Walkerton Independent, Volume 53, Number 26, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 24 November 1927 — Page 2

Walkerton Independent —--EubUshed Every Thursday by ' THE INDEPEN DENT-NEWS co. —..- Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS — LAKEVILLE STANDARD THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES - Clem DeCoudres. Business Manager ~ CbajJes M. Finch. Editor subscription rates - One Year Six Months ” Three Months ' 60 _ Terms in advance ’ s_T ntered at J he poßt »™ce at Walkerton. M second-elajs matter. The tinai test of • inservatism is to go broke and still feel that way. The fashionable aviator will be content with nothing less than an all-silk airplane. An attractive woman, drawing a lot of interest, can well claim her face is her fortune. The fat woman who 20 years ago—was fair, fat and forty, is now sleek, slim and sixty. The movie actress who has been sued for $1,000,000 probably appreciates the compliment. A pedestrian is a man with a large sedan and a nineteen-year-old son just home from college. An oyster doesn’t seem to have much fun in life, but it gets a mighty long summer vacation. Middle age is when one has stopped growing on either end but continues to grow in the middle. What’s become of the barber who used to say that the show would not offend the most fastidious? One nice thing about traveling by airplane Is that you don’t have to read a lot of billboard advertising. The main differerfce between a chiropodist and a footman is that a footman makes a living working on his own feet. Perhaps the greatest risk braved by transatlantic flyers is the traveling over New England’s million lightning rods in a fog. Etiquette is a form of conduct which, if carefully learned, will enable one to conceal the absence of natural good manners. Ice cream Is healthful enough but it is our recollection that apple butter made a better mustache on the average small boy. “A cafeteria,” says a well-known man about town, “is a restaurant run by the patrons for the benefit of the proprietor thereof.” Aviation enthusiasts are declaring that the airship will prove to be the greatest of all time-saving devices. It will have to go some to beat the sandwich. Fearless rider of a lunch joint broncho says chefs are great physical culturists because they have learned how to make salad dressing reduce the waste. Whenever you feel inclined to laugh at the idea that we’ll soon be running around in individual airplanes, remember how the hen used to laugh at the incubator. Paleontologists state that centuries ago pigs six feet high roamed in America. That’s nothing! Anthropologists with half an eye may now see them six feet. too. Who remembers when it was considered virtually impossible for an eligible girl to attract a real catch unless she could paint a lot of yellow roses on a china pin tray? To show how far behind the times we are in matters of absolutely no account, some of us never know the two famed movie players are married until the petition is filed. An English educator says that the dunce at school may turn out to be a genius. No child can get anywhere with that argument when dad is looking over a not-so-good report card. The British people are worrying because at thirty-three the prince of Wales is still single. Under current restrictions of royalty he probably feels that he can’t afford the luxury of divorce. A Chicago judge has decided that a woman, who is a good looker, has grounds for divorce when her husband treats her cruelly for not being a good cooker. When the house-to-house canvasser can’t think of any overwhelming reason why you should buy his little nickel contrivance that ought to be on every faucet, he says that’s the last one lie has left. Os course “Valencia” becomes very „ tiresome, but the Good Old Songs now being compiled in large books were also nuisances in their time. Another shrewd girl is the flapper who insists upon living dose to a car line so that she can ride to town in a different automobile every morning. The president of the University of Chicago says that a scholarship thrill can exceed an athletic thrill. But the trouble is that no one else thrills with you. By court action a plumber in New York has been able to collect a bill twelve years old. So it is not always the plumber that is overdue. Just a little dumber than a giraffe Is the girl friend who thought the man talking about the meteor among the stars was referring to a fat comedian. “After T make the same speech a couple of times.’’ admitted the Great Orator in a weak moment, “I often jflnd inyself leaning to the point of ♦▼lew expressed.”

i • THE • I j kitchen i CABINET!

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<©. 1927. Western Newspaper Union.) George Bernard Shaw says: "Do ■ not waste your time on social ques- , tions. What is the matter with the । poor Is poverty What Is the matter L with the rich Is uselessness.” GOOD THINGS TO EAT Here Is another way >f serving cauliflower: Cook p whole head in

boiling salted water until tender. Take out and ( place carefully in a deep dish, sp-inkle with buttered crumbs after pouring over a cupful of rich sour cream. Bake until the crumbs are brown. Tomato Sauce. — One

I^o 1801

may prepare one’s own sauce and can it for future use by using the following method: Try out one tablespoonful of finely minced pork (salt) and fry in it one-half each of a small carrot and turnip finely cut. green pepper and a small onion, and a bit of hot red pepper. Cook for five or ten minutes. Add three quarts of tomatoes, fresh, ripe and unpeeled, cut into pieces: add two cloves, a sprig of parsley and a small piece of celery, cook all together for an hour, then put all through a sieve. Return to the heat and season with one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt and one teaspoonful of sugar, with pepper a..d cayenne to taste. Boil up and can at once. When it is to be served one may thicken it with butter and flour cooked together. Lemon Prune Pie. — Line a pie plate with pastry and* bake in a hot oven. Mix two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch with one cupful of sugar and one cupful •»! wattr and cook twenty min es in a double boiler. Add carefully, stirring constantly, two egg yolks, siightiy beaten and cook until smooth. Remove from the tire and add four tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and the j grated rind of one lemon. Line the baked pastry shell with prunes that have been cooked and the stones removed. When tilling Is poured over | the prunes, top with a iheringue made from the egg whites beaten stiff, adding six tablespoonfuls of sugar. Place | in a slow oven to brown the meringue. Maraschino Sandwiches. —Slice and butter Boston brown bread, spread with the following: Cream two small cheeses with a tablespoonful 'r two of cream, mix with two tablespoonfuls of chopped maraschino cherries and chopped nuts. Add a bit of the cherry cordial if the cheese seems too dry. | Cut into any desired form. Ham With Sour Cream.—Remove the skin from a slice of ham and let stand twenty-four hours hi good vine- ‘ gar. Drain and brown in hot fat. adding enough to cook the ham; add-a little of the vinegar, a sliced onion. * ten peppercorns, a chopped carrot, a teaspoonfu! of sugar aud three table- , spoonfuls of sour cream. Cook slowly two hours. Thicken the gravy with flour and add a little more sour cream. Chaumiere Salad Dressing.—Blend one-half teaspoonful of salt with a dash of cayenne, one-fourth tenrpoonful of white pepper, a teaspoonfil of powdered sugar, one-fourth cupful of olive oil and one-fourth cupful each of pineapple juice and orange Juice. Shake or beat well until thick, adding a dash of lemon juice if the dressing is to be used on a vegetable salad. Hawaiian Dishes. Pineapple is one of the best liked fruits and lends itself eo happily to many dishes. A slice

of pineapple baked and served with a helping of baked ham is especially delightful. A sauce to serve with the ham may be prepared with the pineapple juice, ha m liquor and a bit of flour

to thicken. When the fresh pineapple Is used with gelatin in desserts and salads, it is weil to remember that the vegetable pepsin will digest the gelatin and more of it Is needed to stiffen a dish. Pineapple acts on the mucous membranes of the throat, healing inflamed areas. Pineapple Salad.—Cut into small pieces the sliced canned pineapple and mix with almonds which have been blanched and allowed to ptand for an hour in enough pineapple juice to cover. This not only softens the nuts, making them easier of digestion, but gives an added flavor to the nuts. Use two cupfuls of pineapple to onehalf cupfuls of nuts, mix with a good mayonnaise, enriched with plenty of whipped cream. Serve on head lettuce. Pineapple fritters are a delightful entree, or may be used as desserts. Cut a slice of pineapple into thirds, drain and dip into fritter batter, fry in deep fat. Prepare a sauce by using the pineapple juice with a bit of butter and flour to thicken; cook until thick. Pineapple Glace.—Cream one-half 1 cupful of butter, adding one and onehalf cupfuls of sugar. Add one well ■ beaten egg. two and one-half cupfuls I of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking • powder, one-fourth teaspoonfui of salt ' and one cupful of cold water. Melt l two tablespoonfuls of butter in an । iron frying pan, add one cupful of brown sugai, stirring until smooth; i spread with a can of shredded or i sliced pineapple and pour over the ; batter. Bake in a hot oven 45 minutes. Serve with whipped cream. vrtJISL Anniversary of Flight July 25 is the anniversary of the ' first airplane flight over the English channel, says Gas Logic. Bleriot, the famous French airman, on that date in 1909 flew from Calais to Dover in thirty-seven minutes. Reward for Bravery The bureau of Indian affairs says that the wearing of a feather by Indians means bravery and there are three grades of bravery, which are denoted by the position of the feather.

The Recluse of Fifth Avenue

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CHAPTER IX —l7— Very ungraciously Mrs. Raxon permitted Agatha Brown to be absent for a night. Very gladly the Raxon girls learned of it. Robin would be theirs for a few hours. After cramping continental pensions and small hotels, their present lavish life rather went to their heads. It took the form of a superiority complex which irritated Robin enormously. But he had promised his father to aid him by preserving a heartiness of manner thata he ■ did not feel. He was wholly obsessed by the thought of Agatha, that strange and lovely girl who held him at arm’s i length, snubbed him. harassed him. and then brought him hack with a glance of those amethyst eyes. She would tell him nothing about her past life, and that worried him very much. What men had loved her, he wondered, and had there been men about whom | she cared? Mrs. McKimber underI stood the situation and sympathized. Her husband was unusually irritable. He could talk about nothing but the Infamous manner in which his press agent neglected to have him featured. It seemed to McKimber that the papers were filled with Paul Raxon. Actually some club women had started a “Better Architecture League.” with Raxon as president. They were to agitate for classes in architectural appreciation in the high schools. I McKimber wandered about the big j rooms fidgeting. Raxon was not to he seen. At midnight, when Sneed | stood respectfully at his elbow, McKimber was as nearly nervous as he had ever been. But he was too old n campaigner to show It. He followed the butler into a big sexagonal room, entrance to which was gained by a flight of eight stairs. That the apartment was furnished with subdued (splendor and was of magnificent pro- , portions added to McKlmber’s IrrltaI tion. Instinctively he was aware that Raxon was getting ready to use his lavish settings In publicity work. Tills tower study would soon be fa- ' mous through the magazines. It was easy to visualize Paul Raxon leaning ' back In his customary Indolent way with a specially prepared background. McKlmber’s private room represented office furnishing In Its most efficient style. He reflected bitterly I that this apartment must have been planner! for photographic reproduction. McKimber decided it vas effeminate. I It provoked in him n feeling of coni' tempt which could not dispel the • knowledge that Raxon's settings were * superb. But they were presumptuous, j Raxon was riding for a fall. He need i cd to be taught a lesson. It would have been wiser for McKimber to ( recollect that Raxon had not succeed j ed through any lack of strength. “This extensive publicity campaign of yours,” McKimber began, “doesn t deceive us any.” “Us?” Raxon queried. “We who represent an organized piuty in this state. \Ve know you’re out to get a primary nomination, and as you’ve got money and a good press agent, it doesn't seem easy to prevent you. These primaries play the devil with party obligations. They encourage the malcontents and the ambitious.” “Which am I?" Raxon asked, sinilI Ing. “You’re ambitious. Raxon. You are overanibitious. The Bard of Avon says that’s the thing which brought the angels down.” “This is the first time I have been called an angel." said the other. McKimber frowned. He detested flippancy. “I prefer to think of you as ambitious than to suppose you are wantI ing to split our ticket and let West field in. If one strong man with his party’s solid backing runs against Westfield, he’ll beat him." “That cheers me very much,” Raxon replied. It was not easy for the domineering McKimber to hold himself in. He was accustomed to respect in the field of politics. “You won’t be the man,” he excluimed "And you will?” "Unless any spiteful malcontent deliberately proves a traitor. Up-state, which I control poltically, has no use for you. It doesn’t know about you. I asked a man from Wayne county the other day if he’d ever heard of Paul Raxon.” McKimber smiled. “He said he never went to moving pictures.” “Your mistake,” Raxon said, "was that you did not ask his wife. The women know me, McKimber. My ‘Better Architecture Leagues’ are springing up everywhere. There's a flourishing one in Wayne county. The larger cities, such as Buffalo, Roch ester, Syracuse and Utica, are taking the thing up admirably. Politicians of your old-fashioned kind resent women in public life, and you don’t conceal this. Politically, women are hypersensitive because they know they have not accomplished what the world expected of them. I admit your upstate strength exceeds mine, but what about New York city?” “A stronghold for West field." “Not so much as you imagine.” Raxon yawned a little, as though the subject wearied him. "At all events. It will be an interesting experiment." “Experiment!” McKimber cried, shocked at his callousness. “It will be a tragedy for the party.” “It will be your finish," Raxon retorted. His manner had no animus in I it. He had neither raised his voice nor shown heat as McKimber had. “Like all old-time politicians, you lack mental agility and you won’t reconcile yourself to new conditions. In the past you have been of great use to the organization. Today you are merely amusing." McKimber flushed red and instinctively clenched his big fists. Paul Raxon noted the gesture. “That demonstrates it perfectly,” he •aid. “When you lose a point or hear q disagreeable truth you want to hit & man. Elemental stuff. We are here to discuss political conditions in this Mate. I think that is how you put it.” “You want me to back down and

By WYNDHAM MARTYN Copyright in the United State* W N U Service party thinks I’ve the better chance, they’ll knife you in a minute. It isn’t possible, surely, that you believe gratitude has anything to do with practical politics?" McKimber did not answer immediately. He was conscious that he had allowed personal antagonism to color his conversation. He adopted the confidential tone which had often won success for him. "Raxon," he began, “I’m putting my cards on the table.” “Save yourself the trouble." Raxon replied. “I can see them just as well when you hold them in your hands. All you need to understand is that I have a better chance than you to go to Washington.” "If we two fight each other. Westfield goes," McKimber said earnestly. “We need a senator at Washington.” “That’s why I intend to go. as you may as well tell your friends. I've >1 if? “He Said He Never Went to Moving Picture*." been working much longer than you can guess for this very end." "Don’t you realize you will be de- ' noum-cd as a traitor to your cause?” “If the cause means so much to you. throw your influence my way. If you did fh.it. Westfield wouldn’t have a chance." “You're d- d well right.” McKimber shouted. “The man I indorse would get in even if yon were he. 11l tell you just this. Raxon. From now ou I’m going to devote myself to showing ' you up for the crooked ward politician you are. My God! To think you expect me to work for you !” “If you’re going to be abusive." Raxon said coldly, "we may as well Stop.” McKimber struggled into a little less violent mood. He might yet be able to divert the Raxon ambition to some less lofty height. “I take that back.” he said. “I recognize that you deserve some reward for what you've done In the past, but I'm entitled to the nomination. It is my just reward I want." McKimber’s voice became almost conciliatory. “Don’t you see the justice of it? I want in my old age the opportunity of serving my country.” "And I." Paul Raxon sneered, "want in my early middle age the opportunity of serving myself. Why drag your country in? Do you think I’m a political idealist Just because bad achitecture offends me?” McKimber rose to his feet. He knew he had lost, ami he wanted to go before he forgot the slender, sneering man was his host. “They told me you were a dangerous man.” he said slowly, "but I don't think they gauged your rottenness correctly.” "I take good care to keep that from them.” “But you're giving it away to me. a confessed rival.” Raxon laughed. The spectacle of

Houses of Worship Found in Odd Places

The miners in the Myndd Newydd coal mines •in Wales have no call to shave, shine their boots, or don Sunday garb when they go to worship. They have a chapel all their own at the bottom of the shaft, so that when they descend the pit they can have a short service before going to their working pla-es. Rough timbers form the pillars and beams of this chapel, and a coal trolley serves as a pulpit. The miners sit on rough wooden benches and the oldest among them acts as pastor. A chapel, more finished in appearance, the St. Anthony, exists in the salt mines of Wieliczka, Austria. It has an altar, crucifix, and life-size figures of the saints, apparently in black marble, but really made of salt. In the old German town of Oberstein an ancient church stands in a great rock rising from the river. The Source of Information At a festival dinner of the Royal society it fell to Professor Huxley s lot to present the Royal medal to Gunther, in acknowledgment of his ichthyological researches. He did so in these terms: “When I am asked to dine at the tables of the great, as I occasionally am. it invariably happens that when the second course is reached the lady whom I have taken In to dinner turns to me and asks, •Professor Huxley, what is the nature of whitebait?’ To which I invariably reply. ‘I really don’t know, but if you will study Gunther’s book on fishes in four quarto volumes, perhaps you . will find nut ’ *

this tall, portly man, whose career had been so successful, amused him. “The trouble with you, McKimber," he said, "is that you don’t understand you are a corpse. Politically, you are dead and burled. You are not a rival. Don’t flatter yourself to that extent.” “I tel] you," McKimber thundered, "all the world shall know what hag passed between us.” "If you don’t lower your voice, all the world will hear. You’re not a broadcasting station. Sit down. 1 sent for you because there’s a lot I have to say which you wouldn't care I to miss.” Reluctantly. McKimber sank back In his chair. He was enwrapped by a i certain and unwelcome uneasiness. ' The man facing him seemed so secure, j so unconcerned, so sure of ultimate triumph. “Tile first thing to fell you.” Raxon began, “is, I am going to Washington You will quit in my favor ami lend . me all your great influence. Naturally ; you must have an excuse which seems a true one. I have it all ready prepared. You are too heavy even for your height, and the pouches under your eyes are unhealthy signs. You had better drop out. because your specialist tells you there is heart and kidney trouble. I shall refer to the fact in my speeches with great regret.” McKimber spoke with deliberation. “They told me you were dangerous, and I know you are a traitor to your party, but not until this moment did 1 believe you were absolutely crazy. They call your sort of madness megalomania.” McKimber rose to his feet. "I've met all sorts of knaves and fools In politics, but you're the worst yet. ’ “What a senator you would have made!" Raxon commented. "Do you suppose I should have talked like this If I had not been certain you were harmless, a rattler with his poison sacs extracted? My success has come mainly because I understand human motivation. I'm going to show you how it Is that when you leave here ft will be to start a Raxon boom In your own city. Sit down. McKimber.” John McKimber. who prided himself upon taking orders from none, dropped again into his sent. It seemed to him he was talking to a Raxon he had not until now understood. He found himself noticing what a cruel mouth the other had. and how In those brown eyes were little flecks of red. Paul Raxon gazed nt him ns an executioner might stare nt a prisoner delivered to him for death. McKimber I new that he had been holding too cheaply one who had a dynamic ami evil personality. "If I stay.” he said huskily, “V will be to hear you give away more secrets about youself. Perhaps I shall learn by what trickery you got this place, and how it was you sent Hazen Brewer to his grave." "I got this place.” said Raxon with his old urbanity, "as I have got everything else in my life, by using men as tools. I studied men and found them pugnacious, noisy, ami vain. It was hard to influence them by ray suhdm d personality, even though I bad the right on my side. I do not mix well. I knew that had to be overcome. In other words, 1 determined to develop something to make up for It. My success has come from finding, almost unerringly, the weak spot in every man’s make-up. I got my chance at International Motors by finding out so much of Brewer’s life in London that he was forced to take me in to protect hi ms-elf.” “You're a d—d blackmailer," McKimber cried hoarsely. “I am.” Raxon agreed. “The phrase does not offend me in the least. Why should it? Is there any more powerful weapon? Most traitors in the great war were forced into espionage because the enemy threatened exposure as the price of refusal. In the drawer before me are two articles. One is an automatic pistol.” Raxon opened the drawer and put the weapon on the writing table at which iie sat. "I am not going to threaten you with it. That is old-fashioned, stupid stuff. I am merely reminding you I have it at hand if you should attack me.” There was undisguised amazement in the bigger man’s voice. “Attack you? What for?” (TO BE CONTINUED.)

front is of stone, but the church itself is hollowed out of the rock and penetrates far into its heart. This curious church is now the only Protestant place of worship in the town. A church in a Pennsylvania town Is said to possess the distinction of being the work of one pair of hands. One man carried every block of stone of which it was constructed, cut each of them into shape, and laid it ip place. Archibald’s Premise Little Archibald is of an inquiring nature. When he comes across anything he does not understand he is seldom slow in asking for information. So when he was told to entertain a visitor for ten minutes, he came straight to the point that had interested him from the moment the man had removed his hat. “Mr. Jones,’’ he asked, “why is it you’ve got no hair on your head?” “Well.” was the reply, “I work so hard with my head that my hair doesn't get a chance to grow; my brains are too busy.” “Oh,” said Archibald, light dawning upon him, “so that's why mother doesn’t grow a mustache.” Man Who Succeeds The successful man is the one whc has tried not cried, worked not dodged, shouldered responsibility nos evaded it. who has gotten under th< burden, not stood off looking on ant giving gratuitous advice.—Grit Whom fortune favors the world I favors-

Improved Uniform International Sunday School ’ Lesson' (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D D.. Dean Moody BibH Institute of Chicago.) (©, 1927, by Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for November 27 — ISAIAH TEACHES TRUE WORSHIP LESSON TEST—Isa. 1:1-20. GOLDEN TEXT—O magnify the ' Lord with me and let us exalt his name together. I saw the Lord and | he heard me and delivered me from all j my fears. PRIMARY TOPlC—Worshiping God. JUNIOR TOPlC—Worship That ! Pleases God. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPj IC—Worship That Pleases God. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—The Nature of True Worship. Isaiah had a long ministry, beginning in the days of Uzziah and ex- j j tending through the reign of Jothan. ■ Ahaz and Hezekiah. For a history of the nation in this time see II Kings, j chapters 15 to 20. Isaiah’s visions . present the redemptive purpose of God ' • through the consummation of Mes- i slab’s kingdom. Chapter 1 is the title ' to the whole book. It contains the j great arraignment of the people for their sins. I. The Moral State of the People (vv. 2-4). 1. Filial ingratitude (v. 2). The universe is summoned to hear the Lord’s complaint against Judah { and Israel for their base ingratitude 1 and even rebellion. In spite of God’s j j care, even as a father cares for his i i children, they went on in sin and in ’ violation of their covenant with God. 2. Brutal stupidity (v. 3). The ox and the ass are proverbially stupid, but Israel’s stupidity exceeded theirs. Israel would not recognize | His right as sovereign, nor author of j I mercies. 3. Habitual evil doers (v. 4). They were not sinners in act merely, but in nature and heart were laden with iniquity. By heredity they passed their vices from generation to generation. They were not only sinners before and with men, but had forsaken God and had added contempt and insult to their vileness by going into ' j idolatry. 11. Their Consequent Miseries (vv. I 5-9). 1. Their perplexity (v. 5). Chastisement only hardened them, i Their afflictions were followed by I deeper and more heinous sins. 2. Their awful confusion (v. 6). The calamity which befell them ex- ' tended to all classes. No one was j able to minister to their comfort. 3. Desolations in the country (vv. 7.8). Revolts from within and invasions from without left their country desolate. Physical ruin always follows moral and spiritual decadence. 4. A saved remnant assured (v. 9). God's purposes cannot fail. A remnant was saved in Israel —a remnant shall be saved in the church. 111. Formal Worship Rebuked (vv. 10-15). Their awful calamities were not due to the neglect of religious rites and i ceremonies. They punctiliously observed the forms of religion while ini dulging in iniquitous practices. 1. God does not need sacrifices ' (v. 11). ; Worship and service are not for , God’s benefit, but for that of the worI shipers themselves. 2. Ged’s attitude toward formal ' worship (vv. 12-14). The very rites and ceremonies which • God ordained for the purpose of help- ■ ing men to approach Him become disI gusting and irksome to Him. 3. God's refusal (v. 15). Every act of worship while the heart and life are steeped with iniquity only incites the anger of the Holy One. IV. An Amended Life God’s Requirement (vv. 16-20). Though the nation had so grievously sinned, their case was not hopeless. In order to enjoy that mercy there must be: 1. A cleansing. "Wash you, make you clean.” The I washing by water symbolized the I cleansing by the blood of the Son of ; God. 2. “Put away the evil of your do- i ings.” There could be no cleansing while : continuing in sin. 3. “Cease to do evil.” Repentance, as stated by a certain I Sunday school girl, is hating sin badly ' enough to quit it. 4. “Learn to do well" (v. 17). One can only cease to do evil by learning to do well. 5. “Seek judgment.” One must not only he upright himself but should protest against the wrongdoing of others. Burdens should be removed from the oppressed. Justice should be done to the fatherless and the widows should be befriended. 6. Encouragement to come to God ' (v. 18). Though their guilt was great and i the judgment which befell them was i awful. God’s pardoning and cleansing j grace were sufficient. 7. Conditional promise (v. 19). This means that they could only en ! joy good on God’s terms. 8. Solemn warning (v. 20). 1 Rebellion against God always brings ruin. “Love Your Enemies” Blessed are my enemies when they revile me and persecute me and say all manner of evil against me truly for their own gratification. Let me j rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for I such will make a strong man out of me, if I am wise in understanding the philosophy of One who said: “Love ! your enemies.” i God’s Call • । Let us remember that God’s call । comes to us most often and most continuously through the needs of men. Every burden we help to bear will prove us in partnership with Him who is ever calling men to roll their bur dens on Him. —C. Campbell Morgan.

A Benefactor A physician who reaches out to benefit humanity leaves a record behind him that is worth while. Such

a man was Dr. R. V. Pierce. His study along medical lines, and his knowledge of the remedial qualities of herbs and plants led to the discovery of his wonderful herbal remedy. Doctor Pierce’s Favor-

few

ite Prescription. It is just the tonic required if a woman is borne down by pain and sufferings at regular or irregular intervals, by nervousness or dizzy spells, headache or backache. Favorite Prescription can be had in tablet form as well as liquid at your neighborhood store. Poor Politicians After all. the politician’s is not the only demagogy. There is a demagogy of art. of literature, of business. — American Magazine. Opens Checks the Bawds the Fever q Tones Stops r\ -I the Cold L /-/System Four things you must do to end a cold quickly. HILL’S Cas-cara-Bromide-Quinine does all four at one time. Stops a cold in one day. Red box, 30 cents. All druggists. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy BFor every stomach and intestinal 11L This good old-fash-ioned herb home remedy for constipation, stomach ills and other derangements of the system so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. A Pain-Relieving wl u ml dealing Oil Rheumatism, Cold in Head, Sore Throat, Piles and Burns for ' Pa™ Heals PAIN i 35 Cts. at Drug Stores jlMni Sample ZMO-GIL mailed - if you send this ad to U. E. Fax. OtL M. R. Zaegel & Co., Sheboygan, Wis. ^“Cutting teeth is made easy” J MRS. WIN SLOWS ' SYRUP X T7ia Infantt' and Children't Regulator At all drugguts Non-Narcotic, Non-Alcoholic Oakland. Nebr., Feb. 28, 1920 Anglo-American Drug Co., Gentlemen: I am more than glad to tell «ou of the experience and result obtained from your wonderful Baby Medicine. Our second baby is now seven months old and has never given us a moment’s trouble. The first and only thing she has ever taken was Mrs. Winslow’s Syrup. She has four teeth and is always smiling and playing. Cutting terth is made easy by the use of Mrs. Winslow’s Syrup. Most sincerely, ISarr.e on request} ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO. 215-217 Fulton Street. New York j u 3 Di ■ x i E Quite De Rigueur “Is cannibalism common among the people here?” inquired the newcomer apprehensively. “Common?” replied the native belle, as she coyly dug her toe into the sand. ' “On the contrary, we consider it very recherche.” IUS; ■ ~ § Don't blame the feed or the con- ■ § diticn of your stock if market § g men grade you low and custom- m R ers complain on account of the X ' ■ color of your butter. You can d i ■ keep your butter always that s ■ golden June color which brings ■ i ■ top prices by using Dandelion ■ ■ Butter Color It's purely vege- ■ § table and meets ail State and ■ 3 National Pure Food Laws-used f j B by all large creameries for years. 5 i B It's harmless, tasteless and B g doesn t color buttermilk. Large K B bottles, 35c at all drug and gro- S g eery stores. g I Write for FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE i <5 Wells & Richardson Co., Inc Berlin^ton, Vermont m