The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 March 1930 — Page 3

The Crippled Lady of Peribonka

— By— . James Oliver Curwood WNU Service (£, 11)29, Doableday Domn * Co.. loe.) STORY FROM THE START Introducing some of the peopie ot the pretty little FrenchCanadian village of Peribonka, particularly the Crippled Lady, idol of the simple inhabitants. Paul Kirke Is a descendant of a sister of Molly Brant, sister of Joseph BrSnt, great Indian He« has Inherited many Indian , characteristics.' His father Is a powerful New York financier. ' Paul marries Claire Durand, daughter of his father's partner. He is in charge of engineering work near .Peribonka. Paul's wife is in Europe. She dislikes the woods. Paul becomes interested in Carla, village teacher. I'a.ul writes his wife to join him. Carla's mother, long an invalid, dies. Claire announces her Intention of joining Paul on. the Mistassini. She writes a- letter of sympathy to Carla. Paul becomes tware of a gulf between him and his wife. Paul. Claire, Carla and two friends make up a luncheon party to visit the "Big Gorge*' ot the Mistasslpi. CHAPTER Vll—Continued —l2— • “I can almost fancy walking upon It without wetting ray shoes, it Is so firm * and * substantial looking,” persisted Claire. . “Did you ever stand on a mountain top and look down Into the clouds and flflnk how nice It would be to jump off Into one of the cozy little nests they make?” asked” Lucy Belle. •'1 have. Once I think I might have done It If Colin hadn’t held me. He says I would-have bad another mile to go after I hit the cloud. But this down here doesn't appeal to me like a nice, white cloud all tilled with feathers. It makes me think of*a—a big boa constrictor running Info a hole! 1 wouldn't try to walk on It. or jump into it. unless Colin fell in first and I had to help him.’' - "Would you—then?” asked Paul. Lucy-Belle meditated for a moment. “Os course 1 would.” she mid. “Do you suppose 1 would let-him go into that tunnel alone?” “I—wonder? Life Is a precious thing. In ninety-nine cases-out of a hundred IV is more precious than the person we live with. We don’t Idealize the wopien who hum themselves on their husbands’ funeral pyres tn India. Do we ?” .. * ”1 don't think so. Their sacrifice was inspired by duty-nud .a. religious, faith. Neither takes the place of love. But If Colin were down there, going to a death like that, I would want to go with him. I would go. 1 cannot explain it. Isn't there a difference?” “Yes—a difference that is infinite,” said Claire. "In this Instance a woman would be joining the man she loved in a final hour of life, that they mlghj be together In the supreme moment. It would be. choosing between a few more minutes with him or a few more years without him, and minutes measured” by love are more priceless to a woman than years without It.” • "Also", to a man.” said Derwent, holding his wife's hand closely for a moment. “I. don't- think we would i hesitate to take the leap. Do you. Paul?” ’ ' ‘ ' "No." . * . He was looking at Carla, who was gazing meditatively ifpon the . viscous sweep of water below them. She looked up almost ire the moment his glance »went to her.- Her lips moved, as If for an instant she were i»n the point of speaking to him. and to him alone. Then she caught herself; and turned her-gaze to tl.e river again. “A womans love for a man Isn’t always like that,” she said, and something in her voice strangely thrilled Paul. “I think there is a love so great that it is cowardly for It to deliberately die, a love so complete that when Its other half goes there is still heaven left In memories, of It. It is wicked to take the breath of human life from such a love because of h .selfish desire hot to live alone. I tljink. Lucy-Belle. If.lt came to the real test God would give you strength to hold yourself back. You would not die. You would live, and cherish the memories ot your love tike a garden of beautiful flowers.” It was ns If a cathedral bell had tolled softly among them,, so wonderfully gentle and strange was Carla's voice. Carla knew. That was the thought which gripped PauL and It held the others. She had passed through the fire at which his wife and eLucy-Belle were only guessing, and It was from her ioul, not her lips, that evidence had come. Claire gave a little sturt at bls side, and her face and eves grew suddenly and vividly filled with light as she looked at Carla, as if nil in a second a great and halfexpected truth had come to possess her. Stranger even than the change

Identify Biblical City Destroyed by Joshua

It «as some two hundred and fifty years before the wooden horse was pulled into ancient Troy that Joshua . brought the sun to a halt upon Gideon and the moon In the vaUey’of Ajalon. Joshua a military successes against the five kings ot the Amorltes and the kings of Jerusalem. Hebron, Lachish et al. were so • ding that Jabin, the king t f liazor, was moved to send word >o the various kings nearby, and to the Canaanites. Hittites. Jebualtes and lllvitea. to mobilise against the upstart newcomer and his Israelites. But. at the waters of Merom. Joshua and his forces “smote them and chased them into great Zidon . . . until they left them none remaining." Then Joshua returned and took Liazor. “the head beforetimes of all those kingdoms.’’ and burned it atone of all the cities he captured; the rest be destroyed. hut not by fire. More than three thousand years has Hasor paid the penalty of oblivion. buVnow'flke the fabled phoenix tt has

* a—- — her face was the way in which she found p aul's hand and held it ten/derly and warmly between her own. Never had the thrill of her entered into him as during these momenta. He closed his hands tightly about hers. But he was, looking at Carla 1 Lucy-Belle sprang to her feet and drew Derwent after her. “Let’s not get sentimental I” she cried. "I'm going to throw all kinds of things down to my boa constrictor and see what be does with them. Thia to begin with—” and she flung out a paper plate which curved and circled, until, lighting gracefully upon the surface of the torrent below, it was caught like a feather and whipped with the speed of a bullet toward the maw of the gorge, without so much as getting its Inner Ude wet. Claire gave a gasp of amazement. “I did not dream the water sped as swiftly as that!” she exclaimed. "But see! It is as 1 said I, The plate Is going—it has disappeared into the tunnel —and not once was it ruffled s or upset Back where the water is breaking and rearing it would have been destroyed." “Walt!” said Derwent. He rolled the short log which they had used for a seat to the edge of the cliff, and with Paul's help tilted it on end and flung It over. "There goes a man," he laughed. “Now see what happens!" They stood close to the sheer edge of the table rock anti saw the log as It struck the water. There was an oily splash, and for a few yards the wood drifted away as smoothly as the plafe had gone. A smile of triumph curved Claire's lips, then swiftly a frightened look, gathered It! Its place. A hand, had reached up, a terrible, unseen band that had gripped the log like a living thing and 1 dragged it down until no chip or shadow of it rode the liquid serpent under them. “Hold your eyes near the rock!” commanded Derwent. Breathlessly they watched, Half a minute later, as if spewed up by the monster Who bad swallowed it, the log reappeared near the huge fang which split the stream, struck against it, and climbed half Its length out of the water, then sank hack and disappeared again, this time to be seen no more. “Gone,” said DerwenL “And Ts you stood at the btber end of the gorge five or six miles from here, you would never see that log come through, ft is ground to pieces. gbestouWof existence in whatever there is between the walls of the chasm, which no man has ever explored, and none ever will. Are you satisfied?" . Claire wns staring, wide-eyed. “I believe 11-—noW," she said. ■ Lucy-Belle had turned a little white. "Still—l would jump In." she maintained, looking at Derwent. Again Paul looked at Carla. The calm and placid beauty of her face seemed accentuated by what they bad seen. , , ■ “And the wooden of It is there are so many who believe that Nature and God are not One!” she said, only for him., ”Is It possible that in the bllnd- ■ ness of our egoism we shall always fail to understand the significance of such things as that? It is a written word. In the hand of God. just as the Peribonka, with its gentleness and sunshine..ls another and different message for us. That la .what I believe." Paul nodded. "So do I." he said, and felt the desire of all the world to take Carla s head against his breast and hold H there. Guilt fastened .Itself upon him, and a little later, inspired by the sweetness of her manner toward him. he whispered to his wife:. "Claire, you are wonderful 1 God knows 1, hope some day to’make you happy!" ‘‘You will," she answered, and the gentle mystery In her voice and eyes stirred him with a deep emotion. Until the play grew tiresome they brought sticks and chunks of wood from the edge of the timber arid fed them to the bidden hands of the stream. The result was always the same, except that chips and grass and vefy light pieces of wood raced swiftly and safely away, like the pasteboard piate. as ts they were too Insignificant to attract attention from below. But with the heavier objects .there was a variation so small tn what happened that the watchers on the rock were arpazed and fascinated, and started a Utile game of guessing how many seconds would pass before LucyBelle's huge snake spat up an object ami then swallowed IF again. To end their aport Paul and Derwent staggered from the edge of the timber with a forty-foot log. which had lain so long In the drying sun and wind that they could bear its weight on their shoulders, and before this was tossed over the five made their guesses, the Ute* to entertain the other four at dinner the next day. (TO BE CONTINUED) ■ 4k4k-AAA A

risen from its ashes. It has been discovered and identified by Garstang. . the great British authority on the Hittites, who for many years has been the director of the British school of archaeology tn Palestine. Queer Wills Elizabeth Orby Hunter may have neen a little odd. but she tempered Jier eccentricities with caution. When she died in 1813 she bequeathed 200 guineas a year “to my beloved parrot, the faithful companion of 25 years," but she also added a proviso to the effect that whoever bad the bird in charge must prove Its identity twice a year when the money was paid, or the annuity Equally odd was the will of an English lady who left 70 pounds a year for the support of her three goldfish, including a provision for flowers to be put upon their graves when they finally shook off their mortal fins.

Attractive Small Frame Home That Gives Owner Most for His Money Jn -zll ' ■ i > a** • IbHk >■ s.—• ■ ■ But« ’■U U| i u i ■ Il * ■■ • '■ ■ JI SB—--1 H • ■ L. I Front porches are all too rare in the houses of today but here, though the house is small, we find a porch which will be a highly attractive place ! i ,to rest on warm summer evenings.

Ji . By W. A. RADFORD ! Mr. William A. Radford will answer 1 p questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to practical home building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experlen -e as editor, author and manufacturer, he is. without doubt, the i highest authority, on all these subjects. Address all inquiries to William ] A- Radford. No. 407 South Dearborn I Street. Chicago, ill. and only inclbse i two-cent stamp for reply. After all. there are few homes < more attractive than those which have been designed to meet the needs of i the home builder of moderate means, i Contractors in small towns have evolved designs for their customers. Most of these are of and are planned so that the oWner will get the most for his money, i In this class comes the home shown In lhe accompanying illustration. This j Is a five-room stoty-and-a-half house. : It is 22 feet wide and 2G feet deep, j exclusive of the wide semi-inclosed l front porch. This porch is one of the | good features of this house. Front : pArches are all too rare in houses of i today*, but we have here, though, the i . houtJe Is small, a porch which will be i ? ■ I ■' i ’ . jm*?- . 1 9 I —J— IWB3I ’j M p i ' <y* ■ • First Floor Plan. a highly attractive place to rest on warm summer evenings. The house contains three rooms on the first floor and two bedrooms and bathroom <pn the second floor. How these rooms are arranged arid tile size of each are shown on the floor plans reproduced here. It will be noted that the living room Wood Material Used to Make Kitchen Modern Pronounce*! opportunities are ofj sered the building industry to promote interior home modernizing during the colder months, the National Lumber Dealers’ association believes.' Many firms are finding this source of business well worth cultivating, and there is a trend in the building industry toward stimulating the interest of home owners in this form of home improvement, according to various journals serving the building field. A great deal of interest is centering on kitchens and breakfast nooks. This is particularly fortunate for lumber interests, the association believes;* because in improving the kitchen, lumber almost invariably plays an important part. Wood also is featured in ; making breakfast alcoves more comfortable, coiivedient and attractive. There is hardly anything which adds so much to the attractiveness and convenience of a kitchen as plenty of built-in features. These may be installed easily at little cost in praeI tically any kitchen; old or new; | The various cupboards; cabinets < shelves and bins can be constructed readily by the carpenter or contractor I or built up at the millwork house and I installed by the carpenter. Some ! housewives will be interested In sug i gestlng Installations that will meet J their particular needs. Cupboards, containing shelves, drawers and blns come first. The four west coast woods— douglas fir, west coast hemlock, western red cedar and sitka spruce, as well as many others —are. excellent materials for these I uses. They easy to machine to j give true, square corners and tight- ■ fitting joints. Modernizing is receiving strong sup- | port from building and loan associations. A Topeka (Kan.) concern has i adopted a policy of completely modernizing every house that comes into Felt and Asphalt Roofs Now Are Guaranteed The technique of laying a flat or built-up roof consisting of layers of felt swabbed and stuck down in place with asphalt has reached such high standards that companies specializing in them offer 20 years’ guaranty against leaks. These roofs are protected on the surface either by gravel or square slabs made of slate or tile. The flat roofs built after these standards are no longer restricted to tropical and warm climates. They have lost their original limitations, and now as practical in the Northwest as in southern Florida. Patching Plaster Best for Unsightly Cracks Cracks in plaster are a bane to every home owner. Fortunately, most of such cracks can be repaired by the home owner himself with no more trouble than is expended on any of the* average jobs that he does around the house. Care should be exercised, however, to use a regular patching ? . ■* £

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

extends the width of the house, it be- I Ing 11 feet 6 inches deep and 21 feet ' wide. This Is a larger living room than is ordinarily found In houses of this size. The dining room is conne’eted with the living room with a cased opening and is 11 feet by 13 feet. The wide opening between the living room and the dining room gives ’ ; ST • ' : • I 21/ I ! Ikfffer ] Second Floor Plan, an effect of spaciousness and practically combines the two rooms. At one end of the living roorti Is an open fireplace. and at the other is an open stair to the second floor. The kitchen 'is also a corner room and is 9 feet 6 Inches square. Two large bedrooms on the second floor are made possible by a wide dormer window set In the steep pitched .. roof at either side. These dormers also taL'e away the plain appearance of the room and add to the appearance of the -house. The house is of frame construction and has 0 a concrete'foundation; the basement is of the same size as the dimensions of the house. The lower half of the house to the eaves has clap board siding, and the gables at .either end are shingled, as are the walls of the dormer projections. This Is an unusually good design for the home builder who needs a house of this size, as it is attractive in exterior appearance, its rooms are large and welt arranged with the idea of giving the most in light and ventilation, and it can erected at-a comparably low cost. its hands before it is rented or sold. The result has been a 50 per cent decrease in rentals on hand and an increase of 100 per cent in sales. Through modernization, this concern believes, many foreclosures have been avoided and many discouraged home owners have been developed into contented. owners. This building and loan organization found that one of its borrowers who had liecoqiri delinquent in payments had no reason .for getting behind, except that they had'become dissatisfied with .their home. Investigation revealed that the house was satisfactory in every respect, except for the kitchen which was so poorly arranged that the owners despaired of .ever doing anything with ft. " The company suggested a modernizing plan, which was accepted. At a cost of about $275 the kitchen was completely transformed. The long, narrow, window was removed and two short twin windows were Installed just high enough to allow a fine sink to.be installed. The old cabinet was removed and replaced with a complete unit of drawers and cabinets finished on the outside with stain and enamel. A variety of appeals have been used by concerns interested in developing kitchen modernizing business. These •’ Incltide: J ‘Cost is less than would be expected. Small Investment results In material increase in value. Make the kitchen a place friends can be shown with pride. An antiquated'kitchen does more to lower the value of a home than any other room In it. - A properly arranged and equipped kitchen enables a given amount of work to be done in Jess time, leaving more time free for other things. A modern kitchen makes easy work out of what would otherwise be drudg- • ery. : plaster which has been manufactured specially for such work. This will insure a good job. Sueb a patching plaster can be purchased in two and one-half and five pound packages and requires only the addition of water to make It ready for use. Ornamenting Doorway A doorway is ornamented either to link it to its setting or to contrast it from a plain background, thus giving It distinction as the most important architectural feature of the composition. It can be embellished in many ways—by paneling, molding, inlays, carvings, by various rich materials, including metal work and glazing, and by painting. The style in which a i doorway is ornamented Is more or less traditional, an inheritance from a certain country or century. Casements Casements that open inward are not guaranteed to be absolutely weathertight in all locations. The outward- . opening casements are very decidedly the more satisfactory.

| Improved Uniform International I Sunday School • Lesson’ (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D.D.. Member or Faculty, Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for March 16 THE PARABLES OF THE KINGDOM LESSON TEXT—Matthew 13:24-51. GOLDEN TEXT—The kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness and peace, and joy In the Holy Ghost. PRIMARY TOPIC—The Whole World . for Jesus. ‘ JUNIOR TOPIC—The World for Christ. . > INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—What OUr Religion Means to Us. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—What Christianity Means to the World. | , The things set forth in these ' parables only apply to the church In I ' the measure that they permeate that i i body by virtue of its being formed I within this period. It should be observed that they set forth the “mys- j teries” of the kingdom. I. The Wheat and Tares (w. 24-30, cf. 36-43). * 1. The solvers. The sower of the ) good seed is the Son of Man (v. 37), | l.and the sower of the tares is the devil (v. 39). 2. The growing crops (v. 26). There is a striking resemblance in i the growing crops. The chief peril of I the devil is that he transforms him- ! self into an angel of light (II Cor. 11:14, 15). 3. The harvests (v. 30). There comes a time when the fruit of the crop shall be gathered. The separation is made by the angels under the direction of the Son of Man. For the tares there is a furnace of fire. For the wheat there is the Lord's ; garner. H. The Mustard Seed (vv. 31, 3’2). I 1. Its unimportant beginning (v. 1). j It begins-as the least of all seeds. Not only was Christ, the King, of humble parentage, but His disciples were unlettered fishermen. Likewise, n through the Centuries, not many wise and not many noble have been called. 2. Its vigorous growth (v. 32). , Though small in its inception, the work inaugurated by Christ has become mighty in power. 3. Ils lodging capacity (v. 32).' . The birds which find lodgment in the tree do not represent the children of men who find safety and salvationjn the church, but the predatory beings who have found shelter in the church, though thev are no part of it 111. The \eavened Meal (v. 33). I. The meal in Scripture means something Nutritious arid wholesome. It was used in one of the sweet ! savour offerings which typified Christ ! (Lev. 2:1-3 IL V.). I 2. The woman. The woman is the administrator of the home. Her responsibility is to 1 take the bread provided by the head I of the home and prepare and distribute it to the children. It means then that the"woman, the administrator, has introduced false doctrine and thus corrupted the children’s bread. 3. The leaven. In Scripture, leaven is invariably'a type of evil (Ex. 12:15; Matt. 16:6, 12; 'I Cor. 5:6-8; Gal. 5:8, 9). It means that in this age the truth of God. would be corrupted by worldliness and unbelief. IV. The Hid Treasure (v. 44). 1. The field (v. 38). Christ's own interpretion makes this to be the world. I 2. The treasure. The treasure means : Israel (Ps. 135:4. Deut. 7:6-8). 3. The purchaser. No one but the i Son of God had sufficient resources to ■ buy the world (John 3:16). 4. The purchase price. This was ; the precious blood of Jesus Christ, I God's beloved (I Pet. 1:13. 19). V. The Merchantman Seeking Pearls (vv. 45, 46). 1. The merchantman is Christ. The Son of Mari has come to seek and save , that which was lost (Luke 19:10). | 2. The purchase price. Christ impoverished Himself (Phil. 2:68) to pur- j chase the one pearl of great price ■ (Eph. 5:25). 3. The pearl of great price. This is the church (Col. 1:18). j VI. The Dragnet (vv. 47-50). 1. The sea. The sea In Scripture ■ denotes peoples or multitudes (Dan. 7:3; Bev. 17:15). , 2. The dragnet The dragnet cast i into the sea means the sowing of the seed by the Son of Man. 3. The dragnet drawn to the shore ! when *ull means that when God’s purpose *or the present age is full, account pill be taken of the results. 4. The separation made by the angels. This will take place*at the end of the age. 5. The destiny of the bad fish. The angels shall sever the wicked from among tb* just,-and shall cast them into the furnace of fire where there ; stall be wailing and gnashing of teeth. Escaping From Trouble The door by which we escape from trouble is of more importance than the escape Itself. There are many troubles frtmi which it is better for a man not to escape than to escape wrongly; and there are many difficulties in which it Is better to struggle and to j fall than to be helped by a wrong hand.— Philips Brooks. Thing* Un*aen and Eternal If we are going to be master in life we must have a great hope; If we are going to endure, we must see Him who is Invisible; if we are to be restrained. inspired, invigorated, we i must look not at the things which are seen and temporal, but at the things which are unseen and eternal. —W. L. Watkinson. A Higher and Stronger Hand “No man, my dear brother, can stand in fae slippery places where we have to go, unless he have the grasp of a higher and stronger hand to keep him op.”—Maclaren.

Set Contmtt 15 Fluid Pratta .izlrenlHe rp 1, Crjr - Children hate to take medicine ■ as a rule, but every child loves the i yv ■ taste of Castoria, And this pure ‘ijil ■ vegetable preparation is just as [’•o good as it tastes', just as bland Ls and harmless as the recipe reads. ilm HmEM (The wrapper tells you just what O. Castoria contains.) • When Baby's cry warns of colic, deserves a place in the family a few drops of Castoria has him medicine cabinet until your-c/iil'd soothed, asleep again in a jiffy, is grown. He knows it is safe for ; Nothing is more valuable in diar- the tiniest baby; effective for a rhea. When coated tongue or bad hpy in his teens. With this special breath tell of constipation, invoke children’s remedy handy, you need its gentfe aid to cleanse and regu- never risk giving a boy or girl late a child's bowels. In colds or medicine meant for grown-ups. children's diseases, use it to keep Castoria is sold in every drug the system from clogging. Your store; the genuine always bears doctor will tell vou Castoria Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature.

I . , z 1 Absurd Claim Clarence Darrow, the noted Chica- | go lawyer, apropos of -a dry states- ! men indicted for dry law violation, referred at a dinner to another law i breaker, whose double life has been 1 exposed. I ’ “The man claimed.” said Mr. Darrow. “that nowadays we are entitled i to double lives. He pointed to, this playwright and that novelist who adi vocate free love. But he got kicked out of the church anyhow. Ills claim didn't go down. r “As one of the church deacons re- ■ j. marked to me afterwards, his claim had about as much sense to it as ; the bigamist’s: “‘What is home without anoth- ; er?’ ” Many on the Road “What kind of a car have you?" “Oh, a runabout. You know—run about a mile, then stop."

Fliers Say Courage Varies with the Way they Feel

Jgs/ / r » Z / X / ’I Member of the “Caterpillar Club” earns his right to membership by 4 5000 foot Emergency Jump.

AEROPLANE za. pilots tell us that their courage, their whole attitude toward flying, varies from day to day, with the way they feel. If they feel full of pep, healthy, they can try anything —nothing frightens them. Their nerve is unshaken; their skill keen; their flying is machine-like in its perfection. It is an entirely different story, however, if they wake up in the moTning feeling sick, down in the mouth. Then fly- ‘ ing becomes a real danger.

What is the matter with the§e b?ave people-when they are not dip to par? j The natural poisons in*their bodies have not been swept away. They are allowing their brains to be clouded and duiled by poisons which should not be permitted to remain in the body. Differ in Meaning The expressions “fatally wounded” . and “mortally wounded" fire comj morily used to express the same I thing, but mortally is regarded by ’ some as meaning suffering death at ; the time ’ of, or soon after, the . wounding, while fatally wounded conveys the idea that death, followed j after a considerable lapse of time. A miracle play of long ago, which I had a great vogue at the time, rep- ! resented Adam as rushing across the I stage to get created.

J' iflk 7 Miserable with Backache? It May Warn of Disordered Kidneys. DOES every day find you lame 4 and achy—suffering nagging backache, headache and dizzy spells? Are kidney excretions too frequent, scanty or burning in passage? These are often signs of sluggish kidneys and shouldn’t be neglected. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes, use Doans Pills. Endorsed the world over. 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: J. F. Parker, 115 Mansion S»- Pitt.burgh, Pa., says: “I mend Dean’s Pill®. My kidney® were not acting normally. The sOcrct ’ < ’”’, we "J very irregular and burned in pamng. I would net Up in the mormna hred and stiff all over. I had a constant backache and headaches annoyed me. oince using Doan's Fills 1 have been in good shape. Doan’s Pills ■ A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys

Born on Fast Train A railway conductor, official of the line, and the doctor in attendance established Huntingdon as the birthplace of a baby born on the Flying Scotsman traveling GO miles an hour on its nonstop run fjom London to Edinburgh. Stop the Pain. The hurt of a burn or. a cut stops when Cole's.Carbolisalve, is applied. It heals quickly without soars. 30c and 60c by all druggists, or send 30c t® J. W. Cote Co., Rockford, Change First Movie Star—We certainly change as we grow older, don’t we? Second Ditto —Yes. I used to marry men I wouldn’t go out to dinner with now. —Vancouver Province. Rendered Unconscious “Did the speaker electrify his audience?" “No; he merely gassed it.”— ' Stray Stories. ' 1 ,

This is the lesson we can learn from airmen. It is the lesson that points to Nujol—the simple, natural ,'normal way ; — without the use of drugs or medicines to keep the body internally clean of the poisons that slow it up. Nujol is pure, tasteless, colorless as clear water I It forms no habit; it cannot hurt even a baby. See how the sunshine floods into your life when you are really well. Get a bottle of Nujol in its sealed pack-, age at any drug

store. It costs only a few cents and it makes you feel like a million dollars. Find out for yourself what Nujol will do for you this very night. You can be at top-notch efficiency and happy all the time. .Get a bottle today. Her Choice Julia— -I',ve won the 5500 prize for the best article on the cruelty of trapping wild animals. 7 Jane—ls that so? What are you going to do with it? Julia —Well, I think I will get a new fur coat. One Enential Needed . Mother—Well, Nellie, Is your doll kitchen completely furnished now? Nellie—No, mamma. I stilb need a policeman for the cook.' ... ' 111 I