Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, January 11, 1917, Image 2
■ ’i/-
V* 1 '
BARNWELL SRlfTINgL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
8mimmmmm»mm»»mniiiiiiiiinmnmmimii»mmmimmim»nmto»»mg through.
to piece out financial needs, Sidney Page, her roothet
Harriet take K. LeMoyne, a strange young man. at a ’ ' come
Ih order
and her Aunt
roomer. Sidney, aged eighteen, and joe Drummond, aged twenty-one,
childhood sweethearts, have agreed to marry “after years and years,”
.but the girl’s promise wavers'on‘better acquaintance with the roomer
and after Aunt Harriet opens a ^dressmaking shop' downtown. She
^ ^ ^ brother's
decides to become a trained nurse and goes to her friend,- Dr, fid—ff .——
the plot to ,unroll; the mystery to deepen.
have you than anybody, of course. 1
He put his lithe surgeon's hand on his
would, 1 her high heeis. being, small ana the
'It's like u guifte,
disagree-on everything, especially Mei-
nver tried to spell those'
le said.
ectaU
spell
I
“We
was en-
:\
ico. If you ev
Mexican names—”
"Why did you think
gaged7’^..she insisted.
Now, In K.’s wjilk of life—that walk
of life where there are no toothpicks—*
young girls did not receive the atten
tion of one young man to the exclusion
of others unless they were engaged.
Bn* lie could hardly sny tuaf. •”
*\>h, I don’t know.- Those things get
In the air/’
— "It's Joliiin.v Hoyoiirblri," siiTTTsld:
nrf. witli decision. “It’.s horrible, tjti*.
way things get about. Because - Joe-
sent me a-box of roses— As a matter
-of fact, rfn not engnged, or going to
be, Mr. Le Moyne. I’m going Into a
hospital to be a nurse.”
Le Moyne said nothing. For Just a
moment be closed ills eyes. A man is
In father a bad ways when, every time
be closes ids eyes, hCsees the same
thing, especially if It is rather terrible.
When It gets to a point where he lies
awn^e at idght and reads, for tear of
closing them—
"\)ou’re too young, aren’t-you?”
"Doctor Ed—one of the Wilsons
across the'Street—Is going to help roe
about that. ft1s brother Max is a big
surgeon there. I' expect you’ve heard
of him. We’re very proud of him in
the Street.”
* 0/0 0 • •
Lucky for K. Le Moyne .that the
moon no longer shone on the low, gray
doorstep, that Sidney’s mind had trav
eled far away to shining, floors and
rows of wldte IxTls. “Life—in .the
raw," Doctor Ed had said that other
afternoon: Closer to iier than the hos
pital was.life in the raw .that night.
So, even here, on tills quiet street in
this .distant city, there-wns to be no
pence. Max Wilson just across .the
way! It—it was ironic. Was there no
place where a man could lose himself?
He would have to move on again, of
course. . ;.*
But that, it seemed, was Just what
he could not do. For: -•
makes-. She’d like to have the parlor
and sitting room behind. They' wouldn’t
interfere with you at all,” she added
hastily. “Christine’s father would
build a little, balcony on"the side for
them, a sort of porch, and*they’d sit
CHAPTER 111*—-Continued.
Only a week—and lovq was one of
the things he had to give up, with
others. Not, of course, that he was in
love with Sidney then. But he had
been desperately lonely,, and, for all there, in the evening*
her practical clearheadedness, BlfiTwos
softly. and appealingly feminine. By
way of keeping his head, hi* talked sud
denly and earnestly of Mrs. McKee,
and food, and THU;*;-and of Mr. Wag
ner and the pencil pud. w
Behind Sidney’s carefully practical
tone the man read appeal. Never be
fore had he realized how narrow the
girl’s world had been. The Street*
with hut one dimension bounded It!
In her perplexity she was appealing to
him who was practically a stranger.
And h4 knew then that he must do
the thing she asked. He, who bad fled
so' long, /could roam no more. Here
on the Street, ylth Its menace just
across, he must live, that she might
work. In his world men Juyj worked
that women Wight TfVe, In certain
places, certain ways. This girl was
going out to earn Jier living, and he
would stay to make It possible. But
no hint of all /this was in his voice.
"I shall j stay, of course,” he said
gravely. *»
the uMiresl miifg
to.bomb that I’ve; known for a long
time. I want you„,to know that^’
“¥au are very good to me,” said Sid
ney.
When she rose, K. Le Moyne sprang
to his feet. ' * * '/*
Antin h^id .notice^ that he always
rose when she entered his room—-with
fresh towels on Katie’s day out. for in-
stnnce—arid she liked him for it. Years
Into an envelope, indorsed it in. Ids.
illegible hand. ■ He hear&'his brother's
ii*fl .
away the lakt vestige of
>•*«, Iffe faced a-7vd£)
IT~Ir{ r flllntlv fnmlll »» ■ -
ittraottf*
“'We tried to get you by i elephenej,**
she tXplaiuefL- ”1 am from thn hrt^-
BEST 10Y OF
operation.- Bd’g lapses tWn ~pTtaTMi|lsrS}mpwt>n’8 father died this
surgic 4 clea nil ness wese s
to the younger man, fresh froi
n#,—she knew you would
have* to Have someone.- -1 watr Just
clinics of Europe. In hlailowntown of- starting for my vacation, so they sent
flee, to L Whlch he would presently make me.”
his leisurely progress, he wore a white
CeTalr and sterilized things of which
Doctor Ed did not even know .the
namqs! . " . - •
Max paused at the office door.
“Rather a poor substitute for a va* .
cation.” he Commented. / / 7
She was a very pretty girl. _"He had
seen hei' before in the hospital, but he
_ . Wad never r.-ally -noticed hovr attrae-
XtTt already.” he gild. • **nr hav* tive she was.—Rather stunotog she
wn.gr ftp thought-
and a Good Cons
X Signposts on the Chris-
"liftn's Journey.*-
- — • ~~~ *
The question of supreme Importance
for the mariner Is, "Whither bound?”
Tills la of even greater interest for
every thoughtful persem. Life Is a sea.
Each "PapehTDiapepxin” digests 3000
grains food, ending all stomach
misery in five minutes.
Time it!' la five minutes all Stom
ach'tiistrp<o»jirm Noindlrestlon.
heartburn, sourness or belching of
gas, acid, or eructations of undigested
food, no dizziness*.. Bloating, il-j&IJIL
breath or headache.
you been to bedf*
ji b after nine,” protested Ed mild-
and our ultiinate destinatioiLlleAat-tho. j
/lth All ol <I/\ T,im4 In n on I 1/va 4n 1.1 M ^ . . _ * * . •
yellow hair and datk eyes was unusual.*
Iy. “If I don’t start early, 1 bmm get bio^reroemhered, Just' In Tfirie, to ex-
flh Paii a4i M J pre.s regret at Miss SI nfpgajv’s be*
reatcmeHL— . —
mo," ho sald. ; ^
things go qn as they've been doing, I’ll
‘I am Miss Harrison,” explained .the
stfbytltute, and held out his long white
have to have an assistant./ I’d rather rcoah The ceremony. Rudely perfuric
tory with Miss Simpson on duty, proved
Interesting, Miss Harrison, In spite of
Wilson, ncross'fSrilffeTrrorinnusnc, with Ills brotfxT Max. brilllarit g !®' f 11 b™” t0 T you? All 4be
surgeon, to get her into the hospital. Thlngi now beghx to happen-/ yeiong;-
the niot to unroll: the mystery t<* deepen. In^ splte of himself, Ed winced.
;ln spite of himself, Ed winced. It
was one thing to work hard thut there
might be one success instead of two
half successes. It was a.different thing
to advertise one’s inferiority to the
world. _JHl8 sphere of the Street slid
the .neighborhood was his own. To
give' it all up and become his younger
brother’s assistant—even if it meant,
as it would, better hours and more
young surgeon tall. When he was Anal
ly In the coat, she Wafc rather' flushed
arid palpitating. , ) ~
"But I knew youf name, of course,”
died Doctor Max. "And—I’m Aerry
about the vacation,”
After that came work. Miss Har
rison was nimble and alert, hut the sur- ‘
good worked quickly and with few
words, was impatient when she coul?
Other side, --^usi $s the-sailor, taking
his compass a nd^fl^avlag -s^otms and
dangers, steers hjs way steadily, guld-
0d by rhe^sun and the stars, until'he
reaches the haven, so inhst w^ do. 'W,e
need faith and a'good conscience. Con
science is pur compass. Faith 7 is the
Confidence that God is, that he is the
rewarder of those who diligently seek
him and that thorn la tin Pfornol hitVi»n r
Speed In regulating upset stomachs.
It
money—wyujd be to submerge his
Identity. He could not bring himself
to & it, “
"f* guess I’ll stay where I am,” he.
said. “They -know me around 7 here,
and I-know them. By the way, will
you leave this envelope at Mrs. Mc
Kee’s? Maggie Rosenfeld Js ironing
there today.»It’s for her.”
Max took the envelope absently.
•‘You’ll go on here to the end. of your
days; working for a pittance,” he ob
jected. "Inside of -ten years , fhere’ll
be no general practitioners; then
wB’ere will you be?”
*TH manage somehow’,” said tjn-
brother placidly. “I guess there A<i 11
always be a few- that can pay my prices
better than what you specialists ask.”
Mum iaui.liid uilll ^PlTOlhe amuse/
ment— • -* - J 7
"I dare say, Ij this is tfte w^iy you
let them pay your prices.
He held out the envelope; and the
older man colored. •-
* *■ • f '
Very proud of Doctor Max wps his
brother, unselfishly proud, of his skill.
of his handsome person, of his easy
good manners; very humble, too, of his
ago the men sh^/bn-dTtnfMvn- hn,d Biicwn--- t -AA.-ti*frti* ;u T? he
this courtesy t.o their women; hut the
St reef regarded such things as affecta
tion. , ■ ■ . : * .
“I wonder if you trould do me an-
other favor? I’m afraid you’ll take to
avoiding me, if 1 keep on.” ' -
“I denXThlrik yoiT need fear that.”
“This stupid story about Joe Druin-
Ulond : —Ilm-uot saying I’ll never marry
him, hut^ I’m certainly not engaged.
Now and ThCn, when you are taking
your evening walks, If you would ask
me to walk, with you—” ‘
K. looked father dated. v
I enu't imagine anythiug pleasan^ Jongt»d to a dead, collie,“and had got
‘I want to ask -fawi^hlnjr, and, itttln hnHr tm
I hope youil be quite frank,” said Sid
ney* -. . .7
^“Anything that I can do—”
.Wfs this. If you are comfortable,
#nd—and like the room and nil that, I
»‘r; but I wish you^’d. explain just
how—” -• 7 V 'l ; .
Sidney smiled at him. As h«f stood
on-the lowest step their eyes were
almost level. , . • .
“If I walk with you they’ll know Tm
not engaged to Joe," she said, with en
gaging directness/
The house was quiet. He waited in
the lower hall until she had reached
the top of the staircase. For some curi
ous .reason, in the tlmeto come, that
was the way Sidney, always mnem-
hered .K. Le Moyne—standlm
ever suspected any lack of finer fiber
in Max, he‘put the thought" "aWay.
I’r<»hably he w.as too rigid h^self.
Max was young,*a hard worker. He
had a right to piay hard.
He prepared his black bag for the
day's calls—stethoscope, thermometer,
eye-cup, bandages, «case of small vials,
a lump of absorbent cotton in a n«ii
qverfresh_towel;'in the bottom, a het
erogeneous collectloipof instruments, u
roll of adhesive plaster, a bottle or
two 'bf sugur-or-milk tablets for the
(-•hildren, - a dog collar that -had be-
beyond. \Ve, too, must "he on the look
out, take dally observations from heav-
j. enly sources through prayer, know con
tinually </hr spirituuf jatpude and long-,
ifude, and keep on. One of the best-
joys of life is to know that we are
headed right arid are making progress.
It is possible to drift from our course
unawares. Unsuspected influences may
be working against us, Even Job of
^ old . proved to he wrong In his reckon*
ing. He thought Himself quite a model
In character, and ail his friends In
dorsed him, but hrrrin^ trials caused ,
him to realize that the divine standard
| of character is very much higher than i
lie: supposed. Ills self-complacency, i
/founded upon general - impression*?
is the surest, quickest stomaeft {rem
edy in the whole world and besides it.
Is harmless.. Put an end to-stomach
trouble forever by getting a larger
flfty-cent case of Pape’s Ujapepsin
from any drug store. Jl6u realize in
minuter how .needless it Is to suf
fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any
itomacn -disorder. It’s the quickest,^
lurest and most liarniless' stomach,
torja the world.—Adv.
duel
^ "/ "TTglbw ln Gett i ng ^Sta rt.
According to Dr. Simon ,N. l’att* ti,
leading economist at tin* University
Pennsylvania, pnly 25 per cCtw of th^
graduates in law at that institution -
follow, the i»ractice. of litw after they.-
leave the wniversity.y^The^
olsO\show tlrat 75_ per ceuf-’of -the- law '
students, after the long demise arid at >
heavy expense, int«* otlier lines of
Avorli. . ‘ -» ' - . ; '.Z
“Tr requires ien years for-.a college
nva11 t/i.earn as nnn h ns the uittraimsl
tiinii’of business," Ductor I’atttm added.
, w 14 » , - t While college men require ten years
'***H»™*** » l,u ? «l j ^ „„ ^, ir , h „. , llB „
graduate usually steps at once into a
Ills re-
r, ’ a "‘ ■"* Ijmyln,: imslnos*. llut-4. mm aot-W
l.'ii’l found his Irtte liullud* and Iour- | 0 yc r hK.ki,| tliM llio man fur
.Overleaps his untrained competitor af-
upon actual-chiiracter values,
vised
and repent in d-ust and ashes.”
ter ten years.’
jTetterine for Ring Worm and Skir*
•... Disease. _' '
■, “ Varnviite,’8. C.. July 17. 190s'
My wife uses your Tetterlne for Rim;-
jtlso uses it in .her family “for all
f skin diseases, and she thinks it
a good medicine. There is no substitute/■
R Bowlins-
iiude. — --
Loyalty AboVe Everything.
Nothing more is possible, for anyone
than t«r he loyal-to this ’faitil and a
gooti conscience. We should he con
tent with nothing else'. Ccfhsclenci* 5
will tell us uuerringly, if we listen.-
whether we are steering true to faith
i ia-all our.thoughla. iinii iujiiinsriir-Tfae4—mt-r-.— ———_
f~ x- . . 'l l , .. \ Tetterlne cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
knowledg# of duty and the-willingness, Wpxm. old ttchtng/Sores, Dandruff, Itch-
to perform it are different things. l n S P 11 ”* Corna t Chilblains and every
, r ,. i - . '• . . .—. ... form of Seal p and Skin Disease. Tetter-.
Theivoiee of conscience and the voice me 60c; Tettertrii Soap 2£c At drua-
nf inclination are often heard in hot tf 818 or-by-mall-direct, from The Shup-
dispute in the soul. This is the cause i with every mall ofder for Tetterlne. w»
*f our inner discord. To follow 1 f 1 '' 8 » box of Shuptritie's lO^-^Aver PUii_
’afflrjaml a g<hitf"conscience/ Is 'the.( V** - *'/. ’] : ' \- • ■
Wcahi path to peace and rest of soul. / : . Ancient , ron Mjr^s. '
It t-Kdtmbtless easier at times to Iraiian ^ urvs arv hein-irmd? of iron
uere4; dialling than to he true to7 takwi mlnes in S ,.Minla_whi-h
aith and cOp-scjence. jSudhjnoments by. th.
n*r>" inrr ' t**sfTnl* bijiies tlur trrin* nn li- ■ ■ ' * - ...
r*>
T /•
»' jL
i
-1
He Faced a Young and Attractive Giri.
not find the thinks he called for, even
*-im*- frnr'resfThg times. t)ur grip- on
failh_and our -oUedleHeerTo conscience
will keep us unswer\'lngiy"Jn the ; path.
Fuitfli -'Without conscience is^u ship
without a compass; conscience'vCUh-t j
a without a-ship/j^Qranulsted EyrUSa. 6U«., Inflamed Ey..
We must-ftaveimtlmjor neither will l>e j n! i
of any use.. w . Op« *r
^ Points of Greatest Importance,
No sailor w illingly neglects the coin-
Romans as.a source of ope-fo lo-lp-ano
their legions, and the guns are henu'
used against nations whose tribal, fot
bears the Rpmaris often fought.
over night by Roman 'Eye Ualeem
provte tta merit. Adv.
pass, or, loses sight of the destined har
bor, but while busy with other things ' ,
^ ^V,, i Philosopher.
his. vessel’ drifts upon the. roe
may he so occupied witli unimportant
things that we lose sight of the two
nrtiiti essentiflli, faitliUmi a goml <on-
"We sliould
the sands of time.'
Alibi, —
leave footprints ).r
i t fie' I'arlor
in the bag in some curious fasHion uud
.tltere retnairied. . ~ * r
He prepared the bag a little nerv
ously/while Max ate. He felt that
modern methods- and .Jthe best usage
might not have approved of the bag:
On his way out he paus^tDafTW^m :
/.g*fooui dopr.——/ /
“Arc you^oing to the hospital?”
“Operating at four^—wish - you could
come in.”- " ^
"I'm afraid not/Max. I’ve promised
broke irito Restrained profanity now
and then. She went'a lltt]e pale over
her mistakes, but preserved her dig
nity and her wits. Now and'then he
fiiund her dark eyes'iixed on him. vyitft
something inscrutable-hut pleasing in
their depths, The situation was rather
piquant. —1 science" 1 Sometime^ life’s voyage Is *. "1. .. _ t * v-
Orice. during the cleaning up be- Undertaken N'rithout these. .Shipwrook Whenever IOU. Need • General TOOlC
X • ;/.T
- ¥
vffUtey would -only show TFiTrt-Ts'
us were going hackward/' obJociOk/ •
Mere Man. . "
t.;
-V/ l
Sidney Page to speak about her to
Jim, Hhr wantn to-eftfet*Hh'e~friilfH11if" “* n ’ffsft-Jfcn'ry sJUJPJi. Miss JJ trarrtson 1| a
tween cases, he dropped to a person-^ wilHinevitably follow unless Ve can
ality. He was drying his hands, while
she pluced freshly-sterilized Instru
ments ori u - glass table.
T *You are almost.u foreign type. Miss
Harrison. Last'year, in a Londof bal
let, I saw’ a blonde Spanish-gir who.
looked like you.” ■
. “My mother was a Spaniard.” iShe-^
did not look up. ~'f i-Rr- .'
Where Miss Simpson was ih. the
ha bit., of clumping through the morning .
simt off the gas overhead, and his eyes
ori hers-above. ' : ' '//.. 7'' /Uir
- “Good nighf,” said K. Le MoyrieT
And all .the thlngs^e hud put out of
his life were iu his voice.
CHAPTER tV. /
On the morning after Sldfiey had in
vited Iv. Le Moyne to Hike her to walk.
Max Wilson cume down to breakfast
ratiier lute. Doctor Ed had breakfast
ed ' '—■
an liour iaiore.' -imd-had already
attended, with much 7 profanity on tin*
part of the patient,-to a boil on the
back of Mr. itosenfeld’s ne«‘k. *
-I’ei ter chantrc yotir lamnirv/^fj.ici'r*
fully ailvisid Diictor Ed. cilLUng^n strip"
oTmfliesivepiaster? “Your neck’s-'irri-.
twtiit-fntpi yi>uf wMi'fe'colIdrs."-
Ilostmfeld eyed ' him suspiciously,
- •-MG-posscssing a "sense of hyluor also/
lie grinned. • - — — L ::
v v.
"It .ain't u:y everyday things that
ther “7.no,” lie replied. "It's my
Hafikety ! lank tfnfes s»Uit. T.ut _ if 7*
liitui \,a it-?,to !>e tony—”
Mr. lleseiifcld buttoned up thejdhe
icttneK-siilrt w'licV, with a j»air of l>oe-
tor ]/!>• Cast-elf t-reuserg^wa*r his oiily
school.”'“ .
.“Tod young,” Said M^ix' briefly.
"Why, she can’t be over sixteen.”
“She’s eighteen.” 7-^
“Well, even jf-Tgltte'enT Do you think
any girl of that age Is Responsible
enough to have~ttfe and death put Ui
herihauds? Besides, although i haven’t
noticed her lajely, ;she used to be a
pretty little thing. There is no use"
lilling up the wards with -a Io’t of
ornaments; it keeps the internes all
s t eu-rd ttp ’’ -.-" —:., ,
Max that morning, a .big man, almost
as tali :is K. Le .Moyne, eager of life, i
-si stn*ng and 11 bit reckless, not fine, per '
- — I’h^ps^hut'Hot evil. 4 lie lind-llie same
treats,! I or one Jab of a knife'!’j,, of living as Sidney, but wiflrttrHE'
a day and a (!HTereiu o ■ Uie ui 11 Jd<i;>d ready to giy.-
iwdsSeifdb Itfc. _!.< 1 I.TrU' HUt lil'e woul.'
"•■Why bid You Think I’Was Engaged?”
She Insisted.
wish you'd stay." Slfe hurried on: “If
I could 1eel that mother had a de
pendable per.son. llke you itf'tlie house*
Jt w*oirld all be easier,” - -
7 Dependable! That stT.ngr
"But—forgive my asking; Tm really
interested—can your mother -iqnnage?
You’ll get practically no money (luring
your training.” ' J
Tve thought of that.
irlstine Lorenz, is going to be
marrie^. Her people are w ealthy, hut
ab«’li hnre nothing hut what Palfiier
-tod bsitfii iii'l.is pocket.*
' "I!o\v';;!liel;/Doc?” _./
" i d o ^lobid-s:" said Doctor Ed briqk-.
y.
"I
My < Id .woman .works
*.i!t' for two do liars.”
'•T^gtiess"!
you to be aide, to sleep on your lia-k.
lie' was impnrtuVbabiy stralghfeniug
his.sm»1t"g!as.s table. He knew lloset
feld, “If yoq dor/t^ffHe pay pri
l/tid you the "knife next time, ijnd/jojt
can let your-wife attendMt> i you.”7.. %
• Rosenfeld drew puLa silver dollar.,
ap-d followed it reluctantly with a limp
' • “Since when,” asked Doctor Ed mild
ly. “have you found good looks In u
girl u handicap?”’
In Ihe end they compromised. Max
would see. Sidjiey- at hi«. office^ ’ It
.would- be "better than having her run
rret^=wo3i1 d puf 'dlmigs
.04. ‘the right footing.. For, if he di 1
have her mlrnltted, slie.would ha\r to
learn at once that he was no lougyr
:*T>V*ctor"Mux;” that, as a" matter af
fact, he was now? staff, apd entitled
P\ natch digni ty, to speech, w itbvmt eoa-
t;o4b tion dr argumentr to cjlean toWr
els. and a deferential Interne ar his
el; oWi . • , 7 ; . -1 .
; * ' ' * *' r4
Down the clean steps want, Dtieiori
secure' them for- <ftir guidance, Pfo- The Old ^Sutjdard Grgve,'s *Ta^tele»
^visions for our spiritual needs are as ®H»U Ionic is Equally yklqaftje. as’ a Gen
complete as for our physical necessi
ties. Man seeks and finds in the pliys"
Take Grove’s
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties oi QUININE and
IRON, It'acts on the Liver, Drives out
ical realm; let him do tile mum in the Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Buildt
’Spiritual and he wilb-find Solid ground yep - the Whole System SO cents,
for*-faith and ample stimulus for a N ; , y——- — —7^ . ^.5
'■y-goml Conscience.7 /—■One- .Way- Out.
A •crowning reward awaits ihe. ma- . “My wife wiigts me tv_cc>_ahiJJUiiair
riner as he. nears the haveri. > Tiie pi-_ witli iier. t doil't-See hoW 1 am going
ateorn the ship nirfr-iftP
Tf she were to sc
TyTnto port/ Waves, storms and dan-7
you back
gers are forgotten in the glad greet- you r“T>fflce after less-1 ha tty an hmir qf^
ing of friends, 'thus also is a picture shopping and told you srt*> would never,
small heels beat a busy tattoo on the
tiled floor. With the-rustling, of her j ing
starched dress, the .sound was esserr ; of the completion of otir voyage,; we take you on such an expeditton^again
tlally feminine, almosHnsistent. When have been true faith arid a goetlj-you would cdnsTder your.splTwldl re-
he had time to notice it, it amused him | conscience. We,.too, shall ‘‘meet our paid for your tnnible, ^wbuldn't you?”
that hedid not find Tt.annoying. idiot face to face, when we have •'Certainly. But how am I going fr»
~ as she passed him a bistpriry, -erns^d the bur.” - \ ; ; do thiiT?” • . •
/‘Let hey cirtcti/Xbd.; flirting with a
he deliberately placed his, fine hurid
over her fingers and smiled into her
eyes. It w us pluy for him; it lightened
the day's work. 7 ,-
Fidnev was in the waiting room.
The-rt* had iieen no foiii-un in (lie fn.iriiv
BELIEF WILL
fa seinn f i ngfeinube cl erk
ing's watting. Like all imaginative peo
ple, she had the gift oFdranuifizing her
self. She was seeing herself in white
from, helid to foot, like this efficient
young wolnirri wHp'came now and then
to the waiting-room door.
oetor"Wilsen-. you’ now.” —
She followed Mlys-Harrison into'the
consulting room. Doctor Max—not the
Trust in God’s Love,* His Promises THICK?. GLOSSY HAIR ,
and His Desires for His Children’^ > ■ ' rnCC FROM DANDRUFT
Welfare—Faith Conquers. - • * *
i ~ t Girls! Try It! Hair gets soft, fluffy and
How can we bani$h fear froiri: ouiLi— be#uilfu1 Get a 2l cent bottle
lives—fear of failure, fear of-poverty, ' ©f Danderine.
fear of Torieliness. and many an un-1 ■
spoken dread that k^eps our spirits
• ^First, let us drag our fears out info,
the open and face them boldly.' Many
1 £*
gloved isd h.med, D.«tor:Maxof .hi f Tanls H h /“ in' the sunlight;
a new person, one .die lord ,Mr » thrlv ' * n darkness or Half dark-
never known—stoofHn his vyhito office,
ness. Our fears lie often in our sub
consciousness and dog ns like shad-
To tell our fears, to analyze.
tall, dark-eyed, dark-haired, competent,
holding out his long, immaculate ‘sutT-f 8 . .
geon’s hand and smiling down at hw. I thpm ' t0 ‘ - fnul out lhe \ r source, js to
I half destroy them. -»
-Second. let us believe in God—his
promises and his love and his desire
| to give us goofl and .net bad things.
Fear is unbelief; "Cultivate belief in
What reason do you think K.
L* Moyne has for needing to
kj#^p away from Doctor Max—,.;; 4 God's, rmm_^ind women and in Gqd’s
world; get the'habit of believing in
jidople, in seeing the good and, in over-
■ J. | looking the evil. Remember that if
■■■■ ^ mrTea 11 y"tTant to Tielieve In men an
does Le .Moyne seem to you to
be some, kind of a crook?
it y.ou xbre lor l^vy.- hair thut -
tens with Seauty and is radiant wltfi
life; has an Incomparable softness and
Is fluffy and lustrous. try Ttanderine.
Just - \onet! application, doubles the
teauty of your lu^ir, besides Jt lmme-.
dfately dissolves every _ particle of
dandruff. You -Gan 'riot have nied-
heavy, healthy "hair if you. have
dandruff. This destructive scurf robs
the hair of its lustre, Its strength and
.Its very life, and if not overcome it
produces a feverishriesjsnnd itching of
the scalp; the hair roots famish^
loosen and die; then the.hair falls out.
fast. Siirely- get a~2r/cerit bottle of
.KuotVlton’s Dariderine Jrom any drug
store and just try it.—Adv.
and dejected dollar bill.
, "There's tl
v ...
ydu J
times,” he said, “when: if
put/me and the missus and a
knife In the same Qjora, yau .\vmUdnlt
Doctor Ed waited until he had made
his stiff-necked exit. Then he took the
two dollars; and, putting the money
imauirg tiiaie was
Ductoc Max, as he steppod into his cur
and made his w ay-H» his •cllce/ "TTere
were people who believed in*him, from
■■■■PH ;>*••.in ln;r jirini mii-
row uf-.qiatUAiitsUtii.g
st 1 fliy r aTround^thH walls *»f the waiting
room. Doctor Max drew p long breath.
This was the real tjiing—work and
plenty of it,,a chance to show -the other
men 'what. he could do, a battU*, to
win !. No humanitarian was he. blit fi
fig
with tr.e/*sntne )battle lust.
Tli^/rifflce nurse had her hack to him.,
\ v ben she turned ae filled an agree-'
aide surprises Instead ot: Miss Slmp-
iod
von wiffsiowly bjjt.suiniJx-geL-U^-^lW as light as you caff Hri' me.
Out . of the ' Question. ” •
Daddy:—"Jeannette, if riTtlow young
Simpson to hecoiiie my spt^-inHriw, 'do
you suppose. h*‘ will be willing to work
and supiwirt you?" ^Icarinette—"Oh,
da^. how can; he when he has prom-’
ised to do nothing but think of me_U-ll
the time?”—Puck. .
/f
AW« to Aafford It. //'/
Hub—“The dbltur i>ays that 4f 1
s pace aTter
money I shall h,e a wreck at forty-
five.” Wife—“Never mind, dear; bj
that time we shall be abls to Afford
It”—Boston Transcrio*- 7 T T" . '
the- habit of faith. Browning ' says:"
"If you desire faith, then you’ve faith
enough.'’ .. • t ■
But faith is k moving, active thing.
it is more than-desire; it needs the
act of the will. Let me try today
believing in a friendly universe, I
wlH be positive^ and not negative; I
will be a believer and. not a cynic.
Faith grows, and s growing, crowds
out fear. • ' • -
Real Meariliig of Joy.. * u
When we spbak of joy it* is not some
thing we are affejp, but something that
will come yyjtrfcp when we. are after
God and duty. . .. ■•/ . - - "T
Judge.” , ...1
"Twelve jianths." - e
“(’ouldtt-’t you fix it -so I could he
out, in time to see the. world series next
year?"" .
NlbTHER, ATTENTION!
rs- ^ A
i, A Gold
3\.
ting for Baby Free.«-
Gjtf a 25c Bottle-of Baby Ease from
rected-and gold ring (guaranteed), /
proper size, mailed you. Baby Ease w
cures-Bowel Complaints and Teething
Troubles of. Babies.—Adv/ ——
* The 48 states are now" spefc
000,000 a year on good rose
A
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iniiKrt*
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