‘I _NUVEMBE_I_I__Z6. 194s I run GUARDIAN, cnsntorrarowu PAGE SEVENTEEN izcAViaioR RECORDS Rear/um 75 " f/fl/V MK)’ ¢ EACH ‘or2rorz89i SUMMERS")! 8s CHARLOTTETOW a WE CARRY GENERAL Q nmcrmc Products of all kinds including REFRIGERATORS Visit our Store Carr's Electrical Sales and Service ice KENT sr. PHONE zisi PATTEBSUIFS have Tlie bcst watches The smartest styles I and i Tlis lowest prices. j ONLY l 15-95 and up plus tax Ie wise — Economise - Shop at PATTERSODPS Jewellery Store iilve It New Life ls tlie old bus burning oil--eoting gas? We'll re- juvenate it ior you by installing new rings and bearings, Qlllldlilfljlld raiocing valves, and cleaning and adjusting all moving ports. You'll drive away i» o liIgli-spitlled ‘vehicle. uonnc morons . res KENT srmr iiioiie en - I707 _ s " . Dhateau Sinister i l 6 c‘ 1 i l: Leslie Ieresford MNN} fiwvnus. xxraunm I "Oh, you're not suspect!” she laughed again. "And my idea. that —-what is happening-was never very convincing even to mo. I think my late relative must be the responsible party. 'I'hat's why I asked you about him, if you knew anything." "And, as I said, I'm sorry. but I don't." “But you do know something about Egypt?" Her question though he laughed: “After a good three years there, andinthe“ ’ “ " know something. But what can Egypt have to do with this-trouble of yours here?" "Quite a lot. I'm afraid. It's really because you let fall that you'd been some time in EBYDt that I started hinting at this trouble of mine. I suppose, when you were there. you never came across a man named Yousef Hus- seln?" puuled him, And now O'Hara, despite her seriousness, had to laugh. "Only one man?" he gasped. "Why if there's one Yousef Hussein in Egypt there must be thousands. Just as many as there are Smiths and Joneses in England." "But this one must be a Yousef Hussein of importance. and rich enough anyhow to be living over here in a villa.’ ' "In this vary place?" O'Hara asked quickly. not without reason and sudden inspiration. "If you walk over to that win- dow. and look down a little to your right, you can see the big white villa where this Yousef Hussein is living. He and another bevanflne his servant, and ' u-"v two other people-not Egyptians. Just now I rather think, the other two people have gone to Paris. But Yousef Hussein is at the villa. and so in his servant." "A big fellow with a scar right down one side of his face?" O'Hara promptly suspected. and she nod- ded “That's the gentleman, and s nasty one too." “So I've already discovered." O'Hara revealed to her. “As a mat- ier of fact, he was snooping around that lane outside the gates before you came along. It seemed to me that he had some interest in you. for he was watching the’ bend be- fore you came round it, and then he took cover in the wood all of a sudden-J’ "I expect. because he had caught sight of you outside the gates." she nodded. "I knew he was some- where about. That was why when I ssw you I'd such ti feeling of relief." WHO SENDS THE THREATS? "But-what did the fellow want with you?" O'Hara was by now be- coming impatient. eager to get at the roof of all this mystery." "The frightening game I talked about just now. Putting on the screw Wait. I'll show you something." She rose, walked over to a hand- some Inuls XV escrltoire, a drawer in which she unlocked with a, key on a tiny bunch she took from her handbag. she returned with son-ie papers in her hand, seated her- self again, and passed them to him. "They make pretty reading." aho said and began in pour out more tea while he persued the papers. Michael found them to be brief musages typewritten and without signature. Each was in quite cul- tured English. and differed in wording from the others. Ilrom first to last they were s crescendo of threats beginning mildly and ending in stark. terse, brutality. The latest summarised the rest. and added a little. "Now you know." it road. "Your heritage is tainted and you have no right to it. You must relinquish it to its true owners. Do not mll~ take patience ror pity. We are mer- ciless. At our own moment we shall come to demand restoration. l If you wish for life, be ready to obey." Nowhere in any of the messages was there anything more explicit or the slightest explanation of facts. They were so worded. O'Hara recognised. as to put the utmost fear into the average woman, without in the least gib- ing away the identity of the sen- ders in case the was not to be easily frightened. His first reaction to them was perhaps very natural. "Sheer silly melodrama!" he scoffed. "Some gang of crooks. who've heard you inherit/ed from old Mr. Payne. and hope to make profit out of it. I suppose you've shown these to the police?" "If I'd been in England I cer- tainly should have done so." she replied. "But here — well, I've not so much confidence." "The French police are every bit as good as ours." he told her. "You should have called them in right away." “And whet could those pieces of paper have told them any more than they told me?" she countered a little impatient. “They reached you by post." he ‘was suggesting, when ‘aha stopped im. "Nothing of the sort. They've leached me in all sorts of queer ways. I found one hanging on a branch of a standard rose tree in the garden. Another was thrown in at the open window ot a taxi bringing me ba& hero, from Blarrltz, when it was held up-by some traffic. Two or time I came on actually in the house. That last use was my on my dsssslig-tsble-as l was going to ill-last MUM.” (‘Io ls Oealnusel IWKVION," Dersetahire. ‘Blluid. - (OP) — Mn. Jane Dalston sslsiirsiee inst- dflth. fill-blinks your family might have a-hsnd in ' ANSWER: Evidently your wife reasons: (1) Her age. (2) We are happy marriage? ANSWER: They are very apt than you are. Ellen's Diary (Continued from Page 14 to be paid except in the returns of satisfaction and convenience it will eventually afford. We spoke of our appreciation this morning when in the sunlight we came with grand- daughter to assist James at the cleaning-up period there. James en- joys much this clearing away of ends of boards, and shingles and all such debris that is left in the wake of any work of repair. Though it can be acutely distressing to be at such a chore out of doors, while within the women-kind pursued their own fancies and pleasures. But jacketed, overalied and ker- chiefed to join him at the work as today, at once all becomes most satisfying in this levelling of in- terests. "There now!” he said with obvious delight, as he tucked a last handful of chips and shav- ings into a corner of the farm-cart. and turned again to regard the tidy scene we were about to leave-the new building with "thr- window there and the door on the far side" Dorothy Dix Says- (Continued from Page 14 wants the money. but she doesn't want you to get from under her thumb long enough to earn it. There are plenty of wives like that, who want tlfelr husbands to be money- rnakers. yet always at their beck and call. You can't reason with these feather-bralned creatures. So the thing for you to do ls to show a little spunk and independence and take the good Jobs that are offered you. She won't turn up her nose at the money you bring in. DEAR. MISS DIX: I am a young man of 20 in love with a girl sev- eral months older than I am. She refuses to marry rne for these three of different religions. (3) We are not of the same nationality. She believes that a person should marry someone of his or her own race and religion. GEORGE to. Wa are all creatures of habit. and you will stand a far better chance of being happy though married if you stick to your own religion and cooking and marry a girl younger such things, Ellen," he continued. "but to my mind, you and I should be able to get more satisfaction out of the like of that and find more to admire about it—being finished and all—than we could get in look- ing at some mountain or lake or sen or building abroad. Well, that's the way 1 see it anyway!" Under the heading of‘ "Disap- polntments" in the family ledger. we entered the loss of a young and promising pure-bred heifer today. We ot course wrote it in an ink that will soon fade away so that the entry will not trike too loo" in disappearing from memory. Such happenings must. in- luru-h- . . farmers stopped iu llllrillll their losses. for iil‘.'.'.‘\_'\‘. ill" takes a toll in passing, the occupa- tion would fast losu in. lllbCllllllllPi and everywhere hunger would be apt to bide. From an lndisposition first noticed some weeks ago and which might have resulted from a cold night spent on pasture-om.- thnt had bccn balmy at bed-time and had suddenly turned chill, her condition, notwithstanding expert and all neat about it now. "I per- hnps have the wrong ideas about- cnre, went from indifferent to worse until this evening, our milk- Should these stop a “Why are yourteeth so much Whiterioclay '2" use lichanged to WITH IRIUM !' I/"PEPSODENT l/ Wll-l. GIVE YOU. TOG. ‘I'll! WIIITEST TEETH Why? Because only Pepsodent contains irium, the marvelous exclusive ingredient that gives you the greatest cleansing action ever oEei-ed. Pcpsodcnt gets rid 0t’ every trace of dull film. Thor's why New Pepsodent with lrium gets your teeth cleanest-and when they're cleanest they're whitest. . . ask fol Iepsodeat Dental Cream today! You'll love . Pepsodecit‘; delicious, fresh _. minty flavor! ‘ ' IT'S IRIUM THAT MAKES THE DIFFERENGI ing ll(‘l'\l nus lF'.~\‘~"ll9[l by oiic. “A "what's gene's gone! and as l said, happy CZlYLLiTEG 0m), and all this cow this.» (lays reg-results llll ii might have been wars". yes a lot delights of it, and in spite of out one-limo r-riro ul‘ :1 good lmv-i-c.‘ nurse." “losses and crosses" this has been Recalling "the hours l spent with Jumcs hills down llic paper lie has ' been rcriiliiig to romnrk. ilion a very nico day. Until tomorrow . . . Diary . . 1 shrugs and ndtls philosophically. thee dear-heart" and the small, Good-night. . . . lfsslnpletolreaptlie haves clean isasso.) 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