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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-05-06, Page 6RAYMOND L. SCHROCK and PAUL GULICK.
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CHAPTER XIII,-,(Cont'd) that cowbeys affect. "As I ewer et
It -was a good ten minutes be,0-101'.?u:a.,,,lie Jest spedhe enonelfThow-
Neenah eaw him again, but she had a I me you.buy mac drink toenight,
singleness Of purpose that steed hen Yo reeel might need that 'there money
in good stead and soon she stoe to tide You over to the end of the
reetly under the sectioo wheee he sat. oronth."
As a portion:a-ay daring cowboy was "I ain't afeared uf thet; I got
at last thrown from the back of atleetY,"I and he tapped his pocket,
dangerous outlaw oamed on the prde laeltie and Chuck sew that it was
gram, Sweet Marie, the whole section: bulgIng with bine.
in front of her rose ep .to get a better "brut I'll tell you what I'll do. We'
view The man that Neetah seueht Jest dughter part sociable, so I propoge
rose with them. To her horror, Neee that you. buy me a drinkh
hah saw him put his arm protectingly I money that'll be mine totmorrer. You
about the waist of a flashily can't hospitably refuse to de that. And
and overly eed-lipped girl with bobbed , You Might invite your slick-eax friend
hair. She stood loolcing, rooted to the rn the, Ke kdhs as though he needed
spot. And as -she looked a hardness a drink."
came into her eyes that had been soft: Sliek ear is a teem Applia to cattle
and sentimental before, Still, Neena
thought, ft might be his sister. With
this thought in mind, _Neenah -worked
her ,way around to the bench behind
'Remorse. Then she tightly clasped'her
hand, about his eyes,
- "Guess, ,guess, my Fred, who has
foute you,' -
-The little half-breed girl was strong
and she had her man at o, disadvan-
tage: -He could not move without be-
ing rough. But he was a man troubled
with many things on his conscience
and he had patience with riddles.
Neveitheless lie could not -budge 'the
clasp about his eyes-, It was his com-
panion who came to his assistance.
"See here," she sled indignantly.
"What is all this, part of the show
or a bold up? I did not think they,
let Indians in the grand 'stand," and
with that she broke Neenah's hold.
Burgess turned around to face the
last person he wanted to see thee or
any other time. Sueprisa, fear and
anger fought -tear mastery in his face.
Anger conquered. ,
"Getout of here," he 'roared, purple
with rage. "When lolefe Wainright
Park I -left you too for good. I
don't know you any
Neenah'e surprise was a pathetic
thing to see. The man for whom she
had made her mistrees suffer as few
have ever suffered, the man who had
promised to marry her and take her
away' from service and serving, the
man she had loved with a dumb trust-
ingeove to thus publicly and violently
disown her. She held out her hands to
Min. in dumb entreaty. For answer
the girl with Burgess slapped her in
the face. And Burgess laughed, That
laugh rang in Neenah's ears like a
death knell. It was also a call to
battee, a battle of outrageel woman-
hood. Swiftly she turned and was lest
.in the crowd; but in her eties was a
deterrninatidh that boded no geed for
• Burgess. And what is more, in :his
heart he knew it. He should have been
more -diplomatic with Neenah.- But
no man earl serve two masters and
• as for serving -two women, even• ,Solo-
mon the Wise, Mold prescribe no safe
recipe
• Neenah hurried. back to her pais.
tress. Her eyes .burning shame
and anger, she was almost inartic-
ulate. She stamped her little feet and
ground her -hands together to 'retain
her composure. It is the Indian's Way
to be calm, come what may, and the
• soic strain in her blood Mood her in
good stead.
• "He premised to marry me -now he
laugh in my face," she said with dig-
• nity and forced ealreness.
"'Who, Neenah?"
"That )3urgese, the' poacher. tee
him. Co to him all glad, and he take
• other womet. Never; want see me
no more" e
''You peer difid, what are you talk-
ing about?"
And IVIarie took Neenah inttr her
arms and soothed her a she -would
have done with a Oster. Her gentle-
ness brought the flood of tears that
opened Neenah's heart and soon she
learned the whole story, the one thing
that Neenah had locked .so securely in
her breast that she had daily been a
traitor to her gentle, suffering mise
tress.
"And now I can tell you. It was
• Bergess shoot Jean La Frage. Not
yohr Malloy. He ver' ineocen' all tam'.
so sorry I cannot tor you before"
'thout a brand, and while it is no
insult to epply it to a heman beingeit
usually Mises a laugh at hieeexpense.
Mackie laughed, and turned te: Chuck.
"Genon m Chuck. We'll buy this
night hawk just one drink to show him
there's no hard feelin's about to-
treerrer's go," and- he turned in the
direction of 'the door again.
"Taine right, Blackreei exgostulat-
ed Cheek, pulling at Blioloe's arm,
"The Boss expects us to go home and
wc oughtm go."
"Say, if you- deo% want to have a
drinkton this guy's money, you dent
have to. You can go up to the stable.
got to be a generous feller with his
money."
et...0huck saw the wavering Bust and
the willing Blackie go in arm and arm.
He knew what that meant. So he fol-
lowed them. At the end of each round
he -politely suggested that that was
sufficient and that it was thne to go.
But one drink led to another, as it will
do, and by the thee Bust was maudlin,
Blackie was scarcely better. It was a
whole hour tater that Chuck fairly
dragged Blackie to the door and piled
him Into a taxi.
TOLLOWING THE FAWN
• 'Skt-joring in a different aspect the unusualness of yvhieh is hot exceeded
even by the hors -es, ot-Quebee. The ulmtograpit was, taken near._
- -
Owhalnyt'intoon. in' Canada, that he did oat ' •-•
The Correct Solution -
who could identify here • The, SWO 1 W 1 111, 1 g
see, and peobably the only one 0 fie v ke _;g, ,u.rk
. • Aild through, the gate,.Vars---a. hand's
the green
(To lie continued.) •
' breadth between;
Wholesale Murder.
The' battle of Marathon, the mush
• ' He hurled his blackness at that clank
and won,
advertised event of 490 HO., was a bat- The problem scarcely rose and was
tle only in name, in reality it done.
A.SQLJARE DEAL
rransparent, lionesty";. "Better be
holiest than rich"; "in :honest man is
the noblest work of d'od"; "No, legaeY
is so rich as honesty." rfbese are
some of the expressions common in
our micist 'as to the high value nien' set
on honor, There is perhoits nothing
that makes life so magnificent as to •
be, holiest with it: .
Not that "Honesty is the best polioY
So it was that I31ockie avoided the
boss the next moreirig. Fortunately
nothing had happened to the boys.
They had all turned in in good shg,e.
Chuck had administered a, feey pails of
cold water to the aching head of
Blackie in the morning and hud fairly
kicked him out of bed and jato his
clothes. He meg sinned at the tougu
lashings with which Blackie relieved
hie feelings., He was too unsteady on
his feet to even ,ttempt the usual.
'
"Guess you don't: want to see the
parade. .All you get to do is tern
around twice and tlie whole world is
a parade to you. Hope re feel better
when I get back." -,
The first thing he had done when he
came back to the Perk with Mr. Regan
was to look up Blackie. As has been
intimated, he was not the same Chu*
Jones that went down town. He
liad
Men a vision, it visiorgere brave and
hardy men, who had dared everything
to conquer an empire. The pageant
had awakened * pride that no amount
of caution oe fear could ever extin-
gius , -
Chuck found Blackle leaning against
it fence in the inner corral. Both
hands 'were stretched out, the fingers
of the hands leaning on the tops of
the boar& Chuck's self -desertion
needed juet a little expression. Here
Was an opportunity. Shafting around
to the back of the fence, the top of
'which. was high over his head, he be-
gan to elimb it. He was directly back
Of Blackie. As he mached the board
on which Blackie's 'fingers rested, he
deliberately stepped on the hand, mid
Went on up as uneoncernedier ae
though Blackie had not vatted a shout
that could be hearetill the way dui; to
the track.
When he reached the top and looked
down Oil the foreman, who was jump-
ing- about and holding his injured
heed tie though he had been shot, he
sat down on the topmost board and
laughed. Blackie shook his ffst at him.
"Why the squawk? You cen drink
with the other hand, can't yer?"
"You consumed, everlastine blank-
ety, blank piece of potato blight, you
jest come dowe here and P11 ----e
case of wholesale murdei" although it
mutely, for anyon•,:fylio is honest juel. e e leaves' a„nd ti :fr h -
j. becaime it pays can•aever be an honest itkountain tea gale dens, tat are used
decided the fate of Greece by fdrever
_ The. spider, chance -confronted with
stoppiog the Persian inreade. Mild. . etarvetion,
ades Was the Greek general and h Took up another eiry eltuetien;
stood his ten thousand oven at the -feet ...
Hee'working jegs, as it appeared to nie,
of a mountein with hie front line Hee mastered prectical geometry.
theoltly strewo with felled trees to
._
'keep away the Persian -horsemen. ...'"he old dog. dreaming in his frowsY
sake. even though. one losee instead of - na .0P.L7M.11,14"*. A. Ewe nnlett. finer in It aVor
I
mall. Let it be honesty for honesty's' ' s = Ak * A, A
gains. It de that spirit onaltert.t. marl's, • t hap anylliznp.owcireit! oft+ japam. Try it. '
111
word. bond end enables others to •
trust him in ell -things..
-Some say it. iS, inipossible. to be here
est to -day, especially in business; that
tho man who attempted to run his
IiIISBANDS LIVE THE LONGEST
buaineas on honest lines would be without- the Tisk of damaging hie men,
bankrunt in a month, Honesty is too
-61d a virtue to be swept ali'pay by mod.)
ern wis.eacrealike4hat. It is that met
of yeasenteg • that makes everybody
suspicious of eyeerybodg:elee. It le
just ;or 'thee reeeon Oat banes' have
wide counter% -aed -braes railing be-
tween the ,quetomer 'and the till! _
• Were .4.11. men 'hofiest we' Melee dis-
miss 85 per cent of th* pollee, and the
ternahider would be serving as traffic
directors; 95 per eetite of the judges
and -magistrates would go, and nertely
all the erisone evould• become' produc-
tive .shops; we [should give lawYere
earl selicitore more useful empleyment
arid find the World a better place in
which to live. ,
Look at' it. squarely and it be
found that nearly ael our trouble he life
is because eetgaregieet.as lionest Mi we
The Gre.alts fought agailiat, one lien- egeh -
twelve ti) one, but th-s Greeks wem Enidyed his, rest antfilid not -drop his
task; '
diled and twenty thousand Persians,
trained soldiers to a: man, with:long He knew e the person "og no•egixed
spears, etrong metal •shielde, helmet0, abode" '
breast plates and short 'swords. The And challe.nged as, he ebufflee down.
untrainedPerlans had short lances, the
light etnseters, very light wicker - •
shtelds and 110 body arreer and thug Suls creaturetr, which (Hagen and I
the ,famed Marathon betaine on event agree) ' •
similar to al man taking candy from a Lack almost every human faculty, .
baby.- The , Greeks lost 1.92 'soldiers worket1 out,the question, •set with sat -
while the Persians had 0401) killed on isfection
Dr. Eugene -1,, risk,,th.e medical di -
'lector of the worldgemotis Life Ex-
tension Institute, of New York, de-
eTaeges that the deathgate of :Angle
men over thirty years is more than
double that of . mayried- men of the
eameeige.
The findings of Profespor Walter' F.
Wiletix, of Cornell Univereity, • hays
oleo shown -thee. the deathenete of mar-
ried men between thirty and thirty-
nine is 5.9, while that for bachelors is
the field while multitudes were -either And promptly took the necessary rtie
drowned or slaughterer' while attempt- gm , , . •
Ing to flee to their ehips. • , . - -
Mill -lades, by the way, suffered the At thiresuceeristul eangfeelee-Loem-
fate of many onee great men, -When ployed
he 'eapturett it girl spy he forced her On "Wbo Wrote Shakespaire?" right-
to'give bbn information which Ire was iy telt annoyed, .
foolis5 enough to believe. Aeting upon Ana seeing' an evening primrose by
elels misinforination he 'personally en- the fence . .
tered the enemy -city and fa:awing her. Beheaded it for blooming Insolence,
instructions fell into it well end broke . -E. Blunden.
his 'tbigb. For this and otherethinget
he was flan theequivaleut to $53,000
and, tie he could not pay such a sum
he was sent to jail,- where he died. •
-. -----2----
Solving a Mystery of Space. .
It is probable that startling new
theories about, what is going on in
sPaee will follow the discovery or high -
frequency penetrating rays of coiled°
origin by tor. it. A. Milliken. •
In 1922, Dr. Milliken, experimenting
withballoons reaching a lisigilt of
nearly ten miles, proved that the un- what you get -Jolt by..what you g ve.
ltnewn radiation was far greater at 1 Taal euccess is service well veneered
high altitudes. . The results ef extieri- --e-be the rewards what:Oltey may. leo
mente- made at Muir Lake, 11,80011. Mall has succeeded, on in the words of
higt, proved the existence of a new ,Phillips Brooke, "no man has come_ to
kind of radiation tit extremely hightrue greatnese who has not felt in
sortie degree that his lite belongs, t•o
the race, anti that what God givee hint,
He gives him for mankind." ..
Lineola was not r'idli, but he was a
great succeee because of his immense
service to menldnd, time only makes
lien loom larger and lerger ter a worle
figure. -One of the meet fleece -able
things in modeert history is 'the world's
ever increasing attrairation , and ap-
preciation of the greatuese or this man
rule the value of his service to man-
kind. , t'
Lake Lincoln, the mine and fame_of .
Florenee Nightingale ere stamped for '
all time on the heart Of man. The one
was born in a log •eablu, the other in
a home oe wealth and cohere. But
both lives were antmated by the same
passion for service which the world
gratefully commemorates -net only in
monunients eef brolize, 'but, in undying
memory."' '• : ,
One's coutact with the world 'must
be a vital one,' one of helpfulness awl -
service, or oneWilt. quiekly be feegog
ten. The world e -,
Oen& of the race. It gives its love only 1 as maah as he goes with Yell."
0,15011 is s'ertaiOuebOhal
ofhose °lierisbes the memory '
Who have given eivilizatiori elite who nice fellow, but,
:tniw
g ho have Reeved it, thosel .
'Itaike in sortie way bettered the °petit 1 "T don't kndw, be don't go witie me
, ain't he dumb?" '
to these whoseemarte ore in sympathy .
witli their fellow. '
• Oettihg and never giving defeats its
own end, for the s•elfls•11., miserly soul
ie never ham*, is nevelt loved...or ye-
semoted. A 'fortune acquired through
Neyistness and greed by- a•mae who
has ground all of Woe and energy
into the driller a:1Mo ,denes not: enrich
even himself,. for In tuermelng his for-
timeehe has saciefieed the real things
of lift -love, conmentonenie the 11-
8pea at his fellowmen; the goy that,
comes from giving oneeself, from help -
Dig1101leetY 1*, in the end, et- weary-
ing, unpetfiltahle bus:Mese. It gets, too
near:the hone foe oomfoireed it low-
ers- a meets 'sten:lard until lie fails to
rise again, and that le always it tra-
Bachelore from foity to forty-nine
Ole oft at the rate of 19.5, while the
married men's figure is only 0.5. The
married mare accenting to the, same
findings, even at the ripe age of from
seventy to seventy-nine, still has a not-
able advantage la the vital statietice.
.Dr. Fisk, in himanalyels of the com-
parative deeth4ratee, Points out that in
the first glace most bachelors repre-
eent "rejected goods" on thelnatri-
menial mo.eket. ,The clam Includes tbe
meneal, Phyeital and financial ale -
glee. ,
Another reason why baehelors are
such relatively bad risks, coatinues
Dr. Rislc, is that they are without that
great conserver of het:ale-a nagging
wile. "It is small Wonder' that baohel-
ors die off -twice As rapidly as their
more -carefully watched and guarded
bretbren,"„ says- the medical director.
"Meet bachelors, again, live on rem
turant or boarding-house food, which
Is not to be compared with the home
product
"It is not only such caterial things
as untended colds or poor food that
send bachelore to early graves. Many man le absent.
Dr, Fisk believes that although,
some men feel obliged to stay single
in order to devote themselves whole-
heartedlg to science or art, there is,
nevertheless, no career in the world
that coula not be helped by the right
kind of wife.
. By all means let there be a fair pro-
fit. We Britons have, prided onrselves
through long years ptin our fair deal-
ing; and other nations have regarded
us es honorable,- The dietinction is
worth prizing.
Estimate a. fair falue end a fair re -
tern and then never llinch from the
decision.. Let -gear credit be good be-
cause your reputation is ennobled and
your Mutes are- clean.
Cultivate other people:: trust you.
Let them knew you would seem to let
them down in thought or deed.
-To be untrustworthy is a beet that
is never really erased. It isa alwaye
wise In matters of modes and busi-
ness to face the sun and let the shad-
OWS fall behind. Men ought to know
eelmoet to a detail -whet to expect froth.
us. Don't make a profession 01 hon-
esty, hut Just be 'truthful and than hon-
esty will be -automatic with you.
Each of us Should determine to be
holiest to hiniselri it we are net. that
we cannot' be holiest to others. All
heaven i,s on the side of him velto is
truthful with himself ail the time.
If eve practim tricke in any trade,
they wit soon turn upon us and the re-
action will bring disgrace. One of
George Washington's Moral Maxims
was: "I hope I ' shall always possess
tirmnen anti virtue enough to Maim
taia whet I consider the most enviable
of all titles, the character of an honest
101111."
Are You Living? .-
8 would rather be a helper, a lifter of
human beings -I Weald rather have
the satisfaction of giving others: elite
of ehcouraging those wile' are doWn-
and-out, ot lendiug hand to those
who Imee been unfortunate', and yet
lit noor, than have the Weelith 01 a
Crleesus and a starved, Pluched; love-
lese lite therewith. ,
Suecess in lite is tot immured by
id me.ohinerse
PA `certain amount of etrain and re-,
eponsibility Is necesearry Lor the gooe,
health of the mind, Thom who do not
have it become epee:Ileac and. 'mentally
degenerate, sometime:: fading awaYel
simply because <they have not enough:
intere.st in the world to keep them
alive. "
The world, however, for Yeses hao
heaped unnecessary pity on the head
of the unmarried woman, continues Dr.
Fisk.
• "The truth of the matter is that the
rielnister adapts herself to single life
with a readlnees that sheuld excite
envy from her tracheate brother. The
apiuster, I find, up to the age of forty-
five, has a mortality rate lower than!,
that of the married woman; during,
later life her rate le higher, but even
then the difference IS slight
• - Advice to Widows.
"Most spinsters have the knack of
reeking snug little homes for them?,
selves, with good cooking in addition.
"The mortality among ,veidows, how --
ever, is appalling, and frone the stand-
point ot the statistic -3, theibest thing
that a ewjdow can do is te marry again
as soon as peseible. _
"The high death -rale Smong widbwe
is readily iinderetood wben we con-
sider lone frequently they are left with- '
tremendous responsibilities and with
the necessity of facing a severe life
sti'uggle.
"Widowers also die with great deter-
mination and despatch, thus proving,
what happens when the nagging wo-
• CHAPTER XIV.
Tem i,Ase STRAW.
Nominally Mackie Smith, the fore,
man of the Bar -0 Ranch was the
leader of the troop of eowboys that
gcarne tip td the city foe the Stampede.
It -was hie place, end that 'privilege
had been confirmed by Regan the night
before in Kelly's" Saloon where the lat-
est sporting proposition had been ac-
cepted. Discipline had eo be main-
• tained away from the raneh even mire
strictly than cn; the range. The temp-
tatione were greater and the chencee
, -or any treachery to the enteants and
their mounts WOTO such that theetirict-
est kind of supervision was necessary. l'en te a "'nal '
p,,,,,eyy.„, mar, on the Beg° payeeen "And I'm tellire you mine -thin' glee,
• knew this mei wereemore than -ready- the:" ahanted Chnek after the retreate
ing figere of the foreman. To impare
"You'll 'lobate_ What'll you do?"
and Chuck jumped down directly in
front of the raging, swearing 'fore-
man, -Beackie took,one good look at
Chuck. His left band, with which
°ilea- had admonished him to do -his
drinichig henceforth, was drawn back
to strike. But the Steadfast, eteeler
loolc in Chueles eyes, so different feem
any look the foreMan had ever seen
there before, deterted him The loft
arm sho,wed no anxiety about eorinect-
ing with thee 'objective. Instead,
Blacicie put it back in his pocket mid
walked gremblingly away -His aching
brain wondered vaguely what had
come over the epu'de peeler, Usuelly
he took everything so good nateredly
and he even let the cook testa him,
Which is the worst ineult that can hap-
penetrative power able , to pass
throegh the atmosphere mei then
through 4581. of water or, eft. of lead.
This was an' astonishing diecoeety,
for the Most -penetrating radiation at
Mu' eOinmaed (the bard X-ray) Is
stoped by Yein. or lead. The shortest
of these newly -discovered radiations
muse therefore, have o Avave•length 0
(MA'S tenentilionth of tlitte;ot ordinarY
. ,
of them die of small aliments because
they have loiet -the will to five -be-
cause they have no interests vital or
vivid enough to keep them bound to
the humdmin wheel of ,dally, wester:me.
"A man Cannot reelese enytifing isa
importeut as the parental iestinat
"I-Kno..4% Something I Shan't
Tell!"
I know something I Owlet telll
Where the twin -flowers Ting their bell,
18 yonebreathe such holY things,
Sem the wonders spread their wines.
I keow something you don't know:
Where the blaest gentians groee
Oil you'd 'keep the trecret true,
I might whisper it to you).
I know soinething none cau guesel
When ene mayflower's loveliness
Blooms in the park rot far away.
Never ru not, betray.
secede found near
Florist -shops would pay to hear;
Treasure of the wood and plain
Greedy folk have teased in vain.
Once a trusted friend I told
Where hid violets color of gold.
Then she rooted all away --
Flowers and Mendable -in one day.
Stevensonon Child Training.
Gay, lighehearthd and eeboneir
though Robert Louis Steveason WaS
during most ne lie; life, he held views
on the Valuing of children that, com-
ing from hire, seem astonishingly se -
Vero. Mr. Lloyd Osbourne, les step-
son, writing in Scribner's: Magazine,
A Whale Census.
Eveh if whales had no value for
blubber, MI and bone, there would be
ompathy with the present enterprise ,
of the British Government in sending
out two vesselm-one of them Captain
Scott% famous Discovery --to attempt
a censes of the cetaceans. They can-
not hope to count them all, but they
will fire chide with Identification <Belts,
to lodge in the hides aud to be collected
at a latea date, as.„.evidence et tho •
range, age, habits and longevity or
these huge mammale of the . mem
The primary aim of the official missiou -
is to call A. bait an the extermination
of the beasts that represent a survival
of prehistoric monsters. Not long ago
the Slaughter was evholestile and reck-
less, as in the ease of the buffalo; but
even though wholes no longer amend
our rivers' and the fleets have ceased
to go forth with their harpoons and
vats to lonely seas, the whale deserves
ipreservation; and as circumpolar lands
increase in value the whale will be
fit groweng demand as a sgaple article
of food, locally obtainable, for -au in-
dustrial pepulation. '
°N.
• e Notre Benet -
If bright secrets you sleeted learn,
Rare wild fiower or fragile fern,
Spare them! Noce them! Love them
well,
Rises and leave them. Never tell:
-Alible Farwell Brown in Youth's
Companion. ,
(11 COAT describes a couvermtion that OCellr-
- ose .
saloon at &Ova eeelecie just' s th this knewledge he thought, beat collie eed when he an t venson, then thee, -
fan was at its height. When Blackie e eaez ' • was 1 298 two years old ancliie poor health, were.
to do' his _meet even to quitting' the
'a e 1 It lo'c,
to See -mining at Davos in the Swiss Alpa.
had given the word the entre troop "Not ten minutes, ego the boss' bet THE TWO-PIECE SUIT ON
jiiined in a night cap -and with a eheir the whole ranch against the Morton TAILORED LINES HAS, ••••• .0ne conversetion I heard hien have
foy Regan, who had paid for ,the `ranch on4he Roman' race. And eif - NO .RIVAL. '' 1 with a visitor at the cealet; seys Vie
roimd, Marcher' out toe whateyee re- Corbett frin't ih shato to ride that ,
ehe nonchalant taieletve Paris is Oshourne, ileMeReed inc deeply. • The.
, , , y an saw that they it. Pm tellin' yer aoYs you'll sober.- alIng•Very Y e e • Y _
cia'' We '' o‘jn. ---ver dashing who after many,..prealubles ventured
visitor was a fussy, officious person,
eirement had been arranged. Blackie eace yge will be the one i:o have to
'Were well started befc,re he said good up an' he ell e'er teeS." this little two-Pisee* Snit. that nlakes .10 eriticiie Steveueon forethe Wilf he
,
. into a taxi to go to the Palliser. Re- deeired effect, it at least loosened the ekirtes full anderiecular with theelaiie •
was bringing me up H. L. 5., W110 was
.sen—tt hem awe d
ni•ght to the boss and watched him get If. the „news dtatet have all of the shortness_the meaeure Of its chic. The
the most reasonable Mi
gan's last WOrd. had been a caution As foreman's tongue. In a surPeising swinging to the sides, and joined to gnon in an aril.
g
..te Corbett and the Palomino pair, time tho whole outfit knew of •the het. a body lining The double-breasted • went, and tamest. over-reeirif y stilor artlimseldf
and no duty to parterre, theemlietme fore that a ranch the eize of tee Bar -0 - - IBM notched. collier and patch pockets. 'Visitors to Ste:ling, En
j eket, debonair and short, has man_ A,QUeen's Violets i where against leonse , p es ,
Miss oil" to his hotel, He also thought have ' had more confidence _than they '
36 bile% .re etre lei d 54 ' h ' ' - ' tl. 1 1 t
n thee 11 niP by bis unshaken stand.
1 nt,s 3 , 3 ,,
haviiig all been peeled for the next heti been stalced en the running of. 11
The Coat is No. 1057,.and cut in sites how the green sward s'lopesetr.li
gland, kpovir I '"01' course I lee him read anything
Having no place ineparticelar to go Nething like it had ever happened be- ,a,
three days, Chuck Jones aleo eaw the sin le. race: Either- the boss must
16, 38 40 led 40 inches bust. Size costle 'gates •-to the river, and here, te i , go ea • he-Shoulthet, I en1 .0..ad.
he wants,' be geld. "And if lie hears
it eyould be a good thing 10 see Blacitie had thought or he had hem e bigger . .. q s •g- e'er s -the every . spring, lovely stented v.0 e s, of it, A child should early gain some
• 'ofi! to the stahle, 'where hoth of them fool than. they thought, „ meteelal, and 2 Yards 36-elleh Inaesteel sering up, They wee not, the common perception ot ,What the world is really
icarn to judge people mot discreeet
PeoPle weld are always grasping -and
hearthling ;who: ham im• outlet to -their
lives, are a pest to society. 'Their lives
make the world,poorer instegd_erich-
er, and their death causes no reglet-
0. S. M., in Success
• --
Upset' His Calculations.
• His ours ever° stretched out in trout
of him parallel to eah other, and he
kept them in that pos.eion.
thus barring his peogress, he s.tepped ' irell' .. •
and :,„.,11111eIentge friend has resommeneed
Whenever he eame to a group of peo- e e ee,
ple state:Bug tenting' to each other,
quieltly into the Toed'. In that fashion. i --Who ean substitute arrything for
he had almost traversed the length 79111 heat effort. -
I ---Who can do the work God hes for
of the street, wh.en A man des-hed out i .
from a, shop ana Wilided with hint.
. • you in this world.
Sentence Sermons.
Yoe Are the Only One -Who can
make the Bee ot your enemies truce
• --Who can lower (he quality of your
merchandise,
-Who can *MIL off the favor and
soliettette of God,
-Who can make yourself too big for
your job.
--Who can hold position after all
ere 8.1.op. poslirdy Biockio would Al'aeleg turned away from malting for lining. The Sicirt, 125:i is In deiviblet or :ale hedgerows) or- the Inte-lts bneellese, ita leeaellartl6.11-tai
,51^..1o0 00 5.511 and hay ,D, too, I L1118 gegtlare, Of ,Self-exPre.ssion he saw sizes 34, 20, 3S, 40 and 42 inelme hese steed_ violeteethat are cultivated. They thinly yenenroil brutalities; he
Sus as Bletkie was thineeng altout I tete, mounted Policemen walking: II Size :3 8 bust.' Te41.111.;eS .2% yards 30- are nole.e,r and sweeter than any that
Price 'efic, eaati jiattenli, 'and nowhere 'elm? Oue Imeno go far
tide metier and treing to decide in ber the path °Mettle Of the high..board inch,. or° 1 % yards 54-1nch „material, diew-elsa,wherc in. BritairC
elee_ge suelneeg,eeeenditore, the 1 foece over whieh he had justh plebe .
ith eli ya.rd 80 -in liniere for l/ediee How del they come to grow there
mimi Z06 he' Of tire': MorCon Ranch came Tile), were I -elk -leg andi the voice shat op
0+.0 of 1.(011SI's.' wereeemegy. teed Wee, ,sepealliieig, slrndeci strangely f
ap, seeing Hiegee.oe tee ei egreele, ,.41,0•i_,%..31tr,r,011(pc, leer as he eigr Fa:ellen' Book, tlinstraleepg, ba_elr ient,o eietery to find the solution
he" eregee eliro, While thee', wore tenea lie eke Oree1111 nev'"-est .and most practical sty.eg will01 ridd4e, eraining teete maeltee Ano 01115 0
eileette their ''iespect,vo pos "And theY said S'eu-weee up Peeee of interest to everY borne dree0- They ere the descemlants or the ee'ettre',- -Mine Was hew I wail bedieglia
ifee ei,ree -always rone of me Rle"0:1', he eel, • • I oiaker, Price of -the Leek 10 cents; violets which Maey of 'GUiS,12,. mother ep, ato 110 0110 9111 090) know except
alirtIN1-17-eTleriee Veleta- , es, eethe1 CO a It'.111 gPcY; the coos:, e ee the more famous • Mary Queen of mesetethe bitter mleeey it cost lee,"
• , " j•eetv-, c 111451.....0 nl rg 4iftlt1`--tklecE--t1/0'1.0a41,Ta 100011s:I /Jo- To 0 ATTr, se..ots, le-etre:let enthe lege groiene Yereeceei .
Writ: mur name a'Id address n:ain. when ehe became the wire or J11111 S
911b eavibe ;Me eh in t wit meg 011
bemeer trailty ruid weaknees and be in
gonle degree elevated and armed -fee
taking hie pnet eeter he the' battle or
life. I have ne Patience meth this fairy-
"Really, gel dreadfully sorry!"
1
apologised. .
• "I should think you arel" returned '
the ether. "Now I shall have le go . *
and Meesure, the svidths of that demi I
all over again!" . • •
Rome's NE:I.rr-ow—lloade. , I
The leads of old 'Rome were Mbar- 1
Tow 'that wegons 'were not allowed iiii I
them at hours when people walked •
busy rind my g•aint 10 geing lice the 71 e0O,e.g ,y, giving . n ecotland. Planted them' ill Poland's 3,10' 111 coir 0501' Chopin,
yen. ;You. knoW to-1,lbrrow ,,vetveill he atgletiat'e ee',„',,',...6.i-gteit•-• -.awl, • tit iber :ad size of' such -V. or
ear. out of your outfit, So to -night ie Ilneee ,t1 ye -ego -ye:, 1011 19
petteens you wau4t, Enclose ege in the' famous Hanging -Garden,: which ores born February 22, 1E10, at Zela-
the ip,st / wig. have e chance er, I reee 011 1,,110 ne1ca ) 10,0r 50i5 (50)5 preferred; wrap, then' adorned teis gragsy slopelle part 70511) Wo
i: son ,Publisliing Coe, iler 33 alt Ade- They neve'r fail to luring up-; -never I One' shoulti have but one object, --to
illackie in the fres and 0003 .0 a hoged feaas,, was Bill lisrltness, the return le1111!- stweeer elsewhere.
-buy Et drink with my owe money.' 194' eee if 1 een-fin•1 him tn e it 50,0 for' each number of the eu-sele•ground ,,ba chew, hi0-
"Can!t for the life oe how 114,110,0, and. l'oolzed theolgebe two
111011 To.moricr 51.17 it with.. yourm 1,3a41`.. . : ddre'ee' er.dg- Patitim 1)ent torte v.iolets gram; there.' I, adacati0 ro'id ail por
11
fibout it?ei,elley gingerly elope -ed eyee. the , •
11 11019 StI 10 oU you got ihRto .lvay, Bust," replied feet Away -from bine mnarated oely by ',aide St . Pat'seree seet,t,y dee 0111 3101- . But thee' eever to make eiltruism eredomintent over eget-
111 ient.-Com to.
'Mae Acker;
Strock by e cereals hand,
Is broken at the foentain.
The Mime tbet Was reo euro
Is cracked at last
By the dip of spying:
. Ana 'the meg,
ottee eagerly OirecMheed,
, Grown mute in me
• At last.
' rna eleetemp Lb.
The new kind of .soap
*makes a new kind
of washday
Sin ply dissolve Rinso and put it
into the wash -water, put in the
clothes, soak 2 hours or more and
just rinse. • -
Cbalige the hardworit of wash.
Ing to just thistly.
No rubbing, no maimed
hands, no aching backs,
or jangled nerves.
Gloriously white,
clean clothes.
Made by tive
makers of Lx:x.
55'454