Newspaper Page Text
New
MEDICINE
CABIXET
THE IDEAL SIZE
FAMILY
LAXATIVE
50#^
■ f
-
V
*1*
t
V c
NON HABIT- \ mg,
FOBMING
Effective in Milder Doses
Insist on the Genuine
FOR CONSTIPATION
DON’T SUFFER WITH CONSTIPATION,
stomach or kidney trouble. Rocky Moun¬
tain Sunshine Laxative Tea will do won¬
ders for you. Sold on a money-hack
Kuarantee. Send 10c for 10 day TRIAL
box and full particulars. Mountain States
Sales Co.. 759 East 20th Ave., Denver.Coio
Make Your Own Candy Confectioner
Guide 60e. Complete instructions in the
art of Candy making. Home. Store. Fac¬
tory. H. E. Meacham.Box 964,Seattle.Wash.
KREMOLA
FACE BLEACH
Positively eradicates from the skin all tan. moth
At patches, sallow complexion, pimples, eczema, etc.
drug and dept, stores or bv mail. Price $1.25,
BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE
DR. C. H. BERRY CO.
2979 Michigan Ave. Chicago, 111*
FETA VS—N UTS—PEC A NS—NUTS
Let us sell your nuts. We have orders for
tons. We pay freight and ba^s. We pay
more than anyone. Write
M. ZEN DELL PECAN CO.
1180 W. 28th St. Indianapolis, Tnd.
t/ne o parrax/i . RAISING FUR RABBITS
r umber our plan
Pays 500% greater profits than poultry
and more easily raised
Yon e*n moke from *50 to 5100 a year from each doe, raiadng’
rcKiatered for rabbits for u,. Wo buy all you raise. Send 10e
for aample contract and full information. Address Dept. W
THE ENGLEWOOD FOR FARMS
20th & Northern Btvd. Independent#, Mo.
INTERIOR DECO RAT IO IV
V The fascinating profession for
^3 recent grad having nates and mature
tfjHciation. women an art appre
REGISTER NOW.
Practical atwlio courses for home
2 and profession.
041 Ajlffl Boston School of tuNrior Deco
ration and Arohitootural Design
*10 140 Newbury St.. st Coploy Square
Boston, Maas
Pilot! Shot From Plane*
Airplane pilots and their para¬
chutes are buried 30 feet dear of a
falling plane by a new German com¬
pressed-air gun. The device is in¬
tended to save (lie danger that when
a pilot jumps to save himself he
may foul the parachute on the plane.
Now lie simply pulls a hand-trigger,
and is shot free.
The inspiration for this safety gun
Is said to have been obtained from
a pneumatic cannon used In n Berlin
stage act that hurled performers
from eight to a hundred feet in the
air.
Controls Watershed Forest
Seattle has acquired control of ap¬
proximately 90,000 acres of land for
safeguarding its nAmtclpnl water¬
shed, says the American Tree asso¬
ciation. Although the principal ob¬
ject Is watershed protection, the area
has been placed under the supervi¬
sion of a trained forester with a
view to continuous timber produc¬
tion.
Texas Christian university has
bought for $100 six old Bibles, one
of which was printed in 1493.
'*<* W
fa
V >3
A. Sour
Stomach
In the same time it takes a dose
of soda to bring a little temporary
relief of gas and sour stomach,
Phillips Milk of Magnesia has acid¬
ity completely checked, and the di¬
gestive organs all • tranquilized.
Once you have tried this form of
relief you will cease to worry about
your diet and experience a new
freedom in eating.
Tnis pleasant preparation Is just
lb good for children, too. Use It
whenever coated tongue or fetid
breath signals need of a sweetener.
Physicians will tell yon that every
spoonful of Phillips Milk of Mag¬
nesia neutralizes many times ;ts
volume in acid. Get the genuine,
the name Phillips is important.
Imitations do not act the same!
PHILLIPS * Milk
of Magnesia .
W. N. ATLANTA, NO. 36--1930.
Hi iWill
The
« -
I Crippled ■
« Lady
of
■ Peribonka
- i
• • >
<
By James Oliver ■
Curwood -
WNt Service
(©, 1929, Doubled ay
Doran & Co., Inc.)
CHAPTER XIII—Continued
— 21 —
Paul finished, and It seemed as
though tiny raindrops were falling in
his brain, so cleurly could he hear
and feel the hearing of his pulse. In
a few moments the moaning of life
came to him In a distant wave. It
struck nearer in the slamming of an
elevator door. Indistinct voices passed
down the hall. From another street,
blocks away, the hammering ot rivet
drivers ou new steel rose above the
rush and roar of traffic. Paul looked
from his window, as if he might see
the pit, out of which the same sound
had come night and day for three
years. His eyes fell upon gloomy,
sooty walls, Under him lay an unend¬
ing fabric of men’s toil, a great sea
of roofs strung with wires, craggy
with ugly architectural warts, broken
with chimneys, streaked with tarred
gutters, and with the gaping, shifting
mouths of ventilating funnels sucking
air into ttieir artificial lungs, lie
looked down and saw a thousand mov¬
ing things. In a stream, like ants,
every hurrying particle a human seal
struggling in the furious Twentieth
ceniury effort to make itself greater
than God. From all this Claire had
freed him. She had given him new
life, and with it love and happiness.
He crushed her 'efter in his hand
as if some pitiful brenth might wrench
its precious pages from him.
Then he turned to the telephone. It
was impossible for him to wait. He
wanted to tell her there was oue other
woman in the world as wonderful as
Carla.
In Claire’s voice was a trembling
note of happiness when he said this.
“Dear old Paul,” she cried softly.
“But you mustn’t come to me until
evening. 1 have something which ]
must do before I see you again.”
That night, when he went to his
home, Claire was uot there.
She had left a note for him.
“I have gone to see Carla.” It said.
“Only a woman can make another
woman—like Carla—understand.”
CHAPTER XIV
And here we find ourselves where
we began, with the lovely Crippled
Lady on her porch at Peribonka.
She had lived a year in Peribonka
when we set out to tel) this story.
A winter had passed, another spring,
a summer, and now it was the begin¬
ning of glorious September. Septem¬
ber is the most beautiful of all months
in the Lac St. Jean country. A soft¬
ness is in the air which one does not
feel at any otfier time, a breath of
ripened forests, a soothing warmth
and comradeship of earth and water
which is like a song. The big river
across the road and down the green
hank from the Crippled Lady’s gar¬
dens of flowers Is friendliest then. Its
water is a sheen of laughter. Its
snowy sandbars possess the quality of
softened whiteness which gives to
them almost the purity of a woman’s
breasts.
There have been changes since the
Crippled Lady was borne from the
hospital to the place, near her mother,
where she wants to live. The pit is
no longer a pit, bur a mighty force
driving its energy in unending streams
through high-tension wires. The Mis
tasslnl may rumble and roar and growl
but it is a slave, securely shackled,
and will probably go on laboring for
Its human masters for all time. Ttiis
change — or development — was ex
pected, anticipated by experts almost
to the day and tiour. But others were
not. The world, for Instance, accept¬
ing a very small corner of tt us the
whole, could uot understand why a
man like Paul Kirke should deliberate
ly sever himself from the huge prestige
and wealth built by his fathers suc¬
cess, and, as the story went, hear
away with him all his personal pos
sessions in a trunk and a handbag
It could understand, quite easily, how
a husband and wife might end theli
marital relationship, hut It was puz
zled and shocked that a woman like
Claire Kirke should throw herself
away, soon afterword, on a stoop
shouidered. prematurely ageing man
; who was possessed of nothing on earth
but an fdmirable passion for shaping
things ont of marble.
“There are a lot of people who
taken collectively, are like a big gap¬
ing boor,’’ f’laire said in a letter to
Carla. “They are amusing for a time.
Then they become normal again.”
This was just before she went west
to join Jimmy Ennerdale in his work
j of completing a marble group for an
| Important civic center
After she got there she wrote
j | Carla: “It is magnificent, When it is fin
i Islted we are going to spend a year in
| Capri, working Mediterranean—the together.” hab
Cap ri. the
' 'tant country. Lac SL Jean—
CLEVELAND COURIER.
I It is glorious here,” Carla wrote
back. I love September!"
Carla always sits on her porch so
that site is looking up the river toward
the north. Paul Is there, working out
a part of the dream which absorbs
them both. Thirty miles beyond the
green and blue-black edge of wilder¬
ness which site can see Paul has a
timber concession, and fifteen men
working with him, where a little while
before he might have had fifteen thou¬
sand. But these fifteen men, and
what they are planning to do with
the concession, mean more to Paul
and Carla than all the millions in
the world.
t . It is not necessary to slaughter
Nature, or even harm her, in order to
possess for ourselves some of her
products,” Paul says in a paper he is
writing for a pulp-wood journal.
“There is such a thing as harvesting
tuniher and having a better forest each
year instead of a diminished one. Na¬
ture wants to fraternize with us, and
will, when we cease to sack and plun¬
der her like vandals.
Next year the fifteen men will he
Increased to fifty, but now camps are
being built and just enough timber
harvested to cover the expense of the
work. Paul labors with Ids ax, aiong
with the others, from morning until
night.
Every Friday he comes down the
river to Carla.
Carla knows that she is going to get
strong and well. This mental atti¬
tude, her soreness and optimism, to
} >s
Tr ■r
V
u
/ *
'^L yf 7
,5
'/a O
'■•V ri
<T) }*-v )
■XL:
? S'
I
No Shadow is Cast Over Their Happi¬
ness Because Carla Cannot Walk.
gether with tier great happiness, has
overcome the doubt of physicians.
She is beginning to stand a little, with
Paul’s arms about her, and their two
precious days u week together are
filled with wonderful plans of what
she is going to do in another year.
Wherever Paul is, there she will also
be. That is the point from which
they always start in building their
castles.
No shadow is cast over their happi¬
ness because Carla cannot walk. Paul
wheels her about the village in the big
chair, and uot a cottage is missed in
their visits. They go os far as the
little picturesque old cheese factory
and down the hill lo the still older
wharf where the boat comes In from
across the lake. Doctor Derwent, who
Is at Mistassini, has allowed Carla
to go twice to the monastery, in Paul’s
launch, and if October is tine she will
make her first trip to his concession
during that month. Paul takes her
over the soft, sandy roads to the
edge of the blueberry plains in a
buggy, and then carries her in his
arms to a place where she can help
him pick fruit for their Sunday din¬
ner. He will never give np carrying
her like that, he says, even when she
Is strong again.
Peribonka has grown happier with
them. Even Maria Chapdelaine is
younger, and Samuel has forgotten his
financial losses.
So Carla wrote to Claire;
“It is glorious here. 1 love Sep
tember.”
(THE END.]
Youth’s First Earnings
Usually Go for Food
When a boy closes his first adven¬
ture In finance with money In his
pockets, earned by his own efforts, his
first Impulse is to buy something to
eat
We have no more Important cus¬
tomer,” said the proprietor of a city
lunch counter, “than tlie hoy who has
earned his first dollar. Now, you don’t
often find a boy whose clothing in¬
dicates financial straits at a soda
counter in a drug store. His needs
are for something more satisfying, and
he conies to us. He looks over the
menu with an eye to quantity rather
than to quality. Corned beef and cab¬
bage have a greater appeal to him
than artichokes, and having eaten he
puts a small tip beside his place with
a nonchalance that Is amusing.”
The hoy may have a few cents left.
If there is no urgent need for his con¬
tribution to the family budget he stops
at a store on the way home and buys
his mother something she does not
need. Thus, very early, he begins ex¬
pressing his love in the stereotyped
masculine way.
Deference to Others
Tolerance is willingness to grant
to the opinions and actions of others
the same consideration you do to
voui own You may not agree with
such acts or ideas, hut this does not
mean that you are right and they are
wrong.—Grit.
Improved Uniform International
T Lesson T
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D.D.. Mem¬
ber of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.)
<©. 1930, Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for September 7
JOSIAH, A ROYAL REFORMER
LESSON TEXT—II Kings 22:1-8; 23t
-25.
(’.OLDEN TEXT—Thy word i» a lamp
unto my feet and a light unto my path.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Josiah Finds
God's Book.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Josiah’s Rare Kind.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP¬
IC—Getting Help from the Bible.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP¬
IC —The World's Debt to Reformers.
I. Josiah a Godly Young King
(22:1, 2).
He did that which was right in the
sight of the Lord and turned not aside
to the right hand or to the left. About
one hundred years elapsed between
the reformation under Hezekiah and
that of Josiah. Sometime during this
period the book of God’s law had been
lost. Two wicked kings had reigned
in the interval. The Lord had given
to Hezekiah much wealth. His son,
Mannsseh. coming into possession of
Ins father’s property and being un¬
godly would naturally neglect the
Bible, if not purposely try to put it
from sight. Those who do not obey
the word of God are usually interest¬
ed in putting it out of sight.
II. Finding the Book of the Law
(22:3-10).
1. The occasion (vv. 3-8).
It was while restoring the temple
during Josiah’s reformation that the
law was discovered, in clearing out
Liie dark corners to make repairs and
to find a place to store the subscrip¬
tions made by the people, many things
which had been lost were found, among
which was the law.
2. The Book read before the king
(vv. 0, 10).
Upon making a report of the work
to the king Shuphan Informed him of
the finding of the book of the law of
l he Lord, and the book was read by
Simplism before the king.
III. The Effect of the Reading of the
Law (vv. 11-20).
1. The king rent his clothes (v. 11).
As the law was read before him lie
was led to realize the awful extent of
the nation’s departure from God. 11a
knew that sin merited punishment
The rending of the royal robes indi¬
cated the king’s penitence and sorrow.
2. The king sent a deputation to
make inquiry of the laivd (vv. 12-20).
He included himself in the guilt be¬
fore God (v. 13). His sense of sin
was so keen that he sent to inquire
of the Lord as to whether there was
any means of diverting the divine
judgments, Instinctively I he human
heart turns from God’s threatening
judgments to a means of escape.
3. T he message of Huldah, the
prophetess (vv. 15-20).
(1) Confirmation of what Hie law
snid (vv. 15-17).
She said that all the curses written
in the law must follow, for the sins
had been so flagrant that God’s wrath
could not he restrained, It was not
too late, however, upon repentence to
obtain mercy from God, but the out¬
ward consequences of sin must he
realized.
(2) Acceptance of Josiah’s repent
ance (vv. 38-20).
Because of his tenderness of heart
and deep penitence, the Lord snid he
should he gathered to his grave in
peace and should not see all the evil
brought ori Jerusalem and its people.
What Huldah said was true though Jo¬
siah died in battle (II Citron. 35:22-25).
IV. Reforms Instituted (23:l-2.i).
3. The king read the law (vv. 1, 2).
He gathered together the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, including the priests,
Levites, and elders, and read unto
litem the law.
2. The king made a covenant before
the Lord (v. 3).
3n this covenant he pledged himself.
(3) “To walk before the Lord.”
This meant that he would get per¬
sonally right with God.
(2) To “keep God’s commandments
and his testimonies and his statutes.”
This obedience was of the heart.
( 3 ) “To perform the words of the
covenant which were written in this
book.”
'J’tie king not only entered Into this
sincerely, but caused all that were
present to “stand to” tt.
3. The king took away the abomina¬
tions (vv. 4-20).
He not only broke down the places
of idolatrous worship, hut slew the
priests who officiated at the altar,
4. Passover kept (vv. 21-23).
So fully and heartily did they enter
into this reformation that this Pass
over was unlike any that had been
held since the days of the Judges.
5. Workers of the occult driven out
(vv. 24. 25).
All the days of the king they depart
ed not from following after the Lord.
Must Follow in His Steps
Sincere we must be. some sacrifices
we must make, and for the rest we
must follow in the steps of the Lord
till we grow into his likeness. It Is a
splendid endeavor, and in its very difli
cutties and elevation lie its greatness
and its success.—John Watson.
Prayer
Prayer is the pulse of the renewed
soul; and the constancy of its heat I*
the test and measure of the spiritual
life—Octavius Winslow.
England Takes Up Idea
of Trees as Memorials
A charming practice of planting
trees in memory of those whose
names it is desired to keep alive is
now growing up in England. It was
brought to public notice recently by
a ceremony beside the Kingston by¬
pass road, near the village of King¬
ston Vale, when an oak tree was
planted and dedicated to the mem¬
ory of a flying force officer who was
killed in the World war. The plant¬
ing of trees along new roads has
been greatly assisted by the work
of the Roads Beautifying association.
If the work is linked up with the
idea of commemoration, ns in the
case of “oaks of memory,” it may
be “speeded up,” and, at the same
time, people will be encouraged to
care for trees and protect them in
a new way because of their associa¬
tions. Montreal, Canada, has such a
tree-planted memorial boulevard
many miles long. These trees are
carefully tended and ornamented
with flags each Armistice day.
One of Oldest Legends,
That of Wandering Jew
How long the story of the “Wan¬
dering Jew” has been in circulation,
and wliat was its origin, are ques
tions on which there is no evidence
to base replies. But it is certain
that from the period of its first writ¬
ing it became more prevalent than
ever in various homes.
It was not till after that the aspect
of eternal wandering was introduced,
and ttiis was possibly encouraged by
the fact that tit intervals persons
claiming to he the original “Wander¬
ing Jew” made their appearance in
different parts of Europe.
According to the Italian astrologer
Guido Bonnati, the wanderer passed
through Forli in 1207. Philip of
Novara, a famous jurist who resided
for a long time in Jerusalem, writing
in 1250, refers to one Johan Boute
Dieu ns one proverbially long-lived,
suggesting that the legend was then
well established in Jerusalem.
Complex Typewriter
Japanese typewriters have 7,026
characters. The operator 1ms a direc¬
tory and chart at his elbow to help
him find unusual letters or signs.
Good writers average ' CO words a
minute, which is ns fast as hand¬
writing. Arid tucked away in one
corner of the machine is the Eng¬
lish alphabet, which may he used at
will.—Capper's Weekly.
Britain’s Smallest Woman
Miss Mary Hegurty, a Donegal
poultrykeeper, who is two feet, eight
inches in height, claims to lie the
smallest woman in the British Isles.
She lives in a thatched cabin on llie
seashore overlooking Tory island, of
which her father, Patrick Hegarty,
was uncrowned king.
The Pastor Say*:
II may be that, young people do not
attend church ns much as they ought,
hut recently 1 was present at a bap¬
tismal service where there was quite
a sprinkling of children.—John An¬
drew Holmes.
This Doctor’s Prescription
Will Keep Your Family Healthy
Dr. Hitchcock learned during his 63
years’ practice as a family doctor that 90%
of all sickness starts with stomach and
howei trouble. He advised against the use
of drastic purgatives which cause chronic
constipation. ciy
When any of his patients were consti¬ f f$|?
pated, showed signs of losing their appetite, SS-'-'J a
or complained of indigestion, dizziness, >
headache, biliousness, or upset stomach, he 9 *
gave them his prescription known as Hitch¬ dgi r Kg,
cock’s was Boon Laxative removed. Powder, He found and the it safe trouble for . It
women and children; Ideal for old folks, if/m I :& v I
as well as for the most robust men.
Dr. Hitchcock’s Laxative Powder quickly iW 35
relieves constipation and makes the stom¬ &PWW& ■'.yj
ach and bowels pure and clean, by remov¬
ing all of the poisonous fermenting residue PRfPARED OY
of the accumulated undigested food that Bn HITCHCOCK MEDICINE CO.
these troubles. Get large yellow (vs Atlanta, Ga.
causes a
tin box for 25c at any drug store.
Use for Old Stockings
Hundreds of American women
tourists visiting Kyoto, Japan, from
tourist ships in Kobe are buying back
their discarded silk stockings in the
form of gorgeous brocades. Brocade
manufacturers recently found they
could buy worn silk stockings in the
United States, ship them to Japan,
unravel and recondition the thread
and get good silk at a cost of 22 yen
a pound instead of 80 yen a pound
for thread from new silk.
Hum-m! Flit is sold only
in this yellow
can with, due
' unit black band.
Here’s the sure, quick, easy way
to kill all mosquitoes indoors
and keep ’em away outdoors!
Kin s yfy ill
pray M uj
r> ^clean smelli n O , r J \Z:^/ zT-Pts B '
;
/; FL n-sl:’ A*
lit U S.P AT Of f
The World’s K
Selling Insect .Oum ansiil—
ACHES
There’s scarcely an ache or pain
that Bayer Aspirin won’t relieve
promptly. It can’t remove the causey
but it will relieve the pain 1 Head¬
aches. Backaches. Neuritis and
neuralgia. Yes. and rheumatism.
Read proven directions for many
important uses. Genuine Aspirin
can’t depress the heart. Look for
the Bayer cross:
fh.
Carry Your Medicine
In Your Handbag
85 79
Com
\ v
•
Our Vegetable Compound coated tab¬ is
also sold in chocolate
lets, just as effective as the liquhl
form.
Endorsed by half a million women,
this medicine is particularly valuable
turity, during maternity the three trying and middle periods of ma¬
age.
98 out of 100 report benefit
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
CfDlA tPINKMAM MtDWNtCa LYNK. MASS.
OILS 24 ENDED HOURS III
No matter how large and stub¬
born, pain, ripens Carboil and heals instantly worst slops boil
or carbuncle often overnight
Get Carboil today from,druggist Boils
vanish Pain ends like magic.
with amazing speed
s;iO 10 .s:»0. Saved
Itiiild >oui- siulU culU'iVi ul mlcltu (ivecn
stalk*, ilfstms Ihr weevil, asti
ihv soil lerliilxey, prevent soil w
J. H. MINER ME RIDIAN. WISS.
Woman Take* High Rank
Dr. Maria Wedl, the first woman
in Hungary ever to be appointed t»
a full university professorship, Is a
mineralogist by profession and for a
number of years has been director
of the mineralogy section of the Na¬
tional museum in Budapest She Is
now professor of tlie same subject
in Dehreezin university.
Embracing the Impossible
Guest—Gosh, I wish 1 could afford
a car like this!
Owner—So do I.—Judge.
Hopeless
A certain motion-picture star was
receiving the condolences of friends
after his third picture in succession
had “flopped.” The reason, poor
stories, was t’atenl ly apparent. The
star was inclined to take the matter
philosophically. He shrugged bis
shoulders and siiid with mock grav¬
ity:
“Spare your pity, my friends.
Everything in life eventually adjusts
itself, except a bow tie.”