18 LANDING AT MOLE PROVES DISASTER Admiral Bacon, in Book, Re veals Thrilling Tale of "Dover Patrol' London. Dec. 19.—1f you suddenly learned that at most vulnerable point, In some of the most critical mo ments of the late war. Great Britain •was being guarded by two men and a boy, armed with two popguns. one of which was away you would experience something ot the thrill given by Admiral Bacon's book, 'The Dover Patrol. 191-li. •writes a London reviewer. For the one fact t hat ®tands out most clearly In these fascinatllng volumes is that for the veiy gate of England, from which we had to send every man and every cartridge, and every mouthful of food 101 the fighting line in France, the ad miralty could only spare a few 0( ?^ 8 and ends of obsolete vessels, be cause, for a chance that never came, we hid away at Scapa all our boast ed naval strength. And yet the Do ver Patrol was the one unit of the fleet that was always in touch with th AimiraV Bacon is i * nd ready to carry on chcerfull} and im provise good-humoredly with two men and a boy. if my lords of the admiralty could spare him noth In* more. But his facts are startling. How splendidly he was wined y his men he is eager to te l. "The men were mostly plain fish erfolk; the vessels ordinary fishing craft The little drifter —with the armament of a single rifle an <* a few rounds of ammunition—who used to accompany us on our bom bardments and be shelled with ap parent enjoyment, had crews of hardv fellows who were seamen in the truest sense. Often they stood unarmed as outposts in the Straita of Dover, with neither gun to fight nor speed to avoid the German de stroyers ... ... "The trawlers, with their brother fisher-folk, swept for mines at the rate of 250 miles a day. and during the first three years of the war swept a total distance equivalent to twelve times round the earth! These pie i saw their comrades blown up. and vet wept on stendilv and unfal teringly with their duties. Eccentric. Monitors Of regular navy boats —except for monitors, of whose navigating ec centiioitlca Admiral Bacon tells some amusing stories —there were . Mrs. Sherman was Miss Ida Dates, of New Market, prior to her mn'T'age. MOTHER KILLED 'BUDDY' BLAKE Jury at Coroner's Inquest Be lieves Woman's Mind Was Deranged Atlantic City, N. J.. Dec. 19.—Five year old James (Buddy) Blake, whose body was washed aahore nt Ventnor last Sunday, came to his death at the hands of h's mother I while she was laboring: under a state j of mental aberration, according to I the verdict of the Jury at the oor | oner's inquest last night into the i boy's death. j Coroner Stoddard announced that he would hold Mrs. Blake to await the action of the grand jury, j More than lu witnesses were i heard by the jury, many of them I testifying as to the mental condition lof Mrs. Esther Miller Blake, the • boy's mother, who is charged with . his murder. Mrs. Blake, who is I under police guard at the City Hos | pital, was unable to appear at the J inquest. Several physicians, includ ing Dr. L. It. Souder, county physi- i eian, testified that Mrs. Blake was I | mentally irresponsible. James M. Blake, Buddy's father, j testified he had been separated from i his wife about five years and that prior to the separation he was forced to send her tu a sanitarium for the insane near Baltimore. "She improved and come here after a lapse of six months," Blake said. "In 1914 I transferred by bust- : ness to Philadelphia and not long afterward she became a patient in a I hospital there. Later we came to Yilantie City and decided to live apart. It was Impossible for us to live together owing to her unman ageable condition. When the boy v/as born she refused to return home, but finally did come against her wishes. She threatened my life on several occasions and I saw there was nothing to do but to separate finally." Blake said his wife made numer ous attempts to affect a reconcilia tion. Doctors Clarence Carrabrant and J. T. Berkwith, alienists appointed by the court, testified that Mrs. Blake was nervous and Excitable. 'Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad It® "PuotTr" Nut Margarine it churned If Tit ' Capital City Products Co., Columbus , Ohio, High Grade Margarine Maters Since 1884. (Also maters of "PuttiTr" Margarine.) "A word to the wise is sufficient"— Let that one word be "PURITY." It is the trade-marked name of Nut Margarine of superior quality and flavor. It is the guide-post to economy—the buy-word that sums up thirty-six years' experience. Your dealer has "PURITY" Nut Margarine, also 'PURITY" Oleomargarine made of wholesome >£_ ingredients, A Jm 'I'll!■! CAL'LTA I. CITY PRODUCTS CO., BRANCH, 40 S. Delaware Ave. ptiii.Al>Kl.pni A, PA. _ Hell Phone Keystone Lombard l4Trt >' < MM Ak TTifl pore Spread for dalfy Bread' DECEMBER 19, 1919.