Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
The Clinton News Record, 1925-12-31, Page 6
3 I: M e J BY RUTH SAWYER; PART IL blue -and -white afAthan tier own mots'-+ Paid • fi red luminous in the boy's er had Crocheted"fifty years ago, 'SI 'e eu. lie squared hie whole body and kan kept it lowly to bundle babies 1 � alile 69 a ew a couple: of inches rightthere on when she had to take them far away, Out ofthis maze of familiar th two unfamiliar'' objects,` Budd sprang at the Commissioner and sl^ her into a complete conscious How long they:' had heed there could not have told. They steed by side near the door and the patently were - as' unconscious of • other as the Commissioner had li of them. "Both had their eyes fate hard .upon her in an uncomfort stare It. was that stare.. that n her realize 'that for the first time her life she must have fainted d away. "Goodness' gracious, how' stop she muttered to herself. And aloud, "I think' it must be the 'Timid some one please epen • a'tN down •-The right-hand figure disentang itself from the shadow and came h rigidly across the room, To her a prise•the Commissioner recognized It was Misr -Kenton, the one wonshe had never` been able to p 1'su into adopting a' baby. She,must h been in the car that passed -a few m utes before. Or was it hours? no longer had a meaning for the' znissioner-she had tont shed eteriai Mrs, Kenton had opened the wind and a cool wind iyaa taking the pi of -the room's oppressive "hnrnidi She .stood now, be�ding Solicitou over the Commissioner's chair. 4 the Commissioner thought how pre she' was, the poise' of the' lovely he the slender, reed -like figure, exquisi 1•y gowned, the chic little made -to -or slippers with their silver bugkies. 'v heat is enough to prostrate aeyo •she was saying. "It quite overea n e that, and the, storm. Such coward! I actually razz down the Rey here for safety." The soft to ended in a love, musical ripple. The Commissioner eyed herdis pointedly, "Was it the steam? thought- you' might have changed yemind about a baby." The ripple became a Iaugh. "D met The I love them in asylums an nursing homes where I can take the presents end cuddle them. and wh I 'Ivlow• I can leave them behind f someone elite to. take charge of. It quite another,zuatr . • , ." What Mrs. Kenton intended to c Was ,never .finished. A strango fC `ping sound cut hersahort from th doorway. Good gracious, I'd forgotten thei was another!" said. the Comnussion She turned toward -the rerriainin figure and saw it distinctly now tl1 the room was growing Lighter wit the gtorm's passing, It was au odd little figure. It wo a rubber slicker as bright' and yell' tis 'Johnnie's marigolds. There was rakisit sport hat whioh looked Stern v'recked. Water trickled off the lop end .ef the brim on to the Commission or'e best rug.` The oddest thing about it Wee a great bundle of potato sack- ing that conipletely covered one arm. The Commissioner was on the point of asking if she had been hurt when the iiguze ripped off the hat with her free hand and sent it spinning into the' corner thereby disclosing a Crop of short hair, slightly reddish and fram- ing a solemn ivory face studded with two tremendous Mack eyes, It was the;etrangest, most striking face the Commissioner had elver 'seen. She wondered what kind of a person the fate would belong to and why was it 'there? Finding no eatisfattory ians- wer in her own confused 'mind, she turned back to the seelety woman and Something this told understand. "Do you know,": she said slowly, "I've always thought if you would take a baby on probation that you. would find Mr. Kenton getting so at- taohed bait he'd want to keep it?" " "l3ut I 'don't want him to get at- tached to one." "Why?"' It would make me fright- fully jealous. 1 couldn't stand it' for an• instant." "Jealous of a baby? God preserve. us!" Tho exclamation cable from the fig- ure in the rubber slicker, Mrs; Kenton looked her over with a touch of in- soleuCe in the look,, r,I hardly see what you have to do with it, ' These are striotly my affairs; you know." Then the Commisskniei•, "Who is she?"' "I am sure I dont kno\Y,"" The little figure .stepped further into the room.- She looked from the society woman to the Coimeissionex and smiled. It was: more than a nice smile; in fact,'it set off the face just as a. tungsten burner lights up a heavy ground-glass' lamp. "I've comae on business—important business,'I don't know but wlat.yob'd call it the hand of God." '.;'Bless 'my soul!" the Commissioner saitl it -under• her breath, Mrs. Kenton sniffed audibly, "I be- .' hove slit's crAzy,,, "No I'm not. " "It"was said with perfeet„good mature. "Bat weeld::you mind going back -to that rernark"you made about being jealous of a baby?, I'd like to know why'?" • "There's no reason in the wold.why I should answer you but I. don't in- tend anyone to think I'm at all 'asham- ed of it,, The idea of shoring my Nus- bend's affections with anyone -even.' a baby -is obnoxious. ` That's why!”. The society woman bit off the last weeds'somewhat veriosngttsly. The odd 'figri.e. coiisi,irred this thoughtfully while she looked straight into Mrs. Kenton's haby-blue eyes. "1 suppose'' she said at last, "except for. babies, you've got everything you want i i the whole wide world?" "Par from it. I'd- line a villa on the Rivdcia or. near Capri. I'd like' a. racer to drive, alone, myself. Most of all, I'd like'some of thoseRussian crown jewels they are selling all over Europe". She turned tbthe Commis- sioner with a sort of ,'cn i' led excite- ment. ' "Did, yo:a see those photo - Cep Commissioner's best Wilton rug. ail he said was, "I aim to treat' The boy gone, a' child -mother took pence, The"Commissioner s voice red. "No use doming, in; Rosie did you that last time, ' Your baby {ping well takencare of; he's in a home;' he'll be 'a fine boy some he girl's weals pretty face lost e of its, sullenness. ' I got where ' had to know how he was settee He's my baby :even if I have h' hide en."• io he isn't." The\Commissioner's . hardened "I told you whenayou you slid 't want to keep him, that i you gave hiwn up he would atop • yours, and that you must stop ing about him 'as belonging to ny longer." The Commissioner's softened 0 fraction, "It is the for the boy, you know that. And beet:" you are malting a .new Keep straight and work hard when you have fun- make it the sort gf clean fun.. >If you' do, w Life"will give you something ` kg:up for losing your baby, Say to yourself every day." e girl went her way and Boyd in with more papers to sign: She the Commissioner over with a =1 stare. • "Say, why .d'en't .you What's the use of throwing life away for the kind.of human hat's just blown out?' She's not it. None of them are—not the and time ,you, put on thein. e' only got one life—enjoy it: all me in a hundred years."' With rel thrust, B4Yd went, back to aehine. - Commisaioner pushed her work es and sat back to think,. After much of it would...natter ie a d years? The world was full es. ' Would her lifetime of work down,the 'number any appreci- mount? Would the stock bred hese folies grow better and go e making of a sounder, 'finer :because she lied taken them e beginning and found good for them to grow in and fine nd women to mould them?• There queation•she could not answer. y years does not breed a'second ttion but Boyd's hundred years tell, Only, someone else would • answer the question. All she wits that so far she was sntis- t) tar there was no visible taint mash on those children born of sly sound parents. They stood ed per cent. strong As against wreckage that had .gone into tions. Surelyin a hundred years id matter. 'If: she couldn't be- at, she. would give up to -day 'mute. • reek .of lightning cut the Ieaden 'of one of the tviirdows; .a mute thunder followed, She' looked the stoat end the people'sout- r shelter. The rain was heat- ed now; the wind was rising. Ors passed in an unbroken She recognized one of them, neon's. Mrs. Kenton was a of. the Orphanage, a generous and a selfish 'one --generous to lend 'her time and' her car service of dependent babies; ish to: take one of those babiea. r own great empty hone. ommissioner sighed as the car ut of sight. What n horde tihe, 'Ake "far a baby! She loved be,- her selfish self-centred sort of nd pretty! The Commissioner ery soft spot in her heart for tethers. But for all the years rs. 'William Wallace Kenton 'ed on the Orphanage Board, d the Orphanage Christmas • donated the Orphans their picnic, the Commissioner d been Able to bring her to t of even considering a baby, a humiliating. fact- that 'the loner -never 'faced without her suddenly'surged a feeling hopelessness and exhaustion she never had felt before. The cycle of mothers and babies les whirled about her until. de her dizzy. They seemed to n, clear to eternity, a black She' found- herself panting th, as if someone had shut off oxygen frofn the air: She' shy heard a tolephone'ringiag distance off and she tried /fin reach out her bend',thi;ough ness And take down the re - vas the last ,she eeznenlbered time. When faint conscious- rned,: she felt as if she were pull herself out Of a bottoee un by 'means sof a slender ver get out," she kept saying ,over to herself and then she `I rrinht find something more to." • opened: her eyes and fasten-. ed her' mind to the familiar out`hel,. Here.;3vas a sure Johnnie's bunch of "znari- re<l gratofully'at here. There iy's picture—on his pony. ane tome- Bobby> had .falleit There, was • the big oblong, Superintendent had riven w Yeas's Day to hold all the of,.hee babies, _Sho.,smiled she remembered what Boyd when she had pasted in the lr one: "Say, the first tiring people' will quit calling this ,y Courthouse and- nano it he House of a Thousand on i ,ior�.r s eye, traveled album int to the big.leather i e those welt -to-do parents tvhesa they carne to adopt; 1 1, >ni that to the little low aro the child -mothers sat cattle to. Ret rid of tem. cf tee i!s the corner was the inns en y oak conscious/ she side ap- each een ned able in, e 111 bad idl" then heat. in- sled ur- ur- it. an ado ave. in- Tirm0 Co rty. OW ace tY• sly Ag tty ad, te- der the ne,>' me a 111:.: nice ap- ur ear ere or ,8 ay oPs e •e er. at h wet ow a 63 . • e c v 30 9 3 a 3?� .3i "I want to learn skiing,: skating, climbing and yodeling," said 1Vi ews; "How, muck do you charge?" "Clraa•ge," replied the Swiss guide. "I'll teach you all, without pay if you promise to instruct me in that Yankee stuff You are now exhibiting.", (llndly draw straight lines nr the between lmbens). grap▪ hs longago? g I've dreamed about " thorn ever since, There was guest - he Road t o Ti t> thfwtrtess.. , Lace -a pearl neeklace =I'S -give my' `Whatever else my e rill e is, I want soul for. If Bill would Buy,, , him to' be truth'ne truthful," is the_earao de - She neverfinished. The strange etre of every trate mother. Birt tenwe small figure cut in like a tornado, her do all that we can to make the :road face flaming, like a torah, "Oh you 'to ery iutneee easy far him? rout And I suppose our Nus- • Very iufaglnwtive children are ofte band worships you, a p onian jealous condemned an liabluthful, The ,esu of a baby, who wants above every- for their remarkable "stories" pan. o thing else to possess thosedreadfulten be traced to exceedingly Imagine relics of„poor, m•dered-women ! lou tive books and staries, This Case is dream about them, while babies, are pot hard to Siandle. Since their mo- brought. into the world and thrown rive in telling it is' to.a,ttract the at - away --like this!" (To be continued.) Care of'the Teeth, The proud parent, who allows het/ baby to suck its thumb (or worse still, Worth rt "f31aw„talo Thou Winter WI It {,would be difficult to chocre among the songs trcattoract'through -i%e plays cit' Sliadsaa.peare that whleh le the love-, tient, but the folio'wing lyric' takes high peacaf. '• 431on, byes,_ Thou }winter wind, Thou. art not so unbind As man's' ingratitude; Thy tooth Is not ser keen Because thou art not seen, Although thy breath p© rude, Ilergh-lzo!` sing, Neigh -ho!' 'unto the lhlost friendship Is reigning, most to inn mere folly; Then, hetgh-ho, the ie llyl This life' is mast jolly. Freeze, freeze, thou hitter sky, Thou dont not bite so nigh As.benelits forgot; Though. thou the waters warp, `Thy satin gis not >o sharp As friend remembered. not. Heigh-ho' sing, heigh-ho! unto the greeu'holly; Most friendship is feigning, most lov inn mere folly; Then, Neigh -ho, the holly! `!'his life is most jolly. iefLfe ,6 a out' afiic e very fie lni,; r u aty�zri hi rself ac- uaintad, v tth 1!eiv tvol-k, 'As ch rtOs oeerizi ed` 1 fie I*eee item one place to. ariothe:- add a,v,1ay made good 1_?; cause she was !lir,- r„i. l'ina»y she ie t us with a liaxpy s "ills on he • face' and a gold band ori h a. finger, for a Job with which 300 had nothing to CQmpste. In lees than it year I heard :Effie had 1sbaby, Anti here comes the point 01 rev story; the efficient Effie was . absolutely unprepared Lor this newest,and most 'pirtant job of all, She was "scared pal.id with the respon v-,'srbi:sty and didn'trlmo+,4 a`thixrg to do. There are few mare pathetic oh_ jests in>,lif9 than young d'oks who have suddenly ceesed from behig boy and girt to li songs lather and mother. They don't know -'what to de. How should they? Our systems of educe tion.havo no course of study icor.hnehA/ responsibilities.. A,.att:e bit of physi- ology, a trifle about hygiene,. and that is all. The public schools tech P a no-.. AN ATTItACTIV� GROUP OP thing, not even the high choose HATS. Where is a girl to get this nssded Left -over bits from a coat or drei training?; ` , may :easily be utilized for makizi i'each,it in tho horne! That is the some of these hats, since they mal Mandate, - But who will teach 1t in the clever use of small pieces. In ever hone? The mothers and grairdmolhez`s instance gored sections were used"' fc whose ideas have ;been patiifully ao- the crowns, because' they tit mor quized from a mass of misinforms- snugly to the head., If there is nes tion and superstition? -;,,Very well.:tertat left over front • coat it is a smai they have discarded the worst of the as well' as economical to make a hs stuff land have clung to' the best, we out of the matching pieces.- Often will suppose, - But -that would not be 'contrast is effective, such as havin considered very sane instruction in the het collar and cuffs of matChin • The Carlene. Saris has'' recently ,held a somewhat fantastic"#estival in honor of the in- vention: of. the candle, though the pre- cise date. of the, birthday which was celebrated must have been difficult to determine. Tri tits thirteenth century candle-nialdng” was inc of the great Psi'isian industries, -and guilds of workers. in wax and tallow went from house eo house making light' in the. "Ville lumiere" as their customers de- n 'mended., One of the classics of English, se scientific literature is the aeries of lee- 0- tures on "The Chemical History of a candle," which Faraday delivered for the young people in the Royal Insti- tuto of London at Christmastide in the noddle of the last century.' He inside. so"simp;e a mutter of the radiance of a small ,taperseem to, have an epic significance. tentionof their elders it Is usually best to ignore the episode altogether. Or, at its eonelusiou "Thais u make -be - hey° story, isn't it?' spokdn es a' men ter of-faot way, usually disposes, of It satlsfaotorily, Stories about trutbfsiness are use - that aboiniriation, "a pacifier") would Sul. The familiar ole story of the bpy be horrified -to know that such a habit who cried "Wolf, wolf:" when thele may .mar the beauty of hetchild for was no wolf makes a deep impression on the., childish mind. Other stories may be invented tbet show the advisa- bility of dvisability.of having a reputation for lion parr, Sometimes we are tempted to "try" These effects' of childish habits are the',cbildeen. "Did you come strziight now well recognized by the dental pro- imine froom school, John?" when We fession. Many dentists earn an hon- know that the ferbldden swimming est living trying, and it must be ad- hole proved ieresis'tIble. Is this jest witted with considerable success, to fair? Do we elders always Zell the. remodel badly fornted•jaws and bring 'whole truth when "cornered?" into place teeth -forced out of position. t It seems: like a good occesion to AP. The expert dentist can show by photo-`, ply -the Golden' Rule. -"Say rndther' is graphs how adenoids ' and enlarged easy to tell things to,;" one small bay tonsils may lead to a 'thick tongue or boasted proudly, . A fine recommend- a projecting lower jaw, or the lack of tion, Surely. If we say "Now, John, hard foods to chew may prevent the I want you to tell nib why you did not normal development of the jaw with conte straight home from school its tonseuertt crowding of the pernlonent I: told you and --i want you to tellme teeth out of place. tee truth!" we imply his •untruthful, life and even be the cause of iL'-health in later years. She dries not know that projectufg teeth, or an undershot jaw, are frequently the consequences of such childish habits. 1273 any other ireportant.subject And how material yet contrasting with the cog about thegirls whose mothers and creating` the ensemble idea, No. 12 grandmothers have no gift for teach- is in sizes 2 4 and © years. 1s, Size ing, and have suffered ninny things years 'requires % yard 32 or 36 -in themselves have reached the-conclu= material for each hat, with 1A yin 1 cion that their girls .must do: likewise, ,additional lilting in for the crown, Pei And the young fathers: who instructs 20 cents. then? Our 'ns Fashion The not solving o won Book sonde'. v ng this prob'em; mere- many styles showing how'to dr 1y presenting it foryou to think about. boys and girls. Simplicity ;is the et With our present social ideas I see for well-dressed' chiidrel,y Clothes reasons why the public schools can character' and individuality for only give the first steps; our high junior folks are hard to buy, but e, schools might go -further; our colleges to make with our patterns. A am might well teach all they know. The amount of money spent on good n churches and Christian associations terials cut on simple lines, will could profitably instructg p •Y young men elltldreil. the privilege oi' weari and young women in preparation for adorable things. Prise of the b their responsibi._ities. — Dr. C. H. 10 cents the copy. Lerrigo. --HOW TO CRDI2R PAITI;RNS Singing is The Essence of Thought. Voice. *eduction; How few really understand it. Of ail the branches of music, that of voeaiization is the most subtle ansteomplexto.teach and learn,. tor it moans not only the perfect union of speech and tone; but the power to produce tone that shall express that which speech omits; 50 have In your throat an Instrument ou which roll can play with complete confidence; one that le se responsive to thought that every ptaking phage of ernotiou Made t5 true reflection in gradations of tone olor more variable and fleeting than loud shadows on a Summer sea.. It is because etagere do not realize ow wondsrful and beautiful Is their rt that the majority achieve so little.' id they but think more they would- esnredly accomplish more, for the ery eaeen'00 of singing la thought, nil that le why it is so difficult to earn to read11. It Is sometimes said that we have oat the art of bel panto (perfect sing- In butthis• Is not so, jor the old days se 'word was the abiset slave to the lrustcal scheme of the composer, and users loved; to aotonisll their listen- ra by wept agility, but the slave has ow been enfranchised, and the word now the wastes:, and Saint Cecilia s to obey where formerly size ruled supreme. 1V'e are no longer satisfied With mere beauty of vocal tone and ornamental devices; we demand ap- propriateness of tone color and dirt- uratic consistency, and, above.all, per- fect speecis In sang, • The Lost R's.y We are all familiar. w1tb the excit- able story -writer who, when iris, villain Is doing his worst, represents him as' "hissing" out sentences without a single s !rl them. Punch has :low c;atrght a novelist • offending 1n the same way..ovitlr another letter of the alphabet. It says, we end to a recent novel, this passage: Scientist Honored, e Einstein, the famous scientist, who has. been awarded the Copley Medal by the Royal Society for Iris theory of h relativity and his contribution to the quantum theory. All of these malformations of the neva hull tile chanoes are very good m jaw which interfere with the normal, that John evill live up to our iznpl}ca- The Sailor's Signpost. arrangement of the teeth also !rater- tion, 1f.'we begin, "I know'"all about a I) a v a fere with the proper chewing and. the wbet you did, 'on its no use your try- 1110 marinea'ls compass. seems to 1 assimilation of food. Indigestion, mal- iirg ." Jelin either beams he Is hare been klio�vn to the Chinese from nutrition and other troubles; may fel- Izoonelessly trapped or he believes we very Sony times, It is reported, that 1 low as :natufal consequences. The are "bluffing." But If we say in a in 2000 13,C, an action wag fought is .i practice of these seemingly, harmless pleasant though nnmiouibly business. habits in youngrehi.dren may have like way, "Now, John, how about beleg lasting and disastrous results, 'not late from 8011001 this ,afternoon? ` only on the health and growth of chit- • ehlinees aro nine in ten that John will dreg but open their physical beauty tali the trete like a man. The habits referred to are all' pre- Make it easy for tlse little tones .to ventoble. ' Parents•should sae that tell the truth until they have acquired their children do. not . develop these a habit of truthfulness end the lxoir- preveritnbl0 habits., tlom :of rtntrnthfulaess will seldom breve to be solved.. ! Envircnznent,ii Loves Its Murderer. re t�,y r The enius of the•kee er ofZoe is often taxed to f a The Hinrlreligion,probably the • pz'ovrdo for 1118 oldeste on earth, is gnito quaint in • charges all the comforts of home. This many respects. One thing is drilled season's cold and fog in London have int1 ns of o t1t3 brei been,peculiarly trying to the pelt and""thet Is that ill'mi must always beend so the temper ament of tlri iguanas from y cltarit(iiite as; t0 Inv,. even his gine3 Brazil- Electric light has Iiterally /was, regard/ea, of whist they`amry dol saved the day tar these queer.. Iong- <11lll . f ''1 lisads.• Under rays vesemblin these lar which ,the o e a, Y g y,saYs, "Even the tree does not with-� baskeaeind gloated' along the Equator,- draw its Welconfe shade from the wood they no longer moped and refused cutter.,: their food, but;disp.ayed e new inter- 1* and a greedy'appetite. An_' The Unicorn, est in life othertory' is to be recorded for Tee "mice' ', r n • mentioned in t science in the domestication of trePie pools of Job was eirobably the tnii'eehs fauna in a Northcrashahitah a. keel of `wild'cati.le rimes extinct, tailed t n der the artificial The ancient Hindu /little, the Veda, i wliich the Emperor of China success- tl fully navigated his fleet through a fog 1• by theaid of an Instrument which was sl *Pliably a compass. e The early Greelts .know that a min- -n is lea era:' Called loaclstones would attract iron, Iron rubbed with..loadstone also became able to attract other pieces, of iron. About the year,1450 an Italian, named Plavis Gioia, found that the magnetized iron, when Suspended, pointed north and :matte Using a tircular •oaril upo3z which the magnet- ized needle was hied, Gioia ,matte his compass by attaching tits card to a cork pieced in a basin of water,. This arraugernen,t WAS, kotvevoz•, - soon im- proved liven. The invention of the compose wasof great Importance sine many voyages of discovery„ could how be undertaken mill greater prospect of success, Thus, shortly afterwerds, Columbus di0eevered America, and Vasco'.,do_ Caine silticeetted in, sailing round the Cage of Good Hope, noting incidental - le that the coestellations appearing at nelfht over the southeric w,szs Were dit- for•ent from those be had •seen `isiern Portugal. my ton of t 1 gueta 1 (lona need anybody pet et disposal,a he obeerved,--or- rather loweve--the rN rolling froth hie hey seemed to hare rolled riglit, out he e en tenee. FaMi C). W,hiC1) '10 00 ]letl "The an" be7eauss it wee made by the warier hi 17:17, the year -d5 his rhen 0 I a• have been :Mee i rod ey "Redeem Wane maker, New York-. storeman; Alexander Itussell, concert director, f{4.1()WP holding tlie pr 84018 ihetrineent, Write your name anti addrese pla ly, giving number and size of s patterns ae you want. Enclose 20c stamps or coin (coin preferred; w it carefully) for each number, address your order to Pattern De Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West A ?aide St, Toronto. Patterns sent return snail. Fun in the Home. A perfectly, normal child ea help expressing in. its face joy mendouepa.rt in the life. 'It a c arid wicked to*suppress this fun -lo inetinet in children and not to en age its de,velopment. I once heard a little boy ask 'othet if he could go over to his h end Play. Ile said, "I daresn't at home. Mother won't allow it.' Think, what a deplorable thing for aechild to be reared with the 1 that he cannot play or frolic in Mt home! Can anything be niers structive to that love of home wi every child should have? I used know mother who was so painf neat and orderly that she would et alfsew her childree to play in the b for fear they would _disarrange tie or make a disturbance. They ha go out to the woodshed or out of d to play; and they looked as th they we're afraid to breathe in hantae. They were sad, serious li ireaturee, -who never had much ot childhood. They were always li grown-ups,—priin, precise, constr. ed manner - The -Very presence of this domiiii fun -loving , passion in children sh what a tremendous part the ere intended it to play le the whole ' Yethow often is it discouraged in hornet • If this irrepressible longing for usement, fon rollickieg fun in ye people were more fully met in home it' would not be so difficu keep the boy and girl under the ental roof. There is nothing Eh happy, cheerful borne. It keeps dren off the streets, it disourago end all that is morbid. Heine Should begin in the -home. Moot homes are far too pert Why ,hot leCthe boys and girls de frolk end play to their heart's tent? Why not reeeIve now that i shall kast be just as happy as can make them while at home, so t in later years they cae look back u their childhood home as the dem tjhas,y ‘i,s,olt.11ide. greatest power for good Half the misery in the world wo be evoided. If people woukl 011 businese of having plenty of fun the home, instead of running ev where else, in sialichof it. "Peace fiath Her Victorie On the summit of a rocky pees In A/208, 100king 011t over the m tains oe the boundary line bens Chile aud this Argentina, stand oilassol statue of the Christ. The hand hokis aloft a cross, the 55 raised in blessing; and the granite pedestal is engraved inseriptioni "Theee mountains will crumble odorottitabortfozaosn,1•geer.:1i,t1iniet.yi shaiivn:1 80m1,101 will break the peace which,, the POT many deeades the pe Chile and the Argentina had war and in 1104 a, fresh Outbre Church. determined to (lethal's bes seve their cotintries from the ing and desolation of war and appealed to our Ging Eilwerd 518 an areitra tor betiveen these nationa, Hie etiohts were ouch 151153 into great stetue