PUBLIC OPINION. ' The opinion of the leading skin authorities of the world, viz., the late Professor. Sir Erasmus Wilson, F.E.S., Dr Redwood, Ph.D., F.C.S., >.1.0., Mr John L. Milton, Senior Surgeon St John’s Hospital for the Skin. London, &c., unanimously agree that Peaks Soap is the best soap for the skin and complexion.— [Adtt.]
' NEW NOVEL OF ABSORBING. INTEREST COMMENCED IN I ANTEEBUBY : fjjlHE ANTEEBUBY (JAIMES' ON AUGUST 13. “THE BROKEN FETTER”. BY JOHN K. LEYS Lovers of thrilling and sensational Action will be delighted to learn that the Proprietors of “ The, Canterbury Times ” have secured the right to publish an absorbing new work of singular interest from the pen of JOHN K. LETS, Author of " The Lindsays," “In the Toils,” "The" Mystery of Lowdon Castle," “ On the Track of the Iron Horse,” Guilty or Not 1 Guilty,” “ A Bird of Prey,” &c., &o. “THE BROKEN FETTER ” possesses on unusual plot and an abundance of incident, and is, moreover, written in-a style to please the most fastidious reader, ' The author of our new story,. Mr ’John K, Leys, is well known as a writer of skilfully constructedstories. His works, whilst quite within the domainof probability, nevertheless ; derive much of their . interest on account of the fertility of .their author’s imagination. They are essentially stories of action, rapid in movement, and are written in' a vigorous style. Mr Leys has few compeers in the art of con. struoting a story so as to sustain and increase the interest with each succeeding chapter. . He lures the reader on from scene to scene, and holds him spellbound to the end of the story. In a serial, competition instituted by one of the great English weeklies, Mr Leys obtained the Arst prize of £l5O for his sensational story “In the Toils.” THE FIRST INSTALMENT OP “THE BROKEN FETTER” COMMENCED IN THE «' CANTERBURY TIMES” ON AUGUST 13. OUTLINE OF THE OPENING CHAPTERS. Dr Stanford is summoned to attend a young Bus. sian lady who seems to be dying from ait inexplicable cause. On examination he decides that she must have inhaled some poisonous gas from a scent bottle placed by someone on the taltAe. The doctor manifests an unusual interest In his patient. When he re-visits the girl, he discovers, the incriminating scent bottle has been removed .by Madame Fabrini, who is ostensibly the housekeeper. On being closely questioned, she reluctantly produces a bottle, which is recognised by Ursula Beritza, the patient, as the identical bottle. Dr Stanford’s suspicions of Madame Fabrini are: temporarily allayed, but in leaving the house his eye is caught by a sparkle of glass in the gravel, which proves to he a fragment of a similar scentbottle. The doctor returns, but Ands that Madame Fabrini lias disappeared; he is informed that Ursula has also gone, but is sceptical about the latter information. He casually sees her. at a window whilst he is going through the gardens, and goes hack, when she conAdesin him, informing him of the plot to destroy her life. Her story is a sad and exciting one. The foregoing conveys hut a faint idea of the. opening incidents of a very ’ exciting serial. The story itself is largely concerned with the affairs of a Nihilist Society, one of whose members is atraitor, and the evil genius of the story, lie plots and counterplots, his chief design being to obtain possession of the Beritza estates. To further his purposes nothing is too diabolical for his scheming brain. He causes Ursula’s brother to be arrested, thereby hastening her father’s death, and matures plans by which he hopes to get rid of Ursula herself. Attempting far too much, he defeats his own ends. A strong love element runs through the story, which one ot extraordinary power and sensation SILYEBSTBEAM i Schnapps (crystal bettel Excels all other brands.
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Bibliographic details
Lyttelton Times, Volume XCVI, Issue 11051, 1 September 1896, Page 3
Word Count
637Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Lyttelton Times, Volume XCVI, Issue 11051, 1 September 1896, Page 3
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