BACK TO "Where do you reckon to make for in the Marquesas?" Tom asked the capâ€" tain, as they sat one night over their evening meal. It had been served under the awning on the after deck, for the weather was very hot and the evenâ€" ing air welcome. "I go to Marchandâ€"a big island," reâ€" plied Costa. ‘"There the French have officers and people who rule the natives, Much more is doinz than of old, but still not very much, I have never been there myself, but talked witn those who have. The islands are rich in bananas and sugarâ€"cane and green things, One cannot say how the great wave served them. They, too, are volcanic and perâ€" haps, like Table Top, they may not be there any more." But the verdureâ€"clad Marquesas broke the sea horizon twelve hours later and glimmered deliciously like jade jewels lifting out of a purple ocean. Morning set their faces glowing and the green islands gradually limned out of a golden haze with grey mountain peaks ascendâ€" ing awbove their pasture and forest. They dropped anchor in a little bay towards evening and received a friendly welcome at Marchand. The visit of the Iguana was an event, and Alymer deâ€" termined that she should stop here for week or two while her repairs were completed and her boilers scaled. Costa was content, and though the island authorities could grant no considerable supply of coal, they promised to furnish all that the ship would need to take her to Callao. Aylmer found quarters ashore, and they left the ship for a time, trusting their treasure chest with the captain, who alone knew of its existence and locked it in his cabin safe. He was deeply interested, for they had told him every particular of the story, and he hoped that they might find a grand reâ€" ward. They had the reâ€" ceptacle but "made no attempt to open it. Indeed such a task promised to be difficult, for the metal box revealed neither lid nor lock. No aperture could be discovered, and it was black and rusted with the cinders and sulphur in which it hadâ€"reposed for half a century and more. Under the scratch of a knife the encrustations came off easily, to show that the little chest itself was made of silver. The islands had felt the upheaval and suffered from the tidal wave upon their northern shores,. The travellers heard sad tale of the disaster, for many native craft were dashed to pieces upon the strands, many homes Gdestroyed with loss of life, and Marchand was in mourning for her dead. From the broadcasting station ashore they were able to learn news and disâ€" patch telegrams. They heard that the mainland® had suffered severe earth tremors but no serious damage, and the volcanic chain of the Cordilleras was quiescent. "The safety valve lay far out in the ocean this time," said Maine, " but I tremble for Lima when I think what may happen ‘to her in years to come. # a “. # L ## + # #4 #* ## Â¥ine! Â¥XC, JULY 20TH, 1939 Mn ltp lip l in in in in in in ty in in is in i in i inainainley dep in in ind dep in dep in l in in ep y dn i y dip in iep in in i in is es dip in y y in i PUBLISHED BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT COPYRIGHT g *# %?xofxo fuatnatnatna®netsetes «te«® 00000000 neluetestnatn« welee Its action is so powerfully penetrating that the itching is instantly stopped:; and In a short time you are rid of that botherâ€" some, flery eczrema. The same is true of Barber‘s itch, Salt Rheum, Itching Toes and Feetâ€"other irritating unsightly skin troubles. You can obtain Moone‘s Emerald Oil in the original bottles at any modern drug store. It is sate to usoeâ€"and tailure in an ot the ailments noted above is rare Indeed. MOISLEY BALL DRUG STORE Here is a clean, stainless antiseptic oil now di sed by chemists at trifling cost, that will do more to help you get rid of your troublesthan anything you‘ve ever Fiery, Itching Toes and Feet CHAPTER XV (Continued) T ABLE Eden Phillpotts "We‘ll try it on Jacob Fernandez," decided Tom. "Perhaps he‘ll pretend to believe it out of his Spanish courtesy," thought Jane: but Angus felt sure that the old man would not. "We shall see like a shot if he believes it," he said. "IL think he will. He knows that Tom and I are not inventive sort of people, and I‘m sure he‘ll feel that you would never tell wicked stories. As far as the island is concerned we‘ve got Costa and his crew to back us up. And we‘ve also got the treasure,. The real snag in my opinion is the spiders. Only we and poor Felice saw them. If we could have brought a dead spider or found some of their egazsâ€"to hatch out when we got home $f CHAPTER XVI JACORB FERNANDEZ AGAIN The little Iguana enjoyed fair cruisâ€" ing on her long voyage east to Callao, and only one spell of rough weather was eneccountered. "That applies to everybody," said Angus. "I‘m not at all sure whether we ought not to be a bit vazueâ€"not so much for other people‘s peace of mind as our own credit,. The truth is rather unbelievable when you look at it calmly and without bias. It doesn‘t get any better as we leave it behind us." Arrived, the travellers took regretful farewell of the master and his crew, promising faithfuly enough that if they were again inspired to seek for advenâ€" ture in the Pacific, Captain Costa shoud be the first to hear of it. Once more, Tom entertained the ship‘s company in port, and gave every hand a handsome present. The I:zuana was remaining to refit and seek for cargo before she went north, but Aylmer, Maine and Jan» Bradshaw quickly set out for Lima to face such complications as awaited them. Felice Pardo‘s mother now knew of his death, but the details would be set before her by Tom; while concerning the interview, he proposed first to see Jacob Fernandez and beg the old man for his advice. He also had yet to learn the fate of the mine, and there grew in him a strong inclination to keep it, unâ€" less Fernandez should prove anxious to purchase and willing to pay the large sum involved. "She will have got used to the sad thought of poor Felice‘s end," said the girl, "and it will be less distressing for you when you meet her. She‘s going to want to know all the details naturalâ€" ly, and the details are such a nightâ€" mare, that you‘ll have to consider what to tell her and what not to tell her." He was welcomed by his staff, and found a spirit of unrest, both at Lima and Mount Atajo, occasioned by the investigations and tne rumours to which they had given rise. His first him to dine with the old man upon the turn, and there came an Invitation for she told him, "but we didn‘t get "Then don‘t contemplate it," be:ged sane. "Think of the buried cities and the Inca wonders we are all going to unearth some day." Aylmer gave an entertainment for the crew of the Iguana on Marchand and feasted them at a great picnic upon the shore. The travellers had created a pretty close friendship between themâ€" selves and the sailors, and Captain Costa cordially hoped that, if ever minded to sail the Pacific again, they would call upon him and his ship. At the advice of Jane, Tom had sent an acrial message to Anita Pardo in Lima informing her of the death of her son. "On, dfm’t! said Jane. "I‘d much rather be called a liar to the end of my life than have done that." She is the most beautiful and noble city in South America, and a real big earthâ€" quake there is too awful to contemâ€" plate." wates #+* # # # ## #. # #* ##* ## #* #4 # # ®# # #. * .... #* w # # L3 #4 *4 w« Tom and Angus were yawning in the darkness of the garden room, and now Jacob invited them to talk. "The monarch of us all," declared Jacob. "What does Hudson say about my quotation? He knew men better than the French author but did not put his faith in them. Indeed he holds Michelet‘s poetry as no more than a vain dream. Not by writing an eloâ€" quent book could the author leaven the dull and brutish mass of his countryâ€" men‘s thought. To a Michelet, the bird may indeed be a soul; but he cannot make Michelets of other men. For the human world its birds remain creatures even more soulless than themselves. To most of mankind the fsathered races exist for one purpose only â€" namely, that he shall have the pleasure of killâ€" ing and perhaps eating them; but in any case of killing them. Birdless France and Italy attest Hudson‘s bitter truth; but you have some respect for the avians in England and do not hasâ€" "You can‘t applaud us very much, however." declared Jane. ‘"We‘re pretty resolute killers still." "My news, such as it is, concerns Aylmer only and it will keep,." he said. ‘T‘ll visit him at his office toâ€"morrow if They chatted cheerfully about Jane‘s Gouldians and Jacob deplored the difâ€" ficulties these birds presented. "They are suCch bad fathers and mothers,"the said. "They build excelâ€" lent nosts and lay plenty of excellent eggs:;: then their interest ceases and they absolutely decline to do their duty." Tom and Angus found Jacob infinitely more interested in Jane than in themâ€" selves, and even after they had dined and retired to an openâ€"air chamiber outâ€" side the house, he persisted in talking birds. "To meet a fellow enthusiast, thouch one as yet hardly out of her childhood, is most attractive," said the Peruvian. "If you are spared to old age, Jane, you should know nearly all that can be called knowledge on your great subject." "How lovely and how true." cried Jane. "It sounds like my own greatest bird hero, W. H. Hudson!" Jane rejoiced in Lima and declared, as many had done before her, that she had never sen such a noble metropolis. Clad in a new dinner sown and carryâ€" ing a present of some little birds from the Marquesas, Jane drove with the men five miles out of Lima to a marble palace whore dwelt their new friend. "I‘d have loved to bring you some of the great yellow birds from Table Top," sh tcld him, "but we didn‘t get a chance to catch any of them. I have th> skin and bones of one. It may be new to science. You‘ll be sure to know. You must let it be set up, Signor, and I will tell you if it looks all right. How I got it is part of our wonderful story." "The story will be interesting, Jane I‘m sure of that," he answered, and then gave her his arm to dinner. The host addressed most of his conâ€" versation to Jane and talked about birds only. He asked after her parrot and congratulated her upon reading the bird‘s riddle, while she declared the praise was Jacob‘s own. "But for you, nobody would have known he had a riddle," she said. "You alone knew he wasn‘t talkinmzx his own language and told Tom to look into it. Everything turned on that." "so they do; but then you take their eggs to nest of a Japon, Bengalese finch," â€"she said. "You rob the poor Bengalese of their own clutch and let them hatch the Gouldians; and they rear them beautifully and do all the right things and, of course, think they are their own beautiful work." "It is the lovelieést subject in the world," she said/ "Have you read Michelet‘s LOiseau‘?" he asked, and Jane shook her head. "Then I shall lend it to you. He has the French emotionâ€"most beautiful. Michelet says this, Jane." Then Jacob quoted from memory. ‘"The winged orderâ€"the loftiest, the tenderest, the most sympathetic with manâ€"is that which man nowâ€"aâ€"days persecutes most cruelly. What, then, is required for its protection? To reveal the bird as soul, to show that it is an actual person.‘ " "Spare the sad details until after we have dined, young people," he said. "I did not know your fallen companion, but am glad to see that Tom and Angus and Jane are apparently none the worse. This is your future bride, I take it, Aylmer?" Jane was introduced. "Most kind of you to ask me too, Signor," she said, "and hearing from Tom of your glorious birds, and knowâ€" ing how famous you were, I broucht this pair of little island ones from the Marquesas for you." Jacob was instantly interested. ‘Now that was a beautiful thought," he said. "Yes, yesâ€"I know all about them. They are exceedingly welcome and quite rare." They laughed to see themselves in the garb of civilization, and all agreed that their ocean rags were much more comâ€" fortable. Jacob made them exceedingly welâ€" come, but asked after the fourth of their company and expressed sorrow to learn of his untimely end. put migrants to sudden death THE POMWUCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO your treasure, 1i indéeed bennys treaâ€" sure was hidden upon it." The past had become more or less a commonplace of existence to the travelâ€" lers, who already felt themselves widely separated from it in time. They told their extraordinary story without adoininent and it would have been hard to say whether Tom, or Angus, was the more fatterâ€"ofâ€"fact and devoid of literary charm. cream olate. agreeable and convenient, Now let me hear everything about your island and vour treasure, iï¬ indeed Benny‘s treaâ€" Thus we now have physicians who make a specialty of trying to discover the food or foods which cause disâ€" turbances. And just as the physician questions and tests for heart, liver, kidney or : blood vessel conditions, so these specialists test patients for food sensitiveness. This means then that they can‘t eat a headyâ€"made meal but must 2at a meal that is made to fit them â€" to fit their digestive system. Of course, it must be remembered that when one is tired, is emotionally disturbed, or working hard mentally, the whole digestive system may be upâ€" set, so that foods that would under ordinary circumstances cause no sympâ€" toms, may cause various disturbances. "Foods may cause upsets of stomach and intestine in a number of ways, chemical irritation by certain foods, the lawative elements in rhubarb and prunes causing diarrhea, delay in empâ€" tying time of the stomach when fats are eaten, the nausea or vomiting efâ€" fect, belching and return of the taste in the mouth from melons, cucumbers, and tomatoes, temperature irritation (as from cold liquids), or finally alâ€" lergy or sensitiveness to certain foods." These fortunate individuals have no hereditary conditions, no sensitiveness or allergy towards foods. Thus any "readyâ€"made" meal "fits" their diâ€" gestion. However, there is a large number of individuals who cannot eat a readyâ€" made meal, but have learned from exâ€" perience that there are certain foods that upset themâ€"bring out hives on the skin, cause vomiting or belching, headâ€" ache or other symptoms â€" and they quite sensibly avoid these foods. Fitting the Dict to the Individual Just as there are many men and woâ€" men who can walk into a store and buy a readyâ€"made suit of clothes that fits them properly so are there men and women who can eat heartily of a meal of any kind or all kinds of food and have not the slightest pain, irritation, discomfort, no headache, diarrhea, belâ€" ching of gas, vomiting or other sympâ€" tom. Jennine Lehr, American _ singer maintains Il Duce shattered her chances‘ of becoming the Duchess of Spoleto. She claims the duke wanted_ to marry her but Premier Mussolini had other plans, the duke marrying Princess Irene of Greece, on July 2. (by James W. Barton, M.D.) Blames Mussolini of PBoutrsg Ehat Bobp Screen Windows and Doors are Regular Lifeâ€"Savers Who was the first man~â€"or womanâ€"â€" who thought of screening doors and windows? ‘The history of discovery and invenâ€" tion fails to name this benefactor of mankind. Yet more lives have been saved in the last quarter of a century by the use of the simple screen door than can ever be calculated. Flies arg Serious Menace! to Health in Home. | BY J. W. S. McCullough, MD., DP H The first screen door or screen winâ€" dow may have been made a hundred years agoâ€"or more. But certainly it is only within the memory of the middleâ€" aged of tcday that this protection against filles came into common use. It is not lomt ago that if you went to the average country hotel for dinner that you had to fight for your food. Refore you could get a spoonful of s‘ixgar you had to chase away a regiment of flies. They covered every eatable in sight. On the farms they were worse than they were in the cities because of their preference for stables and barns. Laying their eggs in manure pilesâ€"or garbage or other disgusting. placesâ€" they flew into the house to carry filth wherever they alishted. The suppession of the common house fly may be accomplished by striking at its breeding places. Since automoâ€" biles have so largely replaced horses, there has been a notale abatement of the fly nuisance in cities. But there are other points of attack. One is the garâ€" bage receptacle. It should always be kept covered and the garbage wrapped boefre being placed in it. Outdoor toiâ€" lets are favorite spots for flies to lay their eggs and are an especially danâ€" gerous source of infection, the flies carrying the germs to the house. Where such open toilets are necessary, chlorâ€" ide of lime should be kept on hand and vsed freely. Summer camps should not only be protected in this manner but a chlorine solution should always be used in the washing of camp tables and dishrs. After all possible efforts are made to reduce the fly population there will still remain the problem of keeping the germ carriers away from human conâ€" tact. That is what makes door and winâ€" If there were no such thing as a germ, the very thought of the offensive nature of dirtâ€"carryving house flies makes one wonder how civilized people could have tolerated them for so long. Even today so many households, in town and country, are careless about the presence of flies that at this season of the year it may be especially timely to recite a few facts about the common house fly. A single female fly will lay about 120 eggs at one time. As it requires only 10 to 14 days for the growth of a genâ€" eration from egg to adult fly, there may be 12 generations in a summer. That means countless millions of flies from a sinzle fly during the summer season., Typhoid fever, cholera, dysentry and other intestinal infections are commonâ€" ly carried by flies. Tuberculosis, leprosy and many othe diseases are spread by these persistent enemies of mankind. Fliiss are not merely dirty in their contact between disgusting objects and exposed food but they are the carriers of disease. Biting flies, such as the horseâ€"fly, which abcounds particularly in stables and houses, infect by piercing the skin. Nonâ€"biting flies, such as the house fly transmit diseases by mechanical transâ€" fer of infection on their body and legs but especially with their excreta. Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Limited Schools Should Stress Development of the Fit In a recent issue of The Globe and Mail there was the following interestâ€" ing and thoughtful letter on the soâ€" called "New"* school system and its general effects:â€" To the Editor of The Globe and Mail: May I crave a little space to draw the attention of the public school to Miss Baskerville‘s letter in your edâ€" ition of July 6; As a teacher of long experience in elementary and high schools I to corroborate every word. The only fault I could find with it is that of understatement. In days gone by we had far more firstâ€"class students than we have toâ€"day. In fact toâ€"day we have hardly any except in schools were teachers can find time to keep students going at full speed by attention out of hours. Sugarâ€"coating and kindergarten methods ruin good pupils before they ever reach hign school. dow screening more than a mere comâ€" fortâ€"a protection against disease. Never let a fly into your house! "On recruiting an army for the Great War, the American Government colâ€" lected statistics. Among the deductions made I have been told was the stateâ€" ment that oneâ€"half of the recruits were incapable of profiting by secondary education. But more hard thinking in the TIMMINS, ONTARIO at the White Top Cabins Row Boats Canoes Swimming Conveniences Stop for Dinner or â€"Overnight Well Furnished Good Mceals 50¢ Comfortable beds Turkey Dinners on $1. per person sundays A GLORIOUS SPOT FOR A WEEK END TEMAGAMI, ONT . GEO. HUTCHINGS, Temagami, Ont On the Highway at Beautiful it will be the Highlight of your trip i The _ pause that ! rej%eshgs in authority Entrance par ties and on school Cana one of entrat beside one ( school studet primary schools w ars dropping into stress toâ€"day is th Globs and Mail:â€"There seems to be an incipient demand for an automobile which in certain cireumstances can be converted into a submarine. A â€" Quickâ€"Healing Salve for. Cyanide Rash, Eczema, â€" Psoriasis, Impetizo, â€" Salt Rheum, Itch, Chavs. and most skin ailments. 50¢.; $1.00 ; $2.00 sizes. (Medium and strong). At all Timmins, Schumacher and South Poreup‘ines Drug Stores. fit not the unfi leaders and strot partments of life "I would like t 63 Birch Street North > of entrance geor:raphy ol LhnAt d ide one of the second form hi 001 students of toâ€"day." A Chiel Amang Ye Takin‘ Notes." TIMMINS BOTTLING WORKS Phone 646â€"J ols would save many who into a class of permanent is the develcpment of the unfit. We never needed trong students in all deâ€" ife as we do now. e to challenge some one ) publish side by side an r in history of the nineâ€" of the recent middle an History papers, and e geor:raphy of that date the second form high s of toâ€"day." PACZE THRE® FOR SKIN DISEASES Timmins