The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1917, Page 15

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| | , | | : Baste Be han tte. _ By Sophie ables of Everyday Folk g atid Old RTs, For Physical Preparedness Irene Loeb Couytight, WIT, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), ‘The Person With the Pui. NCE upon a time there was a Young man who had an influ- ential father., Tho father was @ dominant figure connec- tions. The youth, Clar- ence, was very proud of his father, for the father was » very much of @ Camere’ ‘wee leaning post for . the younger man. Mather paid all bis bills through yl i; and When any “influence” was for anything, father was on fob. Came the day when the young man finished school and father looked @hout to haye him enter some ente: rise, He found it. There was a good friend who was the President of @ large concern, and who had con- mMerable business dealings with tether. ®o father went to the President of Ms company and urged him to tuke fais son into the business. Father explained that he was willing to put @p some money for the son, and he felt sure that tle “dear boy” would make good. So the deal was closed ad Claregoe went into the business. ff course, having this pull of ‘6, which always, seemed ao easy get “py” with, he’ went Into the work with the air of a Caesar. That he came, be saw, and he expected conquer, Now this business was not an easy ome to learn. The men who had to the top and were drawin; salaries here were those who hi started from the ground up, as it were. Bo Clarence was told that the wise bei would be for him to follow in @ footsteps of such men. Oh, yes, he didn't mind that, and started in one of the lower departments, Here were the rough laborera—men who did the fundamental work in the whole scheme. Young Clarence felt himself very much superior to these men, and went among, them with supercilious air, which plainly satd: “I am only here simply to get @ line How I He How Politeness HEN I married Jim he was a brakeman on a local running out of New York. He made Money enough for us to live on economically, and as I had been broyght up to be thrifty, we got along very well. Jim seemed very “Ncontented. Of course, he wanted to Make more--every one does—but, és @ general thing, he did not bother hia Read much about the chances of pro- Motion, though he did his work well @mough to avoid complaint. I think he would have been a brakeman to this day if 1 hadn't happened to take & trip to Chicago, My mother was taken sick and sent for me to come to her, and Jim got mo a railroad) employee's pass through a friend of) Bis in tho office. He discovered also) that he knew a brakeman on the to him, I did this as soon us I could, and the brakeman introduced me to lis con- ductor, who was very kind to me on the trip. But I noticed that this was it a special favor to me, for he was joasant to every one, and never @eemed to mind explaining over and over again to nervous people just how. to change cars at the junction and ail eorts of puzzling things like that, No Matter how fussy thoy were he never aeomed to lose his patience, I stayed in Chicago a month and then mother got so much better that T started home and happened to take the train,on its return run. | was still more impressed by the tact and on what fou're doing; but soon I will bo at the top.” He made them feel that they were working FOR him instead of WITH him, Quite naturally they did not go out of their way much ,to show bim the big underlying elements in the work. ‘ He quickly graduated from this do- rtment into the next one and nally went through them all im the same surface-like manner, hardly getting any of tho real experience that bad made the other men. He reasoned why should HB hi to dif when he had @ pull. went “through” and secured an “offi. cial” position, It was not long until the men higher up realized that Clar- ence Was @ fixture who could be ex- pected to do very iittie in the process’ of making the enterprise grow. . They accepted him as guch and car- ried him along, his one asset being his father’s pall, and the bit of money nted. @ very good time, as he always had. Things came easy Se usual, and be began building castles in the air, of how he would erect a beautiful home, and marry one of the sweet girls of his set, and live hap- pily ayer after, But alae! and another alas! The best laid plans, &c. Father died sud- denly, as fathers sometimes have a way of doing. Also father’s business propositions were very much involved, When it came to a final settlement there was more Hapility than any- b> 0. oO f course Clarence wasn't grow! with it, though his’ @hare was very small compared to the others. As time @ent on, to make a long fable short, the progressive heads of the firm got together on a oonfer- ence of “why Clarence.” Ho was an unnécessary load. He Ris nothing to the busine: The ttle money his father had put in meant nothing to the concern, as they could hire somebody who would help the business expand. The arrange- mont was such that it could be easily broken, Thus Clarence was left high and dry with a few dollars, to face the future and without father’s pull, Pretty goon the money was gone,| and then Clarence had to get down to the bottom of things~in earnest, where young men who want to be “boss” should begin. He learned this moral: ,THE PERSON WITH A PULL | The Evening World Publishes These Exercises to | Men and Women Prepare for A Call to Sarometl Copyright, 1917, ty the Prom Publishingo, (The York Brening World), Third Set—Free Hand Exercise No. 7 ANY young men who are anxious to enijet have written and me how they could gain an inch or more in height, and I know this is an important question just now. The stretching are the best ones for this purpose and any movements which affect the waistline, legs and erme are valuable {n adding height, The transom swing, which ts practiced from @ stout curtain pole fastened in any doom way, is another strenuous but splendid exercise for short persons, Stand on a stool and grasp the pole with the hands, kick the stool away and swing and twist the body for @ minute or two several times a day, Do not overdo this, as {t may cause severe strain. Many experts and pugi+ Hsts claim that an inch or more may de added fo the height up to the age of thirty or more, but I am convinced that it is entirely possible to do a0 &. up to thp age of twenty-four and not a difficult matter at that. eo To-day's exercise is the simple “arm forward, downward” movement for the chest and shoulders, Practise it as follows: Assume the “at com- mand” position, and when you or the instructor commands “arms forward” raise them as shown fn the picture, Repeat this tep times. Readers who = have formed clubs must learn to call the movements by their proper names_— and at the right time, Z Answers to Health and Beauty Questions the cracked surface. Exvessively ary FRUITS FATTENING—ORS. . 4 t and hot fect cause thig and some- Penense nae and grapes are fattening, contain so: it and umes acidity, the only fruit which dos a pened to think of this ald business, that's all. I don't Callers in nagging so 1 never spoke about thia again. Before a year was out Jim was put on a longer pan which 3 FOOD—MRE. O. —— [meant a Fittie more money Ana ty 7p CONDIMENT peatny appetite dos | VEGETARIANS AARE D.: Tour not long before he w el 6 ta oF 0} . [of asthe most obliging man em tna |* pot need re tiegues, anid. strlotly speaking, those who eat exms, & road and when they made him a con- ductor In two years more I knew his | popularity with the passengers had something to do with it. in reste milk and cheese are not v te tloeuise cry Rear flavor ‘of poor &# these are anima egetarians, m\ Soode, king. Pepper, salt, mustard, BEST EXER | | nh nr aaa ewe ew dees, MENT ERENCE FO, TONG Senin rao ae jus water dri to overcome this condition, " ENERGY FOODS—M. B. C.: Fats, wugar, honey, cereals, eweet and white are some. Showing How a Man and a Maid Found Love in the Heart of Romance mometer under his partner’ er tongue, t) ore among them two of the crew arrived, reporting the te sweeps be fo J Pe A He Abo Capt. Oleson swore blasphemously dred and seven, Ie had burned out, those whose fondest desire was to drowning of Captain Oleson and of on that front Une MN ay tor! tne wom ANA and sent a house-boy to bring Oppressive as the heat had been, !t drag the rider in the sand and spring the one remaining boy. As for the tin of faa 74 well done, Part| row ANAEMIC CONDI<« whiskey and soda, Sheldon glanced Was now even more oppressive. Jt upon him and mash him jnto repul- Jessie, from what they told him, Shel- the shore, “iho ‘boat. was flung —MRS. F. R. G.: Iron is cere at the thermometer. was difficult to breathe, He panted sive nothingness. But thé automatic don could not tut conclude that sho full of water, the vent Wil lang) tainly necessary (ce “One hundred and seven,” be eald, for air, The faces and naked arms of pistol his belt with its rattling, was a total loss, Further to hearten 8pon the 7 ae ete pose to we should be introduced into the ovrright, McClure Newspaper Sradicate) “Poor Hughie.” tho house-boys were beaded with « ‘ death, and the auto- him, he wea burning up. And he out =. eee Saon had called arom vegetables and fruits SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING OMAPTPRA t. Oleson offered him some sweat, ing spirit In the man knew that at least another day must tie e Oi house-doys, whe, at/ contain it, Drug and inorgante Derld Sheldon, © young planter in the Eolomos WHTRKE: . “Marster,” ong of them ventured, himself, made them refrain and pass before he could undertake even hinly to Ue Veeeeacging the re-|ere not necessary for thoes who Bi Islands, finds himself threatened ty a rat _ COUldn't think of M—perforation, “big fella wind he come, strong fella buckle down to the task: of hauling the smallest dose of quinine, He on Roe tionta in the hospital, Re aod, Woegge and milk are among bia Wack laborers, ‘The island also f@ ig YOU know,” Sheldon said. too much.” him to safety through the storm. crawled under a heap of blankets, puae tarwes unable to rise up and advised. the grip of » vingue, and he bimgelf con scarcely He sent for a bor Sheldon nodded bis head but did Wet through and exhausted, he was and a little later found himself laugh- 1 ‘down the path to meet the new- o— drag around, a grave to be dug not look. He had a feeling—may, !t nevertheless surprised at tho ease ing aloud. He had surely reached the Ko Gown 94 tay "back in. the FOR CUTS ON HANDS8—Grornam packing-cases to be knocked together was # certitude—that all he had todo with which he got into a change of limit of disaster. Barring earthquak coe Mase ‘and watched for R.: You must 60 very eareful to CHAPTER Il into @ cottin, was to shut his eyes and let go, and clothing, Though he was fearfully oF tidal wave, the worst had already % ee thermometer registered one hun- tugged. = Ther = ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS. bd clean the wounds well with clean hot water ss been fair hell, CY Capt. that he would die, sink Into Immen- woul, he found himself actually feel-. befallen him, Since nothing worse Welln: thew sere: her te batts he|and then apply tincture of fodine to WO days passed and Sheldon Oleton began, then broke off to holp sity of rest. Mo know It. It wan very ing better, ‘Tho diseaso had spent Could happen, things imply had to Wownm Brood te ofn Ae Cuneta them, | felt that he could not grow TUmsdle to more whiskey. “It's bean. simple, All ho hud to do was closo lila jtaelf, and the mend had begua. mend, Bo it was, shivering under [CSUN on the, Wale aver her $708 BOG Jet Bol, for Ba ned. remohed.._« : + pe Lis blankets, that ‘he laughed, until @n- any weaker and live, much Contrary’ winds and calms. We've the stage whero Ne lived by Will gaia Slots atamnt Ret the fever.” he tn tou ecboys with heads toxetner, (eet, WRich he could ate were less make his four daily been driftin’ all about the shop for alone, His weary body seamed torn id, and at the way moment cased ie Bhe | Cottage Cheese in resolved to Ko to taking quinine ag MArvelled at the dovils that were IM vorytinized the hou 4 ge ranleiness of the conductor, I told it him when I got bome and as 6 as I atarted to describe him he int pted with: \ “I know who you mean. ‘Pleasant’ Smith, the boys call him. Every old ‘woman on the road, nll the fussy old gentlemen and cranks wait to take hig train and parents always put ebildren in his charge, when they have to send them over the road.” “Has he only been 80 good natured and OEE since he was a conduc- wert only wondering if that ‘wasn't one of the reasons why he held such an important position, You told me yourself that these long run conductors get very good salaries.” Jim looked rather scornful over this and remarked that conductors and brakemen, too, for that matter, had something more important to do than to be pleasant. But I'm rather stubborn when I get An idea so I continued, “Of course they have mething else to do. If betng pleasa was all T would make # fine conductor myself, but what 1) Mean is this, Take two men equally ten days. There's been ten thousand by the oncoming pangs of dissolu- i. se . i maunde (06 the seaplta sharks following us for the tucker tn, Io wus a fool to hang on. Ho %0M a@ ho was strong enough to dare, him. for some time she scene * bond Appetizing Dishes Dawn of tho third: day after the We've been throwin’ over to them, had died a score of deaths already, 7qll® crawled out on the veranda, CHAPTER IV. ntoadity, At la % speaking te ize vs ‘B4... trouble brought the Jessie's white ‘they was snappin’ at the Cars whea 4nd what was the use of prolonging Ba a faanen byt the wind, . of the men, who He nee Reef mE . ea sails in sight, Eignt miles away, {t We started to come ashore, I wisht it to two score deaths before he really Wan Feo eld led to oe wale, YX the second day of the Ter, mie Le tach co ater teat bale Ee Lf yn] Mi. . was not till two in the afternoon that 10 G0d a nor'wester'd come aibng an’ died? Not only waa he not afraid to Tin ging madie’ to two achieve, wed northweater, Sheldon waa wut of hia chair, and fell back . than mos end C lomons clea very much cheaper. the tight air fans enabled her to drop SWvg' yor it from the waterewater flesh and Weary spirit desired it, and ¢YOFY aecond or third sea broke clear In ¢ollapas from hia fever. helplessly, He waa murprised at the per. Every a a4 who 1001 Mke|pound contains more than three h cree! - d qgver her bow, Two flags w But the dysentory had size of the men, © loomed ° ike squares of flexible sheet-tro footers, and were heavy in propor=| ror pody building. It te also aevalu- filled there before an’ it was all right, But his mind that could will life or e ne 6 of convalescents |). ere y 5 a fresh courage @ud the tedious hours We had sixty recruits—full up, Gnd death still pulsed on. He saw the two JN® was blue, tho other red. Ha Berande, A scor tion, He bad never seen island a able source of energy, though not of waiting did not irk him. He gave my érewof fifteen, Wo've been bury- Whaleboats land on the beach, and kiew their meaning in tho Berande lingered in the hospital, but they ke them, They ware net pine eae alah a0 t0080 WIGS cobra n Lid his orders to the boss boya and made in’ them day aa’ night. The beggars tho sick, on stretchers or pick-a-back, Hrivale code "What are your in were tinproving hourly, There had [io tolgian elt eatures were! lowe that ite value in thie respect eam his regular trips to the hospital, won't live, damn them! They die out groaning and walling, go by in jiuauons’ | Bhall | attempt to land been but one more death—that of the /77' more regular, and even hand- |) Ae oie Se: oe Nothing mattered now, His troubles Of spite. Only three of my crew left lugubrious procession. He saw the , ween an wh ‘brother had wailed over greatly by serving it orimon ‘he signal locker and tho billiard B00, were at an end, He could Ne down 32,'t* ieee, Hive more down. Beven wid thought of the sick in the hee, 'ules, was the code itelt, by which him tnatend of brushing the fies ‘The woman—or girl, rather, he de.) With cream ae te o oymmonly Gomes clded—walked ali the verande| The following recipes suppll and take care of himself and proceed talkin'?” Dital. awe On the Taree cha eee Oe : toward him. ‘The (wo men waited atl the United States Department Py Pr to get well, Tho Jessic had arrived. “How many recrults left?” Sheldon The boss-boys were called and given ‘ialer | Lin the wet a ney On the morning of the fourth 48Y 4ny hoad of the steps, watching curt- His partner was on board, vigorous asked, orders to rope down the hospital {hh rd rio Neal teleost wi riculture illustrate ® number of ways sked. ¢ ital Mod fori Run to Neal Leland for of his fever Sheldon lay on the ver- ously. The airl was angry. He ; and fearty from #ix w recruiting , "Lost halt. Thirty lett Twenty with te two additions: Other boys i citer,” anda, gasing dimly out over the rag- could see that. Her gray eyes were|in which cottage cheese may be , und.” brought the coffin, a grotesque pate } ; on Malaita, He sould take charge bay ee ON id cold a Work of, packing-cases, and ‘under That Captain Oleson had been ex- ing ocoan, He had taken thirty flashing, and her lips were quivering, ved oe ae ane Gerende. ~ a © “That means another addition to his directions they laid Hughie Drum- pecting this signal was apparent by grains of quinine, and the drug Was thoueht, But the eyes were atriking. | co € (to i capital. We've got to eet mond in it, Half a dozen boys car- the celerity with which the shackles buzzing in his ears like a nest of hor- gana, lay ip the, steamer. chelr ie Be yr Rises brad ried It down the beach, while he rode Were knocked out of both anchor- neta, Once, opening his ever he naw pull in for the beach, He wondered You. Viaburi, ring big fella belj on the back of another, his arms (Hane | He slipped me anchers, leay- what he took to bo an hallucination. ‘They were large and wide apart, as the n ish at dinner, may be why only three sweeps were pulling, 5t7ng fella too much.” around the blac! neck, one hand ne, ees Bucret ne ao ei up U: Not far out, and coming In acros® they looked at him fre der level! made by ring legun beans Y ne wondered still more’ when, ‘The hande, called in from the fields clutching a prayer bock. ether. The Josgle swung off the Jessie's anchorage, he saw ® brows, Her face was 80/ of various kinds, cowpeas, pd, there Was 80 much delay in at that unwonted hour, were split While he read the service, the Jnter bel mel mageeil, then the fore. whaleboat’s nose thrust skyward on clear cut was it. Thore were other| peas), with cottage clic getting Dut of the boat, Then he un- into detachments, Some were sent blacks gazed apprehensively at ¢ all, double-reefed, wag run up. 9 a smoky crest and disappear natur- striking things about her—the cow- was away like a racehorse, clearing al - nalebont’ a bos at Gerstood. The three blacks who had into the woods to cut timber for dark line on the water, above Dalen’ an rr jearing ally as an actual whaleboat’s nos¢ boy stetson hat, the he Ile decided ¢hat they wore not gray| be used like meat rolls)—A large after all, or, at least, not all gray.| variety of rolls, suitable for serving ( ntile, OF » and add- Ing bread crumbs to make the mila. ry braids ture thick enough to form into & eompetent In their work and I would| been pulling started up the beac! house beams, others to cutting cane rolled and tumbled the racing clouds, (” oal with half @ cable should disappear, as it slid down the of brown halr, and the long Ned) roll, Beans are usually mashed, but be willing to bet that the courteous bagi toy . on Rane meat k grass for thatching, and forty of The first breath of the wind, faint ‘°nath to spare back of the sea. He knew that no 38 Colt's revolver that bung in 1t#/ peas or sinall lima beans may be and helpful man stood. @ quicker| white man, whom he recognized as them lifted a whale-boat above their and silken, tonio with life, fanned All that night, while equall after whaleboat should be out there and holster on her hip. ,, {Combined whole with bread crumbs hance of promotion than the man|the Jessie's captain, walked in front heads and carried It down to the sea, through his dry-baked body as he Squall smote Berande, uprooting trees, he was quite certain no men !2 “Pretty honpitality, T must a@ay,"!and cottage cheese, and enough of who only did just what he was|and opened the gate, then duopped Sheldon had gritted his teeth, pulled finished reading, Then came the overthrowing oopramheds, and rocking Holomona were mad enough to be was her reeting, “letting strangers the liquor in which the vegetables obliged to and. did not take the| behind to close It, Sheldon knew that his collapsing soul together, and second breath of the wind, an angry te house on tts tall piles, Sheldon «broad tn such a storm, wr ye ink or swim in your front yard.” have oked may be added to imuble to be pleasant to passengers.'|{t was Hughie Drummond who lay taken V Plantation into his gust, as the shovels worked rapidly, slept. He never wakened. Nor did — But the hallucination persisted. | / TI beg your pardon,” he stam- isister instead d had noticed that Jim was often) in the stretcher, and a mist came be- fist on: e, filling in the sand. So heavy was he change his position or dream, He minute later, ohancing to open ne me by a supreme effort dragging chopped spinach, a little brusque with people and 1|fore his eyes, He felt an overwhelm- ‘Have you seen the barometer?” the cust that Sheldon, still on his awoke, a new man, Furthermore, he eyes, he @aw the wile full himeeif to his feet lettuce may be wanted this to sink in, Not that he t smart enough, He hadn't hap- WEARING AWAY OF COINS DUE TO PERSPIRATION, CCORDING to an investigation recently» made by a British of- fieial the chief cauke for the wearing away of coins is not the mechanical rubbing due to long-con- tinued use, but is produced by the fatty acids contained in the perspira- thon conveyed to coins by the fingers of the persons handling them, says Popular Mechanics. These slowly corrode the baser metals, par- tleularly copper, with which the pre- clous metals of the money pieces aro alloyed. The corrosion, according to this authority, gives the coins a pitted ur spongy surface which easily rubs off, exposing new portions of alloy, ing desire to die, The disappoint- Captain Oleson asked, pausing at the feet, seized hold of his man-horse to Was hungry. It was @ week since length, and saw right into it His legs wabbled under him, and added. ent was too grea own bottom of the steps on his way to ape being blown away. Next food had passed his lips, He drank rose on the face of a wave, He saw with @ suffocating sensation he began| BOSTON ROAST—Ono pound ean tate of terrible Reiki, 4 iG oversee the disembarkation a i came the rain, a deluge, a straight, “ «lass of condensed cream, thinned @ix sweeps at work, and in ithe stern sinking to the floor, He was aware of vr equivalent quan. that it Was impossible to go on with sick, horizontal sheet that poured along with water, and by ten o'clock dared clearly outlined against the over- a fecble gratification aa ho saw solic ns: one-half pound his task of holding Berande Plantae | “No,” Sheldon answered, “Is it liko a river, defying gravitation. to take @ cup of beoftea. He was hanging wall white a man who tude leap into her eyes; then blackness ; bread crumbs; galt, tion tight gripped in his fist. en dqwn?" The black, With Sheldon mounted on Cheered, also, by the situation in the #tood erect, atic, awaying Ww © smote him, and, at the moment of beans or p thom the will of him flamed up again, and (‘It’s going down.” him, plunged ahead Into the thick of hospital. Despite the storm there. his welght on the asteering-sweep. siting him, his thought was that at through & meat grinder, Ad@ the he diregted the blacka to lay the “Then you'd ter sleep aboard it, stooping far forward and low to !4d been but one death, and there This he saw, and an elghth man who last, and for the first time tn his life, cheese and b 1 crumbs enough to pivetober on the floor, to-night,” was Sheldon's Judgement, the ground to avoid belng toppled was only one fresh case, while half a crouched in the bow and gazed shore- he had fainted. make the mixture suffciently sthff to Drummond, whom he had “Never mind the funeral, I'll wee to over backward. dozen boys crawled weakly away to ward. But what tied Sheldon ‘The ringing of the bie bell aroused be formed into a roll. Bake in & in health, was an emaciated poor Hughie, and Captain Oleson,” ‘He's sleeping out and far to- ‘he barracks, He wondered If it was waa tho sight of a woman in the him, He opened his eyes and found moderate oven, basting occastonally His closed eyes wera deep he called. “If you can see your way Might,” Sheldon quoted, as he thought ‘he wind that was blowing the disease #tern sheets. A woman she was, for that ho waa on the couch Indoora, A | with butter or othgr fat, and water, The shrivelled lips had to it, come ashore orrow and of the dead man tn the sand and the away and cleansing the land, @ braid of her hair was fying and glance at the clock told him that it Serve with tomato sau This dish ay from the teeth, and the lend me a hand, If you can't, send Tainwater trickling down upon the By eleven @ messenger arrived #he wae just in the act of recaptur- was 6, and from the direction the may be flavored with chopped onton®, k bones seemed bursting through the mate,” cold clay. %, despatched by ing it and stowing it away bencath gun's rays streamed into the room he cooked in butter or other fat amd ® the skin. Sheldon sent a house boy “Right O. I'll come myself, Mr, . 80 they fought thetr way back up Seelee, The Jesse had gone ashore &,24t that for all the world was like knew that it was morning, At first very little water until tender for his thermometer and glanced ques, Johnson's dead, wir, I forgot to tell tho beach, The other blacks caught halfway between the village and Neal 8 own “Baden-Powell,” he puzzled over something untoward PIMENTO = AND COTTAGE tioningly at the captain. you—three daya ago." hold of the man-horso and pulled and Island, It was not till nightfall that appeared behind the he was sure had happened. Then, on CHEESE ROAST—Two cuptule of Slack-water fever,” the captain — Sheldon turnod to his partner, call- Into view on thé tace the wall, he saw a Btetaon hang- cooked lima beans, one-fourth pound MIA Ween dike. chie Ser ate ine atmo a partner, calle oe — — —---— of the following one. Again he looked tng, and, beneath it, @ full ldgo- of cottage cheeso, five canned pimems unconaciour, > , into it, Tho men were dark-skinned belt and a long-barrelled 38 Colt's ree tos chop, orur sail. Put aoe a oy Hee ge eye got Robs, But diuanie Prugmene had ] K ING OF TH E K HYBER R IFLES and larger than solomon Is ra, volver. Tho sleuder girth of the belt the first t sredients through & 1 tery oard, . ched the end, rea wi i i , ; but the woman ho could p 66 told its feminine stor: Y em- meat ughh matter With YOU aw wneidon Mnvercetthte, | Bymera touch, Shel- Hf A Story of India, the Mysterious, and a Plot That Failed || Ws write” Hee red tiie whales Lent eetihe ake tonera [ada break’ onumiear until ean ; > "Sheldon don. eoulc In that the’ dying Sy ; ae “Good boatmen,” Sheldon‘ and tl i hn to form into a roll awered, as he bent over from the man's temp > Was going down Will Begin on This Page J verdint’ ane a ee Tee eee SRS en Wray oes SMe fiaebed bes | Aber TS fie care eae WAISSE GATS BOG Tnpented (ee Thee aren re ia Sune cowe, «I __ (hut Begin 9 June 18 aaa verdict, ag he © boat leap for- neath the level brows. tn the oven, basting occasionally with ward on the face of @ huge breaker, (To Be Continued.) butter or other fat and water,

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