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Show AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN IntereartlDg Mannacript What Is called "the snost Interesting Inter-esting MS. la England' can bs seen by visitors in the Library of Corpus Christ! college at Cambridge, It is the copy of the Gospels wbict Pope Gregory sent with Auguitin when be made hit first missionary Journey to convert the English to Christianity In the year 57. Sabtaarlae Cab2 ' - -M. Gutta-percha, a sap obtained from trees la Java, Malay, Sumatra and other tropical regions, and balata made by evaporating latex from the forests of the Amaaoa-diatricts, Venezuela, Ven-ezuela, Brazil, Panama and the British and Dutch Golanas, are used for submarine cable Insulation. T f T. W e o I 17 WBFi U Inlls .'f -v r .. a X a i, 2,000 Camp Grounds The 48 national forests of the United States now contain more than 2,000 public camp grounds. Alpine Lake Geneva Lake Geneva is the largest lake ia the Alpine region. . . ' By RUPERT HUGHES Second Largeat Congo The Congo river is exceeded in size only by the Amazon. 0 RUFEKT HUGHES WNU SOVKX If Patteni 2282 i pitches are to. easy to jgq'U be surprised to see 'jof panslea trow so quick-ttera quick-ttera 2282 contains Dia-i Dia-i Block; accurate pattern directions for making iutratlons; yardages. I jS cents in coins for this j to The Sewing Circle Kee- Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., lark, N. Y. . wkIU vniit nam a1. Loi pattern number plainly. JESPIII laUfiachedyvaf Ut-ee if with riaLndec. trine Be Li,. i VriCaorbDroaa L-iii Presume Ability vht undertake considera-A considera-A even in a regular way, to give us ground to pre-iUtty pre-iUtty Burke. 1Mb w act --JEW an jast try thai Me kiMht. hwiamaUns. De- aaam imiIiiiI witb i4 talSleINRIromroaT drutiet. Mate the teat toes nu.4 the boa aa. We wffl r fair. 'Mr. Best Friend ' . w best friend." said Emer- frthe ene who can make you T you know you ought to TOO LACK PEP? Phoenix, Aria. Mr. Tib Griffin, 111 W. Fill- mort St., ujn : ur. Pierce ffOlnen Medical i Discovery helped to rive I me a fine appetite and I felt mock atroafer after ' ha am. I had more mer ry ami waa able to sleep better." Aak your druggist today -for Dr. ' Pierce r.AAmm . jrA: i ri.. Ml at tablets, New aits, tableu aUlad $1.35. I An for Fame f ire for fame is the last J 8t is laid aside even by Tacitus. jv i -J-3.M- .anerV at. liaiil.Qa. 47-39 Good Counsel are of little avail Buess there is good coun- Uni r: Cicero. i JS Un0 the Blood LV.PaiufulDody Waste - - KBf?F m.tintly iltertnf w!rrlfo" to blood atrram. But rjrf'mre U la their work da kl5.5f,kur" "tended fall to ro-,"WrtU ro-,"WrtU that, at retained, may 'aekjjjj'" apae the arbem . 5?2.?,r rrlaf backache. WV1--heattacka o( diamine, H? evellinc pntflneea t tj loiif of nervoua ,"" kidney or bladder die-"'m, die-"'m, huming. aeaaty or ?U be nLu ,v. mM as was avmraarm 'Nil r? f th aerlt. tea tti?1" ora I ban forty yean. wLf .aattao-wida reputation. N tt- . Lbr aeopia Ue n rear nnfkliml aBea Sapor rlee, clofwd ae LteM with every Lwp relic tbat r I0FSORTS? ll i aasnane mm siNorsis On board the Nord-ExprcM. with Oa-tend Oa-tend aa hit tmmadlata deftlnaUon. Dr. DavM Jebb li bound for America. With mm la five-year -old Cynthia Thatcher, hla temporary ward. On the train they meet BUI Gain, former elaaamat of Davld'a. David teUa Calnea of hla out-ttandlnf out-ttandlnf weakneat an overwhelming de-aire de-aire to drink. He teela the ur(e coming to him again, and wanta to aafeguard chUd. who ia returning to America with him. During a atop, Calnea leavea the train to buy Cynthia a present The train leavea without him. Then Jebb ia painfully Injured in a minor accident A fellow passenger revive him with a drink, which make hla dealre for liquor aU the stronger. At the next atop David and Cynthia leave the train. David begin be-gin drinking. The next thing he la eonseloui of la a atrange aort of chanting. chant-ing. He look around, dazed and ick. A door opena and In walki a atrange Negro, cloaely followed by a woman, heavily veiled and dressed in flowing robe. She tells him that he Is in Uakub. that her name ta Minima, and that aha 1 the "gift wife" of the Paaha. who has another wife, and who Is husband hus-band In name only to Minima. She know nothing of the missing child. CHAPTER in Continued "Now If I could have some light wood a cigar box, or gomething to make a iplint" "Would thee lofra do?" Minima aid, pointing to an inlaid tabouret "Yes, but it's too handsome," said Jebb. Her answer was to pick up the low table and smash it on the floor, bringing two of the slender legs to Jebb. "And now if I could have some muslin or a long strip of cloth." Swish! She had ripped off yards of her robe. "And now," he said, "would han-lm han-lm effendl please hold these boards, sol here and here while I bind It all together." Two hands came out of the cloud, and rested right under her eyes. In binding the splints together, it was necessary for Jebb to touch those hands. They teemed to singe him like white fire. "Tell him to wear the sling for a week and the splints for two weeks," he said as he finished, regaining re-gaining a professional acerbity of tone. "Ask him if he found out anything about the child." The question waa repeated. Minima Mi-nima spoke with wonderful gentleness: gentle-ness: "No, poor Jebb Effendl. he finded not the child. He is search the all of Uskub. Nobody ia see a leetle girl of the Franks.' " "The FranksT no, no, she Is an American child." "All you Ingiliz and Europeans are Franks to us." Briefly he poured out to her his story, only he did not tell the cause of the great hiatus in his life. He simply said that he became 11L He had not the bravery to confess the truth. It was the crowning ignominy of his plight that he must stoop to beggary beg-gary or to starvation. He postponed post-poned the admission of his penury to the last moment and then postponed post-poned it again. . And the answer to his nauseating apology was that she had known it all the time. Jaffar, finding him unconscious un-conscious ia the street, had. at her orders, undressed him. bathed him, put him to bed, and taken his clothes, drenched as they were with rain, to dry them in the kitchen and to Iron them while the other servants serv-ants slept Jaffar bad reported that there was not a thing in all the stranger's garments only the usual pocket dust not a portemonnaie, not a card, not a coin, not even a bronze baish-para. As delicately as might be she strove to put Jebb at his ease. "It shall be pleasure to me to geeve to Jebb Effendi what I have of money." Seeing his look ofiior-ror, ofiior-ror, she hastened to amend: "And be shall pay it again when Allah sends him reeches once more." But Jebb put up his hand to check her. He could not endure this. "I have hoort the feeling of Jebb Effendi by to offer him of mine," she said. "Now Allah has wheel-pered wheel-pered to me how Jebb Effendl shall earn mooch money queeck and mooch power and fame." "Tell me in Allah's name." "Jebb Effendi is Ingiliz effendl." "No, no, I'm not English, I am American." "Eet ees alia the same to an Osmanli. Jebb Effendi is great phee-seeclan, phee-seeclan, great soorgeon. In our country vwe tbeehk the Frank doc tors work meeracles. Ol old time one believed that Allah sent seeck-ness seeck-ness and and " She paused in dread of the reat word which the Moslems avoid "may he keep far from you the the Cup-bearer of the Sphere. At the promenade today, to-day, Jantine Hanim is expected. But she corned not. She says her son, her . worshipt -son Cani Bey. it in pain mosrffightful. The Bey theenk somebody is give heem of poison, but he is too young to have enemies ene-mies and he does not die in his pain. If Jebb Effendi can cure that ton, the father pays mooch. The father fa-ther is a very rich bey. There are to good doctors here. Jebb Effendi could leeve in Uskub and become most terreeble for reechness." The thought of living In Uskub was not so appalling to Jebb at It would have teemed a few hours before. be-fore. The thought of money wat always al-ways agreeable. "I will see this man at once." he said. "It is bad eUquette, but I am desperate. I wiU teU him that I will cure his ton. I can if anybody can." Minima's palms were up In protest pro-test It would never do to go direct to the Bey. Jebb would be treated as a fraud; he would not be permitted permit-ted to see the ton. Things were not done in Turkey in straight lines. The Osmanli s, like nature, love a curve. "Wh-what am I to do, then?" said Jebb. "There is In Uskub a large khan a hotel the Hotel Turati. Jebb Effendl Ef-fendl shall go there and command the best room and wait" "I can command the room, but do I get it? I have no money not even baggage." "Of that also I have theenked," said the amazing woman. "You shall say your baggage Is sended to StambouL You stop but for one, two days." "That accounts for the baggage. But shall I tay that my money wat tent on to Stamboul, too?" "The money that you moott take from me." But Jebb put out hit hand. "Thank yout and God bless you, hanim ef- "Don't go yet. Remember this ia Turkey." fendlm, for your good heart but I couldn't" "You moost," she persisted. "I don't need it hanim effendlm. I have this ring. I will pawn it" "Jaffar shall take the reeng," the laid, "and breeng you mooch more money at you could touch. He shall tay eet eet my reeng. It looks a woman's reeng." Then a gasp. "It eet perhapt a reeng tome lady gived the effendi?" "No, no. I bought It myself in Cologne." And he added with perfect truth: "It has no associations for me whatever." With which he twisted twist-ed it from his finger and held it out to her. Suddenly a truth stabbed Jebb to the heart; he saw that this woman for whom he had begun to feel a tenderness had begun to feel a Jealousy Jeal-ousy of him. The implied proprietorship proprie-torship did not Irritate him. It delighted de-lighted him; and the delight was the keener for being edged with fear. "Tomorrow morning while yet the effendi it sleep (Inshallah!) Jaffar shall have goed and corned back with the money." "But how can I slip out in the daylight without being seen?" "Also that I have theenked. I tell you tomorrow day, for now eet Is ver' late. Allah send you the sweetest sweet-est of sleep." "Don't go!" he pleaded. But she was gathering herself together to stand up. He leaped to his feet to help her. To rise from a cross-legged cross-legged position Is something of a feat It is one of the few that harem laziness permits. Minima rose straight In air like a lark leaping upward from a meadow. But as she stepped forward, her toot taught On the hern of her robe. She. lost he? ...poise,, swayed, would have fallen. But Jebb had risen from the divan; he put out his arm ; her weight was upon him so sudden-, ly that he had no little difficulty with his own equilibrium. The recovery re-covery of both was a matter of brief and busy delay. , Minima gave a little cry of alarm at her. plight another of dismay at finding herself in a man's arms. And then she fled, soft-footed, spiritual, spiri-tual, like a dark cloud trailing along a mountainside. He put out the lights and groped his way to the window where (he moonbeams beat in and showered the floor. CHAPTER IT At the Hotel Turati Jebb was ac cepted on bis own recognizance. He found that his English was of no use, but hla German, rusty as it was, elicited the good news that there were British, Austrian, and Russian consulates In the town. He made haste to the British building, but the Albanian kavass on guard informed him in a tew broken English phrases that the consul was ill and wat not likely to be well for tome days. Jebb stood irresolute, then went to the Austrian consulate. Here he wat informed that the consul wat in conference with hit Russian confrere and the two governors gover-nors of Uskub, the Turk and the Christian, and the affairs of Turkey were in such confusion, added to the increasing disorder of the district dis-trict itself, that there was little hope of seeing the consul. Jebb looked to downcast at this that his informant asked the nature of his errand, and introduced himself him-self as Herr Xavler Franz Heller von Hellwald of Vienna. Jebb introduced in-troduced himself as a former student stu-dent at the University of Vienna and the young attache mellowed immediately. imme-diately. They adjourned to a coffee house for kafene, a bumble wooden structure with an awning over the walk, and cane-bottomed stools. "But what brings you, Herr Doctor Doc-tor Yep, to this dismal cemetery of an Uskup?" Jebb shook hit head with a dreary "Ich weltt nlcht" and then poured forth In halting German and with baiting courage at much of hit story as he felt it discreet to divulge. "That it a problem Indeed, Herr Doctor Yep. Now if you knew where you lost the child" "If I only knewl" "If you knew where you had lost her, it would be easier. And yet not easy at that If the had disappeared dis-appeared in Vienna, or Berlin, or Paris, we could telegraph and the great engine of the police of Europe could be set hi motion. But we art in Turkey, and Turkey it In revolution. revolu-tion. Nobody knows what will happen hap-pen tomorrow. Nobody knows what happened yesterday. We only know that Constantinople it .captured by the revolutionists and that the Sultan Sul-tan is prisoner." Minima had told Jebb nothing of this; either the had known little of it or had forgotten it in the stress of more personal events. "The Sultan a prisoner!" Jebb gasped. "Turkey in revolution! And the little child lost among these savages." sav-ages." "What did you say the child's name was?" "Cynthia Thatcher." "Tseentia TatTient tseend it it an ertchrecklich name to tay. Bomben, Granateni Herr Doctor Yep, if tomebody asks the child her name and the tells it nobody will be able to repeat it or to remember remem-ber it" "You muat help me." "I will do my all, and gladly. It will take much money. In Turkey nobody moves not even the Sultan without baksheesh. You have much money, yes?" . Jebb tossed his hands. "I have a hundred and fifty dollars about six hundred marks." "You have a difficult problem. Herr Doctor. We must tee what we can do. Your passports are in good shape, I hope." "Passports? I never had any." "You must have had to get into Turkey. And you must have had a teskere or you could not have traveled." trav-eled." "If I had them I lost them, and I don't know where." "Where were you last did you say?" "In Salonica. I think. All I know Charts Are Essential in Charts are to the seamen what road maps are to the motorist. Glance at a chart and observe the thousands of mysterious "little figures fig-ures and letters which cover the portions devoted to various oceans. These are of the utmost importance to the seaman, telling him the depth of water and what lies beneath him, says Pearson's Weekly. By means of campa&s and sextant the captain of a ship fixes what he calculates to be the exact position of his vessel. On the chart appears, say, the letter "r.V denoting that beneath ha, rock.' To make quite sure that he is not heading the ship to destruction on some undiscovered sandbank, he takes soundings. Standing on either side of the bridge is a steel framework on four tegs with a large drum and above this is fixed a dial marked in fathoms. fath-oms. On the drum many thousands of feet of thin steel wire are wound. At the end of the wire is a short length of special non-kinking rope to which It tied a 28 pounc" weight. The base of the lead weight, knqwn simply as the "lead," is hollowed hol-lowed out in the form of a shallow cup In which ia placed a quantity of tallow Fastened securely to the It that the train from Salonica brought me here." "Salonica I Bomben, Granateni It la the very home of the revolution, Everything started there. And you have been in Salonica without knowing. know-ing. And how did you get there? You probably reached there by the railroad from Constantinople. Have you been In Constantinople?" "I don't know." "Did you have the child with you In Salonica?" "I don't know. I may have had. I cannot tell." Hellwald shook his head In dismay dis-may and exploded hla "Bomben, Granateni" in a whisper. Past the cafe where Jebb and Hell-wall Hell-wall sat pondering flowed the eddying eddy-ing traffic of the street Now and then aiTurk, a Russian, an Austrian, or a Macedonian saluted Hellwald after the manner of his race or station, sta-tion, and the Austrian answered In kind. At length a sound of distant wailing, wail-ing, and a hint of doleful chant began be-gan to define itself above the clatter. clat-ter. The crowd paused and massed to give way to a funeral procession led bybearded priests of the Greek Church In gorgeous vestments, marching slowly and tinging. The procession turned the corner and disappeared. . Among those who had paused to watch the cortege wat a venerable white bearded Turk in fez and frock coat; he teemed to be deeply touched. After the crowd had dispersed he still stood In dejection. de-jection. HeUwald tald to Jebb: "That is Akef Bey, one of the leaders of the Young Turks. His eldest ton is an officer at the citadeL Hit younger ton, Gani Bey, is very ill, and the doctors here can do nothing for him." Jebb started at the names of Akef Bey and hit son. He was about to say that he was waiting to be sought by this very man when he realized the indiscretion of such a remark. Akef Bey saw Hellwald and greeted greet-ed him with a sad courtesy in a sweeping salute from the brow. Hellwald rose, saying to Jebb: "Excuse me, I must ask him how hit ton it today." He went to the old man and questioned ques-tioned him in what Jebb assumed to be Turkish. Akef Bey antwered with much excitement and vivid gestures ges-tures of pain and despair. Hellwald listened with evident sorrow. Then he seemed to brighten with an idea. He beckoned Jebb. "I have Just told Akef Bey that you are one of the most eminent physiciana in America, and that I knew you well in Vienna when you studied at the greatest of all Universities. Uni-versities. It is near enough to the truth for a diplomat" As he wat saying this to Jebb, the Bey was pouring fluent Turkish into hit other ear. Hellwald translated in short asidet: - "He it asking me if you cannot come to tee bit ton at once don't accept look tolemn you are busy you are leaving town the other physicians have failed to help him, be says they are ignorant dogs his son cries aloud in agony. But don't accept too readily. Don't go yet Remember this is Turkey. They ex pect to bargain for everything. He it rich. You need much money." . But Jebb agreed and on the way they passed a miscellaneous bazaar, where a meager supply of drugs was kept for the foreign population. There Jebb managed to find a large hypodermic needle and a supply of tablets, which he purchased along with a few of such simples as the ezja-hane possessed. The home of Akef Bey was important impor-tant in Uskub, large enough to be Called a Konak. (TO BE CO?iTlWED) Modern Sea Vessels length of rope is a slim brass container. con-tainer. Into this is placed a narrow glass tube sealed at one end, and graduated along its length in fathoms, fath-oms, with a thin line of red chemical chem-ical running up the center. The whole Instrument is then swung out clear of the ship's side on a boom and let go. Immediately bottom is touched, the lead is hove in by an electric motor and swung inboard once more. The tube is examined to show where the action of the water forced up it by pressure has removed re-moved the -chemical, the actual depth of the. water, while the tallow is scrutinized for any particles of sand or clay. Before the Invention of the present sounding machine by Lord Kelvin, methods of sounding in deep water were cumbersome, lengthy, and not always reliable. The lead used was of the same size and shape approximately approx-imately as that used today. Sailors were lined along the side of the ship from bow to stern on platforms called "chains." The lending man held the lead, to which were attached at-tached many thousands of feet of rope on which were marks indicating indicat-ing depth in fathoms. Cooking Leaaoa Left at heme to cook his supper while hls-ife was at the movies, a 28-year-old hatband In Prague, Caacho-SloTakla, became so alarmed when the porridge boiled over and filled the kitchen with tteara.lhat he rushed to the theatre, calling loudly for his mate. The attend ants objected to this disturbance of the performance, but the frenzied man threatened them with violence If they interfered. Charged at the police court with disorderly conduct. he wat bound over for II months. 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