HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-07-30, Page 2iAa
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fsr pt„'g
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'Fresh 'Iron the, gardens9..
a:1
sYNOPSs.
.. n`A man kn"own as Cock Robin is.found'
j4,, With an arrow through -the, heart.,; Then
a young chapa- weed; Sprigs is• shot.
r` . through tile top- otithei i ead' T ie a nut
V derer writesfinoching notes to the rfeWs-
,
papers, signed The: Bishop. District At
torney Markham asks the Raid of Philo
t Vance` in solving the,7mystery "'' •
` The. following people, 'are associated
tv►th the case: Prof l illard„ his nelee
Belle.' and his protege, Sigurd. ,Arnesson,-;
r who• hopes to Marrs?' Belle;. John Pardee,
a..neighbor with a passion fur chess Mrs
fi Drakkee andi her; son ?Ado ,:iWho is a
. tepid( cripple with' a` super-intellde;:.° '
Vance learns`ti'iat. Drukker, has •lied to
' imeao to his �whereabkouts; on the morn
big ' of • Robins murder ' and decides •te
threaten "hila inr. the.'hope of .,learning f
"Very heliflil. Po you advise call-
ang iris mediuniv''` ,;">
"There'selibinething; We've overlook-
; ed,"r Vance went rort,..tdiregarding the'
sarcasm. "The case is a. -cipher., and
'they key-w'ord is sonewhere,before.ius,
`but we'-don't`nrecognize it. 'Pon }»y
soul,'' it's' dashed annoyin' :' Let's
•be`•ord'er'ly '.Neatness—that's our de-
siderati.m •First,. Robin is killed.
1Veirt; Sp,rigg:.;,is r shot Then Mrs..
':Drukker is 'frightened with. a black
+bishop`;, After that,.Drukker is shov-
ed over a wall. Makin' four dlsti'nct
[acts w'hiCh he 'Yeas :beet •:keepin.r back:•' "episodes in.' murderer's extrava-
.' Thar same night T rukkei%is murdered:.
Slaws oiii'g to •tike .Drukker hp a they ganza. Three` of ''em were. carefully
9 p a Mrs. Drukker dead" front h'hock ln planned. One -the leaving of-.. the
S' ,Drukker'.'"study It is clear that the . ..
murderer had visited the study imine bishop at Mrs. Drukker's door- was
' diately after killing Drukker suer •t hack forced .on the murderer,' and was
Mrs. Drukker found him there., • . therefore decided` on without prepara-
CHAPTER XXX.- (pony 8,) . ,"Clarify your_ reasoning on that
`"Vanee:'i'lia 'bee i gaze g^°lazilyaout of: spo nt:''-
''"the 'window -'`as Arnesson•ma'mbled on.: "`Oh;,my dear fellow! Tlie conveyor
of the brick •bishop Was obviously act -
Jig ' in !:self-defence;: An unexpected
danger •developed along his line of
The impression he, • gave was thathe.
had' scarcely: heard the;dessriptiom of,
Drukker's habits; but •'presently I'm
turn' -an, e, r
campaign ; an e: ,o TS means •e:
, langtri'd:look.. • averting tt-'= 3ustsbefore Robint-'death
"1 say" he drawled; "wouldwyou
;rind• toddling upstairs and fetching
Drukker's note book? Look in both
the study and he-bedrQo*n" •
•" 1 thought I „noticed' an • almost infs.' perceptible , .hesitation on Arnesson's
part, but straightway he rose. •
"Good idea:' Too valuable a demi-.
hour later we Were seated,
With thee professor and Arnesson s� nlxas wolilxrloTo
N
theDillard Y _eonioonasomewhat unusual Jflutrated rims ahtmg •Les •
errand," explained Vance; "but it may. Purntshed tenth Euery. Pattern'
,Have• a ev.i Lbearia•. g ou.our inyestiga-i
tion." . He took out his walletand
unfolded .a sheet of paper. "Here's a
document, Mr. Arnesson, I wish you'd
glance over., It's a ;copyof .t,4%,040,a1
scoresheet of the ehess garde, iret\veen
Pardee. and Rubinstein .• Very inter -
eating, I've toyed with it a bit, but
.I'd,like your •expert analysis of it. The
first part' of the gante is usual enough,
.but -the -play after,'"the--adjournment •
rather er app to me." •
Arnesso�' e kth'e paper and studied
it;with cynical a.iusement.
"Aha! The inglorious record'of Par
dee's.Waterloo, eh`'x'
"What's the meaning of this,.•Mark-
ham?". asked Professor Dillard, con
ternptuously "Do you hope to rurf' a
murderer to, eartk .., by 'd%1 Rdall n :,
over a chess game?"• ; .
""Mr: Vance hoped" something could
ie,learned_frora it "
d,lesticksi" The •
professor pour
ed li'iinsel l' another ` glass of port • and,'
opening a book, ignored us•completely
Arnesson was absorbed' in the nota
tions of the chess :score .
"Something a ,bit quee,s,,, here," he.
Muttered.' "The tini,e's askew. ' Let's
see.... The.':scoresheet •shows' that; up.
to the time of ;adjournmen.W
t, •hite
that is, Pardee -had played one hour
and forty-five minutes, and Black, :or
Rubinstein,,. one Our and fifty-mg-1st•minutes.':Quito in order. But during
the second session of the genie White
eonsunied only .forty-five Minutes,
whereas Black used upone hour and.
thirty=four minutes." •
Vance nodded: "E'xactly. There were.
two .hours and nineteen minutes ot.,
play beginning at 11 p.m. • Rubin -
stein's moves during; 'that time took
forty-ni minutes' longer 'than Par-
olee's.Can you, make out what happen-
Arnesson arose ,and went to ;the lit-
tie chess" table, where he arranged the
men to accord with the position'of the
game at the. timeo lladjour_nment• •'
"It ' doesn't strike. •me as a '.particu-
-iyxriy-t''''enor-abbleis •
dee," verit'ured Vance.
, Arne:; .: •made half a dozen ;moves;
then gave a grunt. "Ha! This is rather
deep stuff ,of Rubinstei'n's. As •I know
=Drukker departed from'ther archery
room' and installed himself in the
arbor. of the yard, where he could look
'into the• archery, reran-through-the_
A. little later he caw
'sone :on. in the room, talking to Robin.'
he returned: to his, house, and''at that
moment Robin's body, was thrown, on
nient.to:be left.ly ins' around ” And he: the range. Mrs ,D`rukker'.saw . it', and
strod'e.from•the room. at that'time 'she, probably' saw Druk=
Markham' began pacing -the.' floor,: ker. She .screaiiled=-very natural,
and.'Heath revealed his uneasiness by what? Drukker fieard ,the scream, and
told'ns'of it later in an effort to estab-
lish anal'i'bi for himself after we'd 'in-
lormed him that Robin • had been kill-
ed. Thus the murderer learned. that
Mrs. Drukker had seen "something:-
Puffing
something:-•
puffing more energetically on his
cigar.:, There was a tense atmosphere•
lathe' little'drawing-reran'as we wait-,
ed far Artesson's return. Each of us
w as in a state of •expectancy, though
,a d/ flog -:SCAT'
What came before:' Captain Jimmy
l argained with General Lu to fly him, to
Japan.in exchange for' helpin fitting. up
his lane to rescue Lieut. 'Stone's brother
Guy, from •:le bandits. lie is about to
start on' his long :trip across the.Chi-
nese Sea.
Gen'.eral Lu sent ';for•' us, in, haste.
He. wanted to start at lance. He
had sold out his posi;tion as ',General'•
for a huge sum Of moi ey, 'which had
just arrived,. and, he was anxious to
be' off before any;of his officers found
-out' and• -wade' --him,-
divicle•'tip•.his
wealth.
• T"h a following
night we' bid Guy
just-w1iat-TMwe•:-hoped: for or feai•_d .how mue},;' -he didn't. know. • But .he
wash t_taking_any„ chances, • He went
to her room at midnight to'• silence
her, and took the bishop to leave be-.
Would have..been_difftcult to define.
In .less than ten, -minutes Arnesson
reappeared' at the door.:,. He shrugged
]kis shoulders and held • out empty side her body as a •signature• -.But he
handsi d thee': "door locked, end -left , thn"
` in bishop 9utside, by vay of=warning"Goiret"lieannounced--Looked
f-. every• likely place -couldn't find it." •her to, say nothing on pain of death.
He: didn't know' that the poor woman
suspected herownson."
"But why didn't Drukker tell us
whom• he save tri the' ,archery -room
he threw himself into a chair and re-
lighted his 'pipe. . "Can't understand
it.. , . 'Perhaps'he hili it."
"Perhaps," thurmured,Vanes. - --=.
It 'was past one o'clock, and Mark-'
with Robin?"
'hair T— m ' r rode- to_the_S_tu ,
'sop 'was'some-one whom ha•cotildn't.
conceive of as being,guil'ty: And Tin
inclined to .believe he mentioied'the
fact to this perso:r and thus sealed
his own, doom:" . .
''' ri
. -'' feel so '"111hful.,._so:- sihnple,._"
"#ssumingthe=correctness ef--youa-
innocent; Vance coin lained lugubrltheory, where.does'it lead tier • ' •
ously.. "So many thinks'are happenin. "To the one episode that wasn't' ela-
and they're bein' manipulated so in' borate; me red in advance. 'And
• •geniously that i can't grasp 'em. It's, when t ere rias been no preparation
very discohcertin', very confusi'n . I.
r for 'a covert alt• there is pretty 'sure
• don't like it71l `:don't at illi like • if to be',a weakness •in one or' rnore •of
Masts'� 'sighed drearily
wearin . :$e •sg ' y the details. Now, please note that at
and sipped' his tea- c " •:the time of each of the three' murders
"Feer sorrosi`s leave me cold, re- an one'of the vario s ersons in the
,..torted Markham. "You've probably e'e'rie could 'have .been ppresent. No
buys the afternoon:'.:pectins argue- one had, an alibi. Thattof course, was
•- bused and pe:rrineat the Metropolis cleverly calculated; the murderer
• •isen Muir,urr.. • Iff y o7'd had to go l chose an hour when all of the actors
thr•r::i w, a t rye 0-ere/i-•• -
, " - ,,,...,,,:it, ,IA reel•., verse re- were, so to speak, waiting in the
baked
ur si b. ,.T rz a far •c - mash wings. s/' .But that midnight• visit! Ah d•
� Thatra`�a 'different matter. There
jf1C,),„„i se,15,fa «;t.,..,p7`d..rlfl :a rr;• 1 -e
moi. r.„hs• 4.,}r Was no time tissWork oft a perfect set
vesant Club. Heath.remained at the
Drukker house to carry on the routine
work, to 'draw, up his' report, and to•
ideal •With the reporters who would he
- •' a can err y-- lis
streaky F strained• my eyes to see,
a large black object. through the inlet, '
Then rocky headland emerged from,
the'-teg on our.; left.
Carefully i banked the pla,ie• and
hosed her 'down as' close to the rucks
as I dared. ,It was a sheer precipice.
At . its . Not the angry waves dashed
themeelves into white fury: • Grad -
the el'fP deseended within fifty'
feet 94 ' the water': Surely there,.
must be a..sand beach • somewhere
iiiiirgi a illy- d'espalr -wkeli tike- c18tf - -
began to rise again and .ended in a• ,'
steep crag'wit hout "'a single inch of; '
sandy beach. Soon we ' circled the
island and it •was simply a tremfln- `
and , Jed _ toile dons %olcanie �' rack ....:with 'straight,.
high •sides. .
Suddeitly We',no'ticed a line of *lute
(, . •.mid `, } ;
good-bye, Aug be-
•gani our trip under
cover of darkness,
Sts hunclred--•ni(les-
or more across the Chinetse,;Sea was
-no joke. Many . bad storms . and
typhoons sweep' •,the • waters, and
----- . heavy. se`a '-fogs make- flying~ `danger-
•-ous.
A printed 'chiffon: voile printed in
white pin ,dots, elbows. how smart
and cool it can be. -
neckline �is , ext.
,• The - collarless
quite low, at the front..Pin inverted
tucks add trimming note at either
shoulder. Shirring at centre-ront
The .attached . skirt favors , the
soft gathered treatment. ' •'The
pointed outline at the front tends
to slenderize the figure. •
Rubinstein, it took him .a'' long time to It may also be . made , with short
'We were
off tire • ground- I could see
we were in for It; The. 'air •'was• just
full OE' bumps, •and General Lu'and-
"Isis faithful servant' grew . nervous..
We tried •a .'thoi2sand feet higher up,
and it was even worse: The plane
tossed .like a boat riding •o:n_a: ough
sea. ' . r .
The sky' gradually, cloudea• up ,and
'-the-wind -gr-ew-in ;'volume. The dark-
ness and fog seemed to crowd :us
flown to the water. Long.,curling
;curli'ng
'stases with sharp white crests 'made
any chance PS ' surviving impossible,
should we be forced, down.
Hour after. hot:r .ws fie* along,
steering ' by the •, instruments.'. A
cold `wet ' drizzle blew right-throligb'
our • coats. I ' wrapped ' a blanket
around Scottie, bn.',t the poor little
chap still shivered. The past few
days . had :been. strenuous, and •ie
were 'about fagged out. Most like,
1y I dozed,mfor,the, next thing 1. knew
-I' was being -vigorously shaken. •'Sco:t-
- :"tie -was 'harking furiously. - -
Right ;under our wheels' the' waves
lapped. aungrily.` I nosed 'the .plane
figure it out. Slow, plodding ear's."' ' sleeves that echo the skirt fatten --
silent tole
ulr-tees -
"It's possible, isn't it," suggested
Vance, "that the working out of that
Combination -explains the discrepancy
in time between Black and White?" •
"Oh,: undoubtedly. Planning the
combination took him all.of.•forty-five
minutes -or I'm a duffer.".• i,
"At what hour,' would • you say,
asked Vance eareleisly, "did Rubin-
stein use use that .forty-five minutes?"
(To be critinued.)
•
The' Rainbow's End
:.Light of foot' and gay of heart,
He took the rainbow road .
With enipty pack while others bore
Am'bition'sheavy load. •
-He-sought -file theni•the_pert of gold,
But ever on his way
He paused to hear the thrushes sing
A requiem for the day.
lingered where•hilk"vistas-spreads
New beauty to his sight;
His iew-like=great-•••Bliley wear it -dawn.
.Creation's holy ' light. •
swarming there' shortly.
•
The Acutumn's Irlfeliness.was his,
• The Spring's ecstatic -Word; '
'The lyric phrase of bird and bee'
_His. listening' spirit heard. "
He came belated to' the place
Where down the hills. descend
The eager feet that seek'•the gold
Hung at the rainbow's end. ,
souks •t`' -• `e """ .a an of, ciicumstanceC----the menace was too ,
• is our only hype. 1.e. - a- ca.. • r. ediate. And what was the result?
thoughtfTi::" H-rs -:L�.� -1..„..,......,e fitr� I3rvkker-and Professor Dillard were,
lows. `tsar'krano, tr.f o„,....,...es. .try sae, i
• being the perfect ''" - . i,.ke r s, - r apparently, the only' personson fi any,•
Morphy's sheat ty...F •xe'rb::1.•,:c..$.•_ at rnidnigh0s, Areesson,�and Belle Dil-
I,,,, ,x ,ard'were supping at the Plaza' and
• Has been aFcsaa w a ` + ' i ;iht return hrirne until half past'
'ahead. There' are rt c e is , Lt,'.:F i "c
V. eive. Pardee was horn -locked ;with
if there were, they'd pr.01 as.:y po .'•4 : Ii',�,ir.sts :n over° a chr hoard.front
the wrong d•irectior.; 'Aur: lest i
• a id••yet there's aometh•r,r Tat\ try-
,, F, e,vn ' tt, r,ne. )jrukk'et i= now r,S
ing •to break through, • I feel :t ; r r r ',.rye `rl'iiriina`r d' What's the an- �
in'tuiticn-that is i.r, Fay, nerves: •r.+•uK"'
"f 'could remand you," ret+arne(
There's an irtaiticu:ca ' ',, •r,r: at Marir<harn irritably, ``that the -alibis of,
wants to speak, and can't. c A d,y7 n
' times I've sensed th'e.presence of vast
the others, have not been thr,rc uf;hly.
struggling force, like an.invisihlr: shoe'; rher:ktd.", •
trying to *Take contact without reveal : ' WP11,, well,, so you could." Vhr'a
' n itis identity." ; lay 'back indolently and sent a lone
r.- and
in„ re ular series of fimo)c., r,ngsvtotly +
Ma: ham• gave an exasperated Sigh.
(' g Suddenly his h� , tensed,'
the telling. >4y
i andand with rneticuMus care he .leaned
eyrie puti,out his'eigarette. 'Then
N
u rses ante I he glanced at his watch and got to his
feet, He fixed Markham. with a COW,-
'
The Toronto. Nospital for Inenra`dea+ �Pral icor,
In, , affiliation' . with-, •Fordham• • tetipltal, + •
Mew York tit offers a Three Years "Forward; my friends. It's MA yet
Course of . 'raining to iroiing Wo' fee ; *;.R s ;Here's 'where A rnwwson trick•
baying -the- required -education, and e -.•----.,-
Sirens of beco , g
. nurses This 7r�ospl haynself' iaSefu1 . •
. -tel -has -ado'pte'd -the !eight -bent s•ya'tent . r. TV15 t Tririr3wry" rii.0..ri7; "' ^rt'"'i -- •7:tr;r+-
..7`b-Tnp11s redeive, uniforms • of the'
School a monthly allowance and ;raitai- ham. ° ri
lin' 'etcl..hses to O from ,1•`te•c' York,•i ,.'t.-ryU- awn • AIO:i ,,i;r,1I.:' dunce°',•
to further particnlare write' or •.pnlY j plied, taking him' by ,the. ai rlt and
to the t;tiperifnendent.
e
in gathered ruffles., • .
Style No. 2614"6 comes .in sizes 16,
18 years, f36, ;38, 40 and, 42 inches
bust.
Chiffon in plain or print, dimity
print, sheer linen print, crepe silk,
-dotted swiss .and printed batiste;
are suitable fabrics. •
Size 36 requires 3% yards of
3$ -inch material. •
1 OW TOd ORDER PATTERNS
Write. your • name and address
plainly,, giving, number;end size of
-such patterns -.as -you want. Enclose '
20c in . stamps or coin (coin" pre-
ferred; wrap it carefully) for each
_.._numberand'address your order to
Wilson Pattern `Service, 13 West
Adelaide St., Toronto. •
up The • • s01ins swathe aroun&.
innearly 'empty tanks._Flying against
the: wind', had exhausted our supply.
We •m'ight have enough :for another
fifty miles. • ••'
•
The dawn 'broke ;'cold .grey
•
br$akers u:mile' or,, t%'? away The
water eon shtl'1'on ' .s a :las` , "
Change 1 folio ed, it ttvo4 Miles four
miles. six- our" gasoline was.'almost,
spent, when 'right 'bolo w appeared the " .T
nicest sand 'beach- y'ou eversat slop--
rng-sgradually up to a-.t:ith1n Jslan,d•/ "se-
'. Like
,,.•''Like a great• many 'beaches,, this
•
•oke looked..much harder 'and smooth, or than than •it really;,• was. With the,
•
motor • cut out •
we hit, roiled {a'.
'few "feet in .±the
soft 'sand,:. and
then the. plane
went' .over on
her nose.- --deur
, in g a] 1s this'.v//�� "�,
t i:m.e Geiera 1 :�r�ki
Ln wast ,splens.
did. Never" a complaint. Never an ...
argument; he eat quietly and ,c'al'm-
ly, waiting .for what. 'might.' happen.'.
'Soon• we: ,kindled • a roaring°' fire'
from driftwood. and';sdried.• ourselves
ou:t. • To our.' surprise, General. Lu
began peeling off •one suit Ater an-
o.ther,; until he had taken off • about•. .
six.. Then i' remembered .that • some
•of • th'e Chinese had. a way of putting.
their snits: on ,in layers. General. Lu .
could afford. . plenty. of sults, s'o . why •
P
bot eerie -them?-_.: - ' -
Meanwh'ile'the question of food and
'water became freasing:: Wel set o•.it,
to •sear. h without delay.
+ '(To be continued)
T•NOre "Airy'.'" --f . e °
writing ' to "Captain • Jirnny", 2010
• Star ,Building, Toronto, will receive
sighed photo of 'Captain :Jimmy. free.
4.
• „ 1
Popular '' .
ChOC�Iate Melted MIk
The \health -giving, delicious . drink for children and grown-
ups. •- 9 Pound ' and Halt Eound ,ting at your grocers.
Work r- Spring Babies
Ar Brigg htest
The gospel of work does not'' save
puls, but it saves peoples. It is not
A Christian•-masSim-enl-y, that• -the*
who do • not weak should not eat; it is
also in. the end a law of Nature and
S •nations.-•--hazy-races die or clee3y.
Races that woik, prbspel on the earfhg
The British' race, its all- its, greatest
branches, is noted for its restless ac=
t:vitt'. , Its life motto is Work! Work!,
Work! ''And its deepest contempt is
reserved. .for_.those-:wha__will not th.0 _
exert themselves.- Dr. Stewart (of.
1,ovelr1P ,)
Tliel found no .shining Pot of gold
4io took the ,trail with him .
And, never knew lila pack of dreams .
Was laden to the bt`im!
-Arthur Wallace, Peach.
• A Good Settler ,
•
The inotorist pulled up at a way-
side garage for petrbl, but he had to,
wait for some time *hip another
customer was.' 'havin6-1iis/iires p> rais-
ed up,
"Was that man a p'romineat.figure
in these parte?,", asked the 'motorist
when tire other. had departed, "Volt
were very respectful and attentive
to him."
The garage proprietor nodded his
head •
"Yes, sir," he said; "he's one :of
the early settlers."
The motorist looked, surprised.
"'But 'Fic:'h still 'twite a •young man,"
he returned,
• "Tree eneagh." Said' the. proprietor;
"bait he' pays his hills the- first, et
r,vr;ry month." , •
Tluee Generatlbn`a in
a
- Daily Work
:
"Lady Luck smiles on the children''
of spring."
Such is• the conclusion -of --Ps- Iz - - --
Blonsky, Russian psychologist, who
compared -the intelligence scores and
birth months of a large number of
Moscow School chiMrat. He found
a significant •difference in favor of
theee_horet. ri the_three .$ring. months.
Those 'born. in the winter were dullest,
lie -said. ' •
:The children were all below normal
lid -from poor homes. 1Blonsky ex-' -
lained the differea .•e as due to
the.
p
Idleness is the key of beggary and fact that children -he -in in the spring
the root of all Oil. If. the devil catchget' more. fresh air, and'that:milk is
a man idle he will set him to work, I cheaper then, so that parents can at-
-find "Kin tools, and' Mere lung "MY fent •to`buy_it-_�_..____
him wages. - The 'winter's children- must spend
Do not .overwork yourself, nor sit
up i;oo late, and never continue any
their first months sin a .stuffy and
often filthy environment. In suioiner
one mental employment. after you are the heal affects the children.
tired of it. -Southey to Coleridge. • It 'appears, he gonclades, that the
As soon as a man begins to love his :-environment in r ich a baby gets
fork, then w,idl he also begin to make its start partly determines the mer,
progress. tel ty g
it will developthrow h life,-
•
Wha ; we would do, ',,tet 'as begin •131onsky's tests have 'just been re -
today. , Every good we' would have peated with a group of 2,925' children
Must be' paid for in strokes of daily
by Columbia University psychodogiste.
effort. --William dames. -as reported. by Prof. Rudolph Pintner
in the Journal of Applied Psychology,
and a• `much smaller difference, con •
side ea• i ignificant, 'teas found be -
41 "Why/' asked the schoolmaster, tw�gn�e iildren' born :n the warm and '
"are the days longer in the stt-miner cold inenths. ''S • -
than in the winter." . t
' • Te chins Post
192.-' .
t. 5
r -- froth' Ifs2 0
ra
For lea. rq i
• Y 7 �
a .feeehit f positron at Smith. sores
(MFinsril k`ra.nrr,,, - was . held auCcrss-
sivoly by Nicholas'flrandjeari (1221
to 1867), his.>snii,. i~rosper (1867 to
1i90), ,and 1, 1'i grand'see, (;ha,;les
•(1'$90 to ]9L,j, :Tr.,,rrrrling to l.Erole
et la Vin,, a '';rorty review of cell'_
cation nllblieh•ed fn Parr The, ithrh.
W3 eeiSra1 fit Szlit3nr Lith!, irfiicia1
oreaTi nfithe,serTrrtecl Staten officci of
k:dnratinil, which said .this was a
record as' far as`-' it• knows• , • * ,
•
Full Marks
Timothy, to whom -'ilio question i ' I would as lief polson-speopfie as mirk
was put, had a' ready answer. untruths about them:=Bishop AV god-
"Because the stn shines longer," cock of Kentucky. - •
he replied.
"Yes, yes," the 'master returned.,
"i3ut why does the sun shine long=
er?" -
• without the • slightest hesitation
the.. boy 1•41ietl:
"l ecause the night is so'.mucli
shorter." • ,, , t
' , Self -Confidence •
"She ha'l'e quiet confidence in being
able to ,do whatever was 'needful for
her to do. She leaned on her neees- r
Rine* insteed of r bo:ng broken by,
them," says n bingrepher, bra blrsy
and useful Iife. The statement is'
pass ng,. thriutriit,�
worth more then s
far the necessities that confront most
liven can ,tither be ?.'flawed to become
a erusliing 'burd'e'n or ;turned 'nto.a•
• staff that will slid on' the .,joturney at
c ,... T. •, „•1--t• 'T , ril,a1- ,• strengthen for gnat egret -d g: -
Y
I ,T
mi
b'•a"h nu,!:^•:, •' •.,•nli,•tte ennui n, •ina; •syst.r.m moist, bd' iznr;;diz 4.1 in tftr, '
lits'�t• _l let ar.•1 tr`h%try c•rai'il•'t . nubile' interest. ••••--= f'rofr:•ranr f;n;st:of
pyjan,c:s. , ' Wt rt)'r1,• , 1' • •
Sommer �.
• Almost everybody knows how.
Aspirin tablets break ftp a cold -
but -why not'prevent it? Take a
tablet or t�1to where you first feel
the cold coming on. 'Share yourself
the discomfortof old.
a summer c
Read the provendirectiong irk every
package for headaches, pain, etc.
• - •.ft +4 $TR, 6, 1;TTrlr i ffTiiF fTr * •r a,trt lr-mrirlc _..:- ..
Made in Ganeda.
ISSUE
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eselit
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