The Signal, 1933-3-2, Page 6r '7711111,71771117"7 ,
'7
THE SIGNAL
11—Mhersday. March 2*d, 1983
TRY 017R
coe1.611 CliernSeY
MILK.
VIEW
Table Cream and
Whipping Cream
Safe, because it is all pro-
duced from a Government-_
inspected Herd.
)
1k. Tour petionage solicited
Ildlanns Dairy
...mai
-
CO
•
Elam the demi of navigation it
1. hop000loto so powers any fur-
ther WOWS et Wait Coal. un.
YR naylgatiamopens again in the
AWN -
la the smagthee we eta supply
Tilt with the Meet (MAO a
ANIHRACITII,, POCAHONTAS
" AND COKE
FLICK
THE WIRE DEVIL
FRANCIS LYND&
(Copyright by Charlie 9cribners Sone, )912. Altillarrangement
e with the Literary Digest Newspaper eyndicate
ettRoPliis
Connolly, the fat train dispatcher,
Bolton, the night man on the car-re-
eord wire, and Calmalne, chief clerk,
were sitting together talking when
the sounder clicked out the horrifying
news that the Apailie tAndted wee-
ditthed at Lobo Out with both en-
gines crumpled up. Connolly sent
Bolton to fetch Mr. Maxwell, tbe divi-
sion superintendent, who 'vas enter-
thin,ng a friend, Calviu Sprague, at
the nearby hotel. Within an hour,
Maxwell had mobilized a wrecking -
trate with doctors and nurses.
Sprague asked to go along with Max -
rheas 1710
pah until 1 could go after her? That
le a pretty peas for things to come to,
lan't it?—when • man is afraid to have
the members of his family ride over
his Own partkular piece 01 rail -
sued?"
- Sprague dipped the ash /roe!
cigar, saying: -That is one et UN
bridges you don't have to cross until
you come to R."
"But you do cross them, whether
you want to or not. I have lost more
sleep over this wire business than I'll
be able to make up in a month. It
is • weaknees, I'll admit, but I have
never been of the tribe of those who
well on the wrecking -train. At 185 can shuck their bueiness worries
mouth of the canyon the wrecking when they shut their desks at the end
train narrowil eivesPed teleeroPing of tbe day."
and being telescoped by another train, Sprague laughed.
which turned out to be the Apache
You ought to have some nice easy
job -like mine, for example; no care,
no responsibility. Falling thet--and
1 come you have failed it—you ought
to oultleate repose, laisees faire, and
all that, you know. That is why I
have grown so much since you knew
me in College. Nothing llke taking it
easy to put the good desh on your
bonee, and nothing like worries for
taking it off."
Tie little frowu of anxiety disap-
peared from its place between the
superintendent's eyes, which was per-
haps the result that Sprague was
&leen/ at.
"You are a whale of a man, Cal-
vin; there is no denying that," he
said "You don't have to ask for
you lemmings; youcan reach up and
take 'ern off the perch yourself. But
coming back to this snarl of ours"—
he couldn't keep away from It. try as
he might—"Pin tremendously sorry
it had to be trailed back to Connolly.
I call myself • fair judge of men, and
Connolly is one that I would have
trusted with anything I have in this
word. It is a good bit uneettling to
Bnd that you've made • mistake—an
impression of Archer Tarbell. I ve egregious mistake—in your estimate
taken quite • fancy to that 7001111 of I man."
Limited, the very train that had been
reporled dliebed 'at Lobo Cut Then
Yemen told Sprague that for a
month fake reports of wrecked trains
had been coming In over the wires.
What the motive of the wire devil
was it hard to say Sprague, who
was a government chemistry expert,
but who occasionally did amateur de-
tective work, offered to stay over in
order to help Marwell to get to tbe
bottom of the thing. Maxwell and
Sprague conferred with Tarbell. the
railroad detective, and Sprague
turned the case over to Tarbell be-
fore the following evening, laying be
was through with his pert of 11.
Maxwell seemed frightfully unnerved
by the mystery of the faked wires.
• • • _
CEIAPTER T_
blegolag..._ e
.--
sprague th' irmokfilir-peacefeliy.
WE CARRY A 1lMP
STOCK OF
Electrical Appliances,
It was perhaps too much to expect
that • man whose problems were
chiefly in the field of laboratory
scieeee should tw very deeply inter-
eatert in one in which the elements
were merely human. When be evoke
again it was to recur to les favorable
GODERICH, ONT.
In the lobby space outside of the
conuter riillng tbree or tour train-
men were grouped in trout of the bal.
natio board 'oohing fur their assign-
ments on the uight trains and thimb-
les. the Me ef ra1.ergeice."
leshind tbe Connolly was sit-
ting at his glass-toppod wire table
with the train sheet uuder Ids hand
and the superintendept at his elbow.
Over in a center, wider kW green-
thaeed electric bulb, Bolton, the mal-
low -faced car -record man, was finger-
ing the keys of his typewriter.
Tarbell opened the gate is the rail-
ing to admit Sprague and himself.
_Maxwell looked up and nodded a wed-
-
come to hiti guest.
"(Jot tired of tattles It out aloes,
did you?" he said; and then: "Ill be
with you in • minute and well go
over to my office. I'm waiting to get
Timanyoni Canyon's report of the
Limited."
"Mrs. Maxwell is on the grater
Sprague asked.
GREAT BOOKS RESTFUL
Wee Mocirest.aa filernimilM`4i2kee
Those That Marilirtood the
Teas of lime.
"Some one, 1 think 11 was Isaac
,Dieraeli. said that he who lid not
make himself acquainted with tte
best thoughts of the politest writers
would one day be mortified to ob-
serve that his best thoughts are
their indifferent ones." writes Vis-
count Grey ot Falloden in "Recrea-
tion," ''and it is f rom the great books
that have Mood the test of time tbat
we shall get, not only the most tast-
iest pleasure, but • standard by
which to measure our own thoughts.
Wi thoughts of others, and the ex-
eillenos f tbe literature of our Owe
day.
"Some years ago, when I was OW
Mary tor Foreign Affairs In law
fellow," he said in conclusion. Hell
pull you out of the hole --with a little
timely help from the newepapers.
When he gets the ball into his bands
and Marts down the field with it
ou'd hest tw prepared for some pret-
sensational developments. They
due."
r a little while Maxwell said no -
and the line lines between his
nod slowly Into • frown of
Fin•Ily he said: "I've got
Calvin—the 'Mimics: I
Wife and two kiddies are
e on the Apache tonight,
u know I had half •
her to ',top over in Co -
Telephone 82 — Ooderich
ti
.7
5111e
coming
and don\
mini to
Sprague's laugh at this was a de-
risive chuckle.
"You can't let the wire -devil burl -
flees alone, even for a little frleedly
talk with an old chum, can you? All
right; I give up."
Maxwell got out of his chair and
refused Sprague's offer of a_ fresh
cigar. -
"No," he said, "this has bees one
of the days when I have =eked too
much. I am going over to.the office to
keep a finger on the pulse of things.
When it gets too dull for you over
herr e come aerose and break in. If I
am not in my office, you will find me
In remam 11—the dispatcher's—keep
ring cases on the movements of the
" Apache Limited."
Fiely Iwo hours beyond the time
Wort tts:-eitherintendeatedetha-i:Alaced
fterosolpnrsei `etraiii Veer vett,
of .he headquarters building. Tarbell,
strolling along the plam-fronting
street. swung !linnetf over the railing
of the Hotel Topaz loggia porch and
took the chair next to the man from
Washington, who was sitting AA Max-
well had left him, and still smoking.
"1 hnve been waiting for you," said
the pstient smoker. without taking his
eyes from the row of lighted windows
in the railroad building across the
plaza.
-I allowed you would be," Tarbell
-Tended, in hie gentle. Tennessee
lain drawl. Then. quietly: "I
i I found the answers to all
thion opeations you 'lo(ted to me. I
reckon 111,,ve got him."
"I've II betting on you, Archer,
my boy.- s the word of approval.
'rlien: "1 , lee 'petty near home,
doesn't it
"ft sure dots. And it's goin' to
hurt Mr. Maxiell good and plenty.
Ile counts the men in the home
of& e as members of hie family. and
there's never h..en One 4). them to go
hack on him till now."
-What Pi your evideneer- SWAIM
asked.
'I reckon you'd call it eircumstan-
tial--and mo will be the judge. But it
hoterles hint all right. just the same.
There's • mit-in on the dispatcher's
wires over yonder, ay 09 'leder the
loot' where nobody'd find it, with four
111' flee lead wires goin' down the
wall. 1 couleia't lind where they
come out at, hut I reckon that don't
meet. any difference; they're there."
"Anything else?"
"Yes. I've got • letter that I
hooked out of him coat pocket not ten
Minute Igo: a letter from same gang
110.4 o' Mien in New York. girth' him
Koss for not showin' texulte, •nd
allowin' to pull Rome sort of a gun on
him if the pothers don't begin to print
*care heads about a vertain railroad
ma nagement pronto."
The government chemistry expert
mailed shrewdly.
"l'im ere not the young man I take
you for, Archer, if you are not wring -
ins vour brain like a wet towel to
make it tell you why anybody In New
Yorr ohould wish to nee Nevada Short
bine wreck bulletins in the newspap-
ers."
'Mutt ain't no joke, neither," Tar
hell admitted gravely. adding: "I
been hopin' maybe it would tome out
in the round -up."
-VPA:' P4141 epregue half sheently.
it will come out in the round•np."
And then. after a thoughtful panne:
"Perhapri we'd better go over and re-
lieve. Mr. MAIWPWA mind. But Arid
it wouldn't be A had idea to telephone
18. editor of the 'Tribune' and ask
him to pond hi. ra tiered reporter
.rienen to .Mr. Maxwell's °eke. If joo
31110.1de, totri- TIE 7,-.-43.1114;
have a im et -page atoll' or 'him;
working headquarters of the deuble
divisions
Tirben went into the hotel lobby
to telephone. and sfterwerd they
ernood the plass tnarther to the
working headqnarters of th• doable
(Brinier'
Finding the anperIntentienes Miler
open and lighted, hut annernpled.
they went on to the dispatcher's room.
Maxwell nodded, and a moment lat-
er Connolly's sounder clicked out
Timanyoni Canyon's report of the pass-
ing train. The fat dispatcher was
nervous. It showed in his rattling of
the key as he 0 K'd the canyon ela-
tion's report,. and grain in a small
disaster when, in reachIng for bis pen
to make the train sheet entry, he
ove,set his Inkwell.
With a 'fluttered malediction on his
own awkwardness, be snatched at the
train sheet, pushing the ink flood
ba,•k with his free hand. Maxwell
came to the rescue, and so did Tar -
bell, and a liberal application of
blotters .topped the flood. But at
the close of the incident Connolly%
hanim were well blackened.
was at this moment that Davis.
the thief dispatcher, ceme in on his
W57 to his room in the attic half -
story above. Connolly appealed to
him at once.
"If you'll sit In here, Davis, just
for a minute, while I go wash my
hendsr he said, addlag:"I'd ought to
be kicked all the-we—rabwnstalrs for
doing a thing like that!"
When Deets had taken the chair
and Connolly had gone out, Daniell
whispered to the superintendent.
Maxwell nodded, and made a idgn to
Sprague. After he had closed the
door of the diepatcher's room' behind
hinmelf and his guest, he explained.
"Tarbell says he is ready, and we
may as well have it over with. Ibo
you want to be present?" letapire• as an instance of one such
"As a chance spectator, yes," said book. wtech bad an atmosphere of
creations into which one passed out
of the worries of party politics and
official strife Such books ta.ke one
away to another world where one
finds not only pleasure. but rest.
"I must warn you that Gibbon ban
Sunday Afternoon
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J. Calvin Cutt
To be of greater service, Lord,
A clover student of Thy Word,
To help bear a brother'''. load
To help to bear a brother's load
And cheer him on the heavenly road.
To tell the lost of Jesuslove
And how to reach tbe home above,
To tenet in God whaner
Be ready at the Master's call
For any task that He may give,
And thus through all the year to live
For illan who gave Himself for me
And taught me that my life should be
A life uneeltIsh, not self-wilied.
But with the Holy Spirit filled!
—illedeeted.
TEDOOUNT
SANT •
land, viten holtdays were OM bag
la coming, short and precious when
they did come, when work was hard
and exhausting and dinagreeable. I
found it a good plan when 1 got
limn* to my library in the eouatry to
have three book' on hand tor recrea-
tion. One of them used to be one of
tbose great books of all time dealing
with treat events or great thoughts
of past generations. I mention Gib-
bon's 'Decline and Fall of the ROOOLE
"Ail right; we'll go to way °Mee
aod wait for Archer." _
The waiting interval peeled to be
"host. Maxwell had juat thrown him
roil -'op desk open, and the govern- been called dull. It ts alleged that
mete man had planted his big bulk Sheridan. • man of brilliant wit, said
solidly in the half -shadowed window so, and when a friend reminded him
seat, when the door opened and Con- that in a famous speech he had paid
nopy came in, eda reit-moon teee a Gibbon the compliment of speaking
frightened wane and eta band mde of the luminous page of Gibbon.'
ink blackened. Tarbell was only e'it Sheridan said he must have meant
step behind the dispatcher, and the 10 557 'voluminous.'
"The second of my books would
rep irter from the "Tribune" was at eke
oe an old book, a novel which
Tarbell's -heels. When the three were bsd bees apyeroyed by neensnetee gen_
inakle Tarbell shot the doer an& Put erations. Tbe third would be some
bis back against it. modern book, whether "meow or
14,61941650112O;Metlk asealsokr..4,4)14
be said briefly: and' "relesslii
lied started to his feet at the door ars excellent, Rat there ars slimy la
opening, mat dowe again In the dui. **kand neither plethorab 213K7
dow and Plaid nothing. nor profit. 0 our leisure is short we
have not mach time to experiment
Maxwell pointed brusquely to a It is worth while to cultivate a few
(-hair at the desk end. "Sit down. friends who„ intettivnice we me
Dan." he snapped. And then: "I respect end whose taste is rempitthe-
suppme you know what you're here tic and who read, and to get from
for?" them from time to time the names of
Connolly fell into the chair as if modern boots which they have read
the sharp command had been a blow. aad tound good."
"Know what I'm here for?" he
WAR ON GEIRDIS.
stammered.
• • •
PRATER
Our Father. may we so live that
when thou colloid tut to special service
we may be found ready. In Christ's
name. Amen.
• • •
& B. LESSON POW MAWR 12, 1933
Lessen Teple--ilthas 110thstirsiirg to the
Multitude.
Lathe Pathage--Mark 8:96-44.
• Text--Matibew 28:28.
Tbe feeding of thevtioist4reusand is
one of the few miracle* which
are narreted to us by all four of the
Evangellate. The novel journeying' of
the apostles, the agitation of his own re-
cent conflicts. the burden ot that dread
intelligemee which had just reached
Itim, the constant pressure a a fluctu-
ating multitude which absorbed all
their time, once more rendered it
necesary that the little company should
recover the tone of their spirits by a
brief period a rest and solitude.
"Come ye yourselves," be maid, "apart
into a desert place, and rest awhile."
. Dig tbeir going did not pose unob-
served, and VI not rirtilibrittlffnown.
It is but six miles by sea from Caper-
uaum ei the retired and desolate shore
which was their deatinetion. The lit-
tle vemet, evidently retarded by un-
favorable winds, made Us way slowly
et no great dietance from the shore.
and by the time it reacbed tbe ahore
the ob)ect which their Master's kind -
Use had deetred for his apostles was
completely frustrated. Some of the
multitude bad already outrun the me-
wl, and were throntrine *hoot the
landing plum when the prow touched
the pebbly shore, while in the distance
were seen the groups; of Paiebover pll-
grime who were attracted out of their
course by the increasing celebrity a
IMA UBIEDOWO prophet Jesus was
touched with compaselon for theta be-
cause they were sheep not having a
shepberd. We may conjecture that on
reaching the land be and his die-
cipirs climbed the hill gide, and there
waited till the whole muitttade had
assembled. Thee descending anion(
them, he taught them many things,
preaching to them of the kingdom of
beaven, and heating the sick. The day
woe* on; tilveady the sun WIIP sinking.
Yet the multitude lingered, charmed by
bat -healing voice and ttL, those holy
tF,Morto!ti.•,„ehulmateithIliatat
come upon them, the Maniples begat tb
be anxious and celled the Master's at-
tention to the unpreparednthe of the
people. But his compassion Lad al-
ready foreatelled their anxiety and he
commanded them to make all sit
down.
Wondering and expectant, the epee -
tin bade the multitude recline, as for
a meal, on the rich green grans which
In that pleasant springtime clothed the
billptidee. And thenstanding in the
melte of his guests, glad -hearted .1 18.
work of mercy which he Intended to
perform. Jetting raised his eye* to hea-
ven, gave thanks, 'deemed the 'mem.
broke them Into pieces, *04 8.960 to dis-
tribute them to his disciples, and
they to the multitude; and the two
&dies divided he among them all. It
wax a humble Not a iinfikient. and to
hungry wayfarers a delicious meal he
caused..th......he handed out to them.
And when all were abundantly satis-
fied. Jeans. net only to show him din-
ciplem the extent and reality of what
had been done, but also to teach them
the memorable lesson that WiletelUl•
DMA, even of miraculous power, is
wholly alien to the divine econority,
bade them gather up the fragments
that remained, that nothing might
be kelt
In John's account of this narretive
VIP read that "when they had men tbe
miracle that Jesus did. thaw men meld.
This 1s of a truth that prophet that
!Mould eOMP into the world." Jesus
marked their undiesruissed admiration
and immediately wet about diernimming
them. find having mineralised his dis-
ciples to embark In their boat ; JPROA
then went np to the hill -top alone to
• pray (o, through eommtmion with him
Father, nerve Ms pool for the bitter
eonflict he knew to be chow at hand.
(Condensed from Farrar's Life a
iChriat.)
68 I bs Gone Altogether
• woman writes: "For nearly
three years I have been taking Krug-
chen Salts every morning in bot wa-
ter, and han lort eft lbs. of fat. My
weight before taking them was 196
lbs., and It is now 12t4 lbs. Compare
the Olfferetice—it is marvellous. He
mother and slider are also tablas
Krtiechen and Lots of our friegids.
think they ars wouderful. As regards
diet, it 1s not oecessary to du one
little bit of dieting; in my case I have
never denied myeelf anything since I
started taking Kruschen Salts. I
vralk every day, and do not eat many
potatoes or much sugar. I don't think
I than ever be StaMfel enough to
Kruschen Salts for tbe great help
they have been to me, sad shall never
atop taking them, or mcommeuding
them to people 1 think need them."—
(Wm) K. T.
Taken every morning. Kruschen ef-
fects • perfectly natural clearance ot
uadieested lood substances and ail
excessive watery waste matter.
lets this wastage is regularly expelled,
Nature will eventually store 11 up out
of the way la the form of ugly fat.
"Yes. Nothing will be gained by
dodging. You may as well come clean.
You've been faking these scare -wreck
reports—don't lie about it; we've got
the evidence. I want to know who is
behind you. Who bribed you to do
this thing?"
"More God,- Mr. Maxwell," the cul-
prit began, with the sweat rolling
down hie face; but Maxwell stopped
him with an impatient gesture.
"I have told you it is no tube to try
to Ile out of it. I have here on tny
de* a letter whicb was taken f rom
your coat pocket tonight since you
came on duty; a letbn from Which
you were careful enough to tear the
mignature, hut on which you were not
careful enough to destroy the date
111M. In that letter the writer threat-
ens to give you away to the New York
police if you don't get busy and give
the newapapers a string of Nevada
Short Line wrecks to write about.
That is enough to Rend you over the
road, but there ia more. The working
wires east and west have been cut
under the roof of this building and
leaders taken off. 'the leader& dibutp-
pear in the wall bath of your bedroom
in the attic. I don't salt you what
you have to say for yourself; I want
you to tell um, right here and now,
who planned the thing and what it
war intended to secomplimh."
Connolly had (wen idowly collapsing
In her chair tinder the merciless fire of
*cremation, and the pokily pallor was
driving the lant vestige of pink out of
lta round face.
A silence crammed .vIth threaten
Ines settled down up. n the office.
Suddenly it wan broke', by the mond
of -iurried footfallm in the corridor,
and Tarhell was hurl. it half way
aerobia the mom when the door we.
elms open from wIthnut
ft wee young Cargill. the loeomotive
engineerwho burst In o the superin-
tendent's office, and is lips were
white
'The Limited!" he triroke ont "She's
Osionacin Seep and Water Is Dent
Germ -Killing Agency.
Everyone has heard of the unend-
ing warfare that humanity must
wage spinet germs, a sort of Brett-
dingnagian struggle with the forces
of Lilliput. The share and responsi-
bility of every individual in this fight
constantly is impressed upon the pub-
lic by health education, end by ad-
vertisements, proclaiming the merita
a commercial "germ killer..'
The multiplicity of these appeals
beoomes a little confusing and germ -
infested human society must rejoice
In the good news coming from a
strictly seteetific source. Dr. John IL
Walkerprominent medical expert,
claims that one of the very btht
germ -killing agencies Is common aelaP
and water.
Experiments eonducted by VV.
Walker proved that the germs a
pneumonia. meningitis, diphtheria,
influenza and the dreaded strepteco-
Niue ajj succumbed to a comparative-
ly weak solution of soap in warm
water in about two minutes. And
the soap need have no fancy name,
odor nor price Good old-fashioned
brown laundry soap proved as effec-
tive as the meet - wonted toilet
varieties.
Conscientious mothers scrubbing
youngsters with snap and water all
unconsciously are complying witb
the beet practice of the medical pro-
fession.
AUTOMATIC BREAD MAKER.
Home-made bread, 111. mother ne-
ed to make without the labor and
worry of old-fashioned methods is
the promise of an Italian Inventor.
Menton, Tendert, of !Wears. Signor
Teodori. after 20 year* a effort, has
perfected an automater bread-tnaking
machine. ealied AutOpare' or in
English "Autobread." 11 dose 5e57 -
thing from grinding the wheat te
baking the bread in one operatic*.
weenie her ordera
ahe'a due to meet 144 -
the single track!"
(To be co
Corona, end
Righteen on
Med
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Let. Terems.
• PRAYER
"Keep us, 0 God, from pettiness. bet
um he hare in thought, in
ordc r and gt deed. Let us
be done with fault-finding and
leave off self-teeking. May we
put away pretenck and meet et ch
other face to face t withotti self-pity
and without pretudice. May wo
never be hasty in udgment and al -
ns take time
us LO (TOW
. LIPt us put
r inrpulses,
frald. Gnat
the tittle
ces, that in
re one. and
to know
'a heart.
te tie
way, generous.
for all things. Ma
thlm, serene and gen
into action our tw
stra,ghtforward and u
that we may realise it
things that create diff
the big things of life w
may we strive to touch
the great common w
And, 0 Lord, let us not.
kind."
_
—The above is a prayer min
the IBM program of a Women's In-
stitute branch and ls published here
on request as worthy of the consid-
eration of other bodies.
HIM Soon Are Wit Wargeti
As -Officials ean and none of the re-
latives or friends nf any of the Dior-
ama hurled in the ancleat Lon on
eburchyard of Rt. Bartholomew'
(haat whieb has had no burials et
1183, the ethnetery is to be eciatheted
lato a earths.
-
6 • There la One
like to see put
tVgstel
We/vying.
ratorium I ehould
to effect it more Tbe daft of wen ring ea. be wee
eiesen.-.....oner.. be the WM. 11111444100 tee.* 1'Weg t0511,*.:we emir -
people of this weakasaa.
The itonther Poet • im a Oppelal
power withont leh *Mineola rennet
re ikon'. this ng especially appar-
ent in the wry wean who ends her
wry re r now herWente far *he Aiwa,
end rho 1 Neely wile en into AMTMOT
water, rev ler the *Mamie only to
return 1 manwier quarters where
they 85. . trarrelitrig through pathless
NM
spoetellitan
et, Ira tYealttirs tut -instir.1.1
WHEN RIGHT IS WRONG,
"Vatic+ platform fee the letersion
trailer porior -Toro to roar wet
sad you'll be right" old Laity
"Deal hp Impertinent, yowl"(
Porter "All tithe thee; ten to the
right and yerWil be lett."
• • •
WORLD MISSIONS
Nearing Hone
An Omaha chief, who hod ruled his
tribe with wisdom and jumtiee for
many years. now Hindi. and the victim
of an incurable disease, was quietly
awaiting death.
"Why are you eon -tent?" waked an
officer. "Pain and old age are not
good &lenge"
The aged ehlef wee anent awhile be-
fore answering, arcorrting to the Indian
bahlt, when a grave question is dis-
cussedand then raid: "The flph that ie
neatened in this little creek will go
down the Misehatippi to the great
gide but in the opting it twill find its
way hack -back to its native waters.
"The WA that Nelda Ire neat on the
(fee welt wleyerew to arymmer
leaves It whee winter ie comingend
travel. thnnsande 01 milee tothe smith
ward; teit in eh. spring it will corn.
back arrome eiak monntelne sad rivers
to tbet very eolith nest —
...t.Aeis do th_girel*VIltaDMIIIWIE tho
well Wee likiWIC ful oda •te-inikta.
Th. ittleat Oplyit pots aornerhing
their heart" wt drew Mem back
their home. And life hes sot to
ten to put Isomerhing 40 aectt eta
beset the draws inf.. drawls thie
Me life ions. ottdo Me Arent
modest twer to aloe Sean 1 n
glad r. -Th. Tort'. Omessalloa.
Tear kills stare Hai
• ) ,
3%"41111'..temirml/r--:
the one
ping stonee inirtead of gravestones.
.11ENCT OF COMMON
CONSTIPATION IS A
SERIOUS MATTER
Prevent This Condition With
,Kellogg's ALL -BRAN
The first question your doctor
asks is whether you are constipated ,
or not. He knows that tkie
eaodI-
tlon may cense headaches, loas of
appetite and energy, sleeplessness.
It is often the starting point a
serious disease.
Ton can prevent and relieve com-
mon constipation so easily. Just
.at a delicious cereal once • day
Laboratory teats show that Kel
loges Am -BRAN provides "bulk
to exercise the intestines, and vita
min B to further aid regular habits.
Att-Bitarr is also a rich mune of
blood -building inn.
The "bulk" hi ALL -Bumf is much
like that found In leafy vegetables.
Within the body, it forms • soft
math. Gently, it clean out the in.
tairtinal wastes.
Isn't this "cereal way" safer and
far more pleasant then taking pat -
.01 nesdielnes--so often harmful?
Two tablespoonfuls a ALL -Beam
daily are usually irufficient With
each meal in serious cases. If not
relieved this way, ese your doctor.
Enjoy Att-Ittuot as a cereal, or
use in cooking. Get the red -and -
cream package at your groceea
Made by Kellogg In London, Ont.
41111•1111111111INIMIEL,
Evening
Footwear
for Ladies and Gents
Ladles' Ise Illsewthir PUMPS
—IN—
KW Satin, 1.1115 .04 Patient
II.W"Mua oxroano
—M—
ane Oaff
NE96S IN Ill'OOTWILE
r
••• 11.111.
W. Hem
=-TIMI MOM HAN—
PIMA OIL