I'&ameata1 loltalmostpeinnrl is mtsnaity. Gray came back to Th, Grip”. Lumbaco, world oi reality as a man from a sound sleep comes l p neither moved nor replied. He - ' watching a pair of phosphor- green eyes in the under- ‘ wth some twenty yards away. were the eyes of a wolf. he ht. no woke, they vanished. ~ _ rm msdyl . . . Just finished my ' -- meditation . . ‘j concentration helps me to fix my ts, I find. Ever tried it?" _ - Bengali shook his head vig- usly. Gray looked at him sharply. future he would not tell K. B- t lamdad Chlemba might tele- Egically say to him. Colin said: 4___ on know the Libitzarianu of Lun- gompa, wel. don you.” g1“; 11g is my good friend. Why E! wmt b0 ask him certain ques- about the papyrus-end as as possible." he said, rising W feet. Ifihlost certainlee he will l Be is most knowledgeable mall. "flail arrange it!" He broke off looked around him. "I have dlws,” he said in low tones. “Most ' inably mie news!" He paused. mebody was coming towards t-flurrlgdly the Babu took his fiyer-wheol from the bosom of his gnd began to twirl it busily. Come, lama TsonS." he filmed Tibetan. "let us so and loin our Qgu in evening prayer!" iBut the foctstells proved w by fine o! the old recliifle- gflloiy Ones." said the Ancient. tingly, as he came towards , “your servant tells me that ‘ ' are going away! 1's it true?" a true. Guru Rimpoclie." M15- dimd K12... thankfully putting away 1i ayer wheel. lqyhren yo wgéldbs when ye live!" rclpon the c man. . 520w four, Reverend ‘lbacher? ytyoumyyakasaman? ask- mllll mY 0F ‘IHE " an. I count not I N! ll l gm}; a; we Brow. within an animal ma! be imprisoned a human g _" It sighed. “Nay. I said Y1‘ 1.1:... for, became I so with Y9!" 11a Bmqaii looked at him in Iqenltmmt. howled. " have been called!" went on the p14 man ga-rrulously, "A voice spoke my meditations. It said: lead thee to a stream. on dds pence’. . . Mayhapiitis the gupmne Liberation, to n-otoleedme! . . .Yea. yel" The decision was day," he min-murod look- g-hcdly st Gray. I will write jg Big Lama, that whidl in a certain verse o. the . Then N‘. written Lsnmlbads W! will W461“ stud!" Anise wfih him as they would, he stubbornly refused to remain in his O C O KBJvaaabIotoelwGr-aymuch hlutmntioneoneerningthe aadttucountry theywcre “RIQIIGIGUYII- . A short spell . answer ‘ of which is a dwell- it LIKE MAGIC Fllli cmzsr cums, caucus Toronto Mother o! 4m n u Mecca and Mustard Mrs. Golding writes: "Nothing ulticc form. For _ tis. mixed with a little mustard, it works like c when applied to the chest and ." If your fsmil is suflering from Colds on Cheat, bronchial Troubles. Chills and Aches, use Meow. withM Sold JIJ Uri-Shah). 5'0‘: “G0od!" he said. “In a few dflyfi you shall have leave to visit your home. Go!" bent and touched the P011114 5'- hi5 feet. and rising, ran quickly 50W" the hill-side. . . . Lunise proved to be a blggl-Qll- walled town. On a 10W hill l1! m9 center of it stood the Lamesery. a collection of ouildlnxs clustered round a big central building WhlCll was surmounted by E 1909-1101941- ‘ zlzxztz- tower w;th sloping walls. 'I‘his gompa housed something like two thousand lamas. K. B. Bold- About, half a mile this side of the heavy wooden gates leading into the town, a funeral procession ap- proached them at a Jog trot and with the jerky motions of its four carriers, the bamboo bier bumped up and down unpleasantly. "Om Mane Padme Hum! (“Hath O Holy Jewel in the Lotus Flower"l) droned the Ancient turning away his head. “All life is weariness! May he be reborn a man!" As the bier passed the £110. K- B- and Gray looked at each other quickly: The bloodstained face 0! i-hfi corpse was the face of K. Bis set- vant. Betraymg no sign of interest. Gray and K. B. passed on. The lit- tle Bengali wu pale to the lips. The market plzwe reached. l 119-1‘ was called. "Wait here!" acid K. B. a trifle shakily, "I go to arrange for lode- Tr... most trusted of his 59195. 'RCMP Finally Get Their Man Reaching Through Time and Space. Aged Sea Captain's Story May Deprive Them‘ Of Their Quarry frm: cnantmfisrowrv GUARDIAN By J. LEO DERY Central Pres Canadian Correspondent MANCHESTER, N. H.. Feb. 5.- A legal battle of wits between ex- perts on internatonal law is ex- pected here when a hearing will be field on the extradition of Capt. Freeman Hatfield. 73-year-old rc- th-ed sealarer, to Canada on s charge of defrauding the Canadian government of $71,276.72. Cape. Hatfield was skipper of the now famous Gypsum Queen. A two-year search for the former skipper ended a few weeks ago when the long and mightly arm. of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police reached over the American border into New Hampshire and "got its man." Captain Hatfield was ar- rested at his home in Canada, a snail town nine miles from this city, whore he had been living since his retirement last July- The story behind the dramatic visit of the “mountlesfl and the ar- rest od the Canadian man, is om of the most amazing Ln the annals of New Hampshire police. n. covers a period of 20 years Its locale embraces portions of two heml- spheres and an ocean, with it is linked the world war. German sub- marines, a sea disaster. and a typi- cal Royal Canadian Mounted Police man hunt. by Conporal Walter Har- vision, R. C. M. P. $1115]! SECRET SERVICE Gray looked around him, his fold- ed arms rest on the top of the yak’s load. c was thinking of Piers and wondering how long it would take him to polish ofi Chor- jiefl and get to her. The Ancient. tired out after the hurried march. was sitting on s small block of stone. his eyes clooed. telling his beads. Now and again the yak would lightly nuzzle the 01d man's neck; but he seemed not to notice Onailfoursidcofflismarkct- place were poor-looking mud-hovel shops, mostly those of grain and butter-sellers or purveyors of hot ten, soups and cooked foods, Before one of them was gathered a little knot of people, who, from the way they kept lookingeover their shoul- ders, seemed w n, ting some- Ohl. o A powerfully-built "Black-hat" nalJorpa (sorcerer) halted a few yards from Gray and stared at him insolcntly. open apron of carved human bones (hi his head was a. bIOBd-us d, steeple-crowned black hat, its lpcx sunnounted by s miniature human skull. lrcrn which fluttered k1 the wind. five narrow ribbons of the five sacred co , green, white. respect. blue and yellow. Ieleemedtobeilidorfliehr- mp0 fluence of some violent drug. Has- hish. Grey suspected. "I am l. servant c! Tamar, the red Tiger. Devil!" he shouted. "I match my mlllo llllnlt all other magical" in bowled looking at Gray. "Can your magic turn a daggers point, thou mountain?" Prom out of his rags flashed a singer with a triangular blade. ith lighlnfi quickness the liglishman‘: t hand smacked down on to the sci-carer's wrist. closing round it like a vice and crushing the skin and bone until they were in the danger of cracking. 1hr a second. neither man moved. Gray suddenly turned his vice-like grxxsherp downwards. e to hisjnces of agony rwihfmncledm: THE CHARGE flrdelw.theohargea.galnotfllt- fieldistfiathecollecudmorct-hen left hand, neljorpa!" said Gray quietly, releasing him. "May you be reborn a louse!" shouted the na-ljorpa, "May the ten Tan-ma she devils rend you limb from limbl" At that moment than cams a sound of the cracking of heavy whips. A little procession consstlng of six stalwart monks armed with heavy hide whips, their foreheads Bflil arms barred wi.h block strips were coming from the direction of the lamosery. Behind them stalked, scdately, a huge, grim-looking lama. As unhurriedly as Fate, the pro- cession made its way to the hovel before which Gray had noticed the small crowd. which had now melted sway. I'm-re. the big lama gave order-Gray could hear his LAWS bAulAb>y lil Llll; eihlillllso WHICH had fallen ovcr ‘the market-place -- and in a few seconds there came out drom the mea-n-loddng little shop, the cowering figure of the but- tor-seller. "We hear that thou hast used false weights!" bomed the Provost lama. “Is it true?" A high-pitched squeal, eloquent of frantic denial and abject terror rang out. The Gekhoa- lama gave another order. Six heavy hide whips rose. and whistling. fell. "Om Mane Padme Huml“ moaned the Ancient. hearing the man's shrieks. When Gray locked for the bled:- hat sorcerer he was not to be seen. On the ground where he had been standing. lay something. the sight of gehifh caused Gray's heart m miss a fl . Bending. he picked it up. blowing the dust from it. _ It was a tiny black-and-whit; on- amel spaniel. To the ring in its an back, were atfuched two links or I. thin, almost threadlike, gold chain. (To Be Continued.) be certain that, in molt cases, over-acidity is tho cause of the trouble: Nou- tniirqit at once with Binmtod Magnesia. This brings relief, because with the cxcesc acid naturalized, the stomach can be rdtorcd to its normal balance. Digestive processes then function "sweetly". Capt. Freeman Hatfield claims that his ship was torpedoed off the Iflgh w"; by ‘ (- July, 1915. $71,000 from the Canadian govern. meant by representing that his ship the Gypsum Queen, sank oitf the Irish wast in July, 1915, when tor- pecLcd by a German submarine The Canadian government alleges Nil-t in s0 duh; Hatfield committed srraudonthegroimidstlmthisshlp w“ not torpedoed, but sank during a storm. Captain Hatfield was paid for the iosofhisve-melinllwlfrom a fund provided for compensation of the victims o1 “illegal acts of war. fare" by Germany during me world war. Accused with Hatfield in thiz alleged fraud is Senator Rance Ingnn cit Parrsboro, N. 5.. a bar- rister who represented Hatfield in the submissim of his claim. Captain Hatfield maintains hi: shlawulmkbysGcrmansub- marine. and gives the following dewrlvtwn of the disaster 1m the mmine of July a1. 191s: “As I came on deck," he said "the mate called my attention to s speck on the water. some distance 0N the port bow. We studied it for a second or two. and then saw the‘. it looked like s periscope. We kept our eyes glued on it. Next thing we knew. we sew the white streak 001111118 fl-t us- ‘That was the tor- pedo’: wake. “She hit us a little way forward Halifax Po rt Arrivals ARRIVALS: Montreal City from New York. Man. Spinner from Philadelphia Man. Citizen from Saint John Indy Burners from Jamica. Monbcliare from Liverpool. Beaver-dale ilrom Saint John. Ile Madame from P. E. I. Ulva from. local Harbour. Mary Ruth from Local Har- hour. Josephine K. rrcm meal Har- hour. Dom. Bond from local Ha:- hour. Nova II from Local Harbour, SAILIINGS: Oln. Leif to U. Kingdom. I10 Madame to Local Harbour Dom. I-lalsyd to local Tier-hour. Noca I1 to Iooal Harbour. Mary Ruth to local Harbour. Joivillhino K. to Local Harbour. VISSDLS IN BIRTH: Mary Ruth Discharging. Jooqohinc K. Disohargi Con. Victor loading. Can. Challenger Loading. Portia loading. Lady Somers Discharging. Leif Bunkering. Barge No 2 Berth. Clss loading. l u Monhclsrc Discharging- Iie Madame Dimharging. Montreal City loading. Man. Citizen loading. Man. Spinner Loading ‘ Tieliua Discharging Leif loading. Belle Isle Berllz. VISSEL! DUI T0 AIIIVI: Feb. Z-Duchesa of York from Saint John acid stomach and kindred ailment: . . . than either hic- lllhmlflncin on the port side. ‘There was s fer- rlfic shock. and the vemel rolled over to port and foundered. I took s sounding and ordered the pumps into action. but the torpedo had torn s gaping hole in us. and she tilled rapidly." With s load of lumber, the ship floated for hours and Captain Hat- field. with his crew. was picked up by the White Star liner Symric and taken to Liverpool. The accused man denies his ship sank during a sworn. He insists that although them was a. light rain, there was hardly any wind and no sea to speak cl when the Gypsum Queen went down Comte-Ln Hatfield said he didn‘t file hi5 claim until many yggrg afterward because he dld not know thflt mere was s mecial reparations fund at the time. As to flhe charge that he is a fugitive from lustice the former skipper said the: he was l" vfimmand of boats out of Jack- sonville and Pensacola, Fla" to Brazil and the West Indies m.» a numb" 0! years and was also in 15111789 0f Ii anal] boat plyng Lpng mind 80111111. He says he always cleared pert under his own mme and Canadian authorities could easily have found him by looking "P Mvlgction records in eagfgm seaboard ports. 8—Darien from New York. Chediabuw sfrom E. C. Ports Qalmelen from. saint John. Antonia fhom London. smurfs from Saint John. 0M8"! 1mm Bo. Africa. 4.—Frederick VIII from New York Vardulia from G-asgow, 4—West Anow rrcm U. s, pom, ' Dominica from St. John's. GJ-Jiolmside from at. John's. ‘l-Ledy Nelson from B. W- Indies ll-Movre m... Saint John. Beaverdale from Saint John, Dlwhesfi 04' Bedfflrd from Liver- pool. Dalnotinn from Saint Jolm. Man. Conmueroc from Saint Cathqart hum Ngggu, 9—.M<mtclare from Saint John, liillcmor from Jemica. . ‘Iransylvanin from Glasgow, lii-Olsidsaa Radcliffe from U, 5, oneaeblm mm m. o. rem Antonie from New York, Alaunin. from London. 1i--Kelso from New York Draminim from New York. Incermon from Ldve-npool, Oolborno rmm B. W. Indies. Bpwrrehomi rmm New York, Holland Society Marks 50th Year NEW YORK, F8). 4—The HOL 15nd 5°°l°W 0! New York celebrated Roosevelt. s trustee oif the was 59°“ W Wlbfvhone from the Whittg House to the e00 @195“. ampmm.‘ “Irvine his speech to the gather- izhc fllg Duwh nttlemont o! Alum-in," ro- stew as a notional symbol of salve. tion. Cllaiiwdls- Illilbt todds-a liai- Iwdquiet m. cntcqcon- New York City and the 21:: Valley by the Drawn pion- A message wsl received from Queen Wilhelmina of Holland. '10!- id and indestructcble are the links that unite my bowie with the dal- ccndants of its sons who were am- onqst the founder! of your put rqaubiic." the message road. mungd djnlno" n b. i Bhlfiifll l‘ fUIl mm until last "y2...“°.';..',..“".,,m““* fr! plucked squi- and m: on, well were nvited to its (111159 The ' ovation was with I‘ uvnmsflm" the mesa novelty m; 301mm 5,. bmua‘ "I". - "M? o! dandng leg ‘ dimic, ‘ ' " - ledmw of Ivory Holland Iooict dinner, is» see-pm; Q1 "flutglxyf," L“ vhe lain: o! 1m: also may‘. $1.131’: - n55,“ l "I41 Annnl loath; of Ill lhnluy . _ .- 3: difililiflfltlirtlscllscoulellnllogimmllillhw- 60B lli 18745 Hollands! XIII-hi the day, Idrhq 18th, 1938 at I Unlock FINE FOR YOUNGSTIRS Children like l0 have tho name Jrink as the grown-ape. Bu! you arobsbly don't give them lea or col- lse. I! is flood for them to have l hot drink. Make Instant Postum Ior ‘ham, using hot milk (not boiled) hstosd o! boiling water. They'll like ‘he tutu immediately. flashes Added to Pen. Sentence IGINTVTLIE, N-Bq Fab. )——(C.P.) ——'Ihn strokes of the lash were added to an eight-year penitentiary sentence upon Fred Magec." 40 of ““"‘*< ‘Bgv wbo -‘~-»_1~1 Built»! in county court to three 0.. . . v. 09...... . ol- fences against his three daughters. twig) of whom are not yet 14 year: o . the Pfiwner to senr eight years on one charre an" three ye rs o“ each of the other two, terms to run concurrently. ' At the request a: his coutfsel yes- terday, Magecb departur- hr P» >- chesier penitentiary was delayed to permit the settlement of his af- fairs here. ROCKFORD BQUARE SCHOOL Honor roll for January. Grade X-l Geneva Stanley, f Ollvc Rowlcy. 3 liliwbcth Gallant Grade IX-l Katherine Feavyour. 2 Ivfsry Prowse. 3 Mary Steele. Grade VIII-l Mary McDonald. 2 Helen Cullen, 8 Gertrude Coyie. Grads VH-i Emma Petilra, 2 M"! Mvflloskw. a flesnor Goudet. Grade VII-l Cecelia Peters. 2 Viola mydges. 3 Mary MwDonald Grade vI-1 Phyllis Reseller. 2 Mary Hennessey. 3 Franzvs Kelly. Grade VI-l Alfredo. Rogers. 2 Helen Campbell. 8 Eunice Condon. Grads V1—Mary Gaudet. I Mar- Kileriis Somers, s Eileen Quinn. Grade V-l Bernice Haughey. 2 Jean Gallant. a Florence saunmra, Grade V—1 Melita Crosby, a m. s10 Doyle. a Mary Gallant. Grade IV-i Frances MoGuigan. 2 Agnes Malone. 8 Thelma smih. Grads IV-i Grace 80mm. I Ur- sula Malone and Joan McOabe, 8 Ircnleus Duffy. Grade IiII-ldllisn McLean and Wands Macmillan, 2 Margaret Jud!!! H. W. Gangster sevtencrvd I" There are. of course, many people who can drink tea and coffee in moderation without feel- Keough and Frances McAleer. Joyce Coady and M. Doyle. 111-1 Teresa Gallant. Peters. S Ida Costello. 11-1 Phyllis Cronin, 2 Helen barter, 8 e Fsustina Grade ‘Hi ‘ll our Heart is Truly a ‘Miracle-Machine” ...Bul Shun Caffeine Stimulation ONSIDER your heart as a ‘double force pump about as big as your fist, power- fully muscled. Possessing a super- conirol system. Even this cflici- ent machine becomes affected when abused by constant stimu- lation. Cafleine is a heart stimu- lant found in both tea and coffee and which makes millions today over-sensitive to the effect of tea and coffee on their systems. :1: ‘3'Lillln.n Thistle. 8 Vivian Duncan. Tm: CLEANING PLANT _ mn- Tvvr H ‘m ISLAND snaps ASSOCIATION cl b raanuany a, 19-. ing the ill-efiecta—without euf- 3 fering from sieeplessness and other distressing disorders. But L‘ not everyone, by any means. ,7; Shun caffeine over-stimula- " tion. Postum contains no drug- stimulant. Instantly made in the cup at a cost of about half-a-cent. 45 cups to a 30c tin. Or there's '7 Postum Cereal made by boiling . or percolating 20 minutes. Make f} a 30-day teat. We'll send you: your first week's supply free. Write Consumer Ser- vice Dept.. General Foods,_:l Limited, Cobourg, Cum: Pius i Grade [I-l Frances Steele. 1 2 Phyllis Cannon. 8 Mary Vesaey. Louise Wedge. 3 ade 11-1 Margaret Melinda Gr 3'7 in now prepared to do custom cleaning of farm seeds. hymen ehcnlrgimmediaiely avail themselves or this u. service while hauling is favorable. -l- 59; y“; “m; “ed; properly cleaned now in madness i!“ '°' ‘°°‘“"" 2-: 3.; For further information apply: M illl ISLAND seeps ASSOCIATION e12" 2-2 Esher Street —- Near Can Fulfil’! H». 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