HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-10-04, Page 34
vot.o*.or-ni
bri"A
•nr,
C.folg"*E.Nc.,;14. lif,
.\
'.4.0
14,
)
Pe
tio
3
1
u
ii.
"
IVIutual Life of Canada ha's acquired an experience of. over
haif a century of life. insurance, • It bas studied .the results„ of
-',12nusan4s and thousands Of policiel Ow; experienceconvinceS us
that for the average family man the most 0004 and eConornical,forrri
of insnranceihe pro6tirarticipatingOorig7term, encloWinerrtYPolicy.
This policy matw 9j1atkanced age; but is Of,caur,se payable
at ii512,r leath 'if'that age -be not attained. - -01.1%-zormloyltiop,,joiraw',"
Annual dividendi 'are paid to holders -of these policies arirtreSultii
will surprise those who have nOt
tion can accomplish towards lessening the cost Of lite insurance. On
Unite of these long-term endowment policies, taken out in youth, policy-,
' holders at maturity have actually 'received in cash 100%0..1110re than
they have deposited with the Company as Preiniutts I '
This form of insurance provides against both prernatuke death and
helpless old age. ....
•
ACCidellt alC1C11)1Satility elaU.SeS
• For a small additional' preniiiiri4 -the Oonipaity Will add the pro-
vision that shonld' theassured at any time be overtaken by ,total
• permanent' disability no further preiniurns shall be payable, and further-
' more, the COMpany wilt -pay, the astired a, monthly -income 'during:the
continuanceof total 'disability. And if desired a still further privilege
'•
may be secured—narnity, a double'indernnitY:in the 'event, Of: death
by accident—that the •Comparry. Will, pay &ouble, the face , ,
•
the Polley.
Mutual Long -Term EnclOwment thus furnishes' fOurfold insUrance
prbteetiori-first against , death, se,cOnd. against old„4ge, third 4,gainat,
, disability; and fourth against accident. At the same time Orofita; so
reduce the cost of insurance as to'rnake this policy infinvestrnent yield-
ing not only all, that, it:costa; but all the'WaY'ftbria 25 to 190% more
according to age and length of 'the 'endoikMent erm."
Fillin and mail the coupon below and we wilt send you particulars
_about this palicy.
„mini ,k
ft
• .0
be
'••W
33
• WINORAM SCHOOL F I
•1_ Dairy Calf—Alvie Iliggins, Nq. 0
Turnberry.
Afgrletiltoral , Colt—George Mines,
NT
,....,o, 9 nrnberrY; jAIM :Willits
nX3
oviricic; ,T oe Kerr, 9 East Wawa,-
• wish; Lawkenee Taylor 9 'East mra,-
wanosh;
Beef Calf -:Alex Lyons, No, 4 $t,
Helens;
To Todd, No. 4 St, Helens;
Gordon Lyons, No, 4 St. Heien,S,
Judging competition—J, L Currie,
No. 9 East Wawanosh; Glen Carner-
... .
op, „r“).- 13 Ashfield,
Pair Bacon Hogs --john Currie No,
9 E,,ast Wawanosh,
•,bP'ring Lamb, (ewe or wether),
Ten], ROPS, No, il Iitalett., Wm.
',I3tIcer. No. 4, Grey.
•School Parade—Wroxeter, NO, 8
.nast , Wawanosh; Lower Wirxgharn,
No. li Turnberry; Wingharn; Town.
Public Speaking--1VI0lly Pepper,
No. 5 Ashfield; Clara Ritchie No, 5
• Ashfield;. Helen Douglas, -"No, 1.,
• TUrnberry, •, • ,
' PlcYsicgl Cu1tttre,4-Lowe1' Wingbam,
No. it Turnberry; Wingharn School• ,
Cockerel, 33,P,R—Dorothy IViiller,
•
.........---........—
orris,
Reets-.Agne1hett Xo„ GreYI
DorothyHiggins, No, 7 Uorris;lill'''
43 FinniganA No. 1?7* ;NATCat WawanoSh;
ROhene Young, NO, Sr .easl VM/awa-
noslit aae Coulfer,, NO, 7 MOrris4
Lila t.iaunt, NP. 4 WA:Wanosh.
Carrots—Arthur• Lewis, 1,3
Howick and TutoberrYl Alice Mc-
Donald, No. 3 Ashfield; Uerien Me-
Cauley, No, 3 Morris; Robena Young
1.1 East Wawanosh; Lloyd V1h,„
'Cauley, No. 3, Morris; Norman Coul,,
,ter, No. 7 Morris.
Parsoips-L,Ledia Foster, No. 9
Robina Young, No. II East
WaWalleS111 Wm Campbell No,
. Pk,
fp,
1-k•
t"The Net Cost...Life hisurance .Company” ... ....., „.. .... ;i.;;5
oh,
73 e .
it:,
WOW` t
00° 1,e-910.11 '
.. ..... -• ',..&,...tele
j.
teirei:: , t, ..... , ...........................
.... . .. ."10/1' CO -AG°
•
Titan- it-, . ...---” ... - otiett it .
eitsk •
Clip this .
O'S
•
. '...e ... .... e e e .v, ...... ;"; cost, 11
#41
i://4', t°dAY• 1,;.1 1 vs to tt,,e . „,,I.t.„,..,4 soFx.1 " ............ ... .. .. .......................... . . . ..... : ... ..
'er
.1,.„1..21. (.,117,,,tentIN....,11Milif.raill‘habralatifirgeta. testrifit"...."'...ealr'' tr'.6!".eilk''''''11....":......... Irar- Claillth:;;;I;Iii.11.2*/
.. : . . ....
............................................... . ....... . .. ,....
/Al Coupon and kW
ox. v 1 ......... ... ......... ,
' ......... . ...... . . ''. ... : ...... .11:11: ........................................... ..........T t7 ............. : ...... .... ...... ......................................................................................................................... ... • .....
,W1011haili 1401Iiii. vi I: 1
/
b.davees .. ', . " . yovta BUea iaist, ow,
ana a: A .1
,aterzoo, ario
• ,
,
Veal 'Ageul;
‘111 31
Nay. Issue
"11, II
0,11,1111
eminent
, .
$106:1066 aid .si000
AMP
COS44E1S
RF Estate
`d
uranee
Ins
Oet.
4 Wiest. )1,4,wanoSh; Isobel Fos-
ter, Ne:,.,! 9 LHiiricke'e'llarolel Foster;
No. 9 'goi.,q8k;t;„Al'eX RObertson, • No.
East yaftO.sh. „
BrOWn, No. 37
HOWick;;,"IOliel Foster No Howick;*
• ' othy No._„4 West WeeiranoSli.
•'Pen qf,itWo Rohert-
SOn, WaWanbsli.' •
'.0reen ''MotrifiainMiiel 'Elliott,
NO..1.4 Grey.
sh Cobbler2-eElnio Prichard, No,
4`,WaWadosh:, Newyn. McCauley, No.
3',Morris; Wm. Irwin, No. it 'East
Wawanosh; Jno Table, No. x Col-
bnrne; Lloyd McCauley; 'No. 3
'Maris. • ' •
• Dooley -Pearl Felker. No. 4 Grey'',
• Alex Loyns, No. 4 Wavvanosh; Got:- ,
I don Morrison, No. 4, Wawanosh;
Marion McCauley, No. 3 ,Morris; Al-
• Tin Potter, No. ix Turnberry.
Marrigolds --Stanley, Douglass, ;o.
.Tornberry; Kenneth 'I'hain No. 3• .
AShfield; Isobel Foster, No. 9 Hi:2w-
• icke Mae coulter, No, 7 Morris. .
, Turnips -;-.Alex Loyns, No. 4 Wa-
• wanosh; WM. Irwin, No. -a, East
Wawanosh; Norman Coulter, No. 7
, Morris.
Whea.t, x t --Walter, ;,:I,,ane, No.
,Ashficld; 4k. McDonagh, No. 5^
Ashfield, ,••
,
•
5 WAs,%e;eticisliewalm—.J.pAar.kMre,,,DNoonallG, No.
Grey.
Oats,1 t—Arthur Sinipson, No, 3
Ashfielde;1-larold Foster, N. ,9'How-
ielq: chas.„ McQuillin, N. 4.,Wawa-
,Posh;_j3ckson McCutcheOn, No, 4,
Grey; Alex. Robertson, No, Ix No.,
Wawanosh. •
Oats, sheaf --Harold Foster, No. 9
Howick; Chas McQuillin, NO. 4
Wawanosh; Jackson McCutcheon
1 NI); W4GaWan
rey;Abslhex. R°berts°11' No. II
E
' Barley, qt—Warner Andrews, No.
West Wawanosh; • Jno. S. McKay,
No. 3 Ashfield; Iglu) Redman, No. x
Colborne; Willie Irwin, No. 11 East
Wauranosh; Willie Treble No. 8 Col-
borne.
Barley, shea.f---Willie Irwin, No. it
E. 'Wawenosh;j. S. MeKay, 3 Asfield;
Willie Treble, No. 8 Colborne; no.
L. Currie, No. 9 East Wavvanosh,
• Sweet Corn ---Jean Higgins, No. 7
Luella'Rintoul No. 4 West
By Bert
arch&
•
Continued from 1
SYN 0 PS I
ter
• ,ri*
tgatA
bY re'Aitteie
• compelled";t
„, 14,0100"*OtoX'to
itwv*•,.
" * or,
tf,
eh ein:inea ta exOlahl, Y
teii„toele$11. YOU .1,0,1P5itellii
FaRioFtW*, 04,18100'W•
'8.4111104041,P.' oat ••
•' r'„Yo WA 'aeleet
letvOltet"-~Z Voulx1,1&"'„Ottn $4•4
0
Om* kliaal,,101,Wq#30-
toc.rvti,PT, 1101;d,°;titeb)rtirlq,
atheeel,WorentireipsfeZierFstfletenon 0.4,,nerornegerzephbeee atoistar !4rf! • .140.
..../te engage • to. Zeck arrow, o. Tenney neel • oerteeeteil-401 oingi gior,44,.,,.
estate. sob. , dip; • isv.set. . ,
11While,
ameet eareinneee,geeere.emzuey,er, wile Tor „
, the firint, time seemit rtre'enetice her
tractivenees:,BbOttly, attergard,.)at. his 're.
quest,: she 'becomes his private stenov,
replier, , After, etre,. msnths $fr.. Hush
V°198e0
an after, a etormr.... Boone,' in, tliot offico
•)2Vawarto'sli'.. • , . ,
Onions—Fred Lewis No. x3 How-
i6lc' and Turnberry; Isa.bel MacLean
'No. 12 Asnfield; Ma.rgaret Simpson,
No. 3 Ashfielde Marion McCauley,
No. 3 ,Morris; Lloyd McCauley, ,No.3
Morrie. Blair Gibbons No. 8 East
2
Wawanosh.
'Wren' House—Harold Foster, No.
9; Howick; Mareyn McCauley, No. 3
Morris; Glen Carrieron, No. 13 Ash-
field; Neil Irwin, • No, ix Turnberry;
Willie' Irwin No. It East Wawanosh
Stewart Lavis, No. 4 Wawanosh.
•.Patch sewn or; Grain -Bag—Nor-
man 'Coultes_ No, "9 East Wawanosh;
•'12.ogs McPherson, No. 4 Wawanosh
Norman•Coulter, No. 7 Morris;
Vetlyn McCauley, No. 3, 'Morris;
Walter Lane, No. 9 A.shfield; Glen
Cameron 'No. i.3 Ashfield.
Any 14,4del in Wood—Kelby Fos-
ter No. 9 Howick Alvin Miller, Nee
4 Wawatosh; Roy Errington, No, r
Colborne; Frank 'Horton, No. 9 Col-
•
b,N• oomr.naep.172nd.,
West. Wawanosh; Dorothy
class--Gra.harn McNee,
Higgins, No. 7 Morris; Carmen Farr-
ier, No. 14 West Wawanosh Agnes
Elliott, No. 4 Grey; Jessie Green, No.
34 Howick; Norman Coulter, No. 7
Morris,
Map, 3rd class—Ethel Nicholson,
No. 13 Ashfield; Olive Farrier No. 14
West Wawanosh; Blair Gibbons, No.
8 East Wawahosh; John Thompson,.
No. 14 Howick; Agnes Coultes, No. 9
East Wawanosh; Margaret Gibson,
No. t4 Howick.
Map, 4th. class—Mnriel'Elliott, No.
4 Grey; Rena Nicholson, No. 13 Ash-
field; ,Agatha Coultes, No. 9 East
Wawa.nosh; Adella. Here, No. 17 West
Wawanosh; Annie McDowell, No. 8
East Wawanosh; Neil Potter, No. IT
Turnloerry.
Writing, at class --Ralph Cameron,
No. 13 Ashfield; Isabel MeK.endrick,
No. 4 Ashfield; ,Margaret Parrish,
No. 15 A.shfield; Emily Brown No. 15
Ashfield; Charlie Anderson, No. 5
Ashfield; Jack Campbell, No. 1.7 West
Wawanosh.
Writing, 2hd class—Yelma Wheel-
er, No .17, Morris; Clara McDonald,
No 4 Ashfield; Ada Phippen, No xi
Turnberry; Dorothy Robertson, No.
e •
4 Ashfield; Alberta Shiell, No. 9
Wawanosh; Glen Cameron, No. 13
Ashfield,
t Welting 3rd clas--Margaret Wright
No. 14 Howick; Mabel Robinson, No.
34 Howick; Carmen Brown, No. 4
Ashfield; Zora Bolt, No. 8 East
Wawanosh; Agnes Coultes, No. 9
East Wawanosh; Ward Jewell, No.9
Colborne.
Writing, 4th class—Ruth Cole, No.
17 East Wawanosh and Morris; Jean
Sparling,, No. 18 Howick; Margaret
Sangster, No. 4 Grey; Jessie Camp-
bell, No. 7 Morris; Lila Gaunt, No. 4
Wawanosh; Malcolm \Webster No. 5
Ashfield.
Three buttonholes in cotton—Aga-
tha Coultes, No. 9 East Wawanosh;
Marion 3.1cCauley, No. 3 Morris;
Lila. Gaunt, No. 4 Wawanosh; Muriel
Miller, No. 4 Wawanosh; Isabel
Campbell, No, 7 Morris; Jessie Edgar
No. 4 Grey. .
• RUDE RURAL RHYMES
Poetic Lisence
'Hamel leaves her ernploYment, Vir. Bush
.kva,rning her ,he evoald mak& bor. sorr.,/,' for,
,.refusing . . • , ,
-rafi.4"iiii,11-Bveh makes an effort. bY
-a gift of flowers, to oqraProralso Hazel In
the nlinde ,„ of her friers:het She• ” returns
them. • Tbe^..e extday :Bush.' thrOwn team
his horse mid, fatally' hurt. He, sends for
ret*Seek,te titee;!;hirn,lbefora he
tithriev'days 'afterward, is '
nounced that he left:'it, legacy cif,: p,e0e, to
"in,.,,reparation,,,for anY ;wrong -X
have.dorte`ber."' Hazel recognizes at
pndC wilat'.eonstructioli'''011,13.11,:put opea
the .wordS. Bush bad' his revenge.
'turned in at the gate, 'bestowing a nod
:open Barrow and a keen glance at her
is he emiseed. , ,
very Person
WW
•,.
in this'Section Who is 'Weak, , Rundown, Sick or Nervous to Try This
. . .
Great ItilWiCine at Our Expense --Free Bottle Will - - -
b.. Givertto All Who Conne.14.rly.
All Have the Same Chance to Get Well and Strong ,
-- --- This ----is- an.._ invitation you.. can't 1 • Only yesterday your head mos] G L. Mathek, the 13. & 0. con-
,
Jefford to ignore'. Well teil --you' have felt dull and heavn You . had ductor, says he had rheumatism so
, ;why. We are going to give you a the "blues," were cross, nerveus bad that he had te,_ use -a cane ..to
'•-„ifree bottle of medicine that will and irritable; everything seemed o
•one you up and put an end to all go wrong and you couldn't tell why.
•: chances of indigestion, rheumatism, •It's ten to one -it was old dYspep-
eConstipation, catarrh and *kindred sia slyly getting in his work not
'enough to cause you pain, but' just
enough to dull your brain, rob you
of your vitality, upset your liver
and deplete your nerve force. May-
be you don't think so, but try a
bottle of Dreco and see if it doesn't
change "blues" to a bright, cheery
• The 'Medicine of which William'
'Brenson said, "It is the only medi-
• eine that eased my stomach and
•topped the gas, wiped away stom-
'; :itch troubles and put strength and
,iitality into my. blood."
- A 'highly efficient stoinach medi-
'Heine -made froni roots, herbs, barks,
i.i.leaves and a 'few other good things
•for the „nerves, stomach, kidneys
bevvels. :
•
You„may be starving. your blood
.the,midst of plenty. It isn't „how
•'Much you eat that' colinte, but it's
• how you digest' the food you eat.
Yen,' cannot get ,itearn out, of
--water without fire; you' Can't get
• brain.power, nerve foxce, and red
blood corpuscles out of toed with-.
'yl.eutedigestion,,
ThouSentis lack sefficient vital
•$orce and doxi't knew why. „ They
'think they' need 'a tonic, a vaeation
or. a change of scenery, but- they
don't. It's old indigestion that's the
; matter with, thein and siX.: days Of
tweet) Will 'preVe,it.1-:,They 'don't get
-7',1 the 'strength but • of their food: It's
'I like running corn through the mill
•',with the rollers too wide apart, the
•^ corn goeS'::' through but the rnill
doetn."V grin&
DON'T THINK -YOU INCITST131,A,Irt
•A-P.A.0110 HAVE INDIGESTION
. ,
pimples,• blotelieS, sallOWVorrifilexion,
lack linpoverished
`blood, , neiv force, headtiehes; beck- red, make, tbs' old world laugh 'in
nehee,, eideathea,,,,wealt brain. Power! it 'Itlem.glee;.aaa Put 'le* lig" Sou
goy . miens, SlideItiOitine134Ore ,76111.''',407.,ag•P41*
iht. eyes, may all . due to the Lewis' '''A; 'Todd, the trevelling
'faulty digestive Awocats,• either in salesman, had stoneach 'trouble ,SO
*litcatoinakh hOWeliee., • ,•bed.• he practically had to live
Take Dreco With4Otit'other.,;/eodi te couldnot eveA„ „eit
itor vie& and tixid-oiit Our: "ii.dgeteblea Without satering terrible
digestive organs • are World/1g," If pain: 'llehtook two • bottles of Drieeo•,
"• the Dreco helps you greatly,,,gives And eon new eat anything he wants
u move fate, strength and,''bralit: ,andyWithentarry distress whatever
ionyt,eritogtvh rrov, .settr. .de'yyh 14 —sounds like a miracle'? Well, We
your liver Arid Vo+itela 'not& have',Igro;4ToddiWirier,p;.,,:a•i,ga,ed', 1400-'
big their day: omit• tAlst,:c144
WAintON itieKinapN.S thr,"18
get around at all. On s
tourtfl
bottle of Drew he said: "I ern now
feeling- fine,— have thrown away
my cane." These are only two of
hundreds, yes thousands.
• TEST THIS MEDICINE FREE“
,pft::T.O.LO. NURSE..TAKE DRECO
Crippled Up By Rheumat-
ism So She Had to Hold on
,tolganisters—Feet Swollen,
tiMba, Ankles, Elbows Full
of Pain.
Mr. Sufferer, have you ever hear&
of the wonderful. medicine that
talks, that really -tells you
what it ,Can do — that's DreedS•
Five nainuteS, after. You take -
medicine begins to unfold ,its
tues, and it will by .actual derniexee
station,' unfold to you ,more
•gard to, its merits in ten mintites
than We could probably make yon
believe it we wrote you. ten bookS
as large as the dictionary.
"Words cannot tell you how glad
we are for Dreco,4 declared Mrs:
Tre,asa Copley. "The first bottle
fbted me up," said. 'IA/alter F. DhEori.,
"Am a changed man, now,". states
Rev. Joseph L. Butler, ,
•
You • May know something a
these people,orknow inomebody who
knows them. We'll Send ,you their
bill, Addresses if you wants them,
so that you can fhid, out about
Dreco and ...tile wonders • it has
:wrought.
Probably you are now, thinking
Ntdrether, all this can ,be frue;;,stpP,
'COme ;once to ,thh P1,31SIS4
listed below.' :Ifere7:low will reqeive,„
ahthintely free, -a •good-sized,bottie,
,Thig, Offer ,OpenJ to•
overt man antV-Wohiarl- in this,
W,V.' 546re ax.itino:ifSi-andS4iir.blita
tigached1:,,,tn; it, , i6idept that • you
'come early' ladoii'the,09nerona
ply of free1i?O41et )18,V liaeit'usedth
0114;4Orili :415V4'. tin`Y*ing if
iY.01122 Alnert ,YreeriVr..to '0,?..ife la
that ,yop,:stop,,In,. an. d ,tedt, tiziC
deed ;medicine, ;end see' ,for yourLi
self what if,deen „do, frors, yen.. 8O.
please tome 4,4 0474Y, 45, Possible; '
"I am writing
to say a few
w,ords in
praise of your
wonderful
medicine, Dre-
co. I have
, often been
asked to en-
dorse this or
that medicine,
but always re-
fused, but Dre-
co is differ-
ent," said Mrs.
D. S. Shun--
Yiins of 1442 Law Avenue, Evans -
Ville, Indiana. '
"I have suffered greatly from
'rheumatism ana ..becn' treated by ex-
,cellent physibians,,finally tiied a
'change of. climate, but 'always my
relief, was iemporary, 'While ,nurs-
ing, doctors pity me, say-
ing should be 'the one in bed
With a 'nurse to attend me. My
feet were • so swollen and painful
r could hardly, keep my shoes cm,
my ankles and liras were, uo ,soro
and Stiff I had a, limn in tny walk.
often had ,darlt,circles, under my
eyes and'that tired look in thim:
"Constipation was a source • of
igreat,• annoyance 'and. I couldn't
•Sectire relief , from. it. 3,, was often
nauseated and had repulsion a*
the sight of ;food, ,•
" 10.4tCY tot feelings• are entirely ,
changed. have taken Phro 'bottles
Ist:.•',Dreco arid ,X,,;401 `134ter
,the doctor told me to keop,
, it. tEveryv ache, and' Ain''
tblOriger'ipliiseate ,
from the .
Barrow sourly. "Oorne on
t let's get".aWaY treed'. here.' SuPpoSee
heir' after ye,u'ifor nneinterilevi,"'
Iry ',Pert,14#04, Mtot/ 9M. "„1.,
beeagiOaratbiogr:',Ioetwea#;4",,,*•;:ah
131101411, *-11
a,47O dLji tri r
about my not 'treating. rtnl, ison°
explainineetheie,,things?!., A
, • •..!%; alitort larik01 Yu440;7JE)Iilliig ;#4IC .
;Wetly, -"Mr: %Inlets
bim„
"Y:ou,::refifsedl'1' Betio* iateerOtiellie
Wo*4112
tatneil:fit hinf,,
Ztgbtetethe" starteShe faundhereelf
• leserstitig ,Barrew's ',tone;
:She hadedionenothingete. weeritnt2eas-'
'Picion -.teem '; But she loVed
' and She- hoped the Could. eonlvine.e ?Ora,.
It was rid mere than teptieeing,
sa' tness for -which ihee was
p ea 13 :
•
wise td'hlexiie.
•• "Heng '10'1 Barrow growled,' before
they traVersed 'ketile.-41rzt
"Here Comes, Grinell ! „mippose -that
'.old cat peinted,•ins..ont,
No dedgrfig bine now.".' ,..„ •
• 'There's no :earthly reason -why '
shOniii dodge him, as you pint' it," Hit
zel replied Stutiy.' "Pisf. net anescaped
, .
linpped itt t,e ehiCf'T
.".,"Tack 11.1 she
• #eiii,„'.•i;,Bnr,r9vi,,Ii'defeadial.,•,,-alie, ,*010„
eiMest.,
•teg „•,..bnt, -my ;hands a�TW
suPpose• yoU did'
that account Ter the. five theuenad,,74010
lare1" • • ,e"•.-Ett-t„ree'tqf
,
'"I thielr," Hasel fiuscgebeelcepaSitioately*..
•111 'let you In that ,"tentleie...•...
Yourself; ;YOU'Va'oid.eii„Ona#,0 te
make me' irattk,You alineat' ' YikOf •Versp
wcbottle30C,Iliteep aft17,110 1
Ou11-1,
• „
i
.BarrOw Shrugged his shoulders in
way that made Hazel bring her teeth
together and want to shake hen. •
Grinell , by ;then wale hurrying up
with long strides., gat in ,hand, he
bowed to, her., "Miss gaze]. Weir,'
• believe?" be interrogated,
, "Yes," she confirmed. •
"I'm on the Times, Miss Weir,"
Grinell went straight to the business In
hand. '"You are aware, I presume,
that Mr. Andrew Bush willed yell a
• sum of money under rather peculiar,
zonditions—that 16, the bequest was
„Worded in it peculiar way'. •Probably
you luive,seen Eeferoyiee to 'it in the
papers., It has canied. it great deal of
.intereet The Times would be pleased
to have it statement from you *bleb
„ will tend to set et rest the curiosity' of
• the , Seine of the other papers
have inclulgedip Unpleasant innuendo.
We would' be plelased to publish. your
side of the matter:"
"I have no statement to make," Ha-
zel said coolly. "I am not the least
concerned with what the papers print
or what the people say. I absolutely
refuse to disease the matter."
Grinell'eentfaued to point out—with
the Persietence lied persuasive logic of
e good newspaper man bent 021 learn-
ing what his paper wants to know—
the desirability of her giving forth a
statem-ent And in the midst of his
argument Hazel bade him it curt "good
evening" and walked on. Barrow kept
step with her. Grinell gave it up for
a bad job, evidently, for be turned
ha cit.
They walked five blocks without it
word. Hazel glanced at Barrow now
and then. and observed with MI '01100111-
fartablP sinking of the heart that ht
-.: es sullen, openly resentful, suqpi.
•
'Jo! 'I): u'She said surld,,nly
tot,ir so cross. Surely you (Axil
'M'an'ner's„an,lasult." „. „ '
"If ypu, on t like mY„
Barrow .,retorted,gtOriailY. ,.;„:„.7:14,1„. to, ,
eIrt • senterme r'Oid ;at
her. ,Ther.twin d.eytia. of.4,esdenet
distrust were- Ides ,-)ier,eC7and it
5110
ixd
_ost: lo."1::nei srife aiaegpileirel ttdas1.11 e It,nsi :nrir vtohl:feu00xiutnd
:0;
•
•
What 'did Mat -ter; ineyWaY„?,'She'svaii
itOO
add .ftiel go, the :fieree.. . • t ; 3,,
Sh
,tInvc.;Soe.?ileS,..tvgi,otrieitenx,Pligle'4,1tish. not' ened,
:heat
up,behin(i.,.,, She Ceu .
• • ' -Id nelinagine hiss
bitnnik Lhr .1* -41,11
pot come, and when, 'at diStariee',•et,
'two 151delis"the sthle 'heckwaroli
,glauce, he bed disapPeared. '
She rethened to the boarding -house.;
The parlor dem- , stood. Nviaa;- and, the
eurious, quickly averted glairee .0, it
girl she knew sent her qnlve,ring -up te
her room. There -was only :One cheer
,fsuhte gbieenurnev. Sed thhea.tIohleeed 1.9j.vsieck4. 1430.47;a76.
she could not believe—she. ;salad net
conceive—him capable of .ekeepints
aloof, obdurate and unforgiving,,, once)
'he got out of the black mood he wa$, in.
--• She was still sitting;by the winiltow,
watching the yellow crimson 9tet,he
sunset,- when someone rapped, atelsee
door. A uniformed messenger hor,
greeted her when she:opened , it
• "Package , for Miss Haeel
She signed the delivery 'sheet. The
eddress an the package was In Jackli
handwriting. A box of chocolates,
or some little peace offering, maybes
That Was like jeck when he'wes sorrY,,
for anything.,• They had quarreled he.
relie,y,
st*C.633
jtureandi, AIM 'In •
ittt re'3*a'Sei *day ch,
1 Viiigyleited frefit'st.,?:hefort.
.:glve, all the credit,Or Itti?\*eatit, .
Ilet'^ek'PreedeIntel ttiOheSitnatinglY. re-
leto EiVairkone,''Wbo)trIfffaas
IlietillsainPlet0 given;
•
'plkol.**y YoUL0
."
'arrV y,
e loons of ir0*.ed
volt itow
.„
• • There lived one' time a poet cuss
whose low -brow 'wish comes clown to -
us, that women had one common
Mouth which he might kiss froth
north to south., Admiring all female
creation I still would use discrimina-
tion. You know „sometimes these
poet fellcievs blow lots of hot air from
their bellows, and in•the songs that
bards have Sting we see that many
like therie young. They have a taste,
for 's^ditabe • and chicks and all their
'little 'flapper tricks. Nor is youth all
.for 1 opine rrnost bards would draw
the col& ,line; And as for me 1 like
sonbraihs; I do not care for silly
Janes:' I slitin the feminist and Tar-
tar, the whiner and the ehronic mar-
tyr:' DeliVer me froth home peace
'Wreekers, from tennagante and all
hen-peckeis. ,,This bard is no poly-
,gatiligt;• ;few are, the moutlae 1IO ever
'kissed. In all the charms that he
Aitbuild -choose, his ptesent • wife juSt
meets his •views; have rib bailer
• in her shoes, Erbm Sart • nancisco
to Satannah „ there, • is no` oilier girl
• like iltiannah., Ati f the • iatts Were
otherwiee 1 vttoufd, invent Seine pious
• 1105, Aor, ift that gentle; lady .bit me,,Mte
stoek, sizeecrowti, wotild eve fit 'file;
yea;',.` when , ;t reached , the Aitaventy
boder,theY*d niake a diadem Id or-
der; aU ti11 of curves and eirqoks and'
lumps- with 'nide soft ',padding ter friy,
'Weeps. DOR ADA.US,
;lime me because Mr. Bush wills too it
•um of money in a way that makes
reimle wonder?"
"1 can't understand It at all," he
slowly. "It's very peculiar—and
Ieticedly unpleasant. Why should he
enve you money, at all?" And why
thould he word the will as he di...?
'Aqua wrong did be ever do
"None," Hazel answered shortly. HIS
tone wounded lier, cut he deep, so
1,1Mient was it Of distrust. "The only
•rong he has done me lies In willing
that money as he did."
"Butthere's on explanation , for
het," Barrow declared moodily.
'there's a key to the mystery, and if
insnody has it you have. 'What is it?'
"3aelt," Hazel pleaded, "don't take
hat time with me. 1 can't stand tt--I
woret.• I'm not 41 little -child to bq
geolded and browbeaten. This Inton-
ing when you ,telepborteil'irOIA evere al-
most Insulting, anti it hurt me dread -
tinily. You're angrynow, and enalPl-
dome You seem to think f tintit'have
done some dreadful thing. 1'Inter
vvilat yotere thinking. The Gazette
hinted et some %fair' between me and
Mr. Bosh ; that possibly that was a
Sort of left-handed reparatio3 for ries'
ining mt. If thet didn't melte me ett.
gry, It would amuse go, nhou,
you any faith fa Me' tteall,
46'40: done anything to be scheMod
of. I've gef"nOthitig to' einieest"'
"Don't eoneeel it, then," Perrot"
muttered sulkily. "I've got 13. right 00
know Whatever there IS to Imo* If
I'm going to 3n11r yu, toe; don't
• t� hevo any blew what ,thle saki
of talk that' gning eiretind - UAW& toe
• Mail."
fore—over trifles, too:
She opened it hastily. A swift heart -
sinking followed. In the small card.
board box rested a folded -scarf, and
thrust in it a small gold stickpin—
the only thing she had ever given
Jack Borrow. There was no message.
She needed -acme to understand.
The sparkle of the small diamond
on her finger drew her gaze. She
worked his ring over the knuckle, and
dropped it en the dresser-, Wiler-e Hui
face in the .silver frame smiled up at
ben She stared at the picture for one
hong minute fixedly, with unchanging
expression. :mil saddenly site swept
It from the dresser with a savage
sweep of her hand. dashed It on the
floor, and stamped It shapeless with
healippered heel. -
And thea she thing hersetf across
the bed and sobbed hysterically ilatto
.
Through the night Hazel dozed fit-
fully, waking out of unettsy sleep
to
lie staring, wide-eyed; into the dark,
every nerve In her body taut, her mind
ebnormelly active. Grief atd wager
,
14
;lung Herself Aereee the Bed and
Sobbed Hysterietally Into a Pillow.
I3 y tarns mastered her, titid t day-
,reelc she:rose, heavy -lidded and nhys-
cully weary.
The'llrat thing tinim which bet gaze
slighted was the erunnoled photo lb its
sitaffered tilireee and., sitting be the
side of her bed, she laughed at the
sudden fdry, , in wbiels tithe had a,.
stroyed httt there 4,vorts no Mirth
liar latigbters '
itomktiggfoi'd isied )
•S
331