The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 September 1927 — Page 7

I feyßMfcgjjMn A"? KING'JMATE BT ROSITA FORBES

STORY FROM THE START Rosemary Crofton la visiting the palace tn Fea, Morocco, with her aunt. Lady Tregarten A Frenchman. De Vries, makes love to her He tells her of the Kaid. 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 Kaid. who turns out to be an Englishman The Raid says It would jeopardise his cause to return her to Fea Pets, sin Australian, and Zarif*, a servant are assigned to •are for’ her She learns the Kaids name Is Westwyn Martengo. a Spaniard, is attracted by her beauty He subtly sets about gaining her favor by pretending to help her to escape Westwyn offers to do anything he can for her.

CHAPTER IV—Continued Rosemary slant) al him. hope wavering against her resentment She did not want to plead with this man. but the words broke from her against tier will. “I can't bear ft. You'll have to let me go.” Westwyn was silent. “You said you didn't understand what It meant to me—" The man Interrupted. “I didn’t when 1 sent you here. Ido now.” “And you won’t help nwF Westwyn shook his head. "It’s Impossible.” he said, and Rosemary was too angry to realize the weight of regret in his voice. "I'm off to. Abd-el Krun now—l’ll consult him, but I'm afraid there’s no way out.” He hesitated on the top of the mud stairway, wishing he could say somethin* to encourage the mute* figure, which would not even look at him. The words didn’t come, so he stamped Sown the flight and gave Pete directions about enough food to feed a regiment. Heavy with a sudden responsibility, he rode off. He would talk to Abd-el Krim. Perhaps something better could be arranged. That night Rosemary and the Spaniard settled their plans Thqy climbed to the same rock above the village, and for the first time the sunset brought no echo of dosing bars to the girl. Excited and tense, she listened <0 Marten go's Inst rations. ”You'd better begin wearing native trees at once. Don't let Zarifa sleep tn your room. You must accustom every one to leaving you alone after sunset. HI have to leave It to you to »llp out somehow, unobserved. »You must come straight to my house. I'll eave the d<»or ajar." “And then?" asked Rosemary, distrust swept away on the tide of excitement. “i’ll have horses ready, but I don’t know If it would be safe to ride over the pass. Do you think you could rlimb It If I had the animals waiting an the other side?" “Yes. yes.' breathed the girl. "Anything to get away." She looked so vital, so flamelike in the blaze around -»er. that Martengo had difficulty In Readying his voice It was a little rough as he told her: •We’ll have to make a dash for It while Westwyn’s away." Rosemary’s mind raced ahead. •Your servants?” she asked. "Won’t •Jhey give us awayF t “There are hone tn the house." be answered. “Doot worry. If you can give Pete the slip your part la done." A few nights later a blur of Indigo. < scarcely more opaque than the surrounding night, crept round the wall •>f the guest house. Rosemary’s heart was In her throat, pounding so that It nearly choked her. but her fret. In , 'heir native sandals, were steady, with scarcely a sound she padded up the path. J" . As she neared her destination the girl's spirits rose. Excitement tingled •In her blood She went more carelessly and. round a corner, almost rumped Into a figure descending stem |y In the soft leather sandals of the mountaineers. It was Heins, a ttolld shy. little German who had tent her month-old papers from the fatherland An exclamation was uifled on the fugitive’s lipa, and the nan stared as be stepped aside forner to pass. Rosemary dared not ook back, but she felt that Heins stillRood at the corner watching her. After this encounter, the quadrangle ootuing above her was sanctury. She •an the last hundred yards, slipped trough the unlocked door and shut It dlently behind her. While she leaned igainsr the wall, breathless, a figure nepped out of the darkness. “Well done." whispered Martengo. •You re all right now." He piloted her nto the house. There was no light n the front room. but Juan guided bis most Into a small back apartment Where charcoal smoldered on an open reartb and a hurricane lamp hung rom the root Rosemary dropped onto the nearest eat still panting, her eyes Naxing In t face bereft of color. “I thought I should never get out." she said. "I i*d to send Pete down to the Tillage. »nd Zarifs was as sleepless as an wk What’s the next movel" -I sent the horses out as soon as ft W dark, but unfortunately, the head«y moment"

Rosemary started. “Rut he’ll delay us—we ought to be off." ”He won’t keep me long, and it Isn’t a bad thing, really, because when your flight Is discovered in the morning. he will be my alibi.” They talked in desultory fashion for a few mln utes. Then Martengo went out to prepare for his visitor, and Rosemary found time to study her surround Inu’s. It was a small, mud walled room with no furniture but u table, a chair a row of coffee pots, and the couch on which she sat. The orly window was a square aperture, unglazed and barred. just under the ceiling “Rath er like a cell.” thought Rosemary, and then her biood raced, for she heard voices and foot steps crossing the court- Automatically she crushed her self' Into the corner furthest from the door, hardly daring to move. That was one of the worst hours of the girl’s life. The drone of Arabic in the next room was like a wheel on which her nerves were spun Thoughts whirled through her brain and werjp gone before she could catch the full sense of them. She pictured failure in every guise, the ignominy of a forced return. In that hour sh» had suffered every possible disappointment, been defeated by every obstacle. At the end of it her head felt taut, as If stretched on wire# Martengo had no place in her thoughts until. Just as she felt she must go mad If she had to wait any longer, be entered the room. She had been so oppressed by her myriad apprehensions that she hud not noticed the departure of Menebbke. MHas he gone?” she asked, but the words were scarcely audible. The Spaniard nodded. “Yes. I’m sorry for the delay. You look a bit played out What about a drink?" Before she could refuse he had produced from the outer room a bottle and two glasses. “I can’t have you fainting on the way.” he said. “This will do you good.” Perhaps his voice was less carefully tutoreff than usual. There was a note In It which was like a cold douche on Rosemary’s Imiwtienee. It steadied her and she was alert as she took the glass and put her lipsi to It The taste was unpleasant. “What Is it?" she asked with a grimace. "Our local poison, 'leghbl.’ It won’t do you any harm." His voice sounded muffled and he seemed to be very busy with a refractory cork. Suspicion flashed across Rosemary's horizon. '“l’d rather have water," she said "Do get me some.” and made a pretense of drinking. Juan left the room without comment and the girl whirled, the glass in her hand, vainly searching a receptacle. She had just emptied the stuff behind the cushions when Martengo returned. Guiltily she faced him. a flush burning so deeply that it was like a hand throttling her. (TO BK CONTINVKD.>

Literary Fame Came L Slowly to Johnson Samuel Johnson gained little money when he compiled an English dictionary. but the work served to make his reputation secure. He had been in L» talon ten years, living ot»cureiy as a hack writer and slowly winning a reputation when he was given a chance to prepare the dictionary, for which he was to receive >4.*<UU It took him seven years to complete the tremendous work and he had to pay several assistants. The work is remembered not because of its merits, but largely because of Johnson's letter to the end of Chesterfield, who had rebuffed the editor until he beard the dictiorory was nearing completion and thia* hoped to be regarded as one of the benefactors of the scholar. Upon the publication of the diction ary. Johnson was given recognition as the greatest living figure in English literature. Fielding was dead. RichardsOn was living in retirement. Gibbon was in Switzerland. Gray and Cbwper were publishing little. Johnson was hailed as England's greatest scholar. The honor had been slow in coming, for 18 years had passed since be had left Lichfield to make h|s fortune in London.—Kansas City Star. W’ortfs Mark Twain was not the only person to find amusement In the German language. A foreigner thus accounts for the denigration with which the negotiations held at Locarno were carried on. “Our interlocutors cannot end their explanations.” said this foreigner. ”JVRh the best will in the world they cannot pronounce rapidly such wor«te a* this’: Antlnlkoholcongressmitgied e r v e r a e I chnlssesdruckkostenvoran schlagprufungscom missions versantm lungeinladungskarten.** This tittle word means "Invitation cards for the meeting of the commission for verifying the accounts of the expenses of printing the list of mere here of the anti-alcoholic congress.’’ Hatt Not Alwayt Common In Chaucer's “Canterbury Tales.” the Merchant had upon his bead “a Flaundrish Never bat” It seems that trem this period bats became more frequently wore, for there is mention In some of the early writings by distinguished people of felt hattes." and “Never battes." Throughout medieval times the wearing of bats was a mark of distinction and ot noble birth.

FARM ffiPCK

CLEAN QUARTERS INSURE PROFITS

Cleanliness of farrowing quarter* and fresh, new ground for the rearing of young pigs is one of the keynotes to successful pig raising, according to C. G. Eiling, specialist in pork production at the Kansas State Agricultural college, who has completed a statewide study. Newly-born Utters that suckle, sleep, eat and drink lu Insanitary quarters are usually un thrifty .and the owner is subject to , heavy losses, Mr. Eiling states. He ’ further contends that worms, lice, mange, scours, thumps and sores as- • fl.ict the pigs and reduce their vitality, making them stupid and weak, fit subjects to be trampled to death or die from weather exposure. “It is a well-known fact that thrifty pigs give good return on such practl- • cal rations as corn and tankage ot corn, tankage, and skim milk." de- ■ dares Eiling. “Rut the basis for their ' thriftiness lies in their getting a good .start from the very beginning, and : clean quarters result la good thrifty i litters at weaning time.” To cite an example of what can be done in the way of raising pork at ' the most economical cost to the prol ducer, the pork specialist points out j Willis Mosteller of Washington, Kan., who raised his pigs in the sanitary way from the time they were born until they were put on the market. In the spring of 1926. Mostellet Itarted with 10 gilts at s2'*o. During the spring and summer, the total expense of feed, labor and material was sl, 164.46. Added to this the initial cost of the 10 gilts, the entire cost was $1,444,46. The total sales of , hogs on hand at the end of the year was $2,326.37. The difference between the total expense of $1,444.46 t und the total receipts of $2,326.37 was tssl.9l. This summed up made a nqf i profit of $88.19 per sow or a return of ; M. 51 per bushel for each bushel of | x>rn fed the gilts. The results obtained by Mosteller will be, on the average, an exceptlona--1 al case, but It is indicative of the sus perior results that can be obtained ’ and probably fairly illustrates the difference between the results In profits secured from thrifty and unthrifty stock. Small Pastures and Pigs Always Found Together Small hog pastures and runty pigs go together, judging from the results of the swine sanitation movement pushed throughout Illinois during the past few years by farm advisers and the extension service of the college ot agriculture. University of Illinois. Tn addition to bringing out other valuable sidelights on profitable pork production these co-operative swine sanitation demonstrations staged by farmers have shown that pigs raised tn large pastures do better than those kept In a small area. The average area of pasture allowed for one sow and litter on 160 farms which reported was nine tenths of an acre. Many sows and pigs were kept mi a still smaller plot of ground. Altogether 9.421 pigs were raised in pastures of less than one acre a litter. The number of runts In those small pastures averaged one runt to each 71 pigs. In pastures a little larger, ranging from one to two acres a litter, I there were 2.827 pigs raided and the i nnml>er of rants was one to" each 77 pigs. In pastures of two or more seres a litter there were 1.204 pigs raised and the number of runts was >nly 1 to 100 pigs, Fall-Farrowed Pigs Che raising of fall-farrowed pigs has not become a general practice on I many farms tn the Northern states. Many farmers who have at various times become Interested In prodm-ipg fall pigs hare found that fall farrowed pigs made slower gains, required more feed, and oftentimes looked very un- > thrifty. As a result of such experiences farmers generally came to the conclusion that the raising of frllfarrowed pigs was unprofitable.

I ? Live Stock Squibs | ■ a Pigs which are to be used for breed fhg should not be fed from a aelf- ■ feeder. e • • Alfalfa tn a winter hog ration of corn and tankage will greatly Increase Its Efficiency. s ee Pigs being growb for breeding purposes should not be allowed to become too tut. •• • . The threat against an animal’s Ilfs Is greatest at birth or shortly afterwards. • • • Experiments show that lambs gain faster on rape and corn or on soybeans and corn than when turned into a cornfield without other forage. • • • For growth and development of strong-boned pigs, they must have plenty of protein, which can be furnished by tankage and dairy byproducts, such as skim milk or buttermilk. • • * Skim milk brings the best returns when fed to the pigs promptly after being milked and separated. ♦ • • Salted hay is relished by stock and tn winter, when salting is necessary, provides the natural way of supplying this need. • • • Cattle with a depraved appetite that are seen eating bones and sticks are usually suffering from a lack of pho» phorus. Finely ground bonemeal supplies the deficiency and helps unthrifty animals.

THE SYRACtrSE JOURNAL

‘ OUR COMIC SECTION

MISS OdE. ) FWfet 4 ■' ■ Il F’l ■ if®

FINNEY OF THE FORCE Page C. C. Pyle, Showman De Luxe

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THE FEATHERHEADS

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WOULD LEAVE HER He (h ighly off ended)—lf you are too

Events in the Lives of Little Men

weary to talk. Miss Blanche, FTI leave your presence. She (interested at once) —Oh, did you bring some presents, Mr. Softleigh?l 1 was only thinking, you know. What Editors Hm to Stand Editor (considering article) —You say here, “seems to advance, but really is as unprogressive as a dock." I don’t get that % Writer—Why, you see, a -elock is running all day and yet it always winds up at the same place.

Uh—Oh!—-in Dutch Again

Anticipated A dramatist was talking to a critic about himself and his work and his aims and all the rest of it. “I have had,” he said, “a whole crowd of imitators." "Yes,” said the critic, "especially beforehand.” , A Likely Story Thrift—Well, Fve decided not to get that automobile. Smith—Did somebody else hold the lucky number?

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