The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 September 1927 — Page 7

King’s Mate By Rosita Forbes Copyright by Roalta Forbaa WNU Service

STORY FROM THE START Rosemary Crofton la visiting the governor'* palace in Fea Morocco, with her aunt. Lady Tregarten A Frenchman, De Vries. makes love to her He tells her of the Kald. a mysterious person in the service of the sultan. Rosemary repulses De Vries* love. Next morning, while riding, she Is thrown from her horse and rendered unconscious She is rescued by Riff tribesmen and meets the Kald. who turns out* to be an Englishman The Kald says it would Jeopardise his cause to return her to Fea Pete, an Australian, and Zarlfg. a servant, are assigned to care tor her.

CHAPTER lll—Continued All day Rosemary sat in the cave. With nothing to occupy her. her thoughts revolted like a mill wheel crushing her brain between them.. By afternoon she had a headache and would have been glad to talk even to Pete, who brought her all the camp outfit either he or his chief possessed, mirror, soap, blankets, a battered basin, but the Australian was monosyllabic. When he couldn’t answer a question he grunted. By sunset she was exasperated beyond endurance. “I shall have to bite tny nails or cry, go out.” she told tierself, with an attempt at humor., Ros-niary climbed a little way up the hill, sat on a bowlder, and stared across the tumult of hills below. The sky was molten tn. the crucible. Flames rippled across It. tearing at the edges of banked clouds. “Rather Jolly. Isn’t It F said a voice, and the girl looked up to see the Kald wtandlng above her. He catne down with the agility of a goat "bo you mind If I smoke—one of our few amusements?" He had washed off several layers of dust and brushed the straight wiry brown hair which resisted every effort to make It look anything but a mat. With even so much return to the normal aspect of mankind as she knew It, Rosemary was Intrigued. She voiced her curiosity. “How did you get mixed up with these people F “My life history for yours.eh? Well, it’s simple. I’ve got no people to worry about me. The war upset things, made life preitw Ast. Hunting and shooting were no sport after the Ypres salient, so I got into the foreign legion—did a bit of desert work. It gets hold of you. you know, but my sympathy was generally on the side of the enemy. So I bought my discharge and went shooting In the mountains. I met Abd-el Krlm by chance, a good fellow, but not up to date enough for the stunt he’s running. He asked me If T’d like to organise this show for him; he has topping fighting material, only wants n little modern strategy." "Which you supply," interposed the girl. “I’m yes. I'm going to see It through. There’s an awful bunch of dagoes round headquarters. It’s rather sport upsetting their gnme u sell us all and their own mothers. If they weren’t so frightened for their skins. The Kiff's never been conquered. and It isn’t going to be now if I can help IL" “I see. You’d sacrifice everything for that." "Not much sacrifice—it’s a great game." “For you." said R<»semary, and repeated the words a little forlornly, though that was the last thing she w-Nhed to appear. The man looked at her sharply. For the first time It dawned on him that •he was young and a girl in a rotten hole, as he put IL He was struck, not by the firmness and fineness of line which had characterized Rosemary for De Vries, but by her helplessness. She shivered In the rising wind, and her companion wanted, •uddenly. to wrap something, anything. round her. “I say. It’s rotten luek on you." "It is! Your fault!" retorted Rosemary. obdurate. “I wish It was. You wouldn’t be here tong if I could help it" "Can’t you?" The girl made a last appeal, clinging to his arm, almost shaking It In her vehemence. “You know I can’t" In silence they climbed down to the caves. "Ixwk here. 111 give you Pete," said the Kald. feeling, like his one-time orderly. the need of making some oblation. “You can start for the village tomorrow. I’ve sent a messenger already to get hold of a bouse. Pete’ll go with you and see you’re all right You cap trust him—up to the hilt" Rosemary's eyes widened. "Aren’t you going back?" “Not fbr a bit IN e got a job in another direction." He dropped the curtain and Rosemary, listening to his retreating footsteps, felt that her last link with the old commonplace life was severed. Two days later Rosemary and Pete, with • guard of a dozen saturnine mountaineers, approached the village of Telehdl It was a collection of twostoried square huts, hardly large enough to be called house*, though •otne of them bad several rooms. A number of women and children ran to their doors as the cavalcade clattered through the single street A few men, dark skinned, with hawk features, turnHfeto look after them. *■ “Blstuillah. "na the Kald brought a

wife at last?" smiled a stat war* youth, shifting the sling of his rifle. “It is time." returned Menebbhe. the village headman, “but bls mind Is full of war and politics. There is not place In It for women." “She is white, and of his own race." ejaculated a third. “He has never cared for our women." At that moment a tall, loose-jointed figure came swinging down the street. “The Spaniard!“ muttered the villagers, and were silent as the man greeted them. “Salaam aleikum." There was a frown, for no Moslem likes to receive this religious greeting from a Christian. Juan Martengo was « Basque from the Pyrenes, but, for thirty years, he had called no country home. His dual gods were money and women. He had the typical courage of the Latin, hot In realization, cold In anticipation. At | moments, when he could forget the passions and the failures of years, he j was charming. His smile ironed' out the lines graven by raw pleasure, and still cruder lat>or. and in spite of every kind of fight with life, with sense, with what little he had once known of honor, be could speak with conviction on such subjects as rifles and horses as well, of course, as of love affairs! This was the individual who arrived at Ute door of the Kald’s guest house, scarcely half an hour after Rosemary, reluctantly, had entered IL She was seated on a rope couch, covered with the headman’s best carpet. She had taken off her hat and ruffled her hair into a mop. Under it her eyes were sun gilt pools, reflecting a gamut of bewilderment. The Spaniard caught his breath on the threshold. This was not at al) the . sort Jof woman he had expected. ’’l beg your pardon. I heard there,, was a stranger here. I came to offer my services in the absence of Westwyn." “Who is Westwyn F asked Rosemany, ignoring the rest. “Don’t you know I thought he sent you here."”*' “Oh. I see.” Rosemary wasn’t giving anything away. She remembered

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“Rath*r Jolly, Isn’t ItF Said a Vole*, and the Girl Looked Up to SL* the Kaid Standing Above Her. the Englishman’s remark about the dagos at headquarter*. “At least you will let me do anything I can for you. Who is looking after youF ~ A faint smile curved the girl’s lips. The apparent pliability of her visitor was encouraging after her escort's grunts and VVestwyn’s unapproachableness. “Thank you." she replied. "Pete —I don’t know his other name —has pine to procure food and water, chiefly the latter. I haven’t had a bath for ages. I can’t remember how many days or years It Is since 1 left Fez." (TO ER CONTINUED.! Moroccan Town Well Called City of Blind Blindness, in Marrakech (Morocco), is a woefully prevalent affliction. Scores of sightless beggars line the streets, squat in the market places, and thread their way with uncanny assurance through the mazes of the souks. More often than not there are two of them together and to many cases they make their apj»eai for a has In groups of feom, lour to a dozen. With or without a crude musical Instrument or two, they chant incessantly their pleas to the passer-by. conjuring him In the name of Allah to share his coppers with his brethren who cannot see. Hour after hour this bourse chanting goes on. rhytltmically, Jpantlngiy, unceasingly—until it Is a wonder that the rasping vocal cords do not frgy out tike an old shoestring and refuse further service. A lu his tour of the souks the visitor I* led through a colorful arcade given over to dealers to the bright-, hued cords from which the Arabs suspend their pouches and daggers, a little beyond the end of this covered passageway he is pennit ted to look uL but not enter, the mosque and sanctuary of Sidi Bel Abbas, the environs of which are peopled almost exclusively by the bliud. Official figures ar* tacking, yet it may be said that the number of these unfortunates is estimated not in hundreds but to thousand** H. G. Wells once wrote a fantasy railed “The Country of the Blind.” Here is a City of the Blind in pitiful rrallty, with Sidi Bel Abbas as its patron saint —Hamish McLauren to “What About North Africa." India's Holi Festival . At the time of the vernal equinox, on the night ot the full moon, the popular Holl Festival is celebrated by the Hindus of India. The ceremonies, lasting for three days, are derived, from the ancient spring festival/ This festival, originally a solemn religious rite, has degenerated and is now known as the Saturnalia of India. Bonfires ar* lit around th* temples and sacrifices are made to the gods. Red powder calltM kunkuma is thrown abouL as Occidentals throw confetti, and th* clothing o*thepeoo>* becomes covered with 11

What’s the f Answer ♦ Questions No. 11 1— Who discovered the Columbh river, and when? 2— How many Presidents died tn office (not assassinated) and who were they? A—What is the chief source of food for humans and animals? 4— What is energy? 5— What is the equine high Jump record and who holds it? 6— What European composer Incorporated Indian chants and negro spin- : Ituals into an Immortal symphony? 7— What African river once had ’ seven outlets to the sea. and now bet but two? 8— In what poem Is found the line, “A thing of beauty Is a joy forever”! 9— Who said: “I am Just mending my (political) fences"? 10— Is “ain't" inelegant? 11— Who said: “I mean to stir the Yankee blood as I stir this grog"? 12— What country holds the Davis uternational tennis championship? 18 —What Is the weight of the hunan heart? 14— What Is a galvanometer? 15— What states were originally eolanized by the,Dutch? 16— How many Presidents have been assassinated and who? 17— What living composer writes nuslc of rare and exotic charm that is so original In Conception and so star tllngly dynamic that it has been termed musical anarchy? 18— What bay, projecting far into :he Interior of North America, forms i vast Inland sea? 19 — What Is Edmund Spenser’s bestknown poem? 20— What great Innovation did Henry Ford establish In his plants? Answers No. 10 1— John B. Souter editor olt the Terra Haute (Ind.) Express. 2 — George Borrow. 3— The sand dunes parallel with ths coast, which afford protection from tbs waves. 4— The Apollo Belvedere. 5— Resolute defeated Shamrock in 1920. C—A violent electric charge between clouds or a cloud and the earth, caused by a great difference In potential. 7— A current that periodically re verses its direction. 8— Henrietta Marie, wife of King Charles H. 9— Nine: John Quincy Adams. Jefferson, Van Buren. Tyler, Fillmore, Johnson. Arthur. Roosevelt, Coolidge. 10— “Unique," meaning without a like or equal, cannot be compared. 11— Patrick Henry. 12— Edward Everett Hale. 13— Johann Strauss, the Younger. 14— Twice; In 1914 and 1919. 15— The unit of measurement of the pressure of the air. 16— The old Spanish piastre, so called because it was divided into sight reals. 17— Battery C. Sixth Field artillery. 13—-Gen. Wesley Merritt, 1895. 19— Its direction Is nearly northsouth, while that of the Old World is east-west. 20— A period during which one has a legal right to delay meeting an obligation. Passionate Love Song Fatal to Capercailzie The male capercailzie ends his love song with such a passionate note that he Is deaf to the world for Its duration of about two minutes and hunters of this bird take advantage of the fact. In their quest of this largest variety of grouse found wild in wooded sections of Europe and Asia, the hunters operate only In the breeding season, fbr “the deaf one," the Wrd is called In Russia, normally has acute bearing. When the song is first heard the hunter advances as quickly and as close as he can before the love-call endj. then waits until the next period of song and deafness. It is said that the capercailzie can hear the snapping of a twig half a mile away when he is not singing and It sometimes takes a hunter hours to get, dose enough t® shoot Ruminating Animals Ruminapts are a group of animals distinguished from all other animals by the fact that they “chew the cud." i The chief ruminants are camels, deer, giraffes, antelope*, sheep, and goats. Their food, after being partially maatlcated and swallowed. is later brought Jiack to the mouth to be further masticated. One on the Bishop At a dinner party a bishop wa» seated next a woman who made a somewhat lavish display of her charms. When dessert arrived the bishop placed an apple on her plate. She expressed surprise, whereupon he said, “You must eat IL When Eve ate the apple she knew what aha looked like, and was ashamed!** The woman was equal to the occasion. She quietly asked the bishop. "Who gave Eve the apple?”—London Tit-Bits. The Higher the Colder As we ascend in society, like those who climb a mountain, we shall find that the line of perfect congelation commences with the higher drcloe; and. the nearer we approach to the , grand luminary the court, the more frigidity and apathy shall we experience.—Colton. Latest in Needleworh A Uttle boy to Akron swallowed • Media and got a stitch to Ms eldecFarm and Fireside

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Old Mines in Mexico Studied

Smithsonian Institution Tells of Other Scientific Expeditions. Washington.—Mexican silver and lead mines which have been in almost constant operation since the Spanish conquest of the Sixteenth century provided study and collecting ground for Dr. F. W. Foshag. under the auspices of the Smithsonian institution and the Harvard Mineralogical museum. Rich as Mexico Is in ores, little is known of its geology or mineralogy. In his investigation. Doctor Foshag visited the Maraville mine where crystals of pure gypsum 6 feet in length rise from the floors of two caves. In the Sierra Mojada district, which owes its discovery to a band of smugglers attempting to elude pursuit, he found the old Spanish methods of mining still in force. Much of the ore is brought to the surface on the backs of peons, often up ladders made of notched logs, popularly called “chicken ladders.” It is said that a strong peon will carry loads in excess of 220 pounds. In the state of Durango. Doctor Foshag visited the Ojuela mine, which has more than 550 miles of tunnels driven to extract the lead ore. Other Expeditions. This is one of the 35 expeditions described in the institution’s exploration pamphlet. There were trips to Sumatra, to China, to Algeria, to Baluchistan and South Africa. Their purposes included the capture of wild game, the unearthing of buried villages which flourished in prehistoric America, the collection of fossil foot prints and fossil elephants and shells, the gathering of ferns in the West Indian mountains. The introduction to the pamphlet reveals that “during the past year more expeditions in which the Smithsonian was represented have gone out than ever before, and this in spite of the fact that the institution has practically no unrestricted funds for field work." A summary of the expeditions described says: “The year’s expeditions were headed by a 30,0U0-mile Journey to Algeria, Baluchistan and Southwest Africa, undertaken by Dr. C. G. Abbott, acting secretary of the Smithsonian, under the auspices of the National Geographic society and the Smithsonian, to select a site for a solar observatory in the eastern hemisphere. He picked Mount Brukkaros among the Hottentots of Southwest Africa and the observatory is already functioning there. The purpose of the field work of the Smithsonian's * astrophysical observatory, according to Doctor Abbott, has been aimed for the last eight, years to solve the question of whether the sun varies, and, if so. what effects on our weather do the changes of solar heat produce? Smithsonian-Crysier Expedition. "Another section of Africa—Tanganyika territory—provided the scene for the Smithsonian-Chrysler livegame collecting expedition under Dr. William M. Mann. The expedition brought home about 1.700 live animals for the National Zoological park under Smithsonian direction, including a pair of giraffes, five impalla. a greater kudu, an eland, a blue duiker, red datker. three white-bearded gnu. four warthogs and quantities of birds, small mammals and reptiles. .The success of the expedition was made possible by the hearty co-operation of

Chapel for American Cemetery at Thiaucourt

1 Olil Ik hi ■ I* II ■! . . HW if ; n Ju ®-t nJ I'lTl ■ —-JKat to : I If< ’ /JI w- - -4- _■«

This is the design fbr the memorial chapel to be erected to the American cemetery » Thia urourt, France, where many doughboys lie buried The design Is by Thomas H. ElllotL

MYSTERY PEARLS PLAY PART IN LIFE OF BARON’S FAMILY

Legend Says They Were Given to German Ambassador's Ancestor by Goblin. Berlin.—-A mysterious string of pearls plays a remarkable role in the history of the family of Baron Ago von Maltxan. German ambassador to the United States, according to baroness Louise Reisnitx-Maltxan. aunt of the ambassador. A legend says the pearls, which are to the possession of the Silesian branch of the family, were presented by a goblin in 1588 to Baroness Eva Regna Maltxan tn the ancestral castle at MlUtscb, in Silesia. One night, the legend goes. wMIe the baroness was beside the cradle of her first-born child, a goblin rose up oat of the ground and asked her to move the lamp to some other corner of the room. He explained that the oil from the lamp was dropping on

A the game department of Tanganyika, and an all-inclusive license from the governor. This proved invaluable because of the numerous native gamekeepers who were constantly dropping in cn the camp, asking to see the license, taking its number and the name of the party and inquiring from |he native hunters what the purpose of the expedition was. The license also enabled Doctor Mann to hire 90 porters of the Wamboro and Warnbugo tribes, who are so swift they can run down animals. “Several attempts to capture young rhino failed due to the absence of young. Adult rhinos charged the party five times, without Inflicting serions damage. Doctor Mann refutes the theory that the tick birds warn their hosts of an approaching enemy. These birds cluster thickly, on the rhinoceros to eat the ticks which are so abundant on his body. At the approach of any suspicious.object, the tick birds ntake a loud twittering, thereby Indicating to men the whereabouts of the rhinoceros. “The wing impression of a large insect like a dragonfly which lived an unknown number of million years ago was one of the prizes brought back by Charles Gilmore with his collection of fossil footprints from the Grand canyon. Mr. Gilmore has gathered footprints from three distinct geological horizons, one above the other tn the canyon. Each set represents, of course, different animals, distant tn time from one another by the ages that It took to deposit four or five hundred feet of sedimentary rocks. “Lieutenant Henry C. Kellers reports that the whir of the automobile h«vs driven the jungle beasts of Sumatra into the interior of the jungles so that collecting is nnt what it used to be. Lieutenant Kellers, medical corps, U. S. N.. was assigned to represent the Smithsonian institute with the Naval Observatory Eclipse expedition to Sumatra. Lieutenant Kellers speaks highly of the natural history lore of the natives. They possess both generic and specific names, though the latter are apt to be misleading from a scientific standpoint Among them ‘the tiger is the most feared of the mammals, although statistics show that crocodiles claim a larger share of victims. In the native legends and folk lore, the men Inhabiting Korinchi district of Sumatra have the power of transforming themselves into tigers.’ Last of the Whaling Station*. “In a visit to what might be called the last of the whaling stations, situated at Trinidad. Humboldt county. Calif.. A. Brazier Howell learned the methods used for catching the speedier, less valuable whales which are all 4J»at remain to the industry. These finback and humpback whales can attain a spt«d of 30 miles an hour, so that it requires careful maneuvering and superior harpoons to capture one. ‘lf the bomb fails to or the harpoon, weighing somewhat less than 150 pounds. Is placed Too far back, a fight of several hours may ensue. The whale may take out a mile of cable and must be as carefully played as a game fish, for although the line consists of a 5-lnch manila hawser with breaking strength of 18.500 pounds, the animal will snap this with ease if too much strain be applied or too much slack be given.’ .. “Dr.*Waldo Schmitt Is on his second year of exploration of the coastal waters of South America. Interesting himself particularly to crustaceans.

A . —— i the bed of his grandchild, wtych..invisible to human eyes, was directly underneath. The baroness obligingly complied with the request of the su- ' pernatural visitor. Nine days later the grateful goblin > reappeared and made her a present > of a string of pearls. He said they would bring luck to the family as long as their color was unchanged and they remained in the possession of the Maitean family. “Should the pearls change color, however." he I warned. “It means that the head of , some branch of the family will die.” • The story continues that In Wifi Joachim Maltxan. tn an altercation ■ with other members of the family as [ to the material of which the pearls i were made, mutilated one of them. > Thereupon there was an earthquake, ■ accompanied by lightning, killing five persons on the Maltxan estate. i In 1850,a sister of the then owner t

At Guayaquil he, a li<Ut shrimp that bores holes in rocks. “Explorations by Smithsonian archeologists and ethnologists spanned the continent of North America and stretched over into China. Dr. J. Walter Fewkes excavated a type ruin near Flagstaff, Ariz., an area hitherto almost unknown archeologically. This ’important ruin he has called ‘Elden Pueblo.' As a result of his study of this ancient structure, Doctor Fewkes concludes: ““There remain many unexplored areas In our Southwest, the pottery of which is unknown. One of these is the region west of Little Colorado and south of the Grand canyon, as far west as California and southwest to the Gila valley. Elden Pueblo lies in the geographical center or heart of this extensive area, of which archeologically and ceramically we knew next to nothing up to the past summer. As a type ruin strategically placed, adding new facts bearing upon architecture and ceramics to the oldest ruins tn Arizona. It Is very pronounced. It has many points of resemblance to the ruins In the Gila basin, apparently connecting them with the pueblos of the San Juan. In this region we evidently have a meeting place of the types of prehistoric cultures In the northern and southern parts of Arizona.’ Survey of Alaska. “Doctor Ales Hrdlicka completed the first extensive anthropological survey of Alaska, following the probable routes of the first Americans on their arrival from Asia, and selecting regions which promise to be most fruitful for future investigations. Doctor Hrdlicka says in his conclusion: ‘These remains show at first sight that the Eskimo of these regions are by no means the highlj- differentiated Eskimo of Labrador and Greenland, but that they approach, in some cases almost to an identity, or on one hand the Asiatic and Mongoloid types of people, and on the other the American Indians, more particularly those of Alaska. The writer has no longer any hesitation in believing that the Eskimo and Indian originally were net any two distinct races nor even two widely distinct and far-away types, but that if we could go a little back in time they would be found to be like two neighboring fingers of one hand, both proceeding from the same palm er racial source.’" Swallow* Works Philadelphia. — John Hanna, age four, playing with a watch, removed the case and downed the works and stem. After a day or so in a hospital he’ll be hack home with bronchial tubes normal. Make Big Pay New York.—Electricians equipping new buildings have been making as high as $250 and S3OO a week with overtime the state industrial commission has been informed.

Leaves Fortune for Home for Old Dogs Budapest.—A rich old lady, Mme. Jeanne Popelka. who lived apart from the world in a beautiful villa with 12 dogs and 20 cats, numbers of birds and monkeys, has just died. She has left the whole of her fortune, which is considerable, for the transformation of the villa into a home for old dogs. Fearing Justly that her heirs would oppose her will and accuse her of madness, Mma Popelka added a certificate of mental health to her will. In spite of this the heirs are attacking it

of the pearls was in financial straits and offered them to the grandfather of the present ambassador, yhe latter. however, restored them to his Silesian cousin, their rightful owner. It Is claimed that the pearls still continue to change color when deaths occur in the family. They are treasured carefully at Militsch as\a talisman. the continued possession sf which Is to bring luck to the family. Use Pigeons to Carry Newspaper Dispatches Paris. —Several newspapers on the French Riviera are using carrier pigeons to cover important sporting events. When the Tour de France—the bicycle race around France —came through the district reports of the race were brought to every 30 Donates by pigeons. It was estimated that the newspapers gained two houra over the usual wire service, since much of the course was through mountainous country where the telephone is unknown.

FOUND HELP

rhelr Sickness Banished by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Mrs. Nina Matteson, Box 206, Oxford. N. Y., writes—“lf it had not been

for your medicine, I could not have done my work as It should have been done. Mother told me of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I had read in different papers what it had dune for different women. She wanted me to ♦ry it, so my hus-

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band got me one bottle at first; then I took two others. Now I am feeling quite strong again.” Mrs. Ernest Tanguay of Adams, Mass., says she was ill for four years and could not sleep nights or go out on the street. She read about the Vegetable Compound and decided to try it After taking eight bottles she was able to do all her work and go anywhere and is quite herself again. This dependable Vegetable Compound is a household word in thousands of homes. The fourth generation is now, learning the merit of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For more than half a century, this reliable medicine has been used by women with very satisfactory results. ’ If the*Vegetable Compound has helped other women, why shouldn’t it help you?

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