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The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-09-18, Page 6WIN GRAM ADVANCE -TIMES Thursday, September 18th, 119'34"'. RV I! ham Advance -Times. "Published at W1NGHAM ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning W. Logan Craig, Publisher •bscsiption rates— One year $2,00 Six rluonths $z.00, in advance, To 13. S. A. $e.so per year. Advertising rates on application. Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Head Office, Guelph, Ont. Established 1840 Risks taken on all class of insur- ance at reasonable rates. :J BNER COSENS, Agent, ents Wingham J. W. DODD Office in Chisholm Block FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND ' -- HEALTH INSURANCE -- AND AND REAL ESTATE P. 0. Box 360 Phone 240 1111 INGHAM, ONTARIO J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan Office --Meyer Block, Wingham Successor to Dudley Holmes R. VANSTONE BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Money to Loan at Lowest Rates Wingham, - Ontario J. A. MORTON BARRISTER, ETC. Ontario Wingham, DR. G. H. ROSS DENTIST Office Over .Isard's Store TR. W. COLBORNE, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Medical Representative D. S. C. R. Successor to Dr. W. R. Hambly Phone 54 Wingham DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND M.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Lond.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DR. R. L. STEWART Graduate of University of Toronto, Faculty lty of Medicine; Licentiate of the Ontario College of Physicians and Mons. "•^' -Office in Chisholm Block Josephine Street. Phone 29 DR. G. W. HOWSON DENTIST duce over John Galbraith's Store. F. A. PARKER OSTEOPATH All Diseases Treated Office Adjoining residence next to Anglican Church on Centre Street. • Sundays by appointment. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272, Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. A. R. & F. E. DUVAL Licensed Drugless Practitioners Chiropractic and Electro Therapy. Graduates of Canadian Chiropractic I College, Toronto, and National Col- I lege, Chicago. Out of townand night calls res- iZoatded to. All business confidential. Phone 300. J. ALVIN FOX Registered Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC AND DRUGLESS PRACTICE ELECTRO -THERAPY Hours: 2-5, 7-8, or by empointment. Phone 19 J. D. McEWEN LICENSED AUCTIONEER Phone 602r14. Sales of Farm Stock and Imple• menu, Real Estate, etc., conducted 'with satisfaction and at moderate hbarges, THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD •.thorough knowledge of Farm Stock Phone 21, Wingham RICHARD B. JACKSON AUCTIONEER Phone 613ra, Wroxeter, or address R„ R. 1, Gorrie. Sales conducted any - Where and satisfaction guaranteed. R:J �+ A. • J. & A. W. IRI N. . FIRST FIREARMIS IN IRELAND Three1Veisbuien . Helped Earl of Desmond Repulse Neighboring Chief In Pitched Battle; The story of Ireland's first exper- ience of the fowling piece is interest- ing reading, says an article in the Cork Echo. If the facts are as clalm- ed for them, the first rifle or shot- gun used in ,Ireland was fired on Cable, or more properly Capel Island, Youghal. The story goes that three broth- ers, sons of a Welsh gentleman of the name of Capel set out from their father's castle in a boat for a day's combined shooting and fishing. Fire- arms were then only newly invented, and, provided with ammunition, the men set oft to test their new guns on some birds that frequented an island near the fishing ground. Returning home, a violent storm.. arose and they were driven out to sea. The storm was a prolonged one, and after some days they were driv- en ashore on the island at the mouth of Youghal Harbor. Suffering from thirst and hunger, and greatly exhausted, the brothers managed to kindle a fire with the aid. of gunpowder and some wood, and on. this they succeeded in cooking some of the birds and, fish that had remain- ed in the boat. The island was un- inhabited, but the people - on the mainland observed the fire and smoke,. but made no attempt to in- vestigate. n vestigate. When the stock of birds and Ash was exhausted the castaways used their guns to secure fresh supplies of food, but only succeeded in frighten- ing the birds away from the island. Soon they were reduced to a state of starvation. Meanwhile the people on the main- land reported 'the strangers to their chieftain, and explained as a result. of their observations that the men had only to raise a stick, which vom- ited smoke and fire, to kill birds, which they cooked and ate. This report reached the ears of the Earl of Desmond, and it was so well supported by credible witnesses that it deeply impressed him. A neighboring chief was at the time preparing to invade his terri- tory, and the earl calculated that if he could enlist on his side the ser- vices of the strangers, with their, deadly sticks, victory would be his. He determined to open up nego- tiations and despatched a messenger to the island with an offer of suit- able reward if they entered his ser- vice. The brothers, now in sore straits for food, gladly accepted the proposal, delighted to find friendl? offer where they had feared death, for they had no idea where they were or what sort of people resided on the mainland. While awaiting the report of, the spies sent out by the earl to ascer- tain the movements of the enemy, the earl and his three newly -enlisted men at arms were walking outside Castlemartyr one day whet an infur- iated bull charged down on them. "Can you stop this bull, otherwise we will be killed?" the earl shouted in Quin, One of • the brothers proui.ptiy raised bis 'gun, took aim, d anshot the bull -demi. The i Gident satis$ed the earl of the capacities of the "sucks,�� and he waited impa- tiently for the enemy invasion. Wen at last it was reported that the invaders ' were approaching, the earl and his forces, with the three Welshmen in front, set out to meet them, which they did near Conner. When the enemy was well within range the brothers fired a volley in- to their midst, and some fell killed or wounded. Astonished by the fire and smoke and the noise of the shots, the on- coming forces paused in bewilder- ment, thus giving the Welshmen time to reload. Having done so, they dis- charged another effective volley into the dismayed ranks, whereupon with- out further argument the enemy turned and Red in confusion. A third volley that took more toll followed, and panic seized the flying foreea; The earl's men pursued them, and a terrible slaughter ensued. The Welshmen were rewarded with grants of land, one getting Igh- termurragh, another Dronadda, and the third Eilleagh. In these places they settled. WREN'S WORRIES. His Original Design of St Paul's {a,theclral Was Rejected."lit Paul's Cathedral, as we see it," writes Canon W. H. Elliott in John o' London's Weekly, "is not quite what Christopher Wren, the archiseet, wanted. He was determin- ed to build a cathedral in the classic style with a great central dome with other lesser domes, i;' possible, sur- rounding it. His original design, how- ever was rejected., The cathedral that he did build was in the classic style, but he was obliged to add a sort of clerestory in the nave as a compromise with tbe committee that liked Gothic better. The great dome he was allowed to give us, but the other dome„ had to go. But few of the great men of his- tory have ever suffered more in this par.ieular way titan Wren, who amidst opposition And contumely worked for $1,000 a ,year and was dismissed in the middle of his task because the progress that lie was making with it was too slow. For- tunately, he wss recalled, and lived to :gee the great building completed." 'rhe Thane's San. 'The Mackintosh of Mitekintosb, !Olaf of the Clan. Chat•ran, a confed- eration of sixteen clans, including DENTISTS Mackintosh ,and MacPherson, eels I'hcn Vilas tried to: *sin his self - ice ellcxandc:r`s face, He held the lin- an escape through the doprway, cintl 1, Win batted his e Jtlt birthday recently, It 1 ice MacDonald Block, ghanty. Control, We saw Tint struggling, r c> Nfor< w 1 , t tr is one of the most artcienP chieftain- .fn- 1 ^ r r>, us, 'and it showed- it would h v: spoiled tire, plan t,t, f„ c tr Eta ,,crit up t r look at a v a c 1 r Edison, Attarsliall.----/ZyjratitsmivmaFREvii WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE Dr. Long, out fishing with Alexan- der Pierce, a detective, tells, of his projected trip to Southley Dowis; Pierce advises him to keep his eyes open wide while there. On the way in a train Dr. Long is attracted by a girl, who later faints. Dr, Long treats her, and looking into her bag, is astounded to find a loaded revolv- er, Dr. long meets Ahmad Das, an Oriental, who conducts him to South- ley Downs, where he meets Mr. Southley and his son, Ernest South - ley, Mr. Haywood and his son Vilas, and then Josephine Southley, who is the girl he had met on the train. Jo- sephine tells him the story of South- ' ley Downs and its ghost, which is "What's this?" Alexander asked. opened into, the hall. The tapestries "Vilas' pistol," Southley replied. and furnishings were rather dark, af- "You told me to get it?' ter the manner of Victorian libraries. "How did you do it without arous- ing suspicion?" "Took is froin tbe drawer in :the library table. He keeps it there in the daytime. Usually carries it 'at right, Exnest and I left' him with the excuse that, we had to talk to some of the colored laborers at their At one side was built the great fire- place, now cheerless and cold, There were rather many curtains that wav- ered when the wind blew, The wind was blowing now. We could feel it, damp and strange from ._the marsh, against our faces." When 1 say that Vilas Hayward cottages. Josephine just slipped sat alone 1 do not mean that there away." were no other occupants in the room. Alexander turned to Ernest. "How There was one other, and it is true about the candles?" that alt first I didn't see him at all. "Two burning in the library. All He kept at the very edge of the can the others have been misplaced, as dlelight, and he moved so softly, , so you directed." ? unobtrusively that it was very easy "And the servants?" to ignore his presence. It was Ah - "No one in the house but Ahmad. mad Das: not the ghost of a human being but The inspector suddenly gasped. A white face is always compara- tively of a tiger. "But I tell you that isn't safe," he Dr. Long has aquarrel with Vilas cried.: • "He'll gettively visible in dim light. That is away. Alexander, why soldiers going on to No Man's Hayward over Josephine, and finds. you promised to keep a watch out a au- for him. He'll be gone when -'we get Land at night darkened their faces tliat the Haywards have a strange with lamp -black. But Ahrnad's face thority over the Southieys. He is or- to the house." was naturally dark, and it blurred in ,tiered to leave Southley Downs. The "1 promised to see that he didn't rain prevents him leaving at once. Dr 'run away," Alexander answered wear_ our siht. Sometimes I saw the ily. be there when we come, whites of his eyes when the.candle- Long and Ernest go out on the road y light shone on them. Vilas Hayward in the rain looking for the tracks of Don't fear, Inspector." He turned to a tiger that Ernest says are there. the others. "Then everything is was not trying to read; and the fact Theyfind the tracks. Later Ernest ready, Miss Southley—if you will go that the Dight was too dim for easy reading had nothing Scally to do with and Dr. Long sec a prowling creature with Inspector' Freeman. His arm is n the hall of Southley Downs. This strong and his aim sure. Southley, it. He was watching Ahmed Das out. Tightens the elder Hayward, who al- you and Ernest can take the south of the corner of his eyes so sees it. Ernest begins to feel that' windows. You, Long, will be an un- The lighting effect was one in Ahmad Das is perpetrating some de- prejudiced witness. But you've got which _ a great artist would have re- to know how to walla silently.'' jaiced. It was yellow and dim, of "I know how. Pik stalked deer in course, and perhaps it had a quality the West."of unreality. The atmosphere of "Good. Then you'll come with'rne. candles at any time is distinctly med- And now—out goes the light." ieval. Then there was the gradation. He lifted the lantern and turned .of shadows—dusky close to the fire - down the wick. Then he blew out place, but shading off to a deep in - the flame: Of course I'. understood tense black. The light from the two in our present position at the base of candles met at the very extremities, the hill, it would not be visible from leaving a dusky path between. \ l - the windows of the house.- It would as' head and shoulders cast a distinct be visible as we approached ,the shadow on the wall, blurred, however, house. by the effect of a candle across the end just as the; shadows fell a room. The shadow thrown by Ah hand touched mine. It was a warm mad was something gliding and dusky band, and soft, and the fingers rested and dim against the curtains of the a single fluttering instant in my palet. l windows., It was a little hand, too, and I had l There was an effect of silence, too, in a single instant of never -to -be -for- possibly induced by the accentuation gotten knowledge cif 'its power to ; of the faint sounds that were present. soothe and hold, and a tenderness be- i It seemed 'to me that 1 could hear. yond al reckoning. And T knew distinctly the rustle and whisper of viltry, The elder Hayward is later found dead, his neck broken by a giant's blow. The coroner and police arrive in ,rder to investigate. Sam's other errands he had done with dispatch. "And where did you pick up the owboat j" I asked.. "You went over Because of the murder, Dr. Long must remain at Southley Downs. All the persons there are questioned by Inspector Freeman. NOW READ ON It was after nine when I saw the flash •of a lantern across the water. Thin clouds were in the sky, and the moon had not yet risen. The whole wilderness world was blotted out by a clay. But there was something dif- ferent about this. There was a lux- ury, a passion, in the nay be spread his long -body on th floor: I can't describe it except to say it was as if he felt a rapture in it: Nor was he calm any more. There was a strange nervousness upon lirn, likean intense eagerness, and his lips were drawn, ever so slightly. 1 -le crawled about so slowly; his •body so close to the floor. Then Vilas spoke again in the si- REMEN1BEfl YOUR DEBT' '13.11+ SCQ'1', ',1.'J1E JEW, .AN to M0111-ill l R4N•LVii,. W . ft Would Be a Sad World Without 'd'hem—loot AR Jokes that Appeal to i)ngbfsh-Speaking People Make Foreigners Smile. A Scot opened his purse and a. moth flew out:" That is a` elaeslc one - lime laugh that has tickled the ribs of the world,. writes a Tit -Bits man. First publish ed in an English newspaper, it was; speeding out of England bywire, wireless, andeable to Europe, Amer- • ice, and the East, almost before Brie. tain had begun to. smile. Within a .. week it had appeared in twenty terent languages in every corner of the earth. White, black, brown, red,. and yellow faces had opened from, the centre because of it. It compris- ed the perfect Esperanto laugh — a. joke the whole world understands The reasons were its brevity and, its simple language. It contained no double meanings or play upon words. A. Scot is a Scot, a purse: is a purse, and a moth a moth, in any language... The joke is as good in Sanskrit or. Bantu as in English.. lence-the words sharp and clear.' Not all jokes that appeal to Eng- 1Viy ,eyes flashed to him. He was lshing-speaking people make for--' leaning forward in hischair, every eigners senile. You have heard that, yarn, no doubt, of the Englishman, muscle set, every tendonrigid. the Scot, and the Jew who went into= g' "Ahmad Das!" be contaltanded, a public -house; the Englishman stood. "Go and get some candles," a round' of drinks, the Scot stood sfx: foot two and the Jew stood in silent "T cannot, sahib," the Hindu an- admiration? swered from the floor. "They are That is the sortof joke that is only. Every one, funny in English. Try to translate it all gone but these two into, say, French or German and you I can bring no more. are lost. The core of the joke is the ` "Then I'm going out to look for triple meaning of the verb,, "to. Southley."stand." There is no equivalent word. "He will be hard to find; sahib, in any other language. The alleged meanness of the Scot There are shadows end water and ` and the Jew's shrewd bargaining are jungle between." Then Ahmad's subjects of world-wide appeal. That voice seemed to grow indescribably ' because Jews and Scots are more „ fdely distributed over the earth's eager. You will need a guide." j dace than are any other nationals. "A guide—what do you mean." Mothers-in-law, too, are good for a. "If the sahib goes, I will take him laugh in most countries, Af Portu- there. The sahib must not start out bur ere paper published the following recently: in the dark alone! And if the sahib Judge: "You are accused of killing. has despaired of Miss Southley meet- your mother-in-law." ing hire here, and wishes to go. to Accused "I did it out of pity, sir."' his room, I will go thence with him, Judge: "Out of pity?" Aceused, Yes, sir, out of pity for too." myself!" Vilas Hayward suddenly snatched Tbat might as easily have been open the drawer in the table. Forneed in an English, American, or German journal. But here's a warn - an instant his frenzied hands thrust ing. I once told a mother-in-law' at its interior; then he whirled to- story to a Chinese. •It all but lost me ward Alnad, bis friendship. He listened gravely to "Where's my pistol?" he cried. "It dyig- lycthat he had made huckliand then ta�md stake re— was in the drawer." he had once thought mea gentleman. ".Perhaps one of the detectives bor- , Chinese. of all classes regard home rowed it for the hunt today—" and family ties as sided. Anything that disparages a mother or father - Again Vihas flung into his chair. by marriage is sacilege. Much` the Again Ahmad went back to his dust same applies to Indians. Whenan ing. His motions seemed to grow Indian calls you bis father and his more sinuous, -ore silent. I looked mother, he is paying you the highest' trt possible compliment. Yet he Is in-• in vain for the cloth. He.seemed to . variably guilty of an unconscious joke have dropped it. whenever he wishes to be. unusually Does the sahib wish to go look polite. A stock phrase for such occa forn" he asked. "If alone is, Sahib, you are my sfather- Sahib Southley?" and my mother, and.I'a.m the son of he does, I will be glad to go with a pig!" It never strikes him as funny! him—" Even before prohibition gave a. To me the words seemed . charged glut of drinking jokes to the world, g the subject of alcohol was a univer- teal senile -winner. Spain was laugh-• ing the other day at the storj of a man whose oculist had told him that his weak sight was due to too much drink. "On the contrary," the. man replied, "when I drink I see double!" And the adventures of the heavy lather and timid suitor raise •a smile he every land where a man and a. maid -make love. I pick this one from, Rome: • She: "What! You -com,e'to ask my hand armed with a rifle?" He: "Wel], you see, someone told me your father was an old bear!" The "dear old lady" yarn is known' the shadow, and the soft light over passion. whose hand it was. • , portiere dragged on the floor by the The effect that they had on Vilas the water brought a queer flood ofr thou hts. I welcomed its a t roach. " Maybe you can understand after i wind: A wvindowv shade wavered with was not pleasant to see. The piin- g I P r the faintest stir of sound. Then hood seemed simply to go out' of ' there were the hushed, manifold hire, His lips, were loose, his eyes sounds of the night that came hushed protruded, shaking hands reached for and strange through the noises— the chair -arms. ' noises so obscure that the ears had "No., you devil!" he cried, hisvoice Ito strain to perceive them. rising, "You won't get the out, there, Vilas' face was lighted by the near- where you got my father," ! est candle. I could really see it more "Sahib!" !plainly than any other detail in the "And 5. order you to get off the room. The fact 'fascinated me at fiogr. You're not working now. Get in ever county except inthe first. All other flings were dint and up, or I'll kill yoti where you lie!" where age is venerated This isroar blurred and unreal; but it was sharp Ahmad Das got tip. He rose very Belgium. A young man has taken his ::ad clear. ;and even this early in .4oftly to his fall height. I- Ie tip -toed elderly aunt to the thea:t o: He tells across the roots. Anel he blew, out her that the next act takes place a.. the drama it had a quality that was year later. disturbing to the spirit. He had en -the light ori the little stand. Old Lady:"Are you sure our tick - disturbing porch these last three days. (Concluded next week.) els will still be valid?" "Good God! Vhhc: c is everyone? The Germans and the Swiss never fail to "fall 'for" a joke against doe • - mad Das!" he exploded at last. "Ahmadl Ah- tors. A Swv ss told toe this 'quite,re- ceutly, A doctor was showing a wo- mao. a fine :tiger skin. "Yes," he said, "one of my friends witode,,d it,,but it was I Who finished off.tnt i "Now, row, doctor;" cooed the wo- ,, roan, ,,an, never make bo believe that this tiger "vas one of your parr, ;: bents!" And this floated throngh the ether the other night from tr German wire- less station: • • Doctor (after examining a patient) "You are suffering from alcoholic abuse and a weak heart;" Patient: "You'd better give •me something for tltelaea rt!" • w Ainerican humor -lucltides skits on domestic differences- that would of- fend many people itt the Old. Country. Thus, a prominent journal had a sketch recently oP, a young wife with a revolver itt her hand and a little. girl lookieg up at her. The mothef' is saying: "itun and get the movie camera, doarr nia,tunra's going to shoot at papa again!" And another ---of a husband returning home at Christina's-tinn'i to and his Wife rim- bvneing another'- ttratt--bore tho cap- tion "ByJove I forgot the mistle- d' tcrl" - Just as Altroviean. humor is slick, , Just 'a5 the shadows fell a ha nd touched mine The scrva nt arose and came near hint, half obscured in the' shadows. At the moment it seemed the only this," she whispered. "Perhaps you He Stood straight and tall. reminder that life still existed about won't condemn me so...'"Yes sahib*" this great, bleak estate of the South- Then like a squad deploying in "Where is everybody? y Sottth.le leys. Without it, it might have seem- battle, we started climbing up the and his srrn rauy;ht to be back by now; ed a realm of death, where human -.lope of the hill. What direction have they gone?" beings never carne. And besides, the \.'Ve soon left the others in the "1 do mit know, sahib, They told great Alexander 1'iertCe was return darkness. Aiexant}er and 1 crept to 'me they were going toward the eat- ing from his expedition, and T did not rhe postern door. tiges of the laborers. nut they did know but that this gleam across the ---..•- -""*"- One sound will spoil the clay,'' he not turn that way after they had gone was the breaking of the light rrtr.t the door." whispered to pre in the instant .that of truth in the darkness, we waited at its threshold. "1Z.cep. `"And ~lis; Southley.' She was to I heard a step behind tire. It was o u ears n eyes 'open." jo:irr lice here." y t c l s and y Inspector Freeman." Slit: u cr crept through into the :She has gone,' too. 1 don't know "I see hc''s coming just at the time llittlehall, Tee tinr,r into the library, where. The deteetives.are spending he rr•omised,'' be said with a note any light he day across the piars!t---on Abe 1 w?t•as opsit, but scarcely Of wonder. ' (ante through. So dee!" was the shad height." The boat drew up 'iii the shore, j ow that Alexander was at once invis- and the colored niers got Out to make ible, light was dim, r' , prier sides it fast. The lantern lr,ht ww.a We lay down tail the c p]>. to 'could o'-s� plainly. It seem- of the (tall sri that we could bink a n d I c t l n i, e r, , ed to me that something was .hrtelcllcd through into the' library. Ilut we in the bottom of the boat ---something; left the passage open, as Alexander rather la r --fort 1 couldn't sec what heti instructed. 'The riascto was sire ""1 do not know what tile; sahib 41 it, was because a robber, tarpaulin had play that lie thought the roan wci ilea e!" F , • come n r make "1)runn Your •blacl, fact.. been thrownvvc'T it._ Hot 1 did . Et c roc, to watch ;might 'want t � r c "But it's time they were. back by now. Gond 1.o' rd, what did they go there, for, when the trouble is 'here? ier•c', '1. tell you, andyou k rov i Y t w i., in' Ahiii t , i td. You know it turf'�tlevil- iah.wvell. A.J.WALKER ;hips, and is said to descend irom • •y plainly, Ile seemed cur him to see us on the way out. 1. - The fight was inscribed 00 his face. ;hong a of Shaw, a sort of Duncan Ili, fe.tttrtw.. 1 err y. y y �.. Y roust rrrtc.nt. ing close to the 'woalls, it was likely And' it was a hard fight, too—a los- �Tacl)xtfP third. Marl J. 'Wife, h y 'cum ,'ing fight. 'For a l",n • moment he r,ulre•rl-ihrt i, r.3i;.,tlatirrtr Mac-Tri-tosch- We walked up the i,,rtlr,,rtnd,three he would pass us by. But after c_ rrh , _- c .ar o' who ae- 1 N1TURE AND Pi/NERAL SER'V'ICE A.3. Walker Funeral DirEctor and n )ffiec Phone l.0li. 'I es. Photic X24. L ttest Lim o slne Prtneral Coach. leh, or:the Thane's Son. ' Although his title is "the. Mackin,. his furniture lantern threw. ':clic spiel that 00 such rt wvcrttld be + it dusting, He bent lcrw- ',testi •rf Maeltintosh." one addre�ssea Clic light that the .t Y1 glint simply as "Mackintosh" and it, were , ere the three wouthle,ys, who had made, 'the darkness -of the hillside el' and lower, and once more he was ! is said that the only thing that makes mare out of the -house: to meet. us. where 1layward had dial would, in on his knees. Mtn c•"r s' is to be. addresst:rl as "Mr. .. tlri ; itr tn'w rnfnd scent ntrn < tcrrii . e And now 1 didn't took at Silas. Mackinloro," His wlfi' however i� re, also seemed grave and deter- t etwrt •rr t�cl:ire> �, ;o ,a "' ,. _.'. .nrre•d. Sontrthing; glowed in the 'than the roost itself, My eyes were frozen upon Aliiu<tc1 � , c 1 a.. Mts iWTacloin ix quiet and Abroad 1)as resumed sl' lowvs imide black streaks across gla nee through the doorway, 1 felt t i.Ce r, I) s s 1)ets. 1Iis rositimi p$ far as ester- , although some Of the grriil.ir, . � old man's hand. A.; Alc:xarrder held '1"]tc'Hbr•ary alt ;3out.lr.ty nwvir. was ! , u+1 iervants call bta' "'Your Lacl •• s.was. tremendously long, It had rules of arils were concerned, wits orte.' that � Thr 1;i,nlerrr birth, ( sae what it ww. , , It wa; pistol, windows at Titre end, and thr. other, every hrraiselec'c'gier gels 'fn intfy Innes 1 gitllj."" IMor,ilii., l::p i ONLY A DOCTOR KNOWS WHAT A LAXATIVE SHOULD BE �F:.75r.w111'��iw�7�+mf Grtullli Danger liesin ca •eless selection of laxatives! C3. tali i the first Hill that comes to mind when bad breath, headaches, 'dizziness, anausea,. bilious- ness, gas on stomach and bowels, lack Gar'tn.a,n pottdorous, and Chinese ho- of appetite or energy warns of emisti•. lite, so the' 'main -•eilieraeteristie of the ration, you risl, forming the laxative Fr'e eclt has always been an aptitude abit. • for the quick retort. Prince Talley - Depend ott .;t doctor's 'indolent in mind, the fan)trs . diplomat, limped lattdl and Ono day on enterlrt a made ?rani Mite prescription of t l`oo'm lter wt),' ntet by a wttrrtttrt' with 11' P lr b 1 i wt ehohstn your laxative IIcre a one y' S g a< stilt n "1llortniaut' do '1"tt Specialist in Bowel and stomach die-, , 1 ellyc. t sad, alio 0* - orders. Its originator tried it in claimed, hew yon wally. thousands of cases; found it safe for in it bash Noe the answer;- women, children and old folks; "Asa you ane, tpad-am, all enok- thorru-.hl effective for the. most , itryecll" robust man. Today,Dr Calrlwell';t 1 Whetherr' yoga 1's,cn Is wbttte, lrhtelt, t.. *1 yrllrrty, :r4 1rr.rrgh rnrtltc's 'lianJlte"rs of SyrupPepsin, as it is callers is the world's most popularlaxative, ud 411 w nrld s most , l.t ,ivn; It as composed of fresh heibs and other tyre ingredients, Vou can get it. inCIVO 11A$94 �'enerotitt bottles and ready for use; at I 'ltYovtir 1189 there lwrtrr boon a airy drugstore. 04 ItOrd,1t .yor fist Loruloir.