HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-02-19, Page 7'1`Ilursdag Pitbrnars . ¢h, i'ilt4.
�E ANa
DISCOURAGE
Irs Hamilton Tells How She
anally Found Health an
Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg.
etable Compound.
Warren. Ind. -"I was bothered ter-
rtblywith female weakness. I had pains
and was not regular,
my head ached all
the time,I had bear-
ing down pains and
my backhurt me the
biggest part of the
time, I was dizzy
and had weak feel-
ings when I would
stoop over, it hurt
me to walk any dis-
tance and I felt blue
and discouraged.
"I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and am now in
good health. If it had not been for
that medicine l: would have been in my
grave along time ago." -Mrs. AIinE E.
HAMILTON, R.F.D. No. 6. Warren, Ind.
Another Case.
Esmond, R.I.-"I write to tell you
bow much good your medicine has done
me and to let other women know that
there is help for them. I suffered with
bearing down pains, headache, was ir-
regular and felt blue and depressed all
the time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and commenced to
gain in a short time and I am a well wo-
man today. I am on my feet from early •
morning until late at night running a
boarding house and do all my own work.
I hope that many suffering women will
try your medicine. It makes happier
wives and mothers."—Mrs. ANNA HAN-
BEN, Esmond, Rhode Island.
'Tennyson and a Telescope.
Sire Herbert Beerbohm Tree in
'Thoughts and Afterthoughts" tells
s tale of Lord Tennyson: The poet
as invited to a certain country house,
d all the neighboring luminaries of
he county had been iniited to meet
m. After dinner his host asked
better he would like to look at the
tars. Tennyson took up the tele -
cope and. forgetting all else. gazed
or twenty minutes at the wonders of
he heavens. "Well. what do ; yon
hank, Mr. Tennyson?" inquired his
cost "1 don't think much of our
minty families," Tennyson replied.
Was Badly.
Run Down.
Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills Built
Her Up.
Mrs. Prank Blough, Sarnia, Ont.,
writes:—"I embrace the opportunity to
rite you saying that I have used Mil -
urn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and found
em very helpful to me. I was very
dly run down, and was taking doctor's
edieine. My son, out West, wrote
e saying, ' Mother! you use the Mil -
urn's Heart and Nerve Pills, they will
ehet fe3' for you than doctor's medicine.'
This I`'did with good results. I often
recommend them to other people. My
doctor did not know I was using them,
Ihe.used; to say 'Why! . I never saw any
one's heart gain up like yours has. You
do notneed any more medicine.'
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are.
50c. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all
teeters; .or -mailed . direct—on receipt of
trice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
reroute, Ont.
] t,
tie Tumblers.
1t glasses tumblers'
in ing called owe
lir name to the fact that they are
(y, successors of the little round ail-
. howls so perfectly belanced that,
aich ever < way they were tipped
out on the table they tumbled into
sition again and there remained with
grim upward.
Fairly Lazy.
s Jones lazy?"
lazy's no name for it., Why, he'll
arta a revolving door and then wait
to come in and turn it
Be,
e 'fines• unbidden will sitd
own
Prov .
S
b r eb
1 t�
LUTE
(1ECUFdTY,
Ccaa iris 7
art ,frame r.
tele. . Pills.
Squat Door skinstwo a4'
ARTEKS
w
TR
PILL
�a,
Soo Elm -glint a Wrapper Calow.
ti^a-! ted us5
.ori q.,
taUg✓.e 1?14"6n gra'i`l
FON fl€AIl;ll;ii ,
rota atimri.o•`i,
rot: e1L16IISLiEtte
FOP TORPiD LIVER,
,F6ll CONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW/ SKIM.
FOR VIEC12MPLERIOH
lINIWZDS14017 twxre Vt NATO.,
prc10a M I Prueertiregetatie. rim >wid
OUR
E,SWQK HEAL ACHEe
Leidy
ee . Doubt
- FrAt111114d v» -,svil111114 %
Re,confessed—to the -whole .story?"
Not a word; claimed to know noth-
ing' except that Claire was here. Said
he saw you, and then went away, not
ge ting back again 'until this morn-
ing."
'The fellow is a liar, colonel. Let
me see him; I'll lash the truth out of
his lips. Where did you say he was
In the library?"
T had barely time to rise to my feet
When he entered. 'His eyes swept
across the guard, and then centered
upon me. Instantly they blazed with
excitement, although. I noticed he took
a sudden step -backward in the first
shock of surprise, his hand dropping
to the butt of a pistol in his. belt,,;
"By all the gods!" he exclaimed
sharply; "If It isn't the spy! I miss
the red jacket, but I know the fade,.
Mister Lieutenant Fortesque,"
"Major Lawrence, if you please," I
returned quietly.
"We'll not quarrel overame.
I've had occasion to know nder
both; bearing one you spy,
the n
you u
were a
beneath the other a Leader of banditti.
1'11 hang you with equal pleasure un-
der either." Suddenly he seemed to
remember where we were, and his
a;re 'tushed with newly aroused rage,
'Put first you'll explain what you are
:cin g here e at Elmhurst. Do jou know
vhese. home this is?"
assuredly," determined not to
ose ray temper, or to be moved by
'tis 'threats. "It is' the property of
"eland . Mortimer, of the Queen's
Rangers."
"And. --end you—you came here to
:gain see—the daughter?" he ques-
ionod, as though half regretting the
indiscretion of such a suspicion.
"Oh,
no, captain; you do the lady
a grave injustice. I came Here a
l-isoner, very much against my will,
not even aware whose plantation this
was. I had no suspicion that Mistress
Mortimer was outside Philadelphia
until I ,overheard your conversation
with her."
"Overheard! You! - In God's name,
where were you—"
"In this room; with both doors ajar
it was impossible not to hear. You
spoke somewhat angrily, you may re-
member, not finding the lady as gra-
cious in her reception as expected."
SEVERE BRONCHIAL COUGH
Doctors Feared Lung Trouble,
Restored to Health by Vivol..
The medical profession does not be-
lfeve that lung troubles are. inherited,
' but a person may inherit a weakness
or tendency to them.
Mrs, Kate Heckman, Springfield,
Ohio, says: "A few years -ago I was
in a vn -very bad run-down, condition, and
, the physician. told me I had <consump-
tion, I tried another physician, and
he told me I had ulcers on my right
lung. I ` quit the physicians and
started . on 'Vivol.' Today t am
perfectly' healthy, and that,.is why I
recommend 'gluon"
Vinol soothes and heals the inflam-
ed surfaces and 'allays the cough,
Vinol creates an appetite, strengthens
the digestive organs and gives the
patient .sitrength to throw off; in -
I cipient pulmonary diseases.
Try a bottle of Vinol with the un-
deratanding that your money will be
returned- if it does not help you.
W. S.R. Holmes, Druggist
Clinton, Ontario
.
- eg venemenely:
"i tell yam, colonel, this has got to
i be done; he is a spy, and here for,
.some infamous purpose."
"Well, I've sent 'Por the fellow,
Grant; what more do you want? I'll
give him five minutes in which to ex-
plain, and that is all. Seldon, have
I the men go on ahead along the trail."
"Yes, sir, they are off already."
"Very well. Have- our horses out-
side; we can catch up within a mile
or two." He wheeled sharply about,
nd looked at me sternly. "Well, sir,
have very little time to waste oar
ou at present, but I advise truthful
hewers. What tis your name?"
"Allen Lawrence."
"You claim to be in the Continental
}'vice—what rank?"
1 "Major in the Maryland Line, Max-
Pell's Brigade."
L "Dressed hurriedly, probably, and,
Lorgot your uniform,"
l l
"I have lately been serving with the,
,Teraey militia, sir, as Captain Grant
aka testify," I answered civilly.
"And Captain Grant is only too
Mous," broke in that officer impa-
Itiently. "1P you will listen to me,
colonel, I'1I tell you what I know .in
two minutes or less. It will settle this
fellow's status."
Mortimer glanced from my face to
The sarcasm in my tone stung him, that of the eper.ker, evidently attracts:,
but the surpr(se•was so great that he ed by the vindictiveness of the voice,
could only rip out an oath. "All right, Grant, go he said
"I thought you would have also en• shortly, "only I shall passss judgment
joyed swearing at that time," I con -
as a soldier, and not because of any
tinued coolly, "only you scarcely dared personal quarrel. What is it you
venture so far. You had previous] knob?"
boaeled tri me of ,oar engalement to "Thht this man came into Philadel-•
the lady, and it naturally was a our, phis three days ago dressed as an of -
Prima to observe how lovingly she ficer of British infantry. He claimed
greeted you—" to be Lieutenant Fortesque of the
"Hell's acre!" he burst out. "Did Forty-second Foot, with despatches
the mina know you were there?" from New York. Howe vouched for
"It you refer to Mistress Mortimer, him, and furnished him with a pass
I presume she suspected it. At least and orderly. He put in the whole day
she came to me shortly thereafter." studying the positions of our troops,
"Then I understand better what and in the evening was a guest at the
troubled the girl. But, in God's name! Mheardnza-Andre gave him a card,
how did you ever escape me? I was I heard—and danced there with your
in every room of the house." daughter. I doubted the man from
I smiled pleasantly. There was our first meeting, and later picked up
certain rumors which convinced me
nothing. for me to gain, or lose, by
goading him, yet it was rather enjoy- he was spy: Some words passed be -
able. .ween us
on the dancing floor, and as
a consequence I asked the man to
"That, of course, I must naturally meet me below. - Some one either told
refuse to answer, captain. I might him he was suspected, or else he had
need to resort to the same methods the heart of a coward, for he failed
again." to appear."
"There will be smell -chance of your, "Did you intend to fight him?",
leaving opportunity. Mortimer will "No, we planned an arrest. .I re
hang you fast enough when I tell my ported to MacHugh'what I had heard,
tale, Don't look for mercy -at his and he had Carter close at hand with
hands, for he's prouder than Lucifer of a squad of the guard."
his family honor." - l "A very pretty trick on mere suspi-
He was out of the door, striding cion," commented the colonel in some
down the hall, bent on carrying out disgust. "But go on with your story."
his purpose. I: heard his voice ask -i Grant sucked in his breath quickly,
in where g 1 tet o the colonel was to be found;i
ev dentis surprised at the remark.
then the guard closed the barrier be -1 "Claire was waiting for me upstairs
tween us. Very well, of the two I In the dining room, but after Carter
would rather leave my fate to Mort1., had scattered his men to the outposts,
mer than to him, and felt profoundly, I took a turn about the grounds in
grateful that the captain was not in hope of thus running across the fellow.
command. Had he been I should Luck favored me, but, damn him, he
doubtless have been hung'Without the jumped into me like a fighting cock,
slightest formality of trial, but Mot' - struck me in the face, and taunted.
'timer would at least hear my version me into meeting hint there and then,"
first; indeed, I could hardly believe "Good boy! the right stuff, eh Sei-
ko would issue so stringent orders . don?"
without listeningalso to his (laugh- "I supposed it all a bluff" went on
tet's story. I was an officer of rank; Grant, paying no heed to the inter -
the .consequences might prove rather
serious were I to be executed 'sum-
marily, ' and without proper trial.
I had scarcely reasoned this out,
however, when a corporal threw open
the door, ordering my guard to cons
duct me into the colonel's presence.
I was taken to the parlor, where the
furniture had been 'somewhat rear-
ranged, and' found myself confronting
Mortimer, the officer I had heard ad -
'Come, You Dog!" Burat Out the Colo-
nel Fiercely, "You 'Know More
Than You Have Told.l" ,
dressed as Seldon, and Grant.
ruption, although his cheeks flushed,
"bug we went at 1t, behind the pavil-
ion, and I • had pricked him twice,
when the guard came up and separat-
ed us. At that the fellow took to his
heels, and by Gad! got away—swam
the Delaware, while we were beating
the west "shore. The next I saw of him
he was in command of those ragamuf-
fins who attacked us out yonder, Now
he shows up here looting: this house
on the trail of 'Red' Fagin. I'd hang
Mtn offhand if itwas me,"
Mortimer looked across at me ear -
neatly, but with an expression of doubt
1n his eyes. As for myself I hardly
knew what to say or do. Grant had
:no corroborative -proof of his asaer-
tions, unless I was returned to Phila-
delphia. 'I could emphatically' deny
;that I was the man, insiston my right
;to a fair trial. But how could I ac -
'count in any reasonable, way for my
presence at Elmhurst, or even success -
!fully sustain my claim to being a Con-
tinental officer, I could not tell
;Colonel Mortimer that I had been tok-
en prisoner by his daughter, masque-
rading as a lieutenant of dragoons.
Apparently he knew nothing of thie
]escapade, and she would- scarcely for.
give me for exposure; besides, for all
I knew to the contrary, the girl might
have thus been attempting toserve
,the colonies, and a word of betrayal
;might seriously injure our cause. All
;this flashed over me before Mortimer
spoke.
-'ave you any proofs, fife, that you
officer of ,Maxwell's brigade?"
'fere," and, I glanced dole at
clothing, "yet with a little
could be ]easily - asoet'-
Continued next week.
PRE CLINTON NEW ERA.
SiriDAY
SCHOOL.
Lesson VIII:—First Quarter, For
Feb. 22, 1914.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Luke xii, 1-12.
Memory Verses, 8, 9 -Golden Text,
Luke xii, '8=Commentary Prepared
by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
Ile had in our last, lesson spoken -of
the' Pharisees as not only having a
mere outward religion; but also of be-
ing true with their ancestors in perse-
cuting and killing the prophets, and
He had accused the lawyers of not
only refusing the truth themselves, but
of keeping it from others. Now [Ie
says to His disciples, "Beware ye or
the leaven of the I'harisee8, which is
hypocrisy." As matters were- consults
mating and the:crisis approaching. He
was speaking Mere pointedly concern-
ing Some things.
All the wrong will be :manifest in
dile tune, and the right will prevail. so
.hitt it is Wise 10 live always in the
sight "1 the Lord ,tad seek In all things
[Pis approval (1 ('or_ iv. 8; 11 Tinl, ii.
15). Ile had said on a previous ocen-
slun. "Beware of the leaven'- of the
Pharisees and of the Silddncees and of
Herod," but they 8Cer0 so dull that
they thought that Ho referred to literal
bread (1111 not to false doctrine (Matt.
xvi, 0.11; Mark viii, 15i.
'Phare is more need Blau ever to be-
ware or false tetiehers and teaching.
for 1000111118m and rationalism and
worldliness are ever increasing. 'The
Pharisee was all fol' turn] uud outward
show. even tholigh professing to be-
lieve some things. The Sudducee had
no use for anythingsupernatural,
t e n ,t „
while Herod, though somewhat-re-
li„leus, preferred the sinful pleasures of
this world (Acts xxiii, S; \lark vi, 20),
There is no place In the Bible where
leaven ever signifies anything good.
In C,ev, vii, 13; 00111, 17, where leaven
was commanded to be offered, it rep-
resented sin in ns and In our service,
as Is explained in Amos iv, 5, margin.
En the parable in Matt, xi!i, 33, it re-
fers to the corruption of the food giv-
en i0 the churches in this age of "the
mysteries of toe kingdom," which is
set forth In the parables of the sower,
the tares, the mustard tree and the
leaven. We are rapidly approaching
the time of the oven and the burning.
If we receive the word of God site -
ply and heartily e'e shall know some
tiling of the hatred of the religious
world (John soli. 141. even unto perse-
cution and death liter. 1, 9; ii, 10; x11-
17(, but our Lord tenches us that the
death of the body is not a serious mat-
ter if we are truly His, for 1t will
mean for the believer real gain and
something very far better than remain-
ing here (Phil. I. 21. 23). Therefore we
are not to fear it (verses 4, 7; Matt, x,
28). He who cares for sparrows -will
surely care for His own redeemed
ones, so that we may be as brave as
Daniel's friends 1t we have faith in
Gud. The unsaved have every reason
to fele' death, fur to them It will mean
Me' torment of Luke' xvi, 22, and fnal-
ly.. the lakeof fire (Rev.. xx, 14. 15).
A true child of (ka] is one who. see-
ing himself to be 11 shiner, has pleaded
guilty and cast himself upon the mer-
cy of (led in Christ. reeetving Jesus
Christ as lits own personal Saviour,
putting all his, trust In the precious
blond shed for him on UnIvary. 'Thus
one is iiable to stir "Being ,institled by
111111, 1 have peace 111th God" (Ho n1.
v, 1) Nom: others are eh11(L•en of God.
1u'cofding to the Scriptures,
NOW, while G 1(1 needs no evidence..
of our sincerity h] this .hart from our
1;11)11, for Ile reads the heart, it is nec-
essary that men should see some evi-
dence of our faith. for they can only
see faith as it Is nunliloot In the lives
and the works ee believers, according
to Eph, if, 10; Tit. iii, 8; hence that
other saying (1)0111 (05118siei,g with
the month the Lord Jesus end show-
ing ball!] by works (horn, 0, 0. 10; ,fns.
II. 2.11. There 31'e those who Welk in
the ()Own 0(1 life as Christians; but
who mind earthly things acd are the
enemies of the cross of Christ. They
profess that they know Goll, bit in
works they deny 1I1111 IPhII. 111, 18,10;
'Cit. i, 1m,
- 19 'udg 11)0(11 or to
Itis. not fort to� ,c
say that they are or are not thus and
so. He 1x111 see to that. But we May
judge .ourselves and consider well 11
our faith in Christ Is real and our life
corresponding in guy measure thereto.
That there is a possibility of being
Saved an11 yet unrewarded 18 plainly
taught in I Cot'. ill, 11'15,
The hest verse of our lesson is a
great comfort to those who are willing,
to confess with their mouth, as well as
to such 05, mnv suddenly he placed in
a diflieui1 position. Nothing can take
the place of .reliance .upon the Holy'
Spirit ourteacher an our -
1 rit both as d ut
tet;(nee. 1 bare In my mind along
with verse 12 the comfort of Ex. iv,
12; .ler. 1, 7-9; Prov. xxii,.1S. and have
arrived the reality of this -comfort
times without number,
As to the sin against the Holy Spirit
which hath no forgiveness. I' under-
stand It to. be the persistent rejection
of the 00100 or the) Spirit until-, the
heart heroines so hardened and the
ears set dull of hearing that Ills mire
Is health no more. Those who font-
Unit
onrUnit they have committed this sin are
the very ones who Imre um cause
at+ to
Prit,. flit the spry fact of their feat•
shutes that 111e Spirit Is still dealing
with tl1etll •
'those wl(n have entiantitte(1 this'sin
are so harleaii+d olid '1't')I IIie is that
they (menet he 11011r 1W11K1 011 1118III 11t•
ler of 1 ((1' 0(11118 welfare, They. will
Int Ilsteu.W ii.
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Wig,
THE
AERONAUTS
How a Girl Went Up In
the Air and How
She Came Down
By MARION ATWATER
"By the bye, Mrs. Grosvenor, said
Mrs, Effingham, "your nephew, Jack -
Kenworthy, comes of age soon, does
he not?"
"In a week from today."
"How nice to be coming of age and
into a splendid property at the same
time!"
"Jack will not enjoy his inheritance
longi,
"Not enjoy it long? Why, what do
you mean?"
:lack, like other wealthy young men,
has been inoculated with .the aviation
fever. For the past year he has been
thinking of nothing else., He has made
a number of trips and learned all abort
aeroplanes and how to Ty them. He
has ordered oue finer than any that has
been produced to be made for him: It
is finished, and be is only waiting for
his estate to be turned over to him to
pay for it. These aviators do not live
on an average more than two or three
years and are liable to get killed at
any time while they are flying. It's
too bard about .Tack. He will have a
splendid fortune; Ole Is very bright
and 111(8 a tine future before nim."
"Has 110 nue any influence over hint
to show 111111 t lin t death is„tbe inevita-
ble end to his flights if he persists in
them?"
"i nm his only living near relative. 8
have pleaded with him to desist from
aviation, to study a profession, to fit.
himself to live rattier than to take
measures for death, 1 have not pro-
duced any impression on him,"
• "Don't you think that if you could
get him married his wife might ac -
compile') that iu wblch you have l'ail-
ed?
"I've thought of that, but Jack Is not
II ladies' man at all. De won't consent
to my introducing him to girls. Indeed,
he won't have anything to do with
them. Several women who have got
the aviation craze have begged me to
intercede with ,iack to take them for a
ride in the air, He scouts, the idea.
'Do you suppose,' he says to me, 'that
I'm going to take tip a woman to lose
her head at tbe slightest jar in the ma-
chinery, grab me like a drowning per-
son and hand me tl mass of pulp on the
earth hundreds of feet below? Not
much!' "
"Does he take men up with:'bioi?
"Only sucb as he is sure will not get
rattled."
Edith Effingham, aged nineteen, was
sitting on a window seat concealed by
curtains, with a novel on her lap, lis-
tening to this dialogue. She had caught
t
the aviation fever and was much inter-
ested in this Mr. Kenworthy, who
skimmed about in the air at the risk of
his life, who disliked girls and who was
about to step into a fortune. Could .
there be any combination better cal.
cnlated to impress a girl to her teens?,
But when we consider that Miss Efng
Children, Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
nom Was desirous or flying atrium; Inc
clouds herself we have conditions that
are likely to prodtace results,
"Manima," sho said after Mrs, Gros-
venor's departure, "I have a curiosity
to see this man who has no more sense
than to risk his neck by trying to make
a bird of himself and who prefers to
get smasbed against the earth instead
of living to enjoy his fortune,"
"Good gracious; Edith, what do you
know about Mr, 'Kenworthy?','
"I was sitting in the window seat
when you and his aunt were talking
about him and beard all that was said,
Please` ask Mrs. Grosvenor to bring
him here to dinner. But don't say any-
thing about me, or he won't confer'
"I'll do no such thing. ' 1 don't wish
you to have anything to do with such a
man; you'll be going up with him in
itis machine."
"Flow can i do that when he won't
take a girl up with hila?"
"Why do you wish to see biro?"
"For curiosity's sake.".
When a girl of nineteen wishes to
get her clutches on a young man, her
mother is not the best person to stand
in her way. Mrs. Grosvenor was 111
vited to dinner and asked to bring her
nephew with ,her. Since. she had
brought him up from a boy of twelve,
she had sufficient influence to induce
him to accept the invitation. At Mrs.
Edingham's suggestion, prompted by
Edith, airs. Grosvenor told Jack that
there were only children fn the Effing-
ham family, and for that evening the
young lady appeared with her hair
hanging unconfined down her back
and robed in a becoming snow white
dress, the skirt of which reached only
midway between her knees and her
ankles.
17pon her entrance into the dining
room, where Mr. Kenworthy, much
bored in his efforts to please his aunt,.
sat waiting for dinner to be announe-
ed, his attention was immediately fix-
ed on this fairy-like child who made
him a courtesy and began immediately
to chat with him in a very animated
fashion, Kenworthy, judging from
her appearance, thou ht :her to be
pn g .
about thirteen, but he had never.
known a child of that age to talk so
much like n woman.
Miss Effingham refrained from any
mention of 11Ir. Kenworthy's especial
bent until she had succeeded in im-
pressing. him with the fact that she
was a very attractive child. After
the dinner had been finished and the
two elderly ladies were chatting over
a cup of tea, with childlike simplicity
she inveigled the aeronaut into the
window seat, where she had heard all
about him,. and turning on the switch
set him going on the subject of flying,
listening while he talked as fast as he
was accustomed to skim through the
air. Her interruptions were few, but
struck him as being made to the
point, ,
Shortly before the guests departed
Miss Etfiugham, putting ber finger on
her lips as a sign of caution, whispered
to her companion that she was dying
to fly. Would he take her with him?
The temptation was great, but the
resistance was sufficient to overcome
it. "I never take women up with me-
1 ant aware of the danger 1 incur, but
have no inclination to take the respon•
sibility of hurling others from a
height of a thousand feet to the earth.
I have on oue or. two occasions taken
a man friend with me, but I draw the
line at women."
"And children?'" asked Edltb, fixing
her blue eyes on 11101 appealingly.
"I would rather take a child than an
adult," was the reply. "The younger
the person the greater the insensibil-
ity to danger. If anything should hap-
pen with you beside me I should not
expect you to wreck the machine by
interfering with tae."
"Indeed, i would not
"In your case I luust refuse solely on
the ground that 1 would have no right
to permit you to risk your life."
"Will you take up my brother?"
"I didn't ICU OW that you have a
brother."
"Will you grantme for him what you
"Wil 3 t
have denied me for myself?"
Edith threw all the pleading of which
she was capable into her expressive
eyes.
"I will."
"When?"
"After I have got my new machine
that has been building for me and
have tested !tin trial' trips,"
"Very well; when yon are ready
ndtify me, but say nothing about the
matter to anyone, 1r mother should
hear of 1t she would prevent it."
She took his hand and pressed it
fervently. The pressure went straight
to his. heart.
Ma'. Kenworthy carried away with
him a very attractive picture, a young
girl in' short dresses, with her hair
down her back and withal sufficiently,
developed both physically and in-
tellectually to please one -who had come •
to manhood. Moreover, the picture
did not fade. The -fancy once caught
is very tenacious. Kenworthy did not
to see Edith again, for be could'
go g
find no valid excuse to visit a child,
but not a day passed without his see-
ing her in his mind's eye.
One day age received a note from
him saying that he had thoroughly
tested his new aeroplane and' was
ready to keep his promise to give her
brother an airing. Re would start
from a field in which stood the shed
covering his machine the next after-
noon at 3 o'clock. When. that hour
arrived a boy jumped the fence and.
strode toward the aeronaut. On reach-
ing; Kenworthy ire said, that bis sister,
1 OWE MY LIFF TO
"FRUIT-A-iiVES"
They Did Me More Good Than All
Other Treatments Combined
Masa H, S. WILLIAMS,
PAT,M3RSTON, ONT., June 20th. 1913
I rerlly believe that I owe my .life
to "Fruit-a-tives". ver since child-
hood, I have been under the care of
physicians and have been payingdoctors'
bills. I was so sick and worn out that
people on the street often asked me if I
thought I could get along without help.
The same old'' stomach trouble and
distressing headaches nearly drove me
wild. Some time ago I got a box of
"Fruit-a-tives" and the first box did
me good. My husband was delighted
and advised a continuation of their use.
"Fruit-a-tives" completely cured me,
Today, I am feeling fine, and a,phy-
siclan meeting me on the street, noticed
my improved appearance and asked me
the reason. I replied, "I am taking
Fruit-a-tives". He said, "Well, if
"Fruit-a-tives" are making you look so
well, go ahead and take them. They
are doing.more for you than I can",
Mrs, H. S. WILLIAMS.
"Fruit-a-tives" are sold by all dealers
at 50c; a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c,
or seat on receipt of price by Fruit -a -fives
L Ottawa.
imited
Edith Ettingham, tine sent atm, saying
that be would be taken up in an aero-
plane.
"You're the image of your sister, only
you are dark and she is light. Are you.
twins?"
"Yes," faltered the boy, quailing un-
der the inquisitive gaze.
Kenworthy's mind being intent on
his preparations ,for his flight, he
turned away and when - they were
completed invited the boy to a seat
beside him. They rose slowly, the
latter bolding to the machine with a
grip which if strong enough would
have crushed it. The nerouaut cast a
glance aside and noticed that the hand
'was white and shapely. But one guid-
ing a machine rising bigher and higher
has no time for other observations
than those connected with his flight.
and Jack having a neck at risk be-
sides his own -felt an extra amount of
responsibility resting upon his shoul-
ders. His companion sat still. display-
ing no fear. but feeling a great terror.
The bills and the houses grew smaller
and smaller below them and they
seemed hung upon nothing. The air
which bad been quiet below was
blustering above, and suddenly the
machine tilted like as bird' changing its
course. A suppressed cry escaped the '.
boy.
"I've kept my promise to your sis-
ter," said ,rock, "and 1 think we had
better desr'entl."
• No (thiertlon being raised. the aero-
nlllit hngnn the descent.. All went web
till they wo1'0 u•1111111 100 feet of the
ground from which they started, when
something slumped nod the speed of
the propellers nus visibly reduced. 11
wits evident from the aeron(utt's sod'
den pulling upon levers .hot something
had happened. Indeed, he found it
neeessary to „glide on 0n'incline down
upon the earth. Ile succeeded iu do- r
hag so, and 1711011 the nlaciiin0 stopped
running on its wheels the arms of 115
hn3' passenger were clasped tightly
mound his ❑eek,
110 unclasped thenar aid then found
that 1110 hey lied fainted. Kenworthy
took 111111 in his arms and laid him on
tile grass. Thinking to rouse bfm, he
ripped open his ,jacket and unloosened
his colla].
The secret was out, or, rather, it be-
gan to come out, for though Jack knew
the boy was a girl he did not know a.
great many other things that he learn-
ed at'tcrwnrd. That was his last trip
in an nol'opinne. Edith Effingham In
her own 'appropriate costume as a
young woman, sifter n courtship, con-
sented to be his wife. but only on con-
dition that he would never sit in an
.tIfn iueie- r..
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