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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-6-16, Page 2a To Buy or Not to Buy. There Can h No nestion IC VERY time you spend a dol lar for advertised g oods you create employment for somebody. Every time somebody else spends a dollar for advertised goods they create employment for somebody—maybe for you. That may sound far-fetched, but if you reason it out you will find that it is so. The world revolves upon Indus- try. That which creates Industry is the consumption or wearing out of goods, and the buying of other goods to replace them. Without Industry the world would stagnate. Without steady, persistent buy- ing, Industry would cease. Those who refuse to buy at the present time, because of a f a Is e impression regarding values, or for some frivolous reason, retard industry, and by so doing impair the prosperity of themselves, the community they live in and the country at large. The important thing to remem- ber is, to buy from those who advertise in this paper. These merchants and manufacturers have faith and they are back- ing their faith with money to stimulate industry and pros- perity. By The an of Tooth talon By MERLIN 1TWORE TAYLOR (.0013yi`ischted) Synopsis of Preceding, Chapters. ,glorious handiwork Of Nature he dubL. ' e "<1." hell uf a lot, of hilts and trees., Judge Graham, teeeor of evil -doers, there indefinitely uutil tile hue and Pie.' 'B'fit'.hit: don't sound reasonable to SONG VVRITERS i revise songs, f 0 r publice- tion,ie.Musici; sot ,toemelodies, Music , , , 5. . trensipoeed ,and orcheatrated. JUL.ES BRAZIL, il?rofeesional Song Arranger, 41 Gormley Ave., .Torohton • tinned. the 'motintaineen ' "1 git's ii paper oncetla a while and hit air al- w'aYsa a7lano,ckin' the Goverinnent.„, I can't; da nmah morehstread ef I spell. put the d en lettere lots of big 'words , < , I don't 'pretend to understand et all, but hittells, of how purty - soon .we folks wilat., 4ir poor air gem' to Intvd a chariot th hange thingS. All of os ls to be alike am!: share and, share alike the Paper sea The rich men Pogoin, to give up, their money and hit'll be divided' amongst all the PO- talus was about to say easy of compae heosion to this mun, "No, sir, those that ‘' promise you things free, things for which you have not done honest labor, are trying to poll the wool over your eyes and make you urn the grindstone while they sharpen an ax. What they really Vsfant Is a chance to destroy the Government and setup one that will allow them to Xtlia thitiga, to loot the banks to take away the property of those who have it, to make slaves of women and girls and to kill those who oppose. "Mr. Lathrop if those clanged traitors got hold of things, the country would run red with the blood of their victims. None of our lives would be safe unless we were worse than they are. Up here in God's blessed moun- tains they are trying to set some of you at the throats of the others,. They wouldn't be satisfied until you had a little riot of your own in this very cove. No, sir, they are liars and trai- tors and if they succeeded in -deceiving you into supporting' them they would turn upon you and wipe you out the minute you discovered that their promises are only the. stuff of which UTOS , ADA:KEY BELLS Itama, eartnot an types all cans oaid sub- oot to,deltvery up to 1100,rallees, or test 1:!,ilit,T:INerfidr4f$,t.rikectecap.hanterelixoefts.' 4or* your own choliM to Look them ore?, -for ask ni take any car to city reproantutly!4 inspection. Very large oto* alsF.ard OS, hand.- • • ran, ofteame distance if Lialta EZlreakey's Used Car Market 414 Irdage- street, - Tomei* ous articles answered the many ques- tions that were asked. The collection 'contained old rugs and tapestries, spinning wheels, camp - VV offered 4it3,0d0 by Lebiune to isidnaP Visions of bomg coraPellett to lemon), lers, silver, brass, capper and pewter As Leb rime leaves "Silver Danny's" erY which already he felt sure was me thet a hy rich man is a-goin' to the ware, pottery, an old, leather fire bucket, a yellowed, hand -made dress Chtialton of the Depaatinent of Just- which he had fleet, nauseated him. Ho way this is a-goin',to lie brung about in which some one's great- • d gran .- tice wee has dubhcd hirn "-The GraY was sullen and morose, and not even is by- ov-ertlirowio' the Government and mother had been christeneid and a s 6 saloon, he is observed by Ralph raised against him in the eitY froth give up anwthin'. The paper saz man's high hat that was two hundred Wolf," V000t takes 'ale $1000 aiven the beauty- of ;Stella, her evident will- Puttin' in ;a -nether niede up of sech as Lathrop, a country girl he. 'had found his past behind: anthus would be you'saIl, belie a Jedge, might ex-' him to bind the compact to Stella bigness to believe ----.1,0 h ------ 'ried We-uns, is. I.kinder thought that meb- and fifty years old. One 'table carried Life Statistics. If you are a woman you will live ; longer than the average man. It is an ; old saying, but very true to -day, in spite of the stress on the modern woman's life and the phyrical condi- tion to which she is subjected. Sta- tistics prove it to be so. Nine hundred and five spinsters out of every thousand who have reached starving in the dty arid lieft'llelidel rnake himself worthy of her, was eufff- Plain 'hit te .1rie " melitary relics of every Canadian struggle from the Indian wars to the Stella is now earning honest wages in oient to arouse the spark of'love which Judge Gaaham did not reply irn- dreams are—" He stopped abruptly, Great War. , a factory and refuses to marnY jog°. heretofore she had kindled in his rnedizitely.- "Ho was thMking that even for the mountaineer had leaped to his At the end of the evening girls untss ha gives up las evil ways, She breast, in this Tar -away place' the Bolshevist feet and was staring with popping dressed in historical costomes served Bolshevism, Vogel carries cret his ham conspheate matters. Vogel felt heard df a mysterious paper, secretly iiitiz, however, fallen a constert t° I. The presence there of Judge Gra- , serpent had ;reared his head. I_e had ., i kpubli-shed, which had for its puipose some nules out of the city. fae :de/ otae 'U t et a h ,,, .i.< vc t e mountain folk would imii to the railroact and perrnita Bolshevism in the moots of the ignor- Wolf" demands that the Judge should ` let certain prisoners, otr with merely }e-sicsrtt. 1 1 alit and the unwary. And in these .ludge Graham lies boon.: tn. a sitic. sure that the moment 'the jurist was the instillation' of 'the, stibtle. pels.on of e And ;in that monsent ; mountams, a fine. Threats of death for h,ini.:5*hift Lome felt ;sure that the danger!. ont of touch with everyday and torture for his son have 1.0 himself would become a real men - suspicious of "The Gray Wolf" with the just Judge, Charlton becolanida ela toce. He had no hope that, back in his home otty, the Judge should not learn Vogel. Stella Lathrop joins the Inner Council. Charlton visited Stella to that he, Vogel, was wanted in connec- find out if she knew of Vogel's where- Ition with the kidnapping and would abouts, and when leaving the hotel put the officers of the law on his trail. saw Lebrune break into her room and ;Why had he permitted hirnielf to lis - Vogel rush to her rescue. Lebrune got ten to Stella and bring the Judge the worst of the fight and pursued along? Far better to have left him to Vogel and Stella in a motor run to die or live, as might happen, in the cel - the hut where Judge Graham is ins- lar of the shack. He cursed himself prisoned, but was frightened into re- for a "softy." turning to the city. Stella insisted So it was -k • 1 '• d that 11 no pleasant frame of upon taking the unconscious judge nun at he heard Bill Lathrop sum - with them in their flight to safety. mon his son and bid him take the Ines - Chariton invaded the Inner Council sage to the g 9" he de - railroad station. under guise of a messenger from head-rwho's that message to . quarters, and afterwards Lebrune re - mended.' 'Stella already had told him yealed the secret of the Graham plot. At the shack Lebrune discovered that Judge Graham was conscious and Oharlton's identity. Alfred Grapparently none the worse for his ex came barring a little weakness. came to his assistance. Judge Graham, e grizzled mountaineer did not re - on recovering consciousness, finds him- ply. He had no liking for this hulk- ing brute of the city. "Let's see it," continued Vogel and CHAPTER XII.—(Cont'd.) He let her go then. Almost Mime- essayed to take it from Lathrop's diately a lanky mountaineer, with hand. He found his wrist clutched in grizzled hair and beard, clad in home- a vise -like grip and above him the span, appeared in the doorway. His steely eyes of the mountain man ,glit- , rusty hat was held in his hand and he teretd___i dangerously. "The Jedge didn't say nothin' 'bout fumbled it nervously. Catching the he showin' it to you," said Lathrop. "Up eyes of the Judge fixed upon him n' essayed to make a respectful flow, here hi the mountains we am t in the ;habit of :forcing ourselves into other "My gal done tole me as how then came to the bedside. 'people's business." He handed the you wus better, Jedge, and I cum in to slip of paper to his grinning son, re- pay my respects," he said. "kI ain't leased Vogel and turned his back on jest •zactly figgered out how she hap- him. For a moment the hand of the pened to bring you and that air city gunman stole toward the butt of the feller along with her, but you air wel- revolver under his coat, then it stop - come, Jedge. We all don't take no truck ped midway and he contented himself •with brushing off the spot where La - rule, but if Steil says as how you air throP's fingers had closed about his all right they ain't no one in the Cove wrist. gobs' to question' it. My name is Bill Judge Graham was able to leave the ' — Lathrop, and Stell, the red-headed gal bedafter he hadeaten and rested. whut has been a-nursin' of ye, is my Piloted by Stella on one side and her daughter." father on the other, he hObbled to the "Thank you for your hospitality, porch and sank gratefully into azocka Mr. Lathrop," said Judge Graham, ex- er that had long done duty for many generations of Lathrops. The rare air of the mountains was bracing. He snif- fed hungrily at the odor of pine and balsam. It had been years since he had been in the woods, and their effect on him was magical., Somewhere in his blood, almost lost through years of city life, there ran a strain of the mountaineer and, in its natural ele- ment, it leaped into being once more. He leaned back in the chair and closed his eyes. When he opened them again they rested upon the morose features of Louie Vogel. The gunman again had sat down upon the porch and was vici- ously whittling a piece of wood. Judge Graham had never seen him before, he knew nothing of his history, but his discerning eye, if not the clothes that Vogel wore, told him that this was no simple child of Nature. There vvas the earmark of the slums in his' every motion and attitude. The Judge knew that he must be that "city fellow" of whom Lathrop had spoken as having accompanied him and Stella there, It puzzled Judge Graham. What could this man have to do -with a girl, kindly, gentle, sweet and beautiful, like Stella? "Isn't it splendid out here?" he said aloud. Vogel's grunt might have been in- terpreted in any way. "You do not seem to dare for it," added the Judge. offer well-nigh insurmountable oh- "Nope." Then Vogel's temper -fiar- stades. ed up.. "I'm sick of it. And these Stella Lathrop had not 'told Judge d—d hill -billies make me tired. And Graham of this. She had not men- the grub! 'Sowbelly and cawn pone.' " tioned that she and Louie had brought He snarled disgustedly. "I wish to him in the automobile as far as ran Gawd I was in the city." the traveled road, had hidden the car "Why don't" you go then?" asked in a lonely spot in the woods end then the Judge. "If I felt that way I that the girl, leaving the .unconscious wouldn't stay for a minute.' man to the mercies of the thug, had "I can't gt} because—" Vogel chop - crossed the mountains in the night and ped the words off short. In his disgust sent back her father with instructions he had almost betrayed the reason to get some of the neighbors and bring why he couldn't return—"because I the Judge to the Lathrop cabin in a promised a certain patty to stay here rudely contrived stretcher of their own a while," he finished weakly. , making. Of the struggle to lug his dead weight these long miles he learn- ed only many months later. On the porch of the cabin "Big Louie" Vogel sat in disgusted silence. He realized that he had been permitted to find; sanctuary here only on suffer - self in Stella's mountain home. tending his hand. "I am Judge Gra- the age of 25 live to be 45; 652 out of lama of the Federal Court and I am not quite clear in.my own mind just how I happen to be. here, but I am sure that everything IS all right. How- ever, if some one can be induced to take it to the nearest telegraph office, I should like to send a message to my family "Sartan, Jedge, sartain. One of the boys'll be glad to tote it to Jasper and her the agent there send it. I'll see if I kin rustle up a bit of paper and a pencil." "You will find both in the pocket of my coat, which I see hanging on a nail, on the wall," pointed out the jurist. The mountaineer found them and brought them to the bedside. Roughly, but evidently trying to be tender, he propped Judge Graham up while the message was written. Then he took it and departed in search of one of his male progeny to send to the station, eighteen miles over the mountains. For the Cove was an isolated community unto itself, separated from the nearest town by al- most impenetrable mountains, ravines and tangles of timber and underbrush. High on all sides of it rose great peaks of virgin timber through which here and there ran an occasional "hog trail." Only the shaggy mountain horses and mules and the sure-footed men and women of the region traverse them in safety. To a stranger they every thousand reach 65; 119 reach; 85, and eight attain the age of 95. On the other hand only 789 males out of 1,000 -who are 25 years old reach 45; 559, 65; 64, 85; and but 3, 95. In regard to mortality among child- ren, Providence and the law of aver- age s,eem to strike a fairly even bal- ance. 'While 20 per cent. more male - children die of tuberculosis than fe- males, 25 per cent, more girls than , boys die of cancer. Nearly, 40 per . cent. more girls die of whooping cough than do boys, hut asthma is more fa- tal' among male children, Ears are once snore in -style and will . be much worn this summer. The arrows of an enemy prove that you are alive. No one shoots at a dead lion. te't• IN VITAMINES P PP‘Of, MADE, IN CANADA 'The iiinraportance of Vitamines in food is being recognized at the present time .to a -greater extent than ever before. it has been_con- elusively demonstrated that yeast is rich in this all important_ element. Many people have re-, ceived great benefit physically simply by tak- ing one, two or three Royal Yeast Cakes a day. Send name and address for free copy "Royal Yeast Cakes for Bette.r llealth." E. W. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO, CANADA 511,151515 MON num ) o 11?,u CD25-17 • _ •‘.1/4„. .ao"4,. • 44 „;•""qj !ISSUL. NO, 24'—'2I. He ;arose, snapped the blade of his knife, thrust it into his Tocket and stalked away. For he was not of a mind to continue the conversation. He had heard of this Judge who could tall when a man was lying, and whose uncanny ability to read minds that tame and because Stella, had vouched did not 'want to be read, had made for him. • But he could not ignore the hirn the terror of wrongdoers. fact that these mountain folk at whom ' Judge 'Graham shook his head. "Something wrong with that chap," he thought. "I've seen men like him be- fore. It is 'With such that our_Priaons are filledi:" Bill Lathrop emerged from the cabin be had an uncomfortable feeling that and sat down on the edge of the porch. he was 'being watched. And it irked His eyes followed the bulky form of him. Mentally he cursed himself as a "Big Louie" disapprovingly. But he fool for 'having listened to Stella and Zaid nothing. Itmyds against the moon - permitting 'her to bring 'him here at tam n code to speak diSparagingly of a all. The mountains awed him. Already guest, and he was forced 'to 'regard he was quite homesick for the smoky, Vogel as such, unwelcome though he impure breath of the city in his nos- might be. He had overheard some of trils, for the electric lights, the the gunman's remarks anent "hili. thronged streets that were all the life billies," too, and they. hod not been he had kildwge i pleasant to him, • His eyes saw none of the grandeur "You -all airs Jedge, Steil lolls me."' of these toVvering peakstheir maJesty he said The ,Tudge ineitdo I. "There iso i'lLings" ex,Ilih'it t -'22'n P-nci L'hartg.c a 5 IMPrelZed him not in the least. The is sornethin' baen a-worryini -me," con- Sulall admissloil fee i° the c''''hibit'icn• he ,secretly was quite willing to sneer as "hicks," kept him constantly under their eye. Even when he chose to stroll beyond the confines of the clear - mg in which the cabin was; situated taiVirEeildthese simple folk offered a Ter - "It's just another case of a lot of clanged fools moniteyin' with a buzz saw," he said finally. Unconsciously he was trying to talk the language that the.,other man would understand. Gone was •the dignified polish of the man of taw,as he strove to put him- self On a. plane that would 'make all eyes at something in the sky. "Gosh, thet there's the biggest bird I ever seen," he exclaimed. Judge Graham caught sight of it then andhis ears heard distinctly the roar of a powerful motor. " "That is, an airplane," he explained, "Seine Army flier on a long flight, I toffee and doughnuts. The impreten- tious refreshments taeted 'the better for being offered by waitresses in the picturesque dresses of the French re- gime, the flowered muslin's and frilly kerchiefs of early Colonial days, or the quaint, high -waisted frocks of a suppose. My boy 'was one an France, later time. "Fust Otte lever See -n, Thetis 'why . . Keep Minard's Liniment in the. house. I, thought it NVUZ a ibird," explained the mountaineer, shamefacedly. "Why it's turned and is con back." (To be continued.) „ Minard's Liniment used by Physicians -Intellectual Honeety. ntuleaTnlh.ehocnhelesftyl.seed -of to -day is intellec- It -is -as essential to women as to Some men can judge themselves 1.wvoitmhoenuteajunggling the scales, but few It is easy to be truthful and fair to a neighbor, but hard to keep from de- ceiving and • fibbing to one's self. If Canadian girls are to be happy and contented as future wives and home -makers they mut tell them- selves the truth. I cannot -impress too earnestly upon our girls the importan.ce of being hon- est toWard themselves in little things as -well as big ones. If you spoil a cake in the -cooking don't say, "I The money was, of course, to go to further the particular church plan that was on foot. These called upon were glad to lend- Whatever desirable articles they had; and. since they ret ferred their. visitors .to -other persons' who might like to ',Contribute to the affair, it was. not long before a con- siderable number of antiques had ;been collected. The admission fee -was twenty-five cents—a sum that no one felt was exorbitant. In addition to the stim- ulus in helping a worth while cause, there was the personalstimulusder- ived from the nature of the eXhibition. Those who had lent relics were proud to have their heirlooms On exhibition, ;and those who, had nothing' to lend were -eager to .see the interesting didn't 1116M to do- it that way" or lection of their neighbors' cherished pessessions. ' "Something went wrong with it." In- stead, say to yourself: "I made a fail- ure of this cake. I am going to make a success of the next one." When a garment you have made for yourself does not fit you or look a.s nice as you would like it, don't blame the material or the pattern or the sewing machine. Just confess that you made a .00r job of it ;and try to do better. Weigh yourself on the same scales, figuratively, that you would have your butcher weigh the meat you buy and which you selcrom take the pains to look at while he is weighing it. See that you get your money's worth out of yourself. The worst cheated per- son is the self -cheated one. Woman is destined to become a far greater factor in our economic life _than she ever has been.. Rouge won't coyer a defect in character, nor will a wig keep hair from falling out or turning gray., Life.is full of mistakes ;and those who make the fewest are those who realize and admit them as they make them. The person; who won't admit a fault is intellectually dishonest. He or, she is handicapped at the start. The kitchen is the first fundamental of the home. The entire family usually has to suffer for the mistakes made. by the cook. That is the reason why there is an increasing demand. far i:.:7000t-300,E000000o0t70.0001:=D000000m00000000000000001:100 town hail. The exhibition Iva§ held in hall. The antiques' wore arranged to the best advantage; a ,card on which were clearly printed the age of the article and the name of its. owner was- ted to every contribution. At .each table some one who had made;hinsaelt familiar -with the history of the veiri-, Warm Chinook Oh, the warm Chinook is blowing in the West, And th,e -:emerald is glowing in the breast Of the broad 'and billowed prairie Where the warm Chinook will tarry, While the birds are making merry, in the West. Now the fields are growing golden in the West, And a baby bird is holding to his nest, But to -marrow he'll be trying And the next day he'll be dying Where the warm Chinook is sighing, in the West. ' —Cy. .Warman. Me re h arts PHONE YOUR RUSH ORDERS For anything in Fancy Goods, Cut Glass, Toys, Smallware.s., Sporting Goods, Wire Goods, Druggists' Sun- dries, Hardware Specialties, etc., to Malls: 6700 on a Reversed charge. Torcan Fancy Goods CO., Ltd. TORONTO Major Harry Cameron Man. Dir. ,Waiting For Others to Begin. ; All of us haye•to live on what all of us produce. We can all live better when all of.us produce more, and not • so well When all of us produce less'. ii each wopid do emore r good bettethingsrwork there would fboer fewer. Those if each ,. doo.$ less there will Those are 'truisms that -should need; neither ekplanation nor argument, yet there are people who seem to think that they Call: gain by reducing their output, or by doing less work. The futility of such a policy will be clear to anyone who will think what.would happen if everyone .acted on it. Let us suppose that all Whe are en- gaged in a given industry shoold de- cide to do less work, or in some wayi to produce less tO the man, on the; theory that it would then take more men to carry on the industry. No mat- ter what might happen if everyone else tkept on producing at the old rate, it is certain that the new Policy would fall if those in other induistrie-s were to act in the same way. If those who produce the raw materal used in a, manufacturing industry should reduce , their output, there would be less work for the factories to do, and leas need, of men to do it. Again, if those "islf)'/O produce other commodities that t in workers in that industry need were also to cut down their production, there would be fewer goods to give in , exchange for the products of the in- dustry. The further the policy is car- , ried the worse it becomes foi' every- one, until it lands. us at last in the certainty that when all of us produce less, all us must live on less. It takes a broad-minded group of workers to see any reason why they should begin to do more work unless 'everyone else will do it, too. They may see clearly that it would; be to the .advantage of everyone, including themselves, if everyone would begin at once to do more work; that while each person would be giving better service he would at the same time be receiving better service from a multi- tude of other people, which would be greatly to his advantage. They might even say, "Yee, we.see the advantage of that when it becomei universal; ; and we are willing to begin when everyone else does; but why should we begin until the others do? Why should we give better service uatil we are assured that everyone else' is go- ing to give us better' service in re- talIta?i'S evident that so long as we all talk and act in that way no ono will begin and we shall get nowhere. e- gress comes only when thefts „. People who are willing to begin without go nrecses,tothdeo bbueiltateeil.'s woofrieti wait- ing for the rest. The leaders of pro - not those who hang back on an issue COARSE- SALT LAND SALT Bulk Cariets TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF - . TORONTO Joe. Send for RCCISC ! old in sanitary, air -tight ins,.the maker's -package —t_tiost: guarantees purity. Packed at the factory, the CaritentS keep *indefiraite- ly. I +1,1 Sweote,rier for tc...aile Esc and cooking CANADA $71:ASCtli CO LIMITED) MON-TP.11AL te- - rCsfa 0",4, t? e t,,,443 'Che, Great SgreC7.--4,1:?,1,..er • training in scientific' housekeeping, . cooking especially. Infallible laws of nature punish intellectual dishonesty in the home, and, unfortunately, as a rule, the inno- cent suffer along with the guilty. wife has a most important part. She H should keep a budget. She should e,El know exactly 'sow much slie has to cover every branch of her hoosekeop- ing and she should so conduct her al: 0 fairs as to make her books ;balance. She should make her figures as well LI as herself tell the truth. She must be El careful, cautious and accurate. The LI losmdation of all happhsees is honesty, EI and the cornerstone of all society is El happiness. CI ci In these trying times the house- El The woman who refuses to cheat herself is not so likely to 'be cheated by others. An Antique Bazaar. A correspondent writes of 'a novel,' practicable and instructive ,entertain -1 merit that those who originated' two women members of a church Most Comfortable and a 0. 0 li ,... Econ.ork-ilcal El 71i' 'f Summer- 0 0 o . 0 Shoes 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 r,-.1 . 0 .i 4 NJOY the greatest f -at comfort you hasiie ev'6i, 8 kr,/own in summer by wearingFLEET litOintit, , Li alaimea.'by a .' distinguished astrono- caItnneagrii.ieillIalsit:s' tIl'altilvi)rtY6ti:r, pl4rvivolegollf,calgei°1Yalledv isi ip'yilt.liiti:og: ' . , , „ (..f this kind; they are. the people who begin, and begin at once, without wait- ing for others. When it is clear to them that everyone ought to act in a certain way they are willing to act in that way whether anyone else does or not. They are the only people who can break the deadlock that is formed when all hang back and wait each for the other to begin. The Unharnessed Forces. We may be growing weaker, and wiser. in our own conceit, but there Is occasion for much pride in the facts of humantachievement. Most of the old miracles fail to compare favor- ably with those of the last fifty years. Aad through all the victories of mor- tal genius run the' threads of .seillsh- nese. The big things in physics, me- .chanics, all science have made for the happiness and; comfort of the race. Just now the Potential possibilities of radium invite . to hopeful specula - tie's. We ,are bringing the lightnings under more complete subjedtien. New .natural forests soon will: be ,harness- ed if we many believe' rumors which come to 'us from the laboratories. A scientist has just demonstrated in a series of remarkable. experiments: that an X-ray apparatus can photo- graph objects through a stone wall More than 250 feet distant from the eource of the. rays. • Investigators • assure ' that they are bringing heatefrona the sun to he used -in practical way. The future will regard the ages or coal and oil . . as ,pioneer periods in human developaii News from Paris verifies the. eleitn Of :French' scientists that they prac- tically have harnessed the ocean .to furnish energy. for man. Two years ago a commission was appointed to consider the question of "blue coal." Enough has been accomplished, it is said, to assure the epochal, fact the t in near future oceanic energy will drive all the wheels and mechanism of industry and commerce. eThe men of Mars may be of higher ittelligeacie than we of eaetla as IS: Cl ' • . ' ' • ' 0 Enjoy the economy of having several. pairs of 0 0 n FLEET FOOT at the cost of one pair of good . P, 4... .... ,....,..,—,.... t f 4 tr, , FLEET n --••:-N lather shoes. rd ' 0 wear I, John, i r OOT right through time sumo -len .,L-ila oil ;La 0 FOOT heavy shoes for work about the fields garden and barn. 13 C3 '' ' d • • 0 al Have the FLEET FOO'r white shoes, oxfordsail, pumps to weal 0 when work is clone. , . 0 o There are FLEET FOOT styles for every summer need, for men, ,E1 • 13 women and children: Put the whole fiunily in FLEET FOOT ,organiz,ation—in tro dun to ; then' H tciWnspeople under the ',Li tic an .0 Genuirm FsLEET FOOT shoes have the,fianie stamped 0 antique ;bazaar, I E (34‘6..em.. tciol;.• fur it. The women visited . everyone wheal 5. they knew had old relics in their pos., E13" /0 473 eve sesSion---houteheid arLieles hit', lie.cl. 0 , , t ,11114.1 canoe t nasally , •LI plained that they Fhouid lie le tioarewi ; ; tUttBeaFtlh' Mk your ShOC Realeir foi,Pieee Foot' aid Make sure- you get Fleet FoOt .01 A p,:i00000004c';'00nc.;Eicidia01-..;0001-;inout4Ipp0000000000 iipo •e• A Contenied ins/. I weigh nettforttine'a frown or snide, I joy 'net MuCh in earthly joys, I seek hot state 'I reck not style; not folift of fancy's toys, rest So PlcaSed-with what:J have- r wish ho morei nO Mote I crave. teign not friendship, where I hate; I fawn not on 1-51tegreat in show; .1. prize. I praise a meun' estate --- 'Neither too lofty nor too low; This, this is all my eh -ice, my cheer, Ai mind content, a conscience cleat,