Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 13 Apr 1922, p. 2

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The Gates of Hope BY ANTHONY CARLYLE The Beginning of the Story. I with her. Had forced her to fbce ! Marcia Hatete*d, secretary to Mrs. hi wo-rM, to figrht for a living for Alten. it entrusted with some k* *> nd . foT a mo ** r wlv <*? J** while her employer goes out to fan- hwd, and, in a wanton, mood had ieon with Kempton Rosriaer, Ms deliberately opened for her the door-, stepmother Lady Rowlaer and her son way to fortune, while m almost the Gordon Ruthven. Marcia puts U) ! *ame nwnvenit it had pu t up unbreak- joweln in ttoe safe but fail* to find th: l ->te lar between her and all hope otf duplicate key. She conauKs a noted ; future. physician who tHs her she cannot) The gods had made a mockery of, li-e longer than six months; thoi the very gifts they had showened upon ; answers the call of a solicitor to find her so lavishly. She had just six j that she is heir to a large fortune on months in which to enjoy those gifts/ condition that she marrie* before *he to *rip the sweet waters of the well hi twenty-one. Returning to Mrs. ' of life, to know those comforts and j AWr.'s >he finds Kempton Roswlaer luxuries and delights for which moat: <whr> i wretly manned to A raby surely her girl's heart hat! yearned. Trus''O replacing the gem& which M* .bi--t tax month*. And, after that t-tr-fp -lii-other had f-to!ru Believing him ; oblivion. to bo the thief, Mareia promises sil- ence if h<- will marry her within two ' CHAPTKR X. I f fell a sudden silence. From bevc: 1 the windows came the Thinking upon it Rosslaer shudder- ed, momentarily forgetting himself. \ The culm'in'ating cruelty had lain in | the condition of her uncle's wiW. Under ordirmry circumta.n<eea she would have been powerless to fulfill it; would li.-ivc had to star.d by and see her for- "i that foT-i m*V'.. 1 1 IK* I'JO 1 -":! \>iniu\\7 uniu i,,:rn-d sound of the !>uy Greets, the' tane hum of living, throbbing London. And 11 " 1 * looking at the girl, Kempton M. !^er w^, ^m^io.m that the room had, 1 **" 1 ' 1 ; *S?*"H?S grcvn a little chill. n ar> g. 1 * 1 * to h * r he ' Her words had tnxk upon Ms j af ter slw WM K**"*- sienies ahiio.H like a Wow. His glance! And then, upan her discovery of swept her rapidly the tired white-: himso'f at Mrs. Akk-n's p;ife, with her - <.f hor face", the droop of her jewels in his ixwsession, Marcia had over-slender ftgur*--^and inr.o h there found the skirU of an amazing oppor-, crppt a fleeting, horrified pity. tunity df>' to l.er hand. Was there fii.'.y six months to live! And yet arty wonder thiit she had graspeJ them glx' was little inore than the merest nnd clung to. them? Was there any girl, vivid, charming, with a \rarm wonder that s>he had shut her mind bea'jty whit-h. he felt, would have to everj thing but thra one miraculous been very real had she not looked so chance which had come her way? ill. Bitter as he miRht feel toward her, "It is no' a very long time." sJie Rossker oou;ld rot blanwi her. Th Bawl, and again there wtas a catfh in temptation had been so great; and her voice. "And I've never known this nighrt. he had learned for himself what it is to enjoy myself to have! that even the stron^st man kno^-a a reaKy gcod time. on hour in his Kfo when temptation "Six months will be all too short l>econwa a foe impossible to worst. for that, but I shan't grumble if I Yet, while he found the thought that can use this chance of gaining p<- he had capitu'ated utterly intolerable, ess-ion of that w<alth whwh otherwise he knew that there ha:l been nothing I must lose. I shall have known six else for ham to do. As he had toild months of luxury, you see, while I Marcia, ho had had no choice. He nhall be at peace concerning my: was powerless to clear him/flf in her mother." j eyes, or in the eyes of th-p world She kir.kcd at Ros4aer, and a little unless ho hwl mad* known the p.irt igh f|uiv-red from her lips- j his youwg sU'p-brother had playe<l. "Well?" She breathed the word so And it was character is'lic of the man low that he only jut caught it, yet he that suth an alternative had never oc- etarted as though it had been a cry. curred to him. lnyo!untatJy he recoiled. Now co^tonipkninrf that solution "Its impofaiblv!" bo sairl hoarsely. I Ruth RosBlaer wpoke in a thick, hoa.rae votee, utterly unlike her own: "WeW?" One hand flashed out and rl>ic,,| upon 1m wrist. It wu burning hot "Why h-ave you been K> long? What has I'lppened? My Gwll Can't you speak?" Kemptcm met her eye* and looked away from them to the boy, huddled and unheeding. For a moment he did not answer. A fierce battle wias rag- ing Within htim, a battle between his passionate dere to $hake him ."If free of the aliacktes with which Fate would burden him U> take back hte ra sihil y given word to Maixrin, and re- pudiate the bargain he had made with nor- -ami thiwe obligations be owed to hc' father and to those whom hds father 'had made bis kin. It was n- brief as it was bitter. Arwby's fece rose before him Mar- cia's -and faded. GrinV.y he took hold of himeeJf, forced him.se' f to face, for once and for all, the need of making n definite decision. He bi-ought hi gtaniee from young Ruthven and met Lady Ro-sslaer's eyes. His o'wn were cold, without ex- prtvsaion: his voice, when be spoke, was oddly flat. "The jewels hsve been returned. They Wei* not niisspvl. There is no- thing at all to worry about." He waited for a moment; then turned abruptly upon his heel. In thus* _ words he had uttered his de- cision. He would keep to the path upon which he had set his feet. The bargain he had mode with Marcia Harstead he would abide by whatever the cost. CHAPTER XII. For Marcaa, too, that night was s'cepleaa Like Kempton Rosstaer's, her thoughts were chaotic. Her ntind Taking the Easiest Way. I have a friend who leaves the pun- ishment of her children to their father. ! No matter how biff or how little the i misdeed, no action ifl taken until "father" comet into the house. Then follows a recital of Tommy's diBO- i bedience or Nellie's impudence. Gen- erally father does what is expected of him scolds severely or wields the arm of authority in tlie administration of corporal punishment. Why, I have often asked myself, does not their mother take the punish- | ment of the children into her own I hands ? The answer, I finally con- cluded, was that it was easier to turn the naughty children over '. their 1 father than to take them in charge i herself. She merely took the easiest i way. I know other mothers who never get beyond threats in the matter of "\njiishment. They know that their thteats are lightly treated, they real- ize that they are making little pro- gress toward correcting their chil- dren's faults, but they talk and talk, because they find this easier than de- vising suitable punishments. A great many mothers have discov- that the quickest way to "bring a r whip or versation. Sometimes they were de- prived c-f ail the good things which appeared on the table, and f creed to make a meal of bread and milk, and I have seen' just one such punishment break a child of upsetting the calm of the dinner-table. Boys soon acquire an Indian-like at- titude towards prhysical punishmemt. They often boa*t of the "lickings" they can take without shedding a tear. If such a method of punishment is resorted to, a a child grows oWer the will have to be more and more in order to hurt the child i to make him penitent. Even so, peniterfoe is not always gained by such means and atubborness and sulki- nesa alone result. What does a child learn from physi- cal punishment? In the main he learns not to do certain things for fear of being hurt by someone stronger than he. His actions are governed not by the desir* to do right, but by the fear of being caught doing wrong. When mother-cat considers it time to wean her kitten, she spits at them, cuffs theon, eende them flying right and left when they continue to annoy a cat lacks the id her kittens of children. BBDVOB 1.00 GROWTOX cd foUowlaff th Orowtos nit. Bold by all drufflit*. or by mall. 0088 MEDICINE COMPANY 70 Jwrri* trt. - Toronto CORNS Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't Hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, Inetant* I/ that corn stops hurting, then short- ly you lift U right off wit] Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of i "Freezone" for a (ew cects, sufficient : to remove every hard corn, soft corn. '. or corn between the toes, and the cal- ' ! hues, without sorecesJ or Irritation. The World's Oldest Clocks. Primitive man did not worry much : about the time. He rose when daylight minating amazement of an amazing lay. Long after he had gone from ' her she sat in Ac little, darkening room, staring straight l*fore her, hia *! to consent to her demands Now 1ht . inrf that his i ip , s twisted , As tH spoke ArabyH face rose- Ix-fore rfttber K ,; mly . ln. ? Linct an<l an inti him. InipoMible' 1 he rdxritcd. nva te'knowlcs!^ of his stt ^p-bnther' B Utterly JOBMA phor.-K-ti-r, tol.l him tlv.it it was more \ery slowly Marcm turned away , h ., n ^^4^ ttl)e younKit er would dc- In a comer of the room, upon a Rjriidl lnx . rate i y d^y tho ac-cusation were he taible, was the U-lephone. Want ^ ^.^ it . Jn imy case the wam i a i Wk.ng Uck at him she reached out Hnid sh ,,,,., (> of d , :i!<x>VPry aiK , publicity her hsnd to the receiver. But before wouW 9trikt , bis f{lther - 8 ^..aUi-ki't-ll. eh* could jnjt it to her oar he WHS ut .-, , . . ., her tide. mm s .akf, for the "For heaven's sake," he implored. s * kc ^ th t honor 4 of tht ;'. r ^5*^fe There wa.s a terd, bit drumming in * f.. > """t go throojA with V* ean. Ab^-e it he seemed to hear t , h " 8 ' r00 ' ktcp ^ 9? path th ' u her words of a momervt >efore: , he , .* 109 nwilliagly; nnist . . "Only six months to live!" A mad, V'eW witlwut effort or protest to bewildeVinK trovtattoii amiilml him. Mar * bewiWerin* .ilemaml*. and . . Only fix mcr.th.s! And after tluat free- I "' l ? ! '; U 'P t;) tho ''"'^-"i he had made dam would i>e bUT again. Un>n- v wwu.ly he caught at her alt-eve. Slow- . V * *",'* a " ?&&*& lh 'u" lyst* turned and looke.1 at him. Thon: *nble night he told himself he "Have you changed vour mind?" " uM n ' lt f". " wlth '^ that !***; V V/u ' ; r - i i \ <ni. lit: . t , , , . - to- a*k*J; and. very rfowlv, tookin* l>> s , uch ".^TY* %?* her straight in the eves, Rosslaer ber,' 'I u ^ 1 ' on U . w *'hk thing impos.i1 htK head I mif and again Arabys- faicc rose "I have 710 choice," he said. "I will l* fcTO him - f :l hc l reoo ? t r} in jf h go through the marriage ceremony horror from th e cotitemptadon of the with you gross deception ho had decided, in his lU.-ijx-iat ;:>(, to pi.i.-'i v iipun hc-r; iiiul not only upon her, but upon Marcia CHAPTKR XI. Kempton Rosslaer Left Maroia foi-1- ing bruised and muni), mentally and Halstead as well. For while he had forced himself to agree to the n;jd nuarrrag't' which was For hours afterward ho t-o bf the pritx 1 of her silence, he could meed the street*, heedless of where ni-ver make Marcia Halstead his wife. Li* steps led him, conguioufi only of H The marriage would be a mockery, the desperate desire to light down the' whole ceremony a farce. Every vow despair anil self -worn which had pos-jhe uttered would be mear. ingles*; *esion of him. ' every promise a conscious ami delib- Altroady he way IkorrinVl at what : omt<' lie. he !'! iL.iic; ulrc-ady l.c \\iilhi-ii in !!< knew ;<n in.<tanf'> ru-h of rolipf, wwdly at his weakness in yielding to' followed 'by a violent mental recoil.: the amazing temptation v, iiirh ha<l n*-': H felt suddenly sick to the soul o<f aiiled him. And yet that temptation him and infinitely weary. Blindly he| had been well-nigh irreintib!. He turnei his steps homeward. had been m> uttwrdy helpl.-s, so rom fetfFy in Marciii'* hanlda. Sh-?, too, had been desperate. He And, as hc went, there went with him tn insidious \v4iisper that no one, ever know that it was only for, had nens<"J that; had undersfxx 1 it. j six months -that he would lx- off wing. Ae his brain began to clear a little i Araiby iva affront, since this other wo- he found himselff looking upon the man's P! aim upon him would lie of the Riration from her point of view. And,! scantfst, a ^ sinve she wa as willing wnd-r Ui pa<y.->ion of res^n'tmenl whiich 1 for secrecy as he would be desirous of surged in his againgt her there was omcthmg, too, of companion a faint, vaigi-c sympathy. Kin- was eo youi.g; ahe had so much af oharm, and of an etusive, aUurfng lo>vi|iinem. He remembered her clear palior. the unnatural largeness of her aft eye* the shrinking tdiat hd been in them even a.* sine had uttered her monstrous jn^>p'i.-i'.m!,. And, whale he writhed anew at the recollection lie couki feel pity tor iier; a genuuie pity beneath wnioii W ol-s was for a little wltdle. it. U wa* only for six nwnths six ' lit t,i<-, swiftly passimg months. Making his way to his own room he pasjaod I..,..-. Rossllaer's door. All I inntuiiil he hesitated, and in thut im- ! i tan t tin- door opened softly. Lady !(.. :.M.I- stood upon the thre.sholirl, looking at him out of burning, eager eyes. Behind Jier lie caught a glimpse of yoimg Ruthven's figure, eloucherl elsw-klv in chair. He was gray-faced tfnd his eyes were bloodshot. A siphon n IK I jfl.-is. stood ;ii hia e]il>ow; his i.!- KU hnd indued ]>layed A sorry jeot lav wiai> crum'pled, l. : - tie loose. Missing Link in Rhodesia seem* to be a missing link b- tween man and tbe gorilla ban beer found gorne of his bone*, that in to ay 1ti a cave in llhode*ia, Smith Africa The cave in, or rather was, in ihe tide ot u hill eixly feet high. Recent mini'ig operations removed the hill, ftiftclc.-ing to view an immenco accu * iniilatioii of foiseii hone* of elephant*. -rs. lior.f. Iwopaixls aud other How HIP lioman got there nobody kir>wp, unles human heinge !. ; i'iil the aDimalii and used iihu cave . ^ \: ti'ti.M and diiiiiif room. But the ii)ipt> :ant ptiu* if <liat. part* of the hkel' : of very i<i%ient man wur 'lug en i>' ili' n:i.s of o^emis ile.bris. Tlu ii.-.'.i'ij .'I. 1 ; 1 ! Bomewhul rrvemh | ( ' \\\--.\ >.' ;i .-ii.I.ia. With l-wuy bony r ,-i i,\i t ii<! nve.< nrt n . ; ! -. Mt. c M) """" f'he was conscinus of a throhtovng oemm cf triumph that was almost exultation, i She had fouRht more desperately than even she herseif, at the time, had been aware- -BI: 1 s.'hc- had won! Now that it was all over fhe was amazed, aghitt t her own temerity. S'h<- w~>ndfrecl a little diazedly how ^he had dared to put into words the wild, fantastic idea th-it had leaped to her bri''n, how *>he h,. 1 ever had the cour- ge to seize uj-on thij one uniooked and un l :;>ed for solution of her difficulty., (To l'i- c'T-tinucd.) You Can't Walk Straight. K\(iyoiiP baa he;ml or read of travellers lost in tho wilds who, after hours of frantic walking, have dis- covered that they have been moving all the time in circles, retunitr.K again und attain to their starting point Without a path to act as a <?uide, or u point upon which to fix the eyes, It Is alnjo.il Impossible to walk straight. Start i i' the k-ft eide of wide road, or the right side If you are left-handed, and walk witli your eyes shut. In n few minutes you will stumble against the opposite kerb! The right-handed man circles to the right, and the 'left- handed man in the opposite direction. Ninety-nine men in a hundred use tho right hand more than the left, with the result that not only the hand It- self, but B!*O the corresponding foot, and, in fact, the whole of the right half of the body, become better de- veloped th;iii the limbs and trunk of the other ide. As you walk, the stronger half of the body exerts u pressure upon the other ami drags you little by little in- to a path that curves towards the right. In left-handed people, of course, i the reull is exactly opposite. Women Can Dye Old Faded Tiring* New in Diamond Dyes , Kaoli package of "Diamond Dyes" i contains directions so simple any wo- man can dye or tint her worn, shabby il rouses, skirts, waists, coats, stock- ' Ings, sweaters, coverings, draperies, | hangings, nverylliing, even If she has never dyed before. Buy "Diamond j Dyes" no other kind then perfect home dyeii g is sure because Diamond Dyes are guaranteed not to spot, fade, streak, or run. Tell your druggist want her the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether It is llneu, cotton or mixed goods. to Indicate that he walked orect, whereas the early folk of Neanderthal type, who inliavitnd Kui-opc during the last Ice Age, stooped, as does a i gorilla, hearing a porl.ion of the body's ! weight on the hand, using the long ! arms almost as a man does crutches. ' Several skeletons of thoge Neander- thai people (one of them that, of a wo- j man) havo been dug up. They rto not I Feeni to have been ancestors of minx, I though apparently they were the first human inhabitants of Europe, where they dwelt for a long Ume, only to be replared by a superior race prexum- nhly of Asiatic origin. Heron i ly gome anthropologist* have Jin-lined lo fhe belief lhat mankind ni-igliiiilrd not In Asia, but in Africa, in : r;ii',iK to Knrnpfe before there was Hiiy .'i' . . 'iiii^.m. riir flnoJng df the K"iillN DIHII In Rhodesia will doubt their theory. Films That Talk. For many years Inventors have been trying t.o produce speaking films, and it to hoped that a solution of the prob- lem will be found In the use of a crys- tal known us nivtlmonlte, which is found In Japan and liorneo. Scdenttots have succeeded in photo- graphing sounds such as tin- voices of dim actora. but they have had great d'irliculty In reconverting Uies Him re- cords into speech or song. KfM-cntly experiments have been car- ried out with Boleniuin, a metal which is so sensitive to light that, us the photographs of sound are pas-seirover it. the variations in their density cause electrical variations in tti selenium. These opwRte a loud-speaking tele- phone, thus reproducing the sounds. The disadvantages of Kolenluin is that it gets exhausted long before the time 'required for an ordinary film to be shown. Antimonlte lasts longer and i.s said tn respond to the changes of light with extraordinary speed. Generally the child has been allowed to go to the limit, so far as naughty actions are concerned. Ho has been spoken to again and again, and has merely grown naughtier all the time, the mother's patience is , she is angered by his dis- , and in that mood it affords her unbounded relief to administer a sound whipping or spanking. She works off her angi-r by raining blows on the body of the child and then, flushed and excited, returns to her | other duties, quieting her conscience; with an oft-repeated: "Well, I guess that will teach him a lesson! He won't think he can walk over me again. She does not stop to consider whether physical punishment is just what the child needs, but resorts to this mode of punishment, because in her angered mood it is the easiest one to apply. All children more's the pity! j have to be punished at times. They come into the world little untrained tilings, and there is u long, hard road i to travel before they emerge into] manhood or womnnliood. The sec-oml i year of life has always seemed to me] the hardest. During the first year| not a great deal has been desired by the child: it is convpara/tively easy for a mother to be firm and for her baby to be "good." But beginning with' the second year, when thc child be-j gins to toddle ubout and wants to] play with and handle things lovd' find j out about this and that, a struggle be-1 gins. Mother's desires and baby's de-i sires continually clash. One kind of] mother, at that stage, will prant al- most anything in order to forestall the cry that is almost certain to ensue when Bomethingr is denied. The other kind will be firm and patient despite howls of protest. The first mother j will follow the easier course; the sec- ond will take the more trying, but in the end, the far better way. It may be true that sometimes a, physical hurt is needed to make a . child behave but I can not believe it.' Children are of a higher order than i puppies and colts and kittens. If one i is willing lo hunt earnestly cnougl.j and to work patiently enough, surely some better method of punishment! can be found for every offence than corporal punislimeivt. Of course, the' otlwr methods are likely to take more time tlian that required for a whip- ping, but mothers who seek to bring ! their children up in tiho best manner' possible are not interested in the! "easiest way," but rather in the most effective way of handling their chil-! dren. Why hurt the body of a child be- cause he says "naughty words" orj talks back to you or calls you names? : It will take a little longer to \vah out the naughty little mouth with a| clean cloth or very soapy water, orj to seal the rosy lips together with court plaster or adhesive tape; but, if the child be endowed with his full , . >t be nece^ary for mothers " fathers t( >. treat their children as the J d !"'*< in , e f to teach them f - , tain lessons ' It is instinctive for the ' * h<; waa coMent to know the . hij;hest polnt meant (he mldd]e of ^ day had Com6i nnd thafwhen it was sinking towards wag Ume foj . hjm to his cave. many things which are instinctive in man, have ber>n, as man has advanced and developed, pushed aside for the use of better methods which his reason has prompted. When we act instinctively, we act immediately; when we use reason, we must take time. Seldom is corporal punishment inflicted without anger on the part of the parent, and when one is angry, his words can have no good lusting effect upon the child. But when one has decided upon a punish- ment that fits the misdeed, and goes about its execution in a calm, deliber- ate manner, albeit a firm, determined one, woids of correction or advice will usually make a deep impression upon the child. It is by no means the easier way, but, judging by the re- sults obtained by those who have faithfully studied the faults wf child- hood and their correction, it is by ftir the better method. Take time and thought before cor- recting the faults and errors of child- hood, choosing tho punishment which your mtelUgetu-e tells you is best and avoid traveling along the line of least resistance. A Success and Happiness Maker. There is no .such protection against all sorts of attacks, no such character insurance as a clean record. How of- ten In our courts the bad record of a prisoner has told against him; has proved the turning point with the jury when a clean record would have saved him fioni imprisonment. Many a time the sentence of a youth in a criminal court la due largely to his bad record. Thc mere fact that he was known to be a member of a certain gang when the crime of which he is accused was committed and that he had a bad re- putation behind him, has turned the scale against htm. On the other hand, time and again, when circumstantial evidence has pointed to a man's gui!t, his clean re- cord, hia reputation for honesty and -iin.u'1- dealing has saved him, be- cause, nobody believed he could do such a thing as was charged against him. It did not tally with his record. "Keep your record clean," was John B. Cough's constant advice to young men. There is no greater aid to hap- piness and successs than a good repu tatlon. i dow of his spear standing upright In ! the soil. From this shadow he con- ceived the idea of the oldest of all I clock-), the .sundial. But it hod one serious disadvantage: it marked only I the sunny hours, taking no account ol those that passed by night. His next Idea was the water-clock, which has been In use among the pea- , plea of the East for more than four j thousand years. -This consisted of a j vessel filled with water upon whose surface was a float provided with a long peg. A hole !n the bottom of the ' vessel allowed the water to escape gradually, lowering the* peg as its 1 level sank. The peg was marked off Into divis-ions., each of which showed the distance fallen in one hour. A glance at tho height of thie peg above the rim of the vessel shewed the exact j time by day or night. Next came the hour-glass, one form of which is still used to measure, the three and a .half minutes needed for boiling an egg. This wan followed by the hour-candle, a "dip" divided into rings, each of which represented an hour's burning. The mechanical clock was s^lggested by the human pulse. If you know the rate of your pulse you can measure off a minute quite easily. Make an instru- ment that will swing, beat, or tick in the same consistent way, and the clock comes into being. The problem was solved when some- one got the Idea of tbe pendulum by watching the rhythmic swing of a ;n i ' V plumb-Hue. Horse-riding, ais a circus perform- ance, is stated to h.xve lout its popu- larity. Audiences, used to dodging motor-cars, call for somcth-ny; move exciting. Ut* Mlnird'* Liniment for the Flit punishment will mean far more to him | than a whipping. If little lijinds continually slap, is it not more of a punishment if they are tied rather than if they are also slap- ' ped? The same method of punish-; ment applies equally well with kick- ing feet. A child takes it to lie-art keenly if he is caught in disgrace. ' Any amount of effort would lie exert- , cd to "be good" rather than have any one outside the family soe him with hands or feet lied, or mcuth sealed. : Misbehaving at table is another naughty trick. How many times have I feen children cuffed and slajipcd, and heard them scolded for ''acting ; up" at meal-time! Yet how seldom ! have I seen effective punishment foi' those misdemeanors. If swore enough, the punishment may compel obedi- ence for the remainder of that meal, but as soon as the next meal begins, the child is ready and willing to run the risk of a few slaps and cuffs for the sake of "acting funny." But I have i?ecn children who be- haved badly at l.lie family table com- pelled lo eat their meals alone and out of rnge of tbe meal-time cwi-| Motor Notes. She "Tom's jut bought a Ford-- yon rs?" He- "Oh, Mine's a Rolls-Royce!-" She "Ah! That's a good car, too, isn't It?" A Powerful Preacher. Very soon after a Congregational chapel had been planted in u smalj Scotch community, an incident oc- curred which showed lhat the powers of Its minister wore appreciated in certain quarter?. A boy named Johnny Fordyce had been indiscreet enough to put a sixpence in his month, and ac- cidentally swallowed it. Mrs. Fordyce, concerned both for her boy and the sixpence, tr!e,d every mean* for its recovery, consulted her neighbors, and finally in ties pair called in a doctor, but without result. As a last resort, a woman present suggested M>at they should send for Hit) t'onacegationallst "meenister." "The meenister!" chor- used mother and neighbors. "Ay, the ineniiister," rejoined the old dame; "od's if there's any money in him, he'll sune draw it out of "m!" An excellent way to deberm!<n th value of an en;p!oyee i* to give him a lot of spare time and thcsi to observe what he does with it. Theodore Roosevelt said, "The sur- est way to wealth is thrift." Mlnard's Liniment for Grippe and Flu. ORCHESTRA LEADERS *5en<i for Dance g m WITH A / SlNflCRS -Send for GET 3 N* : * 5 HITS EACH MONTH' 1 for I month J- |g" f* monlkt > - TAak your dembr for fAts, I ITS A^AYspA np|*|A rdxT WHY CAN'T You Give HE YOUR SMiLt- H$_f*r 6moMhs_ ~ M/fl PEP i.. VT sncio tan DOM V THAT COUOH CONTIMUX! Spohn's Distemper Compound "111 knock Ii In very slioi-t thnc. A I the Pi.it sign of a cough It In your horse. St'. a. l>\v dusoi of "SPOHN'S." will act n the glaml* tliininote itv.i ilmea^c (jcrm ami pr- ^nt furtiu'i 1 destruction "f. body l>v dl.ieii-tf>. "SPOITN'B" lie* be<m the sl)iUi-.l rcmedv for IH.STE.M TEH. 1NFLU- BN/A L PINK KYlil, CATARRH A f, KWVRI:. <'OUt)US and < MI ali> tit :i!l rtrusc store* a: fcHBW, IVD., TT.S.A. vJ'OJ.PS 'or auiiai'lM f a i entui j . ronr IOIDIOAX. OOKVAIT*.

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