8 T by | | Song recital by Cecele | Alex. | | | * Bedtime Stories. most countries a retrenchment policy has The Cup That Cheers” delicious "SALAD TEHEA A’ refroohés. stimulates and invigorates. Ask your grocer for it today. At the aame time, it is pointed out that before the war France had, per head of her population, & much high- er debt than Great Britain or the United States and also that, in these two last named countries, deflation has considerably increased the public debt. It is rather remarkable, says the report, that the two countries in which the public debt shows the greatest real increase are the only countries which have been able to make any substantial repayments of thelir debts. Leaving out of account Germany, where the interior debt has been prac- tically wiped out by the enormous in- flation, the country which can boast the smallest increase in its public debt in Finland, and after Finland come South Africa, Switzerland and Bweden. Bpecial care has been taken to pre- sent full information regarding for- ial;n debts and claims on foreign gov- |érnments. The debt is shown both in |the currency in which it is payable |and’ in domestic currency, the rates of conversion being indicated in each case, The act passed by the United Btates congress for funding the Brit- ish debt is quoted, and other impor- tant statements of international in- debtedness are also set out. It is interesting to note, concludes the report, that private individuals of |the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzer- land have to a great extent repur- | ehased the loans issued by these coun- tries In America during 1919, 1920 land 192 DUKE OFFERS TREASURES POR SALE IN AMERICA Erust August of Cumberland, 78, and Hard Up, Would Sell Jewels of the Guelphs Vienna, Nov, 30-—Duke Ernst Aug- |ust of Cumberland, 78 and hard up, is said to be negotiating with Paris Jewelers for the sale to an American of treasures of the Guelphs. These | ke brought to Austria when he was forced to leave Hannover, over which prineipality he ruled until it was ab- sorbed by Prussia after the Austro- Prussian war in 1860, The price men. tioned is $80,000,000. Austria has ohjected to the expor- tation of the art objects, but the duke has replied that they were never g public museums, that Austria has no claim on them and that the country will lose the 59 per cent export tax if it interferes. He claims the right to dispose of them as he pleases. The duke’s son, the Duke of Bruns- wick, married the only daughter of the former kaiser in 1912, The duke's willingness to sell the Hannover plate is regarded as an indication that he has abandoned all hope of having his family restored to power in Hannover. The United States public heaith service was organized 125 years ago under the name of the marine hospi- tal service for the medical and surgi- It's Easy—If You Know Dr. fimm;‘fodo this you must watch your under your cent of all sickness comes from in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com= patients for years. action yet always effective. e system of impurities. cal care of merchant seamen. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel ver wels—there’s no need of having a sallow com| . look in your g'- with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician pound mixed with olive oil toact on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, are gentle in their about that natural buoyancy should enjoy by up the liver and clearin Dr.&m'ouvmum are known by their olive color. 15¢ and 30c. ask for Horlick’s Tt ORIGINAL Malted Milk m Food-Drink for All aes Home,Officea F' Milk, Malted Grain Extractia Pow- dera Tabletforms. Nourishing-No cooking. 9" Avoid Imitations and Substitutes y GLUYAS WILLIAMS When the Cat Doesn't Show Up. L _ ¢ AFTER WALF AN HOUR OF INDECH S1I0M AND FREGUENT EACURSIONS LA PRALRESS TO BED 15 HALTED SAYS ME'S CALLED AND ME'S CALLED REST OF FAMILY TROOPS OUT AND THE (AT WONT COME IN AND HANG 1T, IT'S TIME TO GO 0 BACKDOOR TAMILY STARTS TOR BED, HALTING MIDWAY WITH CHORUS | AT INCONVENIENT MOMENTS BV ONE OR THE OTHER 5 EMLAIMING THERE ! DIDNT | HEAR WIM THEN" TOTRY THEIR VOKES ON CAT WHILE FATMER MAINTAINS TAMILY COUNCIL GATHE ODE, WHETHER 1PS BLTTER TO WAIT UP, OR 60 T0 BED AND Dt RUNNING COMMENT mn&fi& RISk HAVING TO GET UP LATER N S TAMILY WHEELS AND TROTS DOWN A6AIN AND DECIDES IT SHUTTER IN THE KITCHEN | ANNOUNCES TIRMLY THAT THE CAT CAN STAY OUT TOR MUST HAVE BEEN THE SQUEAKV ALL OF WM MAKES ONE LAST P TD AFTER SPENDING AN HOUR OF SO BACK DOOR IN $TRETING UP AT EVERY ODD SOUND, THE HOUSL HOLD TINALLY SNK! cClure Newspaper Syndicate CAT INTO ALMO YING UNDER THE AS SOUND A SLEEP AS THE ITCHEN STOVE o WAL-TH' FIRST LOOK FOR ™ POLME 5 £70 19 1N oN

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