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" - *V i ^mmaKasassssi 1 n h. CopyiqM' by EcK^nTBalmcr >? rr^nll- 1 t ?? - v?*r?m imi vrmett) CHAPTER XIX k ? Th? 8oundlng of the Drum. Noises of the wind and the roaring mt the lake made Inaudible any sound of his approach to the cabin; she heard his snowshoes, however, scrape the cabin wall as, after taking them off, he leaned them beside the door. He thrust the door open then and came In; he did not see her at first nnd, as be turned to force the door shut again hgalnst the wind she watched him quietly. He saw her now and started and, as though sight of her confused him, he looked from the woman aud then back to Constance before he seemed certain of her. "Hello I" he said tentatively, "Hel!ol" "I'm here, Henry." "Oh; you are! You are!" He stood drawn up, swaying a little as he Kred at her; whisky was upon his tath, and It became evident In the heat of the room; but whisky could not account for this condition she witnessed In him. Neither could It conceal that condition; some turmoil nnd ptraln within him made him Immune to its effects. She had realized on her way up here what, vaguely, that strain within him must be. Quilt?guilt of some awful sort connected him, and had connected Uncle Beuny, with the Mlwnkn?the j Quilt Was In His Thought Now?Racking, Tearing at Him. lost ship for which the Drum had beaten the roll of the dead. Oullt was In his thought now?racking, tearing at him. But there was something more than that; what she had seen In him when he first cnught sight of her whs fsar?fear of her, of Constance Sherrlll. "You came up here about Ben Cor vet?" he challenged. "Yes?no I" "Which do you mean?" "No." "I know, then. For him, then?eh 1 For hlin?" "For Alan Conrad? Yeg," she said. "I knew It 1" be repeated. "He's been the trouble between you and me all the time!" She made no denial of that; she had begun to know during the last two days thut It was so. "So you came to find him?" Henry went on. "He'll be found 1" she defied him. "Be found?" "Some are dead," she admitted, "but not all. Twenty are dead; but seven are not!" "Seven?" lip echoed. "You say aeven are not! How do you know?" "The Drum has been heating for twenty, but not for morel" Constance aald. "The Drum you've been listening to all day upon the beueh?the In man Drum that sounded for the dead of the Mlwaka; sounded, one by one, for all who died! But It didn't sound for him 1 It's been sounding again, you know; but, again, It doesn't sound for Jblra, Henry, not for him!" "The Mlwaka! What do you mean toy that? What's that got to do with this?" Ills swollen face was thrust forward at her; there was threat against her In his tenqe muscles and .his bloodshot eyes. She did not shrink back from him, <or move; and now he was not waiting for her answer. Something?a sound ?l>ad cuught him about. Once It echoed, low in Its reverberation but penetrating and quite distinct. It came, so far as direction could be assigned to It. from the trees toward the .shore; but It was like n<> forest sound. Distinct, too, was It from any noise of the hike-. It was like a Drum! Yet, when the echo had gone. It was a sen it ten easy to deny?a hallucination, that was all. But rA)W, low and distinct It came again; and, as before, Constance saw It catch Henry and hold ' him. Ills Hps moved, but he did not apeak; he was counting. "Two," she aw his lips form. k The sound of the Drum was contlnu: Ing. the beats a few seconds apart. . Twelve," Constance counted to her1 self. The beats had seemed to he 4Uita measured and regular .at first; tout now Constance knew that this was ooly roVghly true; they beat rather Id ^ ... tyhjiP Vh.'o at regular Intervals. terval between tne measures or tne rhythm passed, uiul still only the i whistle of the wind and the undertone J of water sounded. The Drum lmrt beaten Its roll and, for the moment, was done. Twenty-two had been her count, as nearly as she could count at all; the reckoning agreed with what the Indian woman hud heard. Two hud died, then, since the Drum last had beat, wheu Its roll was twenty. Two more than before; that meant five were left I Constance caught up her woolen hood from the tuble uud put It on. Her action seemed to call Henry to himself. "What are you going to do?" he demanded. I "I'm going out." I i He moved between her and the door. I j "Not alone, you're not!" Ills heavy voice had a deep tone of meiiuce In It; 1 he seemed to consider and decide i something about her. "There's a farmhouse about a mile babk; I'm going to take you over there and leave you with those people." "I will not go there 1" He swore. "I'll curry you, then!" She shrank back from him as he lurched toward her with hnnds outstretched to seize her; he followed her. and she avoided him again; If his guilt and terror had given her mental | ascendency over him, his physical strength could still force her to his will and, realizing the Impossibility of evading him or overcoming him, she stopped. "Not that!" she cried. "Don't touch me!" "Come with me, then !" he commanded ; and ho went to the door and laid his snowshoes on the snow and stepped into them, stooping and tightening the straps; he stood by while she put on hers. He did not attempt again to put hands upon her as they moved away from the little cabin toward the woods back of the clearing; but went ahead, breaking the trail for her with his snowshoes. He moved forward slowly; he could travel, If he had wished, three feet to every two that she could cover, but he seemed not wishing for speed but ml her for delay. A deep, dull resonance was ^ booming above the wood; It Hoomed ' again and ran Into a rhythm. No ^ longer was It above; at least It wus not 1 only above; It was all about them? ' here, there, to right and to left, before, * behind?the booming of the Drum. Doom was the substance of that sound of the Drum beating the roll of the dead. Henry had stopped lis front of her. half turned her way; his body swayed t and bent to the booming of the Drum, a as his swollen Hps counted Its sound- c lngs. she could see him plainly In the moonlight, yet she drew' nearer to him r as she followed his count. "Twentyone," he counted?"Twenty-two!" The drum was still going on. "Twenty- 1 four?twenty-five?twenty-six!" Would t he count another? t He did not; and her pulses, which t| had halted, leaped with relief. lie moved on again, descendlug the stee.p side of a little ravine, and she followed. One of his snowshoes caught c In a protruding root and, Instead of s slowing to free It with care, he pulled It violently out, and she heard the dry, seasoned wood crack. He looked down, swore; saw that the wood was not broken through and went on; but as he reached the bottom of the slope, she leaped downward from a little height behind hlni and crashed down upon his trailing anowshoe Just behind the heel. The rending snnp of the wood eatne beneath her feet. Had she broken through his shoe or snapped her own? She sprang back, as he cried out and swung in an attempt to grasp her; he lunged to follow her, and she ran a j few steps away and stopped. At Ids next step his foot entangled In the | mesh of the broken sjiowshoe, and he I stooped, cursing, to strip It off and I hurl it from him; then he tore off the ' one from the other foot, and threw It j away, and lurched after her again ; but ' now ln> Milllk Iltwive lilu L'liojivj nml flnim- i dered In tlie snow. She stooil for a j moment while the half-mad, half- I drunken figure struggled toward her along the side of the ravine; then she ran to where the tree trunks hid her from him. He gained the top of the , slope and turned in the direction she | had gone; assured then, apparency, that site had flown in fear of him, he stnrfed hack more swiftly toward the ! heach. She followed, keeping out of Ids sight among the trees. To twenty-six, he had counted?to twentv-six, each time! That tofd that he knew one was living among those j who had been upon the ferry I What j one? It could only he one of two to ! dismay him so; there had been only j two on the ferry whose rescue he had | (eared; only two who, living, he would , have let lie upon this heach which he had chosen and set aside for Ills patrol while he waited for him to die! She forced herself on, unsparingly, as she saw Henry gain the shore and as, believing himself alone, he hurried northward. She could not rest; she could not let herself he exhausted. Me.cile.sfi minute after inlnute she l mkCu \ *.,i thus-- A dark shape?a flg\ tit* my stretched upon the |rp ahead! licvond and still farther out, fountthing which seemed the lYagmcnts of u lifeboat tossed up and down where the waves thundered and gleamed at the edge of the floe. Henry's pace quickened; hers quickened desperately, too. She left the shelter of the trees and scrambled down the ste~p pitch of the bluff, . shouting, crying ahmd Henry turned J'. Ht' d. and she before she turned and faced him. Defeat?defeat of whatever purpose be had had?was his now that she was there to witness whut he mtgut do; and In his realization of that, he burst out In ouths against her? lie advanced; she stood, confronting?he swayed lUghtly lu his walk and swung past tier and away; he went past thus* things on the beach and kept on along the Ice hummocks toward the north. She ran to the huddled figure of the nan In mackinaw and cap;, his face vas hidden partly by the position In which he lay and partly by the drlftng snow; but, befor*. the swept the inow away and turned Mm to her, she tnew that he was Alan. She cried to him and, when he did lot nnsu'iii* ? >? ?.?.?.i? ?- ?1 ' 1 ...... wc onu"? nun iu kci mm iwake; but she could not rouse him. Praying In wild whispers to herself, die opened his Jacket and felt within lis clothes; he was warm?at least h? he Tried to Lift Him, to Carry Him; Then to Drag Him. But She Could Not. vas not frozen within! No; and there teemed some stir of his heart! She Tied to lift him, to carry him; then to Irag him. But she could rot; he fell 'roin her arms Into the snow attain, ind she snt down. pulling him upon ter lap and clasping hint to her. Site must have aid, she must get hint :o some house, she must take him out >f the terrible cold; hut dared she eave him? Might Henry return, if she vent away? She arose and looked lhout. Far up the shore she saw hf* igure rising and fulling with ills flight vet* the rough ice. A sound came to ler, too. the low, deep reverberation of he Drum heating once more along the .L - - * ? ? mure Him in rne woods and out upon I ho lnke: and It seemed to her that | rlenry's figure. In the stumbling steps if his flight, was keeping time to the * vihl rhythm of that sound. And she 1 itooped to Alan and covered him with ler coat, before leaving him; for she t 'eared no longer Henry's return. t Continued next week.) ???????? c THE NEW DAY BREAKS g The successful marketing of their obacco by cooperative saies is now * issured to the organized growers of iouth Carolina by the record breaking ^ ampaign of last week which reached >2 towns of the belt within seven , lays sweeping millions of pounds and tundreds of new members into the ^ Association. The last strong barriers o Cooperative Marketing have broken ( [own within the Palmetto State. . While half a million pounds a day irere added to the pool in the last days y if the drive, the strength of the As- ? ociation in the State was doubled by he fresh support of business men and ^ rnnkers in a score of towns, whose j fforts will continue to win signers. Timmonsville, the second largest ( obacco market in the State was the ] irst to close its doors to the auction ales, then Aynor and Kingstree fol- j owed fast during the days of the fu- < ious campaigning. Other towns will ;o one hundred per cent, cooperative ) is hundreds of acres surrounding the > >ig markets begin to grow tobacco for ho farmers' own organization. Thou- I ands of acres more will be added to ( he great pool before the markets pen, as committees in every large ( ohaeco nnimtv r. f C^ufV. W Carolina push the signup to the limit n the few tiajs :.b.it rcnvsin in which c o sign the Oii'S'nt crop. Growers from Kentucky who made t he long journey from the Blue Grass Country, growers from the Dark and J ..ight Belts of Vir*ini i bringing their nessage of success, have found a 8 eady welcome and a quick response 1 n action, that means the end of an ?ra of debt and poverty for men ' vho produce the wealth that has been r >assing steadily into other hands. With the new cooperation will come * lew independence, new opportunities, ^ lew standards of living for the prolucers of the millions of dollars of c vealth which now go to other States ind other people, according to last veek's message, which has roused the rrowers, the bankers and the business nen to cooperate to keep it home. From Danville, Virginia, to Timlionsville, South Carolina, ware- ( louses, tobacco growers and the bal- f ince of power have been passing into he Great Cooperative Association. A j 'ew men can no longer hope to block j 75,000 organized tobacco growers vitli $50,000,000 assured them with ] 20(5 warehouses ready for business, vith unsurpassed leadership chosen | rom their number, with the foremost j ?xperts of the world's tobacco trade eady to handle a majority of the to- . >acco from three states for the Asso- t nation. < A majority of the tobacco farmers from the Carolines and Virginia make I i last call to their fellow growers of i ???wmmmmmtmMil i _ _ NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT IN CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Under the rules of the Democratic Purty a re-enrollment i:- required for each election year and his is mandatory. The enrollment :.ooi<s will be open at the various c' ibs on Tuesday, the sixth (6th) da., of June 1922 and will close on Tuesday. Jjly 25th. 1922. The Democratic Ex cutive Committee respectfuly ur>?e3 every democrat to enroll and undjr the rules of the Party unless your name is on the club roll of your preciivt you cannot vote and must enroll in .he club nearest your residence, calculated by the nearest practical route. The rules of the party further provide: "Each applicant for enrollment shall in person write upon tho club roll his (or her) full name anil immediately thereafter his (or her) age, occupation and post-office address, and if in a city or town shall write the name of the street numbor of the house in which the applicant re-ides, if such , designations exists in such city or ' town. "If the name be illegible the Secre- [ ary shall write the name beneath the f .ignature of the applicant. In the J event of the inability of the applicant' :o wrie he (or she) may make his( or ^ ,ier) mark upon the vol', which shall i, oe witnessed by the Secretary or oth- | er person then having the custody .hereof, and if the Secretary shall fill in other requirements." Under the laws of t'ae State and the rules of the l'arty the women have the full right of suffrage and they are most respectfully invited to enroll for the elections and their failure to enroll and vote would give other sections of the State a voting advantage. All democrats who arc properly envrolled and who have vouched th? ago of TWENTY-ONE YEARS, or shall become so before tho general election n November, and who have been in the State TWO YEARS and in the county SIX MONTHS and in the voting precinct 60 DAYS prior to tho irst primary to be held on 29th day of August shall be entitled to vote, provided, of course, they are citizens of the United States and of South Carolina. The following is a list of the votng places, the Committee of Enrollnent for each and the places where he books can be found: Cheraw, No. 1. Mrs. G. W. Martin, i loe Lindsay and L. C. Wannamaker. Place, Town Hall. Cheraw. No. 2. J. .T. West, H. T. juuiuer arid u. ..v ivers. Place, Pollock's Store. Pee Dee. H. K. Linton, R. C. Spease , ind John II. Wallace Place, H. K. Linon's or the usual place Bethel. J. M. Kimery. D. S. Matthe- ( ion and C. C. Chapman. Kimery's .tore. i Brock's Mill. D. C. Caulder, R. S. ' ^arker and J. C. Brock. School house. . Grant's Mill. B. F. McBride, W. B.j Vtkinson and W. H. Caulder. Teal's j dill. Patrick W. A. McNair, D. M. Mc? , S'air and D. F. Buite. Post-office. Middendorf. H. C. Wilhelm, J. C. }atoe and W. R. Johnson. Depot. , , Ousleydale. F. J. Johnson, Theolore Winburn and R. C. Baker. School | louse. McBce. R. T. Seegers, D. L. Guyj ind D. G. McPherson. Corner Drug' >tore. Cat Pond. J W. Ruthven, John A.! iVilliams and Lewis Wilkes. School louse. Shiloh. J. W. Merriman, Bryan )dom and T. H. Douglass. School : louse. Bay Springs. J. W. Rascoe, J. A. Javis, and Daniel C. Camnholl R?? springs School House. Douglass' Mill. J. L. Douglass, B. C. rVadsworth and O. H. Douglass. rV'adsworth's Store. Cross Roads. V. B. Waddell, J. H. Dalrymplo and W. D. Gulledge. Church. Snow Hill. W. C. Freeman, E. C. Crawford and J. F. Crawford. School louse or usual place. Ruby. W. R. Eddlns, J. S. McGregir and M. L. Raley. Bank. Wexford. P. A. Gulledge, I. R. Melon and J. G. Lowry. Dowry's Store. Mt. Croghnn. W. J. Rayfield, H. A. fackson and W. F.. Hough. Bank. Winzo. T. B. Watts, W. M. Jordan md J. A. Taylor. H. Z. Outen's or the isual place. Center Grove. J. A. Demby, Roy summerland and J. W Jordan. School louse. Pageland. C. F. Funderburg. G. W. Cennini/ton and II i OwKnm ... - " " "? " i.lU.t" fo Bros, store. Dudley. T. D. Funderburk, Howard 'underburk and W. J. Funderburk. school house or usual place. Plains. G. W. Hinson, T. J. Rogers md W. J. Ilicks. Hicks' Store. Jefferson. J. A. Baker, J. W. Mill r and J. B. Nicholson. Nicholsons' >tore. Angelus. T. J. Knight, E. A. Midlloton and W. L. Jordan. Jordan'* itore. Catarrh. A. M. McLeod, J. G. Holey and B. E. Funderburk. Fundersurk's store. Court House. F. M. Cannon, T. W. Sddins and C. J. Sollers. Court house. The gentlemen whose name appears ast on each committee will act as secretary. Let the word go out toa 11 the voters ?o that there will be no reason for rnyone in the county being deprived >f his vote in the coming election. The Executive Committee at all times wil he glad to give any additional information. DJjVBgOgjfc^_ M.J. Ilough, | , r '"WWW Renew your health by purifying your system with @>s The puriiiecl and refined calomel tablets that are free from nausea and danger. No salts necessary, as Calotabs act like calomel li. * ? ana salts combined. Demand the genuine in 10c and 35c packages, bearing above trade-mark. candidates for state offices Following is a list of the candidates "who paid their assessments and filed their pledges with the chairman of the State executive committee up to the opening of the campaign. For Governor?Thomas G. McLeod, George K. Laney, C. L. Blease, John T. Duncan, J. J. Cantey, William Coleman. For Lieutenant Governor?Jennings K. Owens, Dr. E. C. L. Adams E. B. Jackson. For Congress?W. T. Logan, J. B. Morirson, R. S. Ilutton, First Dlstrnct; J. F. Byrnes, Second District; F. H. Dominick, Sam H. Sherard and E. P. McCravy, Third Disrict; J. J. McSwain, Fourth District; W. F. Ste venson, Fifth District; Phillip H. Sfcoll, Allard H. Gasque, W. R. Barringer and Jerome F. Pate, Sixth District; H. P. Fulmer, A. J. Bethea and John J. McMahan, Seventh District. For State Superintendent of Edu cation?O. D. Seay, J. H. Hope, C. H. Sef,?ler, Mrs. Bessie R. Drake, Mrs. M. B. Wallace and J. E. Swearingen. For Attorney General?Sain M. Wolfe, Harold Eubanks, D. M. Winter. For Secretary of State?W. Banks Dove und James C. Dozier. For Comptroller General?Walter E. Duncan, T. Hagood Gooding. For State Treasurer?Sam T. Carter. For Coirtmissiouer of Agriculture, Commerce and Industries?B. Harris, George Wightman. For Adjutant and Inspector General?Thomas B. Marshall and Robert E. Craig. For Solicitorshipsr?Frank A. McLeod und John G. Dinkins, Third circuit; L. M. Gasque and C- W. Mulclrow, Twelfth circuit; A. F. Spigner, Fifth circuit. f ?. 666 Cures Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever, It kills the germs. 37 WANTED to communicate with some substantial farmer that is in need, or could use the services of an experienced farmer. Married man with family. Thirty three years of age. Now employed, but for good reason desire to make a change, which will be made known through either a personal interview or by communication. T D. McCoy, 2t-27 Oswego, S. C. FOR SALE?Horse in good condi tion; price right; cheap, plenty of life. J. T. Wallace, Chesterfield Route 4, box 112. 4tp-28 CARDUI HELPED REGAIN STRENGTH Alabama Lady Was Sick For Three Years, Suffering Pain, Nervous and Depressed?Read Her Own Story of Recovery* Paint Rock, Ala.?Mrs. a M, Stern 11, Of near here, recontir related the fol< lowing interesting account of her recovery: "I was In a weakened condition. I wa.T sick three years in bed, offering a great deal of pain, weak, nervous, depressed. Z was so weak, I couldn't walk aorose the floor; Juat had to lay and my little ones do the work. I was almost dead. I tried ?very thing 1 hea * of. and a number of doctors. Still I dldn t get any relief. I couldn't eat, and Blent Doorlv. I believe If I hadn't heard of and taken Cardul I would have died. X bought six bottles, aft?5r a neighbor told me what it did for her, "I began to eat and sleep, began to gain my strength and am now well and strong, X haven't had any trouble since ... 1 euro can testify to the good that Cardul did me. X don't think there Is a better tonlo made and I believe It aaTed my life." For over 40 years, thousands of women have used Cardul successfully, In the treatment of many womanly ailments. If you suffer as these women dld? take Cardul. It may help you, too. M all druggists, ? ?% ?% g% Cur*? Malaria, ChilU, lalala F?v?r, Bilious Fov?r ^^^^Coldyo^Grippo^T 1 THE HC | How to Make and Ui III. WIREL In many ways, all the prlne equally well to radio telephony, b between the two. - In the first pli wireless telegraph transmitter an brator of a spark coll and while | so rapid that they appear as a 1 r,y.i ^ ^ ^ */><? r,j.3 r/r.4 r** sounds of this sort frequently hi , j grnph Instruments. Hence It Is ea \ cannot he cnrrled through spuce because of the Interrupted or hi continuous or were so Incredibly j they transmitted could easily be 1 fundamental key to successful wl known as continuous waves and waves that radio telephony owes , The accompanying figures, N< terrupted telegraphy currents and 1 represents the variations In vll tent oscillations of the wireless would be broken nnd interrupted 1 rupted waves. Figure 4, on the ot wireless telephone transmitter; 5 the continuous waves, interrupt* lug these diagrams you can en broken up as In figure 3 and tlowl In mind, however, that whereas t! be satisfactorily sent or received less telegrams can be sent to pei wireless telephone Instruments. I sets serve the best for sending te! that for the former the continuoi when sending code messages by t< by suitable instruments and a ke; In using wireless telephony, J two separate units known as tran be used only for sending nnd a rec mitting apparntus of the wireless receiving Instruments, as the grea reiving the messages, songs, etc., and as the receivers ure very sin: we will put the cart before the h< end of radio telephony before we i Neighbor Jim?Your son just thi a stone at me. Neighbor Joe.?Did he hit you? COUNTY T State Ordinary County Roads Bridges j Total i Cheraw Marburg Orange Hill Pats Branch Pee Dee Stafford Bethel Center Point Chesterfield Parker Pine Grove Ruby hiloh Snow Hill Stafford Vaughan Wamble Hill Black Creek Center .. Center Grove Cross Roads Mt. Croghan Ruby Wexford Winzo Zion Buffalo Dudley Five Forks Mangum Pageland Plains Zion Angelus . . Center Grove Clarks Jefferson Macedonia Plains Bay Springs Green Hill . Leland Middendorf McBee Providence Sandy Run . Union Bay Springs Bear Creek Bethesda Juniper Middendorf Patrick .. Pats Branch Branch Shiloh Stafford ..( White Oak Cat Pond .t Juniper .. Ousley .. ,i Patrick .. .t Linton ... .v..... 1Mb RADIO | ^ it ?^p b. 4AY.Sg*ggu. jj .ESS TELEPHONE ^53 Iples and laws of wireless teuVraphy appiyj ut, Ih other ways. there are f1"^ difference? 1 ace, the vth rations or waves jent dm by th?^l i Interrupted hh they are produced by the fy the flow of the oscillations or waves may be S steady stream, yet there la really a distinct . pause after each on* n. ff a telephone transmit, ter an<j receiver were , attached to the ordl- , nary nlreless lnstru^ ^ N v y ments used In telegr*? ! phy, the sounds or vl? bratlons of the voice, ^ _ would vary the path of * ^ the electrical oscillatlons and the same variations would be proi ^ duced on the receiver, ^^V'N/V'N/W But, owing to the fact that the waves are In? terrupted and are nof ' " continuous, the words or sounds would be cut up luto sections which would be meaningless, /v although such sounda as music, bells, whistling, etc., might be recognizable. In fact nve been heard over ordinary wireless telesy to see tbat the only reason why all sounds by ordinary wireless telegraph apparatus la oken waves, whereas. If these waves were rapid as to appear continuous, the sounds heard and understood. Therefore, the real r el ess telephony lies in producing what are It Is to the perfection and control of such much of its rapid advancement. [>s. 1, 2, 8, 4, 0 Illustrate Just how the InI the continuous waves carry sounds. Thus, >ratlons In a certain word. 2, the lntermlttelegruph sender und 8, the way the word by being transmitted by means of such inter- I ner hand, shows the continuous waves of the , the sound waves of a word and 0, the way *d by the words would appear. By studyislly see the difference between the word ng smoothly as In figure 6. It must be borne lie sounds of the voice, of music, etc., cannot by wireless telegraph Instruments, yet wlrerfectlon, and can be perfectly received, over ndeed. the very best transmitting radiophone legraphlc messages, the only difference helng js high frequency waves are used, whereas, degraph, the waves are broken or "chopped" y which opens and closes the circuit, ust as In wireless telegraphy, there must be sniltters and receivers and a transmitter can elver for reviving. As the sending or traDHtelephoue Is far more complicated than the test Interest In wireless telephony lies In resent broadcast from large sending stations, iple and easy to understand or to construct, rtrse, so to speak, and consider the receiving take up the sending end. rew Neighbor Jim. No. Neighbor Joe?-Well, then he wasn't my boy.?Mugwump. AX LEVY 1921 12 mills 6 mills 6 mills 1 mill 28 mills I r I b I g I I r 1 t * E. I ! 8. E. s ? ; ; ni s. ? t 3 t - ? - ? I ? ? II I 28 I2 4 1*4 46fa I 28 8 1*4 37*4 I 28 5 1*4 34 *61 28 8 1*4 37*4 28 3 4 1*4 36*41 28 8 2 1*4 39*41 28 8 5 4lfl 28 16 4*4 48*4| 28 8 3 SdB 28 8 86| 1 28 16 6 4*4 58*4 H [28 8 2 381 28 8 6 42 28 8 2 881 28 8 2 8SH 28 8 ss| 28 10 6 43B 28 10 6 43H 28 8 6 6 47S 28 8 6 6 4tH 28 16 6 4 6 68H | 28 16 6 4*4 6 5*2 | 28 8 5 6 <2 | 28 8 8 6 isHj 28 8 7*4 6 48*4& 28 8 4 28 8 )9 28 8 |2 ^ 10j 7V4 SlfH 28 8| 8 4^H| 28 8| 7*4 43 vS 28 g| 7 & 28 8j 6 6 4^H ........ I'28 16| 9 6 &fl -| 28 | 8| S8| I ? !l 28 8 6; 6 4Mm 28 8 10 6 { 28 8 10 6 BH 28 8 6 6 4B | 28 118 Vie} I 4 *4 I 8 |H 28 2 6 sHj . 28 8 6 4H 28 8 6 6 28 8 0 4^8 28 8 |B 28 11 128 3 28 8 5 M 28 15 4 9| 28 8 fl| 28 8 2 H 28 8 2 SB | 28 8 6 | 28 8 0 MM 28 8 H 28 12 6 ? 28 16 4 B 28 8 4 H 28 3 2 B