The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 March 1931 — Page 7

The Plains of Abraham ' J'''' •-■/ '' ■ •■•-■■' . '• -,. ■■' .'■ ' ■ ■ j « « « « By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD » » » » ©by Doubleday Doran Co.. Inc. WNV Service. |

THE STORY With hi* English wife, Catherine. and »ori. Jeems, Henry Buiasn. French settler in Canada in ITO. cultivates -a farm adjacent to the 'Tosteur «e srnturie. As the I story opens the Hulalns are re* ’■ turning frdm a visit to the Ton--'; teurs. Catherine's wandering brother. Hepsibah. meets then: with presepts for the family To Jeems he' gives- a pistol, bidding him perfect himself tn marksmanship Hepsibah fears for the safety, of the Bulains in their Isolated position.. Jeems fights with Faul Taehe. cousin of T«inette Tonteur, whom thej both adore Next day Jeems calls at the Tonteur home and apologises for brawling in front of Tolnette. CHAPTER IV—Continued —7— Jeems did not gol again tn Tonteur manor, thougir occasionally he heard news front the seigjienrie. Every one I .-wait in high liumotj there been use of I the activities going on in preparation ' 'for the exit, of the! entire 'family for Quebec early in September. Tolnette -‘. Was going to school nt the convent of ' the Ursuline* JOe'fns had a feeling of [ loss. It. was as if the fire of his dreams had not only burned Itself out. hut , even the ash were being cleared ■ away. -. Autumn came. and-with It’S great these ti'.nl.urer daxs of golden ripeness, • forests, and <?f crisp, tangy air when nil life stem* I rejuveniited and his O«rn veins danced to the thrill of till-, ending promKe* and cxfcctati' n< But! th:* year a Jieax in« 'S of ht irt was in Isltn with the Changing, of tlm seasons. Tolnette iy.d her people left for Que-, bee. and <-ne evening, a week later. Hepsibah gravely announced that lie • could no longer delay hl« departure for the .far front .-r* <<f I'eri s-Jvanhi and the »i!... 5 . where h s . bPgatioits a« a trader called him. Catherine was • jsllent for a while, thei - ; herself. J«—m-. drew , back where his unde see him clearly. Hear lighted catid ►, • by , a breath of ,'wipd t !■• grimly *•■!, so hard vi* he lighting 'u. hold a grip on bls emotion. He promised that he would never again remain away long at a time. He would re- ■ tuni_during the winter. If he failed to < : would know I■ ■ w .-i* dead XV!n ' H-nri oit of hi, b, ,> tobuild the tire, the* .next morning Hepzibah was gone. He had stolen off like’ a shadow tn ■ some still hour of ’.> • ' j More determinedly than when his i uncle had been with 'him, Jeems con-, tinned at. hig -work and at the mental i efforts with wl i.idi !>c was struggling to reach out Into the mountains and voiles s .of experience silif.i I Os | Through the full and winter the JhiI Inin cabin -was-vislted by wandering Indians who had learned t’ it food, warm! . : nd a w< lyotne w re always th< : ■ was tempered by the things Hepsibahhad tdld him, and; while he brought I : uninvited guests, winning their confidence and:'r,cik.-g himself more etlldm la their s|h«-‘i, he was also watching and listening for the signs of hidden dang.-’rs against which ids uncle had repeateilly wan ed fell . ,Mos< of the Ipdl-ins 'sgere front the ('anuda tribes, and among them he found no cause for unrest, but when occasionally tin Onondaga or an. Oneida came, he detected in their manlier a; ‘ quiet and -i.i-id.'ss caution which told hinm these 'visitors' fr<>m the Six Nations considcredthemselves over the d.•;!•! line win'; I;;;l ■ < * made note that they always came through that part of t ori idden valley which Hepssbah had predicted would be a future warpath for the Mohawks. This whiter jhe went farther in Ids ndventurin-gs. 't'apthin Pipe, the old Caughnawaga. had a habit of Ing several of the hardest- weeks near the Bulains, and with his two snog, XVldte Eyes and Peg Cat. Jeems trayeled to the shores of Lake Champlain for the first time. He wait gone a week and planned with h.s? friends to , make a longer expedition the following year, ns far as frown Point and a place called Tlctutderog*. where the Erencb were going to build a fort some day. On this excursion he experienceti the real thrill of danger, for White-Eyes and B.g Cat.’ both of whom were young, braves who had won their spurs, moved with a caution which was eloquent in Its significance. With Tolnette and her people away from the seigneurie. Jeems had no hesitation in going to the Richelieu, and made trips there with bis father on snowshoes; and In March, during a break in a spell of intense cold, he went alone and remained overnight in. the house of the baron’s overseer with whose young, people he had become acquainted. This overseer was Peter Lubeck, an eld veteran for whom Tonteur held a warm affection, and through bis son. Peter the younger, Jeems had his first news of Tolnette. She was at the Ursuline school, and her parents bad taken a fashionable house In St. 1-ouis street. Peter said Tonteur wrote in every letter to bis father that he was homesick to get back to the Richelieu. As another spring and summer followed those which had gone before, Jeems knew he was fighting something that had to be conquered, a yearning for Tolnette which filled him with a bitter loneliness when its bold was strongest. For two years Tolnette remained In Quebec*without making a visit to the Richelieu. During these years, the tragedy of his divided birth was forced upon Jeems. There was no doubt that

the English In him was uppermost or that the urge In his blood was toward the southern frontiers and the colonies of Hepsibah Adams. Yet he loved the place where he lived with a sincere pa-sion the Big forest. Forbidden valley, all the miles .of wildern«xs about, him as far as be could look to the horizons. This was New France It was his fattier's country and not his mother's. Between his father and himself .a comradeship had grown up which nothing could break, but his worship for his mother was a different thing, as If something besides motherhood bound him to her. Il s friends had increased in number. He came t<» know people along the Richelieu but was always . conscious he was not entirely one of them. Toinette's words and her hatred for ■him persisted.in his memory and kept ' recalling this truth, ? - I Late in August of the second year : r of. Tier absence. Tolnet te returned to j I Tonteur manors for u month. Jeems' heart ached With the old yearning, but he did notgo to the seigpeurie. Paul Tnche and his mother were also at the harbn'k and be felt a sense .of I Ref when■ be learned that all of .them | were on tb» r way to Quebec, with the exception, of Tonteur. who remained | i for the harvesting <•( crop- A fort- i night after 'they Icid gofie. Peter-P'ld I I him about Tolnette and .Paul 'i'aclie. Llle t id scarcely r. -g!. zed Toinette. ! he said. She bad grown taller and I more beautiful. Tat lw was a fqll- I ’grown man am! dressed like a young'l e.- one I si >■ that he -w.-ts desperately In love f ' with Tolriette. Peter avowed. But if i i he were a judge of such affairs, and ■ he < ..nsioered himself to 'bo that. Tache xvas a long way from a realiza- I tlon of Ids desires, even taking ' Tolnette s tender ye.-trs into conshler- j .' at:on. She granted him tin favors. ! ; There had actually: seemed to be a l { coolness in her attitude toward-him. Peter s words st.rre-! deems with a | ' sat ■ . : ■ ■ et the , si ■ ■ ■ - uht 11 o was on . - I way- home •!.>’! lie pud- himself 'from i ; the folly of his thoughts about Toinette. I -| Even if she were npt smiling op Tache ' as warmly as lie had supposed, lie ] - knew she was as far removed from ! now as the sun was from the enr:lL. Yet. as time went on. this'fresh J contact with her presence, though he had ui't su n her. gave a determined I impetus to his plait' for th.e future', There were hours in which he saw himself a splendnl enemv where fate had ordaim-’l that he could not be a friehd. With increasing maturity giving to him. a deeper and more understanding passion for his mother, and a fuller comprehension of the noble qualities in his father, he was harassed bv a i -c '' c; <m of em -t mfs vvddeh he revealed to neither, attd confided only In Hepsibah A lam', who. hail re- | turned from his trip. The ditll- [ cultyof solving the . problem which I j eonfroiiUsl Jeems was as great f«r j < t'atiierifH's brother as it wok d have 1 _l>eeti for t'atherit.o herself, for as j •early ; >s the spring of 1753., when I ■ there was no longer a. doubt in (he ! minds of .ti e people «f the t'-donies . i > New France as to the surety of j • the struggle which was impending. I. While France and England w ere ofli- i | chilly at peace, the forces of the two I j countries In America were <>n the verge of dp«» war and were instigat- I , trig the Inducts . t-I a strife of ex- , termination, • Everywhere, along ■ sums wi re being expendtsl by both < S.-0..-S for human hair that so,.res of whit • id taken up the lucrative business of hunting for scalps. I Almost ut the door b>- Jeer.is' home, war preparatlonk were in pragreM> { , for very landed baron ahmg the Rtch- . r. v. is training his vassal farmers, I I and when the wind was right the Bulains could hear faintly, the twlce-a- I I Wiftek. firing of mti-kets at Tonteur j

Bitter Comment on the Passing of George IV

— I “The remains of what once was I Oeotg* IV have now undersigne the ; process of interment." said an article in the Lendo© Times a century ape. I reprinted by the Detroit- News.- “We I have been charged with two offenses. j d anH-tricaliy opposite, in behavior I toward the late king. One set of accusers will have it that we persecute bis memory. with the same hostile spirit with which we assailed his IlvIng reputation. Another party reproaches us with mean sycophancy to the living, and still meaner malignity towards the defunct prince. It might he sufficient for us to state those inconsistent calumnies, and leave them to neutralize each other: but we disdain to shelter ourselves by such an evasion, and we give the flattest contradiction to them both. . . . “The truth is. however—and speaks volumes about the man—that there never was an IndlviduaMess re- * Beggary la Old England Queen Elizabeth put down trt»r ritual foot and the golden age of Pegging was halted. Before the passage of the statute of 1572. thousands of vaga- ' bonds—most of them able-bodied scamps—made a living by wandering the length and breadth of England, begging, stealing and pestering householders as they went. In great companies they swarmed from ssh Ire to shire. At that time the profession numbered about 10.000 roving beggars, who throve on the indiscriminate charity distributed at monasteries (before their dissolution), at weddings or other countryside feasts and at the great baronial homes.

manor. Being free of the seigneurial , protection and laws, Henri did not go j to drill. Nor did Jeems. Yet Tonteur rode frequently to their home, especially when Hepsibah was there. He Was in better spirits than usual, and it was all on account of Toinette, he said. She was homesick sot the : Richelieu. Her letters to him were filled with a longing for it. and she declared that, in another twelve j months, when her schooling would be finished, site wanted to live at the manor and not in Quebec. That was enough to make him happy, and he laughed at the thought of danger for womenfolk along the Richelieu —in the fortified places. The English and their savages would not get nearer than the lower end of Lake Champlain when war came ; and they wouhi be driven from there very shortly, | and also from Lake tieorge. But on such an outiving farm as the ; place, which had no prot< ever, there was the possible peril of wandering scalp hunters and he never tired of urging Henri and Catherine to make their home within the safety ' of the seigneurie. asked Jeems'and Henri to to his drill, and that they did not re-.' spond made no differetve in his friendi ship. He could understand how hard I it would b«‘ for Henri to prepare for | jva-r against his wife's country, and Ms Secret adoration for Catherine was greater because of her cqurage And I her faith in both peoples with the , catastrophe >o near. It delighted him i to think that his own confidence was • a comfort t<> her. ami the eagerness i with which she accepted his opinions j m to ro be- . yond what Hepsiljab considered In- ! telllgent bounds in giving easement to , her mind. He did not guess what was i in Jeems' heart, nor did the boy's fa- J I'ther <>rmother. Only Hepsibah knew fully w hat was there. Early in the autumn, the trader took ■ Jeemi on a .lourm y to the English fort ■ on Lake George, thence traveling Into . the New York country, returning in j i November. They found a change in ; Catherine. SHie was not less confident ' or less contented in the paradise she ; was helping to build, but something j I e.was ‘ i accepting bravely and courageously' ! and even with pride. One evening, she spok-e of the military activities along . the Richelieu. Many river youths were training with their elders, she said, and it did not seem right that Jeems should not be among them. While killing yvas wicked and inexcusable, it was a God-given privilege to defend one's home and family. She quoted Tonteur to substantiate her belief that war Would never reach them, ami she knew that Jeems would not seek it any'more than his father. I But she thought it would do no harm ! for Jeems to prepare himself along ' with the other young men of the seigneurie. i ToThis suggestion Hepsibah's home, j osophy made.objection. He told ' Catherine the day was coining when ' Jeems would be compelled to fight and I that he would have to choose one side ‘ or the other to champion. Wlom that day arrived, sentiment would not ‘ j stand in the way. for. with a world ip turmoil about them, one could not • be English and French at the same ■ time. No man could tell on which ' side they would be when forced to it, i and as he despised a traitor more than anything else, it was his opinion that Jeems should not be taught the ways i of war under the Ilag of France and then, it might be. fight for the Engi lish. As a frontiersman, he maintained that the finest fighting man was the L<>ng Ride, a free vyanderer of the 1 forests, a leather-stocking trained to • a hundred greater things than the_firing of a musket in company with a s--ore of others. That was what Jeems j should'"be. As a Long Ririe he could j serve where honor and duty called him when t!i<- «<;t became necessary,'.' i i (TO B E CONTINU ED.)

gretted by his fellow-, reatures than.i this deceased king. What eye has wept for him? What heart has heaved j one throb of unmercenary sorrow? Was there at any time a gorgeous • pageant on the stage more completely i forgotten than he has been, even from the day on which the heralds pro I claimed his successor? Has not that successor gained more upon the Eng- ; lish tastes and prepossessions of his subjects, by the blunt and unaffected -—e'en should It be grotesque—cordiality of his demeanor, within a few short weeks, than George IV—that Leviathan of the haul ton—ever did during the 63 years of his existence?" , Trip Doctor Johnson Missed I The history of St Kilda might have been happier had James Boswell carried out the project he once enter- j tained of purchasing the Isolated lit- i tie island, says an article in a London paper. He consulted Doctor Johnson, who took up the Idea with enthusiasm. “Bray do so. sir." said the Great Cham. “We will go there and pass a winter amid the blasts. We shall have fine fish, and we will take some dried tongues with us and some books." Despite such encouragement. Boswell changed his mind—perhaps after an examination of his purse—and the purchase was never effected. Out of the Rut One simple help toward keeping out of a rut. is to go to work by a different route occasionally, and purposely feed on new sights.—Americas Magezine.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

Improved Uniform International Sunday School ' Lesson' (Bv REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. Member of Facultv. Moodv Bible Institute j of Chicaeo.» <?>. IMI West ern Vnlf>n.l Lesson for March 29 REVIEW: JESUS THE WORLDS SAVIOR ' I GOLDEN TEXT—How God anointed Jesus of Naxareth with the Holy Ghost and with power: who went about ’ doing good, and healing -all that were oppressed of the devil; for God wae with him. PRIMARY TOPlC—Jesus Busy Doing Good ' - I JUNIOR TOPlC—Jesus Busy Doing Good INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP- > I IC—Jesu# the -World's Savior: Prejia- I ration and Popularity YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP- j , fC-r-Jesus the World's Saylor; Prepa- j ration and Popularity. Since the lessons of the quarter center in one person and have one theme; namely, the world's Savior, the best method of review for senior and adult classes will be to refresh The mind j with the principal"’facts and lending teachings of each lesson. Assignments should be made a week ahead. The following suggestions are offered: Lesson for January 4. , John the Baptist was a great preacher. He had a great heritage in I his godly parents. Much can be expected, from a son of such parents. tesson for January 11. Jesus, as to personality, was divine and yet his human nature <leveioped in the normal way. He waxed strong in body, was filled with wisdom, ami God's grace was upon him. Though conscious of his deity, tie lived a life of filial obedience. Lesson for January 18„ John the Baptist came in fulfillment i of prophecy, calling upop men to pre-' i I pare for the coming of the Messiah ; by repenting of their sins. Baptism was the appointed . sign of their re- i fWntance. With tine humility. John turned the attention of the people from himself to-Christ. Lesson for January 25. Jesus was led into the wilderness by the Holy Spirit to be tempted of the Devil. His temptation was Mes- : sianic. The purpose was to demonstrate the reality <if the incarnation. • Jesus weiit from the place of anointing and heavenly recognition as the Son of God to meet and to Sfudl the enemy of Got) - and man (Heb. 2:14). Lesson fc.- February I.' Jesus demonstrated his power oyer various diseases and over demons, thus displaying his Lonjship. Even while demonstrating his mighty power, j he operated through benevolent channels. -I Lesson for February 8. Jesus made clear to the disciples .! that they would he hated and opposed i as they Went out into the world with i his message. Those who follow Christ must expect opposition and suffering. Lesson for February 15. Jesus is the friend of sinners. There is no one so’steeped in sin as toene shut out from him. Christ came into the world “to seek and to save that |. ’ vvhb’h was lost.” Lesson for February 22. Jesus' supreme mission was to make known the good-news, of salvation to a lost world. In spite of the good; seed sown by him. only a small portion brought fofth-f.uil fruitage owing | to t'.e condition of the soil. . ~ Lesson for March 1. The greatness <>f the harvest—man's lost condition moved Jesus t<) ask the . disciples to pray the Lord to thrust on. laborers. 'The real force back of missionary endeavor is prayer. When, the cbiinh begins to pray about missions. there will be missionaries and money to sustain rhem. j Lessen for March 8. The parable id the Good Samaritan shows who is my neighbor and what I ng a neig *<B‘ means; My neighlior is the man needing my help. I Whether next door <»r across the j vvprid.. Being a . iii-’-rhbor is-rlie mo<t I important thing for me. To be a neighlwr means to be on the lookout for those in need and to give sympatHelically, the nee«led help, . | Lesson for March 15. The Bethany home was always open to the Lord. Jesus will come into I ; such homes as will give him welcome. The Inspiration of the Bethany home must have greatly helped Jesus as he went out to meet his foes. It Is the inspiration of the home which gives men courage to go out and fight the biHtles of life. Lesson for March 22. The parable of the rich fool shows , thg peril of allowing the heart to be i set ujw'n even the fruits of legitimate toil. To seek gold and thus forget God- is to play ihe fool. Tiie next quarter' continues the lessons from the g<»spel by Luke. Courtesy Courtesy is not the creation of effort, it is the product of grace; it is born, not made; I’aul was born of I grace, and therefore he wiis gracious. ■ and instinctively his courtesy fitted it- : i self to all the changing requirements I iof the day. . . . Grace is the bountiful mother of ail the graces.— ; J. H. JowetL Baptism With the Spirit The baptism with the Holy Spirit Is not an experience that God grants to us merely to make ns happy. It will indeed bring into our lives a Joy such as we never knew before. But that is not its main purpose. The baptism with the spirit is . . . Intended ... to make us effective.—K. A. Torrey. He Hears Our Prayers Others may forget us in their prayers; there is one in heaven who never does forget. Others may fail us when their lamp burns low; he ever iiveth. We are engirdled by the prayers of one who loves us and has the ear of God and therefore is able to save to me uttermost—CL H. Morrison.

OLe KITCHEN ; CABINET ; "Among the most thoroughly self deluded people in the world are those who think that in the multiplication of things and possessions, happiness and contentment lies.” I ■' . . -SOUP'S ON” In these days with hundreds of varieties of soups that come to us

canned and ready ; to reheat and serve, one is hard to suit who cannot rind one to serve forj > any occasion. .For those wlio prefer to prepare their own soups, as most

| cooks do, except in emergency, the following good ones will warm and satisfy : Tomato Bisque.—-Cook three cupfuls of tomatoes with one bay leaf, four cloves, one-half an onion, two teaspoonfuls of sugar ten minutes, then strain, add one-fourth teaspoonful of soda and two cupfuls of white sauce. Serve at once with croutons. To prepare the White sauce take one and one-half tablespoonfuls of vegetable oil. one tablespoonfnl of minced onion, one tablespoonfqL of cornstarch, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one cupful of milk and pepper to • taste. Cook (stirring over a low heat) 1 the oil and the onion, add the cornstarch and stir and cook for three minutes, then add the milk and cook for five minutes. ; Strain and add to the hot soup. " Baked Bean Soup.—Take three pfipfuls of beans, three pints of v/ater. two stalks of celery, bring to the boiling point, then simmer for 30 minutes; Rub through a sieve, add one and one-half cupfuls of stewed and I, strained tomatoes, one ta'nlespoonful of chili sauce and salt and pepper to ■ season. Cook one tablespoonful of minced onion in two tablespoonfuls of ; vegetable oil three minutes, add a tai blespoonful of cornstarch and cook three minutes, stir into soup, boil up and serve with croutons. Home-Made Noodlek.—Beal two eggs, add salt to season, with enough Hour to make a stiff dough. . Knead it. then roil as thin as possible. Cover with a towel and then set aside to dry for a half hour. Spread very lightly with flour and roll like, a jelly roll. With a sharp knife cut strips about <>ne-eighth-inch thick. Unroll and dry again. Then drop into boiling broth or well-salted water and cook 1.” minutes. » "Y. a I . (©; 1931. Western Newspaper Union ) Some Wonder* of Barnum It was the inimitable Bhineas T. Barnum who first made the corner at Broadway and Ann Street, New Y’ork, famous. Years before the- era of finished stage productions, grand operas and perfected concerts, Barnum’s museum and its Uncle Tom’s Cabin, with its curiosities, menagerie, and shows, were the greatest attractions of the city. It drew from the entire'amusement loving part of rhe community. Here was the home of the wooly, horse ’ and the white whales from the Arctic; 1 the Cardiff giant: the even more famous white elephant of Siam; the very club with which the South Sea natives murdered Captain Cook.. Here occurred the great fire from wjiich. it was stoutly asserted by Barnum, the polar bears escaped by climbing down the firemen’s ladders. —New York Sun. Listing a Few Fauitx A California map, suing his wife for divorce after less than two years of marriage, says that slip, is “sullen, j mean. Irritable, morbid, disagreeable, : nasty, gruesome, cool, bitter, jealous, j ■ heckling, picayunish, loathsome, in- j suiting, brazen, miserly, gluttonish. temp* ramentai, selfish, contemptuous, inattentive, uncivil’and inconsiderate.” '■ Well-Nourished Children A child who “just grows up” may do- a very creditable Job of it. But j j tlse fact remains .that accidental j growth can never be as sure success ns scientifically controlled de- j velopment, based on proper food.-— i Exchange. Old Indian Pastime I A snow snake is a long, slender j shaft, curved slightly at one end,, to i be launched so as to glide endwise : over a surface of ice or snow—a game ' which was popular with the American Indians, arid is still played to some extent today. Uncle Eben "De sun shines in January.”. said Uncle Eben, “but not enough to give real encouragement to us folks dat goes right on year after year imaginin’ dat de weather has done reformed."— Washington Star. All Even Jud Tunkins says he can remember a lot of advice that he wishes he had taken. But things even up. He can ! remember just as much advice that he’s glad he let alone. —Washington Star. 'a ■ Gaa Pioneer William Murdoch, an engineer. Is said to have been the first person to heat his home with gas, thereby causing great consternation in his village in Wales one day in 1792. Mangrove a Builder Mangrove trees of the tropic coasts actually build new land, as their tangled masses of roots form a base for debris washed in by the sea. What Interest Is Interest is the universal time price, Unking impending and remote satisfactions, or efforts, or both. It is literally the previously missing link necessary for a complete comparison of efforts and satisfactions at all points of time. ’

Appreciated /CHILDRENare delighted with the fine chocolate flavor ol Monarch = I 0 vE Y Coboa, the inviting aroma, and attractive I I color. It is a most welcome drink on a W I cold day. .... i' vSK j Monarch Cocoa is so rich and smooth L that it makes fudge oF unusual goodness, ijNk xv ) and it has no superior for baking, cooking and dessertfl This is one of more than 250 Monarch < ~" *’*' *j Super - Quality Foods sold and reccm--,-gsgcsy mended by 50,000 independent retailers. ■ 111 \ ' J

■ . _L I Weird Concoctions for Gourmets of the World When the- great French colonial exhibition opens in Paris next year, gourmets will be in their element. Chefs, from the outposts of the French overseas possessions will, in a vast and gorgeous restaurant, serve up strange and rare dishes to provide jaded Parisian palates with new and wonderful sensations. On the menu cards will be found such temptations as salad of silkworms, sea-weed jam (a dessert), octopus heads, shark's fins, and lacquered duck. The latter .» a tasty little bird, served with a sauce, the chief ingredient of which is the sap of the varnish.-tree These delicacies are of Indo-China, but Equatorial Africa will send along an even more remarkable concoction, an eerie dish called "m'poss." This is nothing less than a pudding of white worms. Platonic love seldom becomes any' other kind, much as that may be doubted. *

P ---| For €OLI> S We all catch colds and they can make us miserable; but yours needn’t last long if you will do thjs: Take two or tliree tablets of Bayer Aspirin just as soon as possible after a cold starts. Stay in the house if you can —keep warm. Repeat with another tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin every three or four hours, if those symptoms of cold persist. Take a good laxative when you retire, and keep bowejs open. If throat is sore, dissolve tliree tablets in a quarber-glassfiil of water and This soothes inflammation and reduces infection. There is nothing like Bayer Aspirin for a cold, or sore throat. And it relieves aches and pains almost instantly. The genuine tablets, marked Bayer, are absolutely harmless to the heart. BAYER ASPI RIX Aspirin is- the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Sahcj Ucadfl 11/^9^ — assurance of a good, fit healthy scalp. a The regular, consistent use of CurttiSUra Ointment and Cnticura Soap is assurance of a healthy scalp. Let the shamZ J p OO be preceded by an application of ’ Cutirura Ointment (if there is dandruff c r skin r irritation); then shampoo with a strong suds, or with a It removes goap made by dissolving shavings of t 'miticura > rashes anil Soap in a little hot water. You will he pleased with .. . , . the healthiness of your scalp. . „ blemisnes, too So«p 2S<S. OintSit ix. and 50c. Talcum 35c. Charing Cre«»> 35e. Proprietor*: Potter Drug & Chemical (.orporation, Malden, Mata* Try the neyr Coticura Shaving Cream. in ai m iii iiiwiT'~iTWTtaarlTimmnMnrManiiwiiainnawwnrß

— »l. I 11. Mill Did Sound Strange _ Heavyweight —Yes. my oppohent I had to be taken to’the hospital with j a 'broken nose, two black eyes, a i twisted and a fractured Jaw. Friend—Oh. did he < have a row ; with the referee?—Tit-Bits. _ ~ I Some of the most amiable people do not hesitate to lie a little. - It's rat-lfar* odd when the stocki broker fails to come out even.

I gmmrw Can’t PLAY Can’t REST fesisf iii j r • S / —child needs Castoria |

HEN a child is fretful and irritable, seems distressed and uncomfortable, can’t play, can’t sleep, it is a pretty sure sign that something is wrong. Right here is where Castoria fits into a child's scheme — the very purpose for which it was formulated years ago! A few drops and the condition which caused the trouble is righted: comfort quickly brings restful sleep. Nothing can take the place of Castoria for children; it’s perfectly harmless, yet always effective. For the protection of your wee one—for your own peace of mind —keep this old reliable preparation always on hand. But don’t keep it just for emergencies; let it be an every-day aid. Its gentle action will ease and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. In more liberal doses it will

Settled First “I thought he was going to marry i and settle down." “He was. but his creditors got him first and made him settle up.’’—Pliil- ' adelphia Evening Bulletin. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy

For every stomach and intestinal ill. This good oldfas hio ned herb home remedy for | c on st ip a tlon, Istomach ills and of her derangement's of the sys-

tern so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. Might Be a Senator “What's his political creed?” j “Every man his own party-”— Louisville Courier-Journal. !

An Exception In view of the fact tiiat he started out in life with the handicap of being unable to tell a lie, George Washington got pretty f<ir in politics. —Ohio State Journal. To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate liver, bowela and stomach.—Adv. An audience to face, ' stipulates some to brilliancy, while only a pen or pencil in band stimulates others, and can a typewriter do that?

\J -ZkssS—l 'sill ■ f !> I effectively help to regulate sluggish bowels in an older child. All druggists have Castoria; it's genuine if you see Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature and this mine-plate: ,

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