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The Signal, 1933-3-9, Page 6*r's lila_ r. w �. 1 e P t' $--inareday, March 9th, 198* TRY OUR Wu Guernsey MILK Table Cream and Whipping Cream Safe, because it is all pro- duced !rpm a Government - inspected Herd. Your pgidgniege solicited ,Ctif. McManus Dairy —PTHONR 539 — COAL Macs tits dose dna-lgation It >• Impossibe to procure any fur- ther applies of Weise Coal, un- til s.to navigation opens again in the ala the meantime we can supply yon with the best quality of ANTHRACITE, POCAHONTAS AND COKE Le FLICK Inman Serest nine 17141 Every man carries an taemy in his own bosom. West ELECTRIC SHOP WE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF Electrical Appliances, Fixtures, etc. Electric Wiring of all Minds Wilma Nivea ea application FRANK McARTBUR Telephone 8Z - Goderich j� 'Jerrie V1Cst THE SIGNAL THE WIRE DEVIL By FRANCIS LYNDE (Copyright by Charles 9eribner's tore, 1912. Published by arra.gement with the Literary Digest Newspaper byudirate4 Synopsis Connolly, the fat train dlapatcber, Bolton. the night man on the car record wire, and Calalue, chief clerk. were sitting together talking when the sounder clicked out the horri- fying news that the Apache Limited was ditched •t Lobo Cut, with both m- elees crumpled up. Connolly sent Bolton to fetch Mr. Maxwell, the di- vision superintendent, who was enter- taining a friend, Calvin Sprague. at the nearby hotel. Within an hour, Maxwell bad mobilised • wrecking - train - with doctors and nurses. Sprague •eked to go along with Max- well on the wrecking -train. At tbe bung • pair of handcuffs in his pock- ets, and pinioned him with a grip that was like the nip of a pair of vise - Jaws. "Not yet !" he whispered in Tarbell's ear; and then Deva snapped his key switch and spoke. "It's no use," he said, and the harsh- ness of his tone was only • thin mask for the break In his voice. "First Eighteen was ready to pall out of Corona when the Limited went by. Gorriuger left his wire and chased the freight, hoping to get Its engine to cut louse and run after the passenger to stop It. He couldn't Leitch the freight." A low murmur ran through the crowd mouth of the canyon the wrecking- packed against the counter railing, train narrowly escaped telescoping and and somebody whispered, "It's gut the being telescoped by another train, toes. Hls wife and babies are on which turned out to be the Apache that train. Look at him!" Limited --the very train that had been Maxwell had gripped the back of a reported ditched at Lobo t'ut. Then Max- chair and he was staring hot -eyed at well told Sprague that for • month fake reports of wrecked trains had been coming over the wires. What the motive of the wire devil was It was herd to say. Sprattue who wan • government chemistry expert, but who occasionally did amateur detec- tive work, offered to say over In order to help Maxwell to get to the bottom of the thing. Maxwell and Sprague conferred with Tarbell, the railroad detective. and Sprague turned the ase over to him before the following evening. saying he was through with Ids part of It. The following evening. Tarbell, the nllrosd detective, in re- porting to Maxwell and Sprague, told of ■ cut -In on the dispatcher's wires, awe/ up under the roof. Thin led the way to Connolly's °dice. and told Max- well that Connolly was his an. Max- well. who was very food of Con- nolly, was almost as upset by Tarbell's charge agafnat the train -dispatcher as Connolly himself. At this point young Cargill buret into the omee with the news that the Limited was due to eollide with Second Eighteen on the single track beyond Corona. • • • Chapter VI It was the big -bodied government man wbo led the rush to the dispatch- er's room ; a rash in which even the tat culprit joined. aIn the wire office Davis had the key; hie jaw was set, and the perspiration was standing thickly ou his forehead, but he had not lost W nerve. Calcine, the chief clerk, was hanging over ids shoulder, and outside of the railing the group of trainmen had grown suddenly to • breathless crowd, pressing to hear the latest 'news. When Maxwell's party pushed through the gate, Sprague was still 1n the lead. and hie quiet glance took in every detail of the scene. Like a flash he turned upon Tarbell, who was fum- BOURG ORN SYRUP Gif pure, wholesome, and economical table Syrup. Children love its delicious flavor. Tiff CANADA STARCH CO. UYftTD. NON7ILAL SUPERIOR STORES Week -End for Thrifti Buyers-, t • ALL -BRAN KELLOGG'S Large Pkg. 17c CHEESE CHATEAU 1 Ib. Pkg. TOC Nims JAMRasp. or Straw. Large 40 os.. jars TOILET SOAP MFVOWERS 5.! 25C BROOMS Good 5 String the dispatcher. "Do something, Davis!" he pleaded, like a man stricken suddenly helpless by the shock of the frightful peril that was reaching- out for his wife and children. 'Don't sit there and let thane two trains come together! For GoJ'a make think of something to do." The chief dispatcher ducked his head as If he were dodging • blow and swal- lowed hard. "There Isn't anything to do, Mr. Max- well -you know there isn't anything." he began in low tones. "If there were It wax Din Connolly who made the break. Twisting his arm out of Tar - bell's grip be flung himself at lava. "Get out of that chair and let me have the key!" be wheeled, and be- came tacause Devin did not move quickly enough Connolly pounced upon the key sanding. Davis got up and quietly gild the chair under the night man. who sank heavily into it without mise ing a letter In the call -bet sola in - 'latently clicking out oreF in1Ffever again, 10 endless repetition. "What 1s 1t?" whispered the news- paper man, who was sanding aside with Tarbell and Sprague. and Tar - hell answered: "We the Corcoran coal mine he's galling --about half way between Co- rona and the first saileatTheis ide, and a half mile up the gulch. got a cat -In on the wire. but they ain't got any night operator." Davie overheard the whisper and shook his bead. "Dan knows what he Is tahllitlo� do;" be said in open "There's a young timekeeper that *Jeeps In the coal company's office shack. and he's learning to plug is on the wire ■ little. 1f Dan can only wake him-" and then In sudden self- accusation. "God forgive me! Why didn't I thick of 1t and gave all the time that's been lost?' Then, as Con- nolly cloned the circuit and a halting reply clicked through the receiving in- strument: "He's got him! Thank the Lord. he's got him! Now if he can only make him understand what's wanted there's, a chance .Malt. out chance in ■ thousand!.- With housand!. With the very seeoisin now freighted with the threat of immediate digester, ams la1sgr+phers etether,feewenRE ,_rIISn wire, nine men out of ten would have blown up an,d 'oat the thousandth part of a ch•nee remaining. But Connolly wag the tenth man. With his free hand Making until it fairly beat a tattoo on the gleam table to1% he hitched his chair clatter and began to spell out, let- ter by letter. the brief call for help upon which *o much depended. Tar - bell translated for Sprsgne, word by word: "Hu rry-down-to-ma I n- line -and -throw-•witch-to-red. Then -run weet -flag-passenger." The key switch clicked on the final word, and for five long dragging sec- onds the silence wan a keen agony: " Dot -pa nae -dot ; (tapir -dot -dash," It spelled. and Tarbell translated: "He say% 'G K.' Now it he can only chase his feet fast enough togjet=" How Richard Maxwell contrived to live and not die through the Intermina- ble twenty minute* that followed; how Davie end Tarbell and Connolly hung breathlege over the wire able while the gathering of trainmen ootelde the railway, augmented now to a jammed throng of *ympathettc watchers, ma- tted and moved and whtwpered In awed undertones, are themes upon which the rank and file of tie Nevada Short Line still enlarge In the ronndhonne tool -rooms and in the /twitch ahentben when the crewel are waiting for a delayed train. The dreadful interval seemed as If it would never POMO to an end, but the e nd did come at last when the hesitant clicking of the mine wire grounder was remitted. '('all 1t out. Dan!" shouted somebody among the watehere, and Connolly pro- nounced the words as the amateur et the end of a private wire lahartouely ticked them off. . Both --t reIne--safe. Freight--hack- Ing- to--blind--ceding--et---Qutentin -- twitch. Paasenger- -following--under -fist A shout wont up that drnwned the feeble patter of the telegraph inetrn- nts and made the windon-e reifies "Bally for the kid at the coal mine!" "Bully for Danny Connolly!" "Come out here. Danny, till we get a chance at your' Maxwell fought his way 'stubbornly throngb the crowd. with the news- papermen, Spr•gne, Tarbell and Con- nolly following in hag wake. Witte the live were one/. more behind the closed door a the private office acnme the hall the superintendent turned short npnn the night dispatcher, and be was so full of the thing that he was abont to de that he did not notice that his west had taken Torben amide for s whispered eonference. "lee've drawn the teeth of the law tthN time. ('nnnally;' he geld aherply. '[Attar whirl you've pest done. no man Wily mtfnatein maid wend you to jail. idiot thrt. ft*** la hi** teed ;se and oast ;ns. . seat :. to make trouble for us. 1f you'll do It was Sprague's hand on hie shoot - der that stopped him. and then he noticed that 'Barbell had disappeared. "Jost a misert.-until Torted gets heel." said the gnat In Inc tease And while he was saying It the doer E.ch 25c.` LIGHT BULBS E 30Cor 60C Watt 2 For 29c " PICKLES TASTY SWEET MIX[)ars 27c ' " 4 1 Tui Libby SAUERKRAUT 25c,and 1 lb. WHIRRS all for moss •Meir4 2.fs tab.. �le -Sit solla Ws Savvrotibioney :: ▪ , Mita J. Cam Cutt GODERICH, ONT. opened anddenly and the ex -cowboy re- turned, thrust a sallow -faced young fellow, in his shirt sleeves and livid with tear, Into the office room ahead of him. Tben the government man went on In the ams low tole to Max- well: "Yon may say to thio young man all Um things you were going .to lay to Mr. Connolly. There wee a 11111e lido` Las on Tarim/le yore:, naJ : ' e ;..., about to tell you when the train trouble butted In." Then. to the fat dispatcher: "Mr. Connolly, alt dowu. You've richly earned the right to look on and lie. ten." Connolly sat down heavily, and so did the superintendent. Thereupon the big man from Washington stooped Into the breach, turning briskly upon file yellow -faced car record clerk. "Step up bete, Bolton, and make a clean sweep of it to Mr. Maxwell Tell him how a certain firm or New York broken -you needn't give the names now -set you, a convicted bucketeho wiretapper. out here to disarrange things on this railroad for stock - jobbing purposes. Then tell him bow you tapped the dispatcher's wires and put a set of concealed keys under your ear -record table in the other room. Tell him how, after you'd faked that wreck measa.e last night, you ran a bluff for sympathy, and bow, when the bluff bad worked, your nerve flick- ered and You dropped from the wreck- ing train in the yard end sent a stop order from the yard office. Come to the front and loosen up!" Bolton had shuffled forward and was beginning a tremulous confession when Maxwell stopped him. "You may keep all that to tell in court !" he snapped, waving the new culprit aside. And then to Tarbell: "Take him away, Archer. And yon, Dan. you go back to your job and let Darts go to bed. What Pee got to say to you will keep till tomorrow." Then to the young man from etre "Tribune," who had hie notebook oat and was scribbling down his story at breakneck speed: "Write out what you please, Scanlan, but tell Mr. Tread- well that I want to see the story be- fore it goes to the Itsotype.." After the room was cleared, the sappy little superintendent spun Ads pivot -chair to tace his guest "Calvin," he said setemnly. "yon11 never know how near you came to making me break fay heart tonight. If I'd had to send Ian Connolly to jail Famous Steamboat Rao* of Old Days Recalled • writer to the ludlanagolla News dips Into the past wIW the following description of probably the most fa- mous speed contest that ever took place on the Mlaslaalppl: The river packets Robert E. 1M and till Natchez were DOM anima beats during the prosperous days of river "hipping. The Hobert E. LO•, owned by Capt. John W. Cannon, was built at New Albany In 1808. The Natchez was built at Cincinnati by Capt. Thomas P. Leathers. As the boas cruised the river, there was much speculation as to which was 'the faster. Alter some negotiation a race was arranged. No axed rules were adopted, hence each captain had full power to order his boat as he desired. The race started from New Orleans at 3:00 p. m" Jose 30, 1870, with the Lee four minutes la the lead. The captain of the lee elected to race without paassngers and to strip his vessel of all excess weight. He also followed a course shorter than the route sanctioned for safe naviga- tion. The captain of the Hatches ac- cepted • full passenger list and fol- lowed his usual routine except tram crowding steam to gain time. The Lee reached the goal, St. Louis, at 11/6 se m., July 4, and the Hatches arrived at 8:00 p. m. the some day. The vic- tory iatory of the Lee was disputed as the groead that she did not follow her u sual course with • cargo and passes - ger list, but popular opin1oo favored her, Good Reason Fouad for Ging Youth a Chance It is turd for a parent to realise that youth can solve soros of its prob- lems and make some of its d.ddons without adult leterference. The In- ability of adults to give • youth • chance to assume responsibility is of old sanding. Moat of os are usable to note the growing maturity of • boy. We keep on coddling and father- ing him tar beyond the point w he can make some of ids decisions. Thaekeray found the same condi- tion in his day, and out of the ac- cumulation rcumulation of wisdom gained in his Sunday Afternoon By IAABEL HAMILTON Ooderict, Ont. Precious momenta illy wasted, Precious hours In folly spent ; Christian vow and light unheeded, Scarce a thought to wladom lent. Lord, Thy mercy still entreating, We with shatoe oar stns would own; From bencefognist'the time redeeming, May we live to Thee alone. -M. A. Sidsbutham. • • • S. 8. LIMON FOR MARCH lit, LOU Lesson T•ede -itis Effects et Atesblie Drinks, Lases' Passage--Preverhs 33:3932; Isaiah U:1-4; Daniel 3:1-4. Golden Teri- l reeerks 13:32. The effects of the use of strong drink oo the buman system and 00 the moral ',lamina of the God -created beings we are, 1s an old, old story. We read of 1ta nae and abuse in etre days of Noah :- "And Noah began to be an husband- man, and he panted a vineyard; and he drank of the wine, and was drunk- en" (Genesis 9:20, 21) . The wisest man in Old Testanlsat Mum. amongst his ay lastrncUuss, gave a warning to beware et indul- gence, pard Warty la the chemise from which our lesson la taken today (Prev. 28) He L speaking latimately, too he says: -"My sea, hear the Inuructles of thy father, and forsake sot the law of thy mother." Again be says: - "Hear thou, mg son. and be wise, and guide thine heart in the way. Ile sot among wineblbben ; among riotous eaters of flesh; for the drunkard and the glutton .ball come to poverty ; and drowslnesa shall clothe • an with rags. Buy the truth and sell it not, aha wisdom, and instruction, and an- deretanding." Who can gainsay today the troth of eta effects of drinking and other over -indulgences as set forth by Solomon'In theme verses? lie continues pleadingly —"1ty Na. ve ms l ne heart, and ie observe my ways." ..Who hack woe? Who hath sorrow? Who batt conten- tions? Who bath babbling? Who bath wounds without cause? Who bath red- ness of the eyes? They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seek mixed wine. Look not thou upon the wine when it Is red, when 1t giveth his color In the cup, when 1t moveth Itself aright At tbe last it blteth like a serpent, and adngeth ilke an adder." The effects as set forth by Solomon are clothed In different arms than are used today by those who try to say the ravages of liquor Indulgence but they are Just as true to fact. Those who work among the addicts know about woe. sorrow, contentions, bab- bling, ahbung, wounds and so forth. Another of tbe inspired writers of the Old Testament utters ■ warning to one of the tribes of Israel because of their pride and drunkenoem. Being overcome with wine they were losing their hold on llte-"where glorious beauty Is a fading flower" (lea. 28:1). Farther on be repeats the warning, saying, "The crown of the drunkards of Ephraim, �*ttkr den under foot." In Daniel 5:1-4 1s an account of a king losing bis kingly sense of right 4 aw ivy nto et r itrf'111!ax taehad ordered • feast for lords and wine mowed freely. He drank unspar- ingly and kat his head. Had he been In his right mind be would never have put the vessels of the house of God, which his father had carried away from Jerusalem at the time hie army besieged it, to such ■ common use. He and his guess drank wine out .f them and being in- flamed thereby "praised the gods of gold, and of slave of brass, of iron, of wood, and Retribution followed el upon his impious deed. He began to be troubled In hie mind and showed It In bio countenance and In the trembling and shaking of hie body. Many a man under the luao- enee of drink has since the day of Belehansar seen things that disturbed hie peace of mind andecaueed anxiety to thaws about him. The king's wife was concerned for him and tried to ease hie trouble. So history repeats itself today in homes being wrecked in hut& high and low society. The advleS of Solomon to his son stands arm and d[ followed would change eondltiona Malty and morally. after what he did In the other room • study of mankind, wrote: little while ago—" "We should pay &a mach reverence The chemiatry expert wax grinning to youth as we should to age, there Joyously are points In which you young folks "It wax a carioca lithe sitp," he said. are altogether our superiors; and 1 "I thought Torben was on; never sue- east help constantly crying out to pected tor a moment that he wasn't pers of my own years, when busted until he butted Connally In here and &boat facts mat people -leave them aloe.: don't bs always meddltag with their affairs. wkleb they cam manage tar themselves; don't be always Midst - lag upon managing their boats, and batting your oars In the water with theirs." -Richmond Palladium shot him at you. "But you knew Connolly waga% tete man. How on top of earth did pie contrive to run it down In a Singes day? I can't surround it even yet." "It wasn't much of a nut to crack." laughed the expert easily. "I hop you'll have a harder one for me the next time I happen along. I got my pointer last night -before 1 knew any- Prises eco Reek thing at all about the nature of your There la probably no spot on earth trouble. You see, Bolton was the only which Is more desolate and uninviting man in the out3t wbo wasn't sincerely than the southern tip of South Amer - and genuinely Jarred and horrified by lea. The land a barren and the na- that faked meeeage. i saw 1t the min uvea are miserable .peetmena of ho- Ate d had a look in his eyes. From amity, Stunted. 111 -fed and arty with talk •deet -Weeelesy ugh." so ideas of moralitj. "i don't on the easiness," Maxwell objected.A large rock to the ocean to the "Dont ou? I marsh a ed back- south of the cape la the tip of a vol- -tv1Q.G-.isfi :vr�fa4+(. i nekton for long. .-. 4. cwt.{ . = 45 . .1,_ sole trying to obta a sent • cipher message to a friend of ml.te In New York. He answered at once and put Fe next to a nice Httle plot in the street designed to hamper Ford and break down your company's credit Then I loafed around your shack here until I found Bolton's wire machinery. Bolton didn't catch on, but he was suspicions enough of a etnnger like me to slip that letter Into Connolly's coat pocket. I supposed Tarbell knew that, or I'd have told him." Maxwell had been lletening In keen - cut admiration, but gratitude came quickly to the fore when Sprague pureed. "Calvin,. there in no telling how many lives you've saved by this little stopover of ,yours here in Timanyonl Park!" he broke mit •'You've turned the trick. When that dory, properly trimmed down, or up, comes out In the "Tribune" tomorrow morning, the hare -nervier strain will go off Hite that" --snapping his fingers. "I wish I could Mow you- -By George! "1 wish I could Limited pulitng In, and I've got to go down ami meet the wife and kiddies!" The big bodied man who called him- self a chemistry sharp -as he really was -and confessed to the riding of many hobbles, rose up with a laugh. "You wan't to show me? All right, take me downaaln with you and show me Mrs. Maxwell and the babies. As for the other, you know an well as I do that It's an In the day's work. Pitch out, or we'll miss the folks -and that would he worse than getting another message from the wire devil." (THE END) GOUFRiCH MEN'S ENTERPRISE LONG AGO AT PORT FRANK The Sommer resort of Port Frank, with its beautiful hllla, tete calm and peaceful water of the Aux Sables River, bordered with Mother Netnrr'e shrubs and trees. was at one time well known on account of IM malt well. Fifty years ago Mowely k Williams, of Goder'ch, went to thin beautiful place and decided to drill for salt. /They drilled down 500 feet, when oil ft OWN! freely- (However, this was ordered shit oft, a* 1t was salt which wee nought. At 1,800 feet they came upon salt, which was found to be the finest In Ontario. They drilled Into a hot of 50 feet of salt. the twine tenting 100 per cent, and 130 barrels a day were turned out. Tha was shipped out on the river M its month. a dlatanee of about thr(wgoartera of • mile. M meows and leaded an to lake bona. Thee well which peodneed this ane salt was In time what down to bring np the price of that pr dnet and was never put M operation again By the world the■ has long been forgotten, but the memory .till remains with the M tre + n,.. ' !rank (4 that. wiser ratwre wnreet wave (MOM hitt. stare ago.- Londe, rite Previa Mno beetled. the condition and knee the *letsms ref freemen, In psoptrtien se he an'netnma Ms thought* to view It" hoat anguish or shame Ida lapse into She hndys of debtor.-Iiyttes. term esatikkM' `Y..y satin e. '!etre are about 800 prisoners with • guard et 100. As escape Is Impossible o& ac- count of the rugged character of the country a large company of guards is sot regarded as essential. The con- victs are compelled to work and are given opportunity to learn a trade with ale possibility of accumulating money eo teat they may start a new life when released. Few Really T1isk In his "Art of Thinklug," Abbe Dim - net my, that nineteen out of twenty people do not think. but live like auto- mata. He bolds that most people do set thin' "even ten minutes a day." This a analogous to a thought of Montaigne's : "The majority of peo- ple are too lasy to attack a problem with more than • charge or two." Of course, there are subjects too vast ter even studious minds to master. Talne studied benign society In the attempt to arrive at some aecepable principle rat government. At the end of twenty years of each study he said he had found only one principle -that society is a vast and complicated thing. --Ex- change. Bartheldi's Femmes Statue The sculptor, Bartholdl, has left a record about the execution of the Statue of Liberty. He says that first a statue which memo ire/ from head to' foot 2.8 meters and In its entirety, 2.85 meters. was executed. It was done with rigid precision and then repro- duced four times as Targe by the ordi- nary process The model which was the result of thin work measured about 11 meters In total height u was di- vided Into a large number of sections destined to be reproduced separately et tour times their else. The sections were pecked and shipped to New York, where they were assembled. Nemo as laspiratiea The name, "Peter Pan," WWI invent- ed by RIr J•mea Barrie and need as • title for him play too testified, says Path- finder Magazin. The name was sug- gested by Pan. a god In Greek myth- ology "Peter Pan" Is "a kind of poet- ical pantomime" and was prodnesd In 1904. In 1911 Berrie produced "Peter and Wendy," • sort M sequel to "Pe- ter Pan." Peter Pan became part of the folklore of the nursery sad the statue to Peter Pen in Kensington gar- denia, London, by 81r George Frampton Is very pspdar with child visitant. lam la powerless against 1t" said' wa to mm. "The Oomwunlstle male' meat is ninety per cent. crumbed- The Christian bumanarlan movement 1e taking 1s. place. The requests to be- come ChrbWana are so many that we cannot attend to them. I myself have baptised over arty since Januar". Much persecution is coming to tbe e_`brstiat:e.rte . ti10 o nn en- gineered by the Buddhist priest". The young men •re not being allowed to hold their meetings le their rented houses. The (Landlords are being urged on by the priests to forbid it." 1 told Dr. Kagawa of bearing the criticism that •Itbough large NUM - bent of people came to hear him della do not remain interested atter hs les ves. "I know," Kagawa answered. "That is because they are not prepared with prayer. When so prepared inquirers remain, but when people simply want to use my sante to get up * big meet- ing there is no lasting result." -Weapons have sever been the mother of tranquiUty ; they were ever the i 1Y d pear."- Ougtielsro Ferrero. ---.. MANILA BAY SUPRaME Manila Bay has an area of 710 spare mune and circumference of 110 miles and 1. the Onset bay in Me m- itre Par !Oast. HAD NO KICK COMING "iter geaulse wit under the most adverse circumstances the Irish can't he surpassed." said the surgeon as Iso closed W box of instruments. "That chap at the other end of the room, wbo bad both legs amputated loot weak, gave me as seaman et It today. 1 stopped by his cot this morass and said, 'How are yea feeling, tour " " 'Weil, doctor,' " repit•d the Irish- man with a dry grin, 'to all tae truth, air, I can't kick.' " SHE ATE ALLM AN - E Trjutstitm FINE RESULTS • • • WORLD MISSIONS A Meeting with Kagsws fa Japan By Presldent C. J. L. Bates, D.D.. K9be Yesterday I spent the morning with Kagawa at his Farmer' Gospel School. It in being carried on for • month, and consists of .eventeeh students from widely c-.ttered areas. There are young men only at this school, •11 of them farmers, and all are expected to recut n to their villages to work in various ways to bring In the Kingdom of God. When I went In Ur. Kagawa was giving a lecture on the history of so- cial oMal thought. The previous day be spoke on anarchism. In theme lee - tures he Marmon Communism, Social- ism, Capitalism, etc., and preeente his theoric and plans for the application of the teachings of Jesus and the spirit of (Shrlet to practical living. Yee- terday his subject WWI lbe iodide. He wee followed by Mr. Sugiyama. N.P., recently elected to the Diet am a iabor member, who 1. Kagawa'a first lieu- tenant and specialist In rural/ prob- lemm. True M form, Kagawa Is undaunted by any difficulty and has nonce new pian to meet every owcawion. He in Mill buoyant In motet, though suffer- ing from • swrtm* trouble whleh, we are warned, may prove speedily fatal. i am more than ever eonvinewt that he le the prophet of Gel for the age In which we live. 0 that we had the wladoni to learn what he has to teach and the .plea M apply the Sermon on the Monne as he does. Kapwit told me that the money eon —woof-- "';:ii3: ` • -more t' °a' roans 1 t hie-, T9�D (woo room to on. ec a 'ilanarog as Matansawa, village near Tokyo, which to 11*41 as a ktfTt tigiterefteleP daytime ■rad • farmen gospel school it nicht Fifteen villages are being reached thmngh that centre. "The awakening to tao villages be Cbr1Mrtts to mo greatKIM Cllsessa&. Bsa•t•..came rnaaing to jot . -fir mother, bolding a dry, mewed Mat. *demi, a relic of • day long blas "D hound It 1n 1he big Bible, Grand a " she said, roundeyed"Do you asppesa it heles-,d to ave?' mitiR .: ( i. t, rat: ✓ Delicious Cereal Relieves Constipation Read this very enthsatastic letter "SomethingUkkee eleven or twelve years When I Ibeemnstarted, it wasKellogg's called simply Kellogg's Bran, and I believe it was one of the first prod- ucts Otis kind on the market. *Iff (> de often laugh at my fondness for Ala. -Bass. It gives such a gals ase in the mouth, and I do not feel satisfied until 1 have had my Au.Baate. "If the Ka11ooagg Company should ever stop manufacturing Au.Baax, here is ons who would be greeny disappointed." -Mils Amy Parsee. (Address furnished upon request) . � tbai Au.BuI pro- , &a "bulk' to azerdes tM Inter tines, and vitamin B W further aid regularity. Also iron for the blood. lbs "ip3tAt3altt::.-�. Wsfi1R •like that of leafy vegetables. Row much safer than taking patent - medicines -often harmfuL Just eat two tablespoonfuls daily -for a most types of constipation. or eerioaa cases, try it three times daily. If not relieved this way, sea your doctor. Sold in the red -and -green peek - j. A Inalvomits. Made byba Monumental Works OODERWCH, ONTARIO Best Materials Latent Designs Expert Worimanehip ALL WORK GUARANTEED -Reasonable Prlces- Ra A. Spotton P. O. Ben 111 `Oa/l1leh. Out THE COCKSINR IMPIJ4MEIR SHOP Wire Feat:ias Geo Separation Repairs for Cock.bntt, Frost & Wood Farm Implements and Machinery. . Tdephooe 598 Kingston Sired Evening Footwear for Ladies and Gents 1.ditr' see evaabtg PUMPS -IN- Kid. Satin. Thine lad P•tset KNITS DRICSB OXFORD* -TN- Patent, Rid and Oast LILT 111 SUPPLY TOiJR NR1D1 IN FOOTWIAR J