himself Join us tor a day or t w o « !» each
W c tik ••
'
' S t
“ Kara bere I" K ata cried in horror. Hor
chief consolation through all her trou
blée had been that there seemed to be
some chance o f getting rid o f hor terrible
suitor.
“ And why not?** the old man naked an
grily. “ A re you so hitter against the lad
aa to grudge him the society o f his own
father ?*’
K ate was saved from further reproaches
A . C O M A N D O YLE
toilet requisite*
la spite • ( the poverty
o f the apartment K ate had never been
more glad to enter her luxurious chamber
at borne. The little carpet less room was
• haven o f rest where she would be left,
for one night at least,
to
her own
thoughts. As she lay in bed. however, she
•w ild hear fa r aw ay the subdued murmur
o f Girdlestone’s voice and the shrill tones
o f the old woman. They were in deep
end animated converse. Though they were
too far distant for tier to distinguish a
word, something told her that their talk
was about herself, and the
me instinct
sshtired her that it boded her little good.
When K ate awoke in the morning it
waa some tittle time before she could re
alise where she era* or recall the events
which had made such a sudden change in
her life. The small window o f her apart-
it was covered by a dirty muslin blind.
eagerly out.
fc’ rom what she had seen
the night before she bad hoped that this
prison to which she bad been conveyed
might make amends for its loneliness by
some degree o f natural beauty. The scene
which now
her eyes soon. dispelled
aa> expectations o f the sort. The avenue
with its trees lay on the other side o f the
house.
From her window nothing was
visible bat a dreary expanse o f bogland
and tnudbank* stretch iog down to the sea.
A t high tide this •-tiormous waste o f
dreariness and filth was covered by the
water, bat at present it lay before her in
all its naked hideousnees* the very type
at dullness and o f desolation. Here and
there a few scattered reed* or aa un
healthy greenish scum upon the mud, gave
a touch o f color to the scene, bth for,the
most part the great plain was all o f the
same somber mud tint, with its monot
ony broken only by the white flecks where
th* swarms o f gulls and kittiowakes had
settled In the hope o f picking up what
ever hod been left by the receding tide.
Aarny across the brand surface a line o f
sparkling foam marked the fringe o f the
m u , which stretched away to the hori-
A mile or tw o to the eastward o f her
K ata saw some sign o f house* and a blue
smoke which flickered up into the air.
T h is she guessed to be the fishing village
o f Lea Claxtoa, which the driver had
emotioned the night before.
She felt
ns eh# gased at the little hamlet, and the
meet* o f the boat* in front o f it, that she
waa not alone in the world, and that even
io this strange and desolate place there
were honest hearts to whom as a last re
source she could appeal.
. She pros atil! standing at the window
when there came a knocking at the door,
and ahe heard the voice o f the old woman
asking if ahe were awake.
“ Breakfast
in ready,” she said, “ and the master is a-
woudering why you bean’t down.”
O s this sammoas K ate hastened her
toilet and made her way down the old
winding stair to the room in which they
had supped the night before. Barely Gir-
dlestone must have had a heart o f flint
not to he melted by the eight o f that fair,
fresh face. H is features set aa hard as
adamant aa she entered the room, and he
looked at her with eyre which were puck
ered and angry.
“ You 4re late,” be said coldly. “ You
o ust remember that yon are not in Ereie-
eion square. You a n here to be disci
plined. and disciplined you shall be.”
“ I am s o r r y ” she answered. “ I think
t must have been tired Ify oar Journey.”
T h e vast room looked even more com
fort lees and bleak than on the preceding
evening. O n'the table was a plate o f ham
and eggs. John Girdlestone served out a
portion, and pushed it in her direction.
She ret down on one q f the rough wooden
rHairs and ale listlessly, wondering bow
all this was going to end.
. A fte r breakfast Girdle*tony ordered the
old woman out o f the room, and, standing
in front o f the fire with his long legs
apart and hia hands behind hi* back, he
told her in harsh concise language what
Sis intentions were.
“ I had long determined,” he said, “ that
If you ran counter to my wishes, and per
sisted in your infatuated affection fo r that
w a peg race. I should remove you to some
iw-ctuded a|wt where you might reconsider
your conduct and form better resolution*
foe the future. Thia country bouse an
swered the purpose admirably, and aa an
old servant o f mine. Mrii. Jorrocks, chanc
ed to reside in the neighborhood, I had
warned her that at any time I might come
down and should expect to find things
rredy. Your rash and heartless conduct
b n * however, precipitated m atter* and
we have arrived before her preparations
were complete. Our future arrangements
wilt therefore be leas prim itive than they
are at present. H ere you shall remain,
young lady, until you show signs o f re
pentance, and o f s willingness to undo
the harm you have done.”
“ I f you mean until 1 consent to marry
your son. then I shall live and die b e n ,”
the girl said bravely.
"T h a t rests with yourself. ■ Aa I Mid
Iw-forv, yea ore under discipline here, and
you may not find existence such a bed o f
room am tt WM >a Bedeetoa square.”
“ Can ! have my maj<VT K a te asked, “ I
can hardly stay here with no one but the
the table. The last item o f intelligence,
however, had gives her a terrible shock,
time had filled her with
and at the
astonishment. W hat could tha fast-living,
about town want In
comfort-seeking
thin dreary abode? She knew Bara well,
and waa sure that he waa not a man to
alter hia w ay* o f life or suffer discomfort
o f any kind without aome very definite ob
ject.
It seemed to her that this waa a
new mesh in the net which was being
drawn round her.
When her guardian had left the room
K a te asked M r * Jorrocka for a shoot o f
paper.
The crone shook her bead and
wagged her pendulous lip in derision.
“ Mister Girdles tone thought us you
would be after that,“ she said. “ There
ain’t no paper here, nor p en * neither, nor
ink. neither.”
» ,*
“ What, none! Dear Mrs. Jorrocka, do
havs pity on me, and get me a sheet, bow-
e ie r o
s ilv e r! You are very welcome to it if
yon w ill give me the materials for w riting
one letter.”
{* >
M r * Jorrorks looked longingly with
he- bleared eyes at the few shillings which
the girl held out to her, but she shook her
hesd. “ 1 duren’ t do it,” Bbe said. “ I t ’a
as much as my place is worth.” ,
“ Then 1 shall walk down to Bedsworth
myself.” said K ate angrily. “ 1 have no
doubt that the people in the poetoffice w ill
let me sit there an d,w rite it.”
The old hag laughed hoarsely to her
self until the scraggy sinews o f her with
ered neck stood out like whipcord. She
was still chuckling and coughing when the
merchant came back into the room.
“ W hat then?” he asked sternly, looking
_________________
from one to the other. H e waa himeelf
constitutionally averse to merriment, and
b- was irritated by it in others. “ W hy
are yon laughing, Mrs. Jorrocka?”
“ I was a-laughing at her,” the woman
wbeesed. pointing with tremulous fingers.
“ She was askin’ tne for paper, and sayin'
a » she would go and w rite a letter at the
Iled*w%>rth postofScr.”
“ You must understand once for all,”
Girdlestone roared, turning savagely upon
the girl, “ that you are cut off entirely
irom the outer world. 1 shall give you no
nor be provided aJith either paper'or ink.”
Poor K a te’s last hope seemed to be fad
ing away.
Her heart sank within her,
but she kept a brave face, fo r she did not
wish him to see how hie words had strick
en her. 8he bad a drape rate plan in h «r
bead, which would be more Ukely to be
successful could she but pot him off hia
gt,ard.
She spent the morning hi her own tittle
room. About one o’clock ahe heard the
Matter o f hoofs and the sound o f wheels
on the drive. Going down ahe found that
It was a «a rt which had come from Beds-
worth with furniture. There were car-
pits, s cheat o f d ra w er* ta b le* and sev
eral other articles, which the driver pro
ceeded to carry upstair* helped by John
¡atone. The old woman was In the
room. It seemed to K a te that she
might never again have such an opportu
nity o f carrying out the resolve which she
had formed. She put on her bonnet and
X
leaves from the neglected lawn. Gradually
she sauntered aw ay in this manner to the
head o f the avenue, and then taking one
Ift, timid glance around, she slipped in
among the trees, and made the best o f her
way, half-walking, half-running, down the
dark winding drive.
Oh, the Joy o f the -moment when the
great white bouse which had already be
come so hateful to her
was obscured
among the trees behind her 1 8he had
some idea of the road which she had trav
ersed the night before. Behind her were
a il her trouble*
In front the avenue
gate, Bedsworth and freedom. She wonld
send both a telegram and a letter to Dr.
Dimsdale. and explain to him her exact
situation. I f the kind-hearted and ener
getic physician once knew o f it. he would
take care that no harm befell her. She
could return then, and face with a light
heart the worst which her guardian could
do to her.
H ere wee the avenoe en
trance now, the high lichen-eaten stone
p illa r* with the battered device upon the
top. T h e iron gate between was open.
W ith a glad cry she quickened her pace,
and in another moment would have been
in the high road, when------
"N o w then, where are you a-comin’
to?” cried a gruff voice from among the
bushes which flanked the gate.
The jgirl steppeS all in a tremble. In
tl»e shadow o f the trees there waa a camp
etcol. and on the camp stool sat a rev-
age looking man. dressed in a dark cor
duroy suit, with s blackened clay pipe
stuck in the corner o f his mouth. H is
wiather-beaten mahogany face was plen
tifu lly covered with smallpox marks, and
one o f his eyes was sightless and white
from the effects o f the same disease. He
rose now. ami interposed himself between
her and the gate.
*
“ M y good man.” she said in a trembling
voleé, for his appearance w y fa r from
reassuring, “ I wish to go past and to get
to Bedsworth. Here is a shilling, end I
beg that you will not detain me.”
H er companion stretched on a very
dirty hand, took tke coin, spun It up
in the air, caugkt it. bit it. and finally
plunged It into ths depths o f bis trouser
pockets. “ N o rood this way, missy,” hs
said. “ I ’ ve given my word to the guv’-
nor. and 1 can’t go back from it.”
“ Yon hav* no right to detain me,” K ate
cried angrily. "” I have good friends in
I/ondoo who w ill make you suffer for
this.”
She was only a dozen yards from the
lane which led to- freedom, so she made
n quick little feminine rush in the hope
o f avoiding this dreadful sentinel which
barred her passage. H e caught her round
the waist, however, and burled her back
with such violence that she staggered
at torn the path and would have fallen had
she not struck violently against a tree.
K ate turned and retraced her etapa
slowly and sadly ufe the a ven a * Aa she
tured woman trudging up the Ian« w ith a
tin can in her hand. Lonely and foriO u .
but not yet quite destitute o f hop«, ah*
turnad to the right among the tree*, and
pushed her way through bushes and t r a il
hie« to the boundary
of
the
P r ig #
1 round*. It waa a lofty wail, at leant
nine feet In height, with a coping tb it
bristled with jagged pieces o f glass. K ate
walked along the base o Itl her fa ir • k k
all torn and bleeding with scratches from
the briars, until ahs sat ¡»tied herself that
to m e one has figured out th at tt ooqto
on the a vera ge only ono-bulf aa much
to food a karoo aa it doe* to food a
m a n ; and that the bora* w ilt do tan
times the am ount o f w ork th a t It la
possible fo r the man to do.
I f this
estim ate la correct, thou a d o lla r’s
w orth o f fo o d given the horoe w ill p ro
duce tw en ty tim es aa much results aa
the sam e am ount o f money w ill I f e x
pended In feed fo r a man. T h e re fo re ,
when man dom esticated the h o n e ha
Im m ensely Increased his ow n p o w er o f
securing results. W hen much , fa rm w o rk
Is to ha dona th ere ahonld a lw a y s be
enough horses to do I t
F a rm ers try
to econom ise o n 'th e num ber o f horses
and h ave to lea ve mnch w ork undoes.
In th e even t o f h ired help being scarce,
tt Is som etim es possible to o ffset th is
lack by Increasing th e number o f h o n e s
kept
In som e p arts o f the W e s t and
N o r th w e s t declares the Farm ers* R e
view , the sca rcity o f help has resulted
In m o n h o n e s being used.
F iv e a n
pumping o r fro m a spring. Concrete hitched to a doable plow, and one d riv 1190— Mahomet I I . besieged Constanti
floor and w alla m ay now b e b u ilt aa e r la thus enabled to turn tw o fu rro w *
nople.
cheaply as w ith lum ber, and It la a a t a tim e and p ra ctica lly d oab le the
1378— W illiam Harvay, discoverer o f the
great deal better than lumber. D on’t w ork th at one man baa to do. T h is Is
circulation o f the blood, bora.
stop here. A b arrel churn and a butter the result o f the com plete u tilisation o f
1644— Malaonneuve defeated the Iroquois
m aker w ill be necessary In tu rning out horseflesh.
at the Place d 'A rm e* Montreal. •
a u n iform p ro d u ct
I t looks easy—
1783— Field Marshal Viscount Hardings,
G a M t to r Drum Burra.
sim ply separatin g the cream , churning
an early governor general - o f India
* A very sim ple method by w hich on*
t ill the butter cornea, and saltin g, and
born in England.
man can m anipulate a d ra g saw to cut
the trick la doue. T h a t la w h ere no
dow n trees has been dpvlsed by a west- 1808— Joseph Bonaparte made K la g of
many fa il. T h e cream must be churned
the T w o S icilie*
____ tr a tim ber mah. In
at th e rig h t tem p era tu re; It must be -■ 1JrL
1814— Napoleon Bonaparte saat la agile
»
y
*
using
these
aawa
n eith er too sw eet nor too aour. W o rk
to island o f Elba.
tw o m e n h a v e
in g and malting butter to secure uni
1833—
Treasury buildings at Washington
I
J
.
heretofore
b
e
e
n
I form c o lo r anil fla v o r la a v e ry nice a r t
destroyed by lire.
a
J\
jj8 -
necessary, one at
Don’t t r y to learn to d o It In fa llib ly
Í 5 u lX
r f l .
each end o f the 1843—iSir Charles Metcalfe appointed
In tw o o r three w e e k * bub by a ll means
governor o f Canada.
don’t p ractice on you r cu sto m er* T h a t
1847— Covent Garden theater, London,
/
f
l
(
According
to
the
means toa* I t la better to w a it tw o o r
opened for Italian opera.
/
J L - y new i n v e n t i o n ,
three months b efore yon seek custom
1834— Commercial treaty concluded with
/
.
.
H
K
i
y
t
h
e
r
e
la
rested
er*
And. b efore you ship, find out
Japan by Commodore Perry o f tin
“ *
against
a tree 4
United States navy.
■ 1
1 rod from which Is
o n x -M A W SAW.
gu lrpeD d ed , r o n L 1833— Planet Circe discovered by M.
C H A P T E R X V I.
I t would be unpoesible to describe the
suspense in which Tom Ditnsdale lived
during these weeks. In vain be tried in
every manner to find some pray o f tracing
the fugitives.
He wandered aimlessly
about London from one inquiry office to
another, telling bis story and appealing
for assistance. H e advertised in papers
and cross-questioned every one who might
know anything o f the matter.
There
w ire none, however, who could help him,
or throw any light npon the mystery. No
one at the office knew anything o f tbs
movements o f the senior partner.' T «i all
Inquiries Ezra replied that be had beta
ordered by the doctors to seek complete
repose in the country.
H is father became seriously anxious
about the young fellow 's health. H e ate
nothing, and his sleep was much b rok e*
Both the old people tried
inculcate pa
tience and moderation.
“ That fellow, Exra Girdlestone, knows
where they are,” Tom would cry, striding
wildly np and down the room with un
kempt hair and clenched hands. “ I w ill
have his secret, if I have to tear it ont
o f him.”
"Steady, lad, steady!” the doctor re
plied to one o f these outbursts. “ There
is nothing to be gained by violence. They
are on the right side o f the law at pres
ent and you w ill be on the wrong if you
do anything rash. The girl could have
written i f she were uncomfortable.”
;
“ Ah, so she could. She must have fo r j
gotten os. H ow coaid the, a fter all that
has passed?”
“ L et ns hope for the best, let ns hops
fo r the bent,” tbs doctor would say sooth- f
ingly. Y e t it must be confessed that h«
waa considerably staggered by the turn
which things had taken. H e had seen so
much o f the world in hi* profedbfonal ca
pacity that he had become a very reliable
Judge o f character, A ll his instincts told
him that K ate Hartson was a true-heart
ed. and well-principled girl. It was not in
her nature to leave I .on don and never to
send a single line to her friends th tell
them where or why she had gone. There
itself into one o f two things— either she
was ill and unable to hold a pen, or she
had lost' her freedom and was restrained
from w riting to them. The last suppo
sition seemed to the doctor to be the more
serious o f the two.
Had he known the instability o f ths
Girdlestone firm, and the necessity they
were under o f getting ready money, be
would at once have held the key to the
enigma. H e had no idea o f that, bnt in
spite o f his ignorance be was deeply dis
trustful o f both father and son. H e knew
and had often deplored the clause in John
Harston’s w ill by which the ward’s money
reverted to the guardian. F orty thousand
pounds was a bait which might tempt
even a wealthy man into crooked paths.
( T o be continued.)
A t th « end o f the cord is an adjust
able clamp, to which one end o f the
saw la secured. A t the other end o f
the saw la a handle. In operating the
saw to cut the tree, the end opposite the
handle is supported by the cord In the
sam e position aa i f operated by baud.
W ith th e em ploym ent o f this gu ide the
necessity o f an e x tra man to m anage
one end o f the saw is elim inated.
u “
• * F o r t u it y h r t a a e h l s *
Lan d kept constantly aa a garden
loses much o f its fe r tility by leaching.
A c lo v e r rotation is the best p reven tive
o f t h i * T h era should be a t least tw o
o r th ree garden spots on each fa rm
kept rich enough s o that one y e a r's ex-
tra m anuring w ill bring It Into the
finest possible condition fo r
garden
truck'. I f farm ers ¿ould a lw a y s plan t
gardens on tw o-year clo ver sod they
w ould ra ise better crops and w ith less
stable m anure and oth er
fe rtilis e rs
than th ey now require.
T h e c lo ver
does much m ore than furnish green
m anure to ferm en t In the soli.
Its
roots reach down Into the satmdM. thus
not on ly savin g and b rin gin g to th e
su rface plant food th a t w ould other-
w ise be wasted, but also by en liven in g
the subsoil, a llo w in g th e roots o f crops
to g o deeper. C lo ver sod to begin w ith,
I f w ell enriched. Is best fo r such crops
as cucumbers and m e lo n * th at a re *1-
w ays
most lik e ly
to
su ffer
from
d ro u g h t I t Is qu ite im possible to m ake
a good garden crop unless th e land has
previou sly been enriched by a series o f
heavy m an u rin g* T h e fe r t ilit y lost by
leaching must be constantly renewed.
A
ao p e rfe c tly lu harm ony w ith Ua sur
ro u n d in g *— E. E. M iller, in F arm and
Home.
One o f the moat potent fa c t o r * per-
hapa, th at ahonld be considered when
selecting a breed fo r producing eggs
fo r m a rk et la the dem and o f the m ar
k e t a tew b lch the eggs a re to be dls-
poeed o f, says T h e O uting M agazine,
gom e m a rk e t* notably N ew Y o rk C ity
and c itie s im m ediately adjacent, pre
fe r w hite-shelled egga, and the beat
tra d e In th em m arkets w ill accept none
other. Boston p re fe rs brown e g g * and
P s I l i M s a U la s s w a r e .
pays a substantial prem ium fo r th em ;
You have heard o f m any valuable and, ta k in g the country over, the p re f
w a ys to clean glassw are and give to erence Is fo r brown eggs by a la rge
the pieces a desirable brillian cy, yet m a jo rity . H ow ever, In m any m arkets
here Is a method which la a “ secret” no preferen ce at all la e x p reread ; In
and certain to g iv e the best resu lt* fact, those jn a t mentioned are p ra ctic
W ash the glass pieces and d ra in until a lly th e on ly m arkets In which the
dry, then coat each piece w ith a mix color o f the e g g receives attention to
ture o f h a lf w a ter and ammonia. When th e e x te n t o f influencing p r ic e * W h ere
d ry brush the pieces w ith a so ft bris th ere la a preference, and w h ich ever
tle brush.
Be sure and use only tbe th e p referen ce la, one should keep a va
bristle brush or the polish w ill not ap- rie ty o f fo w ls that la y egga o f the pre
pear. T h ls is excellen t fo r glassw are ferred color.
o f any kind and makes old pieces look
M w u s r t s g L a n d b y W e ls h «.
like new.
T h e a r e a - o f any piece o f lam ), no
m atter how Irregu lar the boundary
H ow m any educated people there are lin e * m ay be accu rately ascertained by
means o f a d elica te balance aa fo llo w s :
w ho have no more than a peasant's
M ake a d ra w in g o f the p la t o f ground
vocabulary.
T h ey do not
use th e
on pasteboard to a given scale, say 4
w ords that a peasant uses, but they
square rods to 1 Inch, C a t from aome
d o not Im prove upon them. T h e y still
part o f th e sheet o f pasteboard a piece
go on saying, '“ H ow a m u s in g !" "H o w
ex a ctly 1 Inch square, which repre
lo v e ly !” “ H ow n ic e !” to the end o f the
sents one acre, o r 4 square r o d * Also
chapter.
N obody can be Interesting
cut ou t the p la t aa drawn. W eigh the
w ho Is a lw a ys w orkin g a lim ited vo
square and the plat. T h e number o f
cabulary.— B ritish W eek ly.
tim es tb e w eigh t o f tbe square la con
tain ed In the w eigh t o f the plat Indl-
l h a o m i l Tam m y.
“ H ere is some com plexion powder* oates tb e area o f the land. F o r exam
auntie.” said little Tom m y Toddles. “ I ple, I f the square w hich represents one
bought this little box fo r mamma and acre w eigh s 20 g r a in * and the plat
I w eighs 240 g r a in * then the p lat con-
the grea t big box fo r you.”
“ Bnt w h y did you think 1 needed ' f « " * t w e lv e a c r e * — Scientific Am eri-
such a la rg e box?” asked the visitin g
aunt In surprise.
'Oh, hecauM I heard papa M y you
I t la fo r tha cooM rva tlon o f m olature
w ere two-faced.'
th at w * keep, np th « cu ltlation o f th *
T e e g s * T ie d T a lk e r * .
U g lc .
, "D id yon take you r g irl's mother ta
the gam e w ith you?
" N o ; w e le ft her at home. W hat la
boms w ithout a m other?” — T a la Heo
cro p « tn the saramer, hat th « eva p ora
tion w h ich
can be checked by this
means Id em ail when com pered w ith
tb e am ount o f W ater taken up fro m tho
•o il b y an ord in a ry grow th o f w e e d *
W * e «n h ardly estim ate the la p o rt-
« M aff k in in e the w e e d *
Feed
C oaahlne.
General L
Qf
iSOfl— First m
A . R.
8paniah H
Chile,
— United I
Buaeia foi
1888— Uni fora
P** letter
a.
1883— Battlrfo
“ * * * " by
1891— Baron
th* l
1898— Chin«
° r i* ‘ H r"
1908— Large ■
»troyed by
1006 Exploelc
Bridgeport
number o f
* 0
,0 0 ,~ Frwi
>yor
f
#
■ re-e*
Sd>r
M***
^
F eed in g sheep and lam bs fo r tbs
guD, M
m arket Is very mnch o f a lo ttery a t Board o f Educ
best
I t Is the purpose o f the feed er nrsca the fora
to b oy thin stock and. a fte r feed in g tt school hygiene.
A new v a rie ty f i t w h eat has been d is
covered by a fa rm er liv in g near Ju li
etta, Idaho. H e aays he found a fe w
kernels o f the w h eat g ro w in g w ild In
Alaska, and being struck w ith th eir
plumpness, hardness and oth er appar
ent good qualities, he brought home a
fe w k ern el* and planted them. From
those fe w kernels he harvested enough
the Drat y e a r to plan t several square
rods o f ground tb e second year, the
y ie ld from this plan tin g being at the
rate o f m ore than 100 bushels per
acre, w ell-fliled h ea d s; the kernels are
large, plump and hard and m illers M y
It m akes good flour.
T o C an v as H am a.
W hen hams a re smoked, roll them In
atlff paper, cat yon r brown muslin to
fit them and aew it on w ith a large
needle and tw in e ; then m ake a starch
o f flo o r and y ellow ochre, and w ith a
sm all w h itew ash brush cover them w ith
I t B a n g them up to dry.
P o a ltry
N ates.
Clean t h « droppings from ondar tha
roosts frequently.
B uckw heat Is excellen t
young and old poultry.
fo r
both
A la y in g ben ahonld hava constant
access to lim a or gravai.
G rit la tha ban’s teeth. P ro v id e her
w ith p len ty o f I t ao th a t aha m ay di-
Lincoln has tendered hie resignation, an!
it was accepted by the board o f trustee«
with the understanding that Chance 11 oi
Huntington shall remain until the end ot
the school year.
A t Chippewa F a ll* W ls „ Bupt Swart*
ordered the members o f the Greek iettei
fraternity Alpha Delta Omega to disfaan4
tbe organisation or
ir0B
school.
I I * declared that no secret o *
gantaation o f pupil* would be tolerated
T h e member* premised to hoed tha warm